The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 26, 1916, Image 5

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    Frosted Cocoanut Marshmellows
12 ounces. 10c
Sour Lemon Drops, 12 oz. 10c
Cream Mixed Candy, 16 oz. 10c
With flour, chocolate, sugar, in
fact everything used in making candy
high and going higher, just look at our
low prices.
All Sunday schools and day schools
should figure on their 'wants now.
Quality guaranteed. Prices guaran
teed on any orders placed with us be
fore November 15th.
Peanuts and candy are now cheaper
for the table than most other foods.
Try ours.
Downey’s 5-IO-26c
Store.
Gleanings.
Quite a snow flurry fell on the night
of the 18th and 19th inst, what?
C. R. Young was looking for the
machine to come and do his threshing
last week, but the snow storm pre
vented it. Cheer up, Clrak, we will
have plenty more nice weather yet.
We learn with regret that Mr.
Thomas Simonson is on the sick list
again. We hope soon to chronicle his
complete recovery.
Mr. Brentson’s sale was a decided
success. Horses brought a fair price
and cattle went high. Farm machinery
however did not sell well. On the
whole, the results was pretty good
considering the fact that there was
nnnthpr sale in the vicinitv a few davs
before.
Plenty of candidates were there get
ting acquainted with the voters.
J. P. Berger was up from Omaha to
attend the Brentson sale. He bought
most of the Stuff sold there.
Mr. Roberts’ mother came up from
Iowa on the 16th, to pay him and his
estimable family a visit.
In glancing through the “Help
Wanted” ads in a daily paper recently,
we noted the large number of ads for
male help, with the proviso that they
bg sober men aS one of the qualifica
tions. It would seem from that, that
neither the boozer or moderate drinker
is wanted in any line of business,
which leads us to enquire in what way
does liquor benefit the human race?
It is clearly evident that from the
articles pro and con on the subject of
prohibition that those states that have
- tried it for any length of time, that
they have forged ahead in business
and along all lines of endeavor,
o We are to vote on a prohibition
amendment on Tuesday, November 7th.
s Lets go to the polls, boys, and help
put Nebraska in the dry column.
c BEFORE RENEWING YOUR FARM
loan see me. I can make you a very
attractive proposition.—C. F. McKan
c na, O’Neill. 20-2
c Mrs. John Heimiller of Kokomo,
Indiana, a sister of Smith Merrill’s ar
c rived in the city Wednesday to visit
her brother and family.
c The failure of our papers to arrive
c until this, Friday morning, is respon
sible for The Frontier being one day
c late this week.
Why It Pays to Buy
At the 5-10-26C
Store.
WORTH WHILE
Tis not so much in knowing much
as in knowing what is useful in this
world that makes the wise man. He
that holds down the ladder at the bot
tom is frequently of just as much
service as the man on top.
CANDIES AND PEANUTS
Do you know one house in Chicag
ships 50 car loads of candy daily.
It is said that Chicago alone spenc
over $10,000.00 a day for peanuts.
No. 1, Spanish Salted Peanuts
12 ounces .•. 1C
No. 1, Virginia Jumbo Roasted
Peanuts, 13 ounces . 1C
Spanish Peanut Squares, 12 oz. 1C
CREAM FUDGES
Peanut Top Fudges, 12 oz. 1C
Chocolate and Vanilla Fudge, 12
ounces . 1C
Assorted Jelly Beans, 12 oz. 1C
MARSHMELLOWS
Snow Flake Marshmellows, 12 oz. 1C
jm __ _ " Copyright isle by
Slip a few Prince Albert^^
smokes into vour system!
You’ve heard many an earful about the Prince AlbertVS,.
patented process that cuts out bite and parch and lets you
smoke your fill without a comeback! Stake your bank roll that
it proves out every hour of the day. « v\
Prince Albert has always been sold | MW MW V\
without coupons or premiums. We IM ^ §31 ftv P \\
prefer to give quality! | V\
There’s sport smoking a pipe or rolling A Y\
your own, but you know that you’ve got A V v\
to have the right tobacco! We tell you #M I ffM I YA
Prince Albert will bang the doors wide A^WULrJOLJL YA
open for you to come in on a good time .. . . . ^
firing up every little so often, without a national joy smoke |
regret! You’ll feel like your smoke past (j
^ x i —T|. been wasted and will be sorry you cannot r"3
^ou swinS on *bis say-so like it was a tip to a
thousand-dollar bill! It’s worth that in happi- M
^ ness and contentment to you, to every
i dm ;i| 1 p v\\ rH ^ j rdt=r 1pur°se^hp“ten,ed
n>en*ahth* U n'ttej '8tat** QoverjJ"
|jjM Mil 1 1 ulllll1j1 cl q\>A€ ^ ^ ^ tobacco is sold you'll find
I The republican party presents for Governor of jj
Nebraska a man who has served more than eleven ji
years on the District Bench in this state.
Judge Sutton’s father homesteaded in Holt jj
county, and Judge Sutton later homesteaded in
Brown county, living in a soddy and taught school jj
in a sod school house in that county. He was one of jj
the pioneers of this state and was living in his jj
soddy at the time of the great blizzard on January i
12, 1888.
Judge Sutton solicits your vote for Governor, jj
regardless of party affiliation, and pledges himself jj
as follows:
P Strict enforcement of law.
p Economy in public affairs.
f j A higher standard of character and efficiency jj
H in appointive officials.
if Constant improvement in administration of af- jj
P fairs of public institutions.
p Encouragement of all educational institutions jj
fi along progressive rather than political lines.
H A better chance everywhere for the boys and jj
p girls of Nebraska.
I A square deal between business institutions and the jj
people—between corporations and the public.
O’Neill-Alliance Burlington Extension
May Be Built Next Year.
The O’Neill-Alliance extension of
the Burlington may be built next year.
Advise received that high Burlington
officials are to make a tour of inspect
ion and investigation of this section in
the near future has aroused the proph
ets of Sioux City, who are particularly
anxious to have the extension com
pleted. The Sioux City Tribune has
the following to say regarding the
proposed visit of the magnates:
“Such a visit would be taken to
mean that the company probably in
tends to build an additional line in Ne
braska. For some time it has been
known that the company had under
consideration the building of a line be
tween O’Neill and Alliance. A dele
gation of Sioux City business men
visited the Burlington officials at
Chicago about six months ago. They
urged that the lines be extended.
joint auspices of St. Mary's Academy
and the Knights of Columbus, Wednes
day evening, November 1st, at 8 sharp.
Tickets from the students or at Rear
don’s Drug Store. Everybody wel
come.
Marie Anderson, a graduate of the
Morningside College of elocution .will
give an entertainment consisting of
readings, instrumental and vocal
music at the M. E. church on Thurs
day, October 2nd.
No Where Else But
John Brennan’s
FLOUR PAL!oAPIVE ROASTED
High Patent Flour Cut out this ad Peanuts
and take to the Per Pound
$2.45 store and get 8c \
1 cake FREE
MATGtffiS | LADIES’ HOSE ''^S^R
3 Boxes | 25c Ladies Hose Womens. Under.
10c I 15c wear $1.20
SUGAR I OVERCOATS I TABLETS f
13 Lbs. Sugar I $15.00 Overcoats I 3-5c Tablets ■
$1.00 I $7.50 I 10c
TOILET (RUBBER BOOTS( RIBBON §
Paper, 3 for i $5.00 Boots I 20c Ribbon u
10c 1 $3.69 I 10c
Cash Does It
W i>eiil anu Alliance uic auuut xrni
miles apart. A line connecting them
would run through 10 or 15 towns. A
connecting link of this sort would be
a boon to Sioux City wholesalers and
jobbers bringing most of the trade of
those towns.
“The Yutan cutoff of the Burlnigton
road will be completed January 1. It
will mark the beginning of better
service on the Burlington to Omaha
and Kansas City. Just how many ad
ditional trains will be operated has not
been made public.”
Great
Illustrated
Lecture
November 1, 1916.
Professor John B. De Shryver, S. J.,
of Creighton University, Omaha, as