The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 28, 1912, Image 8

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    -I
The practical painter says,
there are two sides to
every question, but the
man who always uses
Patton’s
Sun-Prow
Paint
both inside and outside
is on the right side of
the paint question.
Patton’s Sun-Proof Paints are prepared in the Patton propor*
tions which produces a paint unlike any other in durability,
beauty and covering qualities. It resists the action of beat and
cold' to a wonderful degree: holds its gloss, too. Get a
color card and oaint advice from
0. 0. SNYDER
Easier Terms for
Government Water Rights
Payments for water rights on the Government Shoshone
Project in the Big Horn Basin are now $4.70 per acre first
year —$1 00 per acre second year—$1.00 per acre third year
—$3.40 per acre fourth year—$6.00 per acre fifth, sixth,
seventh, eighth and ninth years—and $11.00 per acre the
tenth year, test, 2300 mi to bo openei to entry soon,
320 ACRE FREE H0MEST ADS in Campbell county, Wyoming, good
for dairying, !• :k raising and mixed farming—the kind
that insures a leady cash income.
IEW FtLHESS FBEE —Write me today for new folders telliDg all
about the cheap lands along the Burlington. Get in on
the ground fioor before the coming land movement starts.
Homeseekers’ rates from Eastern Nebraska every first
and Third Tuesday.
D. Clem Deaver, Immigration Agent
lOOt Farnam Street, Omaha, Nebraska
Save Work
Worry
Money
by using a Stover Gasoline
Engine. Made right. Sold right.
Send (or llustrated catalogue
(ree. ^
SANDWICH MFG. CO.
Council Bluffs, la.
General Agents.
Sale bills i ssess.
THEO’EFjILL
ABSTRACT. SO.
Compiles
Abstracts of Title
THB ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB
STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY
COCKERILI. BROS.
Pool & Billiard Parlors
We have opened a Pool and Billiard
Hall In the old Glellsh market
building and respectfully solicit a
share of your patronage.
(Lhe 5ai?itapy
)JWeat Market
WSESSSiP
WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF
Fresh and Cured Meats, Fresh Eggs
and Butter, Pure Home Rend
ered Lard.
Shoemaker Bros.
Naylor Block Phone 150
The Frontier Six Months for 75i
..........i .. ........ i ■ n. ii r itii-innwriwi inn.
(First publication March 28)
Legal Notice.
In the District Court of Holt county,
Nebraska.
William Luben, Plaintiff.
vs.
Luella M. Storer and husband, Samu
al C. Storer,Newton Jones and wife,
Louisa Jones, and William Camp
bell, and wife, - Campbell, real
name unknown, Defendants.
NOTICE
The above named defendants will
take notice that on March 6, 1912, the
plaintiff tiled his petition in the above
entitled cause and court, the object
and prayer of which is to quiet the
title in himself to the northwest quar
ter (nwi) of section two (2), township
twenty-eight (28), range thirteen (13),
west of the 6th P. M. in Holt county,
Nebraska, against the claims of each
and all the defendants; to cancel and
to have decreed to be wholly paid a
certain mortgage executed by Peter
H. Bendixen and wife, Petra A.
Bendixen, to Luella M. Storer, on
October 24, 1895, and recorded in book
66 of mortgages, at page 73 of the re
cords in the office of county clerk, in
Holt county. Nebraska: and to enjoin
said defendants and each and all of
them from claiming any title to the
said premises as against said plaintiff.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before Monday, the 6th
day of May, 1912
41 4 WILLIAM LUBEN,
By W. K. Hodgkin, His Attorney.
First publication March 7th, 1912.
Legal Notice.
Paul Fahy and Jane Fahy, his wife,
real name unknown, C. R Moore,
whose real name is Charles R. Moore,
Hattie J. Moore, his wife, O. G.
Moore, real name unknown, Emma
Moore, his wife, M. S. Boyd, real
name unknown, S. M. Boyd, real
name unknown, The Albert Lind
holm Company, a corporation and
Farmers Loan andTrust Company, a
corporation, defendants, will take
notice that on the 6th day of March,
A. D , 1912, Joel Parker, plaintiff,
commenced an action in the District
Court of Holt County, Nebraska,
against said defendants, the object
and prayer of which is to quiet and
contirm in plaintiff the title to and
possession of the following described
premises, and each and every part
thereof situated in the county of Holt
and state of Nebraska, to-wit:
Lots twenty-two (22) and twenty
four (21) in block thirty-three (33), of
Fahy’s sub-division of lots one (l), two
(2), three (3), fourteen (14), tifteen(l5),
and sixteen (16), in block thirty-three
(33), or O’Neill, Nebraska, and also lot
ten (10) in block N of Fahy’s Park Ad
dition to O'Neill, Nebraska, and lot
two (2) In block twenty-three f23) of
the original town of O’Neill, Nebras
ka, as surveyed, platted and recorded,
and to remove the clouds cast upon
his title to said described premises by
reason of the claims of the delendants
and each of them to some right, title
or Interest In or to or lien upon said
described premises, or some part
thereof, and to forever enjoin said de
fendants, and each of them, from as
serting any title to, lien upon or in
terest in said described premises, or
anv part thereof adverse to plaintiff.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 15th day of
April, 1912.
Dated this 7t.h day of March, 1912.
J. A DONOHOE,
38-4 Attorney for Plaintiff.
(First publication March 7)
Notice to Creditors.
In county court within and for Holt
county, Nebraska, March 5, 1912.
In the matter of the estate of Elijah
H. Thompson, deceased.
TO TIIE CREDITORS OF SAID ESTATE:
You are hereby notified that I will
sit at the county court room in O’
Neill, in said county, on the 1st day
of April, 1912, on the 1st day of July,
1912, and on the 1st day of October,
1912, at 10 o’clock a. m., each day to
receive and examine all claims against
said estate, with view to their adjust
ment and allowance. The time limit
ed for the presentation of claims
against said estate is six months from
ttie 1st day of April, A. D. 1912, and
the time limited for the payment of
debts is one year from the 6th day of
March, 1912. After six months from
April 1 1912, ail claims barred.
Witness my hand and seal of said
county court, this 5th day of March,
1912.
(Seal) THOMAS CARLON,
38 4 County Judge.
(First publication March 28.)
Legal Notice.
To Anna H. Grant, unmarried, and
A. Slimmer, Christian Dame unknown,
and L. J. Thomas, Christian name un
known, partners doing business in the
name and style of Slimmer & Thomas
and-Slimmer, Christian name un
known, wife of A. Slimmer, and -
Thomas, Christian name unknown,
wife of L. J. Thomas, non-resident de
fendants.
You and each of you will take notice
that Caroline B. Steeie has commenc
ed an action in the district court of
Holt county, Nebraska, against you
and each of you, the object and prayer
of said action being to foreclose a
certain mortgage given by AnnaH.
Grant, unmarred,. on the 7th day of
November, A. I). 1910, to Charles E
Gibson, upon the northwest quarter
(nwi) of section twenty-two (22),
township twenty-five (25), range
thirteen (13), west of the 6th P. M
In llolt county, Nebraska, for the
purpose of securing her note for
three hundred ($300.00) dollars with
interest at the rate of 6 percent per
annum and the three interest notes
(hereto attached each in the sum of
eighteen ($18 00) dollars and drawing
ten per cent interest after due; plain
tiff alleging in said petition that she
is the legal owner and holder of said
notes and said mortgage by virtue of
an assignment thereof from Charles
E. Gibson, dated the 21st day of
March, 1911; that there is due the
t plaintiff, under the terms and condi
tions of said notes and mortgage, the
sum of Three Hundred Thirty ($330 00)
Dollars,no part of which has been paid
or in any manner satisfied; plaintiff
praysjthat the amount due her be de
termined, that the same may be de
creed to be a first lien upon said prem
. ises; that the defendants be required
to pay the same or that said premises
be sold and the proceeds thereof used
in payment of the amount due the
plaintiff with Interest and costs, and
for such other and further relief as
may be just and equitable.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 6th day of
May, 1912.
41-4 W. K. HODGKIN,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
First publication March 28th.
Legal Notice.
To Charles L. Rice and M. E. Rich
mond, Christian name unknown, non
resident defendants.
You and each of you will take no
tice that the Pierce State Bank has
commenced an action in the District
court of Holt county, Nebraska,
against you and each of you, and E.
C. Munsil the object and prayer of
said action being to forclose a certain
mortgage given by Charles L. Rice
and M. E. Richmond, christain name
unknown, on the 8th day of March,
1911, to the plaintiff upon certain
laundry machinery now situated and
being in the building owned by E. C.
Munsil, located on lot four (4), block
twenty (20) in the original townsite
of O’Neill, Nebraska, for the purpose
of securing their note for four hun
dred forty-eight ($448.00) dollars pay
able twenty months after date in in
stallments of fifteen [$15.00] dollars
per month for the first six months and
twenty-five [$25 00] dollars per month
thereafter, with interest at 10 per
cent, payable annually; plaintiff alleg
ing in said petition that it is the legal
owner and holder of said note and
mortgage; that there Is due the plain
siff under the terms and conditions of
said note and mortgage, the sum of
t wo hund red and eighty five dollars and
35 cents($285.35) no part of which has
been paid or in any manner satisfied.
Plaintiff prays that the amount due
it be determined, that the same may
be decreed to be a first lien upon said
laundry machinery; that the defend
ants be required to pay the same or
that said laundry machinery be sold
and the proceeds thereof used in the
payment of the amount due the plain
tiff with interest and costs, and for
such other and further relief as may
be lust and equitable.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 6th day of
May, 1912.
W. K. HODGKIN.
41-4 Attorney for Plaintiff.
First Publication March 28th.
Order to Show Cause.
In the district court of Holt county,
Nebaska. In the matter of the estate
of Henry Duffee, deceased.
Now on this 26th day of March,
1912, this cause came on for hearing
upon the petition of Hugh J. Boyle
administrator de bonis non of the es
tate of Henry Dutfee, deceased, pray
ing for a license to sell the following
described real estate situated in the
county of Holt and state of Nebraska
to-wit: The north-west quarter of
section twenty-five (25), township
twenty-five (25), north of range thir
teen (13), west of the sixth principal
Meridian, or a sufficient amount
thereof to bring the sum of $350 for
the payment of the debts allowed
against said estate and the costs of ad
ministration, there being no personal
property to pay said debts and ex
penses.
IT IS THEREFORE ordered that
all persons interested In said estate ap
pear before the district court in the
court house on the 16th day of May,
1912, at ten o’clock a. m. in the city
of O’Neill, Holt county, Nebraska,and
show cause why a license should not be
granted to said administrator de bonis
non to sell as muoh of the above de
scribed real estate of said deceased as
shall be necessary to pay said debts
and expenses.
It is further ordered that a copy of
this order be published in The Fron
tier, a weekly newspaper printed in
the city of O’Neill, Holt county, Ne
braska and of general circulation in
saldcounty for four successive weeks.
W. H. WESTOVER,
•Judge of District Court, Holt Coun
ty, Nebraska. 41-4
(First publication March 28)
Notice.
In the District Court of Box Butte
county, Nebraska.
In the matter of the application of
Frank H. Ramsdell, guardian of the
person and estate of Adelia Rams
dell, an insane person, for leave to
sell real estate.
Notice is hereby given that, in pur
suance of an order of the Honorable
W. H. Westover, judge of the district
court of Box Butte county, Nebraska,
made on the 20th day of April, 1911,
for the sale of the real estate herein
after described, there will be sold at
public vendue to the highest bidder
for cash, at the front door of the court
house in the city of O’Neill, in Holt
county, Nebraska, on the 19th day of
April, 1912, at the hour of 10 a’clock
a. m., the following described real
estate. The south half of the south
east quarter, south half of the soutn
west quarter of section five (5), in
township thirty (30), north of range
twelve west, in Holt county, Nebraska.
Said sale will remain open one hour.
Dated this 28th dav of March, 1912.
FRANK II. RAMSDELL,
Guardian of Adelia Ramsdell, an
insane person. _41-4
To Lovers of Good Horses.
The black Imported Stallion, Col
ton, will cover about the same terri
tory this season as last. Good horses
always bring good money. A word to
the wise is sufficient.
John L. Quig, Owner.
M. O. McManus, Manager. 39-tf.
F or SaJe
Red Polled Bulls
Pure Bred. Servicable age.
GEORGE W. BRADT,
O'Neill, - Nebraska
V ■
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
Cures Colds, Croup and Whoopi r z Cough.
T5he Frontier for. • • Job W ork
■Iiiii ~~ irrmwrnnw mr^ir• 'nrtmmm
SPEED OF A SHOT
Finding the Velocity of a Missile
a Simple Matter.
MEASURED BY A PAPER DRUM.
The Whirling Cylinder Registers the
Projectile’s Flight With Minute Ac
curacy at Any Desired Distance
Wing Shots and Shot Charges.
Persons at all Interested In gun firing
of any kind, whether of the revolver
or rifle or of heavy ordnance of any
kind, occasionally come upon the term
“muzzle velocity” and velocities of the
missile at stated distances.
“How can anybody tell how fast a
bullet is traveling when it leaves the
muzzle of a weapon?” is a likely com
ment on the part of the layman.
As a matter of fact this approximate
velocity of the missile may be one of
the easiest of determinr^ions to make.
In the first place, a drumlike cylinder
is made of fixed diameter and of suf
ficiently stiff paper to allow of its re
volving rapidly on a spindle. Using a
cylinder of small circumference, it is
necessary that the speed approach
2,000 revolutions a minute. These rev
olutions are produced by electric pow
er, and the count is made by an exact
mechanical register.
The gun is placed securely at the re
quired distance from the drum and is
sighted directly at the center of the
cylinder, which is spinning at so
many rods, even miles, a minute, as
its circumference determines. With
the drum’s speed adjusted an electric
current discharges the weapon, the
bullet striking the center of the drum
as measured from top to bottom.
The reader understands that with the
drum stationary the bullet would pass
directly through it on the line of its
diameter, coming out on the other side
with scarcely a shade of impediment.
With the drum’s periphery whirling at
the rate of 2,000 revolutions a minute
and its diameter only a fraction more
than a foot this would mean a rate of
2,000 yards in sixty seconds. Thus in
the fragment of a second necessary for
the bullet to enter one side of the pa
per dwtm, cross it and out at the other
side the opposite side of the drum
would show considerable deviation
from an exact diameter of line of pas
sage.
It is this space of deflection shown
inside the further rim of the drum that
is used for the computation of velocity
of the missile. The speed of the cylin
der may be computed to the ten thou
sandth part of a second if necessary
and the lineal distance run in that time
be charted in perpendicular lines on
the inner side of the paper. At what
ever line the bullet penetrates outward
it registers its time in crossing the
diameter of the cylinder. If it has re
quired the ten-thousandth part of a
second for the bullet to fly one foot its
muzzle velocity to the mile may be
computed by any schoolboy. By the
same process, too, the bullet’s velocity
at 100 yards or 500 yards may be de
termined.
Years ago before wing shooting had
become an art the farmer with his
muzzle loading shotgun and charge of
black powder would shoot directly at a
wild goose or duck in full flight. He
evolved a theory of his own as to the
oncoming bird, holding that the heavy
breast feathers “turned” the shot. He
waited until the bird had passed him
when, firing directly at it, he could
bring down his quarry.
But it was not because the bird was
not vulnerable, coming breast on.
The fact was that it eflw over his
charge of shot. Before he could pull
the trigger and the hammer fell on
the percussion cap and the compara
tively slow black powder could be ig
nited and exploded, sending the shot
twenty-five or thirty yards, the bird
had flown yards perhaps beyond its
position when the fowler first touched
the trigger. But firing directly at the
bird after H had passed the shot
charge had a strong tendency to.drop
as It flew', and the bird flying on a
level line “got in the way” of the
charge.
Today the modern nltro powders are
Immensely quicker than was the old
black gunpowder, yet it ^as been an
engineering problem to determine Just
how fast and in what line a charge of
shot will travel. In this determina
tion the revolving drum device has
shown several important facts which
have been taken in connection with
the speed of individual game birds
and the effects of windage on a shot
tharge.
That most Important fact as to the
flight of shot from a modern shotgun
is that at forty yards the shot are
“strung out" for approximately fifteen
feet. While the leading pellets in the
string have greatest velocity and kill
ing power, at this distance even the
trailing pellets are of sufficient force
to kill.
All this has led to the modem prac
tice of the fowler to reckon with the
speed of his shot, the speed of the
bird, the influence of the wind in
"drifting” the charge, and out of
these established facts to “lead” the
bird sufficiently to kiU it rather than
maim and cripple It.—Marvin Holton
In Chicago Tribune.
The Other National Game.
Mrs. Galey (as Galey arrives home
at 6 a. m.)—Well, what in the world
reminded you to come home at all?
(Qaley—The came was called on ac
count of daylight, my dear.—ruck.
Hatred does not cease by hatred at
any time. Hatred ceases by love.
This is an old rule.—Buddha.
I
\WE obtain the famous 5A
w Blankets direct from the
factory and can sell them to
you at prices that are right.
They are made for warmth and
wear, and will last longer than
any other blanket.
Buy a 5A Bias Girth for the Stahl*.
Buy a 5A Square for the Street.
-We Sell Them -——
J. H. Davison
HOTEL
EVANS
w
ONLY FIRST-CLASS
HOTEL IN THE CITY
FREE BUS SERVICE
W. T. EVANS, Prop
W. K. HODGKIN
Lawyer
Office: Nebraska State Bank Biff.
REFERENCE: O'NEILL NATIONAL BANK, O'NRILL
R. R. DICKSON
Lawyer
REFERENCE I FIRST NATION* I RANK. I'BUU
FRED L. BARCLAY
STUART, NEB.
Makes Long or Short Time Loans on Imorovex
Farms and Ranches
If you are In need of a loan drop bim
a line and be will call and see you,
A* ItAAond
Abstract Ceutipaift
Title Abstractors
Offioe in First National Bank Bldg
DR. P. J. FLYNN
Ph * sman and Surgeon
Night Cant will be Promptly Attended
Office: Flrtt toor to right over Pixley S
Hanley's drujr store. Residence phone 86
OR. J* P* ©ILLIOAN
Physician and Surgeon
Special attention given to
DISEASES OF WOMEN, DISEASES
Of THE EYE AND CORRECT
FII TING OF GLASSES
Dr. E. T. Wilson
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
SRECIATLIES:
eve. Ear. Nose and Throat
Spectacle, oorreetly fitted and Supplied
Office and Reiidence—Rooms No. 1,
and 3, Naylor Block
O'NEILL. NEB.