* at CAN BE FOUND AT 7he best in Quality, Price and Service. We are constant ly striving to give the public the best in quality and quantity, and at the lowest price. Seeing is believing. We ask you to come and see our stock of winter goods. f In Underwear we have surprising values to offer. We isell only the best underwear and at as low a price as cheap underwear is sold. See our lines of dress goods, waistings, skirts, etc. Are you going to buy any blankets or outings? If so, be sure and see our superb lines of Blankets and Outing Flannels We have a complete stock of Winter Supplies in every line and want you to come and see us. Ask to see our furs. ________ _____________________________________________________ » \ ~J. P. GALLAGHER'S STORE I I IM lllll 111 IMI■ ..HI. ..mu"' NO FUND OVERDAWN Place to Look for Overdrawn Accounts Is the Funds Themselves and Not the Warrant Stubs. Every conceivable means is being resorted to by the fusion demagogues in charge of the campaign in Holt county to deceive and mislead the voters as to tlie real financial condit ion of the county. Anyone with the slightest knowledge of plain business transactions knows that it is impos sible for a fund to be overdrawn when there is money in that fund to pay whatever draft may be made upon it. Notwithstanding this simple truth efforts are being made to deceive the voters into believing Hut the county general and bridge funds are and have been the past two years overdrawn. Proceeding on the theory that the county clerk’s warrant book discloses the condition of the county finances it could be made 10 appear that more money is being expended than received and that the county is running into debt. To illustrate this, below is published a certificate from County Clerk Simar showing the amounts levied in the general and bridge funds for the years 1905, 1906 and 1907: General fund levy (including transfers) for year 1905.$19,781. Amount drawn on 1905 levy. 58,196 39 General fund levy (including transfers) for year 1900 . 34,033. Amount drawn on 1900 levy. 35,207.75 Bridge fund levy for year 1907 11,360 80 Amount drawn on 1907 levy (was amount on hand and does not include amount levied at June equalization). 7,303.23 I, W. P. Simar, county clerk of Holt county, hereby certify that the above figures are the amounts of the levies and the amounts drawn thereon for the above named years as shown by the warrant books in my office. W. P. SIMAR, County Clerk. ll mignt, appear 10 some nuui turac figures, and the fusionists are endeav oring to convey that idea, that the general and bridge funds have been over-drawn for the years 1905 and 1906 because the amounts of warrants issued against the levies of these years exceeded the levies But as a matter of fact the funds themselves in the hands of the county treasurer were not over-arawn. Every warrant that was issued against the levies of 1905 an I 1906 were paid in cash as soon as they were taken to the treasurers office. Now, how does that come? Simply this way: There is money coming into all the funds every day from taxes that have been delinquent from one to ten years. These taxes are apportioned oif into the various fun Is and in this way it is possible to have in actual cash in any one fund double the amount of the levy for any given year. Hence not the levy of a given year but the fund itself tells whether there is an overdraft. In conjuction with the above certificate we publish another from Mr. Simar showing the total amounts of warrants drawn on the general and bridge levies of 1905: Warrants numbered 1 to 1577 inclu sive drawn on 1905 general fund amounting to $58,196 39. Warrants numbered 1 to 1239 inclu sive drawn on 1906 general fund amounting to $35,267.75. Warrants numbered 1 to62 inclusive drawn on 1907 bridge fund amounting to $7,303 23 I, W. P. Simar, county clerk of Holt county, hereby certify that the above are the numbers of warrants and amounts drawn on the different funds for the above named years as shown by the warrant books in my office. W. P. SIMAR. You will see by this certificate that there warrants issued against the bridge fund levy of 1907 to the amount of $7,303.23. We have been telling you that not a penny of the 1907 levies have been used yet, but how does these warrants to the amount of $7,303.23 drawn on the 1907 bridge levy compare with that statement? Have we been trying to deceive? There will not be a cent of the 1907 levy in the treasur er’s hands until the 1907 taxes begin to come in and they are not due and collectable until November 1. It is plain then that these $7,303.23 of bridge warrants could not be paid out of the 1907 tax. If the bridge fund had been exhausted when these war rants were presented for payment they would have been registered and maiked “not paid for want of funds.” But they were all paid out of funds on hand in Lhe bridge fund. The war rants could have just as well been drawn against the 1906 levy because the treasurer had the money to pay them and did pay them. Mr. Harnish certifies to this as follows: State of Nebraska, Holt county, ss. I, J. C. Harnish, treasurer of Holt county, do hereby certify that the warrants drawn on the 1907 bridge levy, were paid by money on hand in the bridge fund; and that no taxes have been collected on any of the levies made for 1907, for the reason that the 1907 tax will not, be due until No vember 1, 1907. Further, that all the warrants that have been presented at this office for payment, have been paid in cash: and that no warrants have been presented, registered and unpaid for want of funds. In testimony whereof I have here unto set my hand this 23rd day of October,1907. J. O. HARNISH, County Treasurer. It is noticed that Mr. Harnish also cjrtities that all the warrants present ed to the treasurer’s office have been paid in cash. He conld not tiave paid them if he did not have the money in those funds. He might have done so by doing as the fusion treasurer’s have done when a fund was exhausted—use the money belonging to townships and school districts. But this has not been done in a single instance. The warrants were all paid with money on hand in the fund on which the war rants were drawn. Therefore there is not a dollar of outstanding unpaid warrants for the lack of funds. The total amount of claims against the county, legal' and illegal, is a little over $21,000. With the money now on hand in the general and bridge funds and that collectable November 1 un der the 1907 levy 1 he county has enough money to pay all these claims and have twelve or fifteen thousand dollars left. Compare that with the condition when the last fusion treas urer went out of office and see if you don’t think the whole republican ticket should be elected. Dan Cron in’s term expired January 7,1900, with the county owing dvt r $21,000 more than it could pay. Hainish’s first year will expire January 6, 1907, with all that debt paid off and nearly $15,000 ahead. TWO WAYS OF DOING IT Same Results Quietly Obtained Over Which Fusionists Make Grand Stand Plays. Up at Bassett last week there were some mandamus cases before Judge Harrington to compel the Northwest ern railroad to fnrnish cars to hay shiDpers. Then the official organ of Judge Harrington at O’Neill came out with a great blare of trumpets in a half-page display of the event to boom Judge Harrington’s candidacy. The Independent may as well have said in so many words that the mandamus cases were started purely for political reasons. It also tried to connect the two republican candidates for district judges and the “railroad attorney” at O’Neill with the cases. Douglas lives at Bassett and there is nothing un usual in the fact that he was at home. Jenckes came in from Boyd county and Dickson from O'Neill to confer with Mr. Douglas in regard to a speak ing tour of nolt county which Mr. Douglas began this week and also to arrange for meetings at dill'erent places in the district where Senator Brown and Attorney General Thomp son will speak next week. Mr. Dick son did not even know that there were any hay car cases billed for Bassett until he got onto the train at O’Neill and found A. F. Mullen on his way to Bassett on the political mission of mandamusing the railroad. What these three men could have done for or against the mandamuses is not made clear by the Independent. Does the Independent suppose, had they known anything about the cases, that they would entertain the thought that their presence would have any bearing on Judge Harrington’s ruling on the application'? The court did not enter a writ because the hay shippers were supplied with cars by tlie railroad simply being notified that, a wr't would he applied for. That could have been done without a term of court and the taxpayers of Rock county would have been saved the ex pense of convening and dismissing court. Down here in Holt when court is convened Bailiff McG.nnis opens it in the morning and Bailiff Pinkerman comes in from the country and adjournes it in the afternoon and the taxpayers pay them $2 10 each. But had court not convened and the cars secured by notifying tlie railroad company’s freight agent there would have been no material for a grand stand flourish to catch suckers on the Harrington political hook. Down at Page last Saturday the same results were obtained by a re publican lawyer in a quiet way that it took all the district court machin ery to obtain at Bassett on Monday. There has been no blare of trumpets about it or grandstand plays to pro claim tliata republican lawyer brought a railroad company to time. There were no expensive lawsuits with court costs and attorneys’ fees to pay and there has been no proclaiming from the housetops that a republican lawyer forced the railroads to supply cars to shippers without the aid of the court. A gentleman from the southern part of the slate was in the Page country last week and bought a carof potatoes. Ho was trying to get a car from the Greit Northern railroad in which to ship them to his home, but although empty cars stood on the tracks at Page the railroad would not let him have one and there his potatoes lay exposed to the weather. A republi can attorney from O’Neill was in Page last Saturday and learning of the gentlemen’s prediciment he went to the railway station and telegraphed the freight agent that if a car was not furnished at once to ship those pota toes suit would be commenced against the railroad company. The gentle man got his car and it didn’t cost him a cent. Tlie Rock county hay shippers could have got cars the same way. They could have got them by applying to the railway commission. They could have got them just as quick with Douglas and Jenckes presiding as judges as with Harrington and West over. Some voters may be misled by the claim of the fusionists that the Long Pine Journal, an alleged republican newspaper, is refusing to support J. A. Douglas for district judge, and is bitterly attacking him. The facts are that the Long Pine Journal was sold in February, 1906, by Luke M. Bates, now register of the U. S. Land Office at Valentine, to William Glover of Aurora, a life-long democrat. The paper is being run by Glover’s son-in law, who is also a democrat. The Long Pine Journal has not been a re publican paper for over a year and a half. The above facts come from Mr. Bates himself, and are correct. Every republican newspaper in the district is supporting Mr. Douglas for judge. Republican Meetings. R. R. Dickson and James C. Gar nish will address the voters of Scott township at Seottvilie on Monday night, October 28; at Phoenix Tuesday night, October 29. These men are well qualified to discuss the financial condition of Golt county and every taxpayer is invited to attend these meetings. LEGISLATIVE RECORD Douglas Replies to Fusion Strictures Editor O’Neill Frontier: Please per mit me through the columns of your paper to answer some of the charges made against me in this campaign, principally by the Holt County Inde pendent. If that paper was being sent only to its regular subscribers I would pay no attention to it, but it is circulating throughout the district in large numbers, and those who do not know its methods might accept as true many of its statements. It charges that in the legislature I dodged a number of bills pertaining to failroads, not voting though I was present, and asserts that I was re sponsible for the defeat of Senator Cady’s Constitutional Amendment bill, S. F. No. 253, giving the impres sion that I opposed the Ltailway Com mission idea. I did not dodge a bill mentioned by the Independent, and in every instance where that paper says I was present and did not vote the record shows that I was absent. It may be asked why I was absent when these bills were voted on. It hardly ever happens that a bill is voted on in either branch that there are not some members absent, and it often happens that the introducer of a bill is absent when it is voted on. Committee work, and other duties frequently call members away from their respective branches during ses sions, and I was chairman of the com mittee on revenue and taxation, and a member of several other important committees which took a good deal of my time, and required me to be fre quently absent from the house while it was h> session. The bills referred to by the Inde pendent came on for passage during the last days of the session, and at a time when about all of my time was taken up in securing the passage by the senate of the wolf bounty bill which I had introduced in the house. This bill passed the senate on the 02nd day of the session, after several days of hard work on my part in get ting it out of the sifting committee, and getting the promise of enough votes to pass it. It passed the senate, with amendments, and with only one vote to spare. I then had to get the house to concur in the senate amend ments, and after that was done, had to work hard with the governor to prevent him vetoing it, and also from cutting out of the appropriation bill the $15,000 for the payment of the bounty provided for by the bill. The Independent says 1 dodged Sen ate File 166, which provided for equal facilities as to grain elevetor sites, side tracks, switches, etc. I had voted for a companion bill to this which passed the house, being House Roll 351, (see page 964 of the House Jour nal, 1905). The Independent says I was present and dodged, and the rec ord shows 1 was absent and not vot ing. I was not against the bill, and on the contrary I favored it. It came up in the house for passage on the 63rd, or last day of the session, the day I was getting the wolf bounty bill disposed of in the house on the senate amendments, and laboring with the governor to prevent its veto and the veto of the appropriation. Perhaps the wolf bounty act is not of great impotrance but still it is of value to the people of this judicial district, and I believe I was justified in absenting myself from the house to lopk after it in the senate and before the governor. The charge about my having been responsible for the death of Senator Cady’s Railway Commission bill is the vilest kind of a lie. I supported three different Railway Commission bills We could not pass all of them, and we finally agreed on Senator Cady’s bill numbered 196, and the others were in definate.lv postponed by the house or senate. 1 voted for the Commission bill that, passed both houses. (Sec House Journal 1905, page 1154). The Independent charges me with having spent a day in Norfolk during tile campaign and endeavors to leave tlie impression that Mr. Jenckes and 1 were there conferring with railroad officials. At tiie time referred to ] stopped over night in Norfolk on my way from the State Convention to Boyd oounty. 1 saw no one in Nor folk I knew, and was obliged to wait there over night, for a train to Boyd county. Mr. Jenckes was not witli me in Norfolk. The Independent in its last issue connects ray name witli certain hay car cases recently instituted here, and indirectly charges that I was connect ed with the cases on behalf of the rail road company. 1 had come home Sun day morning from a ten days absence in the campaign, and it happened that these cases were on for hearing the next day. 1 had nothing what ever to do witli any of these cases, and that paper’s accusation about my hav ing been in any conference with any attorneys or persons about those cases is false in every particular. The other charges made by the llolt Oounty Independent are as unjust, unfair and false as the ones referred to, and that paper’s methods should condemn any candidate it supports The people of this district want fair play in the courts and they can hardly expect it from judges who are elected by the unfair methods employed by the Hole County Independent and the clique who use it for their political and personal advancement Respect fu 11 v, J. A. Douglas. Bassett, October 21st. HOT SHOT FROM CORNELL The Chicago and Northwestern rail road through its political boss, Ben jamin T. While, of Omaha, has se lelected Charles H. Cornell of Valen tine, to run the campaign for both Douglas and Jenckes. The chairman ship was bestowed by White in person, and no clearer proof has been furnished In this contest of the dominating In fluence of the Northwestern railroad in this Judicial District than is shown in the selection of Cornell. From the day that he landed In Cherry county twenty-live years ago, he has been a pass-holder, a pass-peddler, a railroad politician agent and a campaign boodle distributer in his home county. From the day that he arrived in this county up lo the present moment lie has never paid a dollar railroad fare, neither has any member of his family. He served as a member in one ses sion of the legislature, and no more subservent tool of the railroad com pany ever sat in that body. The railroad company has furnished him m mey with which to make this contest. They are even paying for tin paper and postage stamps he is using. Cornell has the railroad brand all over him. He never drew a free political breath in twenty-live years. He stands for all that is worst in railroad poli tics. He stands for every corrupt in fluence that the railroads have exer cised in Nebraska politics, it is due the voters of this district that they shall know the kind of man Cornell is. When any of them receive a letter from Cornell they will know who it was that hired him to send it. They will know whose campaign boodle is doing the business. We urge every friend of good govern ment in this district to advise the people fully as to this corrupt poli tician.—Holt County Independent. Tt has been my pleasure as chairman of the republican congressional com mittee, for three consecutive cam paigns, in behalf of Honorable M. P Kinkaid, to conduct the same upon the issues without resort to rancor or personalities. On accepting the ju dicial chairmanship at the request of Messrs. Douglas and Jenckes, the re publican canidates, I had no reason to suspect that contrary methods would be employed. However the foregoing attack is so very malicious, so incon sistent, and, in several statements, so untruthful, it demands a reply. I therefore respectfully submit the fol lowing: 1st. I was in this county three years ahead of any railway, and was a pass holder before the railway or any politics reached Valentine, and con tinuously until a republican legisla ture relieved me of that perogative, since which time 1 have had at no time any transportation, directly nor through any evasion ol the law. 2nd. I am, and have been since he was an attorney in general practice at Norfolk, this stale, an acquaintance and friend of Mr. B. T. White, general attorney for the Northwestern railway, and in the times I have visited his olllce in the headquarters at Omaha, he has never made a request of me any man need blush to entertain. The extent of my “pass-peddling” has been an occasion al request by me, of Mr. Bidwell, the Manager, for trip-transportation for indigent sick to get to the hospital in Omaha, an occasional recommenda tion to iniluence cattle shipments to the Northwestern, and a like occasion al recommendation for an army officer at Fort .Niobrara, in the interest of the retention of the post. I have not been a "pass-peddler” in a political sense and that statement is false. 3rd. As chairman of our county cen tral committee, 1 have collected and disbursed the funds for the legitimate campaign expenses the same as any ottier chairman, but the charge of the "independent” that I have been a "boodle distributor in the county” is likewise false. 4th. The charge that Mr. White or anyone else, for any railway company, or any other corporation, has ap proached me, by word, letter or other wise, or that any railway company is furnishing me as much as as a penny, a postage stamp or a sheet of paper is also absolutely false. 5lh. If the charge that “He never drew a free political breath for twen ty-live years” refers to my pass-hold ing, J may be pardoned lor saying I I lave, for a greater portion of the time at least, had distinguished company not always of my own party. On my parting trip on my lasty ear’s pass to Omaha, 1 was in company with Judge Westover and Mr. Scott, his stenog rapher, when the three of us, with several others on that train, were harvesting the last fruits of our sub serviency for that year. We were all three favored for “08” but a business like republican legislature deprived us of that genial pasteboard compan ionship. If I was doing wrong in carrying a pass 1 am glad, so long as I had to be “set afoot” that the repub lican party, the party of Theodore Roosevelt, Douglas and Jenckes, on discovering the same, had the courage to act at once, and effectively. I am glad that I do not belong to an in cipient, “double-barreled” organiza tion which has been resolving agaiDSt it in convention for nearly twenty years, while all the time the larger number of its delegates, like Judge Westover, carried the “despised cor rupter of official integrity.” (ith. In visiting Mr. White’s office in Omaha, I have met the same dis tinguished Judge, and if I, not an office holder, nor office seeker, did wrong in making an occasional visit there, wtiat can be said of the Judge, the “Independent’s” candidate, who was and is presiding over and ruling upon the causes brought by thepeople, igainst the railroads? If Mr. White’s ■iociely was corrupting, whom would tie most likely wish to corrupt, a mere •itizen or a Judge? In other words if f was in the pay of the railways, as a private citizen, as the Independent would have you believe, in whose pay was the Judge who was doing the same identical things fur which I am so mercilessly arraigned by the “Inde pendent?” If I carry the “railroad brand;” if the “railroad company has furnished him (me) the money to make this contest;” if they are “even pay ing for the postage stamps he (I) is using; pray, what particular "BRAND” does your preferred candi* date carry, and who is footing his stationary and postage bills? If 1 am a “corrupt politician” due to my railway affiliations, why is the “Independent” supporting a like “corrupt politician” for an office that should be, above all others, free from corrupting intiuences? If 1 have nut “drawn a free political breath in twenty-live years,” it being impreg nated witli the impure gasses of the Northwestern, 1 suppose the Judge being in official life, was to go me sev eral better, since he was not only able to stand the impregnated ozone of the Northwestern, but “inhaled”an equal amount of unhealthy B. & M. annual ly, and on his long vacations to the Pacific coast, his vigorous constitution enabled him to withstand all those “courtecies” no matter in what par ticular manner they might have been “tainted.” I, on the other hand, (excepting for a short time) being a plain citizen, with no official designa tion, was obliged to be content with straight Northwestern, “good only from the Wyoming line to the Mis souri river.” But what credence can you place in au editor, Mr. Voter, who seeks to in fluence you through his columns in the article which I have quoted, when most of his charges are maliciously false and when the ones which he in the least can sustair, can be said of the candidate whom he has supported through three campaigns, and is now championing for a fourth election, all the time knowing all the facts? 0. FT. Cornell, Chairman, Republican Judicial Committee, 15th District, Nebraska. Valentine, Nebr,, Oct. 21,1907.