The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 30, 1894, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KINO A CRONIN, Editors.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
V ■
■ .< '
“I'.rf
COURT”.
Fur representatives—
W. 8. GRIFFITH, Paddock.
J. A. TROMMER8IIAU8SEU, Ewing.
For county attorney—
J. L. ROLL. Ewing.
CONaatNsiONAr*
MAT DACOI1ERTY, Ogiilalls.
SENATORIAL CONVENTION.
The republican eleotors of the Thirteenth
senatorial dlstrlot are requested to send
delegates from their several counties to
meet In convention at O'Neill, Neb., on the
1st day of September, 18M, at S p. u. for the
purpose of placing In nomination a candidate
for senator from said district, and for the
transaction of suoh other business ss may
come before the convention.
The several counties are entitled to rep
resentation as follows, being based upon tna
vote cast for Benjamin Harrison for pres
ident in IW2:
»oyd .• | Holt.11
It Is recommended that no proxies be ad
mitted to the convention and that the absent
votes of a county be cast by the delegates
present envoi Kino,
Secretary.
Mat Docgbrty’s election
enough to gamble on.
is sure
Thb senatorial convention
in O’Neill, next Saturday.
convenes
As between dictator* Rosewater
Hammond we have no choice..
and
Wi reiterate that the party of Holt
county and the elate needs new blood.
Gnitn Moork has made a good auditoi
and deaerved hie nomination by ac
clamation.
Tun age of dtetatorism it on the
decline. This does not refer in particu
lar to Roeewater.
A party that la calculated to gain and
retain supremacy muat be founded upon
truth and guided by consistency.
»<«>
Six of Holt county’s delegation to the
■tato convention voted against the mt
' chine. The balance of them voted for
■ Majors. __ _
It would really be too bad to see a pop
If; gun atatesman get into the capitol. If
one should crawl In we would all know
how it was done.
Job Bartley’s nomination by accla
. matlon vu well deserved recognition of
4', duty well and faithfully performed.
^ Our Joe is all right.
Editor MAuriK was not nominated
for secretary of state. Is it not about
time for the pencil pushers to register a
little kick? or ere they entitled to no
representation T
Oamdidatbs for nomination to state
oAcea could shorten the term of sus
pense by calling at headquarters, en
quiring for the slate and ascertaining it
their names are written there.
If noise may be called enthusiasm, the
state convention was one living mass of
I:,.. * enthusiasm. To cite the Irishman's
story of the man who sheared the pig,
s“there was more noise nor wool.”
Did you ever reflect upon how easy it
is to lead a plump, bay stallion down to
a gentle, murmuring brooklet, and then
ponder upon What an arduous undertak
ing it is to make him quench his thirst
when instinct tells him that the water is
\ tainted?_
| r» Ir England and Germany get the in
creased trade they expect under the new
tariff, it should not be forgotten that it
will be at the expense of Americans en
gaged in the manufacture of the same
goods in which the foreign trade is in
creased. _ _ _
Holt’s MacColl contingent to the
stale convention was dubbed kids by
certain politicians and faithfully prom
ised that they could attend no more
conventions, simply because they voted
against the machine. The voice of the
people will be heard above the gag.
Ma. Clbvbland might make a very
fitting appointment and at the same
time relieve his party of a burden by
■ending Congressman Breokinbridge, of
Kentucky, to Turkey, as U. 8. minister.
He and the sultan have tastes in com
non that would probably make them
chums. __ _
And because a delegation is youthful
in appearance It must be sneeringly re
ferred to as "kids." Let it not be for
gotten that the woods are full of kids
and their little ballots count as hard for
or against as a man’s size. That’s no
way to encourage young republicanism,
is it DennleY
It is about time now that the republi
cans of the state take hold of the old ship
and steer her awhile. The few old tars
who have neglected their business by
standing on the cross-trees shouting
"reform” while the pirates bored holec
in the bottom should take a vacation ai
their own expense for the good of th<
party. The place to begin is at the pri
maries. Bend no men to county con
ventions but those who are known to b<
right, and then send delegates to th«
state and district conventions instructed,
This is the way to get proper represen
tation.
Rem's nomination don not auit the
people of this part of the dlitrict. The
delegates from llolt went down to vote
for Holcomb but were forced off. No
independent who (■ true to hi* pro*
feaaed principles can vote for the return
of the red-beaded rooster. He bas done
nothing to deserve it, even from an in
dependent point of view.
Ip every republican in Holt will earn
estly put bis shoulder to tbe wheel in
this campaign, we can easily
redeem, regenerate and disenthral this
county from tbe octopus suction of the
spoil cohorts of populism.—Graphic.
This is esactly the same talk The
Frontier has been making ever since
tbe convention. Republicans can do
nothing else but work for tbe nominees,
but it might just as well be understood
first as last that no half and half busi
ness goes.
The people'* party held it* convention
at Grand Island, last Friday, and nomi
nated the following ticket: Governor,
8. A. Holcomb; lieutenant-governor,
J. N. Gaffln; secretary of state, James
M’Fadden; auditor, C. A. Wilson;
treasurer, John H. Powers; attorney
general, Daniel B. Carry; commissioner,
Sidney J. Kent; superintendent, W. A.
Jones. Friday may be an unlucky day
but sure it is that this ticket is beaded
by a strong and able man. The balance
of the ticket does not cut much figure.
It is very ordinary, and will not be
elected.
Hebe are some facts about democrat
ic economy in government expenditure.
The appropriations made at this session
or congress, even after the estimates
have been cut to the extent of about
*”0,000,000 wbich Representative Can
non correctly says will have to be pro
vided for in deficiency bills at the next
session, 137,200,638.72 more than was
appropriated by the first session of the
fifty-first (billion dollar) congress. A
few low grade clerkships at Washington
hare been abolished in order to get rid
of the republicans who filled them, while
the amount appropriated for increased
salaries to high officials largely exceeds
the amount saved by the abolished clerk
ships. The democratic party Is no
more honest in its cry for "economy”
than it Is for "tariff reform."
It la a fact patent to all in attendance
at the state convention that Torn Majors
was nominated in order to spite Ed.
Rosewater. This premise is not com
batted by Majors' most ardent and en
thusiastic supporters. In fact they freely
admit that had it not been for Rose
water’s opposition to Majors he could
not have been nominated. This, then,
is the kind of republicanism that con
fronts us today in the state of Nebraska.
The good old principles that were once
wont to awaken patriotism in the hearts
of our fathers—and ours in earlier years
—haye been carefully tucked away in
some obscure archive and an age of per
sonal jealousies ushered in. So far as
we are concerned we want none of it.
We care nothing for Ed. Rosewater,
nor do we care anything for Tom Ma
jors only so far as he subserves the great
living truths promulgated by the grand
old party.
What, but such work as was witnessed
at the state convention last week has
thrown the republican party of the state
from its triumphal pillar and almost
vanquished its laurel wreath and golden
rod? What,but such rapine has reduced
us from an almost Impregnable majority
to a pitiful and doubtful plurality? And
for what? To spite and humiliate Rose
water.
There are worse men than Majors, and
men who might make worse records as
governor, but that is not the question.
The cry went up from all
over the state for new men men for of
fice. men at whom the finger of sus
picion could not be pointed, but what
came of it? The ticket was headed by a
man who has been actively engaged in
the politics of the state for thirty years
and identified with people and things
both good, Bad and indifferent. And
why was this done? Simply to slap
Rosewater. In fact Rosewater’s chas
tisement was placed above and beyond
the good of the party.
Such pernicious practice cannot be al
lowed to go unnoticed and unrebuked.
The party has lost the confidence of
many people and it must be purified.
The only question with us is as to the
best place of purification.
Jobbery and railroadism should have
had their day .If we support Majors it will
be because of the great principles that
be is supposed to represent and not be
cause of any particular confidence in
the man or the convention that placed
him before the people.
THURSTON’S PRINCIPLES.
John M. Thurston in his speech before
the republican convention Inst week
said that were he framing a platform for
the republican party it would read as
follows:
The supremacy of the constitution of
the United States.
The maintenance of law and order.
The suppression of anarchy and crime.
The protection of every American
citizen in his right to live, to labor, and
to vote.
A vigorous foreign policy.
The enforcement of the Monroe
doctrine.
Safety under the stars and stripes on
every sea and in every port.
The restoration of our merchant
marine.
The tariff of William McKinley and
reciprocity of James G. Blaine.
American markets for American pro
ducts.
The protection of the American farm,
the American factory and the American
mine from foreign pauper competition.
Much legislation aa will guarantee
steady employment and good wagea to
the workingmen of tbia country.
A free ticket to China for any man
who instate upon his right to buy the
product of human labor without paying
a fair price to the brain and brawn
which produces it.
The enactment of federal legislation
adequate to secure a free ballot and a
fair count in every voting precinct of
the union.
A one-term presidency.
The election of United States senator
by direct vote of the people.
The establishment of a postal tele
graph system.
The government supervision and
control of transportation lines and rates.
The protection of the people from all
unlawful combination and unjust
exaction of aggregated capital and cor
porate power.
War on the three great democratic
trusts—oil, whisky and sugar.
The abolition of all sectionalism: one
people; one country; one flag.
A political crop failure for calamity
howlers and fusion jugglers.
A pension policy just and generous to
our living heroes and the widows and
orphans of their dead comrades.
The utmost expansion of our currency
consistent with the maintenance of the
equal purchasing and debt-paying pow
ers of every dollar.
American mints for American miners.
The free coinage ot tbe American pro
duct of silver and gold into honest
money.
An American welcome to every God
fearing, liberty-loving, constitution
respecting. law-abiding, labor-seeking,
decant mao.
Tbe deportation and exclusion of all
whose birth, whose blood, whose con
dition, whose teachings, whose practices
would menace the permanacy of free
institutions, endanger the safety of
American society or lessen the oppor
tunities of American labor.
An American flag for every American
school house.
A deathless loyally to American in
stitutions and a patriotism as eternal as
the stars. John M. Thurston.
O’NEILLBUSINESSDIRECTORY
jj & DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O'NEILL, NEB.
J C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIQARB, ETO.
J)B. J. P. GILL1GAN,
PHYSICAN AND StTBGEON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over Blglin’s furniture store.
O’NEILL. NEB.
I^ H. BENEDICT
LAWYER,
OBoe In the Judge Roberta building, north
of O. O. Snyder’* lumber yard,
O NEILL, NEB.
R. BUTLER,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW.
Agent for Union Truat Co’e land In Holt
county.
Will practice In all the court*. Special at
tentlon given to forecloeurea and collection*
J^R. B. T. TRUEBLOOD
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
Diseases of ftlie Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m.
and 2 to5p. m,
Offloe first door west of Helnerikson's
^ BOTD,
BUILDERS.
E8TIMATE8 FURNISHED.
QEORGE A. McCUTCHEON.
PROPBIITOR or
| - CENTRAL
Livery Bam
O'NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES
BTqNEW TEAMS.
Everything Firpt-Cla??.
Barn Opposite Oampbe reimplement House
Successors to
R. R. DICKSON £, 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
under the law.
Correspondence 8oliced
i O’NEILL. HOLT COUNTY NEB.
HOTEL
-Jh VANS
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City.
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
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■Mil tux !M 6U. i‘rei.*r«a oy .. w a t xs - , i suautir -
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
. BETWEEN
SlOlJX ClTY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Plainview, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
NEW UNION PASSENGER STATION
Homeseekerg. will find golden opportun
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before going elsewhere.
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address
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Gen’l Pass. Agent.
For rates, time t
call upon agents o
f . c. hills.
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T/roid LASTING RESULTS.
P
v - Cu?»c or rohind >cur rrtouev.
V * >. 5©
_ *'»• ik'^ion,
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In Your Own Locality
made easily and honorably, without capi
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woman, boy, or girl can do the work hand
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making ever offered before. Our workers
always prosper. No time wasted in
learning the business. We teach you in
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TRUE * CO., Box 400,
1 Augusta, Maine.
AT PEOPLE,
o inconvenience. Simnle,
a-s-vt?:? pass I
' us substance.
' b.22l'3E0.
Yea
can stay]
Shin.
HOW TllEY LlKf
Read what some of those
Who’ve received.
The Hub's Head-To-Foot-Oi
Think of their $5 bare-ain*
•‘Received the Ilead-to-Foot outfit all right,
and am very miicli pleased with it. It was a
perfect fit even to the shoes.
Mus. L. M. Kkmiton, Claramont. N. II.
"The suits, lIsad-to-Foot boy's outfit, and
man’s business suit, were received O. K.— ot
only received O. K., but suits O. K. If bragging
of the bargains I rec ived will get you more
orders you are sure to get them.
Min* M akhkhet Newbank, Barry, 111.
“Most satisfactory. You win ,
orders from me from time to t
B. W. Tichmob, A»y. t*K
“The boy’s clothes received -m
pleased with them. w. j |J'
’ ni
“Goods received and give e™
In _ every respect. You may 5?,
orders. J. M. 1'ifi, t
. .A suit of all wool clothes, ages 5 to 15 years_a S
ley cap to match the suit—and a pair of stout and shai
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
the United State* if $1 deposit is sent with orler. If not satisfactory
refund the purchase price. Samples of cloth free. In ordering include &
THE HUB, “S'ftr CHICAGO, ILL
vasason
Always Buy the
Best. The
Best ^ Cheapest
Tae Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and..
.Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found
Neil Brennan’s I
John Deere plows, Moline wagons,
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivatJ
Riding and walking cultivators, haJ
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tin!
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL,!
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE - BAI
OB’ tTNEILL.
CAPITAL $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to Collecil
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSIn|
EMIL SNI66S,
Ill
PRACTICAli
HORSESHOl
.na general blacksmithing carried on in connection,
nage work in either iron or wood executed in the most si
style possible. First-class plow and machine work tb
be relied upon. No new experience used in any bra
work. All my men are skilled workmen.
ALSO DEALER IN FARM INPT-FMTmTg
Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harro
cultivators of all descriptions. Everything guaranty
beat the best. m
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