The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 24, 1896, Image 1

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IINTINO CO.
MuomrrwN, ai.M nr annum.
VOLUME XVII.
O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, SEPTEMBER 24, 1896.
NUMBER 12.
NEWS SANS WHISKERS
Heap* of Interest Told AsTheyAre
Told to Ue.
WEIV AND HOW IT HAPPENED
. ■$*
Lssal Kapfligt tetmd lor esasrol
Idilsatlou an* iMHont.
Mike Flanigan om In the city loot
week. _
'. Walt Townsend was op from Stafford
ftoaday. * • •
•V
. Rafo King went down to Sioux City
last week. __.
attending
Court Reporter King is
court at Bassett.
For nice fresh bread, cake, pies or
cookies go to Motor’s. lOtf
, Mrs. Blineo and daughter were fair
visitors last Friday.
When yon want a good square meal
go to Holer’s restaurant. lOtf
K. H. Benedict went down to Ewing
this morning to attend the fair.
Miss Kiltie McBride was visiting with
friends In Sioux City last week.
, Rw. J. M. Bate* will hold Episcopal
service* In the church Sunday morning
at 10:39. ' , ■
Dr. Morris • is confined to his home
this week on account of an attack of
j erysipelas. _
i, . Mrs. W. A. Woodruff and children
Ttfited in Sioux City last Friday and
Saturday. _
When you are hungry go to Motor's
restaurant. Everything neat, dean and
up to date. lOtf
I
Ham Kautzman, wife and daughter,
were in attendance at the Sioux City
fajhr last week.
Art Mullen took in the fair at Sioux
City Met week and inddentally seen the
sights of the city.
Judge Crawford, the old democratic
war horse of Cumming county, was in
jthp city last Monday.
Nell Brennan and son, Jobnie, w%e
f
^ among the O’Neill people who visited
Sioux City last week.
Andy Gallagher, who is now in busi
ness at Lead City, 8. D., came down on
a visit to his family Tuesday morning.
Mr. and Mr. O. O. Snyder and family,
and Mr. and Mrs. J. Hobar and family
visited relatives at Allen last Friday and
Saturday. ■_.
Corbett’s photo studio and dental
parlors will be open from September 26
to October 2, 1896, inclusive.
9-5 A. H. Cobbitt.
You are going fishing? Well, before
you start get your fishing tackle of Neil
Brennan, who keeps everything in the
sporting line. 44-tf
William Laviollette and two sons,
Earl and James, left Tuesday morning
for Delhousie, N. B., where they will
visit relatives for a few weeks.
Elmer Williams returned from his
trijj to tJtah Monday evening, Mrs.
Williams, who had been visiting rela
tives at North Bend, returned with him.
Jos. Wiar, of Basset, has leased the
Commercial hotel, formerly occupied by
John O’Neill, and will run a strictly
first class dollar-a-day house. We wish
him success.
“Boys will be boys," but you can't
afford to lose any of them. Be ready
for the green apple season by having
DeWitt’s Colic and Cholera Cure in the
house. Morris A Co.
John Fried, of Atkinson, vras in the
city Mopday and made this office a
pleasant call. Mr.'Fried is an enthu
siastic republican and believes that Mc
Kinley is sure to be elected.
Bob Marsh and Tom Tierney were
numbered among the O'NelJlites who
took la the show at Sioux City last week.
The weather was too wet for fair pur
poses but we presume the “boys” bad a
good time. _
At Sioux City attending the fair last
i week were: S. F. McNichols, E. P.
Hicks, W. T. Evans, Chas. O'Neill, C.
W. Hamilton, Pete Duffy. Bill Fallon,
Barney Hynes and B. A. DeYarman.
The days ate getting short and the
lamp season is at hand. If you want a
good lamp os lantern, or anything in the
crockery or glassware line at bed rock
prices, .call in and look our stock over.
11-8 • O’Nbill Gbocxbt Co.
It doeen’t matter much whether sick
headache, billiousness, indigestion and
constipation are caused by neglect or by
unavoidable circumstances: DeWitt’s
Little Early Risers will speedily cure
them all. Morris A Co.
The whole system drained and under
pined by indolent ulcers and open sores.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve speedily
heals them. It is the best pile cure
known. Morris & Co.
Our new crop May picking teas have
arrived and are now on tap. When yon
want a cup of fragrant tea buy a pound
from us. Prices from 15c to 60c per
pound and satisfaction guaranteed.
11-8 v O’Nbill Grocery Co.
We have just received direct from
Japan the largest shipment of tea ever
brought to O’Neil at one time. We are
strictly headquarters for tea, and our 85
and 50 cent Japan knocks out all com
petition. 11-2 J. P. Mark.
James H. Riggs arrived in O’Neill last
Saturday evening from Randolph, where
he had been attending to some business
matters, and spent Sunday visiting with
relatives and friends. Jim has evidently
got a warm spot in his heart for the
Emerald City.
Theories of cure may be discussed at
length 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.
The Presbytery of Niobraita, com
prising thirty-one churches in northeest
Nebraska, will hold its session in the
Presbyterian church in O’Neill on Tues
day, Sept. 39. Home Mission Confer
ence, at 8-30 p. m., led by Dr. Sexton,
and a sermon by Rev. E. V. Wrinht at
7:80. __
There is no flour, at any money, as
good as White Satin, and there is no
flour for the price that equals G. A. R.
They cost no more than other flour of
the same grade, but will give better
satisfaction. 11 4 J. P. Mann.
Don’t trifle away time when you hare
cholera morbus 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 & Co.
A vote was taken on the train going
to Sioux City Friday morning and re
sulted: McKinley, 81; Bryan, 18. The
train was again polled on the return trip
Friday evening With the following re
sult: McKiniey, 37; Bryan, 33. Mc
Kinley is going to carry Nebraska by
80,000. _
Homer Garretson came up from Sioux
City last Friday evening and visited over
Sunday with friends in this city.
Homer is now located at Worthington,
Minn., where he has charge of an elec
tric light plaut that is owned by the
city. He is prospering nicely, a fact
which his many friends here are pleased
to note. _
Last evening the young people of
O’Neill gave a social little dancing party
in honor of Miss Minehan at McCaf
ferty’s ball. The event will be remem
bered by those in attendance as one of
the most enjoyable affairs in the history
ot like gatherings.- Lap luncheon was
served at 13.
On account of the big republican
rally at Sioux City Saturday Sept. SO,
the Short Line will sell tickets at the
very low rate of $3 for the round trip.
Generals Alger, Howard and Sickles,
Corporal Tanner and Congressman
Cousins will speak. The train will be
held till 11 o’clock p. m. that night to
give all an opportunity to hear them.
G. W. sftiTH, Agent.
The county board is being petitioned
by citizens in different parts of the
county to make an appropriation to buy
plates from which to make steel en
gravings of the photographs which have
been on exhibition in the post office the
past week, for the purpose of being used
to advertise the resources of Holt
county. We believe the plan a good
one, and if carried out will result in
much good for the county.
The writer visited Sioux City last Sat
urday for the purpose of attending Ae
fair. As it rained all forenoon the races
and collision were declared off for that
day, and we did not even go out to the
fair grounds. About the first thing
Sioux City should do, before she again
attempts, to get a crowd of Nebraska
people within the confines of hermunic
I ipality, is to get her streets in shape, or
at least Fourth, so that a person could
walk down that thoroughfare without
being mired. Qreat place that, Sioux
City.
*‘My boy came home from school one
day with his hand badly lacerated and
bleeding, and suffering great pain,”
says Mr. E. J. Schall, with Meyer Bros.’
Drug Co.. St. Louis, Mo. “I dressed the
wound and applied Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm freely. All pain ceased, and in a
remarkably short time it healed without
leaving a scar. For wounds, sprains
swellings and rheumatism I know of no
medicine or prescription equal to it. I
consider it a household necessity.” The
25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by P. 0
Corrigan.
OUB 'MR ACCEPTS
Selah’a hlnhtola tad Faladsa Am
Used, Laid Bart tad Burled
Beneath the Irreeistabia
*•:«" hna of “Madeate* :
Sioaoo tad U|ti.
• —--' .
FOOD FOE THE PEODUGBE
The Beeaatty ftr a Batara ta BapuhUaek
Trlaiiylaa -A Mta| Bat at
Bryan's Piaytey.
It ia a source of profound disappoint
ment to na to Had that tha rocaat
troublaa of my quondam patient, Mr.
Selah, which I thought I had removed
beyond the possibility of a relapse, have
again made their appearawtlb ia auch aa
aggravated and violent torn aa any
render the employaaaat of .a ansae what
draatle treatment neoeaaary. Hie foot
that he has again eapcneeed a daahe for
my aervieee, leads mo to believe that he
has faith in my remedies, although alee
is net by any means whet le commonly
known aa the “faith ears.” Dot, to
business.
c ram my previous uownggi or ar.
Selah’e constitution and a lusty ding -
noaia of the symptoms maalfMtad la his
present case, aa praasatad ia the ool
umna of last week's San. I am enabled
to diaooner some new case for Mr. Selah’a
’‘trouble.” and wiD proceed to preaeribe
accordingly.
Mr. Selah’a fading of disgust at the
general policy of the republican party
cannot be very deep eeated, as it can be
traced buck to but a very recent parted.
Under the administration of Mr. HarrP
son, which ended leea than four years
ago, his relations with the powers that
were seemed to be, ae the diplomats
would put it, "moot cordial.” The flies
of the Item, during Mr. BOlah’a control
of that paper, will ahew that he was in
the most perfect harmony with the re
publican hosts, and aa the republican
party is not responsible for national
legislation since that time, the cause ot
the nation’s distress arising from legis
lation or the want of it, can hardly be
laid at its door. Perhaps ”• restoration,”
as the sllTeritea would say, “to his
former position” would be a proper pre
scription in this ease.
Your contemptable effort, Mr. Selah,
to create a prejudice against the repub
lican party by meanly insinuating that
the membera of its honored dead would
not be in harmony with it were they
now in the flesh, could hats no other
effect than to subject you to the soon of
every right-minded American, were you
considered responsible for your expres
sions; but your implication that these
patriotic statesmen and heroes would
countenance, much leae approve, the
political doctrine and ths base practices
of the demagogues and heaves of the
party with which you hays allied your
self, is simply despicable, and a gross in
sult to their sacred memory.
As to the pledges on the financial
question in previous republican plat
forms, you must be very mnch wanting
either in knowledge or sincerity it you
deny that they hays not been carried
out to the letter aa far aa it waa possible
to do so. The very essence of the notion
of “bimetallism" is the concurrent cir
culation of both metals. There is no
nation on the globe today that haa as
much silver in circulation as the United
states. Thera ia not a free coinage
nation on tka globe that baa ona dollar
par capita of gold in circulation, and
banco not one that enjoys true bimetal
liam. There ia not a free silver nation
on the globe that ia not on a silver baala
and whoee silver money ia worth an/
more than ita bullion value, outalde of
ita own boundaries, for money purpoeeo.
The silver dollars of the United 8tatee,
until the Br/an Junto turned Itself looae,
were exchangeable at their face value
among the principal commercial nations
of the world, but since the Chicago cabal
their value has declined in the estimate
of one of our nearest neighbors, Canada.
And this when there is but f shadow of
danger of free coinage. What the reality
would produce It is easy to fudge.
You talk about a • “double standard.”
The conception of a double standard, the
commercial value of both metals being
subject to change, is about as lntolligble
as the notion of a square circle. And
that their value will not fluctuate, ia
about as probable as that yesterday will
return.
Your idiotic iteration and re-iteration
of the lying assertion that the republican
party asks permission of other aationa
to legislate for itself should be allowed
to pass with the contempt it deserves,
but, for the benefit of others, it Is per
haps better to dissect it a bit.
There are bnt two sentences ia the
financial plank of the republican plat
lord! that have direct bearing upon tbs
policy of the party upon that question.
They are as follows: First sentence:
"We are unalterablr opposed to every
measure ealeulated to debase our cur
rency or impair the eradlt ot our coun
try.” Oan you point out in that santenoa
the words expressing a request to be
permitted to legislate for ourselves?
Seoond sentence: “We are therefore
opposed to the free coinage of silver ex
cept by international agreemant with
the landing commercial nations of the
world, which we pledge ourselves to
promote, and until such agreement can
lb obtained the existing gold standard
mUM be preserved." This sentence is
ohm posed of two cc-ordlnate clauses,
-with n subordinate, or deponent relative
dame, used parenthetically with the first.
The first clausa deelsm (makes no re
quest mind you,) “we are therefore
opposed to the free coinage of silver ex
cept. by International agreement with
the leading; commercial nations of the
world," (then comes the parenthetical
clause,) “which we pledge ourselves to
promote.” dan you point out a request
for permission in that clause? The
second clause declares emphatically
(does not beg,) “and until such agree
ment jean be obtained the existing gold
standard must be preserved.'*. Where
ii hi nagging, requeat, or petition for
privilege to leglalata ia either of theae
MBtoaoMf But Mr. Bolah, I auppoee,
will atilf harp oh the old atrlng. Tha
preacription la thla oaaa la, a moral
training 1b the McKinley club and at
leaat a year’a attendance la Prof. Ander
aoa’a primary dapartmeat.
Mr. 8ejeh again laahee himaalf into
phraaay, to apaw out a lot of old worn*
out apithela about Sbjlock and tha ia
ooapetaaap of Grover Cleveland and
aaeb ellly blubbariag; la fan! mora than
aine>teeatha of bla radar la nothing but
worn-out hackneyed pbraaaa that have
baaa doing duty for tha blatharakltaa
until thay bacoma aauaaoua; until thay
"mail, aa ft were. Ha ia atuok on Billy,
of oourae, and aaya he ia telling pleaalng
talaa, and that a whole lot of people are
following him ate. Tea, Clarence, Billy
la eeootlag ao lively through the country
that tha fool-killar cannot catch up to
him. Hold on till the idea of November.
Than will be tha f. k’a. Inning. What
about tha MO, or more, damocratie newe
papera and the hundrada of thouaadda of
the moat .honorable mamba re of that
party thqt have turned their backa to
BOly and marafted la the other direction?
Mr. Selah aaya the oppoaltion calla hie
party repudlatore, Idlota, aaarchiata, etc.
In tha language of the Great Leader,
"what do you aay they areT” Tha prea
ent outatanding debta of thla country
ware contracted or renewed under a
financial ayatem that left not a ahadow
of doubt that they would be paid In gold
or money of equal value with gold. Waa
it not the intention of the borrower to
carry out tbe contract on that baalat It
oertalnly. waa. The moral quality of an
action ia in the intention; therefore the
debtor ia morally bound to redeem hla
obligationa in the quality of money re
ferred to; and tbe crawling behind a
technicality to eacape It la aomethlpg
worn than repudiation, it ia diahoneaty.
For proof to the charge of Idiocy, we
have only to refer to the numeroua ab
aurdltiea and contradictiona in evrey
apeech that Bryan and hia aatelitea have
made and to the peraiatency with which
L v cling to thoae abaurdltlea and falae
bov b after they are, very often through
char, v, pointed out to them. Take
your o Tn caae, for Inatance. I have
been au'uontaking you now for over a
month to take a tumble to youraelf, aa
the boy* say, but It Mam* I might u
wall be talking to the standpipe.
Tba charge of anarchy, I think, does
not stand in need of proof. Has not the
foremost'and most notorious of your
leaders declared that they would accom
plish their ends, regardless of law or the
provisions of the constitution? What
would you call Blood-to-the-bridles
Waite’s preaching? or Pitchfork Till*
man’s preaching? or Demagogue Bry
an’s preaching? who is turning himself
ihslde out, almost, in his endeavors to
fire the minds of one aaction of the
country against the other? or, to coma
nearer home, your own preaching in the
wind-up of your silly tirade against Mr.
Caldwell, where you declare that if you
did not get free coinage at the ballot box
you would get it some other way? Tes
timony could be multiplied to prove far
more than is charged.
Talk against millionalrea comes with
a bad grace from a party in the service
of one of the most gigantic syndicate*
of millionaires in the country, and one
of the tails of whose ticket is many timet
a millionaire, with the other not far be
hind. Perhape the queation is perti
nent: What amount of wealth, undei
the new dispensation, will disqualify *
man for eltisenship?
The quotation from the Hew York
Tribune, Mr. Selah, is, if anything,
rathsr mild. Mr. Bryan declared when
preparing for his eastern tour that h«
wee going into the enemy’a country. It
there any language too forcible to de
nounce the incendiary who entertaini
such ft sentiment, or Uia party which
•aoctloD* Itf and la not such an express
ion azacrable—for a man aspiring to the
moat exalted position within the gift ot
a people the very existence of whose
institutions depends upon their unity!
And still you complain that your party
is regarded as anarchlstical.
After afflicting his readers with a
couple of hundred other old musty
phrases, Mr. Selah treats them to the
novelty (T) "silver was struck down by
the financial assassins,” etc. Well, that
le certainly "fresh.”
Mow, Mr. Bel ah, will you please al
low me to take part la the examination t
Ton say that silver was worth li.M an
ounce when it was "struck down.”
(What a beautiful phrase!) That is not
exactly true. At the Ume of the Intro*
duction ot the bill to “strike down,” the
price was a little overil.«t. The dif
ference is not much, but it Is very Im
portant, as I shall show.
The silwrites strain their mouths
shouting that at the time the bill re
ferred to was under discussion, a syndi
cate of English owners of our bonds
seat a man here with n largo amount of
money to once congress to discard ail
ear that they, the bond holder*, might
be enabled thereby to collect In gold.
Kow let ue eee the reaaoMbleneea of
thle malicious calumny.
Bear In mind that neither silver nor
gold waa at that time coined for cur
rency purpoeea. Bat, aeeording to ell
write testimony, the 418$ grains of sil
ver necessary to constitute a silver dol
lar, was worth 11.08 In gold. Is it any
where within the bounds of reason that
any sane person, especially an astute
flnanceer, would pay a large sum of
money to bribe congress to legislate so
that he would receive pay for hie bouds
In dollars of 100 cents each Instead of
receiving dollars of 108 cents each? It
is contrary to one of tbe simplest princi
ples of human nature, that of self In*
tercet, and the bribery fake is, there*
fore a vile slander.
It la too much to aspect you, Mr.
Selah, to be any more enlightened ou
the relative values of products than the
average ailverite, or to be able to refer
effects to their proper causes. Ton com
plain that It was a “crime” to make gold
the standard of measurmant, then you
«meound-«ad, without a shadow of
authority, make silver, grain and other
products “meaaorsa of value.” Gold Is
the lawful standard, and, as you truly
■ay, an ounce of gold Is equal In value
to about 88 ounces of silver. This be
ing their relative value, why, then, In
the name of common sense do you make
the unreasonable demand that 18 ouaess
of silver shall be declared by lew to be
the equivalent of an ounce of sold?
Mr. 8elah’s reference to the relation
between the prices of silver and farm
products is made, of course, with a de
sire to deceive the agriculturists by
leading them to believe that tbe price of
silver governs the prices of their pro
duce—that they to each other In the re
lation of cause and effect—that a change
in the price of silver causes a change in
the prices of other commoditise. If this
is not the meaning of such references
they have no meaning. It la hardly nec
essary to characterise such trash as
stupidly faladous, much less to expose
the falser; but Harvey, Bryan and some
others of the cunning knaves have so
well aucceded in leading so many un
thinking people Into this insidious snare
that it may be well to give it a little
attention.
The lew of eeneetion ii Immutable.
Ton might u well undertake to con
vince en adult of ordinary intelligence
of hie non exiitenoe ae that an effect
can eziet without a canee, or that where
the canee ezlete the effect ie not inev
itable. ( When I uee the word canee, I
mean, of conree, phrelcal canee, or In
variable antecedence.) We are ae folly
convinced that water will drown or that
lire will burn ae that we are living. But
how la it in the ceae of the Intelligent
egricnltnriet, with regard to the depend
ence of the price of hie produeta upon
that of ailverf Doee he conaider, or do
you, or any one elie conaider, that an
advance in the price of ailver la a necee
aary condition to an advance in the
price of oommoditlea? The ebaurdlty la
too plain to need mention. The fact ia,
that it ia aafe to aay not an agricnlturiat
in ten thouaand knowa the price of ail
ver for a aingle day in the year, or who
haa the allghteat thought of its price
when he holda hia produce for higher
marketa. Still, they will continue, I
auppoaa, to allow themaelvea to be
fooled by thoae blatant knavea and dem
agoguea and their toola, although even
at thia very time the price of wheat ia
ateadUy advancing, while the price of
ailver ia declining. Pityt
It la not neoeaaary to refer to the con
dition of the country up to the cloae of
the laat republican adminiatraUon. Such
proaperlty aa we then enjoyed waa
acarcely known by any nation on the
earth before. Nor ia it neceaaary to re
fer to the depreaaion and diaaater that
h»« followed in the wake of then-’
▼•reel end destruction of the republican
policy of protection end reciprocity. C ■ ft
Our only hope to be able to britv about *•
the former happy condition of affaire I
Ilea in our suceen in the coming election.
Our auoceaa in this will, I am sure, re
Here the country of this horrible con- , ’
dltlon In which Mr. ttelah’a party haa
placed It.
Mr. Saleh quotes a part of a report !
made, he says, by aome commission in
1878. I auppoee the cause of its meeting
the approval of Mr. Selah’s party is the ’
fMt that the "commiaaion” aeema to re- ' ;
gret that the United 8tales has always
been "punctual in the fulfillment of its P'
obligations,” and that it is "the only -
nation that has never seeds a default in
Its promise,” but it haa seen the strong- ,
•at In Europe make default In their obli- ! k
gallons, etc., etc. Mo doubt the mem- >4
beta of that eonusission, if they are now ■ :
in the fleeh, ere ardent Bryaattee, unless
•ome radleal change has come over its
Aiwr uauvenng himeelf of the dryeat ,s
nd reebleat attempt that ha baa yet
mada to patch up a Ilat of hackneyd f
phraaaa and worn-out, dlaguatlng platl
tudee, Mr. Balah ealla upon "Mr. Bap 5
uty" or "Student* to anawar tha above
"facte or argument.” Aa Mr. Hagerty
coaaidarad that ba could occupy hla J
tlma to a batter advantage than by '’
oataring to tha whlma of a mono-maniac,*
the hateful (I hate to ba called upon to --31
refute falaahooda and abaurdltiaa) taak *
haa fallen to tha lot of your humble '
aervaat. Student.
Aa atatamenta. Mr. Salah'a jumbling of
word* la unintelligible. To call It aigu
mant la a mlauae of language.
Tha cloaing linaa of Mr. Salah'a
hanahaa wall leave little hope of raUef
from tha ayatem of torture which he per
aiata in Inflating upon ua. Ha threatena
atlll to torture ua with hla hoarae, aapul
ohral ravinga. Give ua meaalaa, whoop
ingoough, oollc, or even "rough on rata*;
•mpty Paadoraa box upon ua; vlait upon
our unfortunate haada any, or all, of
thaaa aflllotlona according aa our lniqui
tiaadaaarva, butaaveua from the equeak
lug, narve-cruahing, (oul-torturing
chaatlaamant of what Balah daaigaatea
hla "arttolaa.” Studuxt.
; ;
",f IK
ISiitjjSp
3
John Sklrving, chairman of the county
oantral oommlttee. and Clyde King,
aaoretary, have arrangeJ for the follow*
Ing republican ralliaa to ba bald in the
oounty, apaaklng at each meeting to
ooamenca at 8 o’clock aharp;
Ewing—Hon. t. 8. Bradley, of Wyo*
?*• “d Hon. J* I*.
■igSr8”-*■ L b~»w »*»
W. H. Morria, of Orate,
H. Meredith, of O’Neill, on Sap*
a Morria and Dr. J.
P. GllUgan, on September 89.
G°°** Laka church—Judge Morria,
and G. C. Haaalatt, on Oct. 80.
Inman—Hon. Thomaa McSheahy. of .
Ohio, on Oct. 1.
• Dalolt townahlp at the Maben achool
houee—Judge Morria and John Trom*
marabauaaar, on Oct. 1
Doraey—Judge Morria and S. - J."
Waakaa, on Oct 8.
Bagla Milla—Judge Morria and 8. J. ’ ■
Waakaa, on Oct. 8.
Pege—Hon. J. L. Caldwell of Lincoln,
on October 9.
O'Neill—Hon. J. L. Caldgall on
October 10.
The Latest.
‘■vc-’W
:Si;
Our new (til stock te now nearly all in
ud wo km amt been in u goodahape ' ff.
to aerve tha people of Holt county aa wo ,S"
an thia fall. Our atock of draaa good#
■arer waa more oomplete. It contaiaa
everything from a double, width cotton
woratad at 15c to the latent noveltiea in
alike and woratada. We call your aa*
pecial atteatlon to our lino of Bradhead :>1
woratada, tha moat popular, moot etyl* S
lah and boat wearing gooda aror aold
50 ceata per yard, and they coat thc <
aame in O’Neill aa la New York. •
Our liao of cloaka will aurpriae too'
whoa you hoar the pricea commando* ,r
at 58.75 for a atyliah light colored ladial /■
and running up to 810. For 80, 88.8K, - ^
87.00, 58.00 and 810 we can giT0.itn|>'^
raluea that cannot be equaled anywkOMV*
thia aide of Omaha.
On ahoea we can' do you more gifeji Iffl
than anybody, aa we hare the luB#;
atock within a hundred milee of OTndlm
and make a apecialty of carrying tftm.v* 1
beat gooda obtainable1: We bare thw
well-known S. P. Reed A Go. flneahne r
for ladiea, Miller’* celebrated Hieing ■■
aboea for erery day, the Little Giant
children’* and Miaeea’ aboea and Hg|»
kamp Bro’a. celebrated ahoea for men
and boya. v
We have a tremedoua large 11m of .>
underwear aad aome atartling bargain*.
Think of a good heary jeraey-ribbod. ■
fleece-lined ladiea’ reat or drawer* at 88* A
cent* each or 70 cento per 'auit, and an
extra heary one for 00 ceata each. 858
auita of mea’a wool mixed ahlrta and
drawer* at 00 cento per garment, and the .
hearieat one you erer aaw for 81. Kraggy .'^
one of theee are a leader and hard to T**
match anywhere. -3 , - '
Give ua a chance to aell you your fafr%i!
bill and we will acre you aome money. :ll
Youra truly, * t
J.P. MANN.-- ;;
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18-8