The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 11, 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.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BT
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KINO A CRONIN. Eiutohs.
REPUBLICAN TICKET,
BTATK.
For Governor—
THOMAS J. MAJORS, Nemaha.
For lieutenant governor—
R. K. MOORE, Lancaster.
For secretary of state—
J. A. PIPER, Howard.
Auditor of public accounts—
EUGENE MOORE, Madison.
For treasurer—
J. 8. HARTLEY. Holt.
Commissioner public lands—
C. H. RUSSELL. Colfax.
Attorney general—
A. S. CHURCHILL, Douglas.
Superintendent—
II. R. CORBETT, York.
CONaUESBIONAL.
MAT DAUGHERTY, Ogalatla.
SENATORIAL.
For Senator—
S. 0. SAMPLE. Boyd.
COUNTY.
For representatives—
V. B. GRIFFITH, Paddock.
J. A. TROMMBKSHAUSSEU, Ewing.
For oounty attorney—
I. L. ROLL, Ewing.
Thbre la one thing that can be placed
to Senator Hill’s credit; he doesn't pre
tend to he better than hi* party.
Tna Inter Ocean says it ia generally
believed that it baa coat leading demo
crats anywhere from $500 to $1000 to
atop Wilson by cable from making any
more speeches at English banquets.
--►-«*»-,
Wn suppose that if Crawford should
draw a salary as supervisor while he
was attending a meeting of a populist
central committee or convention, or
something of that kind, that bis follow
ers would say it was all right and rise
up and call him great.
Trb efforts of Ed Fry,6f the Niobrara
Pioneer, to defeat Tom Majors may be
commendable—in hit own mind—but the
end in view does not justify him in
crediting to this Journal a lot of rot that
never appeared in these columns. Tub
Frontier prefers to think that the
offense was unintentional, but trusts
that It may not occur again.
-«-»»►«■-.
What conclusion are we to draw from
Senator Wilson’s warm reception in
England? Are we to conclude that the
' demonstrations were mere outbursts of
Joy from the hearts of the Britons at
... what they termed America’s emanci
pation from high prices, or are we to
' Conclude that they rejoiced over new
fields opened for the finished products
of their panper labor? Let the ghost of
former prosperity come forth from the
stillness of our tomb-like factories and
make reply.
Mbt, in the World-Herald, affects to
think It very strange that Thurston re
fused to outline a platform by which he
would be governed if elected to the
senate. There is nothing strange about
it and Metcalf knows it. When a man
Is elected by a political party he is in
honor bound to carry out the platform
Of that party, no matter what his per
sonal views may be. If he doesn’t care
to do that he has no tight to accept a
nomination. There is nothing strange
in the fact that Thurston refuses to
debate upon any platform other than
that of the republican party.
The Jew intimates that Scott’s letter,
which caused such a flutter among the
purified, was wiitten in this office. Cf
course the editorial fool doesn’t believe
anything of the kind—he simply pre
sumes upon the intelligence of his read
ers and his ability to dupe them. Time
is coming, and swiftly too. when Kautz
man can find no man so depraved as to
place any confidence in him. There is
no editor, no matter how great, or how
large his following, that can make a suc
cess of lying continually to his readers.
Scott wrote the article that appeared in
this paper over his signature and no
honest man doubts it, and few doubt the
truthfulness of his assertions.
If Crawford combines business and
pleasure during his senatorial canvass,
it need surprise no one. Business, as
used in this case, means hunting office:
That’s his occupation. Pleasure, to him,
is inspecting bridges and drawing mile
v age and per diem therefor. If the peo
ple In the extreme southern part of the
county buy lumber and build a little cul
vert he goes down to inspect it, even
though the donators of the material send
him an urgent invitation to remain at
home. John is so wonderfully and fear
fully made that he can Inspect bridges
and appraise land all in the same day
and draw pay for services both as super
visor and appraiser. Great fellow, that
’ man Crawford. '
Billy Bbyav in his Sunday World
Herald treats his readers to quite a flow
of words on the income tax and, almost
J tragically, exclaims “where are the
republicans on this question?” We do
not know that we are authorized to
speak for the republican party on this
question, but we ean speak for ourselves
as a unit, and in so doing would say that
as a theory the income tax is all right,
but put into practice it has never been
satisfactory and the democrats them
i .1.1* . iLfttitCX
selves were tbc first to demand Its repeal
In war times. Yes, Billy Boy, your
income theory is Rood, but don't over
look the fact that the democratic party
once declared against it, and if you now
want to return to your vomit do it
stealthily and in darkness without osten
tation. Y’our clause in the hill exempt
ing the income from government bonds
—the income of those terrible bloated
bondholders—should certainly commend
itself to the amalgamation of which you
are a part.
On our local page this week we pub
lish a letter from Jake Roll stating that
be does not intend to withdraw from the
race for county attorney. We are glad
that this is so but we fail to exactly
grasp his meaning when he says he
thinks he should have been consulted
before the matter was publicly an
nounced. No amount of consultation
could have altered the fact that the mat
ter was talked of by a few republicans,
and we insist that in our article no
wrong was done Mr. Roll. Tnis Fhon
tier was among the first to urge Mr.
Roll’s nomination and has no reason at
this time to doubt that its judgment was
good. Ue is a clean, capable man and
worthy the support of the voters of
Holt county. Below we reproduce the
article to which Mr. Roll seems to take
exceptions, and desire to add that if
fair-minded republicans can find any
open or hidden meaning in it in any
way damaging to Mr. Roll we are ready
to stand corrected:
A report, winch has the color of
authenticity, is afloat to the effect that a
move is on foot among certain republi
cans to pull Jake ltoll out of the race
for county attorney and substitute It. J.
Hayes. We confess that we cannot see
the advisability of this move, or where
anything is to be gained. Mr. ltoll was
the unanimous choice of the convention,
made up of republicans representing
every township in the county, and not
withstanding he was not a candidate, it
seems to us to be the heightb of imperti
nence for anybody to request him to
pull out. But in case he should decide
to withdraw, which we trust he will not,
it is quite probable that the county
central committee will have something
to say about who is put up to fill the
vacancy. This thing of a few men
manipulating the machinery to suit
their own sweet will is about played out.
Votem stood aghast and were amazed
when the charge was made that Scott
had used county funds for campaign
purposes, and the independents used
that as their only argument against re
publicans in the campaign of one year
ago. We desire to ask those voters who
took the matter so much to heart, what
the difference, if any, would be in Scott
using county funds and John Crawford
using county funds for the same pur
pose? Our readers are all aware that at
the time Scott’s bondsmen <offered to
settle and the settlement was .rejected,
that the board immediately instructed
the clerk to draw a warrant for $500
payable to the chairmun of the legal
committee) to be used in prosecuting
county litigation. This legal committee
went down to Neligh to attend the §cott
trial. Crawford was there during the
whole time as a witness, drawing per
diem right along when he could have
returned after the first day and saved
this county several dollars. But this is
just an incident and not the main point.
While he was at Neligh doing nothing
but drawing two dollars each day from
Holt county, the independent senatorial
convention was called to meet at O'Neill,
and Honest John, to give the bee in his
bonnet a chance to escape, wanted to
attend the convention. He was finan
cially embarrassed. A happy thought
struck him and be went to the legal
committee and tapped them for 810 for
himself and $10 for his friend Cord
Smith. The committee did not owe
him the money. And that was the way
Honest John came to O’Neill to secure
the independent nomination. The inde
pendent legal committee that loaned
him the money is a partaker of the
crime. While we were not an eye wit
ness to this transaction we have it direct
from headquarters and we do not be
lieve it can be successfully contradicted.
It will do no good to say that he repaid
the money. That cuts no figure in the
case. Scott might have done the same
thing had he been allowed an
opportunity.
The Nebraska Republic, Omaha, says,
and it speaks by the card, that the Ne
braska Business Men’s association or
ganized on Tuesday in Omaha on pure
ly non-partisan basis and with the single
aim in view of saving the credit of the
state by preventing the election ot a
populist state government. A large and
well attended meeting was held on Wed
ensday, fallowed by the appointment of
a strong executive committee, which
convened in the Paxton block for the
purpose of completing the organization.
Its members comprises at the outset a
majority of the influencial wholesale
and business men of Douglas county. It
will be added to within the next fe^
days by four or five times the number.
The organization proposes duiing the
coming weeks of the campaign to ex
tend itself into every town and hamlet
of the state and to bring before the peo
ple of Nebraska the great menace which
is now hanging over them in order that
disaster to the state and to individuals
might be averted. The organization is
specifically limited to working for the
defeat of populism. Its members are
pledged to this end and this end alone.
Upon other questions they are left free
to their own party and individual prefer
v*f, .• r, rf.
ences, but upon the Issue of the defeat
of populism and fusion, whose only aim
is to turn the state over to a populist
governor and with it beyond question to
a populist legislature, the Nebraska
Business Men’s association are a unit.
Many of its members in the meetings
held yesterday and today produced the
stiongest of evidence from correspond
ents and from business connections out
side of Nebraska that the election of
Judge Holcomb would be the most mon
umental disaster to the progress ahd
the prosperity of the state which has
ever befallen this commonwealth. -Sta
tistics were produced from Kansas and
Colorado. These were not from assist
ant cashiers of small banks in the east
ern part of the state or from secretaries
of local loan companies, as the statistics
with which Editor Rosewater attempted
to'answer the charges that populism
would be a calamity, were secured.
But they were from great financial in
terests, from large wholesale merchants,
from individual loaners of capital and
from men whose interest it is to watch
carefully the rise and fall of credits, and
who had learned from bitter experience
as principals and agents that not even a,
crop failure or a grasshopper scourge
bad proved such a bar to investment in
the western states as rampant and
triumphant populism.
O’NEl LL BUSINESS DI RECTORY
R.
B. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O'NEILL, NEB.
J C. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
I _
DEALER IN 0IQAR8, ETO.
JQB. J. P. GII, LIU AN,
PHTSICAN AND SURGKON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over Blglln's furniture store.
O'NEILL, NEB.
E.
H. BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Offloe In the Judge Roberta bulldlntr, north
of 0. O. Snyder's lumber yard,
O NEILL, NEB.
•yy B. BUTLER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Agent for Union Trust Go's land In Holt
county.
Will practice In all the courts. 8pec!al at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
JJR. B. T. TBUEBLOOD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Diseasos of the Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Offloe hours 9 to 12 a. m.
and 2 to5 p. m,
Office first door west of Helnerlkson's
1. BOYD*
BUILDERS.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
Interstate Pair
SIOUX CITY
October G to 14
DAILY EXCURSIONS VIA.
Pacific Short Line
One fare for the round trip from all
stations.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON,
PROPRIETOR OP
|- CENTRAL - ~
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES
W NEW TEAMS.
Everything Firpt-Clag?.
Barn Opposite Oampbe reimplement Bouse
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 Soliced
O'NEILL, HOLT COUNTY NEB.
The Greatest
Offer Yet Made!
Last wensoa THU IIl?B delighted tbon
•audsorijiiyorti all over the United states
will) its" Heud-to-Font” ltoy'a Outfit at
#o,00 consisting of Coat, Cap, Chous and
only ouo pair of pants.
We’ll do better yet this season 1
The Hub’s
Head-to-foot
Boy’s Outfit
tor tho tall season contains as follows:
One Double Breasted Coat,
One Manic n Cap to Match,
One Pair of First Class ,‘ihoes and
Two Pairs of Knee Pants,
and still the price will remain the same,
Itomombor, tho cloth is all wool, the work
manship and trimmings first-class,everything
strictly guaranteed—and your money back
should you want it.
Send for samples of cloth, or better yet, let
us send you one of the Uead-to-h’oot Outflts,
all charges prepaid for #5.75 or O. ]>.
with privilege or examination beforo pay
ment, provided $1.00 on account is sent with
tho order.
THE HUB,
The Largest Clothing Store in the World.
N. W. Cor. State and Jackson Sts.,
CHICAGO, ILL.
Beferences; Any Bank or Wholesale Firm in
Chicago.
WE HiVE NO BUNCH HOUSES
HOTEL
-]h VANS
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City.
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
FAT PEOPLE
PARK 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 ilubbiness. Stout abdomens and difficult
breathing surely relieved. No experiment
but a scientific arid positive relief, adopted
only after vears 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)
2 cents. All corresponcence strictly confi
dential
PARK REMEDY C0„ Boston Mass.
NEW YORK . . .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
The Organ of Honest Snort In America
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
pictuhcd av thc
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
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
raw nu nusmiED jets,
3 PARK PLACE! NEW YORK CITY.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
WHAT'1PEFFEi’S ISlGO?DID.
SiSS?P=5
JJ rlticn Ouarnntee to Cure «»s» w^fT.nj !ie
Sold by Morris & Co.
SPEEDY and EASTING RESULTS.
PATPEOPLE
No inconvenience. Simple,
sure. ABSOLUTELY fill
from any injurious substance.
LASSE ABB0KEH3 BESUCEB.
Ton
[ can get ]
. thin.
iou
[ cm stay]
.thta.
Always Buy the
Best. The . . .
Best is Cheapest
The Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and a
.Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found'J
Neil Brennan’s
John Deere plows, Moline wagons,
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivati
Riding and walking cultivators, hj
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tin
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL,
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE ■ STATE ■ BAI
OF O’NEIIiL. •
CAPITAL $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to Collet
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSIlj
Chicago Lumber Yard
Headquarters for . . .
XMfeati
LUMBER,
—COAL and
BUILDING :MATERIA
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
j O'Neill,
0.0. SNYDER & Cl
ill ill ill ill ill ill ill ill ill m in in in in hi m m in hi in hi mi
Yards < Page,
(Allen.
EMIL SNI66S,
PRACTICAI
HORSESHO
n general blacksmithing carried on in connection,
riage work in either iron or wood executed in the mosti
style possible. First-class plow and machine work tl|
be relied upon. No new experience used in any brai
work. All my men are skilled workmen.
ALi.0 DEALER IN FARM INPLEMENTS^__**
Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, barren
cu tivatois of all descriptions. Everything guaranty
The^
Inter Ocean
~«t*Y -V, FD* J ««»r. AH il ||
or the times in all resnects it B
securing all the news Snd theta,?oTSJSSt
It spares neither pains nor e.\peu*
" lite
“ “ luc ««8t or current literature.
The Weekly Inter Ocean
any otlfifr reusoiiado nottfilre88 i''1,10’ on account of mall servi‘f|
be found thl ^eeVs news of an ,1“lly p??er- In Its colunmf »*
of the literary features oMi,S1,itu w‘irld condensed and the in
western journals It consists of efch^8 “ ,anilly paper 11
lustra ted. in colors, of eight adrihn^.1pilRe8 wltl?BU,PI’1 V
pastes. This supplement*enni7,i,,V.J1“? Panes, making In all»'
and two full page 11 ustrat V* s,lx Pa*es of read Inn' -L
v so “lustrations, Is alone worth the price1“'
The Inter Ocean
of the Alleghenymountains «V^Vint1 co,nmcrolal center of *]1
the people ofVhatsecUou tT,,, n.1 is oe,,ur "dapted to the
eora with the people of the wi® iStcii
IH*'
. is il*
ature
<D ®
By special arrangement with the publishers of the Inter Ocean wears
The Veou?° Tee^y Inter 0cean and Tie Frontier
he Frontier One Year and the Inter Ocean 6 Months, $15°
Void I .' thn 4-1 ... A a. _ «
Now Is the time to subscribe.
4*AtA*«**« t.... . .