The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 22, 1907, Image 8

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    LEGAL NOTICES
(First publication Aug. 1.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA.
Tract No. 2417.
The State of Nebraska, Plaintiff, vs.
Tlie several parcels of land herein
after described, and all persons, and
Corporations having orclaiming title
to, or any interest, right or claim
in, and to,such parcels of real estate,
or any part thereof, defendants.
FINAL NOTICE.
To Alberta IJttley,Howell M.Uttley
and Herman Kauntz, and to the oc
cupants of the real estate described
whose names are unknown.
Notice is hereby given that under a
decree of the district court of said coun
ty, rendered in the state tax suit for
the year 1906, the following described
real estate, situated in the County of
Holt, and state of Nebraska, to-wit:
O’Neill nondescript 2(5, in section 30,
township 29, range 11, west of the
(ith p m. in Holt county, Nebraska,
was on the 22d day of November,
1906, duly sold at public vendue by
the county treasurer of said county,
in the manner provided by law, and
the period of redemption from such
sale will expire on the 22d day of
November, 1907. .....
You are futher notlticd that the
owner of the certificates of tax sale
Issued by the treasurer will make ap
plication to the court in the above
entitled cause for confirmation of
such saleas soon as practicable after the
period of redemption has expired, and
you are hereby notified that the time
and place of the hearing upon such
confirmation will be entered
in the confirmation record kept by
the clerk of said court, on or before
the 22d day of November, 1907. You
will examine said confirmation record
to ascertain the time of such hearing
and may be present, if you desire, to
make any objections or show cause
why the sale should not be confirmed.
JOHN CARTON,
<1-3 Purchser.
(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.
The 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 Hank of Ada, Minn.,
IUchard A. Bevan, unknown heirs of
Christopher II. Old Held, 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-wlt:
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
manner 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 such sale us 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 tlie contimatlon 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 4 E. V. SMITH, JR.,
Owner of said Ocrtiilcate.
(First publication August 15.)
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Department of the Interior, Land
Office at O’Neill, Neb., Aug. 10, 1907.
Notice is hereby given that the fol
lowing-named settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make tinal proof in
support of his claim, and that said
proof will be made before the register
and receiver at O’Neill Nebraska, on
September 27,1907, viz: Arbey Em
ery, Chambers, Nebraska., for the H.
E. No. 17435, for the swl sec 18, twp.
27 north, range 12 w.
He names, the following witnesses
to prove his continuous residence up
on and cultivation of said land, viz:
Peter J. Brown of Chambers, Neb
raska, Samuel D. Woods, of Cham
bers, Nebraska. John S. Keepers, of
Chambers, Nebraska, Michael A.
Inglehaupt, of Amelia, Nebraska.
B. E. STURDEVANT, Register.
(First publication August 8th.)
NOTICE.
State of Nebraska Ilolt, county, ss.
To Whom It May Concern:
The Commissioner appointed to
locate a road commencing at a point
four [4] rods east of the intersection
of the Section line running North and
South, between Section 17 and 18,
Township 31, Range 12 West, and the
Section line running along the South
boundary of said Sectious 17 & 18
Township 31, Range 12 West, in Holt
County, Nebraska. Thence running
straight South twenty (20) rods,
Thence running in a Southeasterly
direction terminating at and con
necting with the public road at the
Eagle Creek bridge, has reported in
favor of the establishment thereof,
and all objections thereto or claim*
for damages must be tiled in the
County Clerk’s office on or before noon
of the 31st day of August, A. D. 1907,
or such road will be established with
out refrence thereto.
W. P. SIMAR,
7-4 County Clerk.
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
Cures Colds, Croup and Whoopip^ Cough.
Or. Price’s Cream Baking: Powaer
World’s Fair Highest Award.
(First Publication July 25)
NOTICE.
In the matter of the estate of Henry
J. Hershiser, 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 tile 22d day October, 190;,
and on the 22d day of January, 1908,
at i0 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 Executt r to settle
said estate, from the 17th day of
August 1908.
This notice will be published in T he
Frontier for four weeks successively,
prior to the 17th day of August, 1907.
(Seal) 0. J. MALONE,
5-4 County Judge.
(First Publication August 8th.)
NOTICE.
State of Nebraska, Holt county, ss.
To Whom It May Concern:
The Commissioner appointed to
locale a road commencing at South
side of section (5) live township 32,
range 12, and running North on the
hair section line running through
said section (5) five, has reported in
favor of the establishment thereof,
and all objections thereto or claims
for damages must be tiled in the
County Clerk’s oiliee on or before noon
of the 31st day of August A. 1). 1907,
or such road will be established with
out reference thereto.
W. P. SI MAR,
7-4 County Clerk.
First Publication August»r,nj
NOTICE.
State of Nebraska, Holt County, ss.
To Whom It May Concern:
The Commissioner appointed to
locate a road commencing at north
east corner of section 35, township 31,
range 13, W. and running tiience due
east on section line as near as practic
able to the northeast corner of the
northwest quarter of section 31,
township 31, range 12, in Holt county,
Nebraska, lias reported in favor of
the establishment thereof, and all
objections thereto or claims for dam
ages must be filed in the County
Clerk’s otilco on or before noon of the
31st day of August, A. I). 1007, or sucy
road will be established without re
ference thereto.
W. P. SI MAR,
7-4 County Clerk.
Notice of Sale Coder Chattel Mortgage.
Notice la hereby given that bv virtue of a
chattel mortgage dated Mar. 10. 1000. and duly
lllcd In the office of the county clerk of Holt
county. Nob.,on the l.'tih day of March, 1000,
executed by Hubert E. Muglrl to th> Sandwich
Mfg. Co. lo secure the payment of the sum of
till! and upon which there Is now due the sum
of tl.32 72, default liavlug been made In the pay
moutuf Bald sum and no suit or other proceed
ings at law having been Instituted to recover
said debt or any part thereof, therefore the
said sandwich Mfg. On. will sell the property
therein described, viz: one I4x1H SouthwlckZ
horse hay press complete with power, both
mounted,one Southwiok seif-feed attachment
—same being the property mortgaged to Emil
Snlggs Jan. 13, 1004, at public auction at Emil
Snlggs’ blueksndth shop In O’Neill, Holt coun
ty. Neb , on Sept. 17, lOlu, at 10 o’clock a. m. of
said day. Sandwich Mto. Co., Mortgagee.
By A. J. Groat, Agent. 0-3
ALDERSON’S GOT EM!
GOOD AND PLENTY
Not the Measles, northejim
jams, but pure bred young
bulls of the best families.
Mostly Red, sired by Scottish
Sharon of Grey tower, 153330,
one of the Pan American prize
winners, and Golden King
152918. Two of the best bulls
ou the uppor Elkhorn valley
today. Time will be given on
bankable note to responsible
Sirties. Delivered to nearest
. R. station free.
JOHN M. ALDERSON
Chambers, - • - Nebraska
.Wash BLUE
For Sals By
LTT-ri all
WISE
GROCERS
DIRECTIONS FOR USEi
Wiggle-Stick around in the water.
E. H. BENEDICT
LAW e£. REAL ESTATE
Office first floor eouth of 0.8. Land Office
J. C. HORISKEY
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Flour, Salt, Country Produce
The Frontier Six Months for 75x
Cost Mark Doesn’t Tell It.
The Saturday evening Past says
this is a true human document and
offers it for what it may be worth:
“I’ve been buying some lately of the
mail order houses and saving money
by doing it,” said the farmer, “but,
by Jolly, 1 don’t know. I was in-’s
grocery today and heard him talking
with the new man that's rented a
piece of-; said he’d like to carry
him, but that he really couldn’t do it.
“After the man went, says I,
“Henry, what’s the matter with the
man that you won’t carry him?” And
he says, “Nothing that I know of; but
I just can’t do it. The mail order
houses and the fellows that come
through taking orders til! they get a
car load, make us sell so close and
take so much cash trade that I just
can’t put another account on my
books to carry over till grapes are
sold.
“Weil, sir, twenty years ago-1
guess, I wouldn’t have been here, ii
Henry hadn’tcarried me a whole year.
I was meeting payments on the place,
and the crops failed. No, sir, I guess
I wouldn’t have been here, if Henry
hadn’t carried me. And I was just
thinking to myself, -Maybe that ren
ter’ll have to throw up the sponge,
same’s I’d had to do. When I paint
ed my buildings I saved thirteen
dollars buying of a mail order house,
and it seemed like throwing money
away not to do it. Rut, by Jolly, 1
don’t know.”
jTiauy uum'io uuu u nuu<>| uuu uid |
thinking about it—as we find from
much evidence. The price mark
doesn’t always tell the cost of the
goods. Certain southern communi
ties may buy cotton quite cheaply
because it was spun by the stunting
toil of children. Wood would be a
better bargain for them. The price
mark does not always tell the whole
story.
A stpry is told to the effect that a
lady from the country bought three
boxes of matches from an Atkinson
grocer. It rained when she was go
ing home, and the matches became
so damp that not one of them would
strike. Last Saturday she brought
the matches back and upbraided the
grocer for selling such useless stuff.
The grocer took out one or two and
struck them quite easily on the bosom
of Ids pants, for by this time' the
matches had become perfectly dry.
But the lady did not think of this ex
planation, and exclaimed: “Tut, tut!
they’re not good enough for me. I
can’t tramp six miles to your trousers
every time I want to strike a match.
Give me three boxes of a kind that I
can light at home.” She got the
matches. _
SOME CURIOSITIES.
Different Lengths of a Mile—How a
Rood Was Determined.
The standard yard prevails through
out the United Kingdom, but the
lengths of the English, Scotch and Irish
mile Is different In each, which Is the
more curious, seeing that the English
and American miles are identlcul. But
the occasional local variations in our
English acre' are even more remark
able. These were perhaps originally
due to the Inexactitudes of ancient
land surveying, which was compara
tively of such a free and easy descrip
tion that the acres of neighboring coun
ties, not to say adjacent parishes,
sometimes varied.
A book published in the reign of Ed
ward VI. gives the following curiously
naive Instructions on the subject:
“Stand at the door of a church on Sun
day and bid sixteen men to stop, tall
ones and small ones, as they happen
to pass out. Then make them put their
left feet one behind the other, and the
length thus obtained shall be a right
and lawful rood to measure the land
with, and the sixteenth part of it shall
be a right and lawful foot.”
This Is almost laughable, but we have
only to apply to one of the older dic
tionaries to find that anything like ex
actness, whether of definition or of
fact, Is quite a modern scientific de
velopment. And the story of the acre
Is a case in point. It was supposed to
have been reduced to a common stand
ard In 1303, but it was not until 1824
that we enacted the statute acre of
4,840 square yards.
With the loose system of measure
ment prevailing for the greater part of
that long Interval, It Is not surprising
that the so called “acre” was too often
what the local wiseacres happened to
make of It. By long use and wont It
seems probable that the discrepancies
thus arising occasionally crystallized
into customs, of which some exumples
still survive. A Welsh acre was for
merly twice ns large as au English one,
while a Scottish acre Is larger than
ours by more than 1,000 square yards.
According to authority, there are
seven different measures still In use
by which the acre may be variously
defined. Lancashire has within her
borders acres measured on a custom
ary local scale, while the so called
Cheshire acre Is even larger than that
of its Welsh neighbor.—London Globe.
Did Know About That.
“The money market” Ms. Wallace |
began, with that superior air a man
assumes when he talks of public ques
tions to his wife—“the money mar-'
ket”—
“Which reminds me,” Mrs. Wallace'
Interrupted.
“Reminds you of what, woman?”
“That you haven’t given me the
market money yet.”
A HISTORIC HIGHWAY.
How Colonel Zane Kept His Contract
to Mark the Road.
It Is said that the beginning of one
part of a historic road may be traced
to the following Incident: In early
days, before the public conveyance by
stage between the east and west, travel
was generally by horseback. Judge
Brown, senator for Kentucky, reached
Whoellhg on the way to the capital wet
and tired. lie was a guest of Colonel
Ebenezer Zane, an early settler at
Wheeling. Standing before the fire in
Zane's comfortable cabin, he remark
ed, “Zane, if you will have a road
way marked from here to Llmeston
(Maysville), I will have congress grant
you a section of land at the crossing
of the Musldngum, Hocking and Scioto
rivers.” Zane fulfilled the contract,
and congress made the grant.
May 17, 1790, congress granted to
Ebenezer Zane three tracts of land,
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. ,Va., to
Llmeston, which road was to be opened
by the president of the United States.
These grants were confirmed to Zane
and patented Feb. 14, 1800. On April
3, 1802, congress made the same al
lowance to Isaac Zane, h!s heirs or as
signs, located in the Northwest Terri
tory, now the state of Ohio. Zane made
good use of his grants. He located the
town of Zanesville on the Muskingum,
the town of Fairfield on the Hock
ing and Chilllcothe on the Scioto. The
story runs that when Judge Brown
passed over the “road” he found it
well marked by—blazed trees. — Ex
change.
POCAHONTAS.
Her Visit to England and the Effect
It Produced.
Pocahontas was born In the year
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, he 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 home 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
fortunate 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 Guarnerlus,
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.”
The 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 Hooghly 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.lttle Tommy was very quiet during
the first courses, and every one forgot
he 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 rengbom is working himself to
skin and bone trying to keep that boy
of his in college.”
“And what’s the boy doing?”
“Doing his best to be 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.
I
BEER FOR BREAKFAST.
Ths Awful Morning Meal That Wai
Once In Vogue In England.
The breakfast appetite varies strange
ly. Some persons are content with a
enp 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- i
cy family both for Lent and for flesh
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 manehets (a manchet
was a small loaf of white bread), a
quart of beer, a quart of wine, two
pieces of salt fish, six baconn’d her
ring, four white herring or a dish of
sprats. Breakfast for my Lord Percy
and Master Thomas Percy: Item, half
a loaf of household bread, a manchet,
a bottle of beer, a 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 manehets, 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.
Criminal*, 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 be
best gauged by the fact that it takes
about 6,000 of them to make n 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 sun.
They are a great native delicacy.
Beginning Well.
“Begin your stories well,” said an au
thor, talking to a group of literary be
I'lnners. “There’s nothing like a good
beginning. 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.
The 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 fiction to read?”
“Oh, no,” she responded sweetly; “X
shall depend on your letters from
home."—London Judy.
She Wasn't Engaged.
“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 iu everyday life is the nose that
: is kept out of other people’s business.—
* Atchison Globe.
t -
■j Some of us are made on the order of
li billboards—a flashy front with a vacant
lot behind.—Exchange.
A* <3. ianwottii
Atatcagt Cen^a^
Title Abstractors
Office in First National Bank Bldg.
D. W. CAMERON
Practical Cement Worker
Manufactures Cement Walks, build
Foundations, Caves, etc. In fact all
cement work neatly and promptly
done. Address, Atkinson or O’Neill
DR. P. J. FLYNN
Physician and Surgeon
Night Calls will be Promptly Attended
Office: Ftr6t door to rtght over Pixley &
Hanley’s druf? store. Residence phone 90
R. R. DICKSON
& Lawyer «ae
mriRCNCi: firrt national rank, o'ncill
DR- J. P.^ILLIGAN
Physician and Surgeon
Special attention giuen to
DISEASES OF WOMEN, DISEASES
OF THE EYE AND CORRECT
FITTING OF GLASSES
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
Tlje Palace Stables
Bowen Bros., Proprietors.
GOOD RIGS, PRICES RIGHT
feeding A SPECIALTY
HORSES IJOlJGllT A SOLD
O’Neill, Neb.
Dr. E. T. Wilson
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
(Late of the U. S. Army)
Successsor to Dr. Trueblood. Surgery
and Diseases of women.
SPECIATLIE8:
EYE. EAR, NOSE AND THflO«’
Spectacle, correctly fitted and Supplied
O'NEILL, NEB.
theO’CEILL
ABSTRACT * 00.
Compiles
Abstracts of Title
THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB
STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY
I HAVE REOPENED
THE CATZ
IWIeat 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 80
————1 ■■■■—■■ ■■ 1
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,
tobacco, etc.
W. J. SALEM, Prop. I
3d door east Hotel Evans
EDISON
Phonographs
THE BEST MONEY
CAN BUY.
1200 Records to Select From!
WM. M. LOCKARD
_O'NEILL, NEB.
Chamberlain’s
Never fails. Buy it uow. It may save liie.