The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 19, 1905, Image 5

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[ .RURAL WRITINGS |
[Items from the country are solicited lor
this department. Mail or send them in as
early in the week a* possible; items received
later than Wednesday can not be used at all
and it is preferred that they be in not later
than Tuesday. Always send your name with
items, that we may know who they are from.
Name of sender not for publication. See that
your writing is legiblo, especially names aud
places, leaving plenty of space between the
lines for correction. Be careful that what
you tell about actually occurred.1
Phoenix Pick-Ups
Charley Reiser of Butte visited
Phoenix friends a couple of days last
week.
Harmen Damero was an Atkinson
vSS'itor tire forepart of the week.
Ilazel Wagner visited with Jessie
Coburn from Friday night until Mon
day morning.
George Syfie, John and Edith Dam
ero, Shady Bell and Roy Parshall at
tended the fp.ir at Butte the latter
part of the week.
Ethel Anderson came home from
Celia to stay.
Mr. Blaisdell moved his family to
Bristow last week.
Ralph and Jessie Coburn and Ilazel
Wagner spent Sunday afternoou at
tlie Damero home.
Emma Storjohann of Turner, acted
as clerk in the store during George
Syties absence at the fair.
Isabel McKathnie called on Ethel
Anderson last Sunday.
Frank Damero accompanied by Will
Benedict of Boyd county, drove to
Bassett for a short stay, with friends
returning Sunday evening.
George Syfie, Ilazel Wagner, John
and Edith Damero, Ralph and Jessie
Coburn attended evening services at
the Storjohann school house last Sun
day evening.
Ted Anderson visited at the Snyder
home last Sunday.
Wesley Kirkland of Ottumwa, Iowa,
is visiting his parents here at present.
Bept Parshall called at R. R. Co
burn’s Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Chris Christensen of Ray was
trading at Phoenix, Friday.
Mrs. M. Christensen and grand
daughter, Editli Jepperson, were call
ers at the Damero home one day last
week.
Will Benedict returned to his home
in Boyd county, Monday last.
Mr. Shepardson moved his family to
Atkinson, where they will live this
winter. They then expect to go to
Wyoming to live. Success to them.
Mrs. Coburn and Jessie visited Mrs.
Parshall a day this week.
Bert Anderson was a Phoenix visi
tor last Sunday.
Messrs. Banty and Bellinger with
their families attended preaching at
the Storjohatn school house last
Thursday evening.
Ray News.
Mr. Twyford was in O’Neill Mon
day.
Etta Bigler commenced to go to
school Monday.
Colmer Boss had business in At
kinson Tuesday.
John Twyford and son attended the
Grutsch sale.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bigler visited
their parents last Sunday.
You
_i
will never
Taste
Better
Bread
than that which ^
any woman ||
can make with fg
The Wonderful Yeast I
that took the First Grand Prize p
at the St. Louis Exposition. :
Yeast Foam is sold by all gro- |fi
cers at 5c a package—enough ^ |
I for 40 loaves. Send a postal M
g! card for our new illustrated
il book "Good Bread: How to
| Make It.”
NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. h
CHICAGO, ILL. |s
for Vour Protection
we place tills label on every
package of Scott's Emulsion.
The man with a fish on his back
is our trade-mark, and it is a
guarantee that Scott’s Emul
sion will do all that is claimed
for it. Nothing better for lung,
throat or bronchial troubles in
infant or adult. Scott’s Emul
sion is one of the greatest flesh
builders known to the medical
world.
We'll scad yoa a sample free.
SGOTT &. bowne, 40%roeri„Rr\ret
Cyrus Campbell of Grand Island,
Neb., arrived last Monday. He is vis
iting friends here.
Nora O’Malley went home Friday
evening returning Sudday eve.
The Christensen dance was a fail
ure last Saturday on account of the
hard rain all day.
Mr. and Mrs. Stebner and Mr. Put
man’s folks visited Mr. Otto Nilson’s
last Sunday.
Estella Ross visited Saturday after
noon with Emma Thavenet.
ATKINSON.
Rural Route No. l with Roy Beck
as carrier, starts Monday morning.
Mail only delivered to those who
have boxes.
Miles Welch and Tom Kelly of
South Omaha, came up Tuesday and
went out to the lakes Wednesday
morning with Ed Purdy and J. P. Mc
Nichols for a week’s outing.
Hiram Shutts of the Cottage hotel,
has completed a fine system of water
works which supplies his building
with pure water furnished by wind
mill power.
P. A. Callen and family of Battle
Creek, arrived in Atkinson last Sat
urday. Mr. Callen informs us that
he will commence building a residence
on his farm as soon as carpenters can
be secured.
Fred Hitchcock met with a very
painful accident last Saturday. While
driving cattle the lash of the whip
struck him in the eye. Dr. Douglass
was called and advised him to go to
Omaha to have it treated. Mr. Doug
lass went with him and returned last
night. He reports that they operated
on him, taking out the injured eye to
save the other. He will stay at the
hospital until he recovers.
M. E. Kerl, Harry Howorth and
Robert Kloke of West Point, came up
the latter part of last week and went
out on a fishing and hunting trip to
the lakes with Ed Purdy, returning
the first of this week. They report
that they secured the limit. An in
cident occurred on the trip that old
fishermen say happens but once in a
lifetime. While Messrs. Kloke and
Purdy were fishing for pickerel from a
boat Mr. Kloke had a strike and as
he went to land him he broke loose
and got away with the hook and a
part of the line, a moment after Mr.
Purdy had a strike and after landihg
a fine pickerel they discovered they
had captured the same fish with the
lost hook and line in his mouth.—The
Graphic.
STUART
Will Sangster lias sold hie Niobrara
ranch and with George Sutherland is
going to Seattle to look up a location.
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Gilroy and fam
ily are going to move on a farm near
Bagley, Iowa, in Green county. Mr.
Gilroy will take charge of the farm of
Mr. Willard Zelmar, who is at pres
ent, here buying Ilolt county horses
and cattle for his Iowa ranch.
L. M. Weaver lias sold his residence
property in Stuart to a man from
Iowa, who lias also purchased the
Lusk ranch near the Niobrara river.
Mr. and Mrs. Weaver will soon go to
Seattle, Washington, to live, near
which place Mr. Weaver owns an in
terest in some copper mines. There
will be no chance in the management
of the First National bank, of which
Mr. W. avcr is president, as he expects
to be in Stuart a part of the time in
future.—Tile Ledger.
Insomnia and Indigestion Cured.
“Last year I had a very severe at
tack of indigestion. I could not sleep
at night and 1 sulfered most excruci
ating pains for three hours after each
meal. I was troubled this way for
about three months when I used
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets and received immediate re
lief,” says John Dixon, Tullamore,
Ontario, Canada. For sale by P. C
Corrigan.
Plans to Get Rich
Are often frustrated by sudden
breakdown, due to dyspepsia or con
stipation. Brace up and take Dr.
King’s New Life Pills. They take
out tire materials which are clogging
your energies, and give you a new
start. Cure headache and dizziness
too. At Corrigan’s drug store 25c.,
guaranteed.
New Cure For Cancer.
All surface cancers are now known
to be curable by Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve. Jas. Walters of Dullleld, Va.,
writes: “1 had a cancer on my lip for
years that seemed incurable till Buck
len’s Arnica Salve healed it and now
it is perfectly well.” Guaranteed
cure for cuts and burns. 2r»c at Cor
rigan’s drug store.
Ese> as m Sign of Intellect.
Generally the special point of differ
ence between unimportant and remark
able people lies in their eyes, in the
clear, steady, piercing gaze - which is
able to subdue or terrify the beholder,
writes Lady Violet GrevUle in the
Graphic. Sir Richard Burton’s look
could never be forgotten; neither, I
imagine, could Napoleon’s or Victor
Hugo’s or that of any other great man.
The eye is the window of the brain,
and through it shines the intelligence.
Nothing to Fear.
Mothers need have no hesitancy in
continuing to give" Ohambelain’s
Cough Remedy to their little ones as
it contains absolutely nothing injur
ious. This remedy is not only per
fectly safe to give small children, but
is a medicine of great worth and mer
it. It has a world wide reputation
for its cures of coughs, colds and croup
and can always be relied upon. For
sale by P. C. Corrigan.
Don’t Borrow Trouble.
It is a bad habit to borrow any
thing, but the worst thing you can
possibly borrow is trouble. When
sick sore, heavy, weary and worn out
by the pains and poisons of dyspepsia,
billiousness and Bright’s disease, and
similar internal disorders, don’t sit
down and brood over your symptons,
but fly for relief to Electric Bitters.
Here you will lind sure and perma
nent forgetfulness of all your troubles
and your body will not be burbened by
a load of debt disease. At Corrigan’s
drug store, price 50c guaranteed.
a waicn a variation.
As to the sympathetic vagaries of
watches a correspondent writes: “I dls
tovered some years ago that it was the
metal buckle of my braces that caused
the irregularities of my own particular
watch. I therefore now make a rule
of putting my spectacle case on the in
side of my watch pocket, thus cutting
off the connection."—London Chroni
cle. _
Full of Tragic Meaning
Are these lines from J. H. Simmons
of Casey, la. Think what might have
resulted from his terrible cough if he
had not taken the medicine about
which he writes. “I had a fearful
cough that disturbed my night’s rest.
I tried everything but nothing would
releive it until I took Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colas, which completely cured
me.” Instantly relieves and perma
nently cures all throat and lung dis
eases; prevents grip and pnemonia.
At Corrigan’s, druggist, guaranteed.
50c and $1. Trial bottle free.
Wounds, Bruises and Burns.
By applying an antiseptic dressing
to wounds, bruises, burns and like in
juries before inflamation sets in, they
will heal without maturation and in
about one-third the time required by
the old treatment. This is the great
est discovery and triumph of modern
surgery. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm
acts on this same principle. It is an
antiseptic and when applied to such
injuries causes them to heal very
quickly. It also allays the pain and
soreness and prevents any danger of
blood poisoning. Keep a bottle of
Pain Balm in your home and it will
save you time and money, not to men
tion the inconvenience and suffering
svcli injuries entail. Eor sale by P. C.
Corrigan.
Ayers
Doctors first prescribed
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral over
60 years ago. They use it
today more than ever. They
Cherry
Pectoral
rely upon it for colds, coughs,
bronchitis, consumption.
They will tell you how it
heals inflamed lungs.
" I had a very bad cough for three years.
Then 1 tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. My sore
lungs were soon healed aud my cough dropped
away.”
Mrs. Pearl Hyde, Guthrie Centre, la.
55c., 50c.. pi.00. ,T. c. AYER co.,
for or.
Old Coughs
One Ayer’s Pill at bedtime insures
a natural action next morning.
At my farm 3 miles northwest of O’Neill
Friday, October 27, at I o'clock
37 HEAD OF MIXED CATTLE
15 cows and heifers, 5 steers coming 2 yrs., 14 spg. calves
Black horse 14 yrs., 1300
1 mare 9 yrs., 1200
Grey mare 7 yrs., 1500
Black horse 5 yrs., 1600
1 yearling colt
8 shoats from 501b to 1001b
Riding stirring plow
Walking stirring plow
Harrow, riding cultivator
Pulverizer, corn sheller
Check row corn planter
Mower, rake, hay sweep
Endgate seeder, 2 wagons
Hay rack, 2 sets harness
400 bushels of oats
Many other articles
TERMS—9 month’s time on sums over $10 at ten per
cent; under $10 cash.
JAMES FLEMING
J. A. Cowperthwaite, Auct n’r. J. F. O’Donnell, Clerk
NEIL BRENNAN^
___ II
The [{peat Majestic j&eel
Range op Mighti} Ann
l^onapcfj, eitshep..
Both are built on the same plan, no
breaks, no useless waste of fuel.
Carries
the
Largest,
the Best
& most
Complete
stock of
If jjou want a cheapen
one We Will sellm 7 n
jjou the Gem fon^JU
It cannot be beat In anybody’s store
for the price.
\ )
We handle the New Moline wagon
that has stood the test for more than half
a century. Buggies from $50 to $85,
nea est and nobbiest in the market; the
Lisk anti-rust tinware, which, when a
lady sees, she buys it; German heaters
and a nice assortment of other stoves,
the Retort Oak which the coal trust and
jack lrost hate more than any other
stove on sale; bale ties, tinware, glass
ware, graniteware, etc. Winter becom
ing and you will need good lamp oil, of
which we have the best; also gasolene,
linseed and other oils, as well as the
very best line of paints.
Fine Line of Guns
See our $15 beauty. Full line of
LOADED SHELLS
" °ur uIOc Counter uENRY8EAlt5<7fc8lIH.
has been marked } MAKeThe
* down to 9c, our 25 fNEST
® cent Counter down i
to 24c. IN THE
We also have 15c and 59c W0RLD
counters that beat in price
and quality anything known
I SELL EVERYTHING AT LIVING PRICES ado duKt youfomit n»
I
Lyman Waterman i
NOTARY PUBLIC
-;
Mortgages, Deeds, and Contracts i
Carefully Drawn
» ' ' --—■ »
E. H. Howland
Lumber & Gcal Co.
Will Sell You LUMBER Cheap
Send In your bill for estimate to 438 North
, s!4th Street, SOUTH OMAHA, Neb. 3 (Sin
Keep a Good Balance I
■ Your bank book shows depos- E
its and that tells the story. A H
! good balance to your credit Ej
i cures the blues and drives away B
sleepless nights. Bank balances 3
1 and credit go together. You g
can buy cheaper It it is known G
your balance is good. It helps |
to have your account in a sub- 1
stanial bank like ours. iJ
O'NEILL NATIONAL BANK I