The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 18, 1915, Image 1

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    The Frontier.
VOLUME XXXV. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1915. NUMBER 40.
SERVICE ^ Where a
~l Lirvqviist © Palmer Jam
NOW WE ARE IN THE SWING OF A
GREAT NEW SEASI IN - SPRING
ft is a pleasure to write it, especially as applied to Women's Wearing Apparel. We are answering
the call of what every woman has upon her mind
•k i
Suits, Coats, Dresses and Skirts
First—a saving on all—we’ll say nothing of the style. You can appreciate that better by actual inspection; but in kind and character, in fit, finish, the tailoring and
trimmings, in cloth, in every detail that goes to make service, our garments are far more superior than O’Neill has ever witnessed at the price. Cloths used in these
suits have never been seen before in O’Neill at this price. All styles aristocrats of a new season, in models distinctively original new in every characteristic, eom- g
plying in every detail. Plain tailored or jaunty belted and plaited or pointed coat styles with full flare gores and plaited skirts; in shades that are most wanted
Sand, Putty, Battleship Gray, Belgian Blue, Navy, the very smart checks, the fancy mixtures and, of course, Blacks. Cloths included Gabardine, Poplin, Coverts. 1
We cordially invite you to inspect this line. I
LOCAL MATTERS.
_ 1
W. J. Hammond had business at Ne- (
ligh Tuesday. ‘
C. W. Moss of Atkinson was in the ,
' city Monday.
Bert Powell is home from a few (
week’s visit in Florida.
James Lobe pulled for Oskosh, Neb., ,
Tuesday on a business trip.
Tom Laham of Atkinson spent Sun- j
day and Monday with friends in the
city. i
Anton Toy was in Omaha last week :
attending the retail merchants’ con- ;
vention.
Mr. Lindquest spent most of the
week with his business partner at
Wausa.
James Brown of the O’Neill News
and Cigar store was a Norfolk visitor
last Friday.
L. W. Arnold, who has been at Spen
cer this winter, is back to O’Neill, hav
ing come over last week.
Edward Myers and Lena Guse of
Snmet obtained a marriage license at
e county judge’s office Tuesday.
A. L. Cowperthwaite arrived yester
day on the 4:45 from his winter’s
hibernation near Los Angles, Calif.
Elmer and Mrs. Merriman left Sat
urday for Page for a shorter route out
to the farm near Middle Branch
whither they are moving.
Sheriff Grady and Herb Hammond
took James Janas, a young man from
south of Atkinson, to the state hospi
tal at Norfolk on Monday.
Miss Magurite Mathews departed
Monday for her home at Albion. She
had been visiting a few weeks here
with her sister, Mrs. J. A. Brown.
Hon. E. H. Whelan went to Jackson
Tuesday to supply the demand there
for a 17th of March oration for which
E. H. is noted as having no peer.
William Myers and family left Em
met last Friday for De Kalb county,
Illinois, their former home, and ex
pect to reside there in the future.
Dr. and Mrs. E. T. Wilson went to
Valentine Monday night to attend the
session there Tuesday of the North
west Nebraska Medical association. j
Miss Snyder, Principal in the
O’Neill high schools, went to Atkinson
last Wednesday to act as one of the
judges in a declamatory contest of
the Atkinson schools.
Atkinson is going to change the in
corporation of the town from village
to city. Division will be made of the
incorporation into three wards and a
mayor and council elected.
Col. Barney Corrigan came down
from Emmet last week and expects to
make his home here. He had a sale
near Emmet Monday and Tuesday
went to Omaha for a brief stay.
A new floor has been laid in the
county treasurer’s office. A heavy
weight like M. R. needs substantial
footing and The Frontier suggests
that concrete be used next time.
Last Saturday twenty-eight teachers
from the various town schools from
Ainsworth to Atkinson met at the
latter place for the discussion of sub-1
jects pertaining to graded and high
school work.
More emigrants are arriving at
O’Neill and adjacent towns in Holt
county this spring than for a number
of years past. The majority of them
are coming well equipped for farming
or stockraising, settling all over the
county, and many having bought
places. i , -- [
People who neglected to take in
their thermometers Monday night had
them froze up. The little tubes indi
cated only 6 degrees above at 8 a. m.
Tuesday, which is regarded pretty
frosty for a spring morning.
Jim Gaughenbaugh is back from
Omaha, where he spent about seven
weeks in a hospital after the removal
of varicose veins from his good right
leg. He is spending the convalescent
period at a hotel here in town.
Congressman Kinkaid returned Sat
urday from Washington to spend a
few days here before going on to Cali
fornia on official and private business.
The judge says he will probably take
in the exposition while on the coast.
Holt county is not the only one that
has citizens who want to know what
the supervisors are doing and why
they did it. According to the Johns
town Enterprise citizens of Cherry
county are demanding an accounting
of the county’s finances.
Guy Alderson returned Friday even
ing from a trip to Norfolk, going out
to his home twenty miles south of
O’Neill Saturday. Mr. Alderson had a
sale at his place yesterday and leaves
soon for St. Paul, Howard county,
where he will make his home.
Mrs. Phillip Morrison, her son R.
R. and daughter Mrs. Peter Donohoe,
departed Saturday for St. Louis upon
receiving word of the serious illness
of John Morrison. Word was received
after their departure Saturday morn
ing of the death of Mr. Morrison.
Inman Leader: G. M. Beardley, of
near Page, who was taken to Blaine
county a week ago last Sunday by
Sheriff Yost, to answer to the charge
of bigamy instituted by wife No. 1,
returned home Monday accompanied
by wife No. 2 and the three children.
He was placed under bonds to appear
at the spring term of the Blaine
county court.
The telephone company is arranging ,<
to occupy rooms at the Golden annex
with the central station. The company
is doing a large amount of w'ork here
relocating and putting in new cables,
and will also transfer the poles and
wires from the streets to the allies.
W. J. Sprague, who came down to 1
Holt county from South Dakota in
time to get “tied up” this side the Nio
brara in the last snow storm, came
in Tuesday from Star with his son ,
Roily. Mr. Sprague is arranging to
go to Rosette, Wyo., within a week or
ten days.
Our old friend of the exchange
table, the Chambers Bugle, has come
into the hands of Charles Johnson who
is about the best “news getter” that
has been on the job over that way
lately, but The Frantier would sug
gest to the esteemed editor that he
take a course of instruction in the art
preservative.
D. D. Harrington was called to
Wisner Tuesday by the death of his
wife’s mother. Mrs. Harrington, who
had been with her mother at Wisner a
good part of the winter but recently
returned home, was called to Wisner
last Saturday, when she received word
that her mother was not expected to
survive but a short time.
The contest for the O’Neill post of- !
fice has been settled by the appointment
of M. H. McCarthy as post master.
Announcement of the appointment
| was made last Saturday. It will prob
j ably be some days before Mr. McCar
j thy receives his commission and as
sumes the duties of postmaster. The
change will effect the present force to
the extent of perhaps one clerk losing
her place and readjustment of titles.
Mr. Schmidt will continue in service
as assistant.
Mrs. PeTer Curtis and son Lyle de
parted Monday for Riverton, Wy
oming, Mr. Curtis having preceded
them a week previous. Associated
with Frank Holt, formerly of the tele
phone company opperating in this
city, they have secured a telephone
franchise at Riverton and will put in a
system there.
G. F. Roberg of Page was in the
city Tuesday, coming up Monday night
over the Northwestern via Inman. Th<
flurry of snow Monday again block
aded the cuts on the Burlington that
have been causing endless trouble all
winter. Mr. Roberg says the wagon
road to Inman also drifted shut Mon
day .
James Early, the landed cattle
prince from the Eagle, came to town
the first of the week and is stopping
at a local hotel. Jimy says he has
been snowed in out on the range for
four months and is going to stick
right here in town till the snow fades
away. Sure you are welcome to stay
forever, Mr. Early.
Georgia Hall, formerly of this city,
is playing with the Harrow-Howard
Stock company in Sioux Falls this
winter. From a Sioux Falls paper
this notice is taken of Miss Hall’s role
in the “Lion and the Mouse,” the
thirteenth performance of the company
at Sioux Falls: “Miss Georgia Lee
Hall as Shirley Rossmore has one of
the best opportunities to show her
ability as an actress that she has had
this season, and she met every demand
of the exacting part in the most
capable manner. Her cool handling of
the financier, her devotion to her
aged and broken father and her love
for young Ryder were artistically
portrayed, while she rose to the
heights of the big scene in the third
act with real dramatic power.”
Harry Bowen got tangled up with
the freight cars down in the railroad
yards last Friday, or rather Harry’s
dray wagon got it. Harry had drovi
in by the cars for freight and without
warning from the engine or elsewhere
the cars were moved and a box car
shoved of the track. The car struck
Harry’s wagon, smashing one hind
wheel and wrecking the rear end of
the wagon.
At a party Tuesday evening a fine
time was enjoyed by about forty-five
of themembers of the bible classes of
the Presbyterian Sunday school at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hunter in
the northeast part of the city. From
early in the evening until one o’clock
in the morning one continuous round
of pleasure was the order of the night,
the time being taken up in playing
games of numerous kinds with an ele
gant lunch at twelve o’clock.
The Frontier wants to extend its
compliments to J. P. Golden for the
splendid work embodied in the atlas
of Holt county compiled by him and
just lately put upon the market here.
It is by far the most complete, best
arranged and most concise work of
this kind ever got out, and citizens of
Holt county will find it the most useful
volume ever placed upon their book
shelves. The atias contains maps of
all precincts, showing names of the
land owners, complete directory of the
voters of each precinct, an interesting
history of the county and all towns
and settlements therein, and a vast
SPECIAL SALE
Ladies’ and Children’s Spring Coats
LADIES* SPILING SUITS
Every Garment
Fully
Guaranteed by
this Store
We are pleased to announce that we will have a special salesman at our
store with his full line of Ladies’ and Children’s Spring and Summer Coats and
Suits, direct from one of the large Eastern factories. .
This line is complete, containing all sizes from infants’ to 53-inch bust,
and in the newest and best materials. There will be all styles from the plain
effects to the latest novelties, and if you cannot be f+ted from his stock, he will
be pleased to take your order. ,
The prices are very reasonable, and there will be such a big selection that
we are sure you can find something to suit your purse as well as your tastes.
This sale affords you a rare opportunity to make a selection from a city stock
at much less than city prices.
Tuesday, March 23 P. GALLAGHER.
amount of statistical information of
the state and United States, as well
as maps of the same.
The Rev. Father Mathion is holding
a mission this week in the Episcopal
church. On Wednesday evening at 8
o’clock he speaks on St. Patrick; on
Thursday on the cause of the Refor
mation at 8 p. m. On Friday on the
Catholic Church at 8p. m. There is
an instruction each day at 3 p. m. and
the subjects are as follows: Wednes
day, Holy Baptism; Thursday, Holy
Communion; Friday, Confirmation and
Confession. There will be holy com
munion at 10 a. m. each day. You are
invited to all the above.
A farm tractor set up and started
up Tuesday at Biglin’s implement es
tablishment was the center of attrac
tion during a demonstration with Cap.
Booth, of local road grading fame, at
the throttle. It is a 10-8 gasoline
kerosene-distilate power engine—
which means it has the pulling power
of eight horses—and is turned out by
the International company. The en
gine is designed for farm or other
heavy draft work and is something
new to be seen here in the way of
small tractors.
City politics have started with the
fi'ing or petitions for candidates for
office, and these are not rushing
rapidly to get on the ticket. F. J.
Dishner for mayor and H. J. Ham
mond for re-election as clerk, Dr.
.T. P. Gilligan and T. F. Birmingham
I for members of the board cf education
I are all who have petitions on file up
to date. Councilmen Cronin, Mere
dith and McCarthy’s terms expire this
year; no petitions having been filed
I for their places but it is understood
these gentlemen will likely be candi
dates for re-election.
The first train this week over the
1 Burlington was a freight which pulled
in about 5 o’clock Wednesday morning.
The conditions of the cuts were such,
piled high on either side with snow,
that the light fall of snow Monday
with a gentle breeze filled in and bari
caded the tracks. A snow plow
opened up the line Tuesday and trains
were expected in that night but a
freight got hung up this side of Page
when the waycar and a freight car
'went off the rails. Several hours
1 were spent in readjustment and the
train pulled in with noisy blasts of the
whistle at 5 Wednesday mornnig. A
passenger train came in shortly after
ward.
Capt. Osmond of Sioux City, in
military uniform and bearing of a sol
dier. exhibited European war scenes
at the Royal last Friday night. Dur
ing the course of the captain’s re
marks in explanation of the various
' ' ictures he took occasioif to allay the
fears of any that might be in fear of
"•i invasion of the United States that,
the war department had recently put
in service artillery that shoots a
i 2 100-pound projectile twenty-three
miles and will shatter any armorplate
yet made at a distance of sixteen
miles. He also stated that the
heaviest artillery it) use in Europe was
the 1,000-pounders in use by the Ger
man armies.
I IN FUTURE YEARS.
You will appreciate in future years
having a collection of the following
photographs: Of the Baby, the Child -
ven. a Family-group, or a photo pf
I Mother nr Father. Special attention
to Wedding Groups. We copy or en
! large from old Photos. Style and
: rri-'e to suit every one.
O’NEILL PHOTO CO., O’Neill, Neb.
"I 42-48, 47-48,