The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 19, 1894, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
FUltUSIIKD XVKltY TIIUUSKAY 1IY
TUB KltONTIKIl J'rUNTINU COMPANY
KINO A CHON IN. Kixtoiih.
STATE CONVENTIONS.
Urts5',^'1'ltn convention, Omaha, Aug
June™?0™1*0 *ro° *"ver convention, Omaha.
,,a*c convention, Uiunil
. “land, August in.
Ju';-Mb.«lon Btn to convention, Lincoln.
REPUBLICAN congressional
CONVENTION.
The republican doctor* of the sixth ton.
tresslonal dtstrlot of tlio atuto or Nebraska
are hereby requested to Hind dolomite* from
. tho several counties comprlHlntt said district
to meet In convention In the city of lirolten
How, Thtirsduy, August 2, A. I)„ IHIU, nl T:*l
r. u., for the purpose of placing In nomin
ation a cundldato for member of congress,
and for the transaction of aueh business hn
, n,*y otim* before said convention.
naiMIKBRNTATIOR.
The several oountles In said district tiro en
titled to representation os follows, bclntr
1>asod upon the vote cast for lion. I. M. Itny
mond for presidential elector In |nu>, giving
one delegate at largo to each county and one
for each 100 vote* and fraction ...
Mnnuer. A,,. 11
niuliio. a
Boyd.7
Brown. li
Box Butte.li
Buffalo.an
Cheyenne. 1
Cherry. d
Custer...,.an
Dawes. in
Dawson. l;i
Deuel. 4
11 rant. .i
CarBeW.; '
Holt.ia
llowiiril. 7
'Kuyii 1‘hIih. I
Kullli. \
Klmlmll. :l
Muooln.11
l<<>!riin. :i
il*»un.:i
Mcrliorsi.ti. 7
Uor k. n
Scott* llluIT. 4
S11 «■ r I < 11111. N
siitirmun.«
Sioux. ;i
TlmimiH. a
Total..',.| in)
It la recommondod Unit 110 proxies bo ail
milted to thb convonllou and that the dele
gates prosont be authorised to cunt (lie full
vote ot the delegation.
W. W. llAltNKY, M. A. DoUOIIKIITY,
Secretary. Ohulrman.
SENATORIAL CONVENTION.
I
Tlni republican electors or the Thirteenth
senatorial district aro requested to hoih!
delegates from tlielr Hoveral ootmllcs to
meet In convention at O’Neill, Neb., on the
1st day of September, 1WI4, at 8 p. m. for the
purpoHO of placing In nomination a candidate
for senator from said district, and for the
transaction of suoh other business ns may
come boforo the convention.
The several counties are entitled to rep
resentation as follows, being based upon the
vote cast for Benjamin Harrison for pres
ident In 1802:
It Is recommended that no proxies be ad
mitted to the convention and that the absent
voles of a county bo cast by the delegates
present Unvote Kino,
, Secretary.
COUNTY REPUBLICAN CONVEN
TION.
The republican electors of Holt county.
Nebraska, are requested to send dele
gates from their several townships and
wards, to meet in the city of O'Neill, on
Saturday, July 28, at 10 o'clock a. m.,
for the purpose of placing In nomina
tion candidates fer the following offices:
Two representatives.
County attorney.
Also eleven delegates to state conven
tion.
Twelve delegates to congressional
convention.
Eleven delegates to sonntbrial con*
ventiou.
And to transact such other business
as may properly come before the con
vention.
THE APPORTIONMENT.
The several townships and wards are
entitled to representation as follows,
being based on the votecaBt for Supreme
Judge Harrison in 1803, giving one dele
gate at large for each township and
ward, and one for each 15 votes and
' fraction thereof:
Atkinson.
Cleveland.
Conlev..
Chambers.
DelolC.
Dustin.
Emmet.
Ewing.
Falrvlew.
Francis.
Grattan.
Green Valley....
Inman.
Iowa.
Lake.
MoGlure.
O’Neill—First w.
AKKtCKteiCieUsIKUKU
lU'WOlll—MJOOIUl W... ”
O'Neill—Third w.... $
l’addock. ,1
I’loasunlvlew. 2
Hook Hulls. 2
Stool Crook. 4
Saratoga. -
Stuart. <
Scott.
Sand Crook. 2
Shields.
Swan. 2
Sheridan. 2
Verdigres. 4
WUlowdule. 2
Wyoming. 2
Total.iu
It is recommended tbat no proxies be;l
admitted to the convention, and that the
delegates present be authorized to cast
the full vote of the delegation.
It is also recommended that the sev
eral townships and wards bold their
primaries for the election of delegates
on Saturday, July 21, 1894.
Clyde Kino, Joiin McBride,
Secretary. . Chairman^®
Few men can be enthusiastic str
in the presence of their hungry fam
Tiib Chicago platfo.m, like lhaa|^y
railway passenger car. was not madetSP
stand upon. /
The large number of fools in con
spicious positions has been made pain
fully evident by the disturbances at
tendant upon the strikes.
Some of Mr. Cleveland's own party
are denouncing him for his efforts to
maintain law and order, but the patriotic
people of the country will support him.
\ Ik Governors Altgeld. Stondf Waite
Pennoyer want Debs to reciprocate'they ;
had better get in their applications be- '
fore Mr. D. takes bis dive to his native
obscurity.
Evk^ if the states rights doctrine was
the lawyof the land, which it is not. Mr
CleVelattd would be perfectly justifiable
in ignoring it in dealing with the mobs
in states so unfortunate cursed 1
with anarchist governors
Title most ’senseless of all strikes it a
"sympathetic” ■ strike. When a man
strikes for his own giio values lie is apt
'o get the sympathy of the public, but
when ho strikes for another’s grievances
In) is more apt to be culled a fool
. — -*-*•*
A mnoi.ic county In 1‘ennsylvniim had
to pay $d,0iX),(HH) f»»r the damage done
during the railroad strike riots in 1*77.
The lax payers of Cook county, Illinois,
will propahly have a larger lull than
that to pay for the Debs’ stiike.
The Kkontiuu started on jts fifteenth
year last week. It is becoming such a
common thing for us to live from one
year to another that we forgot to men
tion our birthday. Newspapers come
and go hut the old reliable goes on
forever. ,
It may have been the proper thing
for the supervisors to pay an Omaha
attorney $100 to defend Henry Murphy
against D^’ll Aiken's damage suit, lint
we don't look at it that way. It estab
lishes a precedent that consistently ad
hered to. might bankrupt a stale, say
nothing about an Impoverished county.
It would (dense This Kiiontikr to see
Holt county's stnto delegation cast about
eleven votes for Will Mnupin for secre
tary of statu. We believe Mr. Mnupin
was first mentioned in this connection
nigh unto two years ago by Tiik
I''uontikh. He was a good man then
and he has been getting better ever
since.
Tint whiskey trust is bottle holder
mid the sugar trust rubber-down in the
ttitiIT light between the senate and the
house. Mr. Cleveland is seconding the
house and Senators Price and (lonnnn
the senate, while Dave Hill is doing the
disinterested onlooker act. No gloves
are to be used and it is to be a fight to a
finish.
Most of the pop papers throughout
the country are supporters of the strike,
not because they believe It is Just, but
because it is in the name of labor. A
pop will condone, palliate and excuse
any crime committed in the name of
labor. The word is to them what a red
flag is to a gentleman bovine, and like
the latter they will in their mad flight
pursue it over the brink of the precipice.
•
Tiik mask lias at last been withdrawn.
Sheriff sale uotlccs now appearing in
the Bun do not have the sheriff’s name
supplemented by that of the deputy.
The deal is an open one and shows cir
cumstantial evidence strong enough to
hang both the editor and sheriff. It
would appear that in the eyes of the
sheriff ho owes his election to powers
other than those contained in the bottle
of Kautzman’s vituperative ink.
Win were told while the strike was
raging that it was all caused because the
wages paid by Mr. Pullman were so
very small that lus employes were
actually starving and resorted to boycot
as a last resort, but now that it has been
discovered that the strike cannot win
the men are asking to be re-instated at
the old wages. It would seem from this
that they are willing to wqrk even if
they starve while doing it. A Chicago
dispatch to a Monday's daily says: “It
has Just developed that Chairman
Heathcote of the committee of Pullman
strikers sent a letter Tuesday to Presi
dent Debs of the American railway
union asking him to call off the boycot
and strike. No answer has yet been
returned. It is explained that this re
quest of the Pullman strikers was the
sending of the peace proposition to the
general managers. The majority of the
Pullman strikers are anxious to return
to work.”
That philosopher, Walt Mason, in his
weekley communication to the State
Journal, writes the following in regard
to populist editors: "In the days of the
years of our stay in the land we have
seeu a good many newspaper men, and
the queerest bird of them all is the
populist editor. If we suppose that he
belioves the stuff be prints, he is the
gloomiest individual on earth; he sees
no good in anything; he lives in a land
of bow-wows; the earth is composed of
sackcloth and ashes, and the rivers run
tears. There is on^idlawAvho used to
r ^
i halcyon
vs cheor
n Job’s
There
that be wl
or a sonn
dingwa* Cl
was there,
became inoi
one day lie cl
psper. From
!
t>ecime the moi
re4 to show
oap left,
save
>e<
liq
WM Sarah 1.6riFfir\.
Only a Scar Remains
Scrofula Cured - Blood Purlfiod by
* Hood's Sarsaparilla.
**C. I. Hoo<l A Co., Lowell, May*.:
“ It Is* w ith pleasure tliat I send a testimonial
concerning what Hood’s Sarsaparilla has doue
for my daughter. It Is a wonderful medicine
and I cannot reeonnnciid It too highly. Sarah,
who Is fourteen years old, has been
Afflicted With Scrofula
©?er since she was one year old. For Are years
■he has had a running sore on ono side of her
face. We tried every remedy recommended, hut
nothing did her any good until we commenced
using Jlood’s Sarsaparilla. My married daughter
advised me to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla because
HoodV^Cures
It had cured her of dyspepsia. She had been
troubled with that complaint since childhood,
and since her cure she has never been without a
bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla In the liouso. We
commenced giving it to Sarah about one year
ago, and It has coiupiered the running sore,
Only ai8car Remaining
as a trace of the dreadful dlscaso. Trevlevs to
talcing the medicine her eyesight was affected
but now she can see perfectly. In connection
with Hood's Sarsaparilla we have used Hood’s
Vegetable Pills, and And them the best.” Mrs.
Maria (Ikifkin, Xenia, Illinois.
Hood’s Pills cure nausea, sick headache,
Indigestion, biliousness. Sold by all druggists.
O’NLl LL1U1S1NHSS DIRECTORY
It
n. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Iieforonco First National Hunk
O'NEILL, NEB.
J C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIQAR8, ETO.
J. I*. (jIILI.lOAN,
l'lIYSICAN AND SUUGKON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over lllglln's furniture store.
O'NKILL, NEH.
£ II. 11KNKD1CT,
LAWYER,
Office In tho Judge Roberts building, north
of O. O. Snyder’s lumber yard,
ONKILL, NEB.
\v.
It. HUTDKlt,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Agent for Union Trust Oo's land in Holt
County.
Will practice In all tho oourts. Special at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
J)IL It. T. TItUEULOOD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Diseases of tyhe Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Offico hours 9 to 12 a. tu,
and 2 to 6 p. m,
Oftioe llrst door west of Heinerilcson’s
A.
BOYrD,
BUILDERS.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON,
PKOPHIETOR Or
~j - CENTRAL -
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES.®
WtNEW TEAMS..
Everything First-Class.
^^iru Opposite Campbe l's Implement House
I
J HAMMUNU AdMAII CU
Successors to
R.R. DICKSON & CO.
bstracters pL Titles.
Complete sj
I
HOTEL.
-Evans
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City.
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
NEW YORK . . .
ILLUSTRATED
. NEWS
The Organ of Honest Sport in America
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
■•■•TUBED BY THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
^ Breezy but Respectable.
FOR A YEAR, $2 FOR SIX MONTHS
Do you want to be posted? Then send
your subscription to the
SEW MS IlWSIEiTED JEWS,
3 PARK PLACE* NEW YORK CITY.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
DR. PRVFBR’S
FEMALE PILLS.
Iltw DISCOVERT. NEVER TAILS.
A now, it liable and safe if lief for sutV
| pros«Kl,ojcee.saiv«*scanty «r painful men*
fitralion. Now used by over 80,000
Iadic« monthly. Invigorates them
organs, Beware of Imitations. Nama
paper. $2, per box, or trial box fl|. Sent
foaled In plain wrapper tioiul 4c in
stamps for particulars. Hold by Local
sssasMMfSsJ^4^
Sold by I*. C. Corrigan.
FIark
Pennyroyal
ills
the celebrated female regulator are perfectly
safe and always reliable. For ull irregular
ities, painful menstruations, suppression,
etc., they never fail to afford a speedy and
certain relief. No experiment, but a scien
tific and positive relief, adopted only after
years of experience. All orders supplied
direct from our office. Price per package $1
nr six packages for ?"», by mail post paid.
Every Package guaranteed. Particulars
(smiled) 4e. All correspondence strictly
confidential.
PARK REMEDY CO.. Boston, Mass.
Tfit iiir^a •ppiu^uon or
OSSaTKSE^Tl
pj Without any internal *
Atnodicine, caron tot- ^
■5S ter, ec/ema, itch, all AS
eruption a on the faca,«j
' handa, noaa, Ac., iGavin*
hr dru(tpi*ti*. or H«-nt by Uinll for 5<> ct*. Aibiru** Dr.
Mwaiii & bun. l’Uil*tlcU>luu. 1'*. Ask your dru*n»isi fur it.
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHOUT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
SlOlJX ClTY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Plainvicw, O'JVcill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers in
NEW 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
call upon agents or address
F. C. HILLS, \V. H.McNinER,
Receiver. Uen'l Pass. Agent.
ion DOLLARS
Bfcw PER MONTH
In Your own Locality
made easily and honorably, without capi
tal, during your spare hours. Any man
toman, boy, or girl can do the work hand
kwithout experience. Talking «n
ktothing like it for.monev
iron iwiore. Our workers
No time wasted in
We teach you in
.'‘<1 from the first
rial without ox
Brt you. furuish
■ >'ii the busi
Bwruntee you
^fcfivlotv our i
IKi-ader, if
Policy, and
"t paying
:ut us your
i a docu
ilars.
400,
Maine.
HOW TflEY LIKE I*j
Read what some of those
Who've received., , j
The Hub’s Head-To-Foot-Outfl
Think of their $5 bargains.
'liocelved tin- II ad-lo Font outfit all right,
and am v«*iy much i leased with it. It was a
|>. rfect til e\eii to tT,<• shoes,
Mus. I.. M. Ki 'ini'N, (.’laramont. N. II.
“Tlu* Milts. 1 |4«;i• l fo-Foot hoy s outfit, and
mail's business Miit. Were received < >. K.— ot
■ aily received U. I\ . hut suits O. K. If bragging
| <;f tin* bargains I rer-iwd will get you more
elders you are sill•• to get them.
Mus M a no i i:kt Nkwiiank, Harry, 111.
•‘Most satisfactory. You will receive fur
orders from me from time to time.
it. \Y. ficiiKNoK, At‘y., Tucson, Ara/ J
"The liny’s clothes received all right am
pleased with them. 1 • - 11
VV. J. Irwin, ,
Philsbiirg. i1
‘•(ioods received and give good satkr-i.
m every respect. You may look for r„
urdters. J. M. limp, Lafayette a
y
. . ;v sini ot all WOOL clothes, ages 5 to 15 years—a Stan
ley cap to* match the suit—and a pair of stout and shapely
shoes—that’s the Hub’s Head-to-Foot-Outfit for $5.
Sent on rec eipt of price, or O. I). willi prtyilege of examination to any parti
the I’nited Spites if $1 deposit is sent with orler. If not satisfactory we agree
refund the ptirehase price, Samples of cloth free. In ordering include 65c postiuj
Cloihiers, Hatters, Furn- PUIP A On III State
1 ishers and Shosrs. bmbAuUj ILL. jacksoni
Always Buy the
| Best. The . . .
Best is Cheapest
Tie: Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and.
.Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found at
MW
ur w
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-Prcs
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE ■ BANK
OB’ O’NEILL.
CAPITAL $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to Collections
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
EMIL SNI66S,
PRACTICAL
HORSESHOEK
And general blncksmithing earned on in connection. C;u
nage work in either iron or wood executed in the most skillfv
style possible. First-class plow and machine work that ca
be relied upon. No new experience used in any branch c
work. All my men are skilled workmen.
ALSO DEALER IN FARM IN1‘LEMENTS_
Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows ar
cultivators of all descriptions. Everything guaranteed 1
beat the best. o’neill, neb, •
TTT*(TT**Trr*T*TTTTTTTTV
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