iQreatNorthemRailwayi I State Lands at Auction [ On certain days during June and July the State M Auditor will sell at public auction 368,000 acres of |€ State land located in Norther Minnesota. The : m terms are easy, 15 per cent down and balance any time within forty years at 4 per cent interest. *■ If For illustrated booklet containing full informa ■ tion about these sales, address S. G. IVEIiSON, ■ f State Auditor, Saint Paul, Minnesota. ** J* v* B Better take advantage of the low railroad rates via H GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY and look over B B these bargains. ■ I Township Order Books j /k j MANUFACTURED & FOR SALE /k | PERCHERON STALLIONS I IIAVK PURCHASED King George (No. 40940) &nd Genera.1 (No. 42946) of I). J. Cronin and will put them on the stand this season as follows: King George at the Dan Cronin place and General at home at the Ilagerty place. Both of these horses are thorough bred Pereberons of the purest strains, both registered. Fine style and action —call and see them. » .^P3TO|» TERMS—#10 to Inaure allotting oolt. If mnro a a m • « la sold or removed from county acrvlco be- iQIVIflC |\/| I |||An comes due at once. UdlllCO lYlUlldl -* The following animals are for serv ice Mils season at my place just north of O’Neill: Black Percheron Graden Stallion, $12.50 Bay Hambeltonian, $10 Black Spanish Jack, $10 Large Jack, weight ten hundred lbs., $12.50 If mare is soldor moved from county service fee becomes due at once. Call and inspect them; they will bear Jn __ spection. I will treat you right. A. MEKRILL O’Neill, j* j* j* Nebraska th day of June, 1907, Charles F. Dodge, plaintiff herein, filed his peti tion in the district court of Holt :ounty, Nebraska, against said de endants, the object and prayer of which are to foreclose the certificate )f tax sale, issued by the treasurer of laid county, March 8, 1904, on the iouth half of the south half of section ,hree, in township thirty-two, north >f range eleven west, in said county, >n which is due $225.53, with interest thereon from March 8, 1904, at 20 per sent per annum, and the liens for sub lequent and prior taxes on said land iy said plaintiff paid, respectively, 152.00, paid March 8, 1904; $7.65, paid June 8, 1905; $21.10, paid August 29, 1906, and $7.20, paid June 5, 1907, vith interest at 20 percent per annum in each payment from date of pay nent; and plaintiff prays that said and may be decreed to be sold to sat sfy the amount due on said certifi cate and payments with interest and costs. Said defendants are required ,o answer said petition on or before .he 22d day of July, 1907 E. F. Gray, Attorney for Plaintiff. (First Publication May 30.) NOTICE. Co Mary A. B. Leonard and husband, M. L. Leonard, first and real name unknown, non-resident defendants. You and each of you will take notice ,hat the plaintiff, Sherman Hammond, fas commenced an action in the dis ,rict court of Holt county, Nebraska, tgainst you and each of you, the ob ect and prayer of said petition being ,o quiet and confirm in him the title n and to the northeast quarter of sec ion 27, township 30, north of range 9, vest of the 6th P. M, in Holt county, Nebraska, and praying for a decree hat the cloud cast upon his title to laid land by reason of your claimed nterest be removed and that you be excluded from having or claiming to lave any interest in said premises and or other equitable relief. You are required to answer said letition on or before the 8th day of ruly, 1907. J. II. MEREDITH, 49-4 Attorney for Plaintiff. (First Publication May 30.) PROBATE NOTICE. [n the matter of the estate of Charity S. Hicks deceased: Notice is hereby given that the sreditors of said deceased will meet he executor of said estate, before me, r_a__ a tt.h V ti i -n the 24th day of August, 1907, and >n the 25th day of November, 1907, at 10 o’clock a. m. each day, for the pur pose of presenting their claims for ex imination, adjustment and allowance. Six months are allowed for creditors so present their claims, and one year 'or the executor to settle said estate, 'rom the 25th day of May, 1907. This notice will be published in The Frontier for four weeks successively, irior to the 22nd day of June, 1907. (Seal) C. J. MALONE, 4D-4 County Judge. (First Publication June 13.) NOTICE. The state of Nebraska, Holt county, is. In county court: Notice is hereby given that, petition laving been tiled in ths county court if Holt county, Nebraska, for the ap pointment of an administrator of the sstate of Samuel Pugh deceased, late if said county. The same is set for learing at 11 o’clock a. m. Monday the 1st day of July, 1907, at the office if the County Judge, in O’Neill in ;aid county, at which time and place ill persons interested in said estate may appear and be heard concerning said appointment. Given under my hand and official seal this 12th day of June, 1907. (Seal.) C. J. MALONE, 51-3 County Judge. FRED L. BARCLAY STUART, NEB. Makes Long or Short Time Loans on Improved Farms and Ranches If you are in need of a loan drop him i line and he will call and see you. rhamhprlain'c Colic' Cholera and cnamoenam S Diarrhoea Remedy. Never fails. Buy it uow. It may save life. BEER FOR BREAKFAST. The Awful Morning Meal That Was Once In Vogue In England. The breakfast appetite varies strange ly. Some persons are content with a cup of coffee and a piece of toast. Oth ers make it the most determined meal of the day. Once it was formidable indeed. In Sir John Hawkins’ "His tory of Music” is quoted a sixteenth century manuscript belonging to the house of Northumberland which gives the breakfast arrangements of the Per cy family both for Lout and for llesh days, and, oh, how some of us have fallen away in trencher work! Here is the simple Northumberland scheme: “Breakfast for my lord and lady dur ing Lent: First, a loaf of bread in trenchers, two manchets (a mauchet was a small loaf of white bread), a quart of beer, a quart of wine, two pieces of salt fish, six baconu’d her ring, four white herring or a dish of sprats. Breakfast for my Lord I’ercy and Master Thomas Percy: Item, half a loaf of household bread, a munchet, a bottle of beer, u dish of butter and a piece of salt fish, a dish of sprats or three white herring. Breakfast for the nursery for my Lady Margaret and Master Ingeram Percy: Item, a man chet, a quart of beer (this for the nursery), a dish of butter, a piece of salt fish, a dish of sprats or three white herring.” At ordinary times my lord and lady fared thus: “First, a loaf of bread in trenchers, two manchets, a quart of beer, a quart of wine, half a chine of mutton or else a chine of beef boiled.” Lord Percy and Master Thomas Percy disposed of “half a loaf of household bread, a manchet, one bottle of beer, a cheeking or else three mutton bones boiled,” while to the thirsty nursery went "a manchet, one quart of beer and three mutton bones boiled.”—Corn hill Magazine. THIEVES FROM CHOICE. Criminals, as a Rule, Steal Because They Don’t Want to Work. The theorists say that men are driv en to crime by poverty and want, but the theorists are not always right. There are no doubt some cases of men stealing or swindling to get bread, but they are very few. Not one criminal in a hundred in this country pilfers, plays burglar or highwayman because he’s hungry, but because he is a crim inal from choice and would rather steal than work. He knows perfectly well that nobody ever made a fortune or even a decent living by picking pockets or breaking into houses or rob bing people- on the streets. He knows, too, that it is only a question of time when the penitentiary gates will open for him, and yet he chooses the uncer tainties of criminal life and idleness in preference to steady work at good wages. Good times with the rest of the world signify nothing to the crim inal, except that the man he robs is likely to have a little more money In his pockets. No matter how prosper ous the rest of the world may be, its criminals are always hard up. When a sneak thief makes a haul or a foot pad gets hold of somebody's roll the first idea is to spend it. It goes at cards, in dives, groggeries, anywhere, to anybody that wants it, and, no mat ter how large the haul, in a little while it is all gone and another job must be done to get more. General prosperity means nothing to the rogue. The devil pays low wages on small contracts.—St Louis Globe-Democrat. A Minute Fish. The most diminutive vertebrate creature in the world is said to be a small fish caught in a mountain lake In the Luzon region of the Philippines. The largest of the species is less than an inch long, but its smallness may J3e best gauged by the fact that it takes about 0,000 of them to make a pound. Although so tiny, however, the fish, which is named slnarapan, Is an im portant article of diet among the Phil ippine natives. Obviously it is too small for any net and is caught in coarse muslin sheets. The fish are pre pared by being mixed with pepper and other spices and then dried in the Bun. They are a great native delicacy. Beginning Well. “Begin your stories well,” said an au- • thor, talking to a group of literary be rinners. “There’s nothing like a good oeglnnlng. Indeed, it’s half the bat tle.” Then, with a smile, this excellent beginner of stories added: “Always bear in mind the case of the young man who, desiring to marry, secured a favorable hearing from his sweet heart’s irascible father by opening the interview with the words: ‘I know a way, sir, whereby you can save money.’ ” The Best Fiction. Tile fond husband was seeing his wife off with the children for their holiday in the country. As she got into the train he said, "But, my dear, won’t you take some Action to read?” “Oh, no,” she responded sweetly: “I shall depend on your letters from home.”—London Judy. She Wasn’t E.igaged. “And do you have to be called in the morning?” asked the lady who was about to engage a new girl. “I don’t has to be, mum,” replied the applicant, “unless you happens to need me.”—Yonkers Statesman. Lesson In Physiognomy. It is all right to rave over Grecian noses in poetry, but the nose we ad mire in everyday life is the nose that is kept out of other people's business.— Atchison Globe. Some of us are made on the order of billboards—a Aashy front with a vacant lot behind.—Exchange. ALDERSON’S GOT EM! GOOD AND PLENTY Not the Measles, nor thejim jams, but pure bred young bulls of the best families. Mostly Red, sired by Scottish Sharon of Greytower, 153330, one of the Pan American prize winners, and Golden King 152918. Two of the best bulls on the uppor Elkhorn valley today. Time will be given on bankable note to responsible parties. Delivered to nearest R. R. station free. JOHN M. ALDERSON Chambers, • - - Nebraska HOTEL EYANS TIT ONLY FIRST-CLASS HOTEL IN THE CITY FREE BUS SERVICE W. T. EVANS, Prop I HAVE REOPENED THE CATZ Meat Market With a full line of meats of all kinds and solicit a share of the public’s patronage. GOOD MEATS AND LIBERAL WEIGHTS *A. H. POE* First door east Hotel Evans. Phone 00 THE O’BEILL ABSTRACT * SO. Compiles Abstracts of Title THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB- k, STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY ' Tlje Palace Stables Bowen Bros., Proprietors. GOOD RIGS, PRICES RIGHT FEEDING A SPECIALTY HORSES BOUGrfT A SOLD O’NEILL, NEB. X Dr- E. T. Wilson PHYSICIAN and SURGEON (Late of the U. S. Army) Successsor to Dr. Trueblood. Surgery and Diseases of women. SPECIATLIES: eve. ear, Nose and Throat Spectaolee correctly fitted and Supplied. O'NEILL, NEB. R. R. DICKSON bawijEP & REFERENCE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK, O'NEILL E. H. BENEDICT LAW a. REAL ESTATE Office first door south of 0.8. Land Office OR. J. P. GILLIGAN Physician and Surgeon Calls may be left at Gllllgan & Stout dru& store or at residence 1 block north and H east of stand pipe Phones: Office 41, res. , DR. P7 J. FLYNN Physician and Surgeon Night Calls will be Promptly Attended Office: First door to right over PIxley & Hanley’s drug store. Residence phone % V. ALBERTS Mro- A DEALER IN Harness & Saddlery Goods Also Agent for Bliss Native Herbs, 300 days treatment for 11 and money refunded if not benefltted. Also Wheeler & Wilson Ball Bearing 8ewing Mach. A* I* Htnmonfi Title Abstractors Office in First National Bank Bldg. J. C. HORISKEY Staple and Fancy Groceries Flour, Salt, Country Produce l