The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 30, 1905, Image 5

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    LOCAL MATTERS.
See McNichols for (lour, feed and
grain. ll-3mo
John Brennan went to Fremont
Wednesday.
Go to Brennan’s if in need of bale
ties.
Mrs. L. G. Gillespie is visiting at
Tilden.
County Clerk Gihnour had business
at Omaha a few days this week.
Do not sell your grain until you see
McNichols. ll-3mo
Editor Miles of the Independent
had business at Sioux City yesterday.
For farm loans see Lyman Water
man, O’Neill. 45-tf
' Loans on farm and city property.—
E. H. Benedict. 44-tf
For Rent—A farm five miles north
west of O’Neill. 21-4 Nora Marren.
I have 320 acres of choice hay land
for sale; prices $2,000.—Neil Brennan.
23—2.
Perkins Brooks has been elected
janitor of the public school building
bv the school board.
An O’Neill girl says that all through
her teens she longed to be 20. She
still has that same longing.
Dr. Wilson reportsa girl at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Eggert in
Shields township, born Tuesday.
Barred Plymouth Rock Roasters and
Pullets for sale. 22-3
Ernest Beaver, Leonie, Neb.
For Sale—100 thoroughbred Lang
shan pullets. $; per dozen; full blood
ed roostar with each dozen. A. L.
Wilcox, Ray, Neb. 21-4pd
For Sale or Rent—An 8-room house
two blocks west and one block north
of the convent.
18-8-pd Mrs. J. J. McNichols.
At the next meeting of the Ancient
Order of United Workmen, next Tues
day evening, officers will be elected
for the ensuing year.
Yesterday at the county judge’s
office Ben F. Conant of McHenry, N.
D, and Maud Waring of Middle
Branch, this county, were unitea in
mariiage.
By Wednesday, December 6, I will
be located in my new building on
Douglas street where anything in the
jewelry line can be had.—W. M.
Lockard.
xne entertainment given oy tne
ladies of the Episcopal church Tues
day evening was a paying and success
ful affair, despite the desperate condi
tion of the weather.
Tlie prize turkey seen this year was
brought to town by a farmer the oth
er day. He was a beauty and weigh
ed twenty-four pounds. Nightwatch
man Ivane secured him for Thanks
k giving dinner.
T All seasons of the year have been
represented the past few days. Mon
day soaking summer showers fell, ac
companied by lightening and thunder
in the evening. Tuesday broke cold
and frozen and developed symptons of
a blizzard.
Will Davis, a former O’Neill typo
graphical artist, is, with his wife
spending the week with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Davis. Will has
been at Sioux Falls, S. D., the past
two years, and comes to O’Neill for a
visit before going to Sheldon, la.,
where he has a position as foreman in
a printing establishment.
I You I
Must I
use ft
YEAST
Foam
1 The Wonderful Yeast r
If you want
to make
■ Bread
1 that is
Bread
^ Yeast Foam Is the yeast
jjl that took the First Grand
Prize at the St. Louis Expo
Si sition. Sold by all grocers
fpj at 5 cts. a package—enough jff
p| for 40 loaves. Send a postal
$$ card for our new Illustrated . Eg
K book “Good Bread: How to ; V
Make lid* ^
| NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. j
I CHICAGO, ILL.
Ask Your
OwnDoctor
If he tells you to take Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral for your
severe cough or bronchial
trouble, then take it. If he has
anything better, then take that.
But we know what he will say;
for doctors have used this
cough medicine over 60 years.
“ I have used Ayer’s Cherrv Pectoral for
hard colds, bad coughs, and influenza. It has
done me great good, and 1 believe it is the
best cough medicine in the world for all
throat and lung troubles.”- Eli C. STUART,
Albany, Oregon.
/ft Made by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
Also manufacturers of
9 SARSAPARILLA.
/lifers stfvm
Keep the bowels open with one of
Ayer’s Pills at bedtime, Just one.
Chas. J. Holt of Chicago will give a
series of Temperance Lectures in
O’Neill, commencing Wednesday even
ing, Nov. 29, continuing every even
ing daring the week and closing on
Sunday evening with a Union Gospel
Temperance Service. The lectures
will be given at the court-house, be
ginning promptly at 8 p. m. Every
body invited. Admission free.
The Sunday question at West Point
lias been settled by the passage of an
ordinance by the city council allowing
business houses and stores to transact
business on Sunday between the hours
of 8 in the morning and 1 in the after
noon. In the same ordinance the sa
loons are absolutely forbidden to do
business on Sunday and the closing
hour for week days is set at 11 o’clock.
Sunday, Dec. 3rd Rev. L. A. Gro
theer, the Evangeline Lutheran min
ister of Chanbers, will again deliver a
German sermon in the Union Church,
near Mr. Ernest’s place. Divine ser
vices will begin at 10:30 a. m. All
readers that understand German
preaching are requested to attend
this worship. Also inform your Ger
man friends and neighbors of this
meeting, that they, too, might in
crease the attendance. **
It is stated that Bernard McGreevy
will apply to the district court for a
change of venue, lie fearing that an
impartial jury could not be obtained
in this county. McGreevy,like every
other man, is entitled to a fair trial
before the courts and if he thinks
Holt county people are prejudiced
should be given a trial in another
county. It is probable, however, that
is fair a jury could be drawn here as
elsewhere as the Elkhorn Valley bank
failure is pretty generally aired
throughout the state.
The following item is'found in the
daily papers, sent from McCook, Neb.,
Nov. 27: The nuptials of Miss Ethel,
only daughter of Mr. Albert Barnett,
president of the Barnett Lumber com
pany, and Mr. J. Raymond McCall,
were consummated last evening at
3:30 o'clock, in the pretence of a com
pany of relatives and friends. The
groom is private secretary to Congress
man Norris of the Fifth Nebraska
district. The couple departed on the
night train for Washington, D. C.” Mr.
Barnett, father of the bride, was
formerly in the lumber business in
O’Neill, when his daughter was but a
little child.
O’Neill merchants are proving the
profitableness of judicious advertising
They have opened up on the public in
a manner that gets the trade. Not
withstanding the very unfavorable
conditions of the weather, people have
been coming to O’Neill the past week
from miles around and adjoining
towns to take advantage of the offer
ings made by our merchants. It is a
well recognized fact that O’Neill mer
chants keep extensive lines that give
quite as good an assortment as larger
department stores. The idea in ad
vertising is to have something to ad
vertise and do it in as few words and
as big letters as possible. O’Neill
merchants have got the idea and are
doing the business.
Somebody who has probably had ex
perience wetting and twisting the ends
of the kids shoestrings in the morning
expresses his feelings tliusly: “The
modern shoelace is an abomination;
yet we have to put up with if. It is
either a foot too long or six inches too
short. It is made flat, as a rule, but
soon becomes twisted and kinky. One
end is eternally getting longer than
the other. The tips come off. In the
old days we made strings of calf skin.
Every farmer was an expert. We
would cut a disc of leather three or
four inches in diameter, stick the
point of a sharp knife blade in a board
place i lie tb imb nail the thickness of
a matcli lrom it, and quickly draw the
string through the opening, the peri
meter being reduced the thickness of
a match at every measure of the cir
cumference. Pretty work! Then the
square string was rolled between the
sole of the shoe and the lloor till per
fectly round, after which it was greas
ed with tallow. Such a lace would last
for months, buttheir.shine soon wears
off, giving them a much-worn appear
ance.”
WHELAN CHEERED
O’Neill Lawyer [Addresses Sons of
Erin at Meeting in Omaha.
Omaha World-Hearld: Tlfe United
Irish Societies of Omaha and Soutli
Omaha joined in a memorial demon
stration in commemoration of the
martys of Manchester Allen, Larkin
and O’Brien—In the hall at Fourteenth
and Douglas streets Friday night.
Irish songs and speeches which flamed
with the patriotic love for Erin con
stituted the program of the evening.
Back of the chairman was hung the
green banner of Erin, while on either
side were draprd the Hags of the Unit
ed States. The chandeliers were
festooned with red, white and blue
streamers. "Michael Hogan presided
at the meeting and recited in a brief
a history of the execution of Michael
O’Brien, William Philip Allen and
Michell Larkin, the three Irishmen
who were hanged at Manchester, Eng
land, November 23,18ti7, ostensibly for
the murder of Sergeant Ilenn, an Eng
lish police officer, who was shot in an
attempt to free two Irish nationalist
prisoners whom he was conducting to
jail.
The speaker of the evening was E.
H. Whelan of O’Neill, Neb., who was
cheered to the echo time and again as
he recounted in graphic manner the
death of the martyrs and affirmed that
the breath which left their bodies on
the scaffold Bred anew the waning
cause of independence into a flame
which would notdie till English domi
nation had passed entirely away. He
spoke of the memorial celebration as
one of the saddest and at the same
time one of the most glorious events
in the history of Ireland’s struggle for
independence. He said that an Irish
American could be true to the land of
his adoption and still feel the patrio
tic thrill and the same reverence and
love for his mother soil. He referred
to the hanging of the three Irishmen
as judicial murder and said that it
was brought about by a corrupt and
perjured English judge and jury be
cause the victims were Irish, not
because they were murderers.
There were tears in the eyes of the
audience as Mr. Whelan described the
scene of the last moments of the
martyrs whose dying words were “God
save Ireland.” He averred that there
is as much potential rebellion in Ire
land today as ever and that it needs
but the right spark to explode it
The victories gained for Ireland in
parliament, he said, were but steps in
the emancipation of the land which
could end only with the establishment
of a republic upon her soil.
Car load of bale ties at Brennan’s.
A Disastrous Calamity
It is a disastrous calamity, when
you lose your health, because indiges
tion and constipation have sapped it
away. Prompt relief can be had in
Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They
build up your digestive organs, and
cure headache, dizzine.s, colic, consti
pation, etc. Guaranteed at Corri
gan’s drug store, price 25c. ’
I-~Z~i
[HE above picture of the
man and fish is the trade
mark of Scott’s Emulsion,
and is the synonym for
strength and purity. It is sold
in almost all the civilized coun
tries of the globe.
If the cod fish became extinct
it would be a world-wide calam
ity, because the oil that comes
From its liver surpasses all other
Fats in nourishing and life-giving
properties. Thirty years ago
the proprietors of Scott's Emul
sion found a way of preparing
: od liver oil so that everyone can
take it and get the full value of
the oil without the objectionable
taste. Scott’s Emulsion is the
best thing in the world for weak,
>ackward children, thin, delicate
•eople, and all conditions of
wasting and lost strength.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists
409-415 PEA HI. STBEKT, NEW TOBJC
50c. and $1.00. All druggists.
I RURAL WRITINGS j
[Items from the country are solicited for
this department. Mall or send them Inna
early ui the week as possible; items received
later Than Wednesday can not bo used at ah
and It is preferred that they be in not later
i than i i.» shay. Always send your u a in* with
items that wo may know who they are from
Name of sender not for publication, rtoo that
your writing is legible, especially names ami
fdaces, leaving plenty of space between the
Ines for correction. Be careful that what
you tell about actually occurred.1
Phoenix Pick-Ups
Howard Greeley was at home Sat
urday.
Kay Coburn had business In town
last week.
Mrs. Nilson was an Atkinson visitor
last week.
Howard Wagner took dinner at L.
G. Coburn’s Saturday.
A1 MeMain was a caller at John
Dameros last Saturday.
Mr. Parshall was a caller at Mr.
Wagners Sunday.
Helen Coburn visited school in Dist
rict No. 51 last Friday.
Mrs. Dameros and Edith went to
town and back Tuesday.
Ralph and Jessie Coburn spent Sun
day evening at John Dameros.
Sylva Coburn visited at her grand
mothers the first of'the week.
Wright Hitchcock of Atkinson was
at Phoenix over Sunday.
Sam Abdnor returned from Lyman
County, South Dakota last week.
Ben Reiser of Badger attended Sun;
day School at Phoenix Sunday last.
Mr. Culver who used to live here is
renewing acquaintances at Phoenix at
present.
A dance was given at the McKath
nle home last Saturday evening. A
good time is reported.
Vesta Barnett closed her school Fri
day for a two weeks vacation and went
to her home at O’Neill Saturday.
Friend Keeler and Fred Anderson
returned from Boyd County last week,
where they iiave been husking corn.
Isabella McKathnie accompanied
by Bessie Cannon and Ethel Anderson
visited at Will Hitchcocks near town
last week.
Geoige Sylie, John and Edith
Damero, Bert and Roy Parshall and
John Storjohann attended a party at
the latters home last Wednesday
evening and report a good time.
Man’s Unreasonableness
is often as great as woman’s. But T.
S. Austin, manager of the Republican
of Leavonwortli, Indiana, was not un
reasonable, when he refused to allow
the doctors to operate on his wife for
female trouble, “Instead,” he says,
“we concluded to try Electric Bitters.
My wife was then so sick, she could
hardly leave her bed, and live (5) phy
sicians had failed to relieve eer. After
taking Electric Bitters she was per
fectly cured, and can now perform all
her household duties.” Guaranteed
by P. C. Corrigan, druggist, price 60c.
“I Thank the Lord!”
cried Hannah Plant of Little Rock,
Arkansas, “for the relief I got from
•Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. It cured uiy
fearful running sores, which nothing
else would heal and from which T had
suffered for 5 years.” It is a marve
lous healer for cuts, burns and wounds
and guaranteed at Corrigan’s drug
store, 25c.
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
— and has been made under his per
{JrL sonal supervision since its infancy.
/■ecccA'C/lt Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
The KM You Have Always Bought
Bn Use For Over 30 Years.
THf OKNTAUR COMPANY. YT MURRAY STRKKT. NCW YORK OITV.
iiiniii mi—!■ nun——I—mmmmwm
The Markets
South Omaha, Novmber IK).-—Special
Market letter from Nye & Buchanan
Choice steers.$4 !>0(«>5 40
Fair to good. 4 00(0)4 80
Cows and heifers. 2 50(0)3 37
Grass Cows. 2 00(o)2 00
Good feeders. 3 30(<«3 75
Good yearlings. 3 25(o>3 75
Canners. 1 50(o)2 00
Bulls. 1 75(0)3 25
Veal. 3 50(q)5 50
Milkers and Springers.$25 to $45
The hog market has shown a steady
decline for several days and we think
should now be more settled. Range
$4.70 to $4.85.
Sheep receipts are still liberal.
Eyes am a Sign of Intellect.
Generally the special point of differ
ence between unimportant and remark
able people lies in their eyes, in the
dear, steady, piercing gaze which is
able to subdue or terrify the beholder,
writes Lady Violet Greville 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.
Croup.
A reliable medicine and one that
should always be kept in the home for
immediate use is Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy. It will prevent the attack
If given as soon as the child becomes
hoarse, or even after the croupy cough
appears. For sale by P. C. Corrigan.
Chicago & Northwestern Railway
TRAINS EAST
tPassenger, No. 4, 3:00 a. 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.
tFreight, 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; tDally, except Sunday.
E. R. Adams, Agent
1
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
*
The I
Food Value i
of a Soda Cracker I
You have heard that some foods furnish fat, Mq
other foods make muscle, and still others are jW
tissue building and heat forming. H
You know that most foods have one or more m
of these elements, but do you know that no S
food contains them all in such properly balanced M
proportions as a good soda cracker ? aMl
The United States Government report shows aW
that soda crackers contain less water, are richer Ml
in the muscle and fat elements, and have a much Ml
higher per cent of the tissue building and heat Bf
forming properties than any article of food made §jf
from flour. Mr
That is why (Jneeda Biscuit should Vw
| form an important part of every meal. They U
represent the superlative of the soda cracker, all B
their goodness and nourishment being brought H
from the oven to you in a package that is proof H
1 against air, moisture and dust—the price being MB
too small to mention. ffjk
NATIONAL BISCUIT?COMPANY *!