r--— ' THE PRAISE GIVEN BLISS NATIVE HERBS BY PEOPLE IN YOUR LO CALITY IS THE S T II O N G E S T PROOF THAT THIS FAMOUS HOUSEHOLD REMEDY DOES ALL THAT IS CLAIMED FOR IT. :: :: NO ONE need suffer with Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Liver Trouble, Kidney Dis orders, Catarrh, Diabetes, Consti pation, Eczema or any ailment arising from impure blood. One tablet of taken each day will quickly put the most weakened system in per fect order. Each root, herb and bark in its composition has a spe cial mission to perform. Each box of the remedy contains 200 Tablets for $1.00 and a Registered Guaran tee to CURE or Money Refunded. A 32 Page Almanac tells the story completely. The medicine is NOT sold in drug-stores, only by agents. THE ALONZO O. BLISS COMPANY, WASHINGTON, D. C... ARE SOLE MAKERS OF BLISS NATIVE HERBS -SOLD BY ALBERTS’ HARNESS SHOP O'NEILL, NEB p 1 —" 1 I O’Neill’s Bakery is now lo cated in its “new home” where you can get Bread, Pies Cake and all sorts of bakery pro ducts. Also canned goods, fruits, nuts, candies, cigars, I tobacco, etc. 8 W. J. 5ALEM, Prop. | 3d door east Hotel Evans l__! EDISON Phonographs THE 5EST MONEY CAN BlJY. 1200 Records to Select From! WM. M. LOCKARD O5NEILL. NEB. ALDERSON’S GOT EM! GOOD AND PLENTY Not the Measles, uor the jim jams, but pure bred young bulls of the best families. Mostly Red, sired by Scottish Sharon of Greytower, 153339, one of the Pan American prize winners, and Golden King 152918. T wo oft h e best bul Is on the uppor Elkhorn valley today. Time will be given on bankable note to responsible parties. Delivered to nearest R. R. station free. JOHN M. ALDER,SON Chambers, - - - Nebraska I HAVE REOPENED THE CATZ HHBeat IHarket With a full line of meats of all kinds and solicit a share of the public’s patronage. GOOD MEATS AND LIBERAL WEIGHTS ❖A. H. POE* First door east Hotel Evans. Phone 80 FRED L. BARCLAY STUART, NEB. Makes Long or Short Time Loans on Improved Farms and Ranches If you are in need of a loan drop him a line and he will call and see you Tljo Palace Stables Bowen Bros., Proprietors. GOOD RIGS, PRICES RIGHT feeding A SPECIALTY HORSES BOUGHT A SOLD O’Neill, neb. dr. j. p. gilligan Physician and Surgeon Calls may be left at (Hlligran He Stout drug store or at residence 1 block north and east of stand pipe Phones: Office 41, res. STATEMENT Showing Receipts, Disbursements and Bal ances for the Six Months Beginning Jan. 9 and Ending June 30, 1907. RECEIPTS To amount received from R. E. Ohittick, ex-treasurer.$ 74869 09 total tax collected . 80097 22 school land interest collected. 800 52 school land lease collected. 4033 14 University land interest collected. 309 84 University land lease collected. . 797 50 state apportionment . 0290 31 miscellaneous collections, county general. 1045 63 fines and licenses. 020 00 interest on deposit. 360 84 redemption. 14070 94 fees. 770 75 received from O. F. Biglin, receiver. 1385 86 Total.$192107 04 DISBURSMENTS By state treasurer receipts.$ 16363 07 county general warrants paid. 5819 74 county bridge warrants paid.s. 4581 74 county road warrants paid. 50 00 soldiers relief warrants paid. 590 00 Grattan R. It. bond. 3040 55 O’Neill R. R. bond. 1045 50 district school bonds and coupons paid . 286 11 district school orders paid. 35889 35 state apportionment. 5258 22 poll receipts. 3282 00 township treasurers receipts. 7688 85 village treasurer receipts. 2972 00 redemptions. 13840 98 fees. 2004 98 orders of the county board. 442 65 water bond. 3343 83 O’Neill judgment. 2002 00 Atkinson judgment. 400 04 special school. 430 00 special sidewalk. 615 10 expense. 559 58 Grattan judgment. 204 54 Irrigation. 015 00 warrants in trust. 4498 53 cash on hand. 76271 22 Total.$192107 64 BALANCES Consoiodated state.$ lie 05 soldiers relief. 655 32 county judgment. 273 63 county school. . 7 77 county funding. 241 69 labor receipts. 663 75 water bond . 1145 97 district school. 26474 00 school bond. 14210 90 special school. 1401 96 township!... 7762 71 O’Neill judgment. 50 77 village . 1304 74 O’Neill railroad bond. 625 31 irrigation. 44 27 Grattan railroad bond. 2176 30 Grattan judgment... 1179 sidewalk. 282 10 advertising. 254 40 county road. 134 66 redemption. 2017 25 Atkinson judgment. 39 27 . University land. 88 11 school land. 183 71 state apportionment. 6912 08 railroad sinking. 564 19 county general. 8392 34 county bridge. 6028 93 center precinct court house bond . 243 30 miscellaneous. 402 62 interest on deposit. 366 84 Total.*85332 39 Orders of county board, overdraft .* 418 18 Fees. 1234 23 Expense. ■ .. 559 58 $ 2211 99 Total balance.$83120 40 AMOUNT ON HAND First National bank, O’Neill.$14459 28 Inman State bank. 2000 00 Citizens bank, Stuart. 6509 00 First National bank, Stuart. 6500 00 First National bank, Atkioson. 6500 00 Atkinson National bank. 6500 00 Chambers State bank. 4000 00 Ewing State bank. 2500 00 Pioneer bank, Ewing. 2500 00 O’Neill National bank. 15000 00 Fidelity bank, O’Neill. 6500 00 Cash in office. 331194 $76271 22 Warrants not turned over by Chittick.$ 40 85 Warrants in trust. 4498 53 Balance due from Elkhorn Valley bank . 2308 80 $ 6849 18 Total as above. ..$83120 40 State of Nebraska, County of Holt, ss. 1, j. C. Harnish, Treasurer of Holt County, Nebraska, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement of receipts, disbursments and balances is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. J. C. HARNISH. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 19th day of July, A. D. 1907. W. P. SIMAR, County. Clerk. (First Publication July 25.) The State of Nebraska, Holt county —ss. The State of Nebraska. In the District Court of Holt county, Ne braska Tract No. 2313. The State of Nebraska, Plaintiff, vs. i’lie several parcels of land herein after described and all persons and corporations having or claiming title to or any interest, right or claim in or to such parcels of real estate or any part thereof, defend ants. To First State Bank of Ada, Minn., Bichard A. Beven, unknown heirs of Christopher H. Oldfield, deceased, un known executors of last will of Chris topher H. Oldfield, deceased, owners, and to unknown owners and to the oc cupants of the real estate described below. Notice is hereby given that under a decree of the district court of said county, rendered in the state tax suit for the year 1905, the following des cribed real estate, situated in the county of Holt and state of Nebraska, to-wit: Lots one (1) to thirteen (13) inclu sive, in Block ten (10) in Mathews’ addition, an addition the city of O’Neill, known as Tract No. 2313 was, on the 22nd day of November, 1905, duly sold at public vendue by the county treasurer of said county in the mariner provided by law, and the period of redemption from such sale will expire on the 22nd day of No vember, 1907. You are further noti fied that the owner of the certificate of tax sale issued by the treasurer will make application to the court in the above entitled cause for confirmation of sucli sale as soon as practicable after the period of redemption has ex pired, and you are hereby notified that the time and place of the hearing up on such confirmation will be entered in the confirmation record kept by the clerk of said court on or before the 22nd day of November, 1907. You will examine said confirmation record to ascertain the time ot such hearing and may be present, if you desire, to make any objections or show cause why the sale should not be confirmed. 5-3 E. V. SMITH, Jit., Owner of said Certificate. (First Publication July 25) NOTICE. In the matter of the estate of Henry J. Ilershiser, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the creditor: of said deceased will meet the executor of said estate, before me, county judge of Holt county, Nebras ka, at the county courtroom in said, county, on the 17th day of August, 1907, on the 22d dav October, 1907, and on the 22d day of January, 1908, at 10 o’clock a. m., each day, for the purpose of presenting their claims for examination, adjustment and allow ance. Six months are allowed for creditors to present their claims, and one year for the Execut r to settle said estate, from the 17th day of August 1908. This notice will be published in The Frontier for four weeks successively, prior to the 17th dav of August, 1907. (Seal) C. j. MALONE, 5-4 County Judge. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Cures Colds, Croup and Whooping Cough. Chamberlain’s mSSkSZ'SSaZa* Never fails. Buy it now. It may save life. A HISTORIC HIGHWAY. How Colonel Zano Kept His Contract to Mark the Road. It Is said that tho beginning of one part of a historic road may be traced to the following Incident: In enrly days, before the public conveyance by stage between the east and west, travel was generally by horseback. Judge Crown, senator for Kentucky, reached Wheeling on the way to the capital wet and tired. Ho was a guest of Colonel Ebenezer Zanc, an early settler at Wheeling. Stnndlng before the tire In Zanc's comfortable cnbin, he remark ed, “Znne, If you will have n road way marked from here to IJmeston (Maysvllle), I will hare congress grant you a section of lnnd at tho crossing of the Muskingum, Hocking and Scioto rivers.” Zone fulfilled the contract, and congress made tho grant. ■May 17, 1700, congress granted to Ebenezer Znne three tracts of laud, one square mile, one on the Muskin gum, one on the Hocking and one on the Scioto river, In the state of Ohio, for the purpose of building ferries on the road from Wheeling, W. ,Vn., to I.lmeston, which road was to be opened by tho president of the United States. These grants were confirmed to Zano and patented Feb. 14, 1800. On April 3, 1802, congress made the same al lowance to Isaac Zane, his heirs or as signs, located in the Northwest Terri tory, now the state of Ohio. Zano made good use of his grants. He located tho town of Zanesville on tho Muskingum, the town of Fairfield on the Hock ing and Chlllleothe on tho Scioto. Tho story runs that when Judge Brown passed over the “road” he found it well marked by—blazed trees. — Ex change. POCAHONTAS. Hep Visit to England and the Effeot It Produced. Pocahontas was born In the yenr 1505. Her father, Powhatan, was the lord and ruler of thirty tribes or clans of savages Inhabiting that vast domain which was then called Virginia, after the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth. His friendship was dearly sought for by the white men and considered essential to the life and success of the colony. Like most red men, ho distrusted the whites and their designs. In England Pocahontas was treated with all the honor shown to royalty. Her grace and charm seem to have won all hearts, and she was at her ease with the best In- the land. She was presented at Queen Anne’s court, attended a ball given by the bishop of London and visited the Globe theater to see Shakespeare’s “Tempest.'* In fact, she took on the garb and accesso ries of civilization with that easy grace which belongs to the truly great and was as much at homo In court as in her own western solitudes. But in wardly she seems to have pined for her own free, open life of the forest, and when she was about to return on the good ship George she sickened and died at Gravesend, having lived long enough, as one commentator has said, to unite two hemispheres, two races, two civilizations. — William Ordway Partridge in Circle Magazine. Lives of Old Violins. Strange indeed are the “lives” of the old Italian violins, says George Leh man. For years or decades they either repose in the amateur’s velvet lined cases or sing with their own peculiar Incomparable sweetness to multitudes of admiring listeners, adored by their fortunaio possessors, coveted by all whose love of their fascinating quali ties Is far greater than their material means. And then, when it Is least expected, some Strad or Guarnerius, known the world over, is tenderly placed In the hands of a new master or mistress and a new chapter In the history of its long life is begun—New York World. Calcutta's “Jungle Villages.” Thu houses, or huts, rather, that form the majority of Calcutta's dwelling and working places are low and mean and crazy to a degree. This vast congeries of dwellings that stretched itself along the Ilooghly bank scarce deserves the name of town except for Its supreme commercial and political Importance and its great population. It Is not a town, this city of huts, except in the central African sense. It is a series of jungle villages spread out and plaster ed on the river bank with a trowel.— Calcutta Englishman. Tommy Knew the Number. T.ittle Tommy was very quiet during the first courses, and every one forgot ho was there. As the dessert was be ing served, however, the host told a funny story. When he had finished and the laugh ter had died away, his little son ex claimed delightedly: “Now, papa, tell the other one.”— Everywhere. A Puzzle. P. —I see you have my novel. I’ll wager you had to look at the last page to see how it all came out. Q. —No; I looked at the name of the publishers on the title page to see how It came out, and even now I can’t un derstand how it was.—Tit-Bits. At Cross Purposes. “Ole Pengbom Is working himself to skin and bone trying to keep that boy ef his in college.” “And what’s the boy doing?” “Doing his best to bo expelled.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Sadly Mercenary. “Why are you so eager for fame?” “Because,” answered the active man, "I need It In my business. Fame nowa days Is merely a synonym for success ful advertising.’’—Washington Star. H-m i B U L L E T I Great Nor!item RaiMm j ti THE LUKE OF THE LAKES, THE 1 WOODS & STREAMS IN S summerVacationDays j To detemine where you will s.icnd vour vacation this sum- H I mer, secure a copy of our "Shooting Fishing Guide," W being an accurate and comprehensive directory of the many * bass, pickerel, pike, muskalonge and trout inhabited lakes H and streams, near and far in the northwest, with full inform- ■ atlon regarding resort accomodations. M For particulars of travel rates, routes and tickets, call on ® or address J. F. Jordan, Agent, O’Neill, Neb.; A. L. Craig, H 6 ” General Passenger Agent, St. Paul, Minn. » ■ Alnsku-Yoiikim PuelHc Exposition, Seattle, .lune-Ootober, lflOB ® PERCHERON STALLIONS l HAVE PURCHASED King George (No. 40940) and Genera.] (No. 42946) of D. .T. Cronin and will put them on the stand this season as follows: King > George at the Dan Cronin place ana General at home at the Hagerty place. Both of these horses are thorough bred I’ercherons of the purest strains, botli legistered. Fine style and action —call and see them. TERMS—810 to insure sucking colt. If mare ■ ■ ■ • . Is sold or removed from county service be- I ^ AO I\/l ■ ill a comes due at once. \JCll I ICO IYI UMtsf I <9. <9. SNYDER & G<9. Bomber, Goal Building Materials, etg. PHONE 32O’NEILL., NEB ®iaasj@i3i3iaEisia)iMsiai£5M@MD!M3ii3iaMc!iai0ia/sjiisiaaiSiaiBiaisiBieMaisisiSiiaisisiaiBisiaa ! FARM LOANS INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS INSURANCE 1 1 FIDELITY BANK I §j Inis Bonk alms to oonoerve tha Interests of Its customers In every g] 5) honorable way. (a •-OFFICERS-• | E. E. Halstead, President. O. F. biglin, Vice-President i David B. GROSVENOR, CASHIER Director*: K. E. Halstead, K. H. Halstead, O. F. Blglln, F. J. Dlsliner L). B. (Jrosveuor. SJ®i3)gElSrSEI3)SI01SiSi@®®)SM3EMSI®0jai@®ISM31i3]S)SiSEISIiiISi3iBEil i Notice to Hunters July is close season on all game. Not only the killing of 1 | game birds, but also hunting them is prohibited. Violation 1 I of game laws will be prosecuted. E. H. WHELAN, S County Attorney. HOTEL EVANS ONLY FIRST-CLASS HOTEL IN THE CITY FREE BUS SERVICE W. T. EVANS, Prop ! II II ♦3 | ! ] Trade Marks i Designs | Copyrights Ac. 3 Anyone sending a sketch and description may ; j quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an 3 invention is probably patentable. Communlca- ; 1 tlons strtctly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents ; 3 sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. i Patents taken through Munn 8c Co. receive : 3 tperlal notice, wit hout charge, in the i Scientific American. I A handsomely illustrated weekly. largest dr- ; « cuiatlon of any scientldc journal. Terms. $3 a 3 year; four months, fL Bold by all newsdealers. : jBUNNiCo."1*—•newTort < Branch Office. (126 F 8t- Washington, D. U. ifYYfffYYtYffYYYYfYYYYfYYYffYYfYYYYYYYfYYtfYtfYYfYt I Instructive jtj* Interesting “Correct English; How to Use It” A monthly magazine devoted to the use of English. JOSEPHINE TURCK BAKER, Edito PARTIAL CONTENTS. Course in Grammar. How to Increase One’s Vocabulary. The Art of Conversation. Shall and Will; Should and Would: How to Use Them. Pronunciations (Century Dictionary.) Correct English in the Home. Correct English in the School. What to Say and What Not to Say. Course in Letter-Writing and Punct uation. Alphabetic list of Abbreviations. Business English for the Business Man. Compound Words; How to Write Them. Studies in English Literature. AGENTS WANTED $1 a Year. Send 10c for single copy CORRECT ENGLISH Evanston, III. J. C. HORISKEY Staple and Fancy Groceries Flour, Salt, Country Produce E. H. BENEDICT LAW & REAL ESTATE W'igpr©# Office first door south of U.8, Land Office