The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 04, 1906, Image 5

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M At the Madden farm 6 miles northwest of j|
H O’Neill, commencing at 10 a.m. on g
g ^
I Tuesday, Jan. 9,19061
! 8 head of Horses I
| 32 head of Cattle |
1 J. I. Case Threshing i
| Machine with 14 Horse Pwr. 1
1 AND A LOT OF FARM MACHINERY I
I See large bills for full list and terms. Free lunch served I
| Wm. JILG, Owner 1
§ Col. H. W. Phillips, Auct. David B. Grosvenor, Clerk g
Spoiled Her Beauty.
Harriet Howard, of 200 W. 34th St.,
New York, at one time had her beau
ty spoiled with skin trouble. She
writes: “I had Salt Rheum or Eczema
for years, but nothing would cure it,
until I used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.”
A quick and sure healer for cut§, burns
and sores. 25c at P. C. Corrigan’s
drug store. .
It Happened In Vineland.
“Shay, off’sher,” the man with the
liquid burden remarked to the police
man, “shee all ’em houses runnin’ by?’’
“Sure,” replied the policeman good
humoredly, "I see them.”
“Well, when num'r six-twent’fi’ comesh
’long shtop ft, caushe ’at’s mine!” —
Philadelphia Ledger.
Very Low Rates to Denver, Colo.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold on Jan. 28,
29 and 30, limited to return until Feb.
15th, inclusive, on account of Wool
Growers and Live Stock Association
Meetings. Apply to agents Chicago
& North-Western R’y.
You
* * * ' iftJ..'£•
will never
Taste
Better
Breed
I than that which f
any woman
can make with
Yeast
Foam
I The Wonderful Yeast
that took the First Grand Prize ||
at the St. Louis Exposition.
Yeast Foam is sold by all gro- %
cere at 6c a package—enough
§§ for 40 loaves. Send a postal |
casd for our new illustrated I
§? book “Good Bread: How to
Make It.”
NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO.
CHICAGO, ILL.
CAMELS OUTDONE. '
Creatures That Go For Extended Pe
riods Without Drinking.
Other creatures than the camel are
able to get along for extended periods
without drinking. Sheep in the south
western deserts go for forty to sixty
days in winter without drink, grazing
on the green, succulent vegetation of
that season. Peccaries in the desert of
Sonora live in little dry hills where
there Is no natural water for long peri
ods. They cannot possibly find water—
in fact, for months at a time. The only
moisture they can obtain comes from
roots and the fruits of cacti, but the
most extraordinary case is that of the
pocket mouse, one of the common ro
dents of the desert. Xhis little creature,
by the way, has a genuine fur lined
“pocket” on the outside of its cheek.
When it is hungry it takes food from
this pocket with its paw, just as a man
would pull a ham sandwich from his
pocket. One of these mice has been
kept for three years with no other food
than the mixed bird seed of commerce.
During this period it had not a taste of
either water or green food. Other ex
perimenters have found, in fact, that
these mice in captivity refuse such
treats, not seeming to know that water
is good to drink. The bird seed put be
fore this mouse contained not more
than 10 per cent of moisture, which is
less than is necessary for digestion.
Stuff so dry as this cannot even be
swallowed until It is moistened by
saliva. Yet this remarkable mouse
gave nothing but his time to.the inter
ests of science. He suffered nothing in
health or spirits during his captivity.—
Brooklyn Eagle.
A Grim Tragedy
is daily enacted, in thousandsof homes,
as Death claims, in each one, another
victim of Consumption or Pneumonia.
But when Coughs and Colds are prop
erly treated, the tragedy is averted.
F, G. Huntley, of Oaklandon, Ind.,
writes: “My wife had the consump
tion, and three doctors gave her up.
Finally she took Dr. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, Coughs and
Colds, which cured her, and to-day
she is well and strong.” It kills the
germs of all diseases. One dose re
lieves. Guaranteed at 50c and $1.00
by P. C. Corrigan druggist. Trial
bottle free.
The Cellars of Bordeaux.
The cobwebs will seem to an impres
sionable visitor the noblest tilings in
the Bordeaux cellars. Some of them
look like thick pile curtains, somber in
hue, of course, but famously suggestive
of warmth. And with even only a
moderate Imagination one may go to
and fro among the barrels fancying the
pendent shapes overhead are dusky
stalactites instead of the airy next to
nothing as they really are. If you hold
your candle high enough you may
shrivel a few yards of the fabric. But
that were truly a shocking deed of
vandalism, for, though no layman can
understand why this dismal tapestry
is reverenced as It is, his ignorance will
not be held sufficient excuse for his
crime—Chambers’ Journal.
Brennan has bale ties for sale.
What a "Hurricane" la,
“Hurricane” is the old Spanish name
for a West Indies cyclone, but it Is
used by modern meteorologists to des
ignate a long continued wind of ex
treme violence. In Beaumont’s scale
the different winds are classed as
“light,” “gentle,” “fresh” and “strong”
breezes. The next Is a “stiff” breeze,
then a “strong” wind and then we
strike the “gales.” The “gales” run
through three or four classes, the last
merging into the “hurricane.”
Very Low Rates to Lincoln, Neb.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold Jan. 13 to
18, inclusive, limited to return until
Jan. 22, inclusive, on account of Vari
ous Agricultural, and Stock Breeders’
meetings Epply to agents Chicago
& North-Western R’y.
Impoverished soil, like impov
erished blood, needs a proper
fertilizer. A chemist by analyz
ing the soil can tell you whn +
fertilizer to use for different
products.
If your blood is impoverished
your doctor will tell you what
you need to fertilize it and give
it the rich, red corpuscles that
are lacking in it. It may be you
need a tonic, but more likely you
need a concentrated fat food,
apd fat is the element lacking
in your system.
There is no fat food that is
so easily digested and assimi
lated as
Scott’s Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil
It will nourish and strengthen
the body when milk and cream
fail to do it. Scott’s Emulsion
is always the same; always
palatable and always beneficial
where the body is wasting from
any cause, either in children
or adults.
We will send you a sample free.
Be sure that this pic
ture in the form of a
label is on the wrapper
of every bottle of Emul
sion you buy.
scon t BOWHE
CHEMISTS
409 Pearl St. Jew Tort
50c. and $1.00.
All Druggists.
SYMPATHETIC LISTENERS
The Help They May Afford to Slow
and Indifferent Talker*.
At no time more than when a thought
| is struggling toward Expression should
; a friend bear with a friend’s iuilrml
i ties. A deep sympathy should he pour
ed out with lavish affection about the
one who is seriously striving to say
some real thing. In this atmosphere of
patient, sympathetic Intelligence the
inept word, the crude phrase, the whol
ly inadequate expression will be en
abled to do their work, and the thought
transference will be effected; the
thought will be safely lodged In the
mind of the other, slightly bruised lu
transit, but intact and intelligible.
With an “I kuow what you mean,”
“Exactly,” or “Go on; I understand,”
much help may be rendered, und at
last when the thinker of the thought
has placed his friend in possession and
by reason of this effort has entered in
to fuller possession of it himself, the
conversation is in a way to begin.
Then lavish upon the elaboration of the
thought all the beauties that can bo
woven out of words — precision, bal
ance, music—but let us, dear lovers of
language, remember to be discreetly
gentle and listen with averted glance
while the thought Is still in negligee.—
Atlantic.
The Grip.
“Before we can sympathize with
others, we must have suffered our
selvss. ” No one can realize the suffer
ing attendant upon an attack of the
grip, unless he has had the actual ex
perience. There is probably no dis
ease that causes so much physical or
mental agony, or which so successfully
defies medical aid. All danger from
the grip, however, may be avoided by
the prompt use of Chamberlain’s
plough Remedy. , Among the tens ot
thousands who have used this remedy,
not one case has ever been reported
that has resulted in pneumonia or
that has not recovered. For sale by
P. C. Corrigan.
The Real Need.
‘‘He said he would lay the earth at
my feet,” said the sentimental girl.
‘‘Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne. “It
sounds good, but it Is not practical.
You already have the earth at your
feet. What you want Is a three or four
story bouse over your head.”—Wash
ington Star.
Why He Loved Her.
Minister — Bobby, do you love your
teacher? Bobby (six years old)—Yes,
sir. Minister—That’s right. Now tell
me why you love her. Bobby —Be
cause the Bible says we must love our
enemies.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
What DI.tlnHTut.he. Man.
The difference between man and the
so called “lower animals” is that he
alone cooks his food and wears arti
ficial clothes. And these are the two
that injure his health!—St Louis Globo
Democrat
Danger of a Cold and How to Avoid
Them.
More fatalities have their origin in
or result from a cold ttian from any
other cause. This fact alone should
make people more careful as there is
ne danger whatever from a cold when
it is properly treated in the beginning.
For many years Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy has been reoognized as the
most prompt and effectual medicine
in use for this disease. It acts on na
ture's plan, loosens the cough, relieves
the lungs, opens the secretions and
aids nature in restoring the system to
a healthy condition. Sold by P. C.
Corrigan.
M*rrl*fe by Proxy.
In Holland, says a Scotch paper,
marriage by proxy Is allowed. This Is
the so called “marriage by the glove”
and is usually put in practice by a
Dutchman who is sojourning abroad
and, wanting a wife, Is too poor or
too far off to return home for one. In
Buch a case he writes home to a law
yer, who selects one conformable t* the
requirements of his client. If the gen
tleman approves he next sends the law
yer a soiled left hand glove and a
power of attorney, which settles the
business. A friend marries the woman
by proxy, and she is thereafter prompt
ly shipped off to her new home.
A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly of
Chambeilain’s Congh Medicine.
Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the sujb
erintendent of Cart Service at Kings
town, Jamaica, West Indies Islands,
says that she has for some years, used
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for
coughs, croup and whooping cough
and has found it very beneficial. She
has implicit confidence in it and would
not be without a bottle of it in her
home. Sold by P. C. Corrigan.
Very Low Rates to Beatrice, Neb.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold Jan. 15 and
16, limited to return until Jan. 19, in
clusive, on account State Volunteer
Firemen’s Association. Apply to
agents Chicago & North-Western R’y.
Stomach Troubles and Constipation.
“Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets are the best thing for stomach
troubles and constipation I have ever
sold,” says J. R. Cullman, a druggist
of Potterville, Mich. They are easy
to take and always give satisfaction.
I tell my customers to try them and
if not satisfactory to come back and
get their money, but have never had
a complaint ” For sale by P. C. Cor
rigan.
Renew for The Frontier.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
"way* Bought
simila ting the Food andRegula- ■ _
ting the Stomachs andBowels of ■ j363iTS txI8
- ~ I Signature
Promotes Digealion.CheerfuI~ ■
ness and Rest.Contains neither |H
Srium,Morphine nor Mineral. ■ 01
ot ^Narcotic. |
n*vttfoun-siMunmaiBi «
M' v ! t
HMx.Smmt * ] U
KmMUSJ*- I M
* 1
teSUlt. I !,1
HfnttSn'U- I
) |
Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa- I
Hon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea H
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- :1§ An mm
! ness and Loss of Sleep. H I* OF Ul 8 I
Facsimile Signature of
I Thirty Years
r_ jgWMggB n A qtii n i m
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. || ||H|f I l||l|ll
MUSIC’S MIGHTY REALM.
In It There Is but n Single and Unl«
versaI Speech.
“In the mighty realm of music there
is but one single speech.” Music forms
the universal language which, when all
other languages were confounded, the
confusion of Babel left unconfounded.
The white man and the black man, the
red man and the yellow man, can sing
together, however difficult they may
find it to be to talk to each other. And
both sexes and all ages may thus ex
press their emotions simultaneously,
for in vir ae of the power of the ear to
distinguish side by side those differing
but concordant notes -which make up
harmony there Is not only room, but
demand, for all the qualities of voice
which childhood, adolescence, maturity
and old age supply. Thus a love of
music is much more frequent than a
love of painting or sculpture, and you
will reach the hearts and touch the
feelings of the majority of mankind
more quickly by singing them a song
than by showing them a picture. In
truth, the sensitiveness of the ear to
melody and to harmony is so great that
we not only seek to gratify it when
bent upon recreation, but even In the
midst of the hardest labor we gratify
It if we can—London Catholic Times.
Uneer Little Blunders.
From an account of the Doncaster
(England) Art club’s annual exhibition
In the Doncaster Gazette: “Miss -
also goes In for portraiture. In bitting
off her father’s head her intentions are
good, but the execution lacks very much
in artistic finish.”
In the London Mall’s description of a
parade In honor of the king of the Hel
lenes the reporter said: “The soldiers,
clad only In their scarlet tunics, pre
sented an unpleasant contrast with the
warmly clad members of the police
force.”
From the windows of a British tailor:
“We have cleared a Scotch merchant’s
remains of high class overcoatings at a
big reduction.”
Not a Born Forarer.
The indorsement of checks is a very
simple thing, but, as the following story
will show, It, too, has Its difficulties:
A woman went into a bank where
she had several times presented checks
drawn to Mrs. Lucy B. Smith. This
time the check was made to the order
of Mrs. M. J. Smith—M. J. were her
husband’s initials. She explained this
to the paying teller and asked what she
should do.
“Oh, that is all right,” he said. “Just
Indorse it as It is written there.”
She took the check and, after much
hesitation, said, “I don’t think I can
make an M like that.”
Hatr.
Animal hair differs in construction
from that grown on a human head. In
human hair the upper skin is smooth
and thin. Ttw^iEcular section is com
paratively broad, forming the main
part of the hair shaft. It is striped in
appearance and carries the color mat
ter. The tubular part is thin, extend
ing to about one-fifth and'.certalnly not
more than to one-quarter of the entire
width of the hair. Animal hair also
consists of three parts, but these are
differently constructed, the tube often
filling the entire hair.
Greatly in Demand.
Nothing is more in demand than a
medicine which meets modern require
ments for a blood and system cleanser,
such as Dr. King’s New Life Pills.
They are just what you need to cure
stomach and liver troubles. Try them.
At P. C. Corrigan’s drug store. 25c.,
guaranteed.
Car load of bale ties at Brennan’s.
Sickening Shivering Fits
of Ague and Malaria, can be relieved
and cured with Electric Bitters. This
is a pure, tonic medicine; of especial
benefit in malaria, on the disease,
driving it entirely out of the system.
It is much to be preferred to Quinine,
having none of this drug’s bad after
effects. E. S. Munday, of Henrietta,
Tex., writes: “My brother was very
low with malarial fever and jaundice,
till he took Electric Bitter, which
saved his life. At F. C. Corrigan’s
drug store; price 50c, guaranteed.
Homeseeker’s Excursion to the North
west, West and Southwest.
Via th’ North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets at greatly reduced
rates are on sale to the territory indi
cated above. Standard and Tourist
Sleeping Cars, Fjee Reclining Chairs
and “The Best of Everything.” For
dates of sale and full particulars apply
to agents Chicago & North-Western
R’y- _
An agreeable movement of the
bowels without any unpleasant effect
is produced by Chamberlain’s Stomach
and Liver Tablets. Fon sale by P. C.
Corrigan.
iti
* ■—»r n- • f * t > . w
« > >•' -it /
CSfe - ,
Baking
• Powder
Compiles with tap Pure Pood UM*
of all Stataa.
" = a
A check book means a whole lot to
its owner. It means his money is in
a safe place, free from all danger of
thef or fire. It means the respect of
those with whom you deal. It means
an increase in your own self respect.
It meanse the ability to travel or buy
w ithout having to carry a lot of money
about you. We invite you to become
a ckeck book owner. It’s very easy.
O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK
- '*!
;