The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 08, 1910, Image 6

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    Supervisors Proceedings.
O’Neill, Nebraska, Nov. 29, 1910,
o’clock, p. m. office of Boaid met pur
suant to adjournment, all members
presents:
Minutes of tbe last meeting of Nov
ember 11 and 12, were read and ap
proved .
On motion the county clerk was lo
st ructed to cash the check of John Mc
Manus for 118.15 and take receipts
from County Treasurer for same.
The state of Nebraska, county of
Holt, ss
We, Th. D. Sievers, M. P. Sullivan
and M. M. Hunter, members of the
Board of Supervisors in and for said
County, dosolemly swear that we will
support the constitution of the Unit
ed States, and the constitution of the
stale of Nebraska, and that we will
faithfully and impartially discharge
the duties of appraisers, as provided
by an act of the Legislature approved
March 5,1885. in estimating and ap
praising carefully tbe value of the fol
lowing described land, exclusive
of improverits, vix:
sw i nef, ei nwj and wi sei section 30,
town 38 range 10 Holt County state
state of Nebraska, according to the
best or our ability.
M. P. Sullivan.
Appraisers:
Thies D. Slevers.
J. M. Hunter.
8ubscribed|ln my presence and sworn
to before us, this 14th day of Novem
ber, 1910.
E. n. Smith, Notary Public.
My commission expires Aug. 30,
1916,
Report of Aparaihers.
Wp, the undersigned members of the
Board of Supervisors in and for Holt
County Nebraska, do herebjr certify
that we have carefully examined the
ahove desarlbed land, and find the fol
lowing to be Just and full value.
swj, nej el nwi wl sel section 36,
township 28, range, 10 value per aore
$10.00.
■ M. P. iSulllvan.
Thies D. Sivers.
Appraisers: J. M. Hunter.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 14th day of Nov. A. D. 1910.
E. H. Smith, Notary Public.
My commission expires Aug. 13,
" 1916,
The board adjourned until 9 o’clock
tomorrow morning.
J. D. Grimes, Chairman.
S. F. McNIchols.
O’Neill, Nebraska, November 3o, 19
to9o,clock a. m.
Board met pursuant to adjourn
ment ail members present.
Meek, Nebraska, Nov. 26, 1910.
County Cl$rk of Holt county, Ne
braska.
Dear Sir: As Mr. E. H. Rouse has
moved his fenoe I wish to withdraw
my petition I filed before the county
board.
E. W. Sargent, Petitioner.
O’Neill, Nebr., November 29, 1910.
To the Honorable board of super
visors of Holt county, Nebraska.
Gentlemen:
I hereby petition your honorable
body to instruct the county treasurer
tpcancel scavenger tax sale certificate
3887, issued to the county of Holt on
Nov., 22,1905, for block 3, in Eastside
Addition to Page, Nebraska, Holt Co.
for the taxes for the year of 1904 for
the reason that the taxes for said year
was paid by me on'Nov. 4.1906, receipt
7900 prior to the date of said scavenger
tax sale to the County of Holt.
N. B. Coover.
M. H. McCarthy.
On motlou prayer of petitioner was
granted.
Qn motion the following bunds were
approved:
William Kidd, Justioe of the Peace,
to fill vacancy, for one year.
W. J. H. Stearns, overseer of High
ways of road district 46 for one yeir.
John L. Hammerburg, Road over
seer, Sandcreed township, for onelyear
Ed. H. 'Whelen, county attorney, for
two years.
W. B. Argenbrighl, township treas
urer for one year.
John Macintosh, overseer of high
ways Dlst. 66, for one year.
| The Gift Store!
Our store Is loaded to the brim this year with the choicest the (*
market affords in Holiday Goods. Now is the time to select your |>
l[ Christmas goods. It gives you more time and insures you getting W
(i what you want. Rings of all kind, plain, stone, diamond and signet. A
We feel oonfldent we can please you in rings, Bracelets, Cuff buttons, J
Watches, Watch fobs and Lockets. We bave a splendid line of S
1 Lockets, big little and medium. We also have a nice line of silv«ware v
and are sure we can please you with our goods. £
At any time day Of night we are pleased to see you in our store. A
Call, we can please you iu style, quality and price. J
W. B. Graves I
\ ' t
' "... ...v ■*■-1 »;▼ * *
■■ -y*c-r~.- . . ■——2
Edward F. Quinn, township treasur
er of of Grattan township, for pne
year.
William Loob. township clerk of
Grattan township, for one year.
E E Hanna, township t reasurer for
one year.
Jobu Gordon, townsliip clerk, Rock
falls township, for one year
W. H. Decker, Justice 01 the Peace for
Verdigris township, one year and two
months.
C. L. Mass, township treasurer foi
one year
Matt Cleary, mad overseer Dist. 48.
for one year.
On motion Board adjourned until 1
o'clock p. m.
J. D. Grimes, Chairman.
IS. F. McMichols, County Cli rk.
O’Neill, Nebraska, October 11, 1910.
To the honorable board of supervis
or uf Holt. County, Nebraska.
Geulletuen:
Your pel It loner, St Mary’s Acad
emy, represents tbas it Is the owner
of 1, 2, 3, 4. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. 12, 13 14,
15, 10, in block 5, in the city of O’Neill
that said property being school prop
erty, was erroneously assessed for tax.
es for the year 1907 and 1910, and we
request your honorable body to in
struct the county clerk to cancel said
taxes for said years and all prior years
that it may have been assessed
St. Mary’s Academy,
By M. F. Cassidy.
On motion prayer of petitioner was
giautcu.
Mr. Chairman:
Your commitee appointed lo inves
tigate the road petitioned for by John
Zuelner and others, reccomend the ev
tabllshment of ft road commencing at
a point 80 rods due south of tlie south
west corner section 0, township 30,
range 13 running thence one mile east
within the north half of the north
half of section 7, in said towuship
and range, and terminating at a point
80 rods south of the southeast corner
of section 0 in said township and range
and we further reticommend the vaca
ting of the section line running north
and south between sections 5, and 6,
and 80 rods between section 7 nnd 8,
also section line running east and west
between section 6, and 7, township 30,
range 13.
M. P. Sullivan.
Con Kramer.
J. II. Grimes.
Mr. Chairman:
I move that the report of the com
mittee above named be adopted and ii
appears to the board that the public
good requests it. I move that said
road bj ahe ed and established as
above set forth, and that tin county
surveyor tie Instructed to survey nrec
ord aud plait said total
Otto NiIson.
Til. D Sievers.
Motion carried.
Honorable Board of Supervisors of
Holt County, Nebraska.
The undersigned represents unto
your hruorable body that on the 30th
day of August, 1910, complaint wes
duly tiled in tne county court of this
county against |James A. Jarman
charging him with statutory rape and
seduction, the said James ]A. Jarman
being then and he still is a fugitive
from justice and he cannot be placed
under arrest or his whereabouts dis
covered by the sheriff of this county
or the police offloers who were notified
to take the said James A. Jarman in
to custony. The undersigned believes
that this was a meritorious case and
would ask that your honorable body
offer a reward of one hundred dollars
(4100) for the arrest and conviction of
the said James A. Jarman upon one or
both of the charges contained fu said
complaint.
H. D, Grady, Sheriff.
I move that the prayer of the petit
ioner be granted.
Otto Nilson.
M. P Sullivan.
Motion carried
( To belcontlnued.)
For Sale or Rent.
The Fleener farm of <140 acres—See
] T. J. Fleenei, O'Neill, Nebr. 23-tf
LIFE INNEW YORK
How It May Run In a Deep Rut
In the Matter of Locality.
LAMENT OF A MAN WHO MOVED
The Homesickness That Came With'
Working Uptown After Twenty
Years of Routine Travel to and From
and In the Downtown District.
There are thousands and thousand?
of men In New York city whose busi
ness has been confined to oni district
for twenty years or more, whose dally
routine seldom fluctuates, yvlio art
punctual In traveling by a certain
train every day In the week, who reach
their offices, barring tie-ups, at a regu
lar hour and take up their dally grind
and hold to It until the hour of closing
Many of these men unconsciously get
to know and make friends of people
whose names they never learn. They
become attached to localities In a
strange sort of way and do not realize
how strong Is the attachment* Here
Is the story of one of them lnt$ whose
life there has come a change through
moving that startles and surprises
him and throws a quaint light upon
some or the city s people.
“In the twenty years that I was
downtown,” tho man said in telling his
experience, “I was in the hahlt, wenth
er permitting, of taking a walk aftet
the luncheon hour every day In some
street between City Ilall and the Bat
tery. 1 have footed every bit of un
built ground In that territory. What
marvelous changes have come in those
twenty years! How many signs on
buildings have changed In that tlm(e!
How many houses have been pulled
down! How many new ones have gohe
up, some of them towering skyward,
to take the places of the landmarks?
“I got to know the lower end of
town so well I could shut my eyes ana
make a mental picture of many of the
blocks and see the names on tho build
ings. If I wanted any article, from
shoelaces to anything elaborate, I knqw
exactly where to get them. If some
particular dish were desired I knew
where It could be served and just what
It would cost.
“A great city never stands still. It
Is as restless as the great deep. But
tho man who becomes a part of It
does not think until he gets away from
the part of it where he has done busi
ness what the changes are. When I
began my strolls there were no tun
nels under the two rivers. In the
years that have drifted awny great
bridges have been constructed be
tween Manhattan and Long Island.
It does not seem long since I used to
hear the restless puff of the coal fed
locomotives of the elevated system,
yet so gradually did the old order pass
that I do not distinctly recall when
the present system was Installed.
"The changes that . took place lu
business firms were Interesting. Many,
many times I have seen the name of
the man whp established a trade taken
down and that of his son or Sons take
Its place. So frequently were the
same people met In the same place
and at the same hour that we nodded
as we passed, although non© of us
knew the name of the nodder.
“Not long ago the business with
itfhleh I am connected made a jump
tiptown. Never until I took my traps
uptown had I any occasion to walk in
the street where our new building
Stands. The first day I went out to
luncheon I had to search for a res
taurant. It seemed odd. I saw peo
ple I never saw before. I read signs—
one of my fool habits—I never read
before. Many of the vehicles that
passed were quite unlike those I used
to see downtown.
“I had to change my hour and route
for coming to business. For awhile I
h«d to watch the street signs to know
where to get off. How I missed the
familiar call of the guard of the car—
for I always came down In the same
car In the makeup of the elevated
train—the one I always boarded at
the same hour.
“And that makes me think. I came
to know by their faces most of the
passengers who boarded that train at
ray station. I knew where most of
them got off. Now that I am In new
quarters In a new section I miss all
these people with whom I traveled for
years. Do they miss mo, I wonder?
“And the many whom I came to
know downtown—how they will be
missed! There Is the old street preach
er who used to stand on a soap box
nenr Wall street or on the stone steps
of the custom house and talk to people
in the summer days and again In the
days that betokened the coming of au
tumn. Then there were the Lenten
days when I spent a part of my hour
at Trinity or In old St Paul’s. I came
to know the regular attendants on
those services so that the strangers
became conspicuous. There are no
street preachers 1ft the new district to
which I have gone. I wonder why
the middle district at the great city
doesn’t need spiritual direction ns well
as the downtown districts.
“And so It seems sometimes that I
am In a new town, among new people,
seeing new buildings, reading new
signs, hearing new voices, but all In
the. some old New York. And when 1
think of the old walks X have taken
downtown, the old buildings that 1
passed so often that they became as
familiar as the faces I met and never
kae\v by name, of the strolls along
the two rivers, of the craft I saw so
often coming and going—when I think
of all these there comes over me that
sort of feeling that a boy has when he
misses his mother. I think It la called
homesickness.’’—New York Press.
ff ,1
i
y
From Decamoer 91h to January Isl j—
r I am going to dispose of my store to my brother, who
has just returned from the old country, and the stock
must be reduced before the change can be made. Every
thing will be sold at cost for the next three weeks. This
sale will give you an opportunity to get bargains that you
: never got before. This is no advertising scheme, but a
thorough business proposition; we must reduce the stock 1
so everything goes at Actual Cost the next three weeks.
THE CASH STORE
J. H. SHAHEEN, Proprietor. |
Nebraska's Population.
Nebraska has 1,192,214 people, about
half as many as live in the city of
Chicago. But this is 125,914 more
than the state had ten years ago.
Douglas county gained 28,158 Lan
caster 8,958 That makes 37,116 added
to the ciiies of Lincoln and Omaha
That leaves a gain of 77,798 in the
rural district, sabout 1 01 persons to
the square mile of area. This ip about
what the birth rate should show in
ten years above the death rate.
The following counties have lost in
population: Burt, Butler, Cass, Clay,
Cuming, Dixon, Dodge, Fillmore,
Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Johnson,
Kearney, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee,
Phelps, Polk, Richardson, Saline,
Saunders and Washington. Some of
the counties have lost more than
1,000 inhibitants.
Sues Northwestern Railroad.
David A. Huston of Ewing has
brought suit against the Chicago and
Northwestern railroad company for
$910.00 damages alleged to have been
sustained in the shipment of a car
load of horses on the defendants con&
pany’s road from Ewing||to (Teneva,
Neb In the petition he alleges that
he shipped the horses on Nov 3, 1910,
and that the trip should have been
made in eighteen hours, but on ac
count of the dilitary tactics of the de
fendant it took twenty eight hdurs to
make the trip. For this delay in de
livery he asks #100. He further alleg
es that one horse, valued at $120, was
bruised, mangled and made lame and
injured to tlie damage of the plaint ffT
in the sum of $115; another valued a'
$100, was damaged to the extent ot
$56; another valued at $150 was dam
aged to the extent Of $100; one team
valued at $275 damaged to the extent
of #55; one yearling damaged to the
extent of $20; another yearling valued
at #85 damaged to the extent of $ 45;
The remaining twenty-one head were
damaged to the extent of #420, making
a total of $910, for which sum with in
terest at seven per cent from Nov. 4,
1910, plaintiff prays for judgment
against said corporation.
Advertised Letters.
The following letters remain un
called for in the O’Neill postofflee for
week ending Nov. 26th, 1910.
Pearl Bishop, T. E. Bayuohoffer,
Mr. G. C. Kenry, Tom Kerns, card.
Tom Kerns, letter, L. E. Graham,
Mr. Roy Vaudenter. A. Vauworht, two
cards, Jerry West, 1755$ Care of Journ
al, D. R. Barker, John Day, Tom
Dunne, Chily Pate, Emary Agather,
Harry E. McGetcrick.
In calling for the above please say
“advertised.” If not called for within
fifteen days they will be sent to the
dead letter office.
R. J. Marsh, P. M.
The famous Palraather Sisters will
appear at the Opera Housi Tuesday
Dec 13 in their up to date original
program of high class musical sketch
es There are live sisters in the
company, aad each of them an artist
of exceptional merit, their programs
are fall of humor and life and their
original sketches of college and Gypsy
I' r. ——
We are unquestionably the best S
equipped we ever have been for the
holiday season. It is impossible to
tell you through the newspapers all
of the splendid display of Christmas
goods we have this year; it is equal
lyimpossible for you to fail to find. ^4
just what you waut for presents it
you look over our magnificient
assortments, and if you donft know
what you want it ts our business to 1
assist you in making selections. |
We call special attention to the |
fact that we have the largest assort- R
iment of China and Cut Glass in the |
city. Silverware, fancy novelties, 1
toys, books, post cards, ets. We |
have recently added a fine line of
candies and can supply your Christ- j
mas wants in the line of sweets. Give
us a call.
75he RACKET STORE- -—
I FRANK BOWEN, Proprietor 1
t\
life are alone worth the price of ad
mission, they have a solo orchestra,
and each being soloists they make a
specialty of high class orchest ra novel
ties, they also have an excellent man
dolin and guitar orchestra, that make
a specialty of College acts with this
line of music, a solo trio of singers,
solo soprano and humorus reader, one
can see at a glance what varied cnter
eainment they can put on, with this
combination. The appearance of the
handsome young ladies is in itself a
refreshing treat, and their beautiful
costumes and senic effects help to
beautify a program that is welt nigh
perfect. Do not miss this grand treat
for it will be the event of the reason
Last Phelps X’mas PhotosSat. Dec
17th. Hurry. Phelps. 27 2
Time for X’mas Photos till Sat.
Dec. 17th only. Phelps. 25-2
Time for X’mas Photos till Sat.
Dec 17th only. Phelps 25-2
i
COCKERILL BROS. I
Poo/d Billiard Parlors
We have opened a Pool and Billiard
Hall in the old Gielish market
building and respectfullysolicit a
share of your patronage.
.0 1*,
DR- J. P.
Physician and Surgeon
Special attention given to
DISEASES OF WOMEN,
OF THE EYE AND
FITTING OF GLASSES