The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 20, 1896, Image 1

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O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTyTn^BRASKA, AUGUST 20, 1896.
NUMBER 7.
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news unmnu
Iteme of Internal Told Tkoy Aro
Told to Ua.
WHIN AND NOW IT HAPPENED
■r
Uni Wappiatago Portrayed For emnl
MUlaattea aad
Dr. MeDoaold bod bnteoto in the city
yesterday. '
Sanford Parker waa over from Spen
cor Saturday.
The Holt County Fair commencea
neat Toeaday._
John Shirring went down to Lincoln
Tueaday morning.
O. F. Biglin ia tranaacting buaineaa in
Sioux City thia week.
Born, to Mr. and Mra. J. M. Meredith,
iaat Monday, a daughter.
William Krotter, of Stuart, had butl*
neaa in the city Tueaday.
Wm. Lanollette mado a buaineaa trip
to Boyd county iaat Friday.
Frank Anderaon, of Sionx City, had
buaineaa in thia city Iaat Saturday.
Attorney DeBord, of Omaha, trana*
acted legal buaineaa in the thia city
Monday.
J. H. Bacon, 4l*o. Harrison and Chas.
Anderson, of Hsligh, bad basinets in the
city Tuesday.
Charlie Baker went down to dear
water this morning. He will return
Friday evening.
Miss B. O'Donnell left for Hot Springs
last evening to spend a couple of weeks
visiting with friends.
Charlie Stout lelt Tuesday morning for
Tekamah, Neb., where he will visit rela
tives for a few weeks.
Chamberlain’s Cholic. Coleraand Diar
rhoea Remedy, always affords prompt
relief. Bold by P. C. Corrigan.
Miss Ona Skirving returned from Lin
/coin leet evening, where she had been
Or attending school the past summer.
' Mrs. Dolan, of South Omaha, who has
been visiting her mother here the past
six weeks, returned home Sunday.
For sale or rent cheap: My residence
back of Tnn Frontier office.
Mrs. McKibnan.
Frank Gapier came up from Sionx
City last Thursday and will spend a
couple of weeks visiting friends and rel
atives here. _
You are going Jlabing? Well, before
you start get your fishing tackle of Neil
Brennan, who keeps everything in the
sporting line. 44-tf
k< -
We have been informed that the grist
. mill, now under course of construction
in this city, will be ready to commence
operation by October 1.
Bishop Anson R. Graves, assisted by
Rev. Bates, will hold Episcopal services
at their chapel Sunday morning at 10:80.
All are invited to attend.
A McKinley club was organised in
Fremont last week with a membership
of 700 the first day. They expect to
double the list during the present week.
Corbett’s photo studio and dental
parlors will be open from August 81 to
the 38, inclusive.
6-4 _t A. H. Corbitt.
A McKinley and Hobart club was
organised in Paddock township last Sat
urday with twenty members. They ex
pect to double the membership during
the present week.
Thei whole system drained and under
pined by indolent ulcers and open sores.
DeWitt’s Witch Hasel Salve speedily
heals them. It is the beat pile cure
known. Morris A Co.
Prof. John Bland, formerly of tbla
place, waa in the city Saturday looking
after bueineaa interest* and renewing
old acquaintances. Mr. Bland has been
teaching at Fremont the past year.
O. F. Biglin sells the best farm ma
chinery manufactured. Every farmer
knows tue name of ihe best machinery;
it is the McCormiotf. Harvesters, bind.'
ers and 0-foot ma#ers for sale at prices
that are right, j
_
Mrs. Mark Irwin and family left last
Sunday morning for Scranton, Pa., to
''y J' join her husband. The" family made
many warm friends during their resi
dence in this city who wish them suc
/ cess in their new home.
ffolin C. Oromer, of McFall, Mo., is in
the eity to-day. Mr. Gromer, who form
erly resided on a farm near Amelia, Is
now in the lumber business at McFall
and is prospering nicely, a fact which
his many friends here will be pleased to
learn. He says Missouri is for McKinley.
County Judge McCutchan granted
license to wed to Fred P. Blonden and
Lillian M. Root, of Stuart, last Satur
day. The groom is a son of Supervisor
Blonden. The Frontier extends its
congratulations.
Leighton Shaw was in the city over
Sunday visiting friends. Leighton left
Georgia as soon as he "recovered from■
his illness-nod |s again back in Madison
with Dr. Corbett. Be has no earthly
nse for the sunny south.
A large delegation of O'Relllites,
headed by the band, went down to Dixon
last Saturday to hear the joint debate
between John L. Webster, of Omaha,
apd M. F. Harrington, of this city. They
report an enjoyable trip.
"Trimary caucus for supervisor in
district number Five is recommended on
Saturday September 10, and the con-!
venlion on the Saturday following, Sep
tember 90, at the LaRue school house at
9 v. x. J. M. Aldkrson, Chairman.
It Is as necessary to get good eider
vinegar when putting up pickles as it is
to have pure spices. We keep the
O’Reida brand that has no superior on
the market. Try a gallon when needing
any. O1 Neill Grocery Co.
Row is the season when you want a
good gun and want it cheap. I have a
line of guns that cannot be beaten any
where and am going to sell them cheap.
Come early and get first choice. I also
have hunting coats and sell them cheap.
?tf Rail. Bbknkax.
Thom who want more rending matter
during the campaign can get the Sioux
City Twicc-a-Week Journal and Th*
Frontier for tl.55; the subscription to
Thi Frostier to continue one year,
and the subscription to the Journal until
November 20.
Theories of cure may be discussed at
lehgth by physicians, but the sufferers
want quick relief; and one minute cough
cure will give it to them. A safe cure
for children, It is "the only harmless
remedy that produces immediate results.’’
Morris & Co.
At a meeting of the school board Tues
day evening Miss Anna Lowrie was
selected to teach in Mrs. Clark’s place
until the holidays, 'fhe boaH was In
session until 2 o’clock in the morning
and it took eighty ballots to make the
selection. There is still one vacancy to
be filled. _
Visitors to the Nebraska State Fair at
Omaha, August 27 to September 5, can
receive valuable information regarding
rooms, etc., without charge, by address
ing or calling on the Bureau of Infor
mation, (under auspices of Knights of
Ak-Sar-Ben) Y, M. C. A. building. 16th
and Douglas St., Omaha.
Bill Laviollette has been making some
indoor improvements in the way of de
corations and new furniture at the Ex
change. The room is now artistically
arranged and the venerable dispenser is
better prepared to dish out the exhiler
ating in quantities to suit the thirsty in
dividual than ever before. -
F. M. Weidner, of Corning, Iowa, ar
rived in the city Tuesday evening. He
was accompanied by Rev. Ewing, prin
cipal of the Corning academy, Walter
Newman, A. B. Turner and Harry
Turner, also of Corning. The party left
yesterday for Wood Lake, Neb., where
they will spend a few weeks hunting.
Dr. Scoggin and frmily left last week
for their home in Norfolk, after spend
ing a month in this city. The doctor
desires Tag Frontier to express his
thanks to the people of O’Neill for their
liberal patronage during his stay with
us, and expressed a hope that at some
future time be would again be able to
visit our city.
If you ever have seen a little child in
the agony of summer complaint, you
can realize the danger of the trouble and
appreciate the value of Instantaneous
relief always afforded by DeWltt’s Colic
A Cholera cure. For dysentery and
diarrhoea it is a reliable remedy. We
could not afford to recommend this as a
cure unless it were a cure. Morris A Co.
Col. Bates, of Atkinson, was in the
city Saturday and Sunday. Monday
morning he left for Charter Oak, Iowa,
where he goes to assume editorial charge
of the Times of that place. He is a
trenchant and ready writer and the
Times will present a noticeable improve
ment as it strides up to the rank of the
leading journals of the Hawkeye state.
A farewell party was given Tuesday
evening at the home of Mrs. Wm. Ryan
by a number of our young people. Danc
ing was the principle amusement of the
occasion. Refreshments were served at
13 o’clock. Mrs. Ryan has made ar
rangements to move to Omaha in the
near future in order that her son Jay
might more conveniently complete his
course in medical college, and the friends
of the family invaded their home on this
occasion to tender them a last farewell.
I About forty electors of Grattan town
' ship met in the court room last Saturday
' afternoon as per call. The meeting was
I a special one called by the town board
in regard to the bonds voted by the
township, in favor of the Pacific Short
Line, some four years ago. As will be
remembered, the fall after the bonds had
been voted, some of the taxpayers of the
township entered a protest against pay*
ing the bond tax and the case was taken
in charge by County Attorney Murphy.
It was tried in the distriot court, the tax
payers being defeated. It was then
taken to the supreme court where the
decision was reversed and decided that
the bonds wore illegal, the same being
issued without doe process of law. From
there it was taken to the United States
court, where it is still pending. Since
the bonds were voted about $8,800 has
been paid in taxerlnto the sinking fund
created for the purpose of redeeming
them. About $1,000 of thin amount haa
been paid under proteat. This money,
$>,800 was in the hands of the county
treasurer. Mandamus proceedings were
commenced against the treasurer to
compel him to pay to the township
treasurer the $1,800 that had been paid
without protest, and the money was so
paid. Then the board engaged Attorney
Murphy to take charge of the case,
agreeing to pay him $8,000 if be won the
suit and $1,000 if he lost it. According
to agreement a warrant was drawn on
the township treasurer in faVor of Mr.
Murphy for the $1,500, the said Warrant
to be paid out of the money in the bond
(ax sinking fund. The treasurer re
fused to pay the warrant on the grounds
that the money had been paid for a spe
cific purpoee and that the board had no
authority to order it paid for any other.
He also employed conned to defend him
in his position. The electors at the
meeting Saturday endorsed the action of
the township treasurer in employing
counsel to defend his action. They
also ratified the action of the board in
employing Attorney Murphy to take
charge of the case, and the warrant will
be paid. They instructed the treas
urer to place the balance of the money
in a fund to be used In the prosecution
of the case.
Last Friday night torn* llgbt fingered
gantry broke IhrtoNert Bre*na*’rTiar9
ware (tore and got away with about §800
worth of good*, consisting of razors,
knives, silver spoons, revolvers and
cartridges. The burglars got into the
building through one of the back win
dows which they pried open. They first
attempted to gain entrance through the
back door by cutting a hole in the door
above the bolt, large enough to put a
hand through, and pulled the bolt. This
only gave them admittance to a store
room, there being a second heavy door
at the rear of the main room, which they
could not open. Failing in this method
they tackled the window and succeeded
in gaining an entrance. Suspicion
pointed to a couple of tramps who had
been seen around town during the day,
as the guilty parties. Early Saturday
morning Sheriff Hamilton wired the
officers up and down the road an ac
count of the robbery and requested them
to be on the lookout for tramps peddling
cutlery. On Friday afternoon he re
ceived a telegram from the chief of
police of Omaha stating that a couple of
tramps had been arrested in Clinton,
Iowa, while trying to dispose of some
cutlery, and he supposed they were the
parties wanted here. The sheriff wired
the authorities at Clinton and was in
formed that the goods found in their
possession corresponded with the de
scription of those “swiped" here. The
sheriff left Wednesday morning for
Boone, having in his possession war
rants for their arrest.
It is always gratifying to receive testi
monials for Chamberlain’s Colic, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy, and when
the endorsement is from a physician it is
especially so. “There is no more satis
factory or effective remedy than Cham
berlain’s Cholic, Cholera and Diasrhoea
Remedy,” writes Dr. R. E. Roby, phys
ician and pharmacist, of Olney, Mo.;
and as he has used the remedy in his
own family and sold it in his drug store
for six years, he should certainly know.
For sale by P. C. Corrigan.
On Wednesday and Thursday, Aug.
20 and 27, we will have on exhibition for
the benefit of our customers a line of fur
samples from the celebrated firm of
Gordon ft Ferguson, St. Paul. This is a
rare chance for those contemplating
buying a fur garment this winter, and to
those who are not, we invite you to
come and see them anyway.
J. P. MANN.
Don’t trifle away time when you hava
cholera morbns or diarrhoea. Fight them
in the beginning with DeWitt’s Colic
and Cholera Cure. You don’t have to
wait for results, they are instantaneous,
and it leaves the bowels in a health
condition. Morris ft Co.
"TH1 WOVBDBD BXBD FLUTTKM.”
Hr. McCgfferty’a late effort, (lee the
Olleill Sun o( lut week) which may
appropriately be designated an
after-birtb, most emphatically Justifies
n»y characterisation of his previous strug
gle with, or ratlier against, nature. If
| we judge from the symptoms, however,
vrgire forced to the conclusion that the
deflpe of agony in the latter trouble
i np have been far more excruciating
tM in the parturition. Mr. McCafferty
■arthe >■ something on obstetrics hlm
aeu^which suggests the idea that he
may have undertaken to act as bis own
attendant.
They say that a lawyer who pleads his
ow® case has a fool for a client.. A
slight paraphrasing would make it read;
“A midwife who acts as her own attend
ant hai a victim for a patient." It is
somewhat fortunate, too, for bis party
| that he Is skilled in the embalming and
undertaking business. We will see that
he has a IS to 1 "stiff" to lay in its last
testing place by the ides of November.
Mi. McCafferty seems to have a burn
ing fleilre to discover the identity of
"Stwiint." To a man who wishes to
hpnduct a discussion on anvthlng but
personalities, it is immaterial whether he
knows the name of his adversary or not.
Voc my part I don't care a straw
whether he uses the name J. J. McCaf
ferty or his old umbrella "Poor Alpbs,”
or any other title. It is a poor policy
thair depends for its efficiency either
upon his reputation or mine. I have
msdf no allusion whloh does not find
ample justification In his own produc
tion,' and which would not be as applica
ble lo anyone who should father it, or
mother it, as to himself.
I aid not mj, John, that Mr.- Caldwell
waa denied a reapectful hearing. Juat
look Again and aee who la the liar. You
may deny that you referred to him
anearlngly, but no one of rente who hat
Mad your remarka will believe you. But
were you really afraid that Mr. C. waa
about to "abut the gates of heavenly
MW In your face? If that were the
catlse of your disrespectful remarka you
may lad conaolation in the thought that
the good gentleman will have to reach
the gate himeelf before he can cloae it.
^What do yon mean by saying “Stu
r*nr*»fa the onMtjkm'A contslneion.”
etc.? ' Evidently your words and your
ideaa (if - you have any) are running
amuck. The phraae “begging the ques
tion,’’ at it is called, means, u almost
everyone know*, assuming aa true, in
the course of an argument, the propo
sition whioh you aet out to prove. Now
if either one be forced to beg the ques
tion you are the one, for the burden of
proof liea upon you. But even you are
not driyen to the petitio prineipii, for you
have failed, to far, even to state what
you wish to establish. You say “the
gist of this argument is whether we had
more money in circulation from’61 to ’73
than from the latter year down to the
present,” and “whether cheap money is
more conducive to the well being and
happiness of the producing masses than
dear money.” And that “vou say yes
and ‘Student’ shoots back no.” Well it
would be difficult to crowd more non
sense and misrepresentations into an
equal amount of spaee without writing
between the lines. A few similar state
ments may cause people to question
your sanity. Every other free silver
advocate considers the policy of the free
coinage of silver at the present ratio,
the “gist of the argument," and ind
dently uses the amount of circulation,
per capita, nt different periods in sup
port of his position. But here we have
the incidental used m the maiii propo
sition, and the latter thrown to the
bow wows!
'men nr. me reels 11 incumbent upon
him to apeak (or Student, saying "Stu
dent ahouta no." Now,"Mr. Me, when I
want to say "no" I can do my own
ahouting, and if I should need a substi
tute I ahan’t choose one who baa proven
a failure in hla own caae. The fact of
the matter is, Mr. Me, that the amount
of money in a country above what is
actually employed has very little tb do
with the prosperity of a country. It
cannot be truly said that a country is in
need of more money while it has mill
ions of it lying idle.
The talk about "dear money” and
"cheap money" la evidently another con
fusion of ideas. Any owner of United
States money has but to hie himaelf
across our southern border and have Jt
doubled in quantity in quick time; or by
betaking himself to some of the South
American states, can have it trebled or
quadrupled in the currency of those
countries; or without leaving our own
country can invest in confederate scrip
and increase it to an amount limited
only by his ability to "tote” it away.
But how much will he gain? That's
the question!
It is difficult to imagine to what use
you wish to devote the array of fig
ures you furnish, unless it be to show,
as it does, most effectively, that there is
i a very large per capita of circulation in
this country at present—anywhere you
say from 930 or 937 without counting a
whole lot of national bank notes. That’s
larger than we claim. John, but we’ll let
it stand. You stick to your stigma upon
the “laborers and factory hands,” and
as a testification for such contempt
plead that Tun Fbontieh boys-have
used similar language. For my part I
don’t know whether The Frontierchape
are guilty of the offense charged or not,
but allow me to give you a pointer, John:
You cannot plead the commission of an
offense by another in lustiflcation of si
similar one committed by yourself.
John, your use of the old threadbare
, remarks about politics and bedfellows is
too stale to be funny. Mr. Whitney and
Herr Moat have political rights as well
as you have; so has your obedient ser
vant, and whether it incurs your dis
pleasure or not Mr. John, we will be
likely to line up with which ever party
we see see fit in the coming election—I
know I shall t but of course I can't speak
for the other fellows. They may ask
your permlasiou.s •
You say you unr thought of conceal
ing your identity, oud it you did you
could no more succeed in hiding your
impulsive nature than Student can the
flopping of his long ears. John, I am
net so flippant about giving the lie as
you are, but this is the third repetition
in your piece under consideration, of the
offense which cast a cloud over the rep
utation of Ananius for veracity. Who
was it, John, but your truthful self, who
in days of yore sailed under the name
"Poor Alpha”? It is a very common
practioe to use fn aeeumed name, and no
impropriety whatever attaches to it, and
I see no reason why anyone should deny
it unless from a fondness for prevarica
tion. The gratuitous admissions qf your
uncontrollable or impulsive nature, of
course, all will accept, but your mention
of it is superfluous.
You say you made no effort to create
prejudice against our creditors in other
countries. Perhaps you did not mean
what you said, but the woids will bear
no other interpretation, and the fact that
you strive to shift the blame upon others
(some of them dead) goes to show that
you do not feel, altogether guiltless. You
do show a mite of candor when you ad
mlt that my charge of nomequitur was
k correct. YbU excuse
about reading the pages of financial his
tory. Rats! There are children in
town who know more about finance than
—well, I will say all you have written
on the question so far. But in the nest
breath you say there Was a conclusion to
what you said, and that yoq "indirectly
led Student to it." What kind of gib
berish is that, pray? Perhaps it bad a
double conclusion, like the tail of your
ticket
Tour silly drivel about anglomaniacs
and the Rothschilds, John, is now rarely
used by any except the puppets of dem
agogues. The art of trying to make a
point by creating popular prejudice is a
low practice, resorted to only by tools
and knaves, and is a sure proof of the
want of legitimate argument.
I thought I would catch you. John, by
the "bosh posh” bait. . You swallowed
it,'however, mere ravenously than I ex
pected. Row, John, I don’t know
whether you have made dilligent search
to find the. phrase or not, but if you
have, and have failed, I will give you a
pointer: Take Webster’s or Worcester’s
or some other standard dictionary; run
down the pages until you find the word
"gold-bug;” continue until you come to
words commencing with the letter "H;”
somewhere in that row you will find
“bosh poih”—that is, if you find the
word "gold-bug," I will gurrantee you
will find the others. Now, it you say
neither can be found in the English
language, then, according to your own
dictum, they must both be slang, but
your poliahed self make frequent use of
“gold-bug,” eo your only escape from
being convicted (for the fourth time) of
fibbing is by your showing that “gold
bug" has a place in the English vocabu
lary.
Mb,' your laborious effort to con
struct a sylogism to provb that repub
licans want to increue the purchasing
power of the dollar deserves commisser
ation. I will save you the humiliation
of dissecting what you would palm of as
a sylogism. But, John, you do us proud
—unwittingly, of coarse. Yes, we want,
and have, a dollar which has a purchas
ing power second to none in this wide
world. And we are pledged, and shall
use every honorable means in our power,
to keep It so. Why should this great
American nation he inferior in A&Y
respect, monetary system included, to
any other nation on the face of the
globe? Don’t ygu say so, John? And if
not, where is your boasted patriotism?
That the silver dollar is a good, sound
standard dollar, John, is no news to us.
But your stupid Insinuation that Grover
Cleveland or the St. Louis republican
platform has any intention to make it
otherwise can only be accounted for
upon the- hypothesis of a change in the
moon. You’re Iuney, John, you're luney t
We’re fighting to keep it so, John, end
eren Grover i« with ui. Do you know i'.:
which tide you ere on, anyway T I
notice that whenever you do chance to
get in anything like a rational aeatence
it generally counte tor our side of the 1
question. But what do you mean, Mr.
Me, by aaying that it we vote tor the V
single gold standard we will cut the vol- \\
ume (naming a big string of figures, as
usual) of. our money in two. Why,
you’re growing crasier as you grow
older. But a train stuffed so full of
musty statistics and worn-out platitudes
can have little room for useful informa
tion. You should know, and if you
don’t it is time' for you to laarn, that we
have been practically on a gold basis
since 1884, and legally so since 1878.
And that Instead of "cutting the vol- -;
ume of m&ney (metal) in two,” we have
more than doubled it in quantity. The
luujMuoiiiKi principle oi our loauitriu
policy i> to shape circumstances so that
an honest toiler may be able to secure a
day’s work; and that of our financial
policy, that, when he wipes the sweat p'
from bis face at night, he receives the f
best dollar that the world can afford. :
We will not victimise him by enacting a
vicious law that would enable us to force
fifty cents upon him for a dollar. Such p,:
is our policy on these two questions, the
only questions I may say in dispute, and "
its interpretation is easy to any but the
blind tools of a hired demagogue.
You seem to possess an inveterate >■££
hankering after dragging dead men from ;'fff
their graves, and garbling their words in
a futile endeavor to bolster up your stu
pid absurdities. Why do you desecrate p
the name of Adam Smith and other hon
ored dead by endeavoring to show that
they sanctioned the gross absurdity that,
"the power of a unit depends on the ?
number of units in existence.” (Those
are your words verbatim.) Does the
power of a man depend upon the num
ber of men in existence? The popula
tion of the world, they say, is on the in
crease, but will you undertake to main
tain that such has anything to do with '.f;
the decline of Mr. Bryan’s power for
mischief? Is the power of an ox or of a
horse so depending? Is the power of a
spiritualist to call up the dead depending
upon the number of spiritualists in-ex*
tstMMT* The enm ofr ovanmvan mUHeMs a
of dollars bas been added to the money
of the United States within a few months.;
I ask the people of this, or any other,
community whether they have felt its
influence upon their money holdings.
Bah, John! As-Ben Butler ones said to
an upstart member of congress, “Shoo
fly!” Nor would their sanction lessen
the absurdity.
Now, John, I hope you won’t take
offense (but it is more than likely that Aji
you will) at a bit of advice: Quit your £
parrot prattle of at least the nonsensical
portions of other people’s sayings. Get ’
yourself together and try to do a little ,
thinking for yourself. If you try it ^
once I am pretty sure you Will like it.
Now, Mr. McCafferty, I shall pay no
more attention to you unless you furnish H
something of some benefit, and in sdkne
reasonable shape. In other words. I 't|
shall pay no attention to your nonsense.
It is merely an imposition upon the
newspaper men and the public generally
—using valuable space to bore them to
death. * ■
1 will also state, in conclusion,-that
you are at liberty to call me an ass, a
liar, a criminal or any other epithet of
such naturh that you, a self-styled gen- ‘Af
tleman, may see fit to use. but I warn
you at the peril of your being made de
fendant in a suit for libel, not to praise
me; commendation from such a source
would be equivalent to the impeachment
of a man’s character. Btuoiht.
xomnaarn us nunnons. .
When you want anything in this line
you can lave agent’s commission and
expenses by purchasing direct from me.
I guarantee first class work and prices as
cheap as any eastern firm can ship it to
you. 6*8 O. Stammakd.
XOtmWIYia, ATTUTtlOV!
When putting up your picklee don’t'
forget that it is necessary to get pure
spices if you want the best results. We
hare them. Come and let us show you
the difference between the pure and the
adulterated. We have both.
6*2 O’Nkim, Obocmby Co. •
LOOK HK&X.
It is now the season when you want to
buy the best machine oil for the least
money, and when doing so always bear
n mind that Brennan’s is headquarters
for all kinds of oil: Machine, gasoline,
kerosene and sewing machine; also axle
grease. Twine as low as the lowest.
Deering Harvesters and Binders. Repairs
for Walter A. Wood ft Co.’s mowers and
binders. Moline wagons, buggies, road
wagons and the finest assortment of , f
hardware in the valley. Anti-rust tin*
ware warranted not to rust for three
years. % 51-tf. Neil Bbhxmam.