The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 05, 1906, Image 5

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INMAN
There is a valuable addition to the
Logaman family in the form of a boy,
which came to their home last Wed
nesday.
Mr. Frank Rogers of Kansas City
came to Norfolk early this week and
with his sister and cousin came up to
Inman to visit his mother, Mrs.
Garnet.—Tlie News.
CHAMBERS
F. D. Smith and Chas. Allen are at
tending court in O’Neill this week.
Mr. Tangeman and a professional
bronco rider from O’Neill went out to
the Whinnery ranch, near Swan, after
a bunch of wild horses which Mr.
Tangeman will take care of this
summer.
Will Majors had the misfortune to
lose a valuable horse, Tuesday, by its
getting fast in the floor of their new
barn and breaking its leg. As there
was no chance of recovery he was ob
liged to have it shot.—The Bugle.
STUART
Frank Saunders of Stanton, a form
er resident of Holt county, was in
town the fore part of the week.
Fannie Gallagher resumed teaching
Monday morning after her school be
ing closed for a couple of weeks on ac
count of scarlet fever.
Rev. Light is holding a series of
meetings at Dustin this week. He
was to preach there last week but for
some reason the meetings were post
poned.
Albert Brodie came up Saturday
evening from Orchard, his home, to
visit with parents and relatives at
Brodie. He returned Monday morning.
—The Advocate.
ATKINSON
'J. F. Brook and Wm. Dickson have
been at Dustin this week on hunting
bent. They returned with an even
dozen geese.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitman, who came
here to attend the wedding of Harmon
Tower and Tillie Christenson, return
ed to their home at Laurens, Iowa,
Tuesday morning.
Jed Landon shipped a car of horses
to Vermont, Sunday. Chas. Baumann
went along to look after their well
fare, and expects to visit his old home
in Pennsylvania before returning.
J. L. Miller, arrived from Holstein,
Iowa, last week and moved onto the
farm he recently purchased near In
glis. His father, G. A. Miller, came
out with him and will stay until his
son is settled.
John McNichols returned from Oma
ha, Saturday, where he went in com
pany with John Ballon and Dell Atkin,
wno are undergoing medical treat
ment.
A. E. Vroman, of Pilger, is stopping
in Atkinson, waiting for the high
water in the Holt to go down, prepar
atory to moving onto his Kinkaid
homestead southwest of town.
H. Pruss’ house in Emmet is nearly
completed and they will move down
there to make their home in the near
future. Mr. Pruss has lived in Atkin
son a good many years and has made
many friends who will regret his going.
His house will be occupied by J. M.
Morgan as soon as vacated.—The
Graphic.
EWING
H. B. Boll of Levy, Iowa, is here
Bread
keeps fresh longer
Bread
tastes far better H
Bread
| does you more good
| when it’s made with
YEAST
FOAM
the wonderful yeast
that took the First Grand Prize
j at the St. Louis Exposition.
Yeast Foam is sold by all gro
cers at 6c a package—enough
for 40 loaves. Senji a postal card
for our new illustrated book,
j “Good Bread: How to Make It.’*
NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO.
CHICAGO, ILL.
I
Does Your
Heart Beat
Yes. 100,000 times each day.
Does it send out good blood
or bad blood ? You know, for
good blood is good health;
bad blood, bad health. And
you know precisely what to
take for bad blood — Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla. Doctors have
endorsed it for 60 years.
One freqnent cause of bad blood is a sluggish
liver. Tins produces constipation. Poisonous
substances are then absorbed into the blood,
instead of being removed from the body daily
as nature intended. Keep the bowels open
with Ayer’s Pills, liver pills. All vegetable.
A Made by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Maas.
Jm Also manufacturers of
JLA f HAIR VIGOR. 's
/ 1 9901* O AGUE CURE.
A JaLfo CHERRY PECTORAL.
—M—M'l nillHIWItt———WB
visiting with his brothers, J.L. and D.
G. Roll.
Messrs. Harmon, Miller and Knapp
of Orchard, were In town Tuesday.
They came to meet the fish commis
sioner’s car and received some speckled
trout to plant in the Verdigris.
Miss Alma Bailey gave a party last
Saturday evening in the hall over Mc
Clow’s store, in honor of the class of
’06. A large number were present
and indulged in games until 11 o’clock,
when refreshments were served, after
which they dispersed to their homes,
having enjoyed themselves immensely.
A banquet given in honor of Mrs. E.
S. and Miss Lou Gilmour at Fraternal
hall Wednesday night by the O E. S.
D. of II. R. N. and Ladies’ Aid Socie
ties of Ewing, was attended by 65 per
sons who report a most delightful
evening. The bill of fare wasas usual,
the best of everything with an abun
dance for all.
Our postmaster has received an or
der from the post office department or
dering him to commence April 1st,
and keep acount on the business of our
R. F. D. route from here, as a test as
to the advirability of continuing.
This is a matter that all the patrons
are interested in The should see to
it that all their business is done over
their routes. All correspondence
should be mailed on the route and
atamped paper's as well as money or
ders should be purchased of the mail
carrier. See to this if you wish to
have the route continued.—The
Advocate.
PAGE
Oral Brown of O’Neill is here visit
ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A
Brown.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Wallace
French, March 23, a baby girl. All
are doing well.
Will Brown of Center, Knox Coun
ty, was here over Sunday visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Brown.
W. P. Evans of the Meadow Grove
Press was a pleasant caller at the .Re
porter office last week.
Mrs. B. L. Clark was called to
Minneola to see her mother who is
dangerously ill. Ekel Brown accom
panied her.
David Farnsworth returned from
the coast last Saturday. He came to
settle up some business, get his trunk,
etc., and start west again on Wednes
day. He has accepted a position as
cashier in a bank atCalienta, Nevada.
A citizen’s caucus was held at the
school house, Friday evening for the
purpose of placing in nomination five
condidates for Village Trustees to be
voted for at the election, April 3. The
meeting was called to order by N. B.
Ooover, and Robert Gray was elected
chairman and M. J. Abbott, secretary.
L. H. Downey and Ed Gallagher were
appointed tellers. The meeting pro
ceeded to vote by ballot; 37 being cast.
The five having a majority were: C.
A. Townsend, N. B. Coover, L. H.
Downey, G. H. Cherry, John Gray,
and they were declared the nominees.
This ticket is favorable to the re
striction of the liquor traffic, and
some other things for good order, pro
gress and public safety.—The
Reporter.
For Weak Digestion.
No medicine can replace food, but
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets will help you to digest your
food. It is not the quantity of food
taken that gives strength and vigor to
the system, but the amount digested
and assimilated. If troubles with a
weak digestion, don’t fail to give these
tablets a trial. Thousands have been
benefitted by their use. They only
cost a quarter. For sale by Corrigan.
For Rent—The Carlon farm adjoin
ing O’Neill, Neb., runting water good
pasture and meadow, etc. Write
Thomas Carlon, Court House, Denver,
Colo.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
IMPORTANT MILITARY POSTS.
Those At Fts. Robinson and Nionr&ra
To Be Enlarged.
A Washington special to the Lincoln
Star says:
Nebraska will get one of the largest
military posts that the war depart
ment is planning to build, and also the
lacation of a camp for the great sum
mer maneuvers.
It is practically decided that Fort
Robinson shall be the place for the en
larged post and Fort Niobrara for the
maneuvers. The Nebraska delegation
have been laboring hard to secure two
of the large posts, one for Robinson
and one foi Niobrara.
Senators Millard and Burkett called
on the secretary of war this morning
in an effort to have Fort Niobrara de
signated as a permanent artillery post
and also to see what might be done for
the improvement of Fort Robinson.
Secretary Taft stated that the neces
sity of service would require the per
manent enlargement of Fort Rob
inson and that the department had
perfected plans to that end provided
Congress would afford the required
appropriation.
Upon learning these facts it was
agreed that Senator Burkett should
Introduce a bill in the Senate today,
appropriating $400,000 to be expended
at Fort Robinson for permanent build
ings and other necessary works under
plans furnished by the war office.
Both Senators Burkett and Millard ex
pressed the opinion today that the
Senate would sanction the bill.
The secretary of war said further
that it was not the intention of the
deportment to abandon Fort Niobrara
as a millitary reservation, but that it
would be retained for the regular an
nual army maneuvers during the sum
mer, where iroops from all posts
would be assembled.
THE COFFEeTpLANT.
A Native of Abyssinia That was
Transported to Arabia.
The origin of coffee is lost in the
mists of antiquity, but the plant Is be
lieved to be a native of Abyssinia and
to have been carried thence Into Arabia
early in the fifteenth century, whence
the Meccan pilgrims soon carried It to
all parts of the Mohammedan world.
A bureau of commerce and labor pub
lication notes that Burton in his “Anat
omy of Melancholy” (1021) makes tills
reference to it: “Turks have a drink
called coffee, so named from a berry
black as soot and as bitter, which they
sip up hot, because they find by experi
ence that that kind of drink so used
helpeth digestion and promoteth alac
rity.”
Although brought to Venice by a phy
sician in 1501, it was only in 1052 that
the first coffeehouse was established
In Loudon, and it only became fashion
able in Paris in 1009, says the same
authority. England gradually forsook
coffee for tea, but the progress of the
beverage, though slower, was steadier
In France.
Until 1000, when the Dutch began to
successfully grow coffee trees in Java
from the Malibar (India) bean, all cof
fee came from Arabia. The coffee cul
ture of the West Indies and Central
and South America had its beginnings,
It is said, in a slip taken from a tree In
the botanic gardens at Paris, which
had obtained a vigorous growth from a
cutting said to have been stolen from
the botanic gardens at Amsterdam. All
the plantations of the old and new
world are practically derived from the
specimens taken from Arabia, first to
India, thence to Java and elsewhere.
ANTIQUE SEVRES.
Yon Can Always Distinguish the Gen
uine by Its Gliding.
False Sevres in the bric-a-brac shops
Is offered as genuine by “reputable
dealers” in London and Paris as well
as in New York. It Is old, it Is true,
but only as old as the “restoration” in
France, although the marks would indi
cate a much earlier and better period.
The counterfeits may usually be de
tected by the surface of the gilding.
In the real It was burnished in lines
by means of metal nails with rounded
points, which were set in a piece of
wood.
The imitations of later date than the
real have been burnished in a similar
manner, but with an agate. It re
quired considerably more force to ob
tain a bright surface by the ancient
method than by the use of the agate
point; hence the burnished lines in the
genuine ware are perceptibly sunken,
while In the counterfeit ware they are
flush with the general surface of the
gilding. There are other means of
“spotting” the imitations, such as the
inexact copying of the marks which
have served since 1753 to denote the
date of fabrication, and the use of
chrome green, which was not discov
ered until 1802, but the test of the
burnished parts of the ‘gilding is the
easiest for the ordinary buyer.—New
York Herald.
Standing Room Only.
The Lawyer—So your wife has sued
you for a divorce, eh? Will she have
any standing in court? The Client—
I’m afraid so. From the nature of the
evidence she threatens to bring in there
won’t be half enough seats to accom
modate the crowd.—Chicago News.
SelflslkneM.
There are some tempers wrought up
by habitual selfishness to an utter in
sensibility of what becomes of the for
tunes of their fellow creatures, as If
they were not partakers of the same
nature or had no lot or connection at
all with the species.—Sterne.
Colonist Low One-Way Second Class
Rates
To San Francisco, Los Angeles,
Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Boise City,
Spokane, Walla, Ogden, Salt Lake
City, Butte and other points in Mon
tana, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and
the Pacific Coast, Via the Chicago,
Union Pacific & North-Western Line,
February 15th to April 7, 1906, inclu
sive. Attractive side trips at very
low rates. Daily and personally con
ducted excursions in Pullman Tourist
sleeping cars, only $7.00 for double
berth from Chicago (accomodating
two people,) through to the Pacific
Coast without change of cars. Choice
of routes. Excellent train service.
Dining cars, (meals a la carte). For
tickets and full information apply to
agents Chicago & North-Western R’y.
Last Hope Vanished.
When leading physicia is said that
W. M. Smithart of Pekin, la., had in
curable cansumptlon, his last hope va
nished; but Dr. King’s New Discovery
for consumption, coughs and colds
kept him out of his grave. He says:
“This great specific completely cured
me and saved my lile. Since then, I
have used it for over ten years and con
sicer it a marvelous throat and lung
cure. ’’Strictly scientific cure for coughs
sore throats or colds; sure preventive
of pneumonia. Guaranteed, 50c and
$1 bottles at Corrigan’s drug store.
Trial bottle free.
John Schmidt, an old settler of
Keya Paha county, has started on a
trip to Germany to visit his mother,
who has attainad the age of 117.
Cheated Death.
Kidney trouble often ends fatally,
but by choosing the right medicine E.
H. Wolfe of Beargrove, la., cheated
death. He says: “Two years ago I had
kidney trouble which caused me great
pain, suffering and anxiety, but I took
Electric Bitters, which effected a com
plete cure. I have also found them of
great benefit in general debility and
nerve trouble, and keep them con
stantly on hand since, as 1 find they
have no equal ” Corrigan guarantees
them at 50c.
Through the endeavors of Congress
man Kinkaid and Senator Millard an
appropriation has been secured for a
$100,000 government building at
Kearney. ______
A Daredevil Ride
often ends in a sad accident. To heal
aecidential injuries use Bucklen’s Ar
nica Salve.“ A deep wound in my foot
from an accident,” writes Theodore
Schuele of Columbus, O., “caused me
great pain. Physicians were helpless,
but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve quickly
healed it ” Soothes and heals burns
like magic; 25c at Corrigan’s.
A baby monkey was recenty born to
pair of monkies owned at Fremont.
Frightful Suffering Releived.
Suffering frightfully from the viru
lent poisons of undigested food. C. G.
Grayson of Lula, Miss., took Dr. King’s
New Life Pills, “with the result,” he
writes, “that I was cured.” All
stomach apd bowel disorders give way
to their tonic, laxative properties. 25c
at Corrigan’s drug store, guaranteed.
After drinking a half pint of whisky
Jasper Higginbotham of York became
violently insane and committed sui
cide. __
Rheumatism Makes Life Miserable.
A happy home is the most valuable
possession within the reach of man
kind, but you cannot enjoy its com
forts if you are suffering from rheu
matism. You throw aside business
cares when you enter your home and
you can be relieved of those rheumatic
pains also by applying Chamberlain’s
Pain Balm. One application will give
you relief and its continued use lor a
short time will bring about a perman
ent cure. For sale by Corrigan.
Very Low Rates to Second Annual
Reunion of Northern Settlers'
Association at San Antonio,
Texas.
Via the North-Western Line. Meet
ings are to be held April 20 and 21.
Excursion tickets will be sold on two
dates, April 3 and 17, with favorable
return limits. Apply to agents Chi
cago & North western R’y.
Caught Cold While Hunting Burglar.
Mr. Wm. Thos. Lanorgan, provincial
constable at Chapieau, Ont., says: “I
caught a severe cold while hunting a
burglar in the forest swamp last fall.
Hearing of Chamberlain’sCough Rem
edy, I tried it, and after using two
small bottles I wos completely cured.”
This remedy is intended especially for
coughs and colds. It will loosen and
relieve a severe cold in less time than
by any other treatment and is a favor
ite wherever its superior excellence
has bscome known. For sale by P. C.
Corrigan. _
A barber by the name of McGuire
was arrested at Norfolk for wife
desertion and placed in the Madison
county jail. _
Grip Quickly Knocked Out.
“Some weeks ago, during the severe
winter weather, both my wife and my
self contracted severe colds, which
speedily developed into the worst kind
of la grippe with all its miserable
symptoms,” says J. S. Egleston of
Maple Landing, la. “Knees and joints
aching, muscles sore, heak stopped up,
eyes and nose running, with alternate
spells of chills and fever. We began
using Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy,
aiding the same with a double dose of
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets, and by its liberal use soon
completely knocked out the grip. Sold
by P. C. Corrigan._
Ministers at Westerly, R. I., will
not perform the marriage ceremony
for people who have been divorced.
Keep your bowels regular by the use
of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets. There is nothing better.
For sale by P. C. Corrigan.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature ef
— and has been made under his per
sonal supervision since Its infancy.
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*
Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio
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 ALWAY6
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THC CENTAUR COMPANY, YY MURRAY CTRKCT, NtW YORK CITY.
K. C. 'is,
Kansas City Southern Railway
••Straight aa the Crow Files”
KANSAS CITY TO THE GULP
! PASSING THROUGH A GREATER DIVERSITY OF
CLIMATE, SOIL AND RESOURCE THAN ANY OTHER
f RAILWAY IN THE WORLD, FOR ITS LENGTH
Along Its Una are the finest land*, ml ted for growing small grain, corn, flu,
cotton; for commercial apple and peach orchards, for other fruits and ber
f i rleB; for commercial cantaloupe, potato, tomato and general truok farms; .
for sugar cane and rice cultivation; for merchantable timber; for raising
horse9, mules, cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and Angora goata.
, Write for Intarmatlen Concerning
; | FREE GOVERNMENT HOMESTEADS f
New Colony Loostlons, Improved Forms, Mineral Lands, Rles Lands and Timber
Lands, and for copies of “Current Events," Business Opportunities,
Rles Book, K. C. $. Fruit Book.
Cheep ronnd-trip homsseekers' tickets on sale first and third Tuesdays of K
each month.
THE 8HORT LINE TO
"THE LAND OF FULFILLMENT”
H. D. BUTTONS Trav. Fase. Agt. M. O. Turn, O. V. and *. A. H
Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo.
WINCHESTER'
FACTORY LOADED SMOKELESsI
POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLSl
Good shells in your gun mean a good bag 1
in the field or a good score at the trap. I
Winchester “Leader” and “Repeater” ■
Smokeless Powder Shells are good shells. I
Always sure-fire, always giving an even I
spread of shot and good penetration, their K
great superiority is testified to by sports- I
men who use Winchester Factory Loaded I
Shells in preference to any other make. I
ALL DEALERS KEEP THEMI
Figures that
Fascinate^
are those on the pages oj a bank book.
Each entry means a lot. It means a
certuin measure of succoss and inde
pendence. Monay in the bank makes
a man of you, with the respect of your
fellow citizens. Why not start an
account at our bank? It needn’t be a
large one at first. You can make it
larger as fast as you like.
O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK