The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 18, 1906, Image 8

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    Food to work on is food to live on.
■ A man works to live. He must live III
Bj( He does both better on /y
I Uneeda Biscuit 1
(t i the soda cracker that contains in the (fa
y most properly balanced proportions a /y
■ greater amount of nutriment than any I
food made from flour.
I Uneeda Biscuit 1
I NATIONAL BISCUIT-COMPANY I
_9L-----■■■.
f .."kTc.
I Kansas City Southern Railway f
| ••Straight as the Crow Flies’* H
I KANSAS CITY TO THE GULF |
PASSING THROUGH A GREATER DIVERSITY OF 1
CLIMATE, SOIL AND RESOURCE THAN ANY OTHER
RAILWAY IN THE WORLD, FOR IT8 LENGTH |
Along Its line are the finest lands, buI ted for growing small grain, corn, lias, Bj
cotton; for oommereial apple and peach orchards, for other fruits and ber- Kg
rles; for commercial cantaloupe, potato, tomato and general truck farms;
for sugar cane and rioe cultivation; for merchantable timber; for raising
horses, mules, cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and Angora goats. |»j
Write for Information Concerning
FREE GOVERNMENT HOMESTEADS f
New Colony Locations, Improved Farms, Mineral Lands, Rice Lands and Tlnbor
a Lands, and lor copies of "Current Events,” Business Opportunities,
Rice Book, K. C . S. Fruit Book. H4
Cheap round-trip homaseekers’ tickets on sale first and third Tuesdays of in
each month. S i
THE 8HORT LINE TO I
_"THE LAND OF FULFILLMENT w gj
H.». BUTTON, Tray. Fall. Agt. 8.0. WASHER, O. F. and T. A.
Kansas City, Ho. Kansas City, Mo. ff
P. K. KOSSI.SK, Trap. Pass, and Imlg'n Agt., Kansas City, Mo.
AiiiHiAAAAAAAAma.|l
50 YEARS’ I
EXPERIENCE j
I
t
Trade Marks
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive
tpecial notice, without charge. In the
Scientific American.
: A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest dr
; dilation of any scientltlo journal. 'Perms, $3 a
■ year; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & Co.36,B'Md^ New York.
Brauch Office. 626 F St- Washington, I). (X . fc
I ... \
-i
WASH BLUE
Costs io cents and equals 20 cents
worth of any other kind of bluings
Won’t Freeze-Spill, Break
Nor Spot Clothes
DIRECTIONS FOR USES
around in the Water,
jj&*:
Or. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco*
A check book means a whole lot to
its owner. It means his money is in
a safe place, free from all danger ol
thefortire. It means the respect ol
those with whom you deal. It means
an increase in your own self respect.
It meanse the ability to travel or buy
without 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
Calumet
Baking
Powder
Perfect In quality*
Moderate In prloe.
(First Publics, ion Dec. 28.1
SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE
Docket V No (110.
In the Circuit Court of the United States, for
the District of Nebraska.
Osmond M Brow, complainant, vs John C.
Morrow ot at., defendants. In Chancery.
hOKEOLOHUKE OF MORTGAGE
Public notice is hereby given that in pur
suance and by virtue of a decree entered in
the above cause on the 14th day of March.
1UU5, I, Geo. 11. Thummel. Special Master In
Chancery of the Circuit Court of the United
-tates tor the District of Nebraska, will, on
the 30th day of January, 190(1, at the hour of
nine o'clock In the forenoon of said day, at
the front door of the Holt county court-house
building, in the city of O’Neill, Holt county,
state and district of Nebraska, sell at public
auction for cash tho following described pro
perty, to-wlt:
The north one-half (n!4)of section thirty
(30) and the west one-ludf (wli) of the
west one - half (will of section
twenty-nine(29), all In township twenty-six
(28) north, of range eleven (11), westoftbe
Sixth P. M., In Holt county, Nebraska.
GEO, H. THUMMEL,
Special Master In Chancery.
Crofoot & Scott, Solicitors for Complain
ant. 27-5
(First Publication Jan. 4.)
NOTICE.
Charles K. Walker, defendant, will take
notice that Lewis M. Keene, trustee, plaint
iff, has tiled a petition In the district court of
Holt county, Nebraska, the object and pray
er of widen are to quiet the title of plaintiff
In and to section thirty-flvo, township thirty,
range nine, In Holt county, Nebraska, and to
obtain a decree that delendant has no Hen
on or interest In said lnnd.
The defendant Is required to answer said
petition on or before tho 12th day of Feb
ruary, 1900.
Dated December 27,1905.
28-4 LEWIS M. KEENE, Trustee.
By Courtrlglit & Sldner, his attorneys.
NOTICE. — To Francis E. Perkins,
Non-ltesident Defendant:
You are hereby notified that on the
2d day of Jan., 1906, Laura Perkins
filed a petition against you in the dis
trict court of Holt county, Nebraska,
the object and prayer of which are to
obtain a divorce from you on the
grounds that you have been guilty of
extreme cruelty toward her. You are
required to answer said petition on or
before Monday, the 12th day of Febru
ary, 1906. Laura Perkins, Plaintiff.
Notice.
The State of Nebraska,Holt County ss.
In County Court: Notice is hereby
given that, petition having been tiled
in the county court of Holt county,
Nebraska, for the appointment of an
administrator of the estate of Peter
Mohr deceased, late of said county.
The same is set for hearing at 10
o’clock a. m., on Monday, the 5th day
of February, 1906, at the office of the
county judge, in O’Neill, in said
county, at which time and place all
persons interested in said estate may
appear and be heard concerning said
appointment.
Given under my hand and official
seal this 16th day of January, 1906.
30 3 C. J. Malone, County Judge
rroposais r or v auit.
Sealed proposals will be received at
the office of the County Clerk of Holt
county, Nebraska, until 12 o’clock m,
the 23rd day of February, 1906, for the
construction of a storage vault to be
built over the vault now used by the
county treasurer, said vault to be of
the same dimensions and to be con
structed of the sane material as the
vault now used by the county treasur
er. Bidders will be requlrea to furnish
their own plans ana specifications,
also to give a good and sufficient bond
for the fulfillment of their contract.
The board of supervisors reserve the
right to reject any or all bids.
All bids to be sealed and marked
“proposals for construction of vault.”
Date O’Neill, Neb., Jan. 17, 1906.
W. P. Sitnar, County Clerk. 30-4
It Happened In Vineland.
, “Shay, off’sher,” the man with the
liquid burden remarked to the police
man, “shee all ’em houses runnln’ by?”
“Sure,” replied the policeman good
humoredly, “I see them.”
“Well, when nuin’r six-twent’fi’ comesh
’long shtop it, causlie ’at’s mine!” —
Philadelphia Ledger.
The Salta In the Ocean.
The salts of the sea have fed through
out all time countless living things
which have througed its water and
whose remains now form the rocks of
continents or lie spread in beds of un
known thickness over CG,000,000 square
miles of the 143,000,000 square miles of
the ocean’s floor. They have lent the
substance to build the fringing reefs
of the land and all the coral islands of
the sea, and there are at present on
the basis of an average salinity of 3Vj
per cent in the 290,700,000 cubic miles
of water which make up the ocean’s
1 90,000,000,000,000,000 tons, or 10,173,
000 cubic miles, of salt. This is suffi
cient to cover the areas of all the
lands of the earth with a uniform layer
of salt to a depth of 1,000 feet.
' a HEARTY LAUGH. ' t
It Is ft Dleiftiitx. Tliin Reflex of a San*
■ hiny Sonl.
The cold, chilling atmosphere which
sometimes pervades a reception or oth
er social gathering is often entirely
dissipated by the hearty, ringing laugh
ter of some simple, genuine soul who
Is bubbling over with fun. The stiff
ness and constraint which a minute
before embarrassed the whole com
pany are relieved as if by magic.
There is something in genuine, spon
taneous humor which removes all re
straint, scatters embarrassment, re
lieves tension and welds souls together
as no introduction or conversation can.
It puts the shy at ease, dissipates prej
udice, gives confidence to the timid and
reassures the shrinking soul. The
cheery smile or the spontaneous laugh
awakens sympathy and arouses feel
ings of friendliness. It seems to melt
all barriers.
Oh, what riches live in a sunny soul!
What a blessed heritage is a sunny
face, to bfe able to fling out sunshine
wherever one goes, to be able to scat
ter the shadows and to lighten sorrow
laden hearts, to have power to send
cheer into despairing souls through a
sunny and a radiant heart! And if,
haply, this heritage is combined with
a superb manner and exquisite per
sonality, no money wealth can com
pare with its value.
This blessing is not very difficult of
acquisition, for a sunny face is but a
reflection of a warm, generous heart.
The sunshine does not appear first
upon the face, but in the soul. The
glad smile that makes the face radiant
is but a glimpse of the soul’s sunshine.
—O. S. Marden in Success Magazine.
UNIQUE FEATS.
Odd Physical Tricks That People
Here and There Can Do.
A group of traveling men were dis
cussing unique feats and physical
tricks that people here and there
can do.
“1 know a Chicagoan,” said one,
“who can whistle a tune and hum its
accompaniment at the same time. He
whistles through a flat, not through tho
usual round hole, and the deep, musical
accompaniment together with the shrill
sweetness of the whistle makes a
mighty attractive thing to hear.”
“I knew a barber,” said the second
drummer, “who had a unique way of
cracking nuts. Ho wrould place a nut
between the back of his head and a
stone or brick wall, and then he would
give himself a sharp rap on the fore
head with his fist. The nuts would
crack open every time.”
“A Manayunk man,” said the third,
“can give his head a jerk that turns
back his eyelids. He has to turn them
down again with his fingers. This is
an ugly feat, and I’m glad It is rare.”
“I knew at school,” said the fourth
drummer, “a boy named Bucky Ad
ams who could play tunes by snapping
his fingers. The thumb and first two
fingers of each hand would work away
busily, and forth would come the clear
est, sweetest, faintest music. I used to
sit with Bucky Adams, and many a
tedious school session would he make
shorter and pleasanter with this odd
gift.”—-New York Press.
i urc uuve uu.
If olive oil congeals in freezing
weather, it is a sign that it is adulter
ated with lard. Very few bottles of so
called olive oil will stand this simple
test—in fact, we seldom get the pure
thing, and, if we did, the chances are
that we could not eat it. At least, that
was the experience once upon a time of
one woman who used a great deal of
mayonnaise dressing upon her table
and had supposed that she doted on
olive oil. An Italian friend bestowed
upon her a flask of the peculiarly green
fluid. To her surprise, not one of her
family, herself included, could bear its
taste. There was a tang to it which
showed them that they had never eaten
olive oil before and that they never
wanted to eat it again. So they gave
the flask away.—New York Telegram.
Thackeray’s Apology.
Thackeray once wrote in a note to a
friend, alluding to an incident occa
sioned by one of his articles in Punch:
“I thought over the confounded matter
in the railroad and wrote instantly on
arriving here a letter of contrition and
apology to Henry Taylor for having
made what I see now was a flippant
and offensive allusion to Mrs. Taylor. I
am glad I have done it. I am glad
that so many people whom I have been
thinking bigoted and unfair and un
just toward me have been right and
that I have been wrong, and my mind
is an immense deal easier.”
A Great Idea.
“My new play is sure to make a hit,”
said the great actress. “It gives me an
opportunity to display twenty new
gowns."
“Gracious!” exclaimed her friend.
“How many acts?”
“Only four, but in one of them the
scene’s at a dressmaker’s.”—Philadel
phia Press.
Talents.
As to the great and commanding tal
ents, they are the gift of Providence
in some way unknown to us. They rise
where they are least expected. They
fail when everything seems disposed to
produce them, or at least to call them
forth.—Burke.
Evolution.
"There is an old proverb that a man
becomes what he eats.”
“Then I suppose all the cannibals
will be missionaries in time.”—Cleve
land Leader.
Philosophy does not regard pedigree
She did not receive Plato as a noble
but made him^ so.—Seneca.
The O'NEILL BOTTLING WORKS
R. J."MARSH, Proprietor
Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages
CIDER MANUFACTURERS
REAL ESTATE
I have good farms for sale at reason
able prices and on good terms. Parties
buying will be conveyed to and from
land free of cost. May find me 4 blks.
west First Nat’l Bank. Address is
O’Neill, Neb. 20-3m B. A. JOHRING
A- 9.
Abstract Ces^aitf
Title Abstractors
Office in First National Bank Bldg.
J. C. HORISKEY
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Flour, Salt, Country Produce
JO HNH OR ISKEY
Drayman
our property handled without smashing It
and delivered when and where you want it.
& - - ■ ' ■ ■ »
Lyman Waterman
NOTARY PUBLIC
Mortgages, Deeds, and Contracts
Carefully Drawn
«-■■■■■■■■ ..... —»
OR- J- P- GILLIGAN
Physician and Surgeon
Calls may be left at Gilligan & Stout drug
store or at residence 1 block north and V%
east of stand pipe Phones: Office 41, res. 10
DR. P. J. FLYNN
Physician and Surgeon
Night Calls will be Promptly Attended
Office: First door to right over Corrigan’s
Telephone Nos.: Office, 58; Residence, 96
R. R. DICKSON
^ Lawyer &
REFERENCE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK, O'NEILL
E. H. BENEDICT
LAW & REAL ESTATE
Office first door South of U. S. Land Office
M. J. ABBOTT
Attorney - at - Law J^4
PAGE, NEBRASKA IP
Speo'al attention given to collection* and
probate business.
D. W. CAMERON
Practical Cement Worker
Manufactures Cement Walks, builds
Foundations, Caves, etc. 'In fact all
cement work neatly and promptly
done. Address, Atkinson or O’Neill
V. ALBERTS
MPQ* A DEALER IN
Harness & Saddlery Goods
Also Agent for
Bliss Native Herbs, 200 days treatment for SI
and money refunded if not benefltted. Also
Wheeler & Wilson Ball Bearing Sewing Maoh.
E. H. Howland
Lumber & Coal Co.
Will Sell You LUMBER Cheap
Send In vour till for estimate to 438 North
24th Street. SOUTH OMAHA, Neb. 3-6m
Dr. E. T. Wilson
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
(Late of the U. S. Army)
Successsor to Dr. Trueblood. Surgery
and Diseases of women.
SPECIATLIES:
EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROA1
Spectacles correctly fitted and Supplied.
O'NEILL, NEB.
SHORTHORN BULLS
AND HEIFERS
SCOTCH tops on best BATES fami
lies, 35 BULLS 14 to 26 mo. old. 2(
HEIFERS and 10 COWS bred to oui
line Scotch bull MISSIES PRINCE
75402. Over 200 head in heard to select
from. These are the cattle for westerr
men,as they are acclimated. Come anc
see them or write for prices.
THE BROOK FARM CO.,
J. R. Thomas, foreman O’Neill. Holt Co.,Net
Scottish
Sharon---.
OF GREYTOWER 153330,
Assisted by Imported KING TOM 171879.
Both prize-winning bulls o:
the Pan-American, heads the Ak-Sar
Ben home herd of Shorthorns. Yount
bulls for sale.
J. M. ALDERSON & SONS,
Chambers, ... Nebraska
$ “ !
^ ONLY ?
^ Double Track J
^ RAILROAD ^
^ Between Missouri River and ^
Chicago
^ Direct line to St. Paul
^ and Minneapolis.^
^ Direct line to the Black
^ Hills, South Dakota.
Q Only line to Bonesteel,
n s. d., the Rosebud Indian
^ Reservation.
X Through sleeping car
9 service to Omaha, making
\ direct connections at Om
9 aha Union Station for
^ Chicago and all points east.
W No delays, no change of
^ cars, Northwestern all the
^ way.
9 Apply to nearest agent for
V rates, maps and time cards, or
Jk write to—
^ JOHN A. KUHN.
A. U. P. and P. A., Omaha
Chicago & Northwestern Railway
TRAINS EAST
t Passenger, 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.
‘Daily; tDally, exoept Sunday.
E. R. Adams, Agent
(M'Umar & Sioux Falls Ry.)
Going East.
LEAVE O’NEILL ARRIVE SIOUX C’Y
7:00 a.m. 164 Passenger 11:50 a.m.
6:30 p.m. 324 Mixed 6:20 a.m.
Going West.
LEAVE SIOUX C’v ARRIVE O’NEILL
5:00 p. m. 163 Passenger 9:50 p. m.
4:00 a. m. 323 Mixed 3:50 p. m.
- Vj
felose connections at Sioux Olty for all
points. For rates and" further Information
call on or address—
F. E. Willis, Agent
HOTEL
EVANS
■'
ONLY FIRST-CLASS
HOTEL IN THE CITY
FREE BUS SERVICE
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
THE O’BEILL
ABSTRACT *00,
Compiles
Abstracts of Title
THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB
STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY
SUCCESSOR TO S. B. HOWARD
PALACE
Meat Market
All Kinds of Fresh and Sait Meats
Cash paid for poultry and hides. If
you find it inconvenient to call at the
market, give us your order. Phone 47
16th to 30th every month