S UPER VISOR SESSIONS Official : Publication : of : Proceeding O’Neill, Neb., Jan. 9, 1906.—Board of supervisors of Holt county met at one o’clock p m. Galled to order by the county clerk. Present: Supervisors Clark, Kramer and Keyes, also Supervisors elect Phillips, Root and Skidmore. Messrs Kramer and Clark were ap pointed a commfttee on credentials. Committee on credentials reported that Messrs. Phillips, Root and Skid more were duly elected and had filed their bonds and were entitled to seats as members of the board. On motion the report was accepted. The election of chairman being next in order. Supervisors Keyes and Clark were appointed as tellers. A ballot being taken resulted as follows: O. F. Biglin, one vote; C. D. Keyes, one vote; F. W. Phillips, four votes. Mr. Phillips having received a majority of ajl the votes was declared elected chairman for the ensuing year. The bids for a bridge between sec tions 34 and 35, 25-12 were opened and considered by the board. Committee to appraise school land in 16-27-9 reported as follows: NWiofSEi 16-27-9 at *7.00 per acre. SW of SE 16-27-9 at *7.00 per acre. The report was accepted. Committee to appraise shool land in 36-25-9 reported as follows: NWi SW 36-29-9 at *7.00 per acre. NE SW 36-29-9 at *8.00 per acre. NW SE 36-29-9 at *10.00 per acre. SW SW 36-29-9 at *7.50 per acre. On motion the report was adopted. Committee to appraise school land in 36-25-9 reported as follows: SW SE 36-25-9 at *10.00 per acre. SE SE 36-25-9 at *10.00 per acre. On motion the report was accepted. On motion the contract for building the bridge between section 34 and 35 25-12 was awarded to Geo. W. Farr at *6.50 per foot, said bridge to be 16 ft roadway with 3-in floor and 4 pile to the bent. On motion the board adjourned until nine o’clock tomorrow morning. W. P. Simar, Clerk. F. W. Phillips, Chairman. O’Neill, Neb., .Tan. 10,1906.—Board called to order at nine o’clock a. m., all members present. Minutes of yesterday session were read and approved. On motion the following bonds were approved: JUSTICE OF PEACE Isaac Millspaugh.Francis Patrick Barrett.Emmet Peter Lineburg.:.Sheilds W A Gannon.Inman P J Lansworth.Paddock Peter Greely. Saratoga J B Torbet.Steel Creek Silas Rohr.Dustin TOWNSHIP CLERK Van Humphrey.Pleasant View CE Havens.Atkinson Geo McCormick.Deloit Charles Brockman.Shamrock OC Sammons.Sheridan ROAD OVERSEER DI8T NO. Thos A Phillips.28 L M Rhodes.29 Fred Yiske.30 U C Gunter.31 Bread keeps fresh longer Bread \ tastes far better Bread does you more good when it’s made with YEAST FOAM | the wonderful yeast that took the First Grand Prize at the St. Louis Exposition. Yeast Foam Is sold by all gro cers at 6c a package—enough for 40 loaves. Send a postal card for our new illustrated book, ij j “Good Bread: How to Make It.” | NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. CHICAGO, ILL. S9IEII PIT LIFE" —That’s what a prominent druggist said of Scott’s Emulsion a short time ago. As a rule we don’t use or refer to testimonials in addressing the public, but the above remark and similar expressions are made so often in connec tion with Scott’s Emulsion that they are worthy of occasional note. From infancy to old age Scott’s Emulsion offers a reliable means of remedying im proper ajid weak develop ment, restoring lost flesh and vitality, and repairing waste. The action of Scott’s Emulsion is no more of a secret than the composition of the Emul sion itself. What it does t does through nourish ment—the kind of nourish ment that cannot be ob tained in ordinary food. No system is too weak or delicate to retain Scott’s Emulsion and gather good from it. We will send you a sample free. Ec sure that this picture in the form of a label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. SCOTT & BOWNE Chemists 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c. and $1; all druggists. UAAuten. 33 Fred Kilty.38 Wm Hull.42 John Walter .51 John Kennedy.53 Chas M Allen.55 SARSAPARILLA. flyers a™ Hasten recovery by keeping the bowels regular with Ayer’s Pills. patent medicines containing danger ous bromides. Mrs. Kraft received.u talegram Wednesday morning from Dr. Lord, Omaha, saying that Miss Ida Kraft had undergone a surgical operation and was doing as well as could be ex pected. She had the appendix and 200 gallstones removed. Her father will remain with her for a few days.— The Ledger. ATKINSON Howard Greely, by a recent decision of the Interior department, retains the title to a quarter section of land in Gregory county, S. D., upon which he had established a squatters right and one Henry E. Cole afterwards filed a soldier’s declaratory, the de partment holding that the squatters right was good. The many friends of Howard in this part of the country are pleased over the decision which gives him a valuable quarter section upon which he had establised a home. There seems to be a feeling among the members of the different town ship and school boards throughout the western part of the county that the board of supervisors should em ploy an expert to check up the differ ent funds and put them on a footing so that they will know just where they are at. A good many of them have not had an accounting for years and it has been impossible with many to tell In what financial condition their districts are in, and we think the taxpayers of tire county will glad ly be burdeded by a reasonable amount to be paid as a fee to an expert to thoroughly check up every school district and township in the county. n iai^c uutuuci ui me uuaiuuss men of Atkinson met with a committee representing the South Fork and the Green Valley Independent Telephone companies at the office of Havens & Stilson, last Tuesday afternoon, to discuss the advisability of establishing an Independent telephone exchange in our city. Dr. McDonald was made chairman of the meeting and Dell Akin secretary. The prevailing opin ion seemed to favor the building of thelexchange, for the reason that the several independent country lines that have built into Atkinson have no medium of exchange, unless they contract with the Inter-State Tele phone Co-, which is a part of the Bell system, and that they refuse to do. This forces the business men and patrons of the different lines to be inconvenienced with several phones which is undersirable and expensive. The following committee was appoint ed to make further invesigations and report at some future time fixed by the chairman, M. Campbell, J. E. Brook, Will Schultz, W. B. Argan bright, Dell Akin.—The Graphic. Danger of a Cold and How to Avoid Them. More fatalities have their origin in or result from a cold than 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 recognized as the most prompt and effectual medicine tn use lor 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. _______ 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. 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._ 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. Sickening Shivering Fiti 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 P. C. Corrigan’s drug store; price 50c, guaranteed. f^pSTORIA || For Infants and Children. I The Kind You Have I Always Bought 1 Bears the -~|l Signature Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- KB : ness and Rest.Contains neither ■ _r* Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. h U1 Not Narc otic . afoun-siHuumauR (I hm*km Semt- i Mx.Smum - 1 ■ _ ******* I ■ % in tew. I ®W ft#**- ) I ll^p A perfect Remedy for Cons tipa- Jit UOO Ron. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea B Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- Hi Hiiav I ness and Loss OF Sleep. || |,Q| UVul Facsimile Signature of I Thirty Years iC ASTORIA TNIOINTMmMMWMV. Hit* VMM «?V. r.T. IIlHHnHHHnBBHBMBMHBB A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly of Chambeilain’s Congh Medicine. Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the sup 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. “The Bridge” Born of Sorrow. “My poem entitled ‘The Bridge,’" said Longfellow, “was written In sor row, which made me feel for the loneli ness of others. I was a widower at the time, and I used sometimes to go over the bridge to Boston evenings to meet friends and return near midnight by the same way. The way was silent, save here and there a belated footstep. The sea rose or fell among the wooden piers, and there was a greut furnace on the Brighton hills whose red light was reflected by the waves. It was on such a late, solitary walk that the splr't of the poem came upon me. The bridge has been greatly altered, but the place of It Is the same.” 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 cuts, burns and sores. 25c at P. C. Corrigan’s drug store. What m "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.” 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._ Half Rates to Golf Tournament Mexi co City, Mex.. Via the North-Western Line. Ex cursion tickets will be sold at one fare for the round trip, January 1 to 12, in clusive, with favorable return limits. Apply to agents Chicago & North Western R’y;_ Very Low Rates to Beatrice, Neb., Via the North-Western Line. Ex cursion tickets will be soid 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. 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. _ CASTOR IA Tor Iqfants and Children. The Kind Yon Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of WINDS AND DRAFTS. The Former Are Beneficial, kaf the Latter Are Dangtroaa. By a draft Is meant the currents of nlr in an inclosed space. Our fore fathers attributed nearly all the evils that beset them to drafts, and they would not have slept in uncurtained beds for anything. Of course their windows and doors were shaky, and houses stood far apart, so drafts were nearly inevitable. But the modern sci entific world tries to deny drafts alto gether and calls them winds, which are harmless and even healthy to a certain degree. Any one who cares to find out the difference between a wind and a draft can do so in any apartment which has windows on different sides of the house. Let him open a window on a windy day on the side of the house toward which the wind blows. The air which comes in is quite harmless if the person exposed to it be dressed in warm clothes, and little children may take the air in a room thus ventilated. But let him open a window past which the wind blows, and it will be found that the air in the room is moved by a number of currents, all of which strive to reach the opening. It is the passing wind which sucks up the air in the room and draws it out, and this causes the room to have what is called a draft The effect upon sensitive persons is immediately felt, like the forerunner of pain to come. A draft will always be felt as colder than the wind. Very dangerous drafts are those that are produced in railway cars by the rapid motion of the train. It is not wind that gets into the carriages, but the air of the car which is sucked out. A lighted match held to the chink of the window will prove this, as the flame will be drawn toward the window, not blown from it. ■\vl ■ THE 1906 World Almanac and Encyclopedia Is On Sale All Over the United States It Is a volume of nearly 700 pages, and sells for 25c. Sent by mail for 35c. A reference book of unusual value, almost indespensable to any man of business, or in the professions. It contains more than 1,000 timely topics and presents over 10,000 facts such as arise daily for answering. Election statistics, agricultural, financial, ed ucational, railroads, shipping, etc., through all the list of topics where new figures are most valuable. 34 col umns of index. Send for this Standard American Annual. Address— THE WORLD Pulitzer Building New York City