The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 03, 1897, Image 4
The Frontier. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY HE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY D. H. CRONIN, Editor. TO ODE SUBSCRIBERS. All oar subscribers who are owing ■ ns on subscription are requated to «all and settle their account Do :V%r:>v ’ • * 5, • not put off the payment of your sub scription, hut come and pay np at once. We need the money to keep ‘ our business going, and if our srub > ■ 'j soribers do not oome in and pay up we will have to employ a collector. ;||i Please call and settle. fit/. -- t <Bt i Coxxr isn’t the first man who has realized the impossibility of running a newspaper on d. h. subscribers. .. Grzeci is an object lesson to those who believe in rashly rushing into war, leaving the consequences ; to take care of themselves. - Goon, land senators: The ooun ’ try understands the tariff, and asks %j* that you will get down to voting f||''< with. as little talking as possible. y Dbbubo is discountenanced al most everywhere else, but at the ,-■» German universities it is on the increase. Twenty-one in one day is ■ a recent record at Jena. Congbimkan Bailit, of Texas, concluded that Jhe would rather make silver speeches in Missouri than to keep butting his head against Speaker Reed’s will. Jisss Gbant may not be the wis hV - est of men, but we believe he has too much sense to allow himself to be used as a figure head by a lot of gamblers who wish to establish a *•*' H Mexican Monte Carla <■*, . ..... ... £ ,? MtM.. • ■ Tbbbb is a pointer in the anxiety of Tammany to keep Mr. Bryan VT froa makingwpeeches in New York duriflg^'tue ‘fistflflcipal ^campaign. .They know the effect of ^Bryan’s • speeches in that locality. -- 1 . * So long as a majority of the \ house is behind him, as it is likely to be so long as the house is con trolled by republicans, Speaker Beed can smile at the ingeniously constructed newspaper revolts against his rule. - t ft s _ Judging from the appearanee of the Coleridge Blade times are more ; prosperous with' Bra Watson now than they have been for the part six v years. And still he kicks. Well, many people are never satisfied, anyhow.;. Bnutoi Thuhbton has recom mended 8. J. Weekee for the posi tion of register of the O’Neill land office, and hia appointment is ex pected daily. R. H. Jenness, of Atkinson, was also a candidate for , - the position, bat he withdrew in favor of Mr. Weekes. It ia under . stood that Mr. Jenneos will be appointed receiver. Mr. Weekes V'•'* had: the aapport of the county and state organisations in hia candidacy, end the appointment will meet with the approval of the republicans in : ^ this section. * : A ruau whose land can be irri gated by. the Great Eastern was going to sell for ISO per acre, but when he found out that he could have water in a few days, he raised & * the Price to *35. His father held \ his land at *35 and raised the price ■. to *40. The father said the son would be foolish to sell at *85, and the son says the father is foolish to |.. cell at *40. Isolds under the canal If are being taken off the market and some are held as high as *75. May *• acme day aee them saleable at Hi this price.—Monroe Republican. THE POPOCRATIG REMEDY. ^ V The remedy of the popoorata foi business depression and the onlj A. one they suggest, is a cheaper dol -A lar than we now have—that is, i ,, \A ’dollar of leas purchasing power fV-'^thoy /urge that the great need oi the country is more money, not , ’ withstanding the fact, well known t< if '■' ;.the more intelligent of them, ths there are hundreds of mill ions o: t'i'jfrs ij 4'.: ?- ,* - •’ \ l... • ... dollars of idle money in the United States and that the rate of interest on good security has never been lower than now. Ifris true that in Borne portions of the country there is scarcity of currency, but that ie due chiefly to waut of the credit necessary to obtain money. Wher ever this credit exists there is no difficulty in obtaining all the money required in legitimate business. The trouble with oar money, how ever, in the view of the popoerats, is that it buys too much. They want a dollar that will exchange for less of the products of the farm and the factory than the gold standard dol lar and at the same time go just as far in paying for labor as the latter. They want a depreciated dollar as measured by all commodities exoept labor. In his speech in the senate on Tuesday Mr. Vest mentioned as one source of evil that our workers are paid on a gold basis and come into competition with those paid on a silver basis. This sounds like an echo from the last campaign, when Mr. Teller and the other free silver advocates urged that American manufacturers would sooner or later realize that they could not pay for their labor on a gold basis and suc cessfully compete with silver coun tries like Japan. The position was unsound then and is equally so now. The mass of American workers com pete with those who are paid on a like basis, though not so well paid. As to the Japanese bogy, it cannot be used any longer, for four months hence that country will bave the gold standard. Of course these people who talk about more money and mean de preciated money are talking for the free coinage of silver. They are keeping up the silver agitation. They profess to believe that there can be no prosperity under the gold standard and they are prepared to obstruct all efforts looking to a res toration ,of prosperity. They know that the oountry has been greatly prosperous under the gold standard when it had a. judicious tariff policy, yet they are opposing a return to that polioy. “More money*’ is their demand. Is it necessary, after all the discussion the money question has reoeived, to repeat that free sil ver would not give the country more money, but only debase money? Does not everybody remember how gold fled the oountry and went into hiding before the presidential elec tion? Today this gold is available as readily as any other money. Can any rational man believe that this would be the case if the party of free silver—which means silver mono-metalism, a silver standard— had been successful in the election? Every dollar of gold would have been driven out of circulation had free silver been victorious last November, contracting the supply of money to the extent of from $500, 000,000 to $600,000,000. It is not more money that the oountry needs, but conditions that will invite the investment of idle capital and make a market for all the labor of the oountry. When these conditions are fully attained there may be a legitimate demand for more money, and if so it will be met, but not by the adoption of a polioy of currency debasement whioh could result only in financial and business demoralization and ultimate disaster to all,interests.— Bee. ; JONES. One by one the roses fade. One by one the demagogy is uncovered of the men who posed under the popocratie banner last fall as the implacable foes of trusts and combi* nations, and the unrelenting oppo nents of corporate greed and oppression. . This time it is Jones. Everybody remembers Jones of Arkansas, who, as chairman of the popocratie nation al committee made pitifnl appeals for popular contributions to campaign funds on the ground that by reason of popocratie antagonism the faces of all the rich men with' the excep 1 tion of the Bilver bullionaires were turned against him. Everybody ' remembers Jones, who proclaimed himself the manager of the. pooi 1 man’s candidate for president and 1 who kept constantly prating aboul ■ the dear common people. Yet the same Jones is now en gaged in launching what is expected to be the most gigantic trast ever conceived. That good popocratic organ, the St Louis Bepuhlic, that served so faithfully during the cam paign as the mouthpiece of Jones and the popocratic managers and candidates, has announced the fact and enlarged upon it with all the important details. The new combi nation is a syndicate of capitalists who have acquired the patent rights to a new process of baling cotton which insures such economies that it is bound to drive all competition from the field. It is to be known as the American Cotton company, with 10,600,000 of preferred and com mon stock—the proportion of water not stated. At the head of the syn dicate is John E. Searls, one of the grasping sugar trust kings. Associ ated with him, among others, are Stuyvesant Fish, railroad magnate and president of the Illinois Central; B. P. McDonald, another railroad magnate connected with the Missou ri, Kansas & Texas railway, and D. B. Francis, late goldbng secretary of the interior in President Cleve land’s cabinet. Neither last nor least is Jones—Jones of Arkansas— member of the United States senate, chairman of the popocratic national committee, in public the enemy of trusts and corporate aggregations of capital, but in private the friend of the sugar kings, associate of goldbug bankers, beneficiary of railroad pres idents and active promoter of odious trust methods. Worse yet, the new cotton syndicate is said to date back to March, 1800, prior to the opening of the late presidential campaign, so that if Jones is a charter member his pretended popocratic virtues must have been assumed from the start After advertising himself as one of the founders of the new cotton trust, how can Jones remain as chairman cf the popooratic national committee at the head of a party that relies almost wholly on the sympathy,dodge for,support? Alas for the poor deluded popoorats, who were led to believe that in Jones they had a paragon of political purity!—Bee. Wo Otter Yoa a j REMEDY Which * INSURES Safety < at Lite to Mother < and Child. EXPECTANT MOTHERS, “MOTHERS’ FRIEND” Hill CwUnmint oflti Pain, Harrw tat Ifok. „ My wife used “MOTHIBS’ FKIKHD” be- ( fore birth of her ant child, she did not i suffer from CKAEP8 or PAlNS-wss quickly , relieved at the critical hour Buffering but t i llttle-ahe had no pains afterward and her' reoorery was rapid. i E. E. Jobrszom, Eu's'.Ua, Ala. < Sent by Mall or Express, cl receipt of i •rice, $1.00 aw betas. Book “To Moth* ers ” mailed Free. BKiDTIILD BMtUTOE CO., Atlanta, 6a.1 sols it all skueexm. DOS’! BE MISLED. When going to Sioux City buy your ticket to O’Neill and take the Pacific 8hort Line at that point. We make connections every day, except Sunday, arriving at Sioux City at 1:46 p. m. Returning, leave Sioux City at 5 p.m., making connections at O’Neill west bound. Passengers from Mitchell, Sioux Falls, etc., going to the Bills, arrive in Sioux City In time to connect with our train west-bound, avoiding any lay-over at Sioux City. Mrs, A. Inveen, residing at 730 Henry St., Alton, III., suffered with sciatic rheumatism for over eight months. She doctored for it nearly the whole of this time, using various remedies recom mended by friends, and waa treated by the physicians, bat received no relief. She then used one and a half bottles of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, which effect ed a complete cure. Thia la published at her request, as she wants others simi larly afflicted to know what cured her. The 25 and 50 cent aisei for sale by P. C. Corrigan. Bdliri’i iMv talant Thli wonderful liniment is' known from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the lakea to the gulf. It ie the moat penetrating liniment in the world. It will cure rheumatism, neuralgia, cute, sprains, bruises, wounds, old sores, burns, sciatica, sore throat, sore chest and all inllamation after all others hare fai(ed. It will cure barbed wire .cuts and heal all wounds where proud flesh has set in. It is equally efficient for an 1 imala. Try it and you will not be with out it. Price SO cents, at Corrigan’s. O’NEILL BUSINESS DIRECTORY jQB. J. P. GILL1GAN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in Holt County Bunk building All work cash in advance. Night work positively refused. O’NEILL, - NEB. JJR G. M. BERRY, DENTIST AND ORAL SURGEON Graduate of Northwestern University, Chicago, and also of American College of Dental Surgeory. All the latest and Improved branches of Dentistry carefully performed. Office over Pfunds store. R. B. DICKSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Beferenoe First National Bank O'NEILL, NEB. JJABSIY STEWART, PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER. Satisfaction guaranteed. Address, Page, Neb. mu in tun ami stage Stage leaves O'Neill at 8:80 a. m., arriving at Spencerat4P.il.; at Butte.R:80p. it. S. D. Gaixuntims, Prop. P] H. BENEDICT. LAWYER, ’ Office in the Judge Roberta building, north of O. O. Suvder’s lumber yard, : O NEILL, NEB. DeYARMAN’S BARN. B. A. DaY ARM AN, Manager. [P’Y ARMAN’S fffffffWf Hlf f Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. Finest turnouts in the city. Good, careful drivers when wanted. AIjo run the O’Neill Omnibus line. Commercial trade a specialty. Only One Standard You and we may differ as to money standards and out of our very differences good may come. But we won't differ as to the merits of one standard emulsion of cod-liver oiL SCOTPS EMULSION has won and held its way for nearly 25 years in the world of medicine until to-day it is al most as much the standard in all cases of lung trouble, and every condition of wasting whether in child or adult as quinine is in malarial fevers. Differ on the money ques tion if you will, but when it comes to a question of health, perhaps of life and death, get the standard. Your dcufgbt sdb Scott’s Brmririrau Two rites, 50 cts. and $1.00 SCOTT a BOWNE, M«w York. Something to Know. It may be worth something to know that the very best medicine for restoring the tired and nervous system to a healthy vigor is Electric Bitters. This medicine is purely vegetable, acts by giving tone to the nerve centres in the stomach, gently stimulates the liver and kidneys and aids the organs in throwing off im purities in the blood. Electric Bitters improves the appetite, aids digestion and is pronounced by those who have tried it as the very best blood purifier and nerve tonic. Try it. Sold for SOc or $1 per bottle at Corrigan’s. TREE8 AND PLANT8. A full 1 line fruit treks or best varie ties AT iABD TIMES PRICES. Small fruits in lirge supply. Millions of j Strawberry plants, very thrifty and veil rooted. Get the best near home and save freight or express. Send for price list to North Bend Nurseries, North Bead. Dodge County, Neb. THE LIGHT RUNNING PLANA to MW tTb m m n mm m IS AM UP TO DATE MACHINE. The Jones Lever Binder Leads Them All With Up TO DATE IMPROVEMENTS. J V, it.- r .. ■ X* ^ *v;£-. 4 • A ^ • V . To My Patrons and friends in Holt and Boyd Counties: When in need of a Binder, Mower, Header, or Hay Rake call at my im— of business and get prices on the Plano Manufacturing Company’s goods athich I don't hesitate to sell on my own yecomendaiion. On the square I think the Jones Lever Binder the best machind ever put on wheels. EMIL SNIGGS ALSO PROPRIETOR OF Elkhorn Valloy Blackmitb and Horseshoeing rc^Jhop.JK^ Headquarters in the West for Horseshoeing and Plow Work. All kinds of repairing carried on in connection. Machinery, wagon, carriage, wood and iron work. Have all skilled men for the different branches. All work guaranteed to be the beet, as we rely on our workmensbip to draw our custom. Also in season we sell the Plano up to date harvesters, binders mowers and reapers. G. W. WATTLES, President. ANDREW RUSSEI JOHN McUUGlJ, Cashier. OP O'NEILL, CAPITAL $30,000. Prompt Attention Given to Collections DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Chicago Lumber Yard Headquarters for LUMBER AND ?! coalI H8T 0.0. SNYDER & CO. s+i NEW YORK .. . ILLUSTRATED NEWS Tli* Organ of Monoot Sport in Amorloa ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY aiCTUPCB BT THt FOREMOST ARTISTS OP THE COUNTRY Ltb in New York Graphically Illuatrated. Breezy but Respectable. *4. FOR A TEAR, sa FOR SIX MONTHS Do you want to be posted? Then send your subscription to the nv nu tumiTEi im, 3 PARK PLACED NEW YORK CITY PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. HOTEL -—£va^: Enlarged Refurnished Refitted Only First-class Hotel In the City. W. T. EVAN sL Pro Wanted-An Idea of torn* Ump