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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 1916)
public Sale I / Having rented my farm I will offer the following property at public auction 1 at my farm, the old Wm. Daley place, 12 miles north of Page, 1 mile east of the old Mineola postoffice, 4 miles east and 1 north of Opportunity, commencing at ji 10 o’clock, a. m., on Monday, February 28 8 Hecvd Horses and Mules One brown mare, 8 years old, weight 1300; 1 black mare, 8 years old, weight 1300; 1 bay horse, 8 years old, weight 1200; 1 bay mare, 9 years old, weight 1200; 1 black mare, 12 years old, weight 1150; 1 black mule, 5 years old, weight 1150; 1 black mule, 4 years old; weight 1000; 1 mule colt. 45 Hea_d of Cattle Eleven cows, 6 of these are good milch cows ; 10 2-year-old heifers, all bred to Hereford bull; 12 2-year-old steers; 12 last spring calves. 7 5 Head of Hogs Eight full blood Poland China sows, all bred to full blood Jersey Duroc boar; jp! ^ 65 good shoats; 1 full blood Duroc boar Farm Machinery, Etc. 1 One John Deere lister, 3-wheel; 1 2-wheel riding lister; 3 2-row elis, one nearly new; 1 riding cultivator; 1 walking cultivator; 1 disc; 1 3-section har row; 1 12-inch Oliver gang plow, nearly new; 1 6-foot McCormick mower; 15- f t foot Deering mower; 1 hay stacker; 1 sweep; Galloway manure spreader; 1 |pj hay rack on truck; 12-seated buggy; 1 farm wagon; 3 sets work harness; 1 bob jjfjj sled; 1 hand corn sheller; 50 bushels potatoes; 8 stacks of hay; 1 Cadillac 5 pas- ||ll senger automobile; 5 dining chairs; 1 6-foot table; linoleum 12x14 feet; 2 bed- pp steads; 1 dresser; 1 couch; 1 incubator; 1 heater; 1 washing machine and ringer; 1 Galloway cream separator and many other articles too numerous to jpj mention. PLENTY OF FREE LUNCH SERVED AT NOON jjjj TERMS—One years’ time on all sums over $10, with approved security and 10 per cent interest. $10 and under cash. ||| B. H. Dimmitt & Son, Owners Col. M. T. Elliott, Auctioneer. S. J. Weekes, Clerk ij|l I LAND & PUBLIC SALE! (Wanting to reduce my obligations, I have decided to sell the follow ing described land and personal property at my place 3 miles west of Bristow and Wz miles southeast of Spencer, on Wednesday, Feb. 23 Commencing at 1 o’clock sharp. Sale of land first. Free lunch at noon. Quarter Section of Land DESCRIPTION OF LAND—S% of NW%, N% of SWy4, Section 8, Township 33, Range 11 West. This quarter is fenced and cross-fenced, with timber and running water, 55 acres cultivated, 50 acres more can be broke, 25 to 40 tons of hay cut each year, about 30 acres bottom land, balance second bench, all good land. Purchaser to have privilege of lease for two years of improved quarter adjoining. Good large house, good barns, hog house with cement feeding floor, 30 acres hog tight and 70 acres cultivated. TERMS OF LAND SALE—$1,000.00 cash, balance at expiration of loan July 1, 1917. 14 Head Horses and Mules One mule, coming 3 years old; 4 mules, coming 2 years old; 2 mules, ;i coming yearlings; 1 bay driving team, 8 and 9 years old, weight 1,800; 1 bay mare, with foal, 8 years old, weight 1100; 1 brown mare, with foal, 10 years old, weight 1050; 1 sorrel mare with foal, 12 years old, weight 1200; 1 brown mare, 10 years old, weight 1200; 1 pony mare, 5 years old, weight 750. 26 Head of Cattle « I Six milch cows, some fresh, others fresh soon; 11 young calves; 6 f yearlings; 1 coming 8-year-old steer; 2 2-year-old heifers. t 30 Head of Hogs—A few brood sows, balance shoats from 50 to 130 pounds. Farm Machinery One 5 Ton pitless scale; 1 feed cutter and tripple-gear feed grinder; 1 Good Enough sulky plow; 1 breaking plow; i two-row eli; 1 single row eli; 1 lister; 1 3-section harrow; 1 corn planter; 1 press drill; 1 1-horse drill; 1 Plano binder; 2 John Deere cultivators; 1 horse power (14); 1 belt-jack and circle saw; 1 truck with hay rack; 1 wagon; 1 spring buggy and other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—On sums over $10 ten months time will be given on ap proved security drawing 10 per cent interest. Sums under $10 cash. CRIST ANDERSON E. A. PERSONS, C. T. SAMUELSON, C. L. TAAQUIST, Auctioneers. F. W. WOODS, Clerks 1 — ■■«■■■ mm Summary of News. (Continued from page four.) weeks ago the State Department sug gested to Great Britain and her allies that in future merchantmen be un armed. The proposition met with dis favor in every allied foreign office. Formal rejection of the plan is ex pected from London, Paris, Rome and Petrograd. Now Germany and Aus tria, however, complicate the situation by accepting without reservation the proposition made to their enemies. While the United States regards ac ceptance on the part of the central powers as a victory for its contention that unarmed merchantmen must not be sunk without warning, the condi tions of acceptance are such that end less complication hardly can be pre vented. At San Francisco Friday twenty seven indictments were returned against William F. Boyce assistant United States immigration commis sioner here, other immigration officers, employees of the Pacific Mail Company, and a San Francisco custom house broker charging them with conspiracy to smuggle Chinese into the United States. The indictments followed an investigation by the grand jury into the dscovery of eighty-six contraband Chinese on the liner Mongolia when that vessel arrived October 17, 1915, from the Orient. The Amsterdam Courant states that Prussian causalty lists Nos. 420 and 429 show 19,339 dead, wounded and missing and lists Nos. 430 to 439 show 18,349 dead, wounded and missing. The total Prussian losses are computed by this newspaper as 2,377,378. The German military losses include 335 lists of casualties of Wurtemberg for ces, 247 Bavarian lists, 248 Saxon lists sixty navy and some lists concerning German officers and noncommissioned officers in the Turkish service. Disposition of the British liner Ap pam, brought into Hampton Roads by a German prize crew, has been decided upon by the United States and will be announced soon. Although there is no official confirmation, the indications are that the ship will be permitted to remain in American waters as a prize of the Germans indefinitely, under the terms of the Prussian-American treaty. President Wilson practically won his fight for ratification of the Nicaraguan treaty in the executive session of the Senate today. Some of its most vigor ous opponents said the administration WILL YOU DO SO? When you want something very badly you put into it all your heart and soul and energy. You give it your time—your thought— your attention. Is there anything that is worth as much energy as accumulating money in our Bank? Is there any thing which will give you more satisfaction in the fu ture? Why not make up your mind to use your ut most endeavors to build up a big Bank Account here? You can do it—if you will. When the feet are bare the whole body thinks!'.— Egyptian Proverb. This bank carries no indebtedness of officers or stock holders and we are a member of The Federal Reserve Bank. Capital, surplus and undivided profits $100,000.00. THE O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK, O’NEILL. NEBRASKA. had won enough votes to command the necessary two-thirds and they pre dicted its ratification. The treaty pro. vides for the payment of $3,000,000 to Nicaragua for a canal route and naval base. Rather than be captured, twenty seven men of the crew of a German submarine trapped in the English Channel off the Isle of Wight killed themselves, according to Dr. M. S. Inglis, a Canadian army surgeon, who arrived in New York Thursday. He said each of the sailors was found to have a bullet wound in the head. Dr. Inglis said he was in Dover when four German submarines were brought in. With a British naval officer he went down into one in which the crew were shot. The periscope of the craft had been broken off by a chain drag of British patrol boats. Dr. Inglis said a British naval officer told him that fifty-nine German submarines had either been captured or sunk. Each day of the last month 1000 men have enlisted in Canada for service over-seas. Trained men are being sent across the Atlantic at the rate of almost 500 a day. The number of officers and sergeant instructors is increasing rapidly through training in Canada and the return of disabled men from the front. Military camps will be opened in each province as soon as the weather permits. Aniceto Pizana, alleged leader of the “Texas revolution,” who is declared to have been responsible for the border trouble last summer and fall, was captured late Thursday afternoon and brought to Matamoros, Mexico, oppo site Brownville, Tex., for imprison ment, according to an official report today to Col. A. P. Blocksom, com manding the United States border patrol. With Pizana were captured four other alleged Mexican bandits. All are being held incomunicado in the Matamoros Jail. William Lorimer, former United States senator from Illinois, was in the field in Chicago Friday for the con gressional nomination in the district he formerly represented in Congress. Hs friends are circulating a petition to place his name on the republican ticket at the April primaries. An autopsy was performed Thurs day night at Chicago by the coroner’s physician on the body of Miss Marion Frances Lambert, the 18-year-old high school student which was found in a wooded section of Lake Forest, 111., and enough poison was found in the girl’s stomach to have caused death. Detectives today continued their efforts to find the man who accom panied Miss Lambert into the woods. His foot prints were found paralleling hers to the spot where the body was found. From there the tracks led to the tracks of the Chicago and North western Railroad, where the taril was lost. How Mr. Davis Got Rid of a Bad Cough. “Some time ago I had a very bad cough,” writes Lewis T. Davis, Black water, Del. “My brother McCabe Davis gave me a small bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. After "OV t ONE MILLION In Cash with the State of Nebraska to protect the depositors in State Banks. This fund was created by the Depositors’ Guarantee Law of the State of Nebraska. The man, woman or child with money to deposit should avail themselves of this protection, offered by the NEBRASKA STATE BANK The only Bank in O’Neill Operating Under the State Guarantee Law. taking this I bought half a dozen bot tles of it but only used one of them as the cough left me and I have not been troubled since.” Obtainable every where. 34-4 Do You Find Fault With Everybody? An irritable, falt-finding disposition is often due to a disordered stomach. A man with good digestion is nearly always good natured. A great many have been permanently benefitted by Chamberlain’s Tablets after years of suffering. These tablets strengthen the stomach and enable it to perform its functions naturally. Obtainable everywhere. 34-4 Meek and Blackbird Items. The social held at the Meek school house last Saturday evening was largely attended and a good time was reported by all. The proceeds of the social will go to help defray the ex pense of the new piano, which was installed in the school house. Dr. Skelton was called to the home of Elmer Hull last Monday morning on account of the serious illness of Mrs. Hull. A nurse is also in at tendance. We hope she recovers rap idly. As Blake Benson failed to make his appearance at the social last Saturday evening, it must be that one, or both, of his cars are out of commission. Mrs. Ralph Pinkerman and Miss Doty are ill with the grippe. Miss Maud Rouse returned from her trip to Boyd county the last of the week. Mrs. A. Clevinger has been on the sick list the past week and her sister, Miss Evans,has been assiting her with her houehold duties. Clarence Hicks was seen strolling towards Griffith’s Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Sargent spent Sunday at Levi Goodfellow’s. The ladies aid met with Mrs. Ed ward Larson last Wednesday and a fine time was reported by all. The next meeting will be held in two weeks with Miss Mae McGowan. The Misses Laura Rouse and Hollas Beauchamp spent Saturday night with Jennie Griffith. Edwin Hull, who has been attending school at O’Neill, spent Saturday and Sunday at Haynes’. George Hansen and Joe Martin made a short call at F. H. Griffith’s Saturday evening. Miss Helen Spindler spent Saturday and Sunday with home folks. Helen looks somewhat downhearted since a certain young man left for the sunny south. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Goodfellow will soon be leaving for their home in Montana. Their friends and neigh bors will be sorry to have them go but wish them success in their new home. COMFORTING WORDS. Many An O’Neill Household Will Find Them So. To have the pains and aches of a bad back removed—to be entirely free from annoying, dangerous urinary dis orders, is enough to make any kidney sufferer grateful. The following ad vice of one who has suffered will prove comforting words to hundreds of O’Neill readers. J. J. Lingel, farmer, Page, Neb., says: “I had a lot of trouble from backache and an almost constant sore, ness just over my kidneys. If I took cold, the pain got very severe and left me so lame for a few days that I couldn’t work. I tried several medi cines but with no benefit. Finally, I used Doan’s Kidney Pills and they cured me. Price 50c, at all deaiers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that cured Mr. Lingel. Foster-Milbum Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Public Sale : We are going to leave the country and will sell at public sale at the old Dixon place, 3 miles west and 4% miles north of the cemetery, O’Neill, Nebraska, commencing at 1 o’clock p. m., on Thursday, F eb. 24 4Head of Horses One bay team of mares, 6 years old, weight about 3,000 pounds; 1 bay gelding, 5 years old, weight about 1,500; 1 blue roan mare, 8 years old, weight about 1,300. 23 Head of Cattle Seven head of high grade Shorthorn milch cows; 1 choice Holstein cow; 15 head, from sucking calves to yearlings past. 11 Head of Hogs Ten Duroc Jersey brood sows; 1 Duroc Jersey boar. Farm Machinery, fctc. One Sharpless cream separator; 1 Avery wagon and box; hay rack; walking plow; Defiance riding plow; Moline lister; Oliver 2-row Eli; Badger cultivator; McCormick mower; McCormic hay rake; Iowa hay stacker; Deering 3-wheel sweep; 3-section harrow; new wagon box and dump endgate; 6 tons of hay and some corn and other articles too numerous to mention. FREE LUNCH AT NOON. TERMS—12 months’ time will be given on all sums of $10 or over with approved security at 10 per cent interest. Under $10 cash. H. W. McCALL, 0. P. NcCALL Col. James Moqre, Auctioneer. S. J. Weekes, Clerk — —i—— I