The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 03, 1896, Image 4

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    ■ The Frontier.
PUBLISHED EVEKT THURSDAY BT
THE FRONTIER PRINTINO COMPANY
D. H. CRONIN, Editor.
TO OUB SUBSCRIBERS.
All oar subscribers who are owing
ns on subscription are reqnsted to
call and settle their account. Do
not put off the payment of yonr sub
scription, bnt come and pay up at
once. We need the money to keep
, our business going, and if onr sub
scribers do not some in and pay np
we will hare to employ a collector.
^ Please call and settle.
Dice Cbokib will find it much
easier to stay ont of politics than to
^ try to get the Tammany animal into
raoing trim again.
t Pbbsidebt Ouvxlaiid has selected
- PfinoetoD, N. J., u his future home,
to which place he will remove after
hie term of office expires.
Laud in the Golden Irrigation
Disti ict will be worth 150 ah acre
two years after the ditch is corn
plated. Mark the prediction.
Bbtak has as mnch to learn about
the use of a gun to become a succ
essful banter as he has about politi
cal economy to become a statesman.
About the only way this govern
ment will get any redress from
: Spain for the property of Americans
^ destroyed in Cuba will be to use
« -
force.
—.....
' Mb. OinvusBO would better hire
a few extra detectives to keep watch
over Mm before all those wrhthy
, silver democratic Congressmen get
to Washington.
‘ * Tax democrats have not elected a
‘ President since the war—Cleveland
owes both bis terms to the votes of
disgruntled republicans—and pres
’ r ent indications are that they never
will again.
. • Taoaa who know and admire the
ability displayed by Chairman
- Hanna in the campaign need hardly
be told that the fool-talk printed as
his recent utter anoes are fakes
pure and simple.
-.
^ Wheat ia still going up. A short
time before eleotion it was worth 33
cents. Now it ia 61 cents. The
free silver advocates are not saying
much about cheap silver and cheap
wheat these days.
Gmanos is now the time set by
Gen. Weyler tor hie greet victory
over the Cubans. When Christmas
comes it will be an easy matter, if
■ he haan't been driven ont of Cuba,
for him to set a new date.
A & Shxldok, editor of the
** Chadron Signal, ia a candidate tor
speaker of the next house. A. E.
r has labored long and faithfully in
i,the populistic ranks; and now, that
he has been elevated to the official
' ranks, he is entitled to the beet there
ia.
,r: Tana isn’t a state in the Union
% tk*t hasn't get good republioan
cabinet timber. Although that adds
to Msj. McKinley's embarrassment,
•l!, it ia good for the party, because it
makes it certain that able men will
;tr compose the cabinet
Tns men who split the demooratio
" purty are now trying to pose as
v advisers to the republican party.
Thanka, awfully, gentlemen; but the
republican party has never gone out
side its own ranks for advisers, and
iaut likely to do so until old age
t ; carries it into aecond childhood.
Iv the enactment of a protective
tariff law will be a disappointment
- ; to the gold democrats they would
better be preparing themselves for
it. And, come to think about the
^ scatter, it will be much better to dis
appoint the gold democrats than to
disappoint the entire republican
party.
" AiLownra that it oould be Constitu
tionally done, which tow good law
1 , ya*s would do, it is difficult to see
• what Kansas could gain by making
* Mexican silver dollars a legal trader
‘ id tooe value; when they are only
worth fifty cents everywhere else,
This will strike most people as
another tool-scheme.—Ex.
YOU CAN'T WAIT LONGER I
• U
This cold weather reminds you that you must in- §
vest in more winter goods, to protect your health and |
make you comfortable, and the question arises: Where |
can you buy to the best advantage? Of course the |
catalogues from large city houses quote very low I
prices on some things, but when you get them you 1
find the quality is in proportion to the price, and you I
find they were not so cheap as you imagined after all, 8
and besides they don’t fit very well, but it is too much 1
trouble and expense to send them back so you make I
the best of it and say nothing. Look over this list of B
bargains and we feel sure you can find as good goods I
for the money at our store as you can anywhere. I
Cloaks.
A good Satinet in light color at
•8.75.
A better one in light color at $4.50.
A good navy blue for 85.00.
All wool Boucle only 86.00.
A fine SILK LINED Boucle 810.00.
The moat faahionable garments
made at $11.50, 819.50, 818.75 and
815.00.
Stylish capes 84.50 to 816.50.
Dress Qoods.
86-inch all wool novelties very
good and very stylish, at 80c per
yard.
A beautiful line of the celebrated
Broadhead worsteds, at 50c per yard,
the most fashionable goods ever
made to sell at this price.
A big line of cotton worsteds and
fancy suitings at 15c per yard.
Fine all wool serge at 85c.
44-Inch serge, extra heavy, at 60c,
and a beautiful one at 75c.
There is no Henrietta like Arnold
and we sell them at 75c per yard,
which is the price you have to pay
other places for ordinary goods, same
width.
Clothing.
Here ia where we ere making our
light for business thla season and in
order to secure a big trade have cut
profits in two. You have only to see
our goods to convince you it is not
necessary to send away for bargains
in clothing.
We can sell you a good cassimere
suit at IS.OO.
Better ones in dark colors, $6.00
and 96.60.
Good all wool, blue or brown, 96.75
A fine all wool cassimere, well made
and well lined, our very best bargain,
98.75.
Good bright black clay worsteds, at
90.00, 910.00 and $18,50, these are
extra good values.
Have you seen our black cheviot
ulsters at 96.75, you never saw suoh in
your life; and our 910.00 Irish Frieze
are just as good value.
Beaver coats for dress wear, 98.75,
910.00, 918,00 and $15.00. You can't
beat them anywhere.
Tbe best dollar sweater in' tbe
market, and a first class line of Fur
Coats ranging in price from 910.00
980.00,
Groceries.
10 pounds of granulated sugar,
#1.00,
All package coffee 18c.
32-pound oatmeal, $1.00.
Good rice 20 pound for 81.00.
82 bars good soap, $1.00.
25 bars Beat ’Em All sosp, $1.00.
Spear Head tobacco, 88c.
Climax tobacco, 38c.
Horse Shoe tobacco, 88c.
Good plug tobacco, 20c.
Good smoking tobacco, 15c.
We sell you a Japan tea at 35c or
3 pound for $1.00 that most stores are
asking 50c per pound for.
Shoes.
This has always been our leading
department and no store in the Elk
horn Valley can give you the assort
ment or satisfaction we can.
We can sell you a fair article in a
womans’ shoe at $1.25, in a heavy
one, and $1.50, $1.75 and $2 00 for
finer ones; while for $2.50 we give
you a very fine shoe fully warranted
and as good styles as oura$3.00 and
$3.50 ones.
4-stay wool boots, the best, 75c
per pair. A small lot boys’ boots,
sizes 11 and 12, worth $1.50 to $2.00
at 75c to close.
ALL GOODS AND PRICES AS REPRESENTED
Don’t fail to see our beautiful line of Christmas goods
now on exhibition. You can find appropriate presents
for all classes, at prices to suit your pocket book.
J. P. MANN.
Joi Blackburn has drawn a pub
lic salary so long that it goes hard
with him to have to give it up.
Knowing his re-eleotion to the
Senate to be impossible, he has. be
gan scheming for the democratic
nomination for governor. His antics
in the last campaign ought. to make
him an easy man for the republicans
to defeat
Tbb Chioory Company pays oat
about $600 per month to its em
ployes here, and we are informed
that by the first of January the pay
roll will amount to about $800 per
month. Instead of trying to tear
down or ruin this industry we should
all work together to endeavor to
secure more factories. Put your
shoulder to the wheel and let us
push onward. Prosperity will not
come if we sulk by the roadside and
do nothing to assist ourselves.
-«■<«»■-»
Tot Irrigation convention held at
North Platte last week was a most
pronounced success. There were
two special features, valuable papers
by scientists and the still more vain
able recital of the experiences of
these who have made a practical
suceeess of irrigation in Nebraska.
Now that the supreme court of the
United Slates has upheld the
Wright law one of the chief elements j
of doubt in relation to the advance
ment of irrigation projects in Ne
braska has been removed, and next
year many additional thousands of
acres of Nebraska land will be put
under the ditch.—Nebraska Signal.
Som people appear to be Burpris-!
ed to learn - that about the first
official act of President McKinley
will be the calling of an extra ses i
sion of Congress to pass a protective
tariff bill. Why, we cannot under
stand. Every prominent republican
speaker in the campaign promised
the people that this very thing
should be done, and certainly there
is no one thing which the country
stand in more pressing need of than
a tariff law which will produce the
revenue needed and at the aame time
protect every class of American pro
ducts. The only regret is that this
legislation cannot be had before
next spring.
RESULT OP THE ELECTION.
Premium on gold disappeard.
Hoarding of gold oame to an end.
Banks began paying out gold on
moderate sized cheeks.
Savings depositors began turning
into the banks gold which had been
in safety deposit vaults.
Foreign exchange, bought because
it was payable in gold, was offered
back to the banks.
■ New savings banks were opened
by the score.
Goverment bonds advanced to the
highest price reached this year.
American securities had a boom
on the London Stock Exchange, and
the New York market was up from
3 to 5 points.
Good stocks were in demand in
Chicago, the wheat market showed
a net gain of 1£ cents, and even
silver certificates rallied.
Interest rates in Now York
dropped from 50 to 4 per cent and
though local interest rate did not
change, more money was loaned.
Country merchants began to order
by telegraph the goods they had
long needed but had dared not to
buy.
Wholesale houses began to fill the
orders which had been given them
conditioned on the election of Me
Kinley.
Traveling salesmen, held back
from the road for weeks and months
by the unsettled buisness conditions,
left for their grounds on ever}' train.
Eastern manufacturers advised
their customers in Chicago that.
prices on staple goods had been
advanced.
The assurance of better times
springing from the settlement of the
money question on the right side
shone from the eye of every busi
ness man in the city.
These were some of the things
that happened in Chicago as a result
of McKinley’s election and the
triumph of sound money.—Times
Herald.
Tom Shabkey is now the champion
pugilist, having defeated Bob Fitz
simmons at San Francisco yesterday.
The report that Kansas abounds
in “deserted wives” will not be ac
cepted as an evidence of conversion
to the single standard.—Chicago
Tribune.
Poor
Blood
When a horse is poor In flesh,
a new harness won't give him
strength. If a house 'is cold
new furniture won't warm it.
If your strength is easily ex
hausted; work a burden;
nerves weak; digestion poor;
muscles soft; if you are pale
and worn out. the trouble is
with the blood. It is not so
mueh IMPURE blood as
POOR blood. Pills won't
make this blood rich; nor will
bitters, nor iron tonics, any
more man a new harness will
give strength to the horse, or
new furniture will make a
house warm. For poor blood
you want something that will
make rich blood.
SCOTT'S EMULSION of
Cod-liver Oil with Hypophos
phites is the best remedy in the
world for enriching the blood.
have prepared a book telling you
nor* about the tubject, Sent Free.
For«alefeyaUdTugfeisisat50c.&$Jf0Q.
SCOTT & BOWNE, New York.
ELKHORN valley ^
PLOW FACTORY
O'NEILL NEB.
•••••
EMIL SNIGGS, Prop.
-Manufactures the Hamnell Open Mould-Board Stirring 1
Plow. Also general blacksmithing and practical horseshoer.
Wagon and Carriage woodwork carried on in connection.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Also dealer in
Parm Implements. Handles the Scandi implements and
the Plano Rakes, Mowers and Binders. Parties wishing
anything in this line call and see me.
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-p]
- JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE■STATE•BAN
OK O'NEILL.
CAPITAI—.$30,000. ^
Prompt Attention Given to Collectioi
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINE!
Chicago Lumber Yard
Headquarters for . . .
LUMBER
COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
„ I O’Neill,
Yards < Page,
{Allen.
A
0.0.
SNYDER & GO.
0 NhiL'LBUSINESS DIRECTORY
J)B-* J. P. GILLIGAN,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office in Holt County building,
All work caih in advance. Night wort
positively refused.
O’NEILL, . . NEB.
JJARNKY STEWART,
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Address, Page, Neb.
g H. BENEDICT,
LAWYER,
Offiee in the Judge Roberts building, north
of O. O. Snyder’s lumber yard,
O NEILL, NEB.
omi m son comm suse
Stage leaves O’Neill at 8:86 a. n., arriving at
Spencer at 1p.m.; at Butte. S:80 p. m.
8. D. Gaixbktinb, Prop.
DeYARMAN’S BARN.
B. A. DbYARMAN, Manager.
D'Y ARM AN’S
rrnrrmrm
Livery, Feed and Sale Stable.
Finest turnouts in the city.
Good, careful drivers when
wanted. A!jO run the O’Neill
Omnibus line. Commercial
trade a specialty.
HOTEL
Enlarged
Refurnished
- Refitted
Only First-class H
In the City.
W, T. EVANS
(ft
Purchase T|e*tlP aqp gentian Mur
Freight »i» me p
F. E.&M.V. andS.
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPARTl
oono un.
Passenger east,
Freight east.
Freight east,
•JO i
0:80 A.
•JO
10:1
3:10«sv.
oono was*.
Freight west,
Passenger west,
Freight,
• 3:10 r. m
• 11:87 r. m
3:10 pin.
tatfon ^ree *10^eri °* flratrcl&sfl tranipor
Fer any Information call on
W. J. DOBBt^,
O’NEILL. NEB/
1
A«t.
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Jjfented—in Idos £HSS»
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