. The Frontier. ppbluhkd xvxky TiiunsnAY nr THI FRONTIER PUINTtNO COMPANY KINO X CRONIN. Emtohs. Sii.vxk has been more injured by tbr friendship of tbo populists than by Hie “goldbugs." Mr. Ci.kvri.and no longer poses rh n Umar of wild borieR. He has concluded that lets barm will rceult from giving tbem a Ioorc rein. Ip tbla congress faila to tnko roiuo definite action on tbo matter it will be aafe to predict another bond ieauc before the next congress meets. — - • -—— A MONKTAHY commission properly aeleoted might be useful, but would lie members be properly selected if Mr. Cleveland 1* authorized to do it? Secretary Morton is tbo last man to undertake tbo Impossible contract of proving to the American farmer that Ids beet market is In Europe. Till republican senators are on general principle* right In refuting to allow any further tariff tinkering, but it would bo both good polltlca and good builnett to paea the freo sugar bill and knock out the eugar truat. -i • --- - Tan vote cast for Matt Daugherty in Holt county It a matter of record, and will do more than anything olae to eatabliah the falsity of certain alle gation* that are being made |uat now.— Dawet County Journal. Bcnatoii Faui.knbh baa returned hit normal state of mind. It took him some time to get himself untangled from those rainbows, but when he answered demooratio election questions simply by saying: "We were badly licked,” as he did the other day, hia friends knew that ha wu again all right. Till man who auppoaos that this country will ever adopt the single gold standard It quite as badly mistaken as he who thinks we shall adopt the single silver standard. It it the conservatives not the extremists, who usually control legislation in this country, and the con servatives will not agree to a tingle standard. Thh sheriff sales McHugh now gets from Hamilton do not bear the signa ture of the worthy deputy. In this does the ante-election understanding between the low editor and the high sheriff appear as plainly as though embossed in letters of gold upon the front page of the lllumlnary. Sheriff tales are the re ward of perfidy; eh, McHugh; eh, Kautz man. _ • I» our republican senate and house fail to .distinguish themselves at the next section by passing good laws, repealing bad ones and making a record of economy consistent with good work wo promise by our halidom that we will make no apologies for them in the future. There Is now an opportunity to practlco what we have been preachlng'and the time to commence is when the session opens. _ _ _ , Oft, shades of departed gall! The Jew accuses Armstrong of attempting to ruin his reputation. There is enough earoatm in that expression to make a mule laugh. Kautzman's reputation! Think of it. Imagine if you can how an editor would go at it to injure that reputation. It is so unsavory even now that the health officers are fumigating theolty. If that man should die it would be a dire calamity: he has not enough friends to bury him and the vilest wretch that bums the earth would not touch his foul carcass for hire. The vultures of t&e air and the carnivorous beasts of the field would get a bite or two if he should suddenly shuffle off and they could stand the stench. And still he talks of people injuring his character. Excuse us while we laugh. Professional reformers lay theii plans to make the earth a paradise at one tall swoop, and in pursuance of the grand object to be attained, they buckle on the armor and hunt for a fat office. Once in office, as far as they are con cerned the work is practically accom plished. Look at Kem; when he first set out to release the common people from the yoke of plutocracy and incidentally do himself a good turn, he rowed by the feathered songster of American freedom that he would do something in congress that no one thought of before, lie would wake the country up as it nevei had been before. He would put laws or the statute books that would redeem the land or perish miserably trying to make himself heard. He has done nothing in congress but to eat and draw his salary and disgrace tho state and he is a fail sample of all the visionaries whi imagine that they are the political Wink leried's who must be sacrificed upon th< alter of office for the country's salva tlon.—State Journal. Ws notice in the last explosion of thi Fire-cracker several references to pro tested notes. This leminds us of thi fact that a gentleman called at tbesi headquarters about a year ago, and hat in his possession some promises to pai bearing the signature of the great am only Ham Kautzman. These notes o hand he filtered to barter and sell at thi rate of fifty cents upon the dollar and throw jn. hy way of good measure, a few years' interest, being at that time unacquainted with the Jew, except hy reputation, and the reputation being in fernally had, we declined the speculation. Not being able to dispose of them to us lie wished to leave them in our bands for collection, which proposition was also declined for the reason that science had not yet arrived at the statu of per fection to be able to tell us how blood might be distilled from a turnip. In the light of these facts it seems to us that a man of seusu would have learned a le.ison of charity and refrained at all futuro times from mentioning the finan cial affairs of others although prompted by a white-headed and nlso white-livered hank cashier. Now, dog of a Jew, crawl within the sanctity of your family circle and howl liku the coyote that you aro. Tub country papers opposing tlie election of Thurston to the senile are for the most part the hotting contingent that followed llosewater into the woods last fall. More than nine-tenths of tho true-blue republican papers are for Thurston and seem to have no secon 1 choice. Vox popuii vox Dei! K pluri hus unmn; licnigno nnmine John M. Thurston.—Btate Journal. It may appear to Bro. Ilixby that the wicked are fleeing with no one In pursuit when we make this upper cut at the saw-log on his shoulder, but ns Tub Promtibh has been supporting Bcnalor Manderson for re-election we desire to statu that we are not in tho woods with Hosewatur. Hy his works we have learned to esteem Senator Manderson and think him entitled to another election if he so desires, but being reli ably informed that he is not a candidate we aro unqualifiedly for Thurston ns we consider him tho noblest Homan of them all and the ablest uxponent of republicanism in the stale of Nebraska. If at the coming session of the legisla ture he Is chosen to make all of the wulkius In Washington ring for the next six years no one can applaud more cn thuslasticly or drink longer nhd stronger to his health and the wise choice of our representatives than the able editors of this excellent family journal. Bo mote It be. Altonnisiion Ihei.amu arrived home today, after several weeks’ visit in the cast, says a 8t. Paul special to the Chicago Inter Ocean bearing date of December 1. To a reporter ho denied most emphatically tho story of his securing a large loan while in the east for the payment of indebtedness ot the Bt. Paul diocese. When asked about the attack on him by Bishop McQuaid, he said: “Ido not care to be inter viewed. Let the country judge. I have no more to say. As to tho election,” ho continued, “it swept tho entire country, as all very well know. It was a splendid thing for the business mun of this coun try in every respect. Confidence has been restored. The defeat of tho popu lists is a blessed thing for the northwest, particularly from a business standpoint. Had populism succeeded every penny of outside money invosted here would have been withdrawn. The victory in New York city will have its gooi results, for coming at this time it emphasizes for every city and district the necessity of good and pure government. The Ameri can people are often over patient and allow things to go too far, but at the supreme moment they always awake and do the right thing. The political victory of the last month is the best vindication we could havo of popular government. The people can be trusted.” Kautzman tins now undertaken the task of informing tlic public as to who is respectable and who not. ThiB would not seem strange to us had he lived in this county any great length of time and could speak from a personal knowledge of people and things, but when we con sider that the first day ho set foot within our city limits he was the tail end of a drunk that had commenced fifty years before, and was a patron of our lag shop for the purpose of driving the snakes out of his boots, even as St. Patrick drove thefti out of Ireland, we marvel that he has the audacity, to say nothing of the intrepidity, to publish malicious libel about people who were born and raised in this community and are favor ably known the length and breath of the county. We would thiuk, naturally, that a man just sobering up from a fifty years’ inebriation, a man who has been stoned from ocean to ocean and scourg ed from the snows of the north to the sands of the south, allowed to remain in no one place hardly long enough to gain a legal residence, punished in the most torturing way by the hand of Providence, would be the last creature on earth to criticise a fellow-mortal for staggering without the paths of virtue and rectitude. We should think that, like the rattle snake—whose every other instinct he possesses—he would be content to lie iu his reeking den with skunks—like some bank cashiers—owls and prairie dogs and give signs of activity only when at tacked. For a man with his record to go about with a chip on his shoulder is a wonderful exhibition of recklessness, , or indiscretion, but when he does run up against a man who literally kicks the bottom out of his pants, blacks his eyes and breaks his jaw, it certainly is a baby act to sit down and cry about it. i If this Kautzman, when lie settled in O’Neill, had attended strictly to business. , referred in a respectable wav to those who differed from him in politics—be 1 has no religion—he might now be re l spected in this community instead of 1 friendless among thousands, like a I hungry man muzzled in a bakery shop. , If we were shunned, loathed and des pised like the Wandering Jew we would ! bless the hand that distills the hemlock. O’NHl LL BUSINESS DI RECTORY B. DICKSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Reference First National llanlc O'NEILL, NEB. J C. SMOOT, EABUIONABLK BARBER, DEALER IN OIOARE, ETO. J)B. J. 1*. GILI.IUAN, 1MIY8ICAN AND SURGEON. Day and night calls promptly attended to. Office over Blglln's furniture store. O'NEILL, NED. P n. BENEDICT, LAWYER, Offloo In the Judge Robert* building, north of 0. O. Snyder’* lumber yard, O NBILI,, NEB. ■^y B. BUTI.KJt, ATTORNEY AT-LAW. Agent for Union Trust Co-* land In Holt county. Will practice In all the court*. Speotal at tentlon given to foreclosure* and collection* JJH. B. T, THUKUI.OOD PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Diseases of the Eye and Ear and fitting glasses a specialty. Office hour* 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 toll p. in, Office first door wo*t of Ilelnerikaon'i MERCHANT TAILOR_ D. II. Garbart has opened up to do a general Mer chant tailoring business in O’Neill. He will be found in tbo Mack building 4 door* 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. 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 anaesthetics. No going to sleep. Also gas for those who wish it. The very heat 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 $8.00 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 auy size enlarged in crayon. Sepia crayon, water colors or a combination of them all. Office and gallery No. 425 East Douglas St., O’Neill, Neb. A.J KAMMQHD ABSRACT GO R. R. DICKSON A. 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 uuder 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 NOW REALLY, DOESN'T THIS STRIKE YOU AS A Big Bargain? A BOY’S SUIT, couslutlng of a doubln breasted coal and short pants All Wool, mind you, lirst-class— good and strong. A PAIR OF EXTRA PANTS to mutch tho suit. A PRETTY CAP tnadfl of the samo cloth aa the coat ana two pairs of pants are made from, AND A PAIR OF SHOES, of solid leather—neat, stylish, vet as strong as a brick. ALL FOR $5.00 Wo call them the HUB’S “HEM-TO-FOOT” BOY’S OUTFITS. You’ll call them tho greatest bar gain of your life when you see them. LET US SEND YOU ONE. 95*75 will bring one, all charge! prepaid to any part of tho U. S.foi wo 11 send you ono (!. O. I). with prlv llego of examination before accop tance, if you’ll send us $1.00 on ac count to secure express charges. SAITIP^KS OF CLOTH and 60-pagi Illustrated Catalogue FKEE on ap plication. * THE HUB, N« W. Cor. State and Jackson $t*f CHICAGO, ILL., America’s Largest Retail Dealers in Men’s Clothing, Boys's Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Hals, Shoes lor both Sexes, and Ladies' • Cloaks and Furs In the United States. The Hub has no Branch Stores anywhere. THE OMAHA.... WEEKLY 12 pages a week—From now to Nov. 15, covering the entire campaign, for. ^10 CENTS. Send Stamps or Silver to THE OMAHA BEE OMAHA, NEB. NEW YORK . . , ILLUSTRATED NEWS The Organ of Honest Sport in America ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY eiCTtmco av tki FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRV Life in New York Graphically Illustrated. Breezy but Respectable. $4 FOR AYEAR,$2 FOR SIX MONTHS Do you want to be posted? Then send your subscription to the SEW TUBE immiTED SEW!, 3 PARK PLACE-! NEW YORK CITY. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. O’CONNOR & GALLAGHER DEALERS IN Of all kinds. A specialty made of FINE CIGARS. If you want a drink of (rood liquor do not fail to call on us. SPEEDY and EASTING RESULTS. ~ FAT PEOPLE No inconvenience. Simple, sure. AE23LWTSL? F2I1 from any injurious substance. ... _LAMS ABDOimtS EEIMID. V s GUARANTEE a CURE or refund yc ur money. Send 4c.lortreitise. JSJ.XOST BLE1HOAI, C.l„ Itof.on, class Ton esc get1 . tMs. r rToe [ cm stay ] . tkla. 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 Neil Brennan's John Deere plows, Moline wagons, Da* Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators Riding and walking cultivators, harrow Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlerv. tinvari G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-B JOHN McHUGH, Cashier. THE■STATE■BAM OF O’XEILL. CAPITAL $30,000, Prompt Attention Given to Collecf/oi DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINES Chicago Lumber Yard Headquarters for . . . LUMBER, —COAL and BUILDING MATERIAL The Stock is dry, being cured By the largest dry-sheds in the world. HS"" 0.0. SNYDER & CO, EMIL SNI66S. PRACTICAL HORSESHOE . “ ^ue,18i? cord with the people of the west both In politics and Literature* By special arrangement with the publishers of the Inter Ocean we sre offer, able1* Weekly Inter Ocean and The Frontier The Frontier One Tear and the Inter Ocean 6 Months, Now Is the time to subsoribe.