The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 11, 1897, Image 4

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    .The Frontier
PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY BY
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPAN1
D. H. CRONIN, Editor.
S TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS.
All oar subscribers who are owing
. ns on sabecription are reqnsted tc
call and settle their account Dc
not pat off the payment of yonr sub
scription, but come and pay up al
once. We need the money to keep
our business going, and if our sub
scribers do not come in and pay up
we .trill have to employ a collector.
Please call and settle.
Diversified farming is what pays.
Plant a little ohioory, care for it and
see the profit you can make.
Sehatob-elect Heitfeld, of Idaho,
calls himself a populist, but is said
to be pledged to act with the demo
crats. _ _
Edison is at work on a new inven
tion by which a mad can be seen
through, something far in advance
of the X-ray process.
It is evident from the members
already selected that brains are to
be a marked feature of President
McKinley’s cabinet.
Nevada is a failure as a state,
from almost every point of view,
but it hopes to become a success as
a prize fighting ground.
m *..
Representative Grimes’ woman
sufferage bill is dead, bat he will
still be the hero of Mary Ellen
Lease and her followers.
Tbb late general Sheridan nearly
ten years ago made the prediction
in a pnblio speeoh that arbitration
would some day role the world.
Senator Dubois will soon have
leisure to devote some time to a
study of the various sorts of trouble
which follow going off halfcocked.
It would seem, in view of the
limited number of them, that the
so-called populist leaders might
agree, but they do not; not even
upon free coinage.
It seems as if ex-Gongressman
Pickier was going to secure the
seven populist votes necessary to
eleot him to the United States
senate from South Dakota.
Tox Watson says that Bryan has
not shown that he possesses pathos.
Well, Tom, we guess he hasn’t got
any; he has certainly had reasons
enough to show it if he had it
' Having made Borne sort of a deal
with the sultan, Russia now grandil
oquently announces that it will not
Join the European powers in the
proposed pillaging of poor Turkey.
m «»» s.
A bill has been introduced in the
Colorado legislature to save the
members from being sued or jailed
until the session has expired. The
measure was perhaps necessary in
view of the fact that 1,120 bills have
crept into the state house this
session. ‘ -
Tbi Texas legislator who has
introduced a bill to prevent the sale
of firearms in the state, is open to
suspicion of being interested in
pushing the immediate sale of fire
arms in the state, by frightening
everybody into buying a supply
„ while they can.
Jfi I», m alleged in some quarters,
the senate committee on foreign
relations amended the arbitration
treaty to wreck it, why did the four
most pronounced jingoists on that
committee—Morgan, Mills, Daniel
and Cameron—vote against the
, amendments T
Siobitiit Francis, of Missouri,
has not been in charge of the inter'
ior department long, but his aotioi
in moving the pension offices front
Topeka and Dee Moines to St Louii
indloatee that he learned verj
quickly what he was there for
—Sioux City Times.
i CoMBissiua Da Aaxoxn’s semi
humorous attack upon Secretary
Morton was bad enough, but whet
he accused the secretary of “trian
gularificatjonableness,” he cross*
the limit by making the longes
, word, aside from technical terou
ever assn in English.
&&-4.vi y .. . /y,
If an implied recognition of. the
; Monroe doctrine be the cornerstone
of the arbitration treaty, as claimed
• by Secretary Olney’s friends, why
should Secretary Olney object to the
r specific recognition made by the
amendments to the treaty ?
Senator Peffeb will find no
1 magazine editor willing to give
space to his financial ramblings
after the third of next month, not
withstanding his having been re
cently paid for an article of that
nature,
--
Afpomatox battle field is to be
converted into a sheep farm by its
owners. A few years ago a syndi
cate purchased the field, including a
tract of about 3,000 acres, and efforts
have been made to get the govern
ment to establish there a national
park, but in vain. All members of
the syndicate have sold ont save two
and they are going into the sheep
raising business.—Sioux City Times.
-.
Tax populist legislature has been
in session about a month, and the
only thing they have done is to un
seat four republicans and put
fusionites in their places so that
they could declare the amendment
providing for five judges of the
supreme court, carried, and thus
seat the populists. What a just
party of puiity and reform this isl
If they have no precedent to govern
them they make one. If there is no
law under which they can do some
thing for their party, they enact one.
They are bound to make themselves
famous if possible.
- —► .«>——
Eoos are worth 12$ cents a doz
en and corn is worth 10 or 11 cents
a bushel And see the pile of work
it takes to raise a bnshel of corn.
Yon have to plow and plant and
cultivate, and hoe and shnck and
break yo\ir back in forty.’leven
places. On the other hand, eggs
cost no human effort. You have a
few scrawny old hens; yon feed them
once a week, or oftener, if yon can
think of it; yon place a box with
some hay in it for them to occupy
and they do the rest Wonderful,
wonderful! And the eggs are worth
a York shilling at the store. Where’s
the sense of monkeying with corn f
Let us cultivate hens, and sure, ah
sure will the harvest be. Eggs in
the darkness and eggs in light, eggs
in your weakness and eggs in your
might—Beatrice Express.
-*****—
Tax present session of the Ne
braska legislature is a screamer.
They have got a streak of economy,
and are now trying to cut the rates
for the publication of legal notices
about one-half. It would be more
in keeping with the eternal fitness
of things if they would out the per
diem of the members of both houses
to $1. Then when the popooratio
solons would assemble (if Nebraska
should ever be so unfortunate as to
again allow them to guide the ship
of state) they would not try to make
the people believe they were all
Bryans or Allens, and that their
only mission was to be eternally
speechmaking. They would not
feel like paying for the privilege of
staying in Lincoln all winter to hear
themselves spout, but would transact
the necessary business and return
home. There is fame and fortune
awaiting the man who introduces a
bill of this kind.
SILVER! SILVER! SILVER!
Great heavens! Are we to be
compelled to listen fonr long years
to a constant thumping on that one
key on the piano—silver, silver, sil
ver? Is there no balm in Gilead
for the bruised and battered ear?
Is silver to be the Aaron’s rod of the
reform movement? Are we never
to hear anything frotn orator and
book writer except the continual
beating of the same strain in the
vain effort fo say something about
silver? *
1 Is silver the Alpha and Omega of
human life?
Can’t a belabored citizen be
allowed to toddle from the “big
. house” to the kitchen without being
r bombarded with books and speeches
i and pamphlets about silver? For
. mercy’s sake touch some other key
1 for a little while apd let the suffer
t ing nerves have peace. Give the
, other issues a chance. s
We don’t know how you feel,
comrade, but we are sick unto death
of seeing the people’s party swung
around by a handful of utterly sel
fish millionare silver mine owners.
It was a day of infinite woe to our
movement when we allowed a few
place hunters to place populism on
the shelf in the interest of silverism.
This scribe is glad to be able to
say he was not ashamed to talk pop
ulism and not afraid to expose the
insufficiency of silverism wherever
he went during the recent campaign.
Did it even in Nebraska and Color
ado, and was cheered while doing it
—Tom Watson in his Peoples Party
paper.
FOREIGN TRADE.
Some of the eastern free trade
joamals are wearing mourning over
the prospect of a gieat decrease of
“foreign trade” to be brought about
by the return to the principles of
protection as exemplified under the
rule of the last republics^ adminis
tration. But this is a rather amus
ing excuse for grief. Let us look
at the figures.
In the fiscal year ending June 30,
1892, the last year of republican rule,
the total exports of domestic goods
and products was valued at $1,015,
732,011. The total of imports was
valued at $827,402,426. Total for
eign trade $1,843,134,473.
In the fiscal year ending June 30,
1896, the last year of the democrat
ic administration, the total exports
were $863,200,487. Total imports
$770,724,647. Total foreign trade
$1,642,025,161. Falling off in for
eign trade $200,209,312. Decrease
about 12 per cent.
The total export of agricultural
products in 1892 was $799,993,343.
The total in 1896 was $571,899,845.
Falling off in agricultural exports
$228,093,498, a decrease of 30 per
cent.
The excess of agricultural exports
over agricultural imports in 1892
was $372,726,721. The excess in
1896 was $189,761,690. Falling off
of excess $182,954,031, or about 50
per cent. A little better protection
of our agricultural products will
possibly not come amiss.
And, by the way, it might not
be impertinent to suggest to Mr.
Bryan, who so loudly proclaimed
that the object of the tariff reform
that he advocated in the Wilson
congress, was to “increase our* for
eign trade” to explain why it didn’t
increase our foreign trade. He will
perhaps say it was the “crime of
’73,” but the crime of ’73 was get
ting in its nefarious work just as
efficiently in 1892 as in 1896 so far
as anybody can conjecture.
Mr. Bryan explained on every
Btump in the first district, when he
ran for oougress in 1892, that the
reason our farmers were suffering so
much was because of the McKinley
tariff, which prevented our European
bretheren from making enough
money out of us by the sale of their
manufactured goods, to enable them
to buy our agricultural products.
All of which looks quite ridiculous
in the light of these official figures.
And it is respectfully submitted
that a man who made such a huge
economical blunder in 1892 isn’t
entitled to the role of a prophet in
La Grippe
If you have had the Grippe,
you Know its aches and pains,
the fever, the chills, the cough,
the depression—you know
them alL The Grippe exhausts
the nervous system quickly,
lowers the vitality* Two
things should be done at once:
—the body must be strength
ened. and force must be given
to the nervous system. Cod
liver Oil will do the first: Hy
pophosphitcs the second. These
are permanently andpleasantly
combined in Scott's Emulsion.
It lifts the despondency and
heals the inflamed membranes
of the throat and lungs.
But you need not nave LA
GRIPPE.
. You can put your system in
a condition unfavorable to It.
You can have rich, red blood;
resistive strength; steady brain
and nerves. Scott's Emulsion
prevents as well as cures.
And whether you send or go
for Scott's Kwwilriwn, be sure
you get the genuine.
SCOTT & BOWNE, New York.
1896 and 1897. Nothing, so far,
has ever turned out as he said it
would, “on his honor and reputation
as a statesman.” It is not to be
wondered at perhaps, that Mr.
Bryan has most religiously excluded
from his book all intimations of his
glorious promise prophesies in 1890
and 1892. They would look quite
lame alongside his similar proph
esies in 1896. Bead in parallel
columns they would be great fun
for the boys.—State Journal.
Some person who was desirous of
creating a sensation wrote a sensa
tional article to the Sioux City Times
last week, having for its subject the
Barrett Scott tragedy. It was a
fake.
O’NEILL BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JJB. J. P. GIIililGAN,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Office in Holt County Bank building
All work cash in advance. Night work
positively refused.
O’NEILL,
NEB.
JB. DICKSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Reference First National Bank
O’NEILL, NEB.
tmi us son coinin’ stabs
Stage leaves O'Neill at 8:39 a. m., arriving at
Spencer at 4 p. m. s at Butte. 5:30 p. tt.
S. D. Gauuwtind, Prop.
jgAKSIY STEWART,
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER.
'
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Address, Page, Neb.
j£ H. BENEDICT, '
LAWYER,
Office in the Judge Roberta building, north
Of O. O, Snyder's lumber yard,
O NEILL, NEB.
Pacific Short Line
-HAS THE
BEST TRAIN SERVICE
-IN
NORTHERN NEBRASKA.
Through Freight and Paaaenger Rates
TO ALL POINTS.
If you are going on a trip or Intend chang
ing your looatlon, apply to our nearest
agent, or write to
W. B. McNIDER,
Gen'l Pass. Agent, Sioux City.
w
H
D
Purohu* Tlokata and Consign your
Freight via the
F.E.&M.V.andS.C.&P
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPART:
going bast.
Passenger east. No. 4,
Freight east. No. 34,
Freight east, No. 38,
10:04 a. ii
13:15 f.k
8:55 p. if.
GOING was*. .
Passenger west. No. 8, 9:40 p. m
Freight west, No. 3T, 10:04 p. m
Freight, No, 38, Local 4:00 p. u.
The Rllchorn Line k now running Reclining
Chair Cara daily, between Omaha and Dead
wood, jree to holders of fintclaaa transuor
tatlon.
Tar any Information call on
Wf J. DOBBS, Agt.
O'NEILL. NEB.
I
1
elKHorn valley
PLOW FACTORY.....
O'NEILL, NEB. EMILSNIGG8, Prop.
... .Manufactures the Hamnell Open Mould-Board Stirring
Plow. Also general blacksmithing and practical horseshoer.
Wagon and Carriage woodwork carried on in connection.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Alan dealer in
Farm Implements. Handles the Scandi implements and
the Plano Bakes,- Mowers and Binders. Parties WKhjng
anything in this line call and see me.
G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSELL, V-Pres.
JOHN McHUGH, Cashier.
THE - STATE - BAN
S’ - OF O’NEaLL.
CAPITAL $30,000,
Prompt Attention Given to Collections
DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
, Headquarters for . . .
LUMBER #
—COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
HsT 0.0. SNYDER & CO.
Always Buy the
Best. The .
Best is Cheapest
lillsirallsiraJ
The Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and.
•.Implement Line in th« Klkhorn Valley is found at
I Neil Brennan’s
John Deere plows, Moline wagons, David
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators...
Riding and walking cultivators, harrows.
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinware.
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