The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 30, 1905, Image 4

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    The Frontier
Publiihed by D. H. CRONIN
ROMAINE SAUNDERS. Assistant Editor
and Manager.
• UO the Year. 75 Uents Six Months
Official paper of O'Neill and llolt county.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertlsments on panes 4, 5 and 8
are charged for on a basis of 60 cents an inch
one column width) per month; on pagu 1 the
charge is II an Inch per month, bocal ad
vertisements, 6 cents per line each Insertion.
Address the office or the publisher.
Tlie Frontier is not boosting any
preferred candidate for .Senator Mil
lard’s toga, but it don’t know of any
man in any party in Nebraska that
could do the state more good in the
national capitol than Editor Rose
water of the Bee. Rosewater has
enimies galore, true enough, but he
also lias some friends and can “scrap”
any man or set of men to a finish for
what lie beleives to be right. lie is
on the Roosevelt side of railroad legis
lation, another strong point in ills
favor.
Never had the people of America
more reason to be thankful to Almigh
ty God for blessings voudedsafe than
on this Thanksgiving day. Despite
our errors and failures and short com
ings divine providence has dealt graci
ously the past year. Our barns and
storehouses are full, the machinery of
Industry moves without a check and
no wars nor famines nor pestilences
nor commotions disturb the happiness
and prosperity of the people. To Him
who rules in the affairs of men, let due
praise and reference be given.
Touching the annountement that
the senate had yielded to the presid
ent’s demand for railroad rate regula
tion, the Sioux City Tribune observes
a point frequently overlooked: “But
if ALL the newspapers of the United
States had refused to give Roosevelt
any support until it became manifest
that he would win the fight, would
the railroads and their senators have
found an insurmountable public opin
ion in their way? If EVERYBODY
had waited for . the band wagon to
come along, would there have been
nny bandwagon? It is well not to
lose sight of those who fought the real
fight for Roosevelt. And those who
waited till the tide of victory had
turned before taking sides, should be
branded the cowards or traitors they
are.”
Fremont Tribune: Lee Herdman,
who for long has been a prominent de
mocratic oracle, is quoted by a Lincoln
paper as saying that unquestionably
G. W. Wattles of Omaha will be a for
midable candidate for United States
senator on the republican side. Mr.
Wattles will, according to Mr. Herd
man, contribute Ireely of his financial
increment, and as he is a rich man it
is thought by many this will aid him
very materially in his quest of the
senatorial toga. It may be taken for
granted that there will be some lively
campaigning in Douglas county.
Senator Millard has been at work
there and elsewhere for a long tima.
He, too has money; and there is Rose
water, who has a newspaper. What
will come out of the conflict between
these three forces can not be predict
ed wi.h accuracy. Thus the Omaha
candidate is likely tosuffer a handicap,
even with a horde of gold at his com
mand, for his identity will not be
known until late in the campaign
Mr. Wattles is said to be opposed to a
convention nomination,though he will
not offer opposition openly and public
ly, not at this time. Mr. Millard has
served notice that he has accepted the
situation and, bowing to the will of
> his party, will favor one next year. In
this he evidently has the advantage
of Mr. Wattles, for it might as well be
known now that the republicans of
Nebraska are in 1900 going to repeat
f thjj Burkett experiment. Under the
new method of popular nominations
senatorships are not palpably open to
the highest bidders and the fact that
a few rich men are looking longingly
on the senatorial seat may not mar
other aspirants. Senator Burkett did
not expend a hundred dollars to get a
pratlcally unanimous nomination.
“TWO FELLOWS IN TIIETHIRD.”
The Independent says the only dem
ocrats in O'Neill who would subscribe
for a democratic paper were one
siartcd here are “two fellows in the
Third ward.” He that as it may, this
reminds us of a little late election
history. Early in the summer the
writer heard a party of leading citi
zens of the county who have been life
long democrats and party leaders dis
missing the party prospects for the
future, and they were a unit for hold
ing a straight democratic county con
vention and once for all repudiate
fusion. The word went out through
the county that there would be a
straight convention and no fusion.
Then the emisaries of fusion and
populism or anything for office and
spoils got busy and manipulated
affairs so the democratic and populist
conventions were called for the same
date.
This accomplished the rest was
easy. The pops stood for fusion and
the democratic camp only needed
“making right.” By getting pops
like McCarthy, Fisher and Shanner
and mugwumps and political nonde
scripts .like Johnson and McCafferty
on the democratic delegations they
captured the convention. The
straight democrats showed their con
tempt and disgust by walking out or
staying away altogether. They fur
ther and more effectually showed it
by using their influence and casting
their votes to defeat the mongrel
ticket. The head push on the fusion
ticket received more than 370 votes
less than the fusion nominee for the
same office in 1003. Hence there were
something over 370 voters like the
“two fellows in the Third ward.”
The sum of the matter is this: The
pop manipulators and grafters wanted
to retain the offices at any cost. Their
greed and desperation overreached.
They could capture the democrat’s
convention but they couldn’t make
the democrats vote the ticket. Hence
they are down and out—and mad.
ANOTHER “GREATEST.”
From the close of the civil war to
Spanish-American war the democratic
cry was that the tariff problem was
greatest before the American
people. The republican party long
ago disposed of this “great
est” problem and established the
varied industries of the nation on a
firm footing. From the rise of Mr.
Bryan’s political star to the calamity
that befell him the democratic cry
was that the free silver problem was
the greatest thatconfronted the Amer
ican people. The republcan party set
tled this greatest of problems and give
us a medium of circulation that is
worth dollar for dollar anywhere on
the globe. From the capitulation of
of Manila to the final defeat of Bryan,
the democratic cry was that imperia
lism was the greatest problem con
fronting the American people. The
republican party has settled this
“greatest” of problems and the coun
try still stands under one flag. The
republican party, through the admin
istration, has successfully solved the
national problems and has been in
strumental in establishing and main
taining manifold peace and prosperity.
The democratic party has hampered
the work in every way it could but
the work has gone on.
The democratic cry now goes up,
“the transportation problem is the
greatest which com fronts the Ameri
can people.” Just as all of these real
or imaginary “greatest” democratic
problems have been successfully met,
so will the transportation problem.
The national administrationhas show
itself capable of handling intricate
problems by more that one master
stroke, and whatever there is to this
present “greatest” problem will be
worked out to the good of all.
There is much truth in this com
ment from the Omaha Bee relative to
what is shown by the report of the
treasurer of the republican state com
mittee: Of the whole Nebraska dele
gation in congress, every one of whom
holds his place as a republican, only
two congressmen came to the front
with contributions to help maintain
the party organization. There are a
lot of others, too, who owe everything
to the party, but who return nothing
to it. On the other hand, the little
office holders who get a meager salary
arg_proportionately the most loyal
party subjects and the most liberal
contributors to the party. The ques
tion naturally presents itself how
people who neither have nor look for
political favors can be expected to put
up to keep tiie party machinery run
ning when those most signally honor
ed turn deaf ears to all solicitations.
SUPER VISOR SESSIONS
Official : Publication : of : Proceeding
O’Neill,. Neb., Nov. 14th, 1905.—
Board called to order at 9 o’clock, a.m.
Present Biglin, Clark, Keyes, Kram
er, Rueting, Skidmore and Phillips.
Minutes of yesterdays session were
read and approved.
Board went into committee of the
whole for the purpose of attending the
delinquent tax sale.
At 12 o’clock m. the committee arose
at which time the Board adjourned
until one o’clock p. m.
At one o’clock p. m.—Board called
to order. All member present.
On motion the taxes on lot 11, 12, 13
and 14 block 8, Page were stricken from
the tax list the same being Church
property and not subject to taxation.
On motion the following claims were
allowed upon tire bridge funds:
August Anderson. $3 50
C. H. Dailey. 3 00
Joe Leatherman. 1 88
ffm Veach,. 5 00
G. S. Graves,. 0 00
N. Y. Houck,. 2 50
J. H. Nickerson,. 14 00
L. Wrede,. 12 00
Floyd Keyes,. 31 00
Jos. A. Mliner,. 5 00
P. C. Peterson. 9 50
H A. Derby. 15 30
Louie Steabner. 28 00
Jas. H. Bacon. 10 00
M. Hull. 46 00
Townsend Bridge Co.,. 27 00
“ . “ “ . 21 00
Prusa & Dobial,. 13 00
John Leinhart. 10 CO
M. Miller,. 10 80
John Straka,. 14 00
Henry Straka,. 9 00
Fred Noby, . 9 00
W. F. Clevish. 22 00
A. C. Mohr. 41 50
N. R. Johnson,. 9 50
John Bran. 6 00
F. B. Coleman,. 12 00
Bernard Ilynet,. 10 00
T. Cox. 2 50
6. Mead, . 4 50
apply on Tax
John Funk,. 5 00
N. Provoet,. 4 50
J. D. Selah,. 3 00
B. B. Thomas,. 45 93
On motion the following claims were
allowed upon the general fund:
J. H. Moler,..$ 3 00
D. M. Stuart.. 4 00
J. W. Moss,. 11 50
Frank Dobney,. 4 00
C. W. Roack,. 4 00
O. C. Simmons,. 4 00
A. R. Wertz,. 4 00
John Mliner. 4 00
Elmer Wise,. 8 00
C. P. Preston,. 4 00
John Kennedy,. 7 00
C. Kramer, . 7 00
C. Carroll,. 4 00
J. M. Johnson,. 4 00
S. S. Smith. 4 00
Henry Hoxsie,. 4 00
M. T. Sanders,. 4 00
C. C. Mills,. 4 00
J. C. Addison,. 8 00
J. W. Holden,. 18 20
Somuel Laggert,. 4 00
Jessie Grotlith,. .4 00
W. T. Gordan,. 4 00
M. M. Sullivan. 1 75
“ “ . 4 00
Rose Hudspeth,. 1 80
A. F. Mullen,. 7 05
C. Kramer,...;. 51 10
Chris. Anderson,. 4 00
II. P. Hanson,. 4 00
Peter Dnffy,. 4 00
Gus Theondal,. 4 00
W. T. Powell. 4 00
Geo. A. Milles,. 4 00
H. Scale,. 4 00
C. L. Brigth,. 4 00
James Kennedy,. 12 50
apply on tax.
C. T. Thompson,. 12 00
D. G. Kunz,. 4 00
Tom Crowe. 4 00
W. F. Clevitk,. 8 00
O. F. Biglin,. 32 00
Martin Stanton,. 4 00
School District No. 35,. 3 00
N. F. Lofquist,. 4 00
Ed McClurg. 12 30
Colmar Ross,. 4 00
H. M. Banks,. 8 20
Geo. Lawrence,. 6 80
R. J. Starr,.. 4 00
J. W. Reitz,. 4 00
C J. Cenders,. 4 00
P. A. J ust,. 4 00
J. R. Reitz,. 7 70
School District,. 3 00
J. C. Clark,. 80 50
Henry Storjohann,. 4 00
Fred Yitka,. . 11 20
H. S. White,.■. 4 00
C. T. Thompson. 4 00
Sas. Barrett,. 4 00
John Staples,. 4 00
P Winslow,. 4 00
Theo. Kubart,. 4 00
L. C. Skidmore,. 27 00
Rose Hudspeth.$4 00 and 1 01
John Kane,. . 15 0(
Henry Scafe,. 4 OC
Isaac Millspaugh,. 4 OC
W. F. Powell,. 3 OC
H. A. Polk,. . 4 OC
L. E. Skidmore,. 6 00
Rose Hudspeth,. 4 00
J. C. Clark,. 22 50
G. II. Benson,. 5 00
P. J. Flynn,. 3 oc
John F. Domers,. 4 00
Brook McMaine,. 4 00
John Robertson,. 4 oo
School District,. 3 00
F. C. Gaty,. 20 00
L. C. Skidmore. 30 00
Frank C. Scofield,. .. 4 00
B. T. Nueblood,. 10 00
H. Reuting,. 43 10
A. F. Mullen,.$11 50 and 16 30
V. G. Kline,. 6 25
F. W. Phillips,.133 70
Leo Logerwell,. 3 75
Remington Type Writter Co_ 3 50
A. Murray,. . . 3 00
E. A. Whelan,. 18 00
Fred Schorer,. 8 80
J, A. Golden,. 4 00
John Leinhart,. 4 00
Ernest Beaver,. 7 80
R. H. Murray. 7 40
C. D. Whithers,. 4 00
G. R. Davis,. 4 00
H. Reuting. 4 00
J. S. Hoffman,. 7 00
School District No. 33. 3 00
Albert Rothleutner. 9 00
Jas. N. Cannon,. 11 00
School District No 89,...,. 3.00
E. II. Whelan,. 4 00
F. J. Dithner. 6 00
T. B. Marlng,. 16 00
J. F. Gallagher,. 8 00
S. W. Brian,. 10 10
M. F. Cronin. 9 00
C. Kramer,. 52 60
C. T. Simonson,. 16 00
C. D. Keyes,. 22 00
I. G, Hoteling.12 50
Jas. M. Morgan,.. 2 70
Ches. Smith,. 12 00
Wm. Lakey,. . 4 00
L. E. Skidmore,. 17 io
Wm Torpy. 4 00
J. M. Brown,. 4 00
G. E. Moore, • • • •.„. 7 00
John McCafferty,. 4 00
Andrew Schmidt,. 6 90
J, P. Gibson,. 4 00
N. Gilman,. 4 00
fl. G. Schmidt.'. 4 00
Ruth Opperheimmer,. 4 00
?. W. Green,. 4 00
Geo. L. Butler,. 8 10
Ncls R. Gibson,. 8 00
Frank Belney,. 4 00
Geo. Kirkland. 11 00
C. F. Porter,. 4 00
Wayne Warner,. 4 00
Arthur Chambers,. 4 00
M. S. Morgan. 4 09
Caleb Phillips. 4 00
A, S. Eby,. 400
Thomas Richardson,. 4 00
P. Reed,. 7 50
H. Reuting,. 37 50
Aenry Henning,. 4 00
D. D. Keyes,. 28 20
G. E. Torske. 4 00
8. S. Wymore,. 4 00
L M. Morgan.$4 96 and 7 30
G. F. Biglin. 36 00
H. E. Howard. 2 CO
Chris Timmerman,. 4 00
H. W. Zimmerman,. 6 10
allowing $4 00.
F. M. Brittle,. 6 10
apply on tax $4 00.
R. B. Trainer. 8 10
J. M. Morgan. 2 95
E. S. Gilmour,. 21 76
E. H. Whelan,. 9 00
Mickeal Brady. 9 00
C. D. Keyes,. 4 00
G. W. Fraver,. 8 50
Wm. Lakey. 15 00
On motion the Board adjourned un
Gl to-morrow morning at 9 o’clock.
E. S. Gilmour, Clerk.
F. W. Phillips, Chairman.
Borne Visitors’ Excursion Tickets to
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, etc.,
Via the North-Western Line, will be
lold at very low rates on Monday,
Nov. 27, limited eo return until Dec.
18, inclusive. For particulars as to
territory to which excursion tickets
may be purchased, etc., apply to
agents Chicago & Forth-Western R’y.
Very Low Excursion Rates to Inter
national Live Stock Exposition,
Chicago, via the North-Western Line.
Excursion tickets will be sold Dec. 16
to 19 inclusive, limited to return un
til Dec. 24, inclusive. Apply to agents
Chicago and North-Westery Ry.
ONE DOLLAR REWARD
Will be paid the lirst person sending
the address of Samuel Reynolds, a
pensioner living at Inman, this coun
ty, in 1880. If not living send address
of widow or other heirs to Henry V.
Capp, attorney-at-law, Washington,
D. C. pd
Mann's are compelled to dose
their general sale that they can
irrange their store for holiday
trade. _
Wnen you want a pleasant physic
buy Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets. They are easy to take and
produce no griping or other unpleas
ant elfect. Ssld by P. C. Corrigan.
Mann’s general sale closes on
Saturday, December 2.
•ooqouoa J^d 'SAW -pgsn J9A9 j oaojs
Cub imp pnj ss9[ SA9jinb9.i pue J95p;q jsgq gqj si n -ugqojpi
aqj ui S9sodand p!J9U9S joj 9p^m oaojs jgjjgq ou gq pinoo gjgqq
iCbs /C[93jj j ‘no/C jo qqSnoq gSutqx 9iqB9[[tipj qojtmojg gqx Supsgj
CiqSnojoqj aojjv :uuua9ja l!9K jj^ ox—'ZZ 'ao^i ‘[[io^LO
s
Monarch Malleable Ranges require no more fuel, no more time and
no more labor to do the work after ten or fifteen years’ use than they
they do at first. The satisfection they give is not alone for the first
year of their use but continues the same year after year Those con
templating buying a cook stove or range should see the'Monarch be
fore thy buy.
We still have the biggest stock at the lowest prices of
hardware, tinware, farm implements, wagons, buggies,
■ lamps, fancy dishes, silverware, paints and oils. &
|n IL BRENNAN 1
Sells More of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy Than of all Others
Put Together.
Mr. Thomas George, a merchant at
Mt. Elgin, Ontario, says: “I have
had the local agency Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy ever since it was in
troduced into Canada, and I sell as
much of it as I do on all other lines
put together. Of the many dozens
sold under guarantee, I have not had
one bottle returned. I can person
ally recommend this method as I have
used it myself and give it to my chil
dren and always with the best re
sults.” For sale by P. C. Corrigan.
Poor Farm Notice.
Sealed proposals will be received at
the offlice of the County Olerk O’Neill
Neb, until noon on Saturday the 23rd
day of December 1905 for the sale to
Holt County of 320 acres of land to be
used as a County poor farm, said land
to be not over five miles from a rail
road station in said county, said pro
posals to give section, township and
range in which the land is situated.
All bids to be sealed and marked
“proposals for poor farm,” the Board
of Supervisors reserve the right to re
ject any or all bids, dated O’Neill,
Neb. Nov. 21st, 1905.
22-4 E. S. Gilmour.
Brennan has bale ties for sale.
i6th to 30th every month
Son Lost Mother.
“Consumption runs in our family,
and through it, I lost my mother,”
writes E. B. Reid, of Harmony, Me.
“For the past five years, however, on
the slightest sign of a cough or cold, I
have taken Dr. King’s New Discov
ery for Consumption which has saved
me from serious lung trouble.” His
mother’s death was a sad loss for Mr.
Reid, but he learned that lung trouble
must not be neglected and how to
cure it. Quickest relief and cure for
coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1.
guaronteed at Corrigan’s drug store.
Trial bottle free.
John Kurtz, the night foreman at
the Northwestern shops at Long
Pine, who after a domestic quarrel
left home a week ago last Friday with
a bottle of strychnine in his pocket
and a threat to his family that they
would never see him alive again and
for whom search parties had since
been scouring the country, was found
last Saturday within a quarter of a
mile of town dead and hideously dis
torted within a stone’s throw of the
Northwestern tracks and in sight of
his own home and other dwellings and
public roads.
The Exact Thing Required For Con
stipation.
“Asa certain purgative and stom
ach purifier Chamqerlain’s Stomach
and Liver Tablets seem to be the ex
act thing required, strong enough for
the most robust, yet mild enough and
safe for children and without that
terrible griping so common to most
purgatives,” say R. S. Webster & Co.,
Udora, Ontario, Canadar For sale by
P. C. Corrigan.
I Bargains I
in Winter Goods
s s
I I-1
We save to our
I customers at
| lea.st
15 Per Cent
s
s on any the
5 following lines
| Dress Goods
$ Ready made Cloth
j ing; Underwear
S for men, women &
\ children; duck
| coats, sheep or
i | blanket lined; Blan
i kets, hosiery, heauy
| wool socks, trunks,
t overcoats, hats,
shoes, gloves, etc.
II - ‘
| 3
A few of our many at- §
tractive specials are:
Men’s suits, tine durable rc\ jj
wool garments, from $18 I 3U
down to. j
3
Duck coats lined so that j *yr
they will keep out the /\ ^3 §
cold wind, $4.50 down to *X ’i
8
Bed blankets for the 8
cold winter nights, CJ(
$1.50 down to. s\J
Ladies’ warm tleese- j ^ >j
lined hose for winter | I |C Sj
8
Ladies’ fleese-lined un- a ' 3
derwear now on sale /\ ^ S
at . XT
8
GROCERIES, BUTTER &. EGGS 5
___ s
| SHAHEEN & SAUNTO !l
„ „ -.-If