The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 02, 1896, 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.
PUBLISHED KVKBT THURSDAY BY
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
KING A CRONIN. Editors.
, NATIONAL TICKET.
For President:
WILLIAM M'KINLEY.
For VIoo-PresIdent:
GARRETT A. HOBART.
COUNTY BEPUBLICAN TICKET.
For Representatives:
JOHN TROMMEliSHAUSSER, of Ewing.
J. A. RICE, of Stuart.
For Count; Attorney:
E. H. BENEDICT, of O'Neill.
IMPORTANT EVENTS.
Democratic national convention, Chi
cago, July 7.
Populist national convention, St.
Louis, July 23.
Congressional convention, s North
Platte, July 8.
SENATORIAL CONVENTION. !
The republican ' senatorial conven
tion of the Thirteenth senatorial district
will be held in the court-house in the
city at O’Neill, Neb., on Saturday,
July 11, at 2 o’clock p. m., for the pur
pose of placing in nomination a candi
date for state senator from this district.
The basis of representation is one del
egate from each county, and one addi
tional delegate for each 100 votes or
major fraction thereof cast at the last
general election for T. L. Norval for
supreme judge.
The counties of the district will be
entitled to delegates as follows
Boyd.4
airfield. 2
Holt. e
Wheeler
Total....!.17
It is recommended that no proxies be
allowed, but that delegates present cast
the full vote of their delegation.
D. C. Harrison, Chairman.
Frank Phillips, Secretary.
f < Well, here’s to Jaok MacColl ,
The Baadolph Times now issues
a semi-weekly. This. iB enterprise,
bat it isn’t business.
Meiklfjohn’s “step stone,”, by
whioh he hoped to reach the senate,
was moss-covered, wet and slippery.
This issue rounds off sixteen
even years for Thi Fbontixb and we
still live and move and have our
being. • Sixteen years is a long
time and has marked great changes
in O'Neill and Holt county.
Oca friend Mathews, of Stuttgart,
says The Fbontixb has always been
“a yellow dog organ”—that is, sup
ported every man nominated by the
republicans. Tax Fbontixb once
supported Mr. Mathews for the state
senate.
-►«!»«
Tax Ainsworth Star-Journal
i claims to be the original McKinley
newspaper in Nebraska. It has
, kept his name at the head of its
editorial columns for three years.
There ought to be a postoffioe in
that, surely.
— ■ » «•» --
A good many people are nursing
the fond hope that the tariff issue
; has been sidetracked for the cam
paign, but it has not. An issue so
important to the welfare of the in
dustries of the United .States cannot
be sidetracked.
— , ...
Tax Beacon Light says the state
chairman oalled the populist county
convention, some time in April, and
that the republican senatorial com
mittee is to blame that the two con
ventions are oalled to meet in O’Neill
on Saturday, July 11. We wonder
by what authority the state chair
man calls county conventions.
Thx withdrawal of Judge Kinkaid
from the congressional race was a
sore disappointment to many of bis
friends in the district, as they
looked upon him as the man to re
deem this district from populism
% and othei isms and place it back in
the republican fold, but as they
speed the parting they turn to wel
come the coming man and will sup
^ port him loyally.
Thx chairman of the county pop
ulist oentral committee and the
chairman of the republican sena
torial central committee got together
in O'Neill last week and decided
• that the republicans should have the
court-house at 1 o'clock on Saturday
July 11, instead of 2 o’clock. It
... therefore behooves the senatorial
delegates to be on hand promptly at
1 o’clock in order that the work of
,v the convention. may be disposed of
- . in the one hour granted to it.
• *.* «-—
IJI^sSFhx editors of the Laurel Advo
'• cate and Dixon Tribune are scratch
ing out one an others’ eyes all for
T- “naething.” One said that the edi
(>4ors of this paper were talking of
Vv i- i 1 ' .
establishing a branch offioe at
Laurel, the other 8aid.it was not
trne, and thus the fight began. The
matter doesn’t amount to anything,
but we think it time for ub to tnm
mediator and set the boys aright
Something like a year ago the pro
prietors of this paper were impor
tuned to put in a paper at Laurel,
but after an investigation found the
lofig felt want at that place pretty
comfortably filled and dropped the
matter.
Doc Mathews has bolted the nom
ination of McKinley and Hobart,
ostensibly on account of the gold
and protection planks of the plat
form, bnt really, we believe, as a
move preparatory to getting back
into bed with the spavined old dem
ocratic male. You see Doc used to
be a democrat in the diiyB of his
early manhood. In his ultimatum
he says he has always been opposed
to high tariff and in favor of bi
metallism. While he may have
been a bimetallist, the columns of
this paper, whioh he one time edited,
show that he is a dissembler on the
tariff question. But then Doc is
a candidate for the legislature with
congress looming up beyond the
firth of Bayou Meto and he must
have votes. Does the end justify
the means, Doc?
' i _r)>M _
Our esteemed friend and doctor of
political philosophy, of the Custer
County Republican; at Broken Bow,
is considerably mistaken in his
diagnosis as to the cause of our
kick against the late county con
vention. The Frontier had no
“crowd” at the convention, neither
wbb it asking for anything; and
although the inditer of these lines
was made a member of the senator
ial delegation, also committeeman
from his ward, and unanimously
elected secretary of the county cen
trai committee zor we sixin term, He
kicks on the way the convention was
run and protests against a lot of
worn out politicians steering things
I to the detriment of the party. It
is difficult for non-residents to fully
comprehend the situation in Holt
county, but we know that the time
has arrived for a new deal.
' » ———■—---- *
There is not a very great differ
ence between the Minneapolis and
St. Louis platforms, on the money
question, after all. . The Minneapo
lis platform said “the American
people from tradition and interest,
favor bimetallism, and the republi
can party demands the use of both
gold and silver as standard money.”
But it did not stop there; it went
on to say: “With such restrictions
and under Buch provisions, to be de
termined by legislation, as will
secure the maintenance of the parity
of the two metals, so that the pur
chasing and debt-paying power of
the dollar, whether of silver, gold or
paper, shall be at all times equal.”
That is exactly where the party
stands today, on the St. Louis
platforng. People who supported
the Minneapolis platform and bolt
the one adopted at St Louis are
simply looking for a chance to get
away.
The advocates of free silver are
prone to refer to holy writ to sustain
their position, but they either do
not know, or conoeal the fact that
King Solomon, the wisest of the
wise men of those piping times, de
monetized silver and held it as
naught The word as it is written
says:
And *11 King Solomon's drinking ves
sels were of gold, and *11 of the vessels
of the house of the forest of.Lebanon
. were of pure gold, none gere of silver:
it was nothing accounted of In the days
of Solomon.
And the king made silver to be in
Jerusalem as stones.
So King Solomon exceeded all the
kings of the earth for riches and
for wisdom.
And all the earth sought to Solomon
to hear his wisdom, which God had put
in his heart.
King Solomon “exceeded all the
kings of the earth for riohes and for
wisdom,” and in his wisdom made
“silver, to be in Jerusalem as stones.”
Free silver devotees should not
weep bo much about the crime of
’73, but pour a few vials of their
wrath upon the memory of Solomon.
We do not advance this fragment
of ancient history as an argument
that silver should not be used as
money, bnt merely to show that
I when its advocates refer to the bible
[ to bolster up their wobbling argu
ment they may be hoist by their own
petard.
Keep Up Your
Scott’s Emulsion
in Summer-time
j*j*What are your resources
for the summer? Have you
an abundance of health stowed
away for the long, hot, deplet
ing days, or does summer find
you low in vitality, run down,
losing flesh, and weak? Scott's
Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil will
give you the proper reserve
force, because it builds up the
system on a solid foundation.
A tonic may stimulate; Scott's
Emulsion not only "boosts,"
it sustains.
It b a wise presautioii always to have at
lea* a small'bottle of Scott's Emulsion fas
the bouse. Unopened, it will keep indcfin
itety. Tightly corked, after using, kept in
a cool place, it will remain sweet tor weeks.
For sale by all druggists at
♦♦♦50 Cents and SljOO
H
, *
PurohMo Tlokota and Consign your
Freight via tho
F.E.&M.V.andS.C.&P
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPART:
OOIKQ BAST.
Passenger east, 9:20 a. m
Freight east, f 10:80 a. m
Freight east, - - 2:10 p.m.
ooisovsst,
Freight west, • i 8:10 f. m
Passenger west, • 9:27 f. m
Freight, • 8:10 p.m.
The Ellchorn Line is now running Reclining
Chair Cars dally, between Omaha and Dead
wood, jree to holdere of flrst-clasa transpor
tatlon.
For any Information call on
Wj J. DOBBS, Agt.
O'NEILL. NEB.
DON’T STOP TOBACCO
HOW TO CURB YOURSELF WHILE US
ING IT.
The tobacco habit grows on « man un
til his nervous system is seriously affect
ed, impairing health, comfort and happi
ness. To quit suddenly is too severe a
shock to the system, as tobacco, to an in
veterate user, beoomes a stimulant that
his system continually oraves. “Baoo
Guro” is a scientific oure for the tobacoo
habit, in all its forms, oarefully com
pounded after the formula of an eminent
Berlin physician who has used it4n his
private practice sinoe 1872, without a
failure. It is purely vegetable and guar
anteed perfectly harmless. You can use
all the tobacco you want while taking
“Baoo-Curo.” It will notify you when to
stop. We give a written guarantee to
oure permanently any case with three
boxes, or refund the money with 10 per
cent, interest. “Baoo-Curo” is not a
substitute, but a scientific cure, that cures
without the aid of will power and with no
inoonveaienoe. It leaves the system as
pure and free from nicotine as the day
you took your first chew or smoke.
ouann n “naoo-ouao” in oainbd
THIBTT POUNDS.
From hundreds of testimonials, the
originals of which are on file and open
to inspection, the following is presented:
Clayton, Nevada Co., Ark., Jan. 28, 1895.
Eureka Chemical k. Mfg. Co., La Crosse
Wis.—Gentlemen: For forty years I
used tobacoo in all its forms. For 25
years of that time I was a great sufferer
from general deoility and heart disease.
For fifteen years I tried to quit, but
couldn’t. I took various remedies,
among others “No-To-Bao,” “The Indian
Tobacco Antidote,” “Double Chloride of
Gold,” etc., etc., but none of them did ms
the least bit of good. Finally, however,
I purchraed a box of your “Baeo-Curo"
and it has entirely cured me of the habit
in all its forms, and I have increased 80
pounds in weight and am relieved from
all the numerous aches and pains of
body and mind. I eould write a quire of
paper upon my ohanged feeling and con
dition. Yours respectfully,
P. B. Mabbubt,
Pastor C. P. Church, Clayton, Ark.
Sold by all druggists at $1.00 per box;
three boxes, (thirty day's treatment),
$2.50 with iron-clad, written guarantee,
or sent direot upon receipt of price.
Write for booklet end proofs. Eureka
Chemical & Mfg. Co., La Crosse, Wis.,
and Boston, Mass. OelSltem.
O’NEiLLBUSINESS DIRECTORY
J. P. QIU1QAV,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Office in Holt County bank building.
All work cash in advance. Night work
positively refused.
O’NEILL,
NEB.
U R. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O'NEILL, NEB.
jgABNIY STEWART,
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER.
Satisfaction guaranteed. .
Address, Page, Neb.
BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Office in the Judge Roberts building, north
' of O. O. Snyder’s lumber yard,
O NEILL, NEB.
mi m am conn stub
Stage leaves O’Neill at 8:89 a. if., arriving at
Spencer at 4 P.m.; at Butte. 5:30 p. m.
S. D. Oaixentins, Prop.
O’CONNOR & GALLAGHER
IN
Of all kinds. A specialty made of
PINE CIGARS.
If you want a drink of good liquor
do not fall to call on us.
Checker ® Barn,
. B. A. DaY ABM AN, .Manager.
CHECKER
WfffPfRW
Livery, Feed and Sale Stable.
Finest turnouts in the city.
Good, careful drivers when
wanted. ALo run the O’Neill
Omnibus line. Commercial
trade a specialty.
READ.
THE TRIBUNE
For Telegraph, Local,
General, State and
Foreign News.
Market complete
-THE
SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE
M Per Year.
50 Cents Per Month.
QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE
Addrew:
THB TRIBUNE.
Sub. Dept.
Sioux City, Iowa.
*3?
seated with blue ribbon. Take '
Jao atker. Refute dangervH* rubMitu
f tiotu and imitmtumt. AiOrURisti, oraodfa
in itupi for particulars, testimonials sad
44 Kallaf flap Lafllee.** is tetter, tor Mara
THE SAFE STORED
O’Neill, Neb.
__ There isn’t a store in the whole country that sells clothing as
'The Nebraska” does. It is an exceptional store, it is a reliable store,,
it is an absolutely safe store. The price today is the price tomorrow
and the next day, and the price to one is the price to all We have
no favorites, we make no discounts, and we neveT resort to catch •
penny methods of marking some goods low in order to sell you other
goods high. Our practice of instantly refunding money when goods
don’t suit is the best proof you can have that our goods and prices
are all right. For eleven years we have been building up a vast bus
iness on these principles and our business was never so large, onr
prices never so low, as they are this spring.
Send for our catalogue. It contains samples of go'ods and will
save you a geeat many dollars above what you have to pay for the
. same qualities at borne. It is a book that ought to be in every
clothing buyer’s hand. . - -
E®~Get our prices on Bicycle Outfits.
Mention The Frontier when writing.
elKHorn valley
PLOW FACTORYw..
O'NEILL, NEB. EMIL SNIGGS, Prop.
.... Manufactures the Hamnell Open Mould-Board Stirring
Plow. Also general blacksmithin^ and practical horseshoer.
Wagon and Carriage woodwork carried on in connection.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Alan 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. V
CAPITAL $30,000.
Prompt Attention Given to Collections
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
Chicago Lumber Yard
Headquarters for
COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world
Yard*
(O'Neill.
■{ I’fcee,
(Allen.
0.0. SNYDER & GO
The Inter Ocean
Is^h^MjMt^opularjiepublican Newspaper
of the West and Has the Largest Circulation.
TERMS BY MAIL.
DAILY (without Sunday)...$4.00 per year
DAILY (with Sunday).$6.00 per year
The Weekly Inter Ocean— .00
PER YEAR..1 —
As a Newspaper THE INTER OCEAN keepu abreast of the ia all
respects. It spares neither pains nor expense in securing; “
ALL THE NEWS AND THE BEST OF CURRENT LITERATURE.
The‘Weekly Inter Ocean
As a Family Paper is Not Excelled by Any.
sIt has something of interest to each member of the it.
the ablest discussions o, all lire political topici it U publi^ed in t^icMo
and is in accord with tho people of the West in both politics and literature
Please remember that the price of THE WEEKLY INTER OCKA.V 4.
ONLY ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. Address OCEAN ia
THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago.
The Frontier and Inter Ocean only $1.75 per year.