The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 03, 1895, 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.
? if i ■ -
g - ■■ ■■■■ ■ ■ ■ —
PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY BT
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KING A CRONIN. Editors.
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTBICT.
_ ' , For District Judges:
M. P. KINKAID. of O’Neill.
ALFRED BARTOW, of Cliadron.
COUNTY REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For County Treasurer:
O. F. BIGLIN, of O’Neill.
if ‘
For Clerk of the Court:
JOHN SKIRviNO.of Stuart.
For County Sheriff:
JOHN BRADY, of Atkinson.
4 For County Clerk:
F. W. PHILLIPS, of Steel Creek.
i-j*• or County Superintendent:
A. T. BLACKBURN, of Atkinson.
For County Judge;
R. 0. WRY, of Chambers.
For County Surveyor:
R. E. BOWDEN, of Paddock.
For County Coroner:
C.O. EIGLBR, of Ewing.
CITY TICKET.
For Assessor:
E. H. THOMPSON, of O’Neill.
For Justices of the Peace:
E. H. BENEDICT, of O’Neill.
0. E. DAVIDSON, of O’Neill.
For Constables:
JOHN HOBRI8KY, of O'Neill.
PBBKINS BltOOKS, of O'Neill.
TOWNSHIP TICKET.
For Supervisor, Third Dlstrlot:
E. J. MACK, of O'Neill.
For Township Clerk:
JOHN HARRINGTON, JR., of Grattan.
For Township Treasurer:
TIMOTHY J. DYWBB, of Grattan.
For Township Assessor:
ARTHUR BARRETT.of Grattan.
For Road Overseer Dlst. No. 4:
JOHN ENRIGHT, of Grattan.
For Road Overseer Dlst. No. 36;
CHARLES SHOEMAKER, of Grattan.
For Justice of the Peace: •
HBNRY HEKSH1BER, of Grattan.
For Constable:
JOHN H0RRI8KY, of O'Neill.
For Judges of Election:
PATRICK BARRETT, of Grattan.
JOHN HEBNAN, of Grattan.
BYRON O. PARKER, of Grattan.
For Clerks of Eleotlon:
ELI HEBBHISBR, of Grattan.
PATRICK McNlCHOLS.’of Grattan,
Prick a vlgllanter and bear a pop
bowl. ; _
Tns township' ticket nominated by
the republicans last Saturday is a good
one and well worthy the support it will
receive. _ _ _
"Yu, my old comrades, they call,
upon usl” drsmaticially exclaims Mike
' the Porger, and tbe public is convulsed
with laughter,
Maxwbll’s non-partisan play is not
cutting much ice, although there are
: Icicles upon the shoulder the public has
•turned towards him.
Canadian Mikb evinces unusual in
terest.In the people’s money. It be
would interest himself as greatly In the
K financial affairs of the defunct Holt
county bank the unfortunate depositors
would no doubt be greatly obliged to
f!': him. .. __ _
. Our esteemed contempts., who have
• always been pleased to quote the say
Inge of that "sterling populist,” J. P.
ir Cavanaugh, of Sioux City, are respect
1 fully and respectively requested to read
the story of his flop, published on our
r* local page.this week.
It n not the reporting of vigilance
outlawery that works injury to Holt
-f county, it is the acts of lawlessness
r themselves. If people want to preserve
the good name of the county it would
be a first-rate idea to make it so warm
tor violators of law that.there would be
no occasion for reporting incidents of
the Binkerd kind.
▲ Bkaksfuuun society or New
York ia about to pay $5,000 (or the Foe
oottnge. And eo rune the world away.
When tbs poor devil vu on eartb, cold,
shivering and dead broke be couldn’t
*pewn bit cboiceet lines (or the price of
: a meal. Literary gentlemen are like the
noble redmen: they are both more
^ highly esteemed after destb.
Warn any man takes the political
: stump, be he layman or clergyman, be
; thereby inyltes criticism and be baa no
kick coming when he receives it. Rev.
1 Lowrie, Rev. Hayes nor any other man
baa license to think that be can stump
Bolt county in this year of our Lord
' and make all kinds of ridiculous state*
( menu wilhoulbeing called to account
(or them._ _ _
Thu populist state central committee
I', has been having one great time to get
some man to accept its chairmanship.
Stark and McKeighan both flatly re
i . (used to have anything to do with it, so
p- it was handed over to Joe Egerton. Joe
p always takes anything that Is offered to
, him and asks no questions. In his lexl
ooa there is no sneh word as “no."
»' them. The assn whose cause ia Just
J has no (ear to attach his signature to
anything he may wish to say through
■ the public prase. Usually it ia only the
> May. the libeler and the demagogue who
fears to father bis own productions.
-They generally come from such a source
V■/'- that the name of the author would
|«** the vt«h out of the articles. •.
Bswaan of the man *who writes
anonymous articles for publication, and
. beware of the paper that publishes
This pops of Holt are making wr;
faces at the republicans and democrat
for fusing, but we take particular notici
that they say nothing about the atati
pop ticket being headed by a man wh<
claims to be nothing but a republican
And, too, they omit mention of thenum
erous fusions made by pops and demo
crats in various c.ounties of the state.
--
Gov. Culbertson, of Texas, has con*
vencd the state legislature in extra see
sion for the purpose of enacting law<
that will stop the Corbett-Fizsimmonc
go. Mrs. Culbertson said recently in a
Chicago interview that nine out of every
ten men in Texas wanted the fight to gc
on. If that is true the legislators will
hardly do more than meet, make ar
rangements for front seats and adjourn.
The Advocate so far has had no
chance to support a nominee for 'judge
upon the bench, nor does it believe that
a democrat can wear the ermine of
judge of the Fifteenth judicial district.
We know that we are hopelessly in the
minority, and our high regard for
Judge Kinkahl will almost compel us to
support him in the judicial field, be
cause of his competency.—Spencer
Advocate.
-><«><
A petition h in circulation tula week
asking the school board to submit a
proposition to bond this school district
for a sum sufficient to pay outstanding
warrants and place the district on a
cash basis. The way matters now
stand the district is compelled to pay
two prices for everything that is bought.
At the present rate it will not take
long to swamp the schools, and this
paper believes the best thing .to do is to
bond and do business In a business way.
Mullen F. Harrington contributed
it long old soldier article to the last
Issue of the Sun. The signature to the
diatribe was "Long Roll,” but we will
stake our reputation as a true prophet
that Canadian Mike is the author. The
leopard cannot change its spots, neither
can Mike disguise himself. A man who
will address the old soldiers from be
hind a nom de plume is unworthy their
consideration. Such an one would hire
a Substitute should he be called to bis
country’s defexse.
The outstanding indebtedness of this
school district is 97,600. These warants
are drawing interest at the rate of 7 per
cent. Bonds bearing 0 per cent, inter
est canjbe voted and a saving of 1 per
cent, made there. The district now
pays two prloes for everything purchas
ed. For Instance: It a ton of 95 coal
Is wanted it is necessary to draw a war
rant for $10 or go without the coal. It
does not require much of a mathematic
ian to figure out that the district cannot
stand that kind of work very long. It
behooves the people who are interested
in the common weal to take an interest
in this matter.
Samuel Maxwell, of Fremont, who
has accepted the pop nomination for
supreme Judge, is a young man of sev
enty-eight years who has a great future
behind him. He held down one corner
of the supreme bench for twenty-one
years, during which time a great many
people reached their majority; he was
placed there by the republican party,
and naturally enough, while be occupied
his high office he held and maintained
that the republican party was a grand
old party in very truth. When he re
paired to his hermitage at Fremont,
however, and found that the grand old
parly wouldn’t put him back on the
bench for twenty-one years more, he
became disgusted with it. He saw at a
glance that the party had outlived its
usefulness, and was in its dotage, and
he wisely decided to cut loose from it
and give his support to the people’s
party, an organization that is young
and vigorous, like himself. He is now
a full-fledged candidate, and is calling
on the b’hoya in various towns, telling
cute stories, and distributing cigars
bought at Wolcott’s cauliflower aquar
ium in Fremont. It is pleasing in the
extreme to see this gay and festivo cav
alier cavorting over the state telling
why the republican party is no good,
and why the party of billgrene and gan
greene is the proper goods.—Walt Ma
son.
It is a fact known particularly well by
those who deal with criminals that ■
murderer cannit refrain from reviating
the scene of his crime. There seems to
be a fascination about the awful spot
that draws upon the blood-stained sop]
and impels the guilty one to approacli
with nervous tread the fatal place and
there re-enact in his feverish imagina
tion every detail of the butchery. Set
again the death struggles of the victim
hear the dull and sickening thud of th<
lifeless body, and look once more into
the glassy eyes of the dead. It is a
further truth that those who have bur
bened their lives with the innocenl
blood of their kind become at once
changed men. They are never the
same again. In an attempt to disguise
the fear that is in their hearts they be
come boisterous with a false boldnest
and appear always to be looking foi
something to materialize in thin air
They start and shudder when the wind
shrieks in a wilder strain, and a dart
night and a lonely spot is for then
filled with horrors. In truth they an
haunted. There Is for them no suet
thing as rest or peace of mind or tran
quil life. The remainder of their dayi
Is spent in one wild effort to escapt
from the memory of themselves and
their dead. The subject is alwayi
uppermost in their minds, and to brinj
surcease of remorse for the time beini
they delight to talk and write about it.
’ O’NEILL BUSINESS DIRECTORY
1 _ ,
| JJR. J. P. GILUGAN,
1 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Office in Holt Connty bank building.
Strangers, those living at a distance, and
night calls must be cash in advance.
O’NEILL, - * ' NEB.
-♦-——
J£ R. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O'NEILL, NEB.
T)R. EDWARD 8. FUBAT,
PHYSIC AN AND SURGEON.
. Day and night calls promptly attended to.
Office over First National Bank.
O’NEILL NEB
E.H
BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
'Offloe In the Judge Boberta building, north
of O. O. Snyder's lumber yard,
0 NEILL, NEB.
w.
B. BUTLER,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW.
Agent for Union Trust Go’s land in Holt
county.
Will practice In all the oourts. Speoial at
tentlon given to foreclosures and collections
J)B. B. T. TRUEBLOOD
PHYSICIAN ft SURGEON
Diseases of the Eye add Ear and fitting
glasses a specialty. Offloe hours 0 to 13 a. m.
and 2 to 6 p. m.
Offloe first door west of Helnerllcson's
O'CONNOR & GALLAGHER
IN
Of all kinds. A specialty made of
FINE CIGARS.
, If you want a drink of good liquor
do not fall to call on us.
0
(A
Purohas* Tloketa and ConaiRn your
Freight via the
F. E.&M.V.andS.C.&P.
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPART!
ooura ur. '
Passenger east, 9:30 a. m
Freight east, 10:80 A. K
Freight east, • * • 3:10 p. m.
ooikq wasr.
Freight west, • 3:10 p.
Passenger west, • 9:37 p.
Freight, • - 3:10 P.
The Rlkhorn Line la now running Reclining
Chair Cars dally, between Omaha and Dead
wood, jree to holders of first-class transpor
tatlon.
Per anr Information call on
We J. DOBBS, Aot.
O'NEILL. NEB.
Checker® Barn,
B. A. DnYARM AN, Manager.
KKK
CHECKER
(MPWPIfW
Livery, Feed and Sale Stable.
Finest turnouts in the city.
Good, careful drivers when
wanted. Also run the O’Neill
Omnibus line. Commercial
trade a specialty.
HOTEL
-Jh VANS
Enlarged
Refurnished .
Refitted
Only First-class Hotel
In the City.
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
NEW YORK .. .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
Tho Organ oflTHonaat Sport In Amarloa
iff _
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
PICTURED DT 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
m nu uuia tm,
3 PARK PLACE! NEW YORK CITY.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
SlOlJX CITY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Plainview, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers in
NEW UNION 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 otber information
call uyon^agents or address
Receiver.
F.C.
W. B.MoNIDER,
Gen'l Pass. Asent.
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.
P. D. A J. F. MULLEN,
PROPRIETORS OP TXUB
GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS
Prices Reasonable.
But of KoOnfferto’a. O'NKILL, MSB.
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 at
ll.lll.lli
Neil Brennan's
John Deere plows, Moline wagons, David
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators...
Riding and walking cultivators, harrows,
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinware.
A
elKHorn valley
PLOW FACTORY.....
O'NEILL, NEB. EMIL SNIGGS, Prop.
. .... Manufactures the Hamnell Open Mould-Board Stirring
Plow. Also general blacksmithing and practical horseshoer.
Wagon and Carriage woodwork- carried on in connection.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Also dealer in
Farm Implements. Handles* the Scandi implements and
the Plano Bakes, Mowers and Binders. Parties wishing *
anything in this line call and see me.
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-Pres.
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE - BANK i
OB’ O’NEILL.
CAPITAL $30,000.
Prompt Attention Given to Collections
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
Chicago Lumber Yard
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%<%%%%%%%%
Headquarters for . . .
LUMBER,
. —COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
(O'Neill,
Yarda-f Page,
(Allen.
0.0. SNYDER & GO.
ONE DOLLAR YEAR
WESTERN
Deccriptive of the West
and Devoted to Irrigation.
AMERICA.
R Western Magazine devoted to
Western Intetests
Western Literature
and Western Developement
Through Irrigation
OF AND FOR
WEST
Send roc. for Sample Copy
Howell Publishing Co.
OMAHA.'NEB.
FACTS AND FIGURES.
<
i
i