The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 10, 1892, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
PUM.ISllKP EVERY THURSDAY IIY
THK FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY.
W. p. Mathkws, Editor.
STILL ANOTHER.
Two Now Members of The Frontier
Printing Company.
CLYDE KINO. U. U. vllONTN.
It I* a chilly week when O’Neill news
papers do not experience a change, This
has been every pleasant week. With
this Issue the "Kids"—of Item fame—
greet Frontier readers with a likeness
of each youth, and by the honesty dis
played on those noble brows above Mate
that they are "here to stay.” The new
members of The Frontier Printing
Company will sling the local qufll and
manage the affairs of the office. Bus!
ness will be carried on at tho old stand,
whsre we will be pleased to meet anyone
who may have business with a news
paper or job office.
"We are the people and must be re
spected."—Mr. Harrington.
A nox of Ilolt county supervisors
would make a valuable addition to Ne
braska’s exhibit at the World’s Fair.
In their efforts to clean the Augean
stable*,' our demo-alliance friends should
be eerr careful that there is no manure
in their own stalls.
Scott to Hayes: “Rhody, I charge
thee, fling away ambition; by that sin fell
the augels; and how can man, the image
of his maker, hope to win thereby.”
f Welcome to Doc Mathews, who has
.. returned to his first love—the newapa
F perial field. The two O'Neill republican
newspapers—Tub Frontier and the
Item—have been consolidated and Doc
is the editor-in-chief. He will make
things hum for the republican party this
summer.—Hemingford Guide.
Tub two republican papers at O'Neill,
'' Tnn Frontier and the Item, have been
consolidated and W. D. Mathews will be
the editor. Doc has always been con
sidered one of the brightest and most
successful newspaper men in this part of
t the state, and by this consolidation finds
himself at the head of one of the best
newspaper properties in the state.—
Neligh Leader.
The reaction in establishing two
newspapers in towns where but one
could exist with profit, or one where
none should be Issued, is setting in as an
inevitable consequence of such digres
sion of Judgment. At O’Neill last week
two of the best newspaper plants in
Horthein Nebraska—Tub Frontier
and the Item—were consolidated and
’will now be issued under the manage
ment of The Frontier Printing Com
pany.—Randolph Times.
Milton E. Free has deposited $100
with the Bee as the nucleus of a fund to
be Used in providing treatment of men
addicted to the alcohol habit who are
-v unable to pay the expenses for them
selves. He has set an example worthy
of emulation and the Bee hopes other
persons who believe in extending a
hand to the victims of dipsomania will
send in contributions. This is a practi
cal charity and the instances in which
habitual drunkards have been cured are
■ so numerous in our midst as to relieve
;i« the charitably disposed from all doubt
, as to the efficacy of the treatment pro
posed.—Omaha Bee.
Thd paper will pay a liberal price for
one of those large, round, juicy tears
Which was shed by Farmer Harrington
* last Saturday afternoon, when, in one of
his sympathetic paroxysms, he pictured
the suffering of the starving and rag
ged tax payers of Holt county in their
pitiful efforts to pay their taxes into the
county treasury, only to have them ap
propriated to the personal speculation
and aggrandizement of the county cor
• morants. The only condition that we
\ wish to stipulate is that it be mounted
OB the gentleman’s railroad pass, which
- this paper is informed is given on “ac
count employee.”
What means all this fuss about Treas
urer 8cottf With a bond sufficient to
cover the loss of every dollar of the
Jsf county funds, what can the county hope
fo make by impeaching and disgracing
a county officer. If in the wisdom of
our county board Mr. Scott’s bond is
not large enough or good enough, let
them demand an additional bond. It
evidently concerns the average tax pay
er but little whether tho funds are
locked up in the county vault or wheth
er they are in the banks, so long as the
county is secure from loss. To the schem
ing politician, however, whose only ob
ject is to advance bis own interests, or
blacken the character of a political op
£ pooent to further partisan ends, it seems
!
to mnlce considerable difference. And
Is this not the real nnimns that lms
prompted the impeachment nnri trial of
Air. Scott? Is this not the milk in the
coconnut? Chagrined at their defeat nt
the polls last fall, disappointed nt Mr.
Scott’s promptness in presenting the
cash at his settlement a few days ago,
the same crowd has now abused the
power vested in them by a confiding
constituency and a generous Jaw, to
still further persue and persecute their
victim. What matters it to this class of
people if a man’s happiness is destroyed,
his reputation smirched and his bonds
men bankrupted, if only their hyena ap
petites for something sensational can lie
satisfied and their own personal and po
litical internals advanced? If Mr. Scott
is a defaulter and his bond is sufficient,
the bondsmen will bo the losers and not
the county. If said bond is not eufii
cient and the county loses, then the
blame is upon the board that approved
it, or knowing it to he insufficient,
neglected to demand more. As Tins
Frontier understands it, there has been
no complaint as to bond, and in fact
there has been no oomplaint from any
of Mr. Scott's bondsmen. It has been
imagined on the part of some of the
vicious ‘‘reformers” that Mr. Scott is »
defaulter, and on this imagination
mainly a case has been predicated,
his vacation of the office demanded
and u successor chosen. It reminds
Tub Fjiontieb of the story of the girl
who was found weeping bitterly and
when asked for the cause of her tears
replied, that she was thinking how
awful it wou]d be if she should get mar
ried, have a baby and the poor little
thing should die;.boo. boo! Mr. Scott’s
enemies, like the girl, seetn to be
terribly exercised over the fear that
in case such aud such is the case some
thing awful may happen to the excheq
uer of tho county some two years from
now when Mr. Scott’s term expires.
BANKER-EDITOR.
“Doc” Mathews, who has resumed ed
itorial control of the O’Neill Frontikh,
is us interesting a writer as there is any
where and that he will make a success
of the paper is beyond question. But
this depurtmcut cannot understand why
Mr. Mathews should resign the prcsi
dency of a bank to take charge of a
newspaper. It must be fun'to be a
banker; it must be simply immense to sit
in regal grandeur and watch clerks and
other hirelings shovelling gold coin into
the groaning vaults, while at the little
brass windows corporation cormorants,
vandais and janizaries deposit their
roils for safe keeping! There is no cx
hllerntion in the thing of sitting at a
desk in the waning light of a winter day
trying to extract a forty-five calibre
thought from a twenty-two calibre
brain, as the author of this is frequently
doing. An explanation from Mr. Math
ews would be timely and interesting.—
Walt Mason in Fremont Tribune.
As something like a thousand individ
uals have asked us the snme impertinent
questions during the past few woeks.
much to our distress of mind and the
trying of the Job-like patience for
which we have always been noted, we
have concluded that the best thing to
do for the relief of the public, and our
self, is to succinctly promulgate in cold
type the reasons fo* the change above
referred to.
Like every newspaper jnan of the
country persuasion, we have always
looked upon the banker as the man
above all others to be envied and the
banking business as the easiest, most
elegant, and withal tnc most independ
ent on earth. In fact Mason pictures
the business just ns we did. “It must
be fun to be a banker,” and the height
of our ambition was to some day be at
the head of a bank. The time came,
perhaps sooner than we expected. Dame
Fortune smiled on our business matters,
and by working everything to one ob
ject we two years ago organized a bank,
built an elegant block, fitted up as fine
bank quarters as there is in the state,
outside of the cities, and opened for
buBiuess smilingly happy, with plenty
of money in the vaults and more in re
serve. The sensation of handling gold
by the handful and currency by the
SfiOOpackagcs was for a time exhilerating,
intoxicating nnd most pleasurable, but
that feeling soon wore oft, and we be
gan to realize, figuratively speaking,
that “all is not gold that glitters," in
other words, that the management of a
bank was not so funny after all—that
to he responsible for the placing and
looking after nearly a hundred thousand
dollafa'WsU'werlc of the hardest kind on
both body and mind. It wns fun the
first two or three months. It was so
easy to get the money out. The presi
dent soon learned to talk finance glibly,
and imagined himself a great success.
Oh, yes, l.e was a good judge of men!
It would be a hard matter to fool him
when it came to arranging the prelimi
naries of a loan. And besides he flat
tered himself that his long residence in
the county, with an almost universal
acquaintance, made him familiar with
the financial condition of the people.
Oh. yes! Well, as before remarked, the
money was loaned in small and large
lots, and it was remarkable how 'many
friends the president had scattered over .
the great county of Holt, who dropped
injto see how the new bank prospered
and before leaving wanted to borrow a
few dollars. In our good nature wc did
not consider that any of “the boys”
wiuld let us down. They might not be
financially responsible for any great
amount, but they were ail right and
good fellows. Yes! Well, we believed
all this, and when our associates in bus
Incss questioned a loan we would set hot
nnder the collar and just to prove our
confidence would write “\V. I). M.” on
the corner of the note, remarking that
“I’ll see to that mvsilf,” Now that we
have a couple of thousand dollars of
this kind of paper among our assets,
which wo felt in honor bound to take
up, we have somewhat changed our
mind in this regard.
For a long while the president cs
ieemed himself a good banker, and
thought he had found a calling commen
surate with his natural ability, that he
would grow rich, live loug and be
happy. He could draw up a note and
chattel mortgage with great dexterity,
and when the applicant said “one horse
eight years old, weight 1200, color bay,
worth $150 casv,” he believed it, and
figured that the security was good, etc.,
etc. Don’t call the president an ass. be
cause it made him blush and stammer to
charge big rates of interest. He was
human, that's all, and it hurt to tie a
man up and exact hiir interest. But
lids same i resi lent in time learned that
all men are not honest—that some men
borrow money with no intention of pay
ing at all, misrepresenting everything to
get the loan; others arc quick to borrow
and awfully slow to pay; othcrslmve bad
luck and cannot pay, etc., so that
with a worry here, a defiance there, a
threat to the right, a kick to the left, a
skip out north, a death south, a cheat
east and a fraud west, the life of a
banker is anything but pleasant.
We have had enough of it, and when
a man tells us that the hanker in this
country is the happy man we will tell
him to keep right on thinking so, hut if
he is a friend wc will advise him to let
the business alone. There ere men who
cun be good bankers, that is successful
bankers, but they must be particularly
trained by nature and long experience,
they must of necessity he fair lawyers,
have some knowledge as detectives,
have the powers of a constable, the
facial appearance of saints, the nerve of
Jesse James, hearts in which there is no
compassion, and even then they are
liable to get left.
Do not be envious of the banker. You
do not know his trials and tribulations,
his sleepless nights, his torment, and the
cause of tlio wrinkles and gray hairs. Be
happy in tho voention you are familiar
with, even if it is simply running a
country newspaper or a Kceley insti
tute. It is hard work writing copy, to
ho sure, but the after-effect cannot be as
injurious or annoying as writing or
signing notes and chattel mortgages.”
Which come due with such remarkable
suddenness. And then as an editor you
can say so many good things that it
makes you pleased with yourself and
you can sleep good all night. If you do
get sour occasionally and say something
mean you can take it all back and
smooth tlie matter over so that no scars
arclcft. You can’t do that in abank
where dollars and cents are figured. Of
course there isn’t as much money in the
newspaper as in the bank, but there is a
whole lot more contentment hud more
fun, especially in a political campaign
when tlie lightning is flashing in every
direction and liable to hit any one ex
cept a banker. See?
TEE REPUBLICAN CLUB.
There were just one-third the num
ber of republicans present at the club
rooms Saturday night that should have
been there. After the regular business
of the meeting had been taken up and
disposed of, Vice President Shanner
took the chair and Hon. A. L. Towle
addressed the members upon the “Tin
Plate Industry and the Present Tariff.”
He said:
Mr. President and Gentlemen: Shall
we manufacture our own tin plate? The
art of tinning plate iron was invented
in Bohemia about the beginning of the
Sixteenth century, although tho tinning
of copper was known at an earlier date,
England just begun to make tin in 1670,
and from about 1740 the industry had
taken permanent root and from this
time up to a very recent date England
possessed a monopoly of this industry.
Before she became skilful in this art
she imported her tin plates from Ham
burg, they being hammered, while the
English improved upo^ their methods
by running them through a rolling mill,
thereby producing a jjlate of fine gloss
and much superior to the imported
plate. She then placed a protective tariff
upon tin plates and kept her money at
home instead of sending it abroad.
Tin plate is composed.of from 95 to
97 per cent of iroD or steel and from 3 to
5 per cent tin. Terne plates are com
posed of iron or steel sheets covered
with an alloy of tin and lead varying
from 1 of lend to 9 of tin and vice versa.
Tin or* is found in Cornwall, Eng
land, and yields about 2J per cent rae
talic tin; in Capalico, California, about
13 per cent; in Rockbridge county, Va.,
from 14 to 65 per cent; in the Black
Hills from 3 to Go per cent; in the Har
ney Peak region tho veins are as wide
as 50 feet and yield better than the Corn
wall mines, "and in custer and Penning
ton counties as reported by the British
Consul at Chicago, there are veins in
width from 1 to 300 feet and in length
from a few yards to five miles, from
which 4 per cent can he depended on
everywhere ” Tin ore is also mined in
the Ternescal mines ot Cal., and one
half the metalic tin of the world is ex
ported from the Malay peninsula, where
the mining is carried on almost entirely
by Chinese. To be more explicit I will
SEE OUR SEEING STOCK-OF MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING.
HATS, GAPS, GENT’S FURNISHING GOODS,
BOOTS, SHOES, TRUNKS AND VALISES.
No Firm in north NebrasKa has Stocked Up as we have this season. It presents
opportunity for economical buying that nobody can aford to miss our imense store this se ^
presents. A Sight Worth Seeing in the way we have Stocked Up for the tW
trade, and that LOW PriCOS we will give you this season on Clothing is worthy \\
patronage of every customer in Holt county. Our immense stock was bought direct fm
the manufacturers, which enables us to do just what we advertise and will prove the same'
you come and see us. When need of Over Alls, Cheap PantS, Workh
Shirts, Jackets* Claves, Working Shoes, anything to wear, do notP!
our store. Come right in. Come to us for your Spring Goods and you will come out ahead
PEP SJOCK Prices at the CHICAGO GLOTHJ tfc Hoilsi
McBRIDE BUILDING SOUTH P. O., O’NEILL, NEB
J. E. SMITH, Manager.
state the amount of mctalic tin import
ed into the United States for tho year
ending June 30, 1890:
1,934
2.880.411
Tin bars, blocks or pips.
Countries from j,-rained or granulated,
which imported: Pounds. Dollars.
Germany. ,5.203
England. 14.280,873
Quebec, Ontario, Mnnl
tobia and the north
west territory. 304
British East Indies . 10,272,560
British Poss. in Austra
lia.,.. 3.520.570
Netherlands. 007,407
*
80
3,130,759
090.820
192.199
Total. 34,993.009 *0,898.909
Prpbably much of that credited to England
was mined in other countries and merely
transshipped hither.
Three fourths of the metalic tin used
in the manufacture of tin plate in Eng
land comes from other countries. Eng
land has been shipping into this coun
try "for years tin plate to the value of
about $17,000,000 per year and the total
quantity of tfn plates imported into this
country in the 20 years from 1871 to 1891
was 3,022.750 gross tons, foreign value
$306,341,404 and in addition to ibis sum
our people paid freights and importers’
profits, making a conservative estimate
and allowing heaps in production, we
have paid in these 20 years $100,000,000
more than if wo had produced our own
tin plate, and instead of paying 300 mil
ions to the Welch tin trust we would
have paid 200 millions to American man
ufacturers to he paid to American labor
ers, while the $100,000,000 that we have
been paying to the trust in the form of
higher prices would have remained ns
additional savings in the. pockets of
American workmen. The man jfacturer
of this tin employs 50,000 persona in
England and Wales besides the men em
ployed in producing the iron ore, lime
stone, coal, coke and pig iron which en
ter into the manufacture of tin plate,
254,951 gross tons of tin plates represent
870.000 tons of iron ore, 300,000 tons of
limestone, 1,800,000 tons of coal and
coke, 300,000 tons of pig iron, 5,000,000
pounds of lead, 25,000,000 pounds of tin,
12.000. 000 pounds of tallow or palm oil,
35.000. 000 pounds of sulphuric acid, 11,
000,000 feet of lumber besides fire brick
clay, oil, ’ubricants, hemp, etc. It
would require 68 large works of five
trains of rolls, involving an outlay of
over $30,000,000 capital and giying em
ployment to about 24,000 workmen in
the rolling mill alone, who would earn
at least $12,000,000 per annum,” and
this was less than the shipments of tin
into this country from England between
1871 and 1891 for two years. With such
a saving, should not every true Ameri
can wish for and work for the establish
ment of this industry in the United
States?
The question is, can it be successfully
established? We will proceed to invest
igat. "In 1875 a specific duty of 11-10
cents per pound was put on tin plates.
Following that at three places in this
country, certain Welchmen started
three factories, one at Willsonville, O.,
and two in Pennsylvania: one at Lead
burg and the other at Dernier. The re
sult of this was that whereas in 1873 the
best quality of tin plates commanded
$14.75 per box, after these factories
started the best quality of tin plates
could be bought in 1878 for $6.25 a box
and second quality which was $14.50
per hox could be bought for $5.18 per
box, "but as soon as the English manu
facturer found we were in the field
against him they cut the prices, that,
with the small tariff existing the infant'
industry could not survive, and why
could they fall'so quickly? Because the
whole tin manufactures of England are
controlled by less than 100 men. But
now under the healthy influence of the
j McKinley bill with its tariff of 2 2 10
' cents on tin plates (the old tariff being
| one ecu'.) we find the following manu
factories of tin plate in the Uuited
States existing and doing business, and
among them we find tho Demler tin
| plate works again on deck wilh a capac
ity of 3,000 boxes of 1C tin per week.
The following list is furnished by the
i Tinned-Plate Manufacturers' Associa
Capital
Invested
$300,031
1C0,00<
75,00i
200,00C
200,00(
250,001
150,00(
800,0m
75.00(
75,001
300.001
153.001
250,0W
ico.oci
250,001
75.001
12,cm
15.001
5,001
50.001
10,001
tion of the United States and is correct
ed to January 0, 1892:
Capuclty In
boxes 1C,
14x20
Name of company. pel-week.
American Tin Plate Com
pany, Biwood. Ind. 2,000
Anderson Tin Plate Com
pany. Anderson, Ind.1,003
Bhilrsvllle Rolling Mill and
Tin Plate CO., Blalrsville,
Pa.1,000
Tlie Britton Polling Mill Co.
Cleveland. Ohio.2,500
Cincinnati Corrugating Co.
Piqua. Ohio. 503
Coates & Co., Locust Point,
Baltimore, MU.1,000
Kieekhefer Bros. & Co., Mil
waukee, Wis.3,000
Marshall Bros. & Co., Phila
delphia, Pa.2,000
Norton Bros., Chicago, 111... 5,000
Pioneer Tin Plato Company
Joliet, 111.:.. 1,000
Pittsburgh Tin Plate Works
Strawbridgo & Beaver,
Kensington. Pa.1,000
St. Louis Stamping Co., St.
Louis, Mo.8,000
P. 11. Laufman & Co.. Ap
ollo, Pa. 1,000
Somerton Tin Plate Works,
, Brooklyn. N. Y.3,000
Summers Bros. & Companv,
Strothers, Ohio.'.. 1,500.
United States Iron 'and Tin
Plate Mfg. Co.. Denimlcr,
Pa.3,000
Wallace, Ban field & Co..
Irondale, Ohio. 1.000
Cleveland Tin Plate Com
pany, Cleveland, Ohio.... 5!,0
Fleming & Hamilton. Pitls
liurgh, Pa. 000
Grilliths & Calnallodur. 23d
Ward. Pittsburgh, Pa. 300
Wm. T. Simpson & Co . Cin
cinnati, Ohirf....1,000
Record Mfg. Co., Couneaut,
Ohio.2,500
N. & O. Taylor Co., Phila
delphia. Pa. 700
Columbia Tia Plate Com
pany, Piqua, Ohio. 450
Union Tin Plate Co.. Alle
gheny. Pa. .
Western Tin Plate Co., Jol
iet, 111. .
The American Tin & Terne
Plate Co. Phlladelphla,Pa. .
The following companies are able to fur
nish tin plate bars:
Shoenberger & Co.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Bellaire Nail Works, Bellaire. Ohio.
A3tna Iron and Steel Co.. Bridgeport, Ohio,
The question is not a political ques
tion so much as it is a question of love
of country. Will you stand up foi
British industries or will you stand up
for American industries. We can, we
arc and we will manufacture our own
tin, the bowlings of the tin liars to the
contrary notwithstanding. We have all
the materials to make the tin and with
the lively competition created by the
much abused McKinley bill, we will
manufacture our tin all here, give em
ployment to thousands of men, pay
higher wages than England and prove
to the free trade cranks that they arc
not in it. and that we ate out of sight.
Let us see for a moment how badly
the terrible McKinley bill has affected
prices of tin. In view of the tubs of
tears which have been shed by tree
traders over the increased price of tin
plate since the new tariff act passed, it
will not be amiss to look up the subject
of prices of the same article in previous
years. According to the supplement of
the Iron Trade Circular (Ryland's) of
January 16, published in Birmingham,
England, the highest price of tin plate
in each year from 1877 to 1.891 has been
as given below. We haVe added a col
umn giving also the foreign price pins
the duty: * 1
FHJCES or CHAllCOAJ,, lOJSIN PLATES.
Foreign Foreign
price price
per box. plus duty.
Year
$5.30
.. 4.S7
. * «.tw
. ' H.28
. 5.33
. 5.23
5.11
. 5.11
4.50
. i 8.83
, ' 4.01
, 4.01
, 4.3S
1" 4.20
; 3.01
$8.44
5.05
7.77
9.38
0.31
8.31
6.19
8.19
5.58
4.91
5.09
5.09
5.48
5.28
*5.42
1877 .
1878 .
1879 ." ‘
1880 .
1881.
1882.
1883 .
1884 . '
1885 .
1888. ..
1887 .
1888 ...
1889.....'.
1833.
1891.
*New duty added.
It will be seen that it was in the years
before the McKinley 'tariff that the
Welchmen prospered n^ost, when we
were at their mercy apij had to pay as
high as $9.36 a box for the plates which
arc now selling in New York for several
dollars per box less. Ves, if you want
to discover when the) \Velch tin plate
monopolists were in itlieir glory nnd
fleeced their American victims according
to their own sweet will, you must go
hack before the McKinjey tariff appear
ed on the scene and s
rted into life an
American tin plate industry to curb the
rapacity of the foreign {makers. At the
present time prices in,Wales are at th
lowest point ever reached in the histor
of tin plate making. We do not pretem
that protection increases profits of W
eign manufacturers.
Let us also at this time examine inti
the wages of the tin plate workers of
two countries. Mr. Wilkins Prick, torn
eriy secretary of the Wales Tin Plan
Makers’ Association, of Swansea, giro
the rates of wages paid to labor in th
plate making in Wales and in the Units
States, as follows:
English r.
, , rates
Itoller ana catehor (combined)
per day...J3.14
Doublers, per day. l.yj
Furuaceinen. per day. 1.75
Opener, per day.
Shearer and assistants (paid for
product of four mills in both
countries) total earnings per
day. 10.13
Ore men, per week. 7.20
Hoys, roiling, per das.40
Catching, per day.$:S l.i
Greasing, per day.20
foreman and roll turner, per
week .14.43 jy
Muson, bricklayer, per day. 1.44 :;i
Blacksmith, per day. lit;
Millwright, for repairs. 1.4-1 si
Now if there is anything Ikatwi
make a free trader smile it is to singi
an audience the song of the workman
dinner pail and tin cup, and I presume
there arc thousands of men who really
think they are telling the truth, but
you ever investigate? Did you evei
know how much tinware you owned
You don’t know, do you?
(Concluded next week.)
fate
M
O’N'LILL BUSINESS DIRlxTQ'
H. PIERCE.
ATTORNEY-AT LAW.
Real Estate and Insurance.
II. BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Office in the Judge Roberts building, north
of Barnott & Frees’ ’.umber yard,
O NEILL, NE“
g W. ADAMS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Will practice in all the courts. Special at
tention given to foreclosures and collections.
Is also
COUNTY ATTORNEY.
JJR. B. T. TBUEBLOOD,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON.
Hseuses of t»he Eye and Ear and Jttlnt
lasses a specialty. Office hours ii to l- a. -
,nd 2 to 5 p. m,
Office over “THE EMPORIUM."
g EWING MACHINES
REPAIRED BY
GEORGE BLINCO
J®~Satisfaction gauri
•anteed
j'ULLEN BROS.,
CARPENTERS & BUILDERS.
atimates taken and material; furnish^
ibing promptly attended to.
C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIQAR8. ETO.
BOYD,
builders.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
K. C. D. B. EISAMAN.
PHYSICIAN & SURGE°N'
RILL,
neb
O'NEILL & GALLAGHER.
—DEALERS IN
3 A specif'
e»8 and liquors of all kinds,
y made of fine cigars. d0
want a drink of good Bin®1
not faU to call on ns.
in’s old stand.
O'Neil1