The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 28, 1894, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
FTTBUBBSO KTSRT THURSDAY BY
4./ THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KING «c CRONIN. Editors.
STATE CONVENTIONS.
Republican state convention, Omaha, Ang
tut».
TScmoc ratio free stiver convention, Omaha,
June 21.
Independent state convention, Grand
Island, August 15.
Prohibition state convention, Lincoln,
July 8.__
REPUBLICAN ' CONGRESSIONAL
CONVENTION.
The republican eleotors of the Sixth con
gressional district of the state of Nebraska
are hereby requested to send delegates from
the several counties comprising suld district
to meet in convention in the olty of Broken
Bow, Thursday, August 2, A. D., 1891, at I 'M
p. m., for the purpose of placing in nomin
ation a candidate for member of congress,
and for the transaction of suoh businesses
may oome before said convention.
naPRBSENTATIOlt.
The several counties in said district are en
titled to representation as follows, being
based upon the vote cast for lion. I. M. Ray
mond for presidential elector in 1892, giving
one delegate at large to each county and one
for each 100 votes and fraction thereof:
Banner. ...
Blaine.
Boyd.
Brown.
Box Butte.
Buffalo.
Cheyenne..
Cherry.
Colter..,...
Dawes.
Dawson....
Deuel.
Orant.
Greeley....
GarBela....
Holt..
. a
. 2
. 7
. 5
. 11
.20
. 7
. 0
.20
.10
.1)1
. 4
. i
. 4
. 0
.1!
Howard.
Keyu Paha..;
Keith.
Kimball.
Ltnooln.
Logan.
Loud.
McPherson..<
Rock..
Scott* Bluff.
Sheridan... .
Sherman.
Sioux..
Thomas..
Valley
Valley.
Wlieelei
. 1
. 4
. 4
. 3
11
. 3
. 3
. 3
. 3
. 4
, 8
. 0
. a
a
. 7
. 3
Total.ISO
It 1« recommended that no proxies be ad
mitted to tht. convention and that the dele
gatee present be authorized to cast the full
vote of the delegation.
W. W. Barnet, M. A. Dougherty, '
Secretary. Chairman.
SENATORIAL CONVENTION.
The republican elcotors of the Thirteenth
senatorial district are requested to send
delegates from their several eountles to
meet In convention at O’Neill, Neb., on the
1st day of September, 1801, at 8 p. m. for the
purpose of plaetng in nomination a candidate
for senator from said district, and for the
transaction of such other business as may
come before the convention.
The several counties are entitled to rep
resentation as follows, being based upon toe
vote cast for Benjamin Harrison for pres
ident In 1881:
Boyd .(I Holt...11
Garfield.81 Wheeler.8
It la recommended that no proxies be ad
mitted to the convention and th at the absent
> votes of a oounty be cast by the delegates
Present Clyde Kina,
Secretary.
CENTRAL COMMITTEE MEETING
• There will be a meeting of the republican
central committee at the oourt-house In
> O'Neill, July 7, 1894, at 2 o’clock P. M. All
J members are requested to be present.
John McBridx, Chairman.
. Ta* ballot should be the working
mao's ooly battle-ax.
Will McHugh allow his friend Bryan
to wage the silver war unaided? Ohl
■ Grover, why don't you speak?
i ■ ■, _ •
President Carnot, of France, waa
assassinated Sunday evening In Lyons
by an Italian anarehtst named Giovanni
• Santo. _ _
Secretary Gresham (would better
r shoo that senatorial bee away. There
are already too many nondescripts In
the senate.
Quay end McPherson must feel awful
lonesome in the senate since they
acknowledged having speculated in
auger etock..
Th* Inter Ocean, which hea the
happy faculty of laying the right thing
the right time, refera to congress as
“sugar cured."
H ini more murders like the one
Ki that France witnessed the other day
and the doom of anarchy will be her
metically sealed. ^
In view of Jhe fate of the Chicago
platform it would be wise for the
democrats to make their next campaign
without any platform.
It should be unnecessary to say that
the man who preaohes anarchy and
^ socialism is unlit to have charge of the
g: education of children.
Nothing can ever make a good
citixen out of the fellow who professes
to believe that it is a crime to be ener
getic, thrifty and prosperous.
Th* bid question of the need of a
new white-house at Washington has
been revived. Thoneedof anewpres
' ident ie far more pressing at this time.
According to our information and
belief it will require more than a de
cision of the state supreme court to
elect a democratic legislature in Illinois
> this year, % ,
Now whet do you pops think of
Senator Allen, anyway? He- votes a
tariff on the sugar you buy here in
O’Neill; the wool that you sell here in
O'Neill he votes on the free list. Can
any pop raiser of wool figure how he
can make any money by tbis deal?
s. THBfree’(liver convention adopted the
following resolutions which it will insist
upon placing in the coming democratic
state platform:
We favor the immediate restoration
of the free and unlimited coinage of
gold and silver at the present
of 15 to. 1, without waiting for
LJ> pr content of any other nation
'.fas- f .; > f ,<■ ■ •
. < iml s» tohi ■ * is i . »• *
Editor Uowem,, of tlie Atlantic con*
stitution, Is honest, if not politic. When
asked why Georgia favoied the income
tax, he said: “None of our people have
any incomes to tax.”
--.'
Tiie Washington police are barking
up the wrong tree. The wildest an
archist would not expect things to be
destroyed faster than the democratic
congress is doing the job.
Tiie jury that convicted Erastus
Wiman had the old fashioned idea that
to sign another man's name for the'
purpose of getting a check cashed was
to commit forgery, whether it was the
intention of the forger to repay it or not.
Tiie democratic senators could stand
a little protection on almost everything
but wool. The . wool growers did not
happen to control a democratic senator
or two, so they got left. The wool
growers have votes, however—nearly a
million of them.
The Rhode Island democratic state
committee neglected, when it passed
resolutions urging the democratic con
gressmen to support the policy of the
administration, to say what that policy
is, and nobody else has been able to find
out.
"A. X. Towle is still Cutting a pretty
wide swath in the vicinity of O’Neill;
he is extremely anxious to have some
one engage in a Joint debate with him,
not having learned that the joint debate
is a relic of barbarism, He has been
throwing wads at Judge Klnkald, but
the judge has larger and more Important
fish to fry," says Walt Mason in the
State Journal.
A number of papers are regretting
the fact thnt John Moher failed to se
cure the appointment to the Alliance
land office. We fail to locate the source
of this sorrow. Maher is not a good
democrat, a good republican or a good
pop. He trims his sails to every politi
cal squall and consequently has no
right to even ask official preferment.
Obscurity is the proper abiding place
for bugwumps.
The Fremont Tribune has blown a
blast on its trumpet warning republi
cans to beware of the free silvery heresy,
and the Tribune has a level head. Bi
metalism is the proper thing until the
United States can act in conjunction
with other nations and secure free silver
and do it properly. Republicans will
make a mistake if they abandon their
well beaten path of wisdom to chase a
populist god into a jungle and- get
swamped.
The calling of the senatorial conven
tion for Saturday, September 1, brings
to mind the fact that the republicans of
this district have a responsible duty to
perfoim in selecting a representative to
make this fight. So far as we are aware
there are no aspirants, and therefore
no wire pulling. All that will be nec
essary this year will be to select a good
clean man and his election is assured.
The people of this senatorial district
are growing weary of populism. We
presume that Boyd county, being other
wise deprived of representation, will
ask to name the man, and so far as this
paper is concerned it is willing io admit
that they can urge their claim with
much reason.
Below we extract views of Secretary
Morton as expressed in a letter written
to a Johnson county democrat. We
reprint the extract because the writer
expresses views on the money question
which cannot fail to be at least Inter
esting at this particular time:
When a Johnson county farmer sells
hogs he buys money. The party who
pays him for those hogs sells money.
The buyer of hogs demands the best
quality of swine flesh. And the man
who buys the money ought to have as
much sense as the chap who buys the
hogs, and demand, therefore, the very
best quality of money. Whenever the
farmer shall perceive that out of pork
which he produces and sells at 3 cents a
pound, the packer issues lard, bacon,
hams and shoulders, which shall average
him a net profit of 3 cents a pound, the
farmer will experience a good deal of
righteous indignation because of the
inequality of the division of profits. But
why should the farmer be any more
wroth at seeing his pork bullion minted
into hog product currency by the packer
and circulated at a profit of 380 per
cent, than he should be when the silver
bullion owner, with free coinage, will
be getting $1.39 an ounce for bis silver
while the miners have produced it at a
cost of less than 60 cents an ounce?
Silver bullion is today worth 63 cents an
ounce, and if we were to have it coined
gratuitously by the government for the
owners, who will the owners be by the
time free coinage is provided? Will the
masses or the classes own the bullion at
that joyful moment?
▲ FEW NOTES. '
Following are a few straws found
leaning by a press reporter at the silver
convention:
It is plain enough that if the free
coinage people capture the state conven
tion Bryan can have the nomination for
the governorship without asking for it.
There were several people with jags
that bore to sobriety the prevailing,
ratio.
Properly speaking it was not a con
vention. It was a mass moeting of a
certain kind of folks.
Anyone could have told it was a dem
ocratic gathering by the reckless man
ner in which many of the delegates
smoked and chewed nntil their attention
was called to the desire of the hall man
agers not to have the place turned into
a livery stable. About 16 to 1 took ‘he
hint.
* •: ' *- •
Mrs. a. A. Lefeber
Bossmoyne, Ohio.
Terrible Misery
Helpless With Rheumatism
and Without Appetite
Tired Feeling and Paine Dispelled
by Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
" I was in terrible misery with rheumatism in
my hips and lower limbs. I read so much
about Hood’s Sarsaparilla that I thought I
would try it and see M it would relieve me.
Whin I commenced I could not sit up nor even
turn over in bed without help. One bottle of
Hood's Relieved Me
so much that I was soon out of bed and could
walk. I had also felt weak and tired all tha
time ; could not sleep, and obtained so little rest
at night that I felt all worn out in the morning.
I had no appetite to eat anything, but Hood’s
Hood’s5^"* Cures
Sarsaparilla restored my appetite so that Z
could eat without any distress, and Z have
gained rapidly In strength. Z have taken live
bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and I am as well
as ever.” Mss. S. A. Levebbb, Bossmoyne, O.
Hood’s Pills cure liver ills, constipation,
biliousness, jaundice, slok headache. Indigestion.
O'NHILLBUSINHSS DIRECTORY
jj B. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
! *^6'NEILL, NEB.
J O. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIOARS. ETO.
£)R. J. I*. GILLIGAN,
PHT8ZCAN AND SURGEON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over Blglln's furniture store.
O'NEILL, NEB.
£ H. BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Office in the Judge Roberts building, north
of O. O. Snyder's lumber yard,
O NEILL, * NEB.
R. BUTLER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Agent for Union Trust Go’s land in Holt
county.
Will practice in all the courts. Speoial at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
JJR B. T. TRUEBLOOD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Diseases of'the Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m.
and 2 to Bp. m,
Office first door west of Heinerikson’s
^ BOYD,
BUILDERS.
E8TIMATE8 FURNISHED.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEONU
PROPRIITOB C>»
| - CENTRAL-|
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES |
WoNEW TEAMS.
Everything Firpt-Claps.
Barn Opposite Oampbe l's Implement House
A.J HAMMOND ABSRACT CO
Successors to
R. R. DICKSON A CO.
Abstracters of Titles.
Complete set of Abetrect Books.
Terms reasonable, and absolute ae
curcy guaranteed, for which we have
given a $10,000 bond as -required
under the law.
Correspondence Soliced
O’NEILL. HOLT COUNTY NEB.
SPEEDY and EASTING RESULTS.
PAT PEOPLE,
No inconvenience. Simple, 1^
sure. Assntrvr,? rut:
from *ny -njurious substance. "
. usst aiwness sweats._
T'"n:IT£E a CURc cr rsiund you.- money.
tf...OOp«r bottle, 4e.far tier ftsr
■ .TX MCD1CA1, CO., Duetuii, 1ilos.
Tou
angst ]
1. thin.
Yos
[ cm stay]
thin. .
HOTEL
-£
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City. '
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
NEW YORK...
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
The Orcan of Honeet Snort In America
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
PICTURED BY THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS Or THE COUNTRY
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
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Do you want to be posted? Then send
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IN Ml UlHtURD JEWS,
3 PfcRK PLACES NEW YORK CITY.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
VANS'
i*^*l"M* X S'"WV **4»»*0W
WHAT PEFFER’S NER’iiGOR DID.
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either sex, Falllnv Memory, Wasting Bis
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atteffects of tel f abuse "or excesses^and
Wards off Insanity and consumption.
■t ■ ..w. «nire ,u .itre urnnuno ine
Sold by P. C. Corrigan.
FAT PEOPLE
PARK OBESITY PILLS will reduce your
weight permanently from 12 to 15 pounds a
mouth. Mo starving sickness or Injury; no
publicity. They build up the health and
beautify the complexion leaving no wrinkles
or ttabblness. Stout abdomens and difficult
breathing surely relieved. No experiment
but a scientific and positive relief, adopted
only after years of experience. All orders
supplied direct from our office. Price 82 per
package or three packages for 85 by mail post
paid. Testimonials and particulars (sealed)
2 cents. All corresponcence strictly confi
dential
PARK REMEDY CO., Boston Mass.
’fi® kwBV** otp* ‘izizz cr s
f;
3Ij&1
plwithnat any Internal
^ medicine, earei tot- fS*?G*
i ter, ocmim, itch, allSlb'U
eruption■ or» the faae.^fc^
' hands, uoae, Ac., leering
’ ciear, wnit* ana neaiiny. y
rtoM t*y druggist*, or sent by nail for 50 ct*. A<tdr«*x. Ptl
Kwaiai * Son, Philadelphia' Pa* A«! you/ druggiat (w U,
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
sloUx cIty ,
, ANJ>
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond) Plainview, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
SBW UNION PASSENGER STATION
Homeseekers will find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA
For rates, time tables, or other Information
lull 11 twin QlUfltfl n/l
F*C U^LL^ent8 °r att<i'r®88
ILLS, W. B.MoNIDER,
Receiver. Gen'l Pass. Age
Agent.
190 dollars
W PER MONTH
In Your Own Locality
made easily and honorably, without capi
tal- during your spare hours. Any man,
woman, boy, or girl can do the work hand
ily, without experience. Talking un
necessary. Nothing like it for money
making ever offered before. Our worker*
always prosper. No time wasted in
learning the business. We teach you in
a night how to succeed from the first
hour. You can make a trial without ex
pense to yourself. We start you, Ihrnish
everything needed to carry on the busi
ness successfully, and guarantee you
against fkilure If you but follow our
simple, plain instructions. Reader, if
you are in need of ready money, and
want to know all about the best paying
business before the public, send us your
address, and we will mail you a docu*
meut giving you all the particulars.
TRUE * CO., Box 400,
Augusta, Mains.
Knees and Elbows Out
-Shoes in Holes and Stay Cap.
U sr,7e*r- -
'Th§ Hub’s Head-to-Foot 0C nn
Boy’s Outfit )3iUU
Ages 5 to 15 years-every thread all wool
double breasted coat—pants made with double
knees—double seats—taped seams (will outwear
2 pairs of the usual kind)—A Stanley Cap
; made illustration-to match the suit—and A
\ Pa!r °,iShifS ofs 5011(1 leather- first-class, strong
and neat—the entire outfit for $5.oo. 5
Seat on receipt of price, or C. O. D. with privilege of examination to any out or
the United States if $1.00 deposit is sent with order. If not satisfactory wo' anee to
refund the purchase price. Catalogue and samples Free. In ordering include 65c
THE MUR Clothiers, Hatters, Furn- CHICAGO ILL
1 nC nUD, Inhere and Shoero. StVtl and JaTk’aonStT
...Always Buy the
...Best The
...Best is Cheapest.
The finest and largest stock of goods in
the hardware and implement line in the
Elkborn vail ley ig found at . . . .
-S' ' ^ A --C ;
Neil Brennans
I NEIL BRENNAN
John Deere plows, riding and walking
cultivators; Disc harrows.
Moline wagons and baggies of all kinds.
David Bradley & Co. famous disc cul
tivator— best in the world.
Glidden wire. Every spool warranted
lull weight.
Stoves. Garland Stoves and ranges—
the world’s best. The grand old Chart
er Oak stoves and ranges. Gasoline
stoves—a world beater—the famous
New Process.
Boss Chnras, Western washer, Planet
jr., drills and garden cultivators, rub
ber hose.
Oils. Gasoline aim ays on hand. Lint
seed and machine oils of all kinds.
Supplies. Blacksmith supplies, iron,
steel, spokes and fellows, hard wood
lumber.
Cuttlery. I keep cuttlery of the very
best brands and in endless variety.
Guns. Sportsmen’s headquarters. Fish
ing tackle, powder, shot, loaded shells
guns and revolvers—best made.
Tinware and granlteware, a grand sup
ply always on hand —prices beyond
comparison.
Seeds. I keep the best garden seeds in
the market. All fresh and new.
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-Pres.
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE - BANK
O*’ O'NEILL.
CAPITAL $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to Collections
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
EMIL SNI6GS,
PRACTICAL
HORSESHOER
And general blacksmithing carried on in connection. Car
riage work in either iron or wood executed in the most skillful
style possible. First-class plow and machine work that can
be relied upon. No new experience used in any branch of
work. All my men are skilled workmen.
ALbO DEALER IN FARM INPLEMENTS
Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows and
cultivators of all descriptions. Everything guaranteed to
beat the best. . o’neill, neb.