The Frontier. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY KING A CRONIN. Buttons. STATE CONVENTlbNB. * Hegublloan state convention, Omaha, Aug . Democratic free sliver convention, Omaha, June SI. Independent state convention, Grand Island, August IS. Prohibition state convention, Lincoln, July a. ___ REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION. The republican electors of the Sixth con gressional district of the state of Nebraska are hereby requested to send delegates from the several oounttes comprising said district to meet In oonventlqn In the city of Broken liow, Thursday, August 2, A. I).. lHUt, at 7:00 p. x., for the purpose of placing In nomin ation a candidate for member of codlrrcss, and for the transaction of such business us may come buforo said convention. UKPHKSKNTATIOIt. Tlio several counties In said district are en titled to representation as follows, being based upou the vote cast for Hon. I. M. Ray mond for presidential elector In 1803, giving one delegate at large to oach county and one for each 100 votes and fraction thereof: Han nor.3 iliulno... Boyd.1 Brown... 5 Box Butte.It Buffalo.30 Cheyenne...*. 7 Cherry. 0 Cuiter. ....20 Oawex.10 Dawton.18 Deuel. 4 Grant. 3 Greeley.4 UarOeld. a Holt.13 Howard. Kora l’alm.. K tilth. Kimball. Miionlu. Loirnn. hour). McHliontuti.. Itock. ■irotti UlufT, Shorldan... . -ihcrmun. Stoux. I’hoiims. 4 , 4 . II II , a . 3 5 4 8 U 3 Total.:.TO It Is recommended tlmt no proxies be ad mitted to the convention and that the dele gates present bo authorised to cast the full vote of tho delegation. W. W. BaHNBV, M. A. DOtTOHKIlTV, Secretary. Chairman. SENATORIAL CONVENTION. Tho republican electors of the Thirteenth senatorial district are requested to send delegates from their several enmities to meet in convention at O'Neill, Neb., on the 1st duy of September, 181)4, at 2 v. m. for the purpose of placing In nomination a candidate for collator from said district, and for the transaction of suoh other business as may Come before 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 1SB2: lloyd.si llolt.n Oarfleld.21 Wheeler.a It Is recommended that no proxies be ad mitted to the convention and that the absont votes of a county be cast by the delegates present Uidwa 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 38, at 10 o’clock a. m., for the purpose of placing in nomina tion candidates fcr the following offices: Two representatives. County attorney. Also eleven delegates to state conven tion. Twelve delegated to congressional convention. Eleven delegates to senatorial con* vention. And to transact such other business aa may properly come before the con vention. TBS APPORTIONMENT. , The several townships and wards are entitled to representation as follows, being based on the vote cast for Supremo Judge Harrison in 1893, giving one dele gate at large for each township and ward, and one for each 13 votes and * fraction thereof: Atkinson.is Olevelnnd.2 Conley.B Chambers. 8 Celolt.. Dustin...2 Emmet.2 Swing. Falrvlew.. Francis. 2 Qrattsn.2 Green Valley.2 Inman. Iowa. Lake. ... McClure.2 O'Neill—First w.4 jmoiii—second w... J'Nelll—Third w.... I’addook. I’leueuntvlew. Kook Kails. Steel Creek. Saratoga. Stuart. Scott. Sand Creek. Shields. Swan. Sheridan. Verdlgres.. WUlowdale. Wyoming. I tS«*>WKlvl4«COK'MiUt;0'C ' It is recommended that no proxies be3 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 hold their -primaries (or the election of delegates on Saturday, July 21, 1894. Clyde Kino, John McBride, Secretary. Chairman. Vat Mr. Debs kindly steer Senator 4Uen, ot Nebraska, up against a gold cure establishment? Hon. H. L. Shumway, of Dixon coudtT. would like to accept the nom ination for lieutenant governor. The labor leaders who figured out a victory for the strikers use a system of mathematics unknown to ordinary folk. “Give us no more of Debs” would be an appropriate addition to the prayer of the man who struck himself out of a Job. _ It seems that Hon. Henri Watterson is willing to swap his guardianship of the star-eyed goddess for an unspotted senatorial toga. Congressman Breckinridge, of Ken tucky, says the newspapers have lied about him and slandered him. lie may have been lied about but after his own Statement under oath in Washington court it would not be possible to slander him. j TnKRK is onr striking point of simi larity between n Wall atreet broker and a Coxeyite—they both live at tho ex pense of others. Money and sentiment are both good things in their way, but neither should be allowed to determine the next re publican presidential nomination. Thkiih Is some excuse when an igno rant man is led astray by high sounding talk, hut when a man who claims to be a minister of the gospel publicly an nounces himself to be an anarchist, as Myron Reed, of Denver, recently did, there is no excuse—nothing but disgust. Kinkald is entitled to this delegation, and those who oppose him from merely personnl reasons may learn in the sweet subsequent that ’twere better to keep hands off. Political conventions always afford opportunities for revenge but it generally comes at the expense of the party. ---- What, In the name of the great horned spoons, was the sense of employing ex perts at enormous salaries to go over the books of the county oiliclals if it was not the intention to settle by the report? Scott’s first term shortage could have been settled by the board releasing the bondsmen from furtherresponsibility on the first bond. dumb people wno leel a burning de sire to make Kinkaid walk a rocky road to Dublin should not lose sight of the fact that they are at the same time mak ing war on Kinkaid’s friends. An organized light against Kinkaid will create a feeling here In Holt county that will take the party years to recover from. This is no idle fancy. We can see it cropping out in an hundred differ ent places. Tub republican primaries over the county were held last Saturday, and so far as heard from the majority of the delegates are favorable to Judge Kinkaid for congress. This is as it should be and we sincerely hope that at the con vention next Saturday good council will prevail and he will receive this delegation without a struggle. He is entitled to it beyond question and the Interests of the republican party of this county demand that it be given him. Tub shelving of W. D. Mathews by the Second ward republicans was retribution swift, sure and hard. His candicacy for delegate to the county convention offered his erstwhile friends their first opportunity to show approval of his land office record and they did it in a manner that deserves commenda tion. Mr. Mathews is the kiad of a man of wbich an example should he made. The fact should be (and let us hope has been) impressed upon his mind that when a man is elevated to a public office he does not thereby become bigger than the party that elevated him, and when he turns a cold shoulder to his triends and gives the patronage of his office to the opposition he at the same time is digging bit own grave. Mr. Mathews, do you realize where you are at? Tns second attempt of Scott’s bonds men to settle, last Thursday, was as we anticipated, a dismal failure. , Scott offered to turn in securities to the amount of 850,000, and Treasurer Bartley offered to give $5,000 in cash, but the proposition was contemptuously Bpurned —upon advice from Harrington. The board did not even discuss the propo sition or appoint a committee to invest igate it, but arbitrarily rejected it. And why would Harrington advise the board to settle? Wouldn’t a settlement knock him out of a three year’s law suit? Is it not to his interest to keep this case at law as long as possible? Won’t he get a fee of five or ten thous and before he releases his grip, or be fore the board gets onto his scheme? There was but one thing for the board to consider iu this settlement and thjtt was this: Was the $60,000 offer better for the county than a law suit, with the possibility of losing. It is safe to say that if judgment is finally obtained against this bond the amount collected will not exceed $25,000. Kautzman's replies to our silver queries are characteristic. He opens with abuse and closes with nonsense. He says we know nothing about the money question, which may be true, but wo see clearly from his article that it will be a long and weary peiiod be fore we learn anything from him. “What If the mine owner does make a profit of 40 cents on every dollar, would not the mine owners pay those dollars out to his employes, and they into the channels ot trade, and as the volume of money increased wouldn’t there be more demand tor manufactured articles, farm products, more bouses built, more idle workmen employed and prices gradually advance to a fair profit over cost of production for every other branch of industry,” so says the finan cier. Perhaps an increase of circulating medium would not hurt the country in the least, but if you are going to make it one-half fiat, why not make it all fiat? And if you are going to make it flat what’s the sense of using silver? Why not gather up the shells from the sea shore? It is immaterial whether silver went down or gold went up, it is suffi cient for us to know that at the present time their is a difference in their values and they should be coined at a ratio that will make them equal. IF. J. Baker North Pembroke, Mass. After the Grip Relief from Hood’s Sarsaparilla Wonderful and Permanent. " C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Maas.: “I had kidney trouble and severe pains In my back, which was brought about by a cold contracted while In camp at Llnnfleld in 1862. I have been troubled more or less since that time and havu been unable to do auy heavy work, much less any lifting. I received only temporary relief from medicines. Last spring I had an attack of the grip, which left me with A Bad Cough, Very Weak physically, In fact my system was completely run down. I tried a bottle of Hood’s Sarsapa rilla ami It made me feel so much better that I continued taking It, and have taken six bottles. It has done wonders for me, as I have not been so free from my old pains and troubles since the Hood’s^Cures war. I consider Hood’s Barsaparllla a Qod-sent blessing to the suffering.” William J. Baker, North Pembroke, Mass. Hood’s Pills cure Constipation by restor ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. O’NEILL BUSINESS DIRECTORY ATTORNEY AT LAW Reference First National Bank O’NEILL, NEB. C. SMOOT, FASHIONABLE BARBER. DEALER IN OIOAR8, ETO. J)R. J. 1*. GILL1GAN, P1IY SIC AN AND SURGEON. Day and night Calls promptly attended to. Offloe over Biglln's furniture store. O’NEILL, NEB. E. n. BENEDICT. LAWYER, Office In the Judge Roberts building, north of 0. O. Snyder's lumber yard, •0 NEILL, NBB. 'YY' It. BUTLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Agent for Union Trust Oo’a land In Ilolt county. Will practice In all the courts. Special at tentton given to foreclosures and collections D U. B. T. TRUEBLOOD PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Diseases of abe Eye and Ear and fitting glasses a specialty. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m, Office first door west of Uetnerlkson’s ^ BOYD, BUILDERS. ESTIMATES FURNISHED. GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON, PROPRIETOR OF | - CENTRAL Livery Barn O’NEILL, NEB. NEW' BUGGIES ja WnNEW TEAMS. Everything Firpt-CJapP. Barn Opposite Oampbe l’s Implement Bouse Successors to R. R. DICKSON d. CO. Abstracters of Titles. Complete set of Abstrect Books. Terms reasonable, and absolute ac curcy guaranteed, for which we have given a $10,000 bond as required uuder the law. Correspondence Soliced O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY NEB. SPEEDY and EASTING RESULTS. FAT PEOPLE, No inconvenience. Simple,, ABCjLCTEt? TBESl from nny injnrions substance. ua: 4s:cusits btxczd. You [ can stay] ^ thba . ■SiU vfZc p. CURE or refund tour money. -fV»v.-rtx.ttle. fond 4c.fortreoute. rn^MoAi, to. ISoftton, M L *LZ'Jh»US.toh HOTEL (’ :$\r' tw E VANS Enlarged Refurnished Refitted Only First-class Hotel In the City. W. T. EVANS, Prop. NEW YORK . . . ILLUSTRATED NEWS The Orsan of Honeet Sport In America ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY PICTURED BY THE FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY Life in New York Graphically Illustrated. Breezy but Respectable. $4. rOR A YEAR, $2 FOR SIX MONTHS Do you want to be posted? Then send your subscription to the SEW M numiED JEWS, 3 PARK PLACE* NEW YORK CITY. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. WHAT PEFFER’S NERVIGOR DID. «*Ih2i£t#J??w£rfll,,y and flttlckly, Cures when ah others fail. Yount? men regain lost manhood; old men recover youthful vigor, Absolutely Guar anteed to cure Nervouanesa, Loit Vitality, I m potency, Xlghtly aloua, LoitPowcr cither sex, Full!ng Memory, WunUiib: IM<* £/*<■’/ abuse or excesses and indiscretion. Wards ofr Insanity and consumption. Don tlotdrnggistsimposo a worthless substitute on vou ^emuse it yields agreaterproftt. Insist on hav iP* ® JWKKyiGfilK, or send for it. Can he carried in vest pocket. Prepaid, piain wrap. ner.Wl per box, or O for with A Posttlve written Guarantee to Cure or Refund the H nn.117. Poinnhlnt f mn U 1.1 #1 . .. J, n , I I,r° * V VI- Mcaunu MIH Sold by I’. C. Corrigan. FAT PEOPLE 1*ARK OBESITY PILLS will reduce your weight permanently from 12 to 15 pounds a month. No starving sickness or Injury; no publicity. They build up the health and beautify the complexion leaving no wrinkles or flabbiness. 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 $2 per package or three packages for *5 by mail post paid. Testimonials and particulars (sealed) :! cents. All correspondence strictly confi dential PARK REMEDY GO., Boston Mass. ITCHING PILES SWATHE’S ABSOLDTBLT CORES. OINTMENT BJ“.PTWMS7Mo,?tu.Te1 lntM.no I totting Ilf met »t night, worn. lirwnuhTns'lf •flowedto continue luinor. form and protrude. blfffillng, ubHorbnthetnmonk. Sold l>y druggists or bT M>uilor jU cu. Prepared by im. Swum 4 Son,rbiiadgiyliia. Sioux City, O’Neill and Western Railway (PACIFIC SHORT LINE) THE SHORT ROUTE BETWEEN SlOlJX ClTY AND Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os mond, Plainvieiv, O'JYcill. Connects at Sioux City with all diverging I linos, landing passengers in NEW UNION PASSENGER STATION Homeseekers will find golden opportun-1 ities along-this linA Investigate before going elsewhere. THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA | For rates, time tables, or other Information | call upon agents or address F. C. BILLS, W. B.McNIDEK, Receiver. Gen’l Pass. Agent. | 120 DOLLARS 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 workers always prosper. No time wasted in learning the business. We teacli you in a night how to succeed from the first hour. You can make a trial without ex pense to yourself. We start you, furnish everything needed to carry on the busi ness successfully, and guarantee yon against failure if yon but follow our simple, plain instructions, lleajier, if you are in need of ready moaey, and want to know all about the best paying business before the public, sent, us your address, and we will mail yoijf.t docu ment giving you all the particirtirs. TRUE & CO., Boa 400, Augusta/Maine. how they like n Read what some of those Who’ve received. The Hub's Head-To-Foot-Outfi Think of their $5 bargains. “Received the Ilead-to-Foot outfit all right, and am very much pleased with It. It was a perfect tit even to tin1 shoes. Mutt. I- M. Kt'i cton, Claramont.N. H. “The suits, llead-to-Foot boy’s outfit, and man’s business suit, were received O. K.— ot only received O. K., but suits It. K. If bragging of the bargains I reclved will get you more orders you are sure to get them. Mrs. Marge it kt Nrwbank, Barr/ 111, ‘‘Most satisfactory. Yon will receive orders from me from time to time. 111,1 « Ml unit;, B. W. Tichkxob, At'y„ Tucson, Araz.i, ‘Tlie boy’s clothes received alt rieht pleased with them. W.J. Irwin Philsburg, j; "Goods received and give Rood satlsr*,, In.every respect. You may look for?, : orders. ■ J. M. Kikd, Lafavet , i . ./V suit OI ALL w ool ciotnes, 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 receipt of price, or C. O. D. with privilege of examination to anv the United States if $1 deposit is sent with orier. If not satisfactory weal-, " refund the purchase price. Samples of cloth free. In ordering include 65c p(,s'e|' THE HUB, cllfeKLFm- CHICAGO, ILL. &• Always Buy the Best. The . . ■ Best is Cheapest 51^13 51^-lB The Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and. .. Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found at Neil Brennan’s lHMisifa»5i “Pi1 5lHjB iilJvrSlS SlMfS EflSSm siipa siHis John Deere plows, Moline wagons, David Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators. .. Riding and walking cultivators, harrows, I Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinware, i G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-Pres, JOHN McHUGH, Cashier. THE - STATE - BANK OF O'NEILL. CAPITAL $30,000. Prompt Attention Given to Collections DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS EOT.JL SNI6GS, __ PRACTICAL HORSESHOES 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. ALSO DEALER IN FARM tvpt Tnv/rTmrrc - Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows and cultivators ot all descriptions. Everything guaranteed to beat the best. o’neill, neb. I The> mTTTfTmfimfr Inter Ocean The Weekly inter Ocean The Inter Ocean Is published In Chicago, the news and commercial center of all west or tne Allosnenv mnunt.ti.ina n»»ri io <»r>t*n» °pt0(i to the needs of ; Tu a . l. tuu news ana commercii r the Allegheny mountains and is Defter «dapt<___ l^SLP2SPi5e*2£..®ect|on tli an any paper farther feast. Itis in ac By sped lilt iuc ueuuio ui mat, section than any paper further feast, ft is in e i'ora with the people of the west both in politics and Literature. .arrangement with the publishers of tbo Inter .Ocean we are able to * .offer. The Weekly Inter Ocean and The Frontier The Frontier One Tear and the Inter Ocean 6 Months, $1.50. Now Is the time to subscribe. P,°PP*®r Republican Newspaper of the west and has the vISrfmieeu,I‘lfi?nb Te,rms *>y mall: Pally (without Sunday) *6 per (With Sunday) 18 per year: semi-weekly, *2 per year; «Vr .mKi pe,r y?,‘r' As » newspaper the Inter Ocean keeps abreast ,n u11 respects. It spares neither pains nor expense In securing all the news and the best of current literature. especially for those who, on account of mail service or l«" f^„Hr.reKSO”l.do not *!ally Paper. In its columns are to 1, i'. week s news of all the world condensed and the cream »i52.l‘ffary Matures of the dally. As a family paper it excels all 11!<■ eousists of eight pages with a supplement, 11 C0