The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 16, 1896, Image 7

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    '■J
* \ Whj He Knew It W»» Good.
Okie of tfae principal men in the
bureau of engraving and printing had
a somewhat peculiar experience .in New
York recently.
He had tx casion to visit the metropo
lis on business, and after a stay of
several days at one of the chief hotels,
he called for his bill. When it was
given him. he tendered in payment a
brand now $20 silver certificate The
clerk looked at it for a moment, and
then passed it back.
‘•What’s the matter,'” asked the
official.
"I can’t take that,” replied the clerk.
“I don’t think It’s good.”
“Not good,” exclaimed the official.
“Not good! Why, man, 1 know it’s
good. 1 made it myself.”
“Yes.” said the clerk, “that's just
what I thought ’’—Washington Post
4 Her Philosophy*
Of course deceit is an abomination,
i and yet it has its uses. It's very like
• poison—something to be shunned in
everyday life, but extremely valuable
:i at certain crises. They are mainly
social crises. When good temper can
be preserved and harsh feeling escaped
f by a little deceit then it should be used
—or. at least, so says the social philos
opher.
The greatest joy one can give one’s
| enemies is to let them see that their
arrows have struck home. Unless one
wishes to engage in the work of afford
ing pleasure to onets foes it is there
l fore wise to show no anger at their
rr*blo\vs and to be'entirely unaware of
’ A their attitude.
y Put np trust in unexpressed affection.
There is only one thing which will pre
vent a man from giving voice to his de
votion as soon as he is sure of it and as
long us it lasts. That is a total dumb
ness.
Broke the Tobacco Trust*
St. Louis, Mo., (Special)—Col. Wm.
A. Kirchhoff, general western manager
of. the American Tobacco Cp., baa
startled his numerous friends by stop
' ping the use of tobacco. For years he
had smoked twenty strong cigars daily,
' and a lees quantity would leave him
nervous and ill. The habit was under
mining his health, and he tried to quit,
but could not, until he took No-To
Bac, the medical miracle that has cured ;
so many thousands of tobacco-users.
Col. Kirchhoff’s craving for tobacco has
entirely gone, and he feels better than
ever before. He is a great No-To-Bac
enthusiast now. Over 300,000 bad to
bacco-users have been cured by No
To-Bac, and the loss to tobacco manu
facturers is easily over $10,000,000 a
yeaii 1 •
>
He Worked Barnato,
The English papers hdve been telling
a story about an alleged country person
who recently got the best of Barney
Barnato. He wrote to the king of the
Kaffirs asking for relief from embar
rassment on account pf an overindnl
gence in Kaffirs. “My aim,” he wrote,
"has always keen investment—not spec
ulation. When your bank came, 1 re
garded its shares as an investment and
purchased 400 of them at £4, sinking
my little all in them and a good deal
more. They have now fallen to £3,
and 1 am undone. 1 cannot face my
-parish as a bankrupt, and what am I to
do? I throw myself upon your mercy.”
Mr. Barnato was deeply moved by the
appeal and replied that he would buy
back the shares at £4. On receipt of
this reply the guileless parson wired to
his brokers to “buy 400 shares of Bar
nato stock at £3 and send them around
to Barnato Bros., who will give you £4
for them.”
"Xanaon’a Vagie Corn Salve.” •
Warranted to cur« or money refunded. Ask yooi
druggist for it. Price 15 cents.
The first issue of the Atlantic Mon
thly for 1896 opens with an unpub
lished noto book of Nathaniel Haw
thorne now printed for the first time.
There are also the opening chapters of
anew,.three part story by F. J. Stim
son (.T. S. of Dale) entitled “Pirate
Gold.” Two political articles will be
sure to attract attention, “The Eman
cipation of the Postoffice.” by John li.
£ Proctor, chairman of the United States
t civil service commissiou; and (‘Congress
out of Date,” the latter being an able
^ statement of the evils due to the pres- I
ent system of convening congress a |
year after its election. J. M. Ludlow
contributes an able paper on “The
Christian Socialist Movement of the
Middle of the,Century.”
... The man who minds his own business will
Vays have something to do.
i /. ■ - ‘ti " --
| 7 It costs a great deal more to be proud
i- iaif ft does fo be generous.
f t -. .
-iiiAVe wd!l forfeit $1,000 if any of our pub
lished testimonials are proven to be not
genuine. The Fiso Co., Warren, Pa.
A word to the wise is enough, when it
happens to be the right word. .
Billiard table, second-hand, for sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akix.
til 8. T-th St., Omaha, Neb.
The Century for January, following
following upon two special numbers—
the Twenty-fifth AnniTersary and the
Christmas numbers—is not lacking
either in individuality or distinction.
Thu capable and picturesque artistic
work of Mr. Castaigne would of itself
give distinction to any number of a
magzine. This month bis pencil is ap
plied to the ill nstration of the first of
several separate papers on Rome by
Mr. “ F. Marion Crawford, who first
gives us “A Kaleidoscope of Rome,”
setting forth contrasts of the Eternal
City, with, so to speak, a reconstruc
tion of the city as it was in the time of
the Emperors, and coming down to the
Rome of the present day, which he des
cribes with very distinct detail. Mr.
Castaigne shows his versatility in the
reconstruction of the Colosseum and
the Forum in the days of the Christian
martyrs, together. with numerous
scenes and character-sketches of to
day.
WILL GROVER HELP?
SAYS HE “WILC OLADLY LABOR
IN EVERY ENDEAVOR.”
. '"V.. ■ r* ■"
Nothing More Patriotic Than Protection
to American Industrie*—Centre** Will
Let's late for More Revenue anti In- I
cldental Protection—Revenue Wanted.
By command of the people a customs
revenue system, designed for the pro
tection and benefit of favored classes
at the expense of the great mass of our
countrymen, and which, while inef
ficient for the purpose of revenue, cur
tailed our trade relations and impeded
our entrance to the markets of the
world, has been superseded by a tariff
policy which in principle is based upon
a denial of the right of the government
to obstruct the avenues to our people’s
cheap living or lessen their comfort
and contentment, for the sake of ac
cording special advantages to favorites,
and which, while encouraging our in
tercourse and trade with other nations,
recognizes the fact that American self
reliance, thrift and ingenuity can build
up our country’s industries and develop
its resources more surely than enervat
ing paternalism. — President Cleve
land’s message, December 3, 1895.
Whether the president is wofully ig
norant, or deliberately misrepresenta
tive, it is not our business to Inquire.
But he must be either one or the other
when he speaks of a protective tariff
being "inefficient for the purpose of
revenue,” and as having “curtailed
enue sufficient tor the r.ceds of the gov*
ernment. The existing law does not do
this. It should either be repealed or
amended. It is impossible to repeal it
at present. That will come later. But
we believe that it can be amended;
A tariff upon wool and a change trom
ad valorem to specific rates of duty on
woolens, should add at least $10,000,
000 to the revenue. The restoration of
the McKinley tariff lumber duties
would add, approximately, $1,000,000.
A duty of 5 cents a pound on foreign
cotton would furnish $5,000,000 If im
ports continued as at present. Flax,
hemp, Jute and their manufactures,
now admitted free of duty, would con
tribute to the revenue. Earthenware,
pottery, hides and skins, glass and
glassware, fruits and manufactures of
iron and steel, provisions, tin plate and
many other articles have all afforded
more revenue under a protective tariff
than they do now. To- check the large
imports of such goods, as we are now
receiving, would also stimulate “that
American self-reliance, thrift and in
genuity” which, as Mr. Cleveland tru
ly says, “can build up our country’s in
dustries and develop its resources.” In
such a “patriotic endeavor” the presi
dent "will gladly labor.” It would
“further the Interests and guard the
welfare of our countrymen.” Moreover,
it would supply a sufficiency, not a de
ficiency, of revenue. This is what is
needed.
Dfmnmtio Trade Revival.
The condition of the New York
stock market is said to be invariably
the precursor of trade conditions. What
business men may expect, therefore,
is outlined by the following quotation
from the Wall Street Dally News:
"There seems to be no' legitimate
buying power. Nb matter how much
stocks decline they offer no temptation
to the public; hence, the dry goods plan
of marking goods down to figures that
will create buying must be followed.
Until a genuine absorption of securities
takes place, it is, idle to expect any
permanent improvement-in prices. For
the moment, the uncertainties in the
situation will undoubtedly prevent any
general or large buying for long ac
count. Aside from the fact that farm
Imported
I89H
UlckinlcjTorijj
#122,7»0- '
Foreign Blade Fire arms
Tfiarteted in the
United States
during tfie tuio fiscal'gears)
ending June;ao'
■!894>eU895j
•; ':!&2QOfio6'
• Dollars.-!''
I8S5
Go
rman
.'.•./OoltaTsV
our trade relations and impeded our
entrance to the markets of the world.”
He has but to consult the trade and rev
enue statistics of the United States to
learn that such statements are false in
every particular. Hoping that some
congressman will publicly present the
facts so that they may be published
the Congressional Record, we turn to
what we deem to be the policy of the
friends of protection in the -fifty-fourth
congress.
The idea of creating “renewed ac
tivity and enterprise in all business
circles” by an “increase of our bonded
debt” is so absurd that it has suggest
ed questions as to the president’s san
ity. Of course, such a proposition wil*.
not receive a moment’s serious con
sideration, but the friends of protec-,
tion should set themselves to work to ;
devise means for increasing the reve- 1
nue so as to meet our expenditures.
The Republicans have always done this j
heretofore and they will not hesitate J
again. Their duty is too plain. Reve- !
nue must be furnished, and the presi- ■
dent offered his co-operation in the'
following closing words of his mess
age:
“I desire, however, to assure the
congress that I am prepared to co-op
erate with them in perfecting any other
measure (than ‘increase of our bonded
debt”), promising thorough and prac
tical relief, and that I will gladly labor
with them in every patriotic endeavor
to further the interests and guard the
welfare of our countrymen whom in
our respective places of duty we have
undertaken to serve.”
There can be no more “patriotic en
deavor to further the interests and
guard the welfare of our eountrymen”
than by the reenactment of a protect
ive tariff policy. The complexion of the
senate, however, prevents this being
done at once. Meantime there need be
no further necessity for a deficient rev
enue such as we have experienced un
der the Gorman tariff. The protect
ionists must prepare a bill for revenue
purposes.
To do this will require the exercise
of much care and judgment. But there
aro members of the house of represen
tatives who are fully equal to the occa
sion, and it is the prime duty of the
house of representatives to furnish rev
products are at starvation prices and
that there Is a halt In Industrial activ
ity, is the coming meeting ol congress
and its unsettling consequences. There
is also the question of gold exports,
which are likely to take place at al
most any moment.”
Reports from all hands on the gen
eral condition of trade in every line of
business, and from all authorities, are
indicative rather of the nature of a
wake. Perhaps this is the free-trade
notion of revival.
The Duty of CongreM*
Free trade and no foreign policy ad
vocates appear to be without a leader.
The man who poses to be better than
his people appears to be without a
party. Old and tried officials in fi
nance and government are talking to
more earnest listeners, and will likely
again be called upon to reinstate confi
dence, business and stability In Amer
ican enterprises still sorely embar
rassed. The 64th congress will place
the responsibility of the additional
public debt and the chronic deficiency
in treasury funds .exactly where it be
longs.—Clapp’s Weekly Market Letter.
Pulitzer’* Tex on Labor.
There is no necessity whatever for
attacking American labor by increasing
the tariff on raw material used in our
manufactures of woolens. A gentle in
crease in the beer tax will supply all
needed revenue.—The World, N. Y.
Would not this be “attacking Amer
ican labor” by increasing the cost,
lessenirg the quantity or deteriorating
the quality of “American labor’s” dai
ly refreshment? Can this be from the
pen of that Pulitzer who poses as the
friend of labor and forces the people
to such a condition that they must ac
cept his free bread charity, or starve?
VTlUon Not In Congre**.
The next tariff will be made by the
party of protection. It will be an
American tariff, framed with a view
to give American industry the first
chance in the t, merican market It will
lack the sweet simplicity of ad valorem
duties, which hold out the largest re
wards to the exporters and importers
who do the tallest swearing.—The In- 1
telllgencer. Wheeling, W. Va. 1
Bmut of OintmanU for Catarrh That
j Contain Htrrqry,
! As mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely derange
the whole system when entering it
j through the mucous surfaces. Such ar
I tides should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physl
i clans, as the damage they will do Is ten
! fold to the good you can possibly derive
l from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manu
■ factured by P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,
; O.. contains no mercury, and Is taken
i Internally, acting directly upon the
; blood and mucous surfaces of the sys
- tem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure, b£
sure you get the genuine. It Is taken In
ternally. and made In Toledo, Ohio, by
F. J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists; price, 75c per bot
tle. Hall’s Family Pills, 26c.
Bismarck's Lower Lip.
It is said that Prince Bismarck is par
ticularly well pleased with the truthful
way in which 1‘fretzschner, the sculp1
tor, has treated his lower lip in the re
lief medallion for his monument being
erected on the Iludelsburg. "The art
ists,” he says, "have always made my
busts without giving me justice as far
as my lower lip is concerned, and that
is wrong. It is there, and it is there
very much—but not too much, for that
would indicate willfulness That was
} never one of my qualities, and I have
; always been amenable to argument if
I better opinions than mine were given.
; But a well formed lower lip indicates
; perseverence. Upon the completion of
j the artist’s work the prince took the
i modeling spitula into his own hand
and engraved personally his well
known "V. B.,” giving the medallion a
signature which no other Bismarck por
trait has ever received.
•400 IS PRIZES OK OATS AKD COMB)
Last year we offered |200 for tho
, biggest yield on oata. 209 bushel* 811
j ver Mine Oats won the prize. This
j year we offer 9200 more on oats, |1Q0 on
1 Silver King Barley, a barley yielding
; in 1895 116 bushels per acre, and $100
ou Golden Triumph Yellow Dent Corn,
I the corn of your dreams!
What’s Teoslnte and Sand Vetch and
! Sacallne and Lathyrua and Giant Spur
; ry and Giant Incarnate Clover and lota
of such things? They’ll make you rich
if you plant a plenty. Catalogue tells
you!
| If yon will cat this out and send it
with 10c. postage to the John A. Salzer
Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will get
I free 10 grasses and grains, including
, above oats, barley, corn and their mam
1 mom catalogue. Catalogue alone 5c.
| A StandUh Memorial.
| Three hundred patriotic ladies and
gentlemen, descendants of revolution
ary sires, gathered in Squantum, Mass,
I the other day to commemorate the
; landing at that place September 30,
I 1631, of Captain Myles StandUh and
I his party. The site was marked by a
! monument built of beach stones In the
! form of a cairn, about ten feet high
! and three feet in diameter. The cor
| nerstone, a round white flint, was laid
jointly by Mr. Adams and Mrs. Lee
and a polished granite table was placed
in one side, bearing this inscription:
‘•Captain Myles Standisli, with his
men, guided by the Indian, Nquanta,
landed hero September 30, 1031. This
, memorial is erected by the Daughters
of the Revolution of the common
wealth of Massachusetts, September
20, 1896.” _
“Brown's Bkoncri.ii. Troches” are of
great service in sutduing Hoarseness and
Coughs. Sold only in boxes. Avoid imi
tations.
The Literature of Crime.
Buffalo Express: Those persons who
like to fancy that published accounts of
crime tend to incite people to commit
similar crimes can amuse themselves
by discussing the possible responsibility
of Mary E. Wilkins for a recent murder
in Albany, Ore. Miss Wilkins' detec
tive story, published in the Express,
told of a woman who dressed in man’s
clothes to commit a murder. Very
soon after its publication this Oregon
woman actually donned male garb and
committed a murder. To be sure, she
may never have heard of Mary E.
Wilkins or her story. Then, again, it
is usually the true stories of crime as
published in the newspapers which
meet objection • from these critics.
They may be as ready to argue that
literature ought to be suppressed as
that news should be. But perhaps
they can induce an argument to show
that no person should be allowed to
learn to read.
Ilngemen’s Camphor lor wit li Oljrcorm*.
Cuiv» chapped Haodaand Kite*, Tender or Sore Kent,
Chilblain-, Pile*. Sc. C.O. Clark Co, New Haven,Cb
■ Then end Now.
Twenty-five years ago II. R, Mears,
an inventive watchmaker of Youngs
town, O., turned out a bicycle which,
though heavier, was very similar to
the bikes now in use. The people did
not take kindly to the new machine,
and when Mears continued to use it
against their protest he found that his
business was injured, and he was final
ly compelled to close his store and lo
cate elsewhere. Now everyone in
town who can afford it, and many who
cannot, is riding a wheel.—Pittsburg
Dispatch.
Tam* Parrot of Poata*
Sir Lewis Morris, tbe recently
knighted tame parrot ot well known
| poets, comes to the front with com
I mendable regularity on every public
occasion which offers reasonable excuse
for an ode or an elegy. It is said that
he tried to induce various American
newspapers to cable across the Atlantic
his recent effusion on the subject of the
Armenian atrcfcities, but even a new
knighthood proved too weak a weapon
to accomplish this high-handed assault
on fame. “Lord Sallisbury will de
liver Armenia from Turkish oppres
sion,” sighs one weary reviewer, "but
who will deliver the public from Sir
Lewis Morris?”—Chicago Times-Uerald.
Ghosts ars Pale and Shadowy,
Pay those who profess to have Interviewed
them. Whether spooks are tallow-faced or
not, mortals are whoso blood Is thin and
watery In consequence if Imported asslml
I latlon. When Invalids resort 10 IIostetter's
I Stomach Hitters, and use that unmjualled
;tonlc persistently, they soon "pick up” In
i strength, flesh at a color. It should be used
also to prevent malarial, rheumatic and
Kidney complaints, und to remedy constipa
tion, sick headache und nervousness.
| The rule stl'l holds good that the bigger
the s.eeve the more modish the garment.
...PITS—All r Its stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
fierve Koatorer. No Fluafler tbe lirMtlitv'M use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise anil fg trial bottle free tv
tit cases. Beau to tic. Kllue^U ArcUbt., flats., la.
A teaspoonful of flavoring extract is
enough tor a plain cake.
•*l have tried Parker** Slaver Taate
snitbelieve In |i,"s>y, s mother, end mwil you
soy wbeu familiar with lis revltalltlrg proportion.
Scattering chloride of lime about wiil
banish fleas.
gsilhow It does |t Is aot the veeslloa.
It Iscnouidi to knew that Uinderoorns takes out the
coins, end a very pleasing relief It Is. lte, at druggists
The fan is now an Inseparable adjunct of
ail dainty evening toilettes.
It the Baby M Cutting Teetn.
He sura and use that old and well.tried remedy, Xus.
WauLow’s gooTswo Svittir for Children Toothing.
A six pound roast requires one hour's
roasting to be rare.
ON® TOMOY»
Boti: tho method and results when
Syrup of Figs is token; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, el causes tlje Sys-.
tem effectually, dispels colds,, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Symp of'Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-,
duced, pleasing to tho taste and oo-.
ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in'
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances. Its'
many excellent qualities commend1 it
to all and have made It tho most '
popular remedy known. V* !
Syrup of Figs is for sale ,}u 80
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try rt. Do not’accept an v
substitute.
CALIFORNIA F/0 SYRUP CO,
SAM fSAMOSCO, CAL
touismu, nr. new rose *r.
ur (jUcjp tobacco
EVER SOLD FOR 10 ([Nlj,
FIELD AMD HOC FENCE WIRE.
Noth“'a o°n fhi ma^ef^^Sm^r^wiU^r^rTM^ri* **
UNION FENCE COMPANY. BE ham. Hi.
/
The The The
Best. Rest Test.
- There are two kinds of sarsaparilla: The best—and the
rest. The trouble is they look alike. And when the rest
dress like the best who’s to tell them apart? Well, “the tree
is known by Its fruit.” That’s an old test and a safe one.
And the taller the tree’ the deeper the root. That's another
.test. What's the root,—the record of these sorsaparillas ? The
one with the deepest root is Ayer’s. The one with the richest
fruit; that, too, is Ayer’s. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has a record of
half a century of cures; a rocord of many medals and awards —
culminating in the medal of the Chicago World’s Fair, which,
admitting Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as tho best—shut its doors against
the rest. That was greater honor than tho medal, to bo the only
Sarsaparilla admitted as an exhibit at tho World’s Fair. If you
want to get tho best sarsaparilla of your druggist, here’s an
infallible rulo : Ask for tho best and you ’ll get Ayer’s; Ask
for Ayer’s and you 11 get tho best
S®.® AKKMO'lou w. Homs half tljfl World's
windmill busioess, because lc hiu reduced the com at
wind power to i w what it w»a.< it bus manj branch
hooaofc,andsupplies luitoodssudihpah*
* at four door, it cun aud duet, f uraUh a
I hotter article for leas luoofif thaw
'otbors. It makes .Frunpi tie and
Ousted, 8u«l, Ualvar.isod-after
. Completion frlndnMlIs, TUtliur
r and Fixed Stool Towers, steel liuia saw
Frames. Stool hood Cutters and Food
Urlnders. On applleollmt Uwrttt name one
_ •>( these articles that it will furnish until
Jan oars »t 1 /3 the usual price. It 0.1m makes
Ta^sand Ftuipsor all klnaa Sand for estalofu*.
Pattorj! Illk, Rockwell rod Fillmore Streets. Chul^.
WELL MACHINERY
all warranted.
Mou* City Karin* and Iran Works,
Suenawom to Iwh Mg. Co.
ru* bo*iu.*S7.k •EfiSayi
_1*14 Woiit Rievent \ .‘■trims, i:a»r*> i H.v .*•■.
W. N. U., OMAHA—3—ISUQ
When writing to advertisers, kindly
mention this paper.
Fi.$O v5 .CURE POR
. CUKtb WHfcRt AlL (
| Best Cou;th Sjrap, Ta
■Si
CONSUMPTION ^