SEE WYOMING NOW! AT HARVEST TIME See for yourself the bumper crops of the homesteaders. Meet these people on their own places and hear of the opportunities that await you there. See 40 bushels per acre wheat; see the alfajfa, pota toes, sugar beets and practically every farm product now. During the past year more than a thousand families have found home* in this state along our lines. There is room for you. You now have a chance of a 320 acre Mondell homestead of good agricultural and grass land, or an 80 acre government irrigated farm in the Big Horn Basin. Think this over; get in touch with me. This should be a big question with you. This is better than a rented or martgaged farm and is a sure way to get ahead and own your home. aially conducted excusrions to this territory on lesdays of each month. I have ready for free distribution literature that Is all about what Wyoming offers you, if you are in rch of a home. Write mg. S. B. HOWARD, MIGRANT AGENT, 1004 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. ft n Bvirvdle of Satisfaction is The Service OF O’Neill Sanitary Laundry. (First publication October 7.) NOTICE. In the County Court of Holt County. Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate of John C. Campbell, Deceased: To All Persons Interested in Said Es tate: You are hereby notified that on the 1st day of October, 1916, W. K. Hodgkin, administrator of the estate of John C. Campbell, deceased, filed in said court his final account as said ad ministrator and a petition for final settlement and distribution of the resi due of said estate; that the said final account and petition for final settle ment and distribution will be heard on the 28th day of October, 1916, at 10 A. M. at the county court room in O’Neill, in said county, at which time and place any persons interested in said estate may appear and show cause, if such exists, why said final ac count should not be approved and a decree of distribution made of the residue of said estate in the possession of said administrator. It is ordered that a copy of this notice be published for three suc cessive weeks in The Frontier, a news paper, printed and published in said county. Dated this 1st day of October, 1916. (Seal) THOMAS CARLON, 17-3 County Judge. (First publication September 23.) NOTICE OF ESTRAY. To All Persons Whom These Presents May Concern: You are hereby notified that on or about September 15,1914,1 took up on my premises in the Town of Sham rock, County of Holt, and State of Ne braska, an estray animal which at that time was of the following description, to-wit: One red steer, three years old in the spring of 1914, weight about 700 pounds, with a brand on the right hip which the undersigned believes to be a flat bar. The owner of said animal may have him by proving property, paying charges for keeping said animal, expenses of filing notice with the Justice of the Pe ace and with the County Clerk of Holt County, Ne braska, and the publication of this notice. Dated this 22nd day of September, A. D. 1916. daniel McCarthy, Being the person who took up said es tray. _ 15-5 (First publication September 23.) SHERIFF’S SALE. By Virtue of an Order of Sale, Di rected to me from the Clerk of tin District Court of Holt County, Ne braska, on a judgment obtained before R. R. Dickson, Judge of the District Court of the Fifteenth Judicial District in and for Holt County, Ne braska, on the 12th day of September, 1914, in favor of Occidental Building and Loan Association of Omaha, Ne braska, as Plaintiff, and against Josephine Lenhoff, Jacob Lenhoff, her husband, Fred C. Tenborg, Nora Ten borg, his wife, William Luben, Jr , Alexander Searl and Leslie I. Puckett, as Defendants, for the sum of Two Hundred Seventy-Two ($272.00) Dol lars. and No Cents, and costs taxed at $29.90, and accruing costs, I have I levied upon the following Real Estate taken as the property of said Defend ants, to satisfy said Ordef of Sale, to wit: Lots Nine (9) and Ten (10), in Block Three (3), in the Original Town of Emmet as Surveyed, platted and re corded in Holt County, Nebraska. And will offer the same for sale to the highest bidder for cash, in hand, on the 25th day of October, A. D. 1915, at the front door of the Court House in O’Neill, Holt County, Nebraska, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, when and where due attendance will be given by the undersigned. Dated at O’Neill, Holt County, Ne braska, this 22nd day of September, 1916. H. D. GRADY, 16-5 Sheriff of Said County. M. L. Donovan, Attorney, Omaha, Neb. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DE FENDANTS. In the District Court of Holt County, Nebraska. Kate E. Gunnell, Plaintiff, vs. C. D. Bricker, George E. Bricker, Mary Myrtle Bricker, W. W. Loomis, B. E. Loomis, First National Bank of Windom, a corporation, the unknown heirs or devisees of James S. Barber, deceased, John A. Rupert and Wil liam Chalfant, Receivers for the Chester County Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Company, a corpora tion, and the Chester County Guar antee Trust & Safe Deposit Com pany; a corporation, Defendants. To C. D. Bricker, George E. Bricker, Mary Myrtle Bricker, W. W. Loomis, B. E. Loomis, First National Bank of Windom, a corporation, the un known heirs or devisees of James S Barber, deceased, John A. Rupert and William Chalfant, Receiver for the Chester County Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Company, a corpora tion, and the Chester County Guar antee Trust & Safe Deposit Com pany, a corporation: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 16th day of Au gust, 1915, Kate E. Gunnell com menced an action against you and each of you in the District Court of Holt County, State of Nebraska, the object and purpose of said action be ing to bar you and each of you from any interest in or claim to or equity of redemption in the following describ ed real estate situated in Holt County State of Nebraska, to-wit: South West Quarter (SWVi) of Sectior Twelve (12), and the North West Quarter (NWy4) of Section Thirteen (13), Township Thirty-Two (32) Range Eleven (11), West of the 6th P. M., being 320 acres more or less, and for the purpose of quieting title in plaintiff; that pursuant to an affidavit filed in said case by the plaintiff, the following order was made by the Dis trict Court of Holt County, State of Nebraska, entitled in the above cause to-wit: “This cause coming on to be heard upon the petition of the plaintiff positively verified and affidavit in the matter of service by publication upon the defendants in the above entitled cause. “It is hereby ordered that service by publication b$ had in the manner pro vided by law upon all of said above named defendants in The Frontier, a newspaper published in Holt County, Nebraska, for not less than thirty days. “Signed this 19th day of October, 1915. BY THE COURT, R. R. DICKSON, Judge.” You are required to answer said petition on or before the 6th day of December, 1915. 19-5 KATE E. GUNNELL. By M. L. Donovan, Her Attorney. SPEECH,U. S. SENATORSHERMAN Speech of Hon. Lawrence Y. Sherman, United States Senator From Ill inois, Before the Home Mar ket Club at Boston, Mass. Imperative as the need is for a Re publican victory in 1916 there is some thing greater and more enduring now and hereafter. It rises above party and politics and race and creed. It dwells in a region bounded only by our flag. It calls for the allegiance of every son of the republic, native or alien born. It is found on that higher level where only patriots walk. It lives only in the deathless spirit of those who made us free. It calls from Con cord and Lexington and from every name and event on lettered tablet and memorial stone near us tonight. It broods above the monument on Bun ker Hill, where was written the genesis of free government in the New World. It spoke of free seas and neutral rights more that a hundred years ago. It made the sacrifice from the river banks of Shiloh to the red hillside of Gettysburg that the Union might be saved from dismemberment, its institutions respected, its laws su preme. It is the spirit of Americanism re generated, redeemed and rededicated to our republic by all who are gath ered within its sheltering folds. Half the world is at war. None may ask that the ties of nativity be broken. We ask only that they be subordinated to the welfare of our country. This country is what the people make it. If it fails it will be one fail ure. If it succeed, it will be our suc cess. We can succeed. We must not fail. It would proclaim to crowns and sceptered might that the people cannot rule. It would write in the world’s history our dishonor and shame. We are of many races. It was so from the beginning. The founders built for all and shall not all sustain with loyal will what they did? It must not be a republic of racial hate, of alien jealousies, of people en tangled in the ancient feuds of Europe. The wars of the Old World must not be waged in our country. The fore'ign and the native born must fuse in an unconquerable pa triotism of America first and loyalty to our republic forever. Let us make it American, self-restrained, dignified, powerful, peaceable, but adequately prepared and capable of self-defense against either foreign or domestic enemies. Our nation is sovereign and rules its territory, its people and its institu tions. It is neutral. Amidst the perils of a world conflict it has held the course chartered by the law of nations. This republic cannot be the theater of alien plots and murderous strife. The Republican party knows that the production of wealth precedes its distribution. Its adversaries do not recognize the simple truth that the American people cannot distribute either wages or wealth thfcy do not have. With this maximum as a corner stone of its party edifice, it strives steadfastly that all may share in sup plying each other’s wants. It declines to see the wisdom of buying anything elsewhere if we can produce it at home. in 191b must be told again the story of American protection. It will not now fall on heedless ears. Experience has taught the time-honored expensive lesson of Democratic victory. It will not be forgotten or unlearned by lis tening to strange tales of tariff reformers or visionaries riding their theories into industrial ruin. The pro tective periods of the Republican party write the chapter of the country’s prosperity. Industrial activity, living wages and prices, with steady employ ment and constant markets naturally follow a Republican administration. President Wilson in his message to Congress, April 8, 1913, speaking for the Democratic party, said: “The object of the tariff duties henceforth laid must be effective com petition, the whetting of American wits by contest with the wits of the rest of the world.” The American people have now had two years of “effective competition.” So effective has it been no one has escaped its devastation. Distrust was substituted for confidence. Enterprise halted. The paralysis of idleness fell upon the industry of the country. The rising tide of increased imports and a decrease of exports lost our home mar ket and denied, until mitigated by the temporary calamity of war, an expan sion of trade abroad. Whetting our wits against the wits of the world because a contest of American wages against foreign wages and standards of living. It is an un equal contest. It pits at last the American home, its women and child ren, against the conditions and wage struggles of the Old World. Success can come under the Democratic plan of J whetting wits only by the debasement of our labor and consequent impov erishment of all dependent on it. It is not the first tariff operation the Democratic party has tried on the pro ductive industries of the country. The offense has been committed so often as to merit a long term sentence in 1916 under the habitual criminal sec tion of economic laws. It is the mission of the Republican party, among other high duties of gov ernment, to rescue the industries of the country from the misfortune caus ed by the mistakes of the Democracy. It will restore industry, revive busi ness, and give work to the idle. The time lost to the wage earners cannot return. An idle day can never be re deemed. On October 3, 1913, when the Pres ident signed the present tariff act, Mr. Underwood, then Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, stated: “I am absolutely confident that this law will reduce the cost of living in the United States and it will provide ample revenue for the Government.” The high cost of living was 7 per cent higher in September, 1914, than in 1913. The only relieving feature of the prophecies of abundant reveune is that few believed them when made and no body believes them now. The obser vant ones long ago discovered a treas ury deficit was a normal system of a Democratic administration and a logical result of its tariff legislation. It has been fortified by a European war tax, by an income tax and a cor poration tax, and still the deficit grows. The Democracy has tried everything but economy in its efforts to keep even. This would be tried if it were not in their 1912 platform. Treasury re ports advertise a constantly decreas ing net balance. The months of July and August, 1915, present the Govern ment with a deficit of $30,000,000 as the ample revenue of Speaker Clark and Chairman Underwood. Free trade prophecies again yield to mathematics. The fiscal delusion of Democratic statesmen require treatment by Re publicans who are able to distinguish between a surplus and a deficit. The great interior region between the Alleghanies and the Rocky Moun tains is known as the Middle West. In territory and agriculture it is the great body of the North American Re public. It is washed by no tidewater and its southern borders blend where both corn and cotton grow. It con tains the nation’s granary. Without its generous yield we would depend on foreign markets to support our people. It numbers among its cities the second largest in the Western Hemisphere and one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world. Manufacturers, mining, railways and agriculture, com merce and banking have sprung from its fertile resources since the Civil war. When peace reutrns to a troubled world we face the nations who must turn their surplus to our markets. They must sell their excess. Their highly perfected organizations for war purposes will be diverted to peaceful pursuits. A vast production must re sult. The temporary protection given our markets by war will end. The free lists of the Democratic tariff will flood our markets in an unprecedented vol ume. The crippled and the maimed must live. Their handiwork will help swell the flood until our people must feel the strain. Wage scale adjust ments alone cannot meet merchandise produced under such conditions. Subject to the essential principle of protection, reciprocal advantage must be sought in return from other nations so that our surplus may reach foreign markets. A constructive policy, not an exclusive and destructive course is required. The most abhorrent act of the pres ent Democratic administration is the statement that an American who seeks to open a market or extend the area of proper American influence abroad must expect no help or protection from the mother country. They are told all who enter on a foreign soil for gain are guilty of greedy commercialism and must assume there the risks of life and prosperity. A more reprehensible, un-American declaration never came even from the Democratic party. . The Democratic party appeals for support and asks that President Wil son be re-elected because he has kept us out of war with Europe. In 1853 Franklin Pierce, a Democrat, was President. The Crimean War began then. For more than three years Great Britain, France, Turkey and Sardinia fought Russia. President Pierce maintained peace. In 1871 the Franco-Prussian War broke out. Gen eral Grant, a Republican, was Presi dnet. He kept the peace. A few years ago the Russo-Japanese Wrar present ed similar questions of neutrality and the rights of neutrals. Theodore Roosevelt, a Republican, was President. He, too, kept us at peace. Why should Pierce, Grant or Roose velt have involved us in any of these past wars of the Old World? Why should President Wilson involve us in the present European War? Other Presidents did only their duty then. It is equally President Wilson’s duty now. There is no more reason why the President should enter into war now than the Presidents named in nther years. The Government at Washington is not now representative. It is sectional. It represents neither voting power, wage earners, occupations, nor ma terial resources. The thirteen States of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Flor ida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South arolina Texas, Tennessee and Virginia are a group of solidly Democratic States. Connecticut, California, Illi nois, Massachusetts, Michigan, Iowa, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wisconsin are thirteen States that are certainly Republican, or may be re garded as fighting ground. The thir teen Democratic States in 1912 cast 1,818,000 votes. The thirteen Republi can States cast 7,985,115 votes. The Democratic States have 869,583 wage earners. The Republicna States have 4,778,340. The legislative machinery of the United States is framed and operated by a combination of States having less than one-fourth of the total population and less than one-eight of the total votes cast in 1912. The Democratic party is itself in power by a minority of over a million votes. It, in turn, is ruled by a sec tional minority, through which one fourth of the population casting one eighth of the votes is the ruler and law-giver for 100,000,000 people and 15,000,000 votes. The Republican party will substitute national govern ment for sectional control. PAID ADVERTISING. GIRL TO WORK FOR BOARD AND go to school.—Mrs. Flynn. 18-2p. For Sale—Two pure-bred Poland Poland China boars.—B. H. Johring. 17-3 GOOD MEDIUM HOUSE, CLOSE IN, for rent. Enquire of J. J. McCaf ferty. 19-2p. MASSAGING, MANICURING, SIIAM pooing, call Tel. No. 166.—Mrs. Dunhan. 6 STEEL RANGE FOR SALE CHEAP —In good condition. Enquire at this office. 19-tf. FINE CANDIES AND HOT CHOCO late.—McMillin & Markey’s Bakery and Candy Kitchen. 22-tf. FOR SALE—NEW FOUR ROOM house and two lots, southeast part of O’Neill.—Wm. Welch. 43 OLD WHEAT FLOUR$1.75 A SACK; New Wheat Flour $1.40 a sack, cash. 600 pounds $13.50, at the Mill.—George Gaughenbaugh. 15tf. FQR SALE—SOME S. C. RHODE Island Red, high scoring Cockerels, at $1.0 each if taken at once.—Andy Clark, Emmet, Neb. 19-3p. KODAK SUPPLIES. KODAK AM ateur finishing developing, any size roll of film, 15c; prints or post cards, 5c eacl>—W. B. Graves. 44-tf. ROOMS FOR RENT—FURNISHED or unfurnished, in brick building, close in, with steam heat, electric lighted, hot and cold water and bath. Call at this office. 19-tf. FOUND—ON THE LINKS OF THE Idle Hour Golf Club Sunday, Octo ber 14, a pair of glesses in case and a pocket comb. Owner can have same by calling at this office and paying for this notice. NOTICE — THE PARTIES WHO took two pair of gloves from our store Monday afternoon are known. If they wish to save trouble they better return same at once.—O’Neill Clothing Co. 19-1 FOR SALE—MY FARM OF 160 acres, 9 iles northeast of O’Neill, price $30 an acre, on liberal terms; also, two good corner lots in good location in west part of town.—C. A. Moore, O’Neill, Neb. 19-3p. LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN— On or about July 1, two head of yearlings, branded “C. A.” on left hip. Liberal reward will be paid for infor mation leading to their recovery.—Ad dress, Andy Clark, Emmet, Neb. 19-3p. Mr. Farmer: If you want to make a loan come in and let me show you my fifteen year and six months amorti zation plan. This is the best farm loan proposition that was ever heard of in Holt county. My office is always open and I will be glad to see you. Yours truly, 12-tf. John L. Quig. IMPORTANT NOTICE We have never before sold a remedy with the QUICK action of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka, the appendicitis preventative. ONE SPOONFUL re lieves sour stomach, gas and consti pation AT ONCE. Gilligan & Stout, druggists. E4. We keep a good supply of Fresh and Salted Meats on hand at all times. Your patronage solicited. Give us a call. DIMMITT BROS. PROPRIETORS O’NEILL, — NEBRASKA I EDWARD H. WHELAN * £av/yet* * PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS -o O’NEILL, NEBRASKA theO’CEILL x ABSTRACT .SO j Compiles v Abstracts ot Titlr-* rHE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY. &he 5ai?itapy )Jti|eat Market We have a full line of Fresh and Cured Meats, Pure Horn* Rendered Lard. Wrn. Simpson Naylor Block Phone 150 Dr. E. T. Wilson PHYSICIAN anti SURGEON SPEC<IES: ^ Eye, :: Ear, :: Nose :: and Throat Spectacles correctly fitted and Supplied Office and Residence—Rooms No. 1, and 3, Naylor Block O’NEILL, NEB. FRED L. BARCLAY. STUART, NEB. ^ Makes Long or Short Time Loans on Improved Farms and Ranches. If you are in need of a loan drop him a line and he will call and see you. DR. J. P. GILL16AN Physician and Surgeon Special attention give to DISEASES OF THE EYE AND CORRECT FITTING OF GLASSES DR. P. Jf FLYNN Pkystcian and Surgeonj Night Calls will be Promptly Attended Office: First door to right over Pix ley’s drug store. Residence phone 96. DR.. JAMES H. HALE OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Naylor Building O’Neill, Neb. i Office Hours: 9-12 A. M., 2-5 P. M. Phone 262. To our Patrons and Prospective jf Patrons: THE SCHLITZ HOTEL is not closed, nor will it be for some time to come. V The same Splendid Service, at ' Popular Rates, will be maintained in the future as in the past. P. H. PHILBIN, President. 314-522 South 16th St. OMAHA. NEBR W. K. HODGKIN Lawyers 0 Office1 Nebraska State Bank Bldg. Reference: O’Neill National Bank. O’Neill, :: :: :: Neb. snwoiti Abstract Coni£aift Title Abstractors Dffice in First National Bank Bldg WELSH GRAIN CO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Solicits your consignments of Hay. Prompt returns our Motto. Srandeis Big. - - Omaha, Neb. AUTO LIVERY GO DAY OR NIGHT NEW : CAR. i PHONE-219. ' Charles A. Calkins