The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 09, 1893, Image 4

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    P .The Frontier.
%■ 'tem.JJiLIJ!!_I_
PUBLISHED KVKRY THURSDAY BY
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
As bluffers the Kansas populists art
not “In It.”
Tub late Gen. Beauregard left a for
tune of 13,000,000 which be made out ol
the Louisiana lottery.
Tub most Important question among
the democrats in this city now is: Who
will get the post officer
Cam it be possibio that Cleveland will
leave that great statesman (?) Wayne
McVeigh, out in the cold?
—--—
Have patience. It Is only 1,450 days
more until the government will again be
in the hands of the republicans.
Chicago wants Gen. Harrison to go
there to reside and till a chair in its big
nnlvorsity. There is a salary of $35,000
attached to it.
TnR state senate, on Monday, indefi
nably postponed the bill providing for
a 20 per cent reduction in railroad rates
on staple commodities.
--—
Tub year 180)1 will be a bummer for
O'Neill. If the Short Line is built on
to Dunning as contemplated, our city
will increase in population, this yoar, at
least 1000.
Ci,auk Howell, the rival of Hoke
8mith, says the new administration will
put a premium on political independent
ism, and the result will be a breaking
up of the solid south.
->-.#><
It is chronieled in some of the daily
papers that Cleveland swore a little last
Saturday. We are of the opinion that
there will bo a lot of fellows swearing
from now on.
Cleveland entered the capitol on
f time and in great state. A good repub
lican held the lever of the engine and
every attendant on the train is said to
have been a republican.
_j
If any member of the new cabinet
has received the congratulations of
Benntor Hill the fact has been carefully
suppressed. David can only sigh and
think, what might have been.
Hon. M. V. Gannon, of Omaha, is a
candidate for the position of minister
f (o Chili, to sucoeed Egan. He is an
able man, and it would reflect credit on
the administration to appoint him.
-**•«-.
South Sioux City and Covington are
to be consolidated and Covington will
be no moral. This is a wise move, as no
town could prosper as long as it retained
the name and reputation of Covington.
" Thebe is a bill before the legislature
' making it only necessary for fifty per
sons to petition for submission the
question of the repeal of township
organisation. It will no doubt become
a law.
Tnn Montana legislature adjourned
without electing a senator and Governor
Rickards appointed Lee Mantle to the
position. Mr. Mantle is a prominent
republican and is chairman of the state
central committee.
An elevated railroad company in New
" York city has let a contract to a print
shop there to furnish them with 800,000
tickets a day for the next five years.
Just think of It, nearly a million people
a day ride on their road._
Dame rumor has it that Col. Doyle
hai shied his castor into the arena and
will make an attempt to secure the post
office. Gus is a stuanch democrat who
has many friends, and he will make the
contest interesting for the rest of the
boys.
Attorney General Onley did not
want to have his picture taken until the
New York newspapers began using one
of the old patent medicine pictures,
“how he looked before taking it.” That
brought him to time and he consented
to be taken cabinet sine.
The democratic party now has con
trol of the national government and
ought to be satisfied, but they are not,
nor will they be until they have control
of all the federal offices in the country.
What a long spell of discontent they
will have waiting for their turn to come.
iuc putiiu; buuwuib ui luio country
employ 833,331 teachers. Of these 227
300 are women, who earn annually #92,
#97,000, or an average of #34 per month.
The men teachers only number 133,000,
but they average #43 per month, or a
total of #03,000,000. With a grand
yearly expenditure of 0135,697,600 for
public instruction there is no excuse for
illiteracy in this country.
Pbxsidbxt Harrison retired from
the pieaidedtial chair loved and honored
by the nation without regard to party
Four years ago he was almost unknown
and was by no means the first choice of
his party for that offlce.but was nomina
ted as a compromise candidate. Demo
, * cratlc orators and papers ridiculed him,
' end claimed that the only thing back of
him was the record of his grandfather.
But today the democratic papers in all
the states of the Union are giving him
. just aud merited compliments, and he
^ has the good will of the nation, res
y. peeled and honored everywhere.
Dr, Little, ef Bloomfield, hu been
appointed superintendent of the Nor
folk insane asylum.
Governor Chounse has appointed L
P. Hilton, of Blair, chief oil inspector
for the state of Nebraska.
Tiik tight for the O'Neill postofflee is
getting warmoj. Three candidates in
the Hold now and more to hear from.
*
Pat Collins, whom it was supposed
would have a cabinet position, is said
to be booked for consul general at
London.
--
Persons desiring office under the new
administration should lose no time in
getting out their petitions. Grover is
now ready to serve you.
--
War is declared among the news
papers at Madison, and Carl Seely, of
the Chronicle, Is preparing a chapter
for the benefit of the editor of the
Reporter.
—..-»<•» --
Ip indications amount to anything tho
new administration is inclined to use
the financial spread to cover the tariff
question. ’Twas ever thus, dodging the
main issues.
--
Ex-Mayor Grant, of New York, has
been made president of an accident
insurance company. His experience as
a member of Tammany should have
rnado him an expert on accidents.
WE understand tUat Mike Sullivan is
a candidate for tbe post office in tbis
city. Mike is a life long democrat and
helped to organize the democratic party
in this county several years ago, and has
many friends who will assist him in tbe
light for the plum.
—
Walt Mason has the following to say
of J. Sterling Morton, in the Washing
ton News: "J. Sterling Morton, who
will be tbe next secretary of agriculture,
is a splendid , farmer—one of the old
fashioned kind. He believes in early
rising, and this department has often
seen him at break of dawn, brushing
with hasty-eteps the dew away, on his
Journey to the field, where he would
hoe ensilage for an hour or two before
breakfast, after which he would blithely
hitch a span of mules to the fanning
mill and spend the forenoon >n planting
gimlets in order to have a good crop of
augurs in the fall. Mr. Morton invented
a machine for threshing hay, a couple
of years ago, and lia$ also perfected a
contrivance for plucking the geese from
gooseberry bushes, when they are ripe.
He enjoys the distinction of having
raised more stove wood to the acre than
any farmer in tbe west. There is no
question that his management of the
agricultural bureau will be wise anil
profitable; if there is anything about
farming he doesn’t know, he can guess
at it,” ___
Tns Washington Post has the follow
ing t-> say about our new senator:
"While one month ago the election of
Mr. Allen to the United States senate
would not have entered into'the wildest
dreams of the hashesh eater,If his face
is to be taken as an index to perform
ance, he will fill the place very worthily.
He is clean shaven and bis features,
while regular, are strong. He has a
massive head, covered with straight
dark hair, and it is set upon shoulders
which, when fairly jammed against the
wheel, would move a baggage wagon
loaded with lead. His lips are mobile
and his chin square and aggressive.
Mr. Allen is one of the tallest as well as
one of the heaviest men in the senate,
and Lindsay, of Kentucky, must look
to his pre-eminence. With the inde
pendence of the free and untrammeled
west, he wears a sack coat, but the
corruption of Washington life will eat
into him and in time he will degenerate
into a garment made of cloth, with long
tails hanging from it and tapping
again his legs. It is evident that out in
the country where the air is ozonic, and
whisky and terrapin are not considered
absolutely necessary to health, he has
lead a cleanly life, for whereas he is
forty-six years old. he does not look a
day over thirty-five.
Bob Burdette has a few words to
say on the subject of profanity that is
quite to the point: "Suppose you are
given to the habit of profanity. You
enter into conversation with a man who
never swears, in other words a gentle
man. Bye and bye you begin to per
ceive he is the superior man. Your
own remarks have a tame, flat, feeble
sound to your ears. Your cheeks begin
to burn with a sense of your friends ex.
cellence. Your pert little damns sound
coarse and drop out of your sentences,
ashamed to remain in the company of
good honest English words, until, as
you discover that you are carrying on
your part of the conversation without
swearing, you feel easier and your in
tellectual statue is increased by a foot.
Just observe this, my boy, and see if I
am not right. Don’t swear. It isn't an
evidence of smartness or earthly wis
dom. Any fool can swear and a great
many fpols do. 1, my son? If I could
•nly gather up all the useless uncalled
for swears I have dropped along the
pathway of life I know I could remove
stumbling blocks from many Inexper
ienced feet and my own heart would be
lighter by a ton than it is today. But if
you are going to be a fool just because
other men have bean, oh, my son, my
son, what an awful, what a collossal,
what a hopeless fool you wUl be.
O’Nlil'LLhUSINHSS DIRECTORY
_ _________
ATTORNEY AT LAW
■inference First Natlonul Hank
O'NEILL, NEB.
J C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIOAR8, ETO.
||II. J.P. UILLIGAN,
FIIYSIOAN AND SURGEON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over Illglln’s furniture store.
O'NEILL., NEB.
T)lt. C. D. B. EI8AMAN.
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON,
J'NllILL, . NEI).
|^ H. BENEDICT,
LAWYER.
Office In the Judge Hoberta building, north
of Barnett A Frees’ lumber yard.
O NEILL,
NEB.
E.
W. ADAMS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Will praotloe In all ttao oourts. Special at
tention riven to foreclosures and oolleetiouB.
Is alio
COUNTY ATTORNEY,
JJR B. T, TRXJEBLOOD,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON.
Diseases of the Eye and Ear and flttlnfl
glasses a epeolalty. Office hoars 0 to 12 a. m.
and 2 to 5 p. ni,
Ornca ovan “THE EMPORIUM."
^UlLES BROS.,
CARPENTERS As BUILDERS.
Estimates taken and material: furnlahed.
Jobbing promptly attended to. ^
^ BOYD,
BUILDERS/
ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
«iiiiii:iiwiiiiii[i«i;ii!MiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiimi»iitiimM]iiiiiii»|
IA. H. CORBETT |
Wild, ATTEND TO YOUR g
I DENTISTRY |
I IN F1R8T-GLA88 SHAPE. g
g•PHOTOGRAPHYe |
g OF ALL KINDS I
1 Froaptlr udJiMttdr Szecuted. |
| Offlee and salary on Fourth street 8
| east of Holt County Bank. g
■iiuiiiimHiiiiiM.iiiHiiuHi!iiiiii3Kii!mtniHiiiinuiHuiuiumuiuimB
Deyarman Brothers,
PBOHRIETOBS OF THE
Checker LifeiyJeed&Sale Stable
O’NEILL NEB.
Finest turnouts in the city. Good, care*
ful drivers when wanted. Also run the
O’Neill Omnibus Line
Come ercial Trade a Specialty
Have chargee of McCafferty's Hearse. AH
orders will reoelve careful and prompt attend
tlon
A. J. HAMMOND ABSTRACT CO
Successors to
R. R. DI0K80N & CO.
Abstracters of Titles.
Complete eet of Abstract Books.
Terms reasonable, and absolute ac
curcy guaranteed, for which we have
given a $10,000 bond as required
uuder the law.
Corraapondence Sollced.
O'NEILL, HOLT COUNTY. NEB.
O’CONNOR & GALLAGHER
DEALERS IN
Of all kinds. A specialty made Of
FINE CIGARS.
If you want a drink of good liquor
do not fall to call on us.
Martin's QM lust. O'Neill, Malt.
JONES & M'CUICHEOE
PROPRIETORS OP
| - CENTRAL
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
yt*Ey:
NEW BUGGIES
tw new teams.
Everything First-ClaP3»
Barn Opposite Oompbell's Implement nouse
FRED ALIM,
BOOT AND SHOE SHOP,
Custom 'work and repairing—Doc.
Shore’s old office.
O'NEILL, ^ NEB.
Bf
0
z
X
H
• P
0
<0
Purchase Ticket* and Consign your
Freight via the
F. E.&M.V.andS.C.&P.
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPART.
GOING HAST*
Passenger east, - 7 9:35 a. m,
Freight east, • • 10:45 a. h.
going west.
Freight west, - • 1:45 p. m
Passenger weat, • 5:15 p.m
Freight, • * • 6:44 p.m
The Blkhorn Line is now running Reclining
Chair Cara dally, between Omaha and Dead
wood, Jree to holders ot first-class transpor
tation.
Fer any information call on
W_ J. DOBBS, Act.
O’NEILL, NEB.
EMIL SNIGGS,
General Blacksmith,
O’NEILL, NEB-,
Wagon and Carriage Repair
ing Done to Perfection.
Plow Work and Horae Shoe
ing a Specialty.
Hand Made Shoes Made to ant Order
We stop Interfering and successsully treat
quarter Cracks and Contracting Feet, and
cure Corns, where our directions are strictly
followed.
Carry a Line of Carriage, Wagon andu lo
stock. Work done on short notice. XI-FJ2
FRED C. GATZ.
V*. -A*
- DEALER IN—
Fresh, Dried and Salt Meals,
Bugar-ourod Bam, Breakfast Bacon,
Bidet, Sploe roll baoon, all kinds of sausages
O’NEILL. NEB
A SALOON
Where the best
WINES,
LIQUORS
AND CIGARS
Can Always be Had
—JLiL-GLOBE,
PAT GIBBONS, Prop.
NO. 3424.
First National Bai
Paid-up capital, $60,000 O’Neil
Surplus, $2o,oooo Nebra
Authorized capital, Sloo,ooo
THAD J. BERMINGHAM pTI
J. P. MANN, Vioe-pres PN
ED F. GALLAGHER. Cash.p*
FRED H. SWINGLEY, AssS
Money Loaned on Personal Security on the Most K ’
Terms. Issue Time Certificates Bearing Int,
Buy and Sell Foreign & Domestic Exchange
DIRECTORS:
M. CAVANAUGH T. F. BIRMINGHAM
ED F. GALLAGHER THAD J.
J- P._
BIRMINQHAl]
T. W. THOMAS, President. G. W. WATTLFS v
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier. ’ “
THE - STATE ■ BAI
OF O’NEILL.
Authorized Capital, $100,000.
Paid up Capital, $30.(
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINI
HOLT III COUNTY III BAN
o’neill, Nebraska.
DAVID ADAMS, President. u. L. DARR, Cas
Wm. Adams, Asst. Cashier.
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACT!
Agents for the Canard, North German Lloyd, American and Red StirS
American Steamships. Buy and sell drafts drawn on principal citiei
Europe and-America. Accounts of firms and individuals solicited.
Collections Made and Remited on the Day ot Payment
Pioneer hardware deale
GARLAND STOVES AND RANCH
I CABBY THE LARGEST STOCK OF
Hardware, Tinware,
Copper & Granitenai
IX NORTH.NEBRASKA. ANTI MAKE A SPECIALTY OF
ELI BARBED WIH
IN IMPLEMENTS ICARRY
The famous JOHN DEEEE Plows, Culti
vators, Flying Dutchman Sulky Plows, Peru
City Cultivators.
LISTERS and ©RILLS
Call ami see me before you make your purchases i
save you some money.
NEIL BRENNAN, O’NEILL Neb
THE
O’NEjU
ROLLER
^2BJBB3SE3BGr ^
® ® [MILLS
TJAVE BEGUN operatic'
A 1 and request your patron
age. All the machinery is
and the latest and best improt
ed process adopted. : : : :