The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 21, 1918, Image 6

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    I REFEREE’S SALE
I Rit HMB18 UK {Will!
It will be sold to the highest cash bidder, in front of the Court House, in O’Neill, Nebrask a,
at 2 o’clock p. m., on
Sat ’day, Nt tvemb * 23,1918
Land is the East-half of Section 9, Township 29, Range 12
Two miles north and 3 miles west of O’Neill, the best town in north Nebraska. Look at
map. Splendid, hard, level roads to town. Land all level and all tillable. Soil first class.
Public school house and union church building across the road. Inexpensive buildings. Large
part in crop this year. This is one of the best farms in the county and must be sold by order
of the court to close an estate. If you want to get a good farm at your own price do not miss
this sale. No agents or commissions to pay in this deal.
The Frontier
Published by Dennis H. Cronin
One Year .$1.60
Six Months ... 76 Cents
Entered at the post office at O'Neill,
Nebraska, as second-class matter.
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Insertion.
LOCAL MATTERS. *
Charles McKenna went to Omaha
Tuesday afternoon.
Frank Morey, of Page, was trans
acting business in this city Tuesday.
Miss Eula Stilson, of Atkinson, was
in the city last week visiting with
friends.
Rev. M. F. Byrne, of Emmet, was
in the city Monday visiting with
friends.
Rev. Father Giblon went to Omaha
Tuesday morning for a short visit
with friends.
E. S. Roche and his daughter, Miss
Laura Roche, of Page, were visiting
with friends here last Saturday.
L. E. Skidmore, of Ewing, was in
the city Monday visiting with friends
and attending to business affairs.
H. J. Porter and Roy Alderson of
Chambers, went to Lincoln Monday as
delegates to attend the I. 0. 0. F.
Grand Lodge meeting.
L. W. Arnold lost a watch last week
and was very fortunate to find it
again where it had been dropped
while L. W. was feeding cattle.
Mrs. T. J. Wilburn, of Atkinson,
and her daughter, Mrs. R. Cole, of
Brunswick, were in the city the latter
part of last week visiting with friends.
Senator John Robertson went ,to
Omaha Tuesday afternoon to attend a
session of the district exemption
board. The board has about three
weeks work to complete its labors.
Relatives of Peter Matthews re
ceived word the latter part of last
week that he had arrived safely over
seas. Peter enlisted in the Cavalry
over a year ago, but since that time
has been transferred to the artillery.
T. W. Crawford, 70, of Paddock,
Nebr., and Mrs. Maria Taylor, 63, of
Royal, Nebr., were granted license to
wed by the county judge last Thurs
day. They were married on the same
day by Rev. S. T. Walker at the
Methodist parsonage in this city.
The Parrot declares the pro-Ger
man vote to be responsible for the
recent democratic holcast. Reason
ing along this line one would of ne
cessity reach the conclusion that the
pro-German considered Sheriff Duffy
less patriotic that the other demo
cratic candidates.
The problem of what to do with the
soldiers about to be discharged need
not worry the government as far as it
applies to Holt county. The corn
fields of the county are awaiting the
boys and many of these same fields
are owned by those in the service.
Holt county can re-absorb its entire
quota without oversupplying the labor
demand.
The thanks of the entire community
are due Mayor P. D. Mullen for his
untiring energy in enforcing, regard
less of the prejudiced opposition of a
few, the rigid quarantine against in
fluenza. Mayor Mullen started in
even before the government took a
hand and has maintained an effective
quarantine without fear or favor and
apparently oblivious of press and
other attacks. As a result the number
of new cases is steadily decreasing
and many owe their lives to the dili
gence of the mayor.
O’Neill soon may have a third news
paper. Democratic leaders are dis
cussing plans for the organization of
i a stock company to publish a weekly
newspaper,, to be the official organ of
. the party in Holt county. It is the in
tention to equip the new plant with
an extensive job departmer.' and with
modern machinery. Lead.: 3 long
have felt the need of a medium
through which to promulgate the
party doctrines and believe that some
of the ticket might have been saved
at the last election had they been
properly equipped with a publicity de
partment. The new sheet probably
will start soon after the first of the
year and will have a guaranteed sub
scription list of 1,000 or more to be
gin with. It will be known as the Holt
County Democrat, will be published at
O’Neill and will fearlessly and con
sistently advocate the principles of
the late Thomas Jefferson.
Liberty Loan Items.
Holt County’s quota for the Fourth
Liberty Loan was $829,760 and there
was subscribed through the banks of
Holt county the sum of $960,450
divided among the towns and town
ships as follows:
Towns Quota Amt. Sub.
Atkinson .$39,500 $73,000
Chambers . 8,500 7,400
Emmet . 5,500 5,150
Ewing . 28,500 29,250
Inman . 7,800 7,900
Page . 13,950 13,450
O’Neill . 83,500 123,200
Stuart . 33,500 37,750
Townships Quota Amt. Sub.
Atkjjnson ...$36,000 $41,700
Chambers . 27,000 29,450
Cleveland . 9,350 9,350
Conley . 7,650 8,750
Coleman . 11,000 12,900
Dustin . 9,000 7,150
Deloit . 17,150 17,450
Emmet . 17,600 18,750
Ewing . 12,400 11,900
Fairview . 10,200 13,150
Francis . 24,060 27,150
Grattan . 36,150 41,300
Green Valley. 17,600 19;960
Golden . 19,550 16,200
Inman . 26,850 27,260
Iowa . 18,900 18,750
Josie . 5,500 5,000
Lake . 12,050 10,200
McClure . 9,950 12,950
Paddock . 21,250 20,600
Pleasant View. 14,600 15,700
Rock Falls . 16,650 18,250
Sand Creek. 13,050 12,800
Saratoga .. 11,900 12,150
Scott . 14,100 16,260
Shamrock . 10,200 15,350
Sheridan . 22,250 28,150
Shields . 25,500 24,750
Steel Creek . 14,900 12,760
Stuart .. 43,500 47,300
Swan . 11,050 11,000
Verdigris . 28,900 29,350
" llowdale . 10,360 11,950
,/yoming . 15,300 15,700
The amount shown as subscribed by
Steel Creek and Scott townships in
cludes the amount subscribed through
banks of Boyd county for which Holt
county received no credit and in these
two townships there was $15,700 sub
scribed through banks of Boyd county
which is included in the amount as
shown subscribed by the citizens of
those two townships.
About $15,000 was subscribed in
the county by non-resident real estate
owners of this county.
Wesley Conrad.
Inman, Neb., Nov. 19.—Wesley Con
rad, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Conrad, died very suddenly (at his
home at Lusk, Wyo., from pneumonia
which followed Spanish influenza. Mr.
Conrad lived here twenty-four years
prior to moving to Wyoming two
years ago. He was born Jan. 15,
1884, near Preston, Minn., and died at
Lusk, Wyo., Nov. 13. He came in In
man with his parents when 10 years
cld.
He accepted a position with the
Northwestern as locomotive fireman
from Chadron to Lusk, Wyo. He was
married June 13, 1903, to Miss Della
Miller, of Inman, who died Jan. 29,
1908. To this union two daughters
were born, Violet and Sarah. On June
9, 1910, he was married to Miss Lena
Trowbridge, of Page, and to this union
two sons were born, Pleney 7, and
Austine 2 years old. He leaves his
wife, four children, father and mother,
one brother, Ray, and sister, Mrs. Lot
tie Thompson of Inman.
The remains were brought Satur
day morning on the early train from
the west and a private funeral held in
the afternoon. Interment was in the
Inman cemetery beside his first wife. 8
“13
Only One-Fourth ef American
Telephone Exchanges Are
. Bell Owned or Controlled
Of the 21,700 telephone
exchanges in the United
States, only 5,400 or about
25 per cent, are owned by
the Bell System.
The Bell System, composed of 37 associated companies,
does not seek universal ownership of the telephone. It does,
however, encourage the connection of all the telephone sys
tems in the country with each other so that communication be
tween any two telephones in the nation will be possible.
In addition to 9,129 independent telephone companies in the
United States operating 16,300 exchanges, there are 22,000 mutual
telephone associations of farmers with 1,400,000 rural telephones.
The United States today has over 11,700,000 telephones, or
more than all the rest of the world combined, and the service is
the best and cheapest given anywhere.
No single telephone organization can claim the credit for the
magnificent showing made in this country. Every telephone com
pany, large and small, Bell owned, independently owned or a mu
tual association, is entitled to its full share of the credit.
NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY
Have Food
Boy War Savings stumps
and Liberty Bands
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