The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 21, 1895, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
pvBuanBD imr tbumoat bt
*HB FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KING A CRONIN, Editom.
BONDS Ok NOIBONDS?
On Friday, the flrat day of March, the
people of Holt county will decide by
their ballota whether or not the county
ahalllaaue bonda for 100,000 for pur
poaea and under auoh reatnctlona aa are
embodied In the law authoring the
taaue of bonda for relief of deatitute
farmera.
Tnn FttOHTOH considers this propo
u iltion far from just or equitable. Il
‘ taxea the whole people of the eountr foi
the benefit of a few. It la elaaa legisla
tion : only inch persona aa are engaged
In agriculture being entitled to benefit,
the poor of the towna who are equally
deserving will reoelve no direct benefit
from the aale of auch bonda If iaaued.
Other residents of the towna who are
not destitute, but heavy tax payera, will
be called upon to pay their share of the
taxes, while directly they will receive no
‘benefit. The farmer who baa seed and
feed must pay an increase In taxes to
assist his neighbor who has none. No
provision is made to reimburse the men
who pay the taxea. If every
man’a note Is paid when due—which
will not be the caae, as no security
more than a personal note is required by
• the oounty board—there la no provis
ion that the proceeds may be applied to
-v‘the redemption of the bonds. The
amount must be raised by taxation of
the whole people, while the amount rea
lised from the sale of the grains will go
Into the treasury and benefit the man
whb has received aid as well as the man
who hu not.
And then again the leu provides that
the man who has no sesd or feed may
receive aid by making the proper ehow
' lbg. The law says nothing of his ability
to borrow the necessary funds. All
that he needs la to be without grain or
money. If he has security upon which
he could borrow a thousand dollars it
makes no difference.
The farmer who would plant a small
acreage In any other event mar now
'Plaat without limit. He is in no way
• circumscribed.
The opportunity for fraud is una
bridged.
For there reasons and others not emi
montod Thb Frontwh ii;i the law li
' neither “Just nor .equitable." But (or all
that, we realise that something must be
done and It no better plan la presented
we favor the laauanoe of the bonde. In
tfhie we consider that We are magnani
The very elaaa that will receive
the benefit of theae bonds but a ahort
time ago frowned down a proposition to
bond for Irrigation purposes, for the rea
eon that they thought the taxation would
not be distributed in proportion to the
derived. It ted waded
feeeeteddttherstoeuUaowteao oo
•'•adriaa to bead rot aid. leery able
‘'■’USttba Man it the coualy would have
had g winter'll-week o* the ditch, and at
**|et#”teldet Bit this le no ttee for
*"reeehtment, neither la It a time to repay
ehort-slghtedasas with short-sightedness.
Tho time Jor planting will soon be
hare and It I the duty of all to consider
this proposition impartially and vote for
the greatest good to the greatest num
‘her.
Oharity la twice blessed; it bleeseth
him that gives and him that takes.
" Via barbers who are on' Kantaman’s
""String" may properly be said to be
Sam-strung.
Tn Jew’s dialogue between “Clide
and Me" was quite Shakeaperian. It
•"was a comedy of errors.
Tnn populist mice nibble voraciously
at tho cheese of publlo funds. A taste
of patronage often proves a- dangerous
thing. __ |a| __
* Bomb time last fall the Bmudge an
• nounoed its intention of cleaning out
“the state house ring." When does
' the Jew propose to march on their
• works? _ _ _
Fmox the present outlook we predict
j that the bonds will carry. The men
..who see an opportunity to get some
thing for nothing are not occupying the
back seats theM times.
Wheh a small body of men met out
’ fa'Shields the other night and where
aaed that they are destitute and minus
the wherewithal to buy seed grain when
It wonld have been Just aa fair and a
great deal le*a burdenaome for the state
to have furolabed ahl to Ha deatitute
farmera laatead of requiring the coun
tleatodoit. It would be committing a
little wrong tg do a great good.
Gbbat head that engineered the reso
lution out in Shields, which was to the
effect that every man who signed the
petition requesting Robertson to resign
should be boycotted. This resolution
followed one asking the people of the
county to vote bonds for aid.
--
That prince of fakes, the Jew, in his
last disgorgement of congested ideas
attempts to aay that a plan was laid last
week to mob Roy. We cannot believe
that it was anything more serious than
a party of "friends"—perhaps bonds
men—organized to “spirit him away.”
WnAT’s the matter with the illegal
legal committee being required to fur
nish an itemized statement of their
receipts and disbursements. Not only
moneys received and disbursed, but from
whom receive^ and for what expended.
There is altogether too much star-cham
ber business connected with the work
ings of this committee. The people
have a right to be on the inside of this
matter, and the board has no right to
keep them in the dark.
Mike Uabrington lias filed a bill for
1200 for prosecuting Barrett Scott at his
trial at Nciigh. Judge Robinson certi
fies that the bill is a reasonable one, and
therefore it will have to be paid. If this
fee is all that Harrington has ever
[ received for this same work it would
not be so outrageously exorbitant, but
we opine that if the inside workings of
that legal committee were spread out to
public inspection it would be found that
he has had his fine Italian band in for a
liberal grab.
The amount of money lost to the state
and counties under the depository law
exceeds <450,000. This paper believes
now, as It believed at the time the law
was passed, that It Is not a good meas
ure. The county money—if it must be
loaned—might lust as well* bv loaned
directly to the people as to the banks
and by the banks to the borrowing class.
If the public money is to be employed
for speculative purposes we can see no
reason for dividing the profits with the
“bloated capitalists.”
In looking over bills filed fol 1894 The
Frontier ascertains that County Attor
ney Murphy is charging the county up
with office rent at the rate of $10 per
month. Also that the county is buying
his coal. And this is reform. We
await for time to disclose that other offi
cials are charging the county up with
house rent and fuel. The supervisors
ought not be so far behind in the proces
sion; they surely are entitled to as many
perquisites as Mr. Murphy. Oh I suffer
ing Holt, when will thy sorrows cease f
The Jew last week clipped a para
graph from The Frontier, date of Feb
ruary 7, and tacked It onto another arti
cle, date of July 5, ’94, attempting to
make it appear that that the paragraph
of February 7 referred to the article of
July 5. It is hardly necessary to com
ment on this kind of journalism. Any
man who will resort to such under
handed methods Is eertalnly a disgrace
to the profession. In fact, he is not a
journalist, he is a bushwhacking
copper-head. A point gained by decep
tion seldom malts In lasting advantage.
Kvoa popmhst readers win in time resent
being imposed open eoatlanaily. •
Tm oom of the county against Durr
hM finally roochod ■ termination. 'Mr.
Darr y«ys tho oonnty NOb. It will be
rMMkint that Hit Uni or four
years ago when the pope were possess
ed with an investigation devil a little
bird whispered to them that Mr. Darr’s
books, as county treasurer, might offer
a little sport it the brush were properly
beaten, so they expet ted them and to
make it appear that time so employed
was not utterly thrown away they found
him short WOO. But Mr. Darr, who is
somewhat of a flgurer himself, turned
bsck the musty pages of his old ledger
and decided that the county was in*
debted to him in the sum of $400 and
secured judgment for that amount. The
way the case now stands he is $100
ahead on the deal. His gain is the
county’s loss, of course, and besides,
there are all of the costs, which Mr.
Jones will liquidate. It doesn’t always
pay for reformers to be too officious.
It hat be a little wicked to see any
thing humorous in the death of an old
soldier, but there is 41 vague degree of
satisfaction in learning that the old vet
erans of the war for the preservation of
the Union got the start of Hoke Smith’s
pension department as it is at present
conducted, even though they had to die
to do it. Two weeks ago Dr. R. M. De
Witt, an old soldier, died at his home in
Dee Moines, Iowa. For the last two
years of his life he was confined to his
bed by disabilities incurred during the
war. He was buried by his old com
rades with all the honors he had so dear
ly sjon. Seven days after the burial his
family received a notice from Hoke
Smith saying his case had been investi
gated by the department and it was
learned that he was not incapacitated
fsona sssawsi labor, and therefore bi|
pension was rad need to eight dollars pe
month. What a ooaamentary on ou
govarnmaat as admlaiatrreil by this ma
Hoke iSmlth! Dying after being tw
•mart in Knot ^IbrnnaMmntlju," „1,a»
years in hod, “lavnamgatloo” showed b
was not IbMPacftjMaC It k a little grat
•tf&WMolM*
Nr*
t :
all of sev-1
NOW REALLY. DOESN’T
THIS STRIKE YOU AS A
Big Bargain?
A BOY’S SUIT,
consulting of a double breasted coat
and short pants All Wool, mind you,
first-class—good und strong.
A PAIR OF EXTRA PANTS
to match the suit.
A PRETTY CAP
made of the same cloth as the coat
und two pairs of pants are made from.
AND A PAIR OF SHOES,
of solid leather—neat, stylish, jft i
strong as a brick.
ALL FOR
$5.00
Wo call thorn the
HUB’S “HEAD-TO-FOOT”
BOY’S OUTFITS.
You'll call them the greatest bar
gain of your life when you see them.
LET US SEND YOU ONE.
•5.75. will bring one, all charges
prepaid to any part of the TJ. B. or
we'll send you one O. O. D. with priv
ilege of examination before accep
tance, If you'll send us fl.00 on ac
£°.uitJiP_?Scur? express charges.
OF CLOTH and oD-page
Illustrated Catalogue F8EE onap
THE HUB,
If. W. Cor. State and Jackson wy, ■
CHICAGO, ILL.,
LsfS<»» Retail Dealers In Use's
Clothing, Boy, s Clothing, Furnishing Band*.
Hnta, Shoos for both Soxos. and Ladlso*
• Cloaks sad Furs In Ihs United States.
Ths Hub baa no Branch Stornt anywhere.
O’NEILLBUSINESS DIRECTORY
R. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O'NEILL, NEB.
J O. SMOOT,
FASHIONABLE BARBER.
DEALER IN OIQARS, ETO.
JJR. J. P. GILL1GAN,
PHYSICAN AND SURGEON.
Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Offloe in Holt County Bonk building.
O'NEILL. NEB.
Jjt'H. BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Offloe in the Judge Roberts building, north
of O. O. Snyder’s lumber yard,
0 NEILL, ' NEB.
w.
B. BUTLER,
ATTORNEY. AT-LA W.
Agent for Union Trust Go’s land in Holt
county.
Will praotloe in all the courts. Speolal at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
J^R. B. T. TBUKBLOOD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Diseases of the Eye and Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Offloe hours 8 to IS a. m.
and 2 to 5 p. m,
Offloe first door west of Heinerlkson's
JL J, HAMMOND HSUCT CO
Successors to
R. R. DICKSON & CO.
Abstracters of Titles.
Complete eel of Abstract Books.
Terms reasonable, and absolute ac
curcy guaranteed, for which we have
given a $10,000 bond as required
under the law. .
Correapondence Sollced
O’NEILL. HOLT COUNTY NEB.
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
hi the City.
■ W. T. EVANS, Prop.
HOTEL
VANS:
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHOBT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
Sioux ClTY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Plainview, O'JVeill. ,
Connects at Bioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
NEWlUinON PASSENGER STATION
Homeseekers will find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA
For rates, time tables, or other lnformatloi
call u^on mrente or address
F.C.
Heoelver.
W. B.MoNIBEB,
Gen'l Pass. Agent
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
is combating Religious Prejudice
and economic injustice, and helping
Catholics and Protestants to under
stand each other better.
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
Is brilliant without being super
ficial, instructive without being
heavy, popular without being trival.
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
Will delight every American Catho
lic and interest every thoughtful
Protestant.
Only $2.00 a year.
Write for sample copy.
DONAHOE’S MAGAZINE CO.
611 WASHINGTON ST.,
BOSTON MASS.
O’CONNOR & GALLAGHER
DEALERS IN
WINES^
LIQUORS
Of all kinds. A specialty made of
FINE CIGARS.
If you want a drink; of good liquor
do not fall to call on us.
Before purchasing
OILS,
GROCERIES,
DRIED AND
FRESH FRUITS.
(ire at variety of
VEGETABLES
Always on hand.
Highest market price paid for
BUTTER
? AND
/
"\
ADAM &.CO.
\
Always Buy the
Best "Hhe .
Best is Cheapest
The Finest end Large*! stock of good in the Hardware ami
.Implement I^ine in “the Elkhorn Valley it fc^l
John Dfcere plows, Moline wagom.
BradleM & Co’s famous Disc cultivat
Riding fand walking cultivators.
Glidden Wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, t
G. W. WATTLES, President. \ ANDREW RUSSELL, 1
JOHN McHlUGH, Cashier.
THE ■ STATE - BAI
OF OTfEILL.
C A PI TAlI $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to CollecJ
DO A GENERAL BACKING) BUSK
Chicago LumbeTYard
Headquarters for
LUMBER,
COAL and
BUILDING MATERIA1
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in th|e world.
< O'Neill,
Yards < Page,
f Allen.
0.0 SNYDER &
ew.il sni
PRACTICAI
HORSES®
And general blacksmithing carried on in conneetioi
riage \^>rk in either iron or wood executed in the most
style possible. First-class plow and machine work
be relied upon. No new experience used in any k
work. All my men are skilled wjorkmen.
ALSO DEALER IN FARM IMPLEMENTS'—
Plano binders, mowers, rakes, J Skandi plows, harr
cultivators of all descriptions, j Everything guara1
beat the best. ( o’neiix. ’
Is the most popular Republican Newspaper ofth e west tni* ^ ^
largest circulation. ™™«h»m«ll! DaUv (without s»nu_j ^
year; dally (with Sufe.
iapubllcan newspaper or
erms by mail: Dally (withoutSun
iday) K per year; seml-wet'l'lr'^fabrfj
Ls a newspaper the Inter Ocean
u “•** i inim (JU fiuav) CO UCl J » ovu*» ■■— „ bPPDS ®u
weekly, $1 per year. lAs a newspaper the Inter Ocean
of the times in all respects, It spares neither pains n
securing all the new's and the best of current literature.
The Weekly Inter Ocean ^
. Is edited especially for those who, on account of “{ftJnTsNl
any other reason, do not take a daily paper. In its v the crei
be found the week’s news of all the world condeusea au ^ ejcceb
of the literary features of the daily. As a family^pape^
western journals. It consists of eight pages with a
lustrated. In colors, of eight additional pages, ninaing* ^mat
pages. This supplement, containing six pages ‘JLjnriceolP*1*
and two full page illustrations, is alone worth tn v
The Inter Ocean
Is published In Chicago, the news and commercial centtr^J^ij
of the Allegheny mountains and Is oetter sdapteU to Jt u je
the people of that section than any paper rartner jjteratur«
oordwitd the people of the west both in politics an
M
<§>
By special arrangement with the publishers of the Inter Oeea
.offer.
The Weekly Inter Ocean and The Frontier £j5«.
The Frontier One Tear and the Inter Ocean 0 Months.
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