The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 25, 1894, Image 1

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    BY THE FRONTIER PRINTING CO.
E XV.
BUMORIPTION, SI.
WNUM.
CLYDt KING AND D. H. CRONIN, EDITORS AND MANAGERS.
O’NEILL. HOLT COUNTY. NEBRASKA, OCTOBER 25, 1894.
NUMBER 1
|gt Told Ai They Are
bid to Us.
IHOW IT HAPPENED
Portrayed Tor General
In *nd Amusement.
Smith is visiting relatives
i week.
an was down to Omaha
i a carload of cattle.
* Bates, of Valentine, held
Ices in this city last Sun
|e started Sunday morn
8, where he is thinking
Bd Cora Adder, both of
tied Tuesday by County
Brn, bran and all kinds of
''Neill Flour & Feed Co.,
»a«er. 38-tf
It: “I am the backbone
f the independent party of
-Kautzman.
Itohan is on duty again,
(recovered from the acci
I last week.
[Smith, of Ainsworth, was
|iturdav and Sunday, the
lose Merithew.
left for Geneva, Neb.,
1 attend the funeral of a
I there yesterday.
lutterick patterns order
Itnn and save postage
khion plates free. 13-4
srithew entertained a
S‘ friends last Saturday
enjoyable time was
O. M. Kem was in the
lay night. He came in
ent in the dark. He is a
irk ness anyway.
iman and Ed Purdy re
lay night from Arkansas.
pleased with the country
ting of locating there.
e Bowen, who had been
ome days in Holt county,
her home in Lincoln Sun
ness of her daughter, Lillie.
i, Mrs. Pfund and Miss
ns returned Sunday night
, at which place they al
and lodge of Jtebekahs.
[gbn and G. W. Wright, of
lansas, are in the city look
ae cases in court. They
Phoenix Insurance com
|an by name ot Bain, from
pe, has purchased George
ftksmith shop and will re
ps family to this place in a
pn, who resides on the Nio
t>ear the mouth of the Red
i O’Neill Monday night, hav
from a prospecting tour
ksouri.
fin will furnish you all kinds
carload lots or in small
He can also furnish you
pi and gasoline by the gallon
|Get his prices before buying
15tf
Ice, aged 13, daughter of Lon
Past Monday at the home of
Ison, in this city, of typhoid
Pe funeral took place Tuesday,
i being interred in the Protest
my
itis and Ab Wilcox have
horse race to take place in
ic week from next Saturday,
rill be 600 yards, single dash,
> of $30, and a number of side
’ill be an exciting race.
es of the Presbyterian church
a Halloween supper and
iron sale at the rink, Wednes
>er 31. Come and see the dis
■ons. Each one of the United
111 nave one for sale. Hard
>8.
ling photographer made a da
Ipe of a comparatively obscure
|inois in 1831. The man was
; Lincoln, and the picture is the
likeness of him in existence,
published tor the first time in
| Magazine for November.
tool board has decided to dis
music and drawing in tbi
ir which purpose MUs Dwyei
loyed some weeks ago. Wi
that a lack of funds was thi
[or this move. The pupils it
il departments circulated i
mday, protesting against thi
in by the board.
John G. Tipton, of Omaha,will discuss
the issues of the day, from a republican
standpoint, at Ewing, October 20: at
Inman, October 80; and at Page October
31. Mr. Tipton is a good speaker and
should be greeted by large crowds.
Tbb Frontier’s local department is
somewhat abridged this week on account
of a surfeit of political matter. We
look upon the coming election as one of
more than ordinary importance to our
people, and we would feel guilty of a
moral crime should we fail to give the
matter our fullest attention.
Neligh will in a short" time vote on
the question of bonding the city for
18,000 to build an irrigation ditch. The
river will be tapped about twelve miles
west of Neligh near the Uolt county
line, run down.through a fine section of
country to Neligh. where it will be
used for power and city purposes.
Jim Mullen, Mike Harrington, Tom
Golden and Gene Cress went out to
Shields Friday night to talk populism.
They must consider their case desperate
when they find it necessary to election
eer in Shields. Perhaps they think the
boys out there aie preparing to resent
the shabby manner in which they have
been treated.
The county central committee met in
O’Neill Saturday as per call. Hon. Neil
Brennan was elected chairman to fill the
vacancy caused by the resignation of
John McBride. The selection of Mr.
Brennan was undoubtedly a wise one, as
is evidenced by the rustling manner in
which he has gone to work. The differ
ent townships of the county were well
represented and the committemen
enthusiastic over the bright prospects.
The O'Neill republican club is now in
good working order, with the following
officers: President, John Skirving; vice
president, Robert Marsh; secretary.Clyde
King; treasurer, S. J. Weekes. A meet
ing was held at the council rooms Tues
day night to make arrangements for the
rally today. The attendance was quite
large, and the meeting was favored by a
short speech by Mr. Walker, of Spring
field, III., who was in the city transact
ing some business.
A gentleman was down from Atkin
son last week and while in the city
stopped the Beacon Light and subscribed
for The Frontier. After having stop
ped the Jew’s sheet with anything but
complimentary remarks, Kautzman ac
costed him upon the street and asked
him if he did not want it again, to which
the gentleman replied: “No, not any
more than the itch.” Pretty hard. Ham,
when an old subscriber says he would
rather have the itch than read the
Smudge.
A press dispatch from Ainsworth,
date of October 18, says: “GeorgeCam
pen, assistant city engineer of Lincoln,
with a party of eight left hsre today for
the headwaters of the proposed irriga
tion ditch on the Snake river, and before
returning will make a permanent survey
for the entire main ditch. The county
has made an appropriation to pay for
the permanent survey, and as soon as
this is done and cost estimated there is
no doubt that bonds will be voted to
construct the entire ditch, thus insuring
to this county the benefits and prosperity
arising Irom lands that can be depended
on for good crops annually."
A Frontier reporter had the pleasure
Sunday of going through the various
rooms of the O’Neill public school, in
company with Professor McGuire and
several other gentlemen, and viewing
the work that had been placed on exlii
bilion by the pupils of the several grades.
The work taken as a whole was very
creditable, although one could not help
noticing that in rooms occupied by the
lower grades the work by the pupils was
much more thorough and showed a de
gree of painstaking that is commendable.
In the higher grades, while the work, in
the abstract, was full and complete,
the scholars seem addicted to a don’t
careitiveness in regard to details that
somewhat marred the otherwise pleasing
effect. However, progress is being
made this vear and marked improvment
is expected by the end of the term.
Tom Cain was up before County
Judge McCutcheon yesterday on charge
of shooting horses found trespassing on
his farm, complaint being brought by
D. P. O’Sullivan, owner of the horses.
County Attorney Murphy prosecuted
the case, while Mr. Cain struggled
along without counsel. During the
progress of the trial the information was
obtained from the defendant that he bad
been shooting horses for the past seven
years. He seems to labor under the im
pression that whenever he finds a stray
.animal upon his farm he has a consti
tutional right to shoot it on the spot.
The judge bound him over to the district
court in the sum of $500. The prisoner
said that he would give no bail; all that
be would ask would be the privilege of
getting out of jail one hour each night
to shoot “tramp horses." He appears
to have a mania for wounding dumb
animals, in fact hasjustly—or unjustly—
earned the title of “Tom the Horse
I Killer."
Democrat!, Hew So Ten Like Itl
Thb Fboxtibb knows of a few dem
ocrats who ore thinking of voting for
John Crawford for state senator because
they believe that if elected he will vote
for Bryan for United States senator.
That idea is an illusion; he would not do
it, because he said he would not.
The Atkinson Qraphio of October 11—
and Frontibr of same date—made the
statement that Crawford had said he
would not vote for Bryan. The follow
I ing is the language of the Graphic:
| John Crawford gives it out cold that he
will not, in the event of his election,
support Bryan for U. S. senator, because
the silver-tongued orator is not a full
fledged populist.
The Beacon Light, realizing the egre
gious error that Crawford bad commit
; ted, last week published the following
denial.
The Graphic ia a dead straight Han
Jchn Crawford never made use of any
auch language, and we are authorized
by him to say that he always held Mr.
Bryan in the highest esteem for the
manly stand he took in congress in de
fense of the rights of the people—free
silver, tariff reform and the income tax.
It is easy enough to call a man a liar,
but to prove it is a very different thing.
We have not taken thU matter up to
vindicate the Graphic, aa that excellent
journal is amply able to take care of
itself, but we have interested ourselves
in the matter for the purpose of showing
that Crawford made the statement
which he now hastens to deny; to show
that he has said that he would not vote
for Bryan, and to show that he has said
he would vote for Bryan, thereby plac
ing himself in a position to make him
self a liar one way or the other, should
be be elected. In evidence of his per
fidy we append the following aflldavit,
and from the well-knowp reputation of
the man making it, it will pass current
any place in this senatorial district:
Atkinson, Neb., Oct. 22, 1894.
To whoiu it may concern:
This is to certify that the above state
ment, accredited to and published in the
Atkinson Graphic, October 11, 1894, is
correct. That said John Crawford made
the statement to me in effect that should
he be elected state senator he would not
vote for Bryan for U. S. senator, for
the reason that he, Craw,ford, did not
consider Bryan a good populist. That
said Crawford made said statement on
or about September 17, 1894, on passen
ger train, coming from O’Neill to
Atkinson. Frank Moors.
[seal]
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 22d day of October, 1894.
A. T. Hart, Notary Public.
My commission expires Jan. 27, 1890.
Teachers’ Meeting.
The tacbers of Holt county were well
represented at their meeting at O’Neill
October 20. Fully sixty teachers were
present and much interest was mani
tested. Able papers were read by Supt.
McGuire, of O’Neill, Miss Krebs, of
Atkinson, and Miss Davis, of Ewing,
eliciting warm discussion and much
enthusiam. The pros and cons of the
vertical system of pennmanship were
debated with some favor. The time
between sessions was profitably spent in
examining the fine exhibit of school
work displayed by the O'Neill schools.
It was conceded by all that the display
demonstrated the fact that much sound
educational work is beingdone at O'Neill.
The teachers were entertained in the
evening by the pupils of the high
school in the novel and original drama,
“The Congress of the Nations,” and all
departed to their several homes feeling
that the day bad been weU spent, and
that it had indeed been good to be there.
SEC. n C. T. A.
Dr. Price’s cream baking powder—a
pure grape cream of tarter powder.
Always a Season Why.
This has been a year of wonderful
growth for the Lincoln State Journal.
Its aggressive methods have pushed it to
the front. One thing that accounts for
this is the Journal’s principles. It is
republican, true and blue, but first of all
it is a great newspaper and considers
news the most essential feature. It
prints more state telegraph news than
either of the Omaha papers. The
business interests of the state rec
ognize in the Journal the only state
paper which is standing up for the wel
fare of Nebraska. You can see how the
Journal is growing in your own town.
It is gaining in every other town in the
state just as much. The reduced price
is 50 cents per month without Sunday,
or 65 cents per month with Sunday.
This also accounts for the big growth.
The Semi-Weekly Journal lifts the larg
est circulation of any Nebraska paper.
It has completely routed its old-fashioned
once-aweek rivals. It is being sent from
now until January 1, 1896,.for $1. This
carries readers through the coming legis
lature and through the next presidential
campaign. It gives readers two com
plete papers each week for the price of
one. Gov. Furnas is farm editor, and I.
L. Lyman poultry editor. It is published
at the state capitol and is a paper for
Nebraskans.
Dr. Price’s cream baking powder—the
most perfect made.
VERY HARD PRESSED
♦—*— i
Popa Ran lacking Their Brains For
Campaign Arguments.
REDUCED TO AWFUL STRAIGHTS
Harrington And Golden Koeort to the Bank
eet Kind of Pettifogging,
Since the populist party has been in
existence in Holt county Tun Fhontieh
hag watched them closer, perhaps, than
any other Journal and more freely ex
posed their shams and awful hypocrisy,
but we do not believe that in all their
campaign trickery and subterfuge they
have ever resorted to such unwarranted
deception as they are doing to-day.
They are at a loss for campaign argu
ment; the Scott matter is worn thread
bare and Is no longer' potent. They
cannot argue from the record mnde by
the last legislature because that body
saddled upon the state a debt of over
$700,000 and passed many laws for the
enforcement of which they made no ap
propriation, which the next legislature,
be it populist or republican, will have to
make good. They cannot argue that
they have economically administered
our county affairs, because the past year
has seen more wanton extravagance than
any other year in the history of, our
county. The board of supervisors—
with a populist majority—has been in
session almost continually, at a cost of
9100 per day. Illegal appropriations
for the le’gal committee aggregate thous
ands of dollars, while county claims
to-day are only worth eighty cents as
against ninety-live two years ago. The
county levy is to-day almost exhausted,
with many claims filed and not allowed,
nor will they be allowed this year and
probably not next year. We say they
are reduced to terrible straights for cam
paign arguments. They are poverty
stricken. Being poverty stricken, and
poverty being the mother ot Invention,
they have invented, and by the rankest
kind of deception are attempting to
make the people believe that their taxes
are being reduced under populistic con
trol. Mike Harrington and T. V. Golden
are preaching this from the stump, and
we are told that in some precincts they
have found audiences gullible enough
to applaud them. Golden and Harring
ton know that they are deceiving the
people; they know that they are guilty
of pettifogging and they know that they
dare not argue the question fairly and
squarely upon its merits and the facts.
They have spoken in Shields, Emmet
and other townships, and in the course
of their harrangues have compared the
taxes levied in other years—showing a
reduction -and then had the effrontery
to declare that populistic control was
the cause of it- Their statements are
outrageous and far from tenable. The
county officers have had nothing to do
with this reduction, and we will tell you
why: The amount of any man’s taxes
depends upon his assessed valuation and
nothing else. This fact cannot‘be dis
proves Who fixes the assessed valua
tion of real and personal property? Is
it the county officers or tl)e board of
supervisors? No. It is the assessors
who are required to meet in March of
each year and fix a schedule covering all
property. This being a fact the county
assessors are alone responsible for in
crease or reduction m taxes, providing
the rate of taxation is not changed. In
view of these indisputable facts we de
sire, for the benefit of Harrington,
Golden and the people at large, to make
a little comparison and show them ex
actly why they have paid less taxes this
year. In some townships the tax has
been reduced on account of school bonds
being paid off, and in others raised be
cause bonds have been voted, but what
we want is the general average. Fol
lowing we give a parallel, showing how
your real estate was valued in 1893, and
how it is valued in 1894:
KBAL ESTATE—1893
Atkinson 12 25 to 8375
Chambers 185 “ 2 90
Conley 1 75 •• 2 50
Cleveland 175 “ 2 50
Dustin 1 76 “ 2 50
Delolt 185 “ 3 00
Ewing 2 00 “ 310
Emmet 2 00 “ 310
Francis 175“ 8 50
Falrvlew 1 85 “ 3 On
Q rattan 2 50 “ 4 50
Ore’nVal. 185 “ 3 00
Iowa 185 “3 00
Inman 210 “ 3 25
Lake 185 “ 3 00
McClure 1 85 “ 300
Rock Falls 185 “ 3 UC
Paddock 1 85 3 0C
Ple's’ntv’w 185 “ 3 0(
Ste’l Creek 1 85 “ 3 0C
Scott 185 “ 3 0C
Saratoga 1 85 “ 3 0(
Sand Cre’k 1 &5 “ a (K
Stuart 185 “ 3 2!
Shields 185 “ 8 0t
Swan 1 80 “ *29(
Sheridan 1 85 “ 3 2!
Verdigris 185 " 3 0(
Wyoming 175 “ 2 9(
Wlllowd'le 1 85 “ 3 0(
All lands within twc
miles of either or any
line of railroad Iron
$2 to 15 per acre. A1
land wtthln one mile
of rhe limits of Ewing
85.50 to 111 per aero
Inman, 85.50 to 111
O'Neill, 818 to *28; At
klnson, 89 to 118
Stuart, 83 to 812; Page
$5.50 to 811.
Merchandise one
third actual oast
value.
HEAL E8TATH—1894
Atkinson II35 to la 00
Chambers 110 “ 3 30
Conley 110 “ 2 00
Cleveland 110 “ 2 00
Dustin 110 “ 2 00
Delolt 110 “ 2 40
Ewing 120 “ 2 50
Emmet 1 20 “ 2 50
Francis 110 “ 2 00
Falrvlew 110 “ 2 40
(Irattan 1 60 “ 3 00
Gre’nVal. 110 “ 2 40
Iowa 110 “ 2 40
Inman 180“ 2 CO
l.ake 110 “ 2 40
McClure 110 “ 2 40
Hock Falls 110 “ 2 40
I'addock 110 “ 2 40
I’les’ntv'w 110 “ 2 40
Steel Ore'k 110 “ 2 40
Scott 110 “ 2 40
Saratoga 110 “ 2 40
Sand Ore'k 110 •• 240
Stuart 110 “ 2 80
Shields 110 “ 2 40
Swan 110 “ 2 30
Sheridan 110 “ 2 ou
Verdigris 1 10 “ 2 40
Wyoming 1 10 “ 2 30
WlllowdHe 110 '• 2 40
All lands within one
mile of either or any
line of railroad from
11 to 14 per acre. All
land within one mile
of the limits of Swing.
13.40 to 19 per acre;
Inman, 13.40 to 19;
O'Neill, 19.60 to ISO:
Atkinson. 15 to 115;
Stuart, 13.50 to 8>; Page
13.50 to 19.
Merchandise one*
third of the actual
cash value.
I Besides tbia great reduction on realty,
the tchedule for the assessment of per*
ton el property shows a reduction in
every imtance of nearly one-half. This
being the case, why In the name of the
great horned tpoona would not the
taxea be lighter?
Some may ask why and bow thla re
duction in the schedule? That la easy:
The property has depreciated In value
here aa well aa elaewbere and ahould
not be assessed as high; the people are
not worth aa much; their property ia
not worth aa much. Compare carefully
for the two yeara the valuation placed
on your land and when these base de
ceivers attempt to Impose upon you,
call them down.
Bowm on Crawford.
The O’Neill Alliance Tribune this
week will say: Readers of the Alliance
Tribune are well aware of the fact that
we have not been supporting John
Crawford for state senator. The Tri
bune has long known Mr. Crawford to
be unworthy the support of honest men,
and we were surprised that the Inde
pendents of this district should have
nominated him for so important an
office as state senator, when the need for
honest men and true was so obvious.
His terrible hankering after office would
not be so very bad In Itself (although
that is one of the things the Indepen
dents are opposed to) if his record as an
officer was not so dirty and damnable.
We cannot support a man In our own
party who employs the same disreputable
tactics we condemn in the old parties.
John Crawford and The Tribuno have
been good friends, but we have not for
the past two years been in aocord with
him or his acts as a public officer.
His true character was first shown
when he attended the Independent com
mittee meeting at Atkinson, and charged
the county with that day's work as
member of the board of supervisors.
He next voted for the famous tax list
steal of which the republican papers
have so long accused him. He was at
the time a stockholder in the Holt
County Independent, and one of the in
corporators of that concern. Any one
can see the reason he had for this action.
Me was liable at any time to be called
upon for an assessment, and he took this
means of robbing the taxpayers of the
county to enhance the value of his stock
in the printing company.
He went, at the county’s expense, to
inspect private culverts in difierent
parts of the county when in reality the
county had nothing at all to do with the
culverts. At that time he was chairman
of the bridge committee and drew big
pay for every day heputin. While you,
taxpayers of Holt county, were at home
working like dogs to make a miserable
existence, this reformer from Sand Creek
township lived off the fruits of your toil.
He charged Jas. Skirving mileage and
appraiser’s fees for appraising a piece
of land and at the same time charged to
the county mileage and a day’s wsrk for
inspecting a bridge close by the land.
This in itself was not so awfully bad if
he had not charged Skirving several
miles in excess of what the distance
really was.
He was at Neligh attending the Scott
trial just before the senatorial con
vention at O’Neill, and he and another
of bis friends used 810 apiece of the
money that had been appropriated by
the county to prosecute Scott, to pay
their way from Neligh to O’Neil), that
he (John Crawford) could be here to
pull the strings for his nomination for
senator; ana ne succeeded.
He swore by all that was good and
holy that if Judge Bowen did not do as
he and Harrington wanted him to be
need never expect anything further
from the independent party of Holt
county. Of course honest Judge Bowen
refused to violate his oath of office and
as a consequence he was beaten for a
renomination for the office of county
judge. But we prefer to give Judge
Bowen’s own words as regards this
charge; the balance of the charges can
be verified by the records. The follow
ing is Bowen’s letter:
A LAW BRBAKBB SHOULD NOT BECOME A
LAW MAKER.
O’Neill, Neb., Oct. 18,1894.
To the editor of the Alliance Tribune—
Having unexpectedly 'come to this
county and finding that Mr. John Craw
ford has been nominated for the import
ant office of state senator, I feel it my'
duty as a good citizen to offer a protest
against the election of him for senator
from this district, feeling that a law
breaker should not be a law maker.
He did at two or three different times,
while I was county judge, ask me to
make decisions in two or three different
cases, against parties before any evi
dence was produced, saying it would
save the county big expense and it
would be for the benefit of the independ
ent party, well knowing as be did, that
the independent party is a standing
protest against all forms of bribery and
tampering with courts and juries. The
least particle of self respect, or even
respect for the eternal principle of right
and justice, would have restrained any
one from even thinking of making such
a proposition to an honorable court.
One time when he failed to see me
| personally, he called my son, Ora, aside,
Instructing him to tell me what I mutt
do in a certain cate, If I expected any
thing of the Independent party In the
future.
Again, it it well known that John
Crawford wat appointed by the board
of auperyltora to visit houtea in O'Neill
to atcortaln whether they had been cor*
reetly aaieaaed, and raise the aaienment
where necessary, when he hlmtelf had
one of the beet farm boutet, and the
bett furnished, In Holt county, and he
did not present one article on the attet*
tor's schedule. Men in hnmble hornet
In O’Neill were attested from 91S to
8125 on their little household gooda and
at the same time John Crawford would
not have traded furniture with them for
two or three hundred dollars difference.
They paid taxes, he paid none. We, ae
a party, preach equal taxation and
equal rights for all men, and special
favors to none, and it it right under
such circumstances that poor town
mechanics mutt pay taxes, while John
Crawford who is well fixed pays none
on his household goods? The hooka
show that all the property he gave in in
1863 was about 9180 all told. ,
It is also well known by members of
the board of supervisors that when Mr.
Brodie offered a resolution that when
two or three of the supervisors living
near any bridge to be built, be a com
mittee to attend to it, in order to save
expense both in days an mileage to the
county, John Crawford bitterly opposed
it, for be was chairman ot the bridge
oommittee, and the resolution was tabled
thereby giving him many day’s work.
and much mileage; and he is one of the
champions of reform, but we cannot see
where the reform comes in.
All the foregoing is true and correct
and is given not in a spirit of malloe, as
Mr. Crawford and I have been the best
of friends, but as a matter of duty. I
think we, as a party,must have true men
to bring about the reforms we need so
much. A corrupt tree cannot bring
forth good fruit. Friendship should cut
no figure in politics, when Justice and
right Taw is at stake. >
We ask the voters of this district to'
consider well who they send to make
our laws in the coming session.
Yours truly,
Wm. Bowkn.
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!IUJ. UU TV Oil, IJCIUR Ullt UUIV |nUIU|
depose and say that I hare written the
foregoing and that the material stat»
roente therein contained are correct to
the best of my knowledge and belief.
Wk. Bowen.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
to before me this 22nd day of October,
1804. S. I. Wnnxnfl,
Notary Public.
Commission expires July 15, 1805.
Gentlemen of the independent party
of Holt county, do you still desire evi
dence of the rottenness of the man yon
have nominated for state senator? No
man in this county will doubt the word
of ex-Judge Bowen. Thousands of the
independents left the republican and
democratic parties because the leaders
of those two parties were corrupt, but
you are asked to support a man more
corrupt than any republican or democrat
dare. For refusing to comply with
the demands of Mr. Crawford,and there
by violating his oath of office, Judge
Boweu was turned down. This county
never had a more capable or honest
judge than Mr. Bowen, and it was his
honesty that beat him. We have no
candicate on our ticket for the office of
state senator. We could not place the
name of John Crawford, knowing, aawe
do, his rotton political record.
Our friends are left to do as they
please about voting for a senator, but it
is better, a thousand times better, to not
vote rt all, than to vote for a man whose
record is polluted with such acts as John
Crawford has done.
As Judge Bowen says: "A law
breaker should not become a law maker."
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Letter tut.
Following la the Hat of lettera remaining In
the postoffloeat O'Neill, Neb., unclaimed, for
the week ending Ootober 18,18M:
V
) it
' isS £
J L Adcock
San Blnnell
M A Cuasler
Ufa Emma Freeman
Miss B Mulrajr
~ .ids
Zuen Wedar
Allen k Co
Irena Barber
O De Hares
Mrs Viola Qrar
Joseph Vaaek
8 J wellbar
B Walton
In calling for the a bore please sag "adver
tised." If not called for In two weeks they
will be sent to the dead letter offloe.
J. u. BumsP. M.
For The Campaign,
The campaign this (all will be of the.
greatest interest to all the citizens of
Nebraska. The Omaha Weekly Bee
will handle all the issues of importance
during the campaign in its usual able
manner and proposes to make a price of
20 cents for the balance of this year to
all Nebraska subscribers who may desire
to keep thoroughly posted on the Im
portant issues that will be discussed.
Send us 20 cents in silver or stamps
for the 12-page Weekly Bee up to Jan
uary 1, 1805. Address, The Omaha Bee,
Omaha, Neb.
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Dr. Price’s cream baking powder—the
most perfect made.
MERCHANT
TAILOR_
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D. H. Oarhart has opened
up to do a general Mer-.
chant tailoring business ^ >vr <
in O'Neill.
lie will be found in the
Mack building 4 doors
east of Hotel Evans, Where
he will be pleased to show you
samples and take orders for new .•
suits. Repairing and cleaning
done neatly and promptly.
D. H. OARHART.
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