The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 25, 1913, Image 5

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    Save Work
i Worry=
Money
by using a Stover Gasoline
Engine. Made right. Sold rig)it.
Send for llustrated catalogue
free.
SANDWICH MFG. CO.
Council Bluffs, la. ~!
General Agents.
California, Washington
Oregon, British Columbia
ONE WAY
FROM PRINCIPAL NEBRASKA TOWNS
September 25 to October 10, 1913.
THROUGH TOURIST SLEEPERS TO THE COAST
VIA SALT LAKE ROUTE, Scenic Colorado, every day; personally con
ducted Wednesdays and Saturdays.
VIA WESTERN PACIFIC, Scenic Colorado, Feather River Canyon; per
sonally condvcled Wednesdays and Fridays.
VIA SOUTHERN PACIFIC Scenic Colorado, Salt Lake, every day; per
sonally conducted Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.
VIA SOUTHERN PACIFIC, every day through the Northwest, to Spokane
Seattle.
VIA GREAT NORTHERN, every day, through the Northwest, to Spokane,
•Seattle.
The undersigned will be pleased to ticket you, arrange for your
hrough berths in tourist sleepers.
H. G. FREY, Ticket Agent, O'Neill
L. W. WAKELEY, Gen’I. Passenger Agt., Omaha, Neb
STUDENTS!
I Here's the Neatest, Cleanest, Easiest
to Fill Fountain Pen You Ever Saw
“Everybody's Wearing Them Now"
7ohn w. hiber
Jeweler and Optician
Inman Items.
Rev. and Mrs. Mni ton of Page
were in Inman last Tuesday.
The Fair store shipped a car
load of cattle to Omaha Monday.
Mrs. Ed Clark went to Omaha
last Tuesday to do some shop
ping.
A baby boy look up his abode
at the Roy DeLong home last
Saturday.
The I. O. O. F. hall will be
dedicated by a big supper and
dance Oct. 8th.
Chancey Keyes and Edward
Wilcox made a business trip to
O’Neill Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Downey
and sons of Page spent Sunday
at the J. T. Tavenor home.
Mrs. Chas. Enders and daugh
ter, Hazel, and Miss I.ucy Judd
visited in O’Neill Saturday.
James Thompson and family,
who have been attending the fail
at Sioux City, returned home
Monday.
Mrs. J. P. Hancock and Mrs.
C. J. Malone went to Meadow
Grove last Saturday to attend a
Rebekah convention.
Mrs. Roy Townsend, Mrs.
Mills, Mrs. Peeler and Mrs. Davis
of O’Neill autoed to Inman in the
Townsend car last Tuesday.
The Ladies’ Aid cleaned anc
papered the M. E. parsonage last
Tuesday. But we did not suceed
in getting a Minister at the con
ference. Our charge will be sup
plied.
Miss Sadie Decker was taken
to the St. Vincent hospital at
Sioux city last Saturday to under
go an operation for appendicitis,
but before she reached the hos
pital her appendix bursied leaving
her in a critical condition. Mon
day she was not expected to live,
but she is gradually growing
better and her many friends hope
her a speedy recovery.
Diarrhoea Quickly Cured.
“I was taken with diarrhoea and
Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, per
suaded me to try a bottle of Chamber
lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. After taking one dose of it
1 was cured. It also cured others
that I gave it to,” writes M. E. Geb
hart, Oriole, Pa. That is not at all |
unusual. An ordinary attack of
diarrhoea can almost invariably be
cured bv one or two doses of this
remedy. For sale by all dealers, adv
My Notice to You!
Do you want to buy a piano? If
you won’t buy one of me, let me make
the other fellow sell you one cheap.
My expenses nit and my profit will be
very small. No exclusive piano dealer
can complete with me.
Implements.
Rain wagons, Fairbanks Kerosene
engines in stock. Do these names
mean high class gasoline engins,
pumps and wind mills and pipe. I am
agent for Case and Rumley and Avery
threshers and engines.
I write fire insurance and surety
uonds.
14-4 Frank Campbell.
PAID ADVERTISEMENTS.
Dr. Corbett, dentist, in O’Neill
every day. 15-tf
Wanted—Good girl at NcMillan &
Markey bakery. 10-tf
Wanted—Girl (or general house
work.— Mis. P. J. Flynn. ll-tf.
Fine Candles and Hot Chocolate.—
McMillan & Markley’s Bakery and
Candy Kitchen. 22-tf.
Star Brand Shoes are better, nc
substitute for leather ever used. Fot
sale by Fred Alberts 61-tf
Try Frank and Vince Suchy’s tailor
shop for French Dry Cleaning. Theii
work can’t be beat. 1-tf.
Highest cash price paid for fresh
eggs at the Busy Bee restaurant —
Thompson & Reed, Prop. 14-2pd
For Sale—My residence property in
the west part of town. Six lotR well
improved.—R. H. Madison. 48-lf
For Sale—House and lot one block
east of the school house. Terms
reasonable.—D. W. Cameron. 9-tf
Try Zipp coal in the stove with the
long pipe where you have had trouble
with soot —O O. Snyder. 16-1
For Sale or Trade—One thorough
bred Durham bull, 3 years old, guar
anteed Call upon or write, E. A.
Steskel, Atkinson, Neb., route 1. 14-4
We do French Dry Cleaning in out
shop of all ladies and gentlemen’s
garments. Nothing but first class
work turned out. At Frank and Vince
Suchy’s tailor shop. 1-tf
Reward—Tl will pay #5 reward foi
the return of the two automobile
blankets taken from my place on the
night of September 14th, or for infor
mation that will lead to their re
covery.—William Boedecker, O’Neill.
Strayed—From our slaughter house,
one mile east of O’Neill, on or about
August 8, one red cow, bar on right
shoulder, with bob tail. Anyone hav
ing information concerning her where
abouts please notify the Sanitary
Meat Market. ll-tf.
wauguL a. o&u i/uia.
"Last winter my son caught a very
bad cold and the way he coughed was
something dreadful,” writes Mrs.
Sarah E. Dunkan, of Tipton, Iowa.
We thought sure he was going into
consumption. We bought just one
bottle of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy and that one bottle stopped
his cough and cured bis cold
completely.” For sale by all dealers.
Adv.
Supervisors Proceedings.
On motion the following school dis
trict levies were made on the one dol
lar valuation for the year 1913.
SCHOOL LEVIES.
No. Valuation Estimate Levy
1 11687 300 30
2 S«004 3300 35
3 11707 3«5 35
4 18426 35 39
5 59801 150 03
2'/. 0092 450 85
City 268205 9000 26
8 28605 350 15
9 26200 300 l5
10 13128 410 35
U 11287 400 35
12 14042 970 35
13 0172 340 35
I* 17863 300 20
15 25700 300 15
18 21056 550 30
17 26928 400 15
18 19700 25
184 12071 IS
19 12046 300 25
20 60823 1000 20
21 163085 0100 311
22 26019 450 20
23 21204 575 30
24 19396 400 25
D
26 13009 267 25
27 15556 350 25
29 115155 6000 35
30 84970 2854 35
31 109343 25
32 16475 450 30
33 19265 225 10
35 2H068 400 15
36 26917 504 20
37 29860 527 2:
38 17676 5'H) 30
39 14208 385 X
40 11872 75 11
41 34792 385 11
42 18642 250 10
I)
44 110176 30
D 20
48 10824 600 30
47 18111 400 20
48 17986 10
49 24001 500 8f
50 18897 6(10 30
51 16127 375 21
52 18681 ar>0 20
53 14610 305 2!
D
55 10871 700 31
56 22498 800 3(
57 27705 658 2S
58 41733 400 li
59 18226 376 S(
80 28121 200 01
D
82 21859 425 «
63 18611 3115 2(
84 19011 200 11
85 28877 250 1(
86 21331 400 2<
67 26782 600 2i
88 15715 350 21
69 20048 300 II
70 27314 10O 01
71 13745 310 21
72 Made no levy
73 17750 488 31
74 31316 475 li
76 4822 300 o
77 13835 202 li
78 9704 325 3
79 17463 278 2
80 18889 358 2
81 10056 200 2i
82 9883 160 2i
83 20100 300 II
84 15827 360 2
88 28782 300 1:
87 7209 200 3
88 42817 800 li
89 28940 360 II
90 20758 651 II
90H 8804 110 3
91 34035 300 1
92 21663 450 2
93 23690 500 2
94 18295
95 8972 810 3
96 13753 400 33
97 10794 25
90 18030 429 25
99 10876 225 22
100 10712 450 30
101 10010 400 25
102 12962 300 25
10M 11476 400 35
106 17360 525 32
107 33434 850 27
108 16214 500 35
110 24776 325 15
111 10817 512 85
112 27405 475 lx
113 23696 200 10
,114 10420 350 25
] 115 21327 250 12
116 10980 No levy
117 11304 250 30
118 13100 365 30
110 37451 200 00
120 14002 22
121 9790 300 35
122 0768 250 30
133 11026 377 35
124 14128 375 !5
125 49472 300 07
127 15051 485 85
128 12603 400 35
120 8105 75 10
131 17972 500 30
132 11078 1UO 10
134 28001 350 15
135 20882 375 20
136 49784 400 10
137 30191 25
138 24781 030 30
141 10008 150 10
142 12830 302 30
143 14055 415 35
144 10831 428 25
145 12710 504 35
148 28102 300 12
147 19287 420 25
148 12054 300 25
150 21875 522 20
162 31406 600 20
465 20834 425 22
156 15302 250 20
157 22350 150 08
158 8154 860 35
160 14150 300 22
100 11410 800 30
102 8850 250 30
163 15934 250 18
165 32507
168 16023 350 20
109 18078 327 20
i rn ttrim
171 8783 400 3.7
172 13253 200 16
173 11012 400 35
174 20883 450 35
176 8821 500 35
177 8004 300 35
178 12323 330 25
180 20054 450 25
181 32473 375 15
183 10465 330 851
184 10654 *51
187 21412 400 20
188 18441 431 26
189 6140 475 35
192 17124 f45 22
193 8521 350 45
194 25590 200 08
196 25278 472 20
197 10494 OKI 35
199 11523 400 35
202 19405 30
203 18271 400 2"
205 13788 200 16
206 21919 600 30
•207 23801 150 08
208 11458 350 35
2C9 12892 350 30
210 13600 400 35
211 17662 SUO 20
312 12730 *75 30
213 20352 16
315 11659 406 35
216 11709 430 35
218 16101 600 35
220 5969
222 16375 300 20
223 13233 365 30
224 10012 No levy made
225 10445 380 35
228 29318 20
227 14347 300 26
228 19674 350 20
229 3C768 200 07
231 19959 275 15
232 19210 350 20
283 17253 383 25
234 11278 247 25
235 737(1
230 14615 425 36
237 , 12499 400 35
238 14445 425 35
289 9852 609 • 35
240 9757 2»
241 0632 295 36
342 20326 100 05
243 16543 300 20
244 13722 35
245 * 14101 400 30
246 8739 170 35
247 11768 26
248 9950 276
249 16187 325 20
250 7885 305 35
18(4 15
90(4 20
On motion the following levies were
made on the one dollar valuation to
pay school district bonds for the year
1913.
District No. Mills Levy
City of O'Neill.16
20 . 4
30 . 8
44 . 6
137.8
172. 5
238.. 6
245.14
11 . 4
21 .10
39. 6
71 .12
157.10
230. 7
244 .10
248.15
Tb. D. Sievers, Chairman.
S F. McNichols, County Clerk.
Statement of the Ownership, Man
agement, Circulation, Etc.,
Of The Frontier, published weekly
at O’Neill, Nebr., required by the
Aot of August 24, 1912.
Editor. D. 11. Cronin, O’Neill, Neb.
' Managing Editor, D. H. Cronin,
i O’Neill, Nebr.
i Business Managers, D. H. Cronin,
i O’Neill, Nebr.
' Publisher, D. H. Cronin, O’Neill,
i Nebr.
i Known bondholders, mortgagees,
i and other security holders, holding 1
i per cent or more of total amount of
■ bonds, mortgages, or other securities:
i None.
i D. H. Cronin.
> Sworn to and subscribed beiore me
i this 25th day of Sept., 1913.
i (Seal) C. P. Hancock,
i Notary Public.
My commission expires March 21,
i 11916.
A Futile
Attempt ii
;; To Keep a Boy and a Girl ;
From Wedlock
By PETER SCHONSKY
Count Ivan Ivanovich, a Russian no
bleman, bad the misfortune to marry
a wife who for years led him a dance,
then ran away with an officer in the
army, lenvlng him alone with a son,
Boris, a year old.
Naturally the count was imblttered
•gainst women. The very sight of one
of the opposite sex threw him into a
State bordering on insanity, lie at
last became so affected on encounter
ing n woman that his physician recom
mended that he go where.he would not
meet them.
So Count Ivan sold out his estate
near St. Petersburg nnd went Into Si
beria, where he bought a large tract of
land, in the center of which he built
himself a bouse. He encircled his laud
with a high wall, in which there was
but one opening, at which he stationed
a guard with instructions not to per
mit any woman or female child to en
ter the inclosure. His servants were
all men, and if any article was needed
that a mnn could not make it was ob
tained from without.
Besides keeping nway from women
himself, the count decided to keep his
son away from them. When Boris be
gan to talk his father gave orders that
he should not bo told that there were
such persons as women In the world.
The boy was to grow up thinking that
the only human beings were men. Per
uups mere was a [race or insanuy m
this, but be thnt as It may, so great
was the care taken to keep all sexual
knowledge away from Boris that he
was fifteen years old before such
knowledge came to him.
The revelation reached him in this
way: A lady of Moscow, Catherine
Barchikoff, had the same experience
with her husband that Count Ivano
vich had with his wife, Barchikoff
having deserted her for her maid. The
sight of a man did not have the same
effect upon her that the sight of a
woman invariably hnd on Count
Ivanovich, but she determined to bring
up her baby daughter, Nathalie, in
ignorance of the male sex, keeping
her so if possible till she should have
passed the age at which young girls
usually marry.
Now, Mme. Barchikoff knew as well
ns did Count Ivanovich that it would
be Impossible to bring up a girl never
to see a man unless in a wilderness.
So she began to make inquiries ns to
where she should find an uninhabited
region in which to live. Very nat
urally, she arrived at the same conclu
sions as Count Ivanovich. Siberia was
but thinly settled, and it was the
nearest region to St Petersburg fitted
for the purpose, was not far from ■
railroad terminal and therefore avail
able for receiving supplies. Thus it
happened that Count Ivanovich took
a son and Mme. Barchikoff a daugh
ter to the same neighborhood in Si
beria, the one to keep his boy away
from women, the other to keep her girl
away from men.
Siberia is a very large country, but
not large enough to keep apart a man
and a woman, provided there be but
one man and one woman within its
limits, even though they be at points
farthest apart. Boris Ivanovich and
Nathalie Barchikoff were the only
youth and maiden in the region in
which they dwelt, and they were not
very far apart. Ergo, if the above
reasoning is correct it follows that
despite the watchfulness of their re
spective parents they would sooner or
luter form a union.
Boris grew up a manly young fel
low and before he was thirteen years
old began to chafe at being confined
within an inclosure. When he asked
permission to go outside the walls his
father said to him:
“Are you not permitted to ronm over
a vast territory? Have you not rivers
in which to fish? Have you not forests
in which to hunt? Be content, my boy.
Within our domain you are safe; with
out it you will be subject to a great
danger.”
“What danger?”
“Without our walls is an animal
something like a man. It is made in
the image of a man, but has the eye
of a serpent. It charms men as the
snake charms birds. If you once meet
one of these creatures you are liable
to be devoured."
Far from being impressed with such
a warning, Boris, who was fond of
hunting, thought continuously about
this creature fashioned something like
n man, yet able to charm men to de
stroy them. Gradually a desire grew
upon him to see one of these creatures.
If he felt a spell coming over him he
would shoot the vampire. It wyas not
long before he was trying to bribe the
guard at the gate to let him out. But
the guurd was incorruptible. So when
Boris was in his sixteenth year he
rodo away one morning with an ax
and his gun and, reaching the wall, cut
dowrn a tree that leaned toward it and,
when the tree fell against the top of
the wall, climbed up and dropped
down on the ground outside the in
closure.
The boy, keeping his gun ready to
protect him in case of need, hunted for
hours for the manlike creature his fa
ther had told him about, but found
only w'lld animals. He returned by
felling a tree on the outside against
the wall and went home, no one hav
rng-vnscoverua jjs u^ji—iuj ijlj wnu" me
inclosute.
Boriat made many such trips before
he found the manlike creature. Com
ing one day to a high fence, he climb
ed it and pursued his way through a
forest. Presently, coming to a lake
whose surface was frozen, he saw
what he was convinced was the crea
ture he was desirous to meet skating
on the ice.
From what his father had told him
he had got an idea that there was
something hideous about the animal
and that it influenced men not by its
beauty, but by magic. What he saw
was so beautiful that instead of bring
ing his gun into position to protect
himself it dropped out of his hands
forgotten. The creature wore a gown
trimmed with fur, the garment flutter
ing in the wind as she skimmed grace
fully hither and thither. A dainty cap.
made chiefly of fur, was on her head,
and her hands were incased in fur.
Boris forgot entirely his father’s cau
tion. Ills chief desire was to go and
see if he could catch the thing. Un
fortunately he had no skates with him.
lie ran to the margin of the lake and
called. The vampire turned, stopped
and stood gazing at him with eyes as
full of wonder as his own.
’’Can you talk?” he called to her.
“Yes. Can you?’
“Of course I can, or I couldn’t have
asked you the question.”
“I wonder If you’re not a man?”
“Of course I am. Why do you won
der if I am?"
“Because I’ve heard our servants
talk about what they call men, but
I’ve never seen one before.”
“And I’ve never seen anything like
you before. What are you?”
“Why, I’m a girl."
“Are you the creature that charms
men as snakes charm birds and then
eats them?”
“I don’t eat men. I never saw one
before."
Each had by this time approached
the other. The girl put her hand on
UUMB BltTVU Uim lUUL’Utra 1113 VUtTh
with her finger.
“Have you got a name?” she asked.
“Yes; Boris.”
"My name Is Nathalie.”
Boris took the cap off her head and
saw the coils of hair. He run bis band
over them.
“How smooth and soft,” he said.
Suddenly her skates slipped from nn
der her, and she fell Into his arms.
She smiled at him, showing white
teeth between her lips. No one ever
told him about a kiss. He had never
heard of such a tiling. No one ever,
told a newborn babe that, feeling hun
gry, It W'ould find sustenance at its
mother’s breast. Boris kissed the lips
before him from the same cause—in
stinct. He started.
"What is It?" she asked.
"The spell.”
“What spell? Isn’t it nice?"
"Nice! Too nice. Are you going to
charm and eat me?”
The girl laughed and showed the
same white teeth between the red lips
and a couple of dimples besides. He
kissed her again. Then he began to
think very hard.
“What are you thinking about?” ask
ed Nathalie.
“Well, I was thinking that if what
my father said Is true, that you are
charming me to destroy me, you can
go right on doing it, and I’m going
right on doing It, too, till I’m lost."
And he kissed her again.
Mme. Barchlkoff, having a mind to
Join her daughter, who, she was aware,
had gone to the lake to skate, at this
moment stepped from the edge of a
road and stood transfixed at seeing her
daughter held in the arms of a youth,
whose lips were pressed upon the
girl’s. The good woman caught at a
tree to prevent her falling in a swoon,
and ns soon as she could gather her
faculties she hurried down on to the
tee.
“What are you doing here?" she de
manded of Boris.
“Going to the devil as fast as pos
sible. But I can’t be ruined by you.
lou may be one of the same kind, but
I can resist you without trouble.”
“Go away from here.”
“I won’t."
“Nathalie, come to the house imme
diately.”
“I won’t. If this is the awful man
I’ve heard about I don’t think he’s so
awful nt all.” And she clung to Boris.
"Come to the house, both of you,”
said the mother, more persuasively,
and they obeyed.
An hour later Mme. Barchlkoff was
driven in a sleigh to the gate of Count
Ivanovich and demanded admittance.
Being refused, she sent in word to the
count that her son was at her house
making love to her daughter. The
count, having steadied himself with
a goblet of vodka, went out to see his
visitor and, after a brief conversation
between the two, rode back with her
to her home. There they found the
young couple sitting before an open
fire locked in each other’s arms.
“You are ruined!” cried the count to
his son.
“I love to be ruined,” was the reply.
“You have brought down upon your
self,” said Mme. Barchlkoff to her
daughter, “a terrible trouble.”
“I’m ready to endure It,” replied the
girl, “for another of those what-you
may-call-’ems” (referring to the kisses).
“Send for the priest!” cried the lady.
“The priest! Great heavens! Is my
son to be manacled?”
"Yes, and I presume he will leave
his wife for a menial.”
“Well,” moaned the father, “I sup
pose I must yield. Oh, my son, you
have brought great misery on yourself.
You will regret this all your life."
The priest came and went through a
ceremony the young people did not
understand, and that was the end of
the endeavor of Count Ivanovich and
Mme. Barchlkoff trying to keep a boy
and a girl apart