£t» **** •** vj The ■ ;,.'N «TII IINTINO CO. ■UMORIPTION. BI.M MR ANNUM. D. H. CRONIN. CDI1 VOLUME XVII. O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, OCTOBER 29, 1896. NUMBER 17. NEWS SANS WHISKERS Items of Interest Told As They Are Told to Us. WHEN AND HOW IT HAPPENED Local Happenings Portrayed for Omars! Miloatim sat Isneswt. E. 8. Kinch visited In Sioux City Monday. _ Mrs. Cress went down to Sioux Citv Monday morning. Miss Rose Merithew is visiting friends in Atkinson this week. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. John Dressier, i Monday morning, a son. Rev. B. Biain will preach in the M. E. church next Sunday morning. Court Reporter King went to Keys Paha county Sunday evening to attend court. __ Charlee F. Lantes and Edith P. Cor* . nish were married by Judge McCutchan Tuesday. ■__ Bernard Kernan has recovered suffi ciently from his recent illness to be around again. C. B. Oldfield, of Sioux City, pres ident of the American Chicory Co., was in the city Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. McHugh are re joicing over the arrival of a baby girl at their home Friday morning. John McNichols came down from At kinson Saturday to'spend a day with his mother before she departed for the west. There will be a meeting of the fire department Monday evening at 8 o’clock in McCafferty’s hall. A full attendance is desired. WANTED—A girl to do general housework. Will pay 88 per week to * competent girl. Enquire of Mbs. E. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Smith returned last Sunday evening from North Platte, ftwh., where they had been visiting relatives. ' The Ladies’ Working Society will meet next Wednesday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. J. H. Meredith at 2 o’clock, _ Corbett> photo studio and dental parlors will be open from October 23 to 80, 1808, inclusive. 0-5 A. H. Corbett. Mrs. McNIchols, mother of Steve and Dave, left Sunday morning for Aspen, Col., where she will remain during the winter visiting relatives and friends. Will Mullen, who has been attending school at Lincoln the past year, came home Saturday evening and will spend a k few weeks recuperating among friends. J Dr. C. H. DeLong. the Omaha dentist, will arrive in O’Neill November 4 and will remain a few days. He will be prepared to do all kinds of dental work. A hacking cough is not only annoy ing to others, but is dangerous to. the , person who has it. One Minute Cough .Cure will quickly put an end to it. ^Morris A Co. Mr. A. Snyder, of Wyoming, 111., was in the city last week looking after his landed interests. Mr. Snyder says Ill inois will give McKinley an overwhelm ing majority. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve is an an ticeptic, soothing and healing applies tion fot burns, scalds, cuts, bruises, etc., and cures piles like magic. It instantly sto0s pfcln. Morris & Co. lion—ABogi last Thursday, between the Checker barn and B. A. DeY arman’e residence, a pair of child’* mittens, blue with black cuffs. Finder please leave of the age. One Minute Cough Cure acts speedily, safely and never fails. Asthma, bronchitis, coughs and colds are cured by it. Morris 6 Co. Hon. Albert Watkins, of Lincoln, and Hon. W. R. Patrick, of Omaha, will address the people of O’Neill tomorrow evening on the issues of the day from a democratic sound money standpoint All are invited to attend. There is ao 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. ll-4 J. P. Mann. “ you get hungry waiting for the re turns election night come to the Millard building. The Ladies’ Aid will serve lunch and oysters from 9 till 12 p. m., and they will also have a good chicken pie dinner the next day. Everybody come. Com. Speed aifal safety are the watchwords Social at McCallerty’a ball next Mon day evening._ Dr. Scopgin, dentiat, Monday, Octo ber 26, 27, 28, 29 and 80. Fine gold fillings, gold crown and bridge work a specialty. 16-1 The social and entertainment whioh was to be given by the ladies of the Catholic church at McCafferty’s hall this evening has been postponed nntll next Monday evening. Dr. Scoggin, the Norfolk dentist, will again visit O’Neill, Monday, October,26, 27, 28, 29 and 80, prepared to do work in all the branches of dentistry. Office at Hotel Evans. 16-1 Word has been received from Mrs. Welton at Mankato, Minn., that her daughter Ada’s health is improving slowly and that she is thought to be out of danger, a fact her many friends here will be pleased to note. Now 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. 7tf Neil Bbbknait. McClure's Magazine for November will contain the first installment of a five or six part story by Rudyard Kip ling. It is Kipling’s first long story of American life, being a tale of stirring adventure among the Gloucester fisher men on the Grand Banks. It will be illustrated with drawings from life by 1. W. Taber._ Henry Haynes and Mrs. Julia Lyons were married by County Judge Me Cutchan last Wednesday morning at the residence of Mrs. Lyons in this city. Several invited guests were present to witness the ceremony. They have the best wishes of a host of friends for their future happiness. Thk Frontier ten ders its congratulations. A young man in thia city who be came enamoured by the accounts of army life in Cuba, wrote to the Police Gazette and ashed the following ques tion: “Where can I go to join the Cuban army." The reply was received through the columns of the paper and was a very terse and truthful one. It Is as follows: “O’Neill is a good place to stay. Spanish bullets are hard to dodge.” The handsome young man in epaulets on the cover of the October Midland Monthly (DesMoines, Iowa), is none other than Grant at the age of 22 The first installment of Col. John W. Em erson’s "Grant’s Life in the West," re* moves all questions as to the liability of the author to interest and as to his per sonal knowledge of the character and career of the greatest soldier in history. This is a work one should read from the tart. __ There is trouble in the camp of the retail grocers and a broad smile on the faces of their customers, while the «"«•* chants are pounding each other ou_t£e back with cut prices. We wsut to tell our customers, and everybody else, that we are strictly in the deal and selling groceries at any kind of prices to get trade—ain’t particular about profit, and samply make prices to get biz. regard less of cost or the price the other fellows make. 10-2 J. P. Mann, About twenty-five members of the O’Neill ladies’ McKinley club went up to Atkinson Tuesday evening to attend the rally. Several members of the Mc Kinley and Hobart club were also in at tendance. The parade was one of the largest ever seen in Holt county. The meeting was a very enthusiastic one and was addressed by O. M. Lambertson, of Lincoln, who presented our present issues in a clear, logical and convincing manner, and was applauded heartily throughout the course of his remarks. Previous to the speaking the ladies from this city rendered an original campaign song that captured the crowd and they were loudly cheered. The meeting was a hummer. _ John McBride on Monday started for Park City, Utah, where he has accepted an important position in the office of Thomas Kearns, a large mine owner, and one of the bolting delegates to the republican national convention. We knew Tommy Kearns when he was a "poor Irish laddie,” starting out in the world to seek a fortune, borrowing 930 to take him to Utah, If we mistake not McBride furnished the money. That was only ten years ago. But Tom struck k rich and is now rated "away up there.” Wealth does not make him a snob, how ever. He is the same genial, open hearted Tom, and puts lots of money in the way tb help relatiyes and old friends, and is ever ready to do a kind turn. The F. P. wishes McBride good luck in Utah, trusts that life among the Mormons will be congenial and profitable, and that Kearns will find him too valuable to part with.—Stuttgart Free Press. A PIMMOTUBE! Bryuite Fallacies Exposed T* Public Inspection. UNABLE TO STAND THE TEST Xis theories Bested tad tamlM it Saod lam. You are loo late, Ur. McCafferty, with your claim for a patent on the unlimited 16 to 1 fake. “Silver Dick" bad “done" filed bis caveat ten or twelve yenra be fore 1888, tbe year you waked up Billy. And Billy, too, where wai he playing Rip Van Winkle up to thla late date? Both of you are anywhere from ten yeare to ten, decadea behind the age on principlea 6f civil government. But it is doubtful Whether your claim on Billy'a conversion la any better eatabliahed than your claim to Dick Bland’a place in the drama, at least Billy never manifested violent aymptoma of the craze until the silver syndicate, it is said, made him a stock holder in the World-Herald com pany. Up to that date he howled with a voice like a caliope that prices were too high, all on account of the “robber tariff." But the American people repu* diated his theory, and Nebraska repudi ated himself. Now prices are too low, and unlimited coinage the cure. What next, I wonder? Yes, John, very likely they will call you “proud.” A man who has pride to throw away on Billy must have a superfluity of it. i suppose it is ss well to suffer ps* tiently the fantastic capers of this literary merry-Andrew, as it is a mere waste of time to try to improve him. Atter giving what Jeremy Bentham would call an "abomuiable" defi nition of ‘‘goyernment,’* which, be ing immaterial, I will pass by, he comes at us with this piece of logic: "There fore if a majority of the (People say, by their votes, on the Sd of November, that sixteen ounces of silver is equal in value to one ounce of gold it will become a ‘fiction of our mind* and will be later on ratified by an act of congress and signed and made law by the stamp of President Bryan’s signature”—allow me to breathe.' Readers, I will not insult your intel ligence by commenting upon this quint essence of idiocy. I will, however, call your attention to one statement in the above strangulation of the syllogistic principle, and which is the central idea around which Bryanism revolves. It Is that the relative values of gold and sil ver are determined by the government stamp, instead of depending upon eotn mercial principles. If you put the ques tion to them squarely as to whether they believe this "principle" or not, you need not expect a direct answer. They will “answer your question by asking an other.” It is only in a stuttering man ner, as above, that you can catch them at it. But here we have it from the ■^patriarch” (self styled so) himself, the "oracle” of the "rehabilitation of silver” as be claims to be ( regardless of Bland’s ten years’ seniority ) that sixteen ounces of silver will, in the event of Mr. Bry an’s success, be made "equal to one ounce of gold." Now, I submit the fol lowing question: If the fixing or reg ulating of values can be effected simply by enscting a law to that effect, why can we not make the legal coinage ratio between gold and silver one to one, or even up? Or why can we not give copper a chance and ring it in upon an equality with both gold and silver? Or, in order to make money still more plen tiful, why not rehabilitate iron? and so on down to the cheapest material. If the question of fixing values be a mere question of statutory law, why cannot the cheapest commodity, and the small est quantity of it, be made equal in value to any quantity of gold? Bryan ism affords no answer to thesf questions. Still his dupes will tag after hW tail and shout "hurrah for Bryan.” section 1 of the coinagf actof 1878, and section 2 of the act of 1888-90 is good enough authority upon the equality between the gold and silver dollars for anyone but a Bryanlte. But what care they for the law! "The Mohammedans used to shout: ‘There is no Ood but Allah, and Mohammed is his prophet!'" The Bryanites might shout: “There is no lawgiver but Billy t” etc. Both gold and silver are legal tender m Mexico. Why are they not at a parity? Because there is practically no limit to the coinage; and the govern ment, if it were disposed to do so, could not keep them at a parity no more than could our own government under such circumstances. I don’t blame you much, John, for not being capable of distinguishing between matters of fact and matters of opinion. You seem to think that quoting Brown’s or Smith’s opinion upon some question is stating a fact. You are so prone to using other people’s judgments, instead of your own, that you hare lost the power to diacriminate. And, by the way, strange aa it may seem for a Bry anite, nearly all Mr. McCafferty’a authorities are “foreigners,” end nearly all English, at that Attd he asks where I get the word “gllbe-tongued dema gogue.” And It must be in English, that U, I (mppoae, 1 must tell him In English, •■o you, see John it patriotic when he would establish a system of coinage— unlimited 16 to l—that must be distinct ively ' American. But everything else, even opinions lit favor of the above scheme, must be English, yon know. Such hypocrisy it beneath contempt. ftoW, John, I will say, in the first ptaoe, '‘gllbe-tongued demagogue” art two wfiHIa, not ope. They come about as near being one word as "three-legged stool * But I don't think you will find the latter in the dictionary—you might, however. The letter "e" ingllbe should Cot hate been .used. It is a mitg-spell ing. Horace Greeley, they say, spelled "door" d-o-a-r-e. But that does not jus tify me In outraging the delicate literary taste of a polished literateur—(pardon me, John, this word is not pure English) like Jobh—who "knows nothing about 'Jargon.* ( Nor about anything else, I will add on the quiet.) Of course a common dod-hopper, like your humble servant, nan pass, not merely wrong spelling,, but the grossest violations of rhetoric and grammar without suffering anetvous thockor even making a re mark about them. For instance: "Six teen ounces is,” etc. "Strictly in It.” "Where ie-he at?” Theee are part of polished John’s vocabularly. "Haven't you 'hots' (gold) on the brain, too?” These illustrations could be increased almoet indefi nitely, but I don’t wish to offend John’s sensitive taste. John “strains At (hi ffBftt. hut fivtllrtwi thm mkioI ** John, with his usual consistency, brings McOuUongh u n witnesa, and again brings the same McCullough to impeach him. That la, "he appeals from Peter drank to Peter eober.” The Bryanitsa lore to dwell on the per capita of 1804, when there was not a dollar in coin in circulation, and when a paper dollar was worth aa low asthirty fl«f cents .in coin. But the Bryanitea claim, vMa It answers their purpose, that the prices of products depend upon the amount of "primary” money in dr* culatfon. They also cite 1804 and there abouts aa the era of our greatest pros perity. Hence, the era of greatest pros perity that the country has enloyed was when there was not a dollar of "pri mary” money in sight. And hasn't Mr. McCafferty figured out that the United States at that time lacked several mill ions of having any money at all In cir culation? Your question, "What prevents the money of the country from circulating,” John, is an easy one. The owners pre fer to hold It until they are assured, by the election of Mr. McKinley, that they can invest it with safety. Choke off the howling mob of Tillmans, and Waites, and Altgelds, and their ilk who are now engaged in goading the people of the country into riot and discord, and you will quickly find the millions of capital now lying idle seeking investment. You ask what do I know about the Gresham law. It seems to be something new to you. You are like the Bryanite who said to his opponent, who used the above principle to confirm his argument: "When - Bryan is elected we’ll repeal the darned Gresham law.” But it is not a civil enactment—not a law that can be repealed. Briefly stated it is, “bad moner drives out good money." Mr. Gresham was the first to annunciate it in England, it aeems, as Newton wifi the first to give formal expression to the law of gravitation. Of course it is natural for you to think that the valid* ity of a principle or of a natural law dependa upon the political creed of him who gives expression to it—that is.if he is in sympathy with the Bryan schema, it is all right whether it is or not. But if he is out of harmony with that arch demagogue, then it is all wrong upon general principlee. Nit so, John. Judge Bradley’s opinion may carry great weight on questions of law, but I prefer McKinley on questions of states* manship. Here again you confound opinion with fact. But if it were a matter lol opinion McKinley would be entitled to preference, in accordance with the maxim governing the compe tence of a witness: "Trust each person in his own specialty." But it is not a matter of opinion. It is a fact that the mints were open at least from 1880 to 1878. Did they furnish a single dollar toward carrying on the general business of the country? Not one. flow was it about the factories? The industries of the whole previous history of the country taken together is insignificant in comparison with the re sults of manufacturing and commerce lor those ten or twelve years. The mints were open during Buchanan's adminis tration, but the bonds of the United Statu, bearing six per cent. Interest, went begging for purchasers at a dis count of from six to ten per cent. A few months ago our flee per cent, bonds commanded a premium of twelve per cent., with bide for nearly half a billion dollars more than wuneoeuary to cover the Issue, and this at a time when the “mints are closed to silver” and when charlatans are bellowing from the curb stones and through the press that “there is not enough money in the country.” Mr. McCafferty does not deny that there Is sufficient money In the country. He thinks we are suffering from financial apoplexy, in fact. He wants this money to get into circulation, as we all do, but, like every other quack, his remedy is worse than the dlseue. Your comparison is not a happy one, John. A better one would be to compare the condition of the country to a wmtern town surrounded by a gang of highway men, In which case every prudent owner of wealth would conceal it u best he could, and allow it to remain in hiding until the outlaws had dispersed and he could withdraw it with security. Mus cle the gang of incendiaries that you haye running at large inciting the peo ple of the country to rebellion and making the investment of capital dan - gerous, and you will soon find that the trouble will cease, under republican mangement, and that the “circu lation" will resume its accustomed, natural condition. jonn lines to ape toe manerltma or hla god, Billy, and other* whom ha eon* aldarahla superiors. “I hare here be fore me the report of the commtaalon,” etc., quoth he. So far aa hla commenta ahow be would auffer leaa confualon if the document were behind him. The condition of thoae poor creaturea whom you repreaent aa eking out a mere ex iatence la pitiable, indeed. But you would not acruple to make their con dition atlll more Intolerable by reducing the purchasing power of their pittance to one-half Ita preaent capacity. Again, he hypocritically, like Bewail and St. John and the reat ot hla millionaire frienda, etripa hla teeth to ahout "money changera,” and rehearaea the paaaage of acripture misconstrued, corrupted by all thoae of hla ilk., and. then Uirna with a grfn to look for the uaual applause. The queation Involved la: Why doe* your party engage the uae of other peo ple’* money or property under the falae promise that they mean to pay it back or return It when, at theaame time, perhaps, they are concocting schemes to defraud him out of all or a part of it? Ia there a defense, either in law or moral*, for such decaption and dishonesty? And, referring to the scrip tural text: "And, entering into the tem ple, he began to cast them out that sold therein, and them that bought.’—Luke, 19-45. It ia not neoesaary to say that it was wrong, a sacrilege, to carry on commerce ot any kind in that sacred edifice. But who, except one demoralized by a constant perversion of facta, would construe this "buying and selling” into the lending of money? It might be taken to meau the buying and selling of hardware or other merchandise, but not money-lending. Those hypocrites, too, have nothing but anathemas for those who lend money for a profit, except he be one of themselves. Men and com panies of large capital and where money ia plentiful, put out money as low aa 2+ per cent, per annum, and sometimes leas. How ia it withethose engaged in the mercantile business? Let the "peo ple” who are driven to Montgomery Ward St Co .’a ana wer. When they don’t me a man ■ wares mey pass nim oy. it would be well (or thoae Bryanitea to do likewise or they may have a stone thrown into their own basket of eggs. No well-regulated Bryanite hatangue Is complete without a vilification of the nami of Sherman, although they cannot point their finger to a dishonest or dis honorable act of his during his whole public life. Things have not gone just to suit them. Some of their leaders said something went wrong at some time and that Mr. Sherman was the cause of it, and then the whole kennel take! up the howl. But Senator Sherman has out lived the barking of the big dogs among his enemies and he will be likely to sur vive the yelping of the poodles. Mr. McCafferty would also like to dis tort Major McKinley’s expressions in favor of as large a use of silver as is consistent with a sound monetary policy into an approval of its unlimited coin age. This trying to steal in the names of eminent authors in approval of fal lacies which they would indignantly scout, is too old a dodge. Mr. Me. Certainly, John, it was because the silver dollar did not circulate that it was dropped from the list of coins in the act of ’78, and It did not circulate because it was worth more as bullion, and hence tbe stamp did not “fix its value," and hence how stupid the parties to the “crime" to drop it from the list so that they might receive payment for their bonds in dollars of leu value, and hence the melicioueneea and villainy of thoee who wilfully, knowing their char gee to be false,. slander the names of honorable gentlemen who took part in the passage of the act—and a whole lot of other "hence*.” Give yon rope enough and yon will do the rest. But silver did not last long above par after the act. Like other products, it is sub |ect to the inevitable law of anpply and demand, (which even Bryanitee recog nise, except when applied to silver) and, in spite of the favors bestowed upon it by a too-indulgent government, it landed where it is to-day at about half its former value. And the "chumps,” (John does not deal in "elang words or (ar gon”) as John calls us, are eaddled with a debt of several millions of dollars, on their bullion purchases, made for the sole benefit of the mine owners, who now pay them back with curses for their pains. John wonders that nearly all the bankers are on one side of this question. The answer is that thoee who are on the sound money side only show their good sense. After quoting from Horace White's catechism to some extent and confound ing prices with values, as be con founds opinion with fact, John has discovered an argument that will "knock the gold bugs to smithereens.” In his endeavor to unfold his tale (or perhajna tail; he may be the "missing link” In disguise), however, he becomes as hope lessly entangled as the traditional "raveled hunk of yarn” and vehemently calls npon Student to extricate him from his trouble. ai joana request la somewhat in the nature of a peremptory demand, I with to etete In the flret place that he haa no ‘ valid claim upon my aaelatance. The faot that he ie ao mentally blind aa to be unable to perceive any other than a flctidouB cauie for the explanation of certain effecta, ie no proof that aome other and real came doea not exist. This is what Is known as the "argument ignorantiam," which means that your position is correct it your opponent can not prove the contrary. It Is his place to support his conclusion by valid jnae* oning, not to rest it on my inability to prove the opposite;' ' But; la the Beat place, as It is the first time that either of these twin sisters, with whom I have been coquetting for the last couple of months has laid down a scientific print ciple as a basis for any part of their "argument,*’ notwithstanding my per sistent and urgent demands for such, I will fake advantage of the opportunity and in a few words remove the mask from one of the Bryanite principal ar guments. John lays down the principle that “every effect must have a cause.” There ie nothing truer. Be says, too, that aa, decline in the pricee of agricultural ‘ products is the effect of the appreciation of gold as a cause. Now, if a decline in Reprice of products is the effect of an advance in the value of gold, then it necessarily follows that an advance in the prices of products is the effect of a decline in the value of gold, and that to eay there is no change in pricee of products is tantamount to saying there la no change in the value of gold. Let. us now examine a little into this matter. Agricultural products 1 in general are such commodities ar are usually pro duced by a farmer in the line of his business as such. For the last year or so there has been a general decline in the price of wheat, but the prices of | cattle have advanced from fifty per cent, to over one hundred per cent., while the prices of horses remained about station ary. Therefore, the value of gold has advanced and declined and remained about stationary at the same time. But this is a contradiction, as the value of gold cannot advance and decline at the same time—that is, a thing cannot be and not be at the same time. This ar gument holds good for any other product of the farm and for any period of time in the history of commerce. , I nave now refuted your claim that the creating of value is a mere matter of legislation, by reducing it to aa ab surdity (reductio absurdum); and your claim that appreciation of gold is the cause of decline In prices of products, by direct sylogism. These two claims are the foundation stones of Bryanism, and their removal upsets the super structure. Several other facts go to prove that all you need to convict yourself is suffi cient privilege to talk. For instance, to prove that the decline in the price of wheat is caused by the gold standard,you make your starting point 1887, when the country had been on a gold basis for fourteen yesrs. and when wheat brought a higher Oprice in gold than it did immediately before the "crime” of *78. This shows that if the gold standard had any effect at all upon prices it was a beneficial one. Three or four years ago the price of rye on the Chioago market advanced to (Continued on page S.)