The Frontier. PUBU»nM) xyxry Thursday nr THE FRONTIER PRINT1N0 COMPANY KINO A CRONIN. Editor*. NO CONTEST. At will be seen by a letter from Mr. Sample, on the local page of tbit Untie, the eenatorlal conteit la off. Mr. (tainpie ■aye that be doe* not believe the evi dence that be bat at hand would JuHtlfv him In untealing old John, if be could. Wa do not know what the evidence would be in other precincts, but we re iterate that the election In Orattan wat unlawfully conducted and should re ceive a ahaking up. I’erbapt, though, for all concerned, Mr. Sample'* conclus ion It a wise one. Whatever is, it right. Drtam’i Thanksgiving document will atand at hit brightest and beat editorial effort, lie didn’t tay a word upon the subject. -. ■ 'MlS-V— Wu will forgive the State Journal for devoting a whole page to foot ball on the 80th ult., If it will promise to not repeat the offence. Bryan should adopt the custom of signing hit name to hit editorials. There ought, by rights, bo at least one bright, brief spot in the dull things. Conorrssman Wilson doesn't draw dollar* at a lecturer any better than he did votes at a candidate. He should taka the hint before It is more focrlbly given. Tub Kentucky editor who asserts that Becretery Ctrliile thinke for himself i« doubtless right, but what makes so much trouble la that Carllslo continues to act for Mr. Cleveland. What’s the use of talking Jack McOoll for senator? He's to be the next governor. Either Manderson, Thurston or Crounse would make a good senator. Give McColl a rest for two years. It’s remarked that "large aches from little toe corns grow.” We do not sup pose any number seven foot now on cased in a number six shoe will question the truthfulness of the observation. "What the democratic party needs,” says a contemporary, "is reorganization." If we were called upon to prescribe for the democratic party we would be obliged to iusist upon immediate burial. | _ Two decomratlc members-elect of the Fifty-fourth congress will owe their seats to republican votes, and the coun try owe its thanks to the Texas republi cans who voted for democrats in prefer ence to populists. While the free and unlimited coinage of American silver might result in no great harm in financial circles, the coin age of the silver of the world in Ameri can mints eertainly deserves the “lunacy” title given it by Morton. Ghadrok is indulging In a lot of loud talk Just at present regarding the estab lishment of many kinds of manufactor ies. It Is a wise provision of Providence that during these hard times talk is still cheap and within the reach of all. Didn’t Mr. Bryan say he was going to devote his time hereafter to the law and journalism, or words to that effect? Yet here he is at the trans Mlsslsstppi congress making a motion regarding 10 to 1 silver money, just as though he didn't know it was loaded.— Sioux City Journal. So Postmaster General Bissell con alders cheap good books an evil and rural tree mail delivery an expensive luxury. Could he have furnished a better argument showing his unfitness to be at the head of the postal depart ment of a progressive people? It would leem that Crawford’s attor neys consided his case desperate when they sent a man over into Boyd county to buy up the main witnesses for the prosecution. Such tactics are reprehen sible. but are strictly In Michael’s line. Aren't they a treacherous gang? Whkn the Crawford Tribune says Tub Frontier knifed Majors and Daugherty it makes a statement that the election returns brand as a lie, and a statement that is credited by neither of the gentlemen mentioned. In our oppo sition to Daugherty’s contest we have no excuse to offer. It seems that five cent cotton is no more popular in the south than fifty cent wheat in the west. The idea is gradually dawning upon some minds that all the industries of this country are in the same boat; that you cannot expect oto sell your own products at a high price and purchase those those of others at a low price. AxONQ many other good things ex pected by the people of the state to come from a republican house and senate is a law making it a penitentiary offence for Rosa Hammond to write poetry. It anything is more heart-rending than a populist majority it is surely Hammond’s carpenter work with the English laun gnage, when he attempts a little joining in the poetry line. VVic do not question that the ('hadron Citizen limn linn properly diagnosed Ida rasu of "lame hack," lint we do question that he has properly ascribed the cauae. It is not the "bellyaching” of Kinkaid’s frlcnda that gave him that "lame hack,” hut the load ho undertook to carry through the congrcaalonal light. It ia too bad that the holiness men of Omaha do not extend to the Daily lie public patronage sufficient to enable it to extend its intluencu and good works. The Republic la a snappy sheet but not voluminous as it should be. coming as it does from a big city like Omaha. Hut. large oaks from little acorns grow, and we we hope lor the best. J too it Bowkn in last week’s Tribune •lapped Kuut/.man up to a peak, to use a figurative term, He replied strongly to Kautzmnn’s cowardly and lying criticism upon the part taken by him in the llolt county campaign this fall. We surmise, Mr. Kautzman, that the lu st thing for you to do is to let Mr. Howcn severely alone. lie is thrice armed whoso cause ia Just. ---- It whs hardly fair for the the Butte Unzetle to strike Kautzman below the belt. It Is only in extreme heat of i passion that a human being will kick even a cur when It is down. The Jew , Is a dead letter; ho has been, and is being, repudiated by the men who discovered him and it is no more than right that the dead and the beautiful should rest in peace. j Bomb of Daugherty’s friends in dif ferent pnrts of the district are making first water asses of themselves by howl ing about the vote given that gentleman in lids county. Mr. Daugherty’s friends In llolt county, among whom we wish to ho counted, are not finding any fault and these non-resident waiters are simply kicking nguiiiBt the pricks of their own conscience. To all such we would say: get a copy of the returns and post yourselves soniowhat before giving further public exhibitions. Gutzman insists that Monkey King worked against Judge Klnknid, because the aforesaid Monkey assisted in de feating Doc Matbews as delegate to the convention. If it is true, ub Kautzman says, that the Monkey directed his en ergies against the judge, then wo must confess that he made a dismal failure of his undertaking as Mi. Kiukaid selected tlie delegates to the ltrokcn Mow con vention without a dissenting voice. Avaunt, foul boast! Your solicitation for the judgo is more gauzy than a fish net. --— - Onb of the unfathomable mysteries of Holt county populism is that the high sheriff can conscientiously and with tho consent of his party lenders— without which ho does nothing~give his patronage to the Sun, which sheet doos not espouse a single hope of popu lism. The Sun is a Cleveland gold-bug organ, thus giving n cold shoulder to the pops’ pet, silver, and during tho last campaign it supported the rump ticket ns against the fusionists. How the Jew sits idly by and sees his diamond field harvested by an inteilopor is indeed strange. -- 1’lainvibw people have gone daft on spiritualism. There is something mys terious in these seances, mediums, guides and conditions, and it is a mystery that we don’t want to explain, as the old testament tells us to let the dead alone and their spirits will take caro of them selves. Tipping tables, rattling slates and independent writings may be useful as amusement occasionally, but we would advise our Plainview friends to not burn much midnight oil in prose cution of the uncanny business as our insane asylums are now filled to over flowing. Tun trans-Mississippi congress last week declared for the free and unlimited coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1, but not without the opposition of some of the best men of the congress which had convened at St. Louis. Mr. Bryan’s resolution, that old familnr refrain, was in part this: "That all issues of paper money should be by the general govern ment; that the pending proposition for a reformation of our paper currency is one that in our judgment would create additional and perhaps insurmountable difficulties to a return to bimetallsm and we are opposed to the same; that in any currency reform acted upon we demand that the constituent part thereof shall be the remonetization of silver or it shall be of such a character as to be of no im pediment to our return to bimetallism as it existed prior to 1878.” After the in troduction of the resolution the minority report was then presented by ex Gover nor Stannard, favoring the use of silver in the coinage of the country to the fullcst extent consistent with the main tenace of the present staudard, and cordially approving the efforts of the United States government to secure the co-operation of other nations iu a more extended use of silver in international commerce upon such a ratio with gold as may be found expedient, but we dep recate the agitation for the free coin age of silver by this country as a men ace to the soundness of our currency and injurious to the public welfare. After debate a vote was taken ou the substi tution of the minority for the majority report and it lost 213i to 77*. While the Bryan resolution carried by a large vote, it was a dearly bought victory in that it succeeded in stirring up quite a feeling against the measure. O'NEIU.BUSINESS DIRECTORY Jjl it. DICKSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Ucforonco First National Hank O’NEILL, NEB. J C. SMOOT, FASHIONABLE BARBER. DEALER IN OIOARB, ETO. J)B. J. P. GILL1UAN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Day and night call* promptly attended to. Office over Blgltn's furniture store. O’NEILL, NEB. Jg IT. BENEDICT, LAWYER, Offloo In the Judge Huberts building, north of O. O. Snyder's lumberyard, O NEILL, NEB. It. BUTLER, ATTORNEY AT-LAW. Agent for Union Trust Co’s land In Ilolt county. Will practice In all the courts. Special at toutlon given to foreclosures and collections JJR. B. T. TKUBBLOOD PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Diseases of the Eye and Ear and fitting glasses u specialty. Offloo hours 11 to 12 a. m. ami 3 toft p. in. Office first door west of Ilelnerikson's A. BOYD* BUILDERS. ESTIMATES FURNISHED. MERCHANT TAILOR_ 1). U. Garhart baa opened up to do a general Mer chant tailoring business in O'Neill. Ito will bo 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. II. GARHART. DR. CORBETT, THE DENTIST, Wishes to call attention to the fact that he is extracting teeth without pain by the use of "Odontunder,” the most successful of all local antesthetics. No going to sleep. Also gas for those who wish it. The very best teeth at $8.00 per set. Special attention paid to the preservation of the natural teeth. Gold crowns, pivot teeth and bridge work a specialty. Also proprietor of the leading PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY of Northwest Nebraska. Photo graphs at hard time prices as follows: $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, $2.25. $2.50 and $3.00 per dozen. Larger sizes quoted upon application. Views, exterior or interior made at any time. All negatives pre served so that duplicates may be made as wanted. Picture of any size enlarged in crayon. Sepia crayon, water colors or a combination of them all. Offlceand gallery No. 425 East Douglas St., O’Neill. Neb. A,J HAMMOND ABSRACT CO 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. Enlarged Refurnished Refitted Only First-class Hotel In the City. W. T. EVANS, Prop. Successors to HOTEL VANS THE OMAHA.... WEEKLY 13 pages a week—From now to Nov. 15, covering the entire campaign, for. <^IO CENTS. Send Stamps or Sliver to THE OMAHA BEE OMAHA, NEB. NEW YORK. . . ILLUSTRATED NEWS The Organof Honest 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 FOR A YEAR, $2 FOR SIX MONTHS Do you want to be posted? Then send your subscription to the HEW TIES MIMED HEWS, 3 PARK PLACE: N EW YORK CITY. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. O’CON NOR & GALLAGHER DEALERS IN WINES® LIQUORS Of all kinds. A specialty made of FINE CIGARS. If you want a drink of good liquor do not fail to call on us. SPEEDY and LASTING RESULTS*. ! FAT PEOPLE, No inconvenience. Simple,, sure. AB33LUTSL? F25EI from any iniurious substance. tAMS ASrOlCElfS SICU323. J!<> u'URrnTEE a CURE Of refund year moi.er. • - b..«t Je. fe.ni to. ter treatise. .. 31KOICA1, CO., Ikatnn, Tinas Always Buy the Best. The . . . I Best is Cheapest S!syKU!aig The Finest and largest stock of good in the Hardware and .Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found m kk Neil Brennan’s John Deere plows, Moline wagons, Dai Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators Riding and walking cultivators, harroi Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinwar G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-] JOHN McIIUGH, Cashier. THE ■ STATE - BAN OF O'NEILL. CAPITAL $30,000. Prompt Attention Given to Collecfio DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINEi Chicago Lumber Yard Headquarters for . . . LUMBER, COAL and BUILDING MATERIAL The Stock is dry, being cured By the largest dry-sheds in the world. 0.0. SNYDER & CO, 11 ill in m m in in i EMIL SNI66S, ______ PRACTICAL HORSESHOE And general blacksmithing carried on in connection. C riage work in either iron or wood executed in the most skill dyle possible, i irst-class plow and machine work that i he relied upon. No new experience used in any branch work. All my men are skilled workmen. ALsO DEALER IN FARM INPLEMENTS^— Llano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows a mlti\ ators of all descriptions. Everything guaranteed seat the best. o’neill, bib. The Inter Ocean Is the most popular Republican Newspaper of the west and has the lar«rest cireulatlon. Terms by mail: Daily (without Sunday' Sunday) $8 per year; semi-weekly, $2 per pe,r y<;?r- As 11 newspaper the Inter Ocean keeps abrta oi the times in all respects. It spares neither pains nor expeusi securing all the news and the best of current literature. The'Weekly Inter Ocean Is edited especially for those who, on account of mail service any other reason, do not take a daily paper. In its columns are « llO TAn nn , K11 ,imn 1.'« —_ . .1 ■ . r ^ - * 1 ..ny other reason, do not take a daily paper. Iu its columns are ' be found the week’s news of all the world condensed and thecrcaj; . the literary features of the daily. As a family paper it excel? estern journals. It consists of eight pages with a supplemen • ■* lustrated n colors, of eight additional pages, making in all o'v.ic «...—i —- - ■ ■ ^ ««adinfr in:n>ri . rr*. , ^ cibui, nuuiuonai pages, muKiu* - pages. This supplement, containing six pages of readingana and two full page illustrations, is alone worth the price of P*P The Inter Ocean I? P£? !*e