The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 04, 1894, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The Frontier.
PCnUIIIXD EVERY THURSDAY UT
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KING & CRONIN. Editors.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
STATIC.
For Governor—
THOMAS J. MAJORS, Nemaha.
For lloutonant governor—
R. B. MOORE, Lancaster.
For soerotary of state—
J. A. PIPER, Howard.
Auditor of public accounts—
KlIGENK MOORE, Mudlaon.
For treasurer—
J. 8. BARTLEY. Holt.
Oomiqlssloner public lands—
C. II. RUSSELL. Colfax.
Attorney Ronoral—
A. B.CHURCHILL, Douglas.
Superintendent—
H. R. CORBETT, York.
, OOmiRKMSIOMAL.
MAT DAUGHERTY, Ogalalla.
SENATORIAL.
For Senator—
8. 0. SAMPLE. Boyd.
county.
For representatives—
W. 8. GRIFFITH, Paddock.
J. A. TUOMMEU8HAU88EK, Ewing.
For oounty attorney—
I. L. ROLL, Ewing.
Dobs the Sun desire that Mr. Soott
should expose some more of the men
who have county money?
Thurston accepted Bryan’s challenge
with the vigor and promptness that is
characteristic of the man.
-«.<>►«
Thh Graphic publishes the republican
ticket and the repeal ticket. Now If it
will only run the democratic, populist
and prohibition tickets the people can
tell at a glance exactly where it is at.
Thb democratic bolters in filing certif
icates of nomination say that Milton
Doolittle is a resident of O'Neill, and
that his postofflee address is O’Neill,
Holt county, Nebraska. Does Milton
register from O'Neill when he Is away
from home?
Lit him (Soott) turn over the bundle
of notes, which ha claims to have, to
the county attorney; and If he does so
the Sun believes that Mr. Harrington
will lend his valuable services in secur
ing as light a punishment for him as is
consistent with the enormity of the
crime of which he has been convicted.—
Sun.
Who is the oounty attorney, anyway?
Bryan has gall that time cannot
wither or usage wear out. When he heard
that Governor McKinley was to address
Omaha republicans he immediatly
called for division of time. Now wasn’t
that gall supreme? What business has
a statesman like McKinley with a com
mon prairie incendiarlst like Bryan ?
Thb Chicago Inter Ocean says there
Is one good thing about David B. Hill—
his personal habits are above reproach.
He is absolutely and perfectly free from
all ordinary vices and every form of
dissipation. His influence upon the
young men of his party as regards per
sonally habits ought certainly to be
strong and wholesome.
Thb cattle men of Jackson county, 8.
D., have decided to assess live stock
owners one cent per bead for all stock,
the amount so raised to be used for the
purpose of paying premiums for the
destruction of wild animals. This looks
to us to be a more equitable adjustment
|| the matter than to tax the whole
population for the benefit of stock
Owners only.
\ Thi new editor of the Wayne Dem
ocrat, A. B. Charde, We see has yet to
learn that journaliam does not consist
in the abetract, even, of warping a mat
ter of newe to suit a political occasion.
He has taken upi the old cry that Scott
loaned his money to republicans. A
careful perusal of Scott’s letter in our
last issue would draw an apology from
an honest newspaper.
Mat Daugherty is making his cam
paign tour in this, the big Sixth con
gressional district, and is gaining a
strong foot hold eren among populist
voters. The intelligent populist is tired
of the farcical representation in which
Nonentity Kem has proven himself to
be expert. Daugherty is a man of solid
business qualifications while Kem is
■imply a howling calamity office-seeker.
•—Valentine Republican.
Frontier readers can well afford the
time necessary to digest the article from
the State Journal published on our local
page, reviewing the work of the populist
legislature of ’01. Now, upon the eve
of a legislative election, is the time for
voters to acquaint themselves with the
work done by that calamity body, and
decide whether or not it is to the inter
est of the state to have that reign of ex
travagance repeated and duplicated by
this year eleeting populists to represent
us in the state assembly. The article in
question is reliable and official. Holt
county voters have no cause to doubt it.
They have before them the supervisors,
' who have been to Holt county exactly
what the representatives have been to
the state. This is a year when a man
can make no mistake by voting against
a populist. If you know nothing against
him personally, vote ferninst him for the
record his party has made.
When Populist Oldham climed upon
the platform nt tho court-house last
Friday evening to deliver his free silver
speech he found that the capacious hall
was hut sparsely settled, and as the
speech went on the settlement grew
sparser. The democrats and republi
cans who were there went to hoar a free
silver speech, but when be commenced
explaining to them why it was that they
should support Holcomb for governor
their hearts sank and they retreated
through the yawning portals out Into the
gathering darkness. Oldham is a pop
in disguiso.
---
A press dispatch from Pittsburg, Pa.,
date of September 29, says that every
tin plate plant with the possible ex
ception of one, was closed down, throw
ing several thousand men idle until the
wage dispute is settled. The Morwood
tin plate manufacturing company of
Elizabeth, X. J., is the exception, and
it will suspend if work on hand can be
completed. All mills in that part of the
country have closed, the last being the
big plant of the United States Iron and
Tin Plate company at Demlos station,
which suspended yesterday. Today
notices were posted notifying the men
that the shut-down is due to the reduc
tion of the tariff. It will be hard work
for democratic orators to make these
several thousand workingmen believe
that free trade was the “change" for
which they were looking.
Mat Dauguebty was in O’Neill a
couple of days last week feeling the
wrist of the body politic. The vote that
Mat will receive in this county will be a
genuine surprise to the populists, lie
will receive the entire republican vote,
a big share of the democratic vote and a
considerable number of independents.
The people are not enthusiastic for
Kern, lie has never done anything to
awaken their admiration or even gain
their respect, lie has proven himself
incompetent to discharge the duties of
his office. lie is acknowledged to be an
ignoramus and when his constituency
has wanted anything they have always
gone to some other district for repre
sentation. Kem is a fractured idol (or
idle) and will be completely shattered In
November. Tho people of this district
can afford to return him to no place but
his native sand hill.
-—
Republicans of various parts of
the county are patiently awaiting for
some assurance from Ewing and Atkin
son that they intend to support Mr.
Griffith for the legislature. Republicans
in those towns cannot afford to cut
Griffith for Doolittle. Doolittle stands
no more show of election than the seeth
ing lakes in hades do of becoming a
glare of ice. If republicans in those
towns support him they defeat Griffith.
Do they think for a moment that
Griffith’s friends will allow his assassina
tion to go unavenged? Trommer
shausser owes an explanation to the
voters of O’Neill, Stuart, Inman, Grat
tan, Willowdale, Paddock and Steel
Creek townships for his attitude on this
question, and delay is dangerous. TnE
Fbontieb is for the republican ticket
but it is not disposed to assist in the
election of a republican who is plotting
the defeat of another. If the republi
cans of Ewing and Atkinson have a
right to vote for Trommershausser and
Doolittle, the republicans of the other
townships named have a right to vote
for Griffith and O’Donnell. Kettle will
hardly have the gall to call pot black.
THE DEMOCRATS.
The democratic convention held in
Omaha last week went "hell bent” for
Holcomb and Bryan too. Holcomb was
endorsed and Bryan was made the dem
ocratic candidate for the senate. It was
a Bryan free silver convention by a vote
of several to one. The following ticket
was placed in the field:
For governor—Silas A. Holcomb.
For lieutenant governor—J. N. Gaffln.
For secretary of state—F. R. Ellick.
For auditor—J. C. Dahlman.
For treasurer—G. A. Linkhart.
For attorney general—D. B. Carey.
For commissioner—S. J. Kent.
For superintendent—W. A. Jones.
This wholesale fusion coupled with
free silver resolutions was too much for
the cast iron stomachs of the administra
tion fellows and they seceded one
hundred and fifty strong (among them
being the Holt delegation) and organized
what they termed a democratic conven
tion, at which another ticket was nom
inated, composed of the following
named gentlemen:
For governor—P. D. Sturdevant.
For lieutenant governor—R. E.
Dunpby.
For secretary of state D. T. Rolfe.
For auditor—Otto Bouman. ,
For treasurer—Luke Brietenthal.
For attorney general—John N. Ames.
For commissioner—Jacob Bigler.
For superintendent—Milton E. Doo
little.
The above ticket was the first to be
placed upon file with the state secretary,
and there arises a serious question.
There can, under the law, be but one
democratic ticket, although the law per
mits one political party to endorse the
nominees of another party and have
them placed upon the ticket, as the
nominees of the party endorsing.
Secretary of State Allen has an
nounced that he will hand down his
decision today and it will be read with
considerable interest. From the fact
that the bolters did not leave the free
silver convention until after the ticket
had been named, in fact participated in
the deliberations of that body, and of
which they were a part, it would look
to us aa though they, being a whipped
minority, had no right whatever to
organize a side-circus. We predict that
when the matter is finally adjusted in
the supreme court the Bryanists will be
on top.
Much interest has been taken in this
convention by republicans on account
of the probable effect it will have on the
coming election. We are not a pre
tentious soothsayer, but we have us
good a right to guess as anyone, ami
in exercising that preogative would say
that the best thing that could happen
the republican party would be to have
the Bryan nominees placed on the
ticket. In that event every administra
tion democrat in the state would vote
the republican ticket. In case the nom
inees of the other convention were
placed on the ticket the administration
democrats would vote for it while the
populists would vote the populist ticket.
If we have correctly and intelligently
diagnosed the case, then it is better that
the Bryanists win, leaving the adminis
tration fellows free to yote as they
see fit. The free silyer people will vote
the fusion ticket anyway, and the ad
ministration democrats will vote the
republican ticket only in case the
Bryanists win in the present contest.
O’NEILLBUSINESS DIRECTORY
R.
R. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Rank
O'NEILL, NEB.
J C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIOAR8, ETO.
J)H. J. P. GILL1GAN,
PHY SIC AN AND SURGEON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over Blglin's furniture store.
O’NEILL, NEB.
E.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 Bolt
county.
Will praotlce in all the oourts. Special at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
J^R. B. T. TRTTEBLOOD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Diseases of the Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m.
and 2 to 5 p. m,
Offloe first door vest of Helnerlkson's
X. B°TD*
BUILDERS.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
Interstate Pair
SIOUX CITY
Oetoher 6 to 14
DAILY EXCURSIONS VIA.
Pacific Short Line
One fare for tho round trip from all
stations.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON,
PROPRIETOR OP
| - CENTRAL
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES
W NEW TEAMS.
Everything Firpt^Cla??.
Barn Opposite Ostnpbe l's^Implement Bouse
A,JHAMMOND ABSRACT £0
Successors to
R. R. DICKSON 6. CO.
Abstracters of Titles.
Complete set of Abstract Books.
Terms reasonable, and absolute ac
curcy guaranteed, for which we have
given a •10,000 bond as required
under the law.
Correspondence Soliced
O’NEILL. HOLT COUNTY NEB.
The Greatest
Offer Yet Made!
LaNt mb non THE HUB delighted ttaou
lauds of buyer* all over thu United States
with Its" Hoarl-to-Foot" Boy’s Outfit at
85.00 consisting of Coat, Cap, Shoes and
only one pair of pants.
We’ll do better yet this season I
The Hub’s
Head-to-Foot”
Boy’s Outfit
for the fall season contains as follows:
One Double Breasted Coat,
One Stanley Cap to Match,
One Pair of First Class Shoes and
Two Pairs of Knee Pants,
and alill the price will remain the name.
$5.
Remember, tho cloth Is all wool, the work
manship ana trimmings first-class,everything
strictly guaranteed—and your money back
should you want it.
Bend for samples of cloth, or better yet, let
us send you ono of the Head-to-Foot Outfits,
all'Charges prepaid for 05.75 or O. O. K
with privilege of examination before
ment, provided (1.00 on account Is sent
the order.
THE HUB,
The Largest Clothing (ton In tho World.
H. W. Cor. State and Jackson Sts.,
CHICAGO, ILL.
References; Any Bank or Wholesale Firm in
Chicago.
HOTEL
-£ VANS
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City.
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
PARK
ENNYROYAL
ILLS
the celebrated female regulator are perfectly
safe and always reliable. For all Irregular
ities, painful menstruations, suppression,
etc., they never fall 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
or six packages for *5, by mall post paid.
Every Package guaranteed. Particulars
(sealed) 4o. All correspondence strictly
confidential.
PARK REMEDY CO.. Boston, Mass.
NEW YORK . . .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
Tha Organ of Honeat Sport In America
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
fictuseo av the
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTHV
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
Breezy but Respectable.
$4 FOR A YEAR, %2 FOR SIX MONTHS
Do you want to be posted? Then send
your subscription to the
HEW TUI ILLUSTRATED HEWS,
3 PARK PLACE! NEW YORK CITY.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
*>a. pebwieixvs
FEMALE PILLS
i gts-TOaS
D!®ntWy* Invigorates these
SS£a,*<PewVf!’of,m,tatton*. Hama
£?K£ P3'Xfr. box> o«’ trial box $1. 8en|
*s»J0^dcrhi;B^f£,'i,6«®
Sold by Morris & Co.
SPEEDYond EASTING RESULTS.
✓S\FAT PEOPLE/
■ MB erf 1No Ulc0nvenience- Simple,*
V thk. J?ur'- ASSOTIL? 7811
^L. f from any injurious substance.
LAS3E AM0ESS3 BEBBCED.
[ can stay]
.thh.
P &*0°MTEE » CURE your »
7,TV!’ ?. _ Send_4c. for troofio
Always Buy the
Best The . . .
Best is Cheapest
The Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and..
.Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found ij
Neil Brennan’s
John Deere plows, Moline wagons, h
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivator!
Riding and walking cultivators, harri
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinwj
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V.|
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE - BAISlI
OB' O’NEILL.
CAPITAL $30,000.
Prompt Attention Given to Collect
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINEl
ii in in in in in nr in in nr nnuTiMininifmTuiTf TTMinTfiiTlM
Chicago Lumber Yard
Headquarters for . . .
LUMBER,
w — COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
Yards
O'Neill,
Page,
Allen.
lililUU liliuilliuminiii m II
0.0. SNYDER & CO.
Hi III III It l tl<
EMIL SNI66S, I
PRACTICAL
HORSESHOE
. uiacjssmicning carried on in connection. C
riage work in either iron or wood executed in the most skill
style possible. First-class plow arid machine work that u
be relied upon. N0 new experience used in any branch
work. All my men are skilled workmen.
ALbO DEALER IN FARM INPLEMENTS
ano mders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows a
beat the°bes°f ^ de8CriPtions- Everything guaranteed
* o’neill, neb,
The.
m Hffj*
Inter Ocean
Isrgestch^Jution* Terms'bv m?nW8J?aRer ot the west and has tl,e
year; dally (with Sundttv8i*is1J!a : *,ai‘y (without Sunday) K! per
weekly, Sl permr A,»ril.fr year; semi-weekly, *2 per year;
of the times In alf rejects. Ocean keeps abreast
of the times in all resnepta i7B"n«v- *“w *ll,vcr v/uean seeps uurv*
securing all the news Snd thebeTo^eurrenUlte^St8"^ eXPe"8e
^ u«8i or current literature.
the Weekly Inter Ocean
any other reason^do not takefa dmi°’ 0n aocount at mail service ur
befoundthe week?s news ofRiMdtUily pWer< In Its columns are to
of the literary features of °hedalltW<A condensed and the cream
..—- juumuis. It consists of nioUt 8 a ra'ulJyPaPer It excels an
lustrated. In colors, of elahfsddiH fhtipaRes with a supplement. il
pages. This supplement contsolVui"* puKes-making in all sixteen
o full n,,u,, tio,.':l0.,!"tlni,.'K pages of reading matter
and two full paufo llluHtrAtlnne YJ? 7“'* «t reaiuiiK *«»“'*
illustrations, is alone worth tho price of paper
The Inter Ocean
of the Allt^Jitoiy mouiu'i.VmiBofit00^ c,'>riTii! refill tynl<,of ,11
the people of that section tfmll 8 npttur adapted to the needs of
cord with the people of the w^«tV'y. ,p,tpur '“ttlior east. It Is in ac
v Pie or ute west both in polities and Literature.
..MB..
Th.rr.^o»"?j^^“dsh’ Fr“*i"
'1.ear an<1 the Inter Ocean 6 Months, $1.50.
-a.. ”ow *s the time to subscribe
—-TtlBBlW .
"“hi