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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1919)
The Frontier Published by Dennis II. Cronin One Year. $2.00 Six Months . $1.00 Three Months .. $0.50 Entered at the post office at O’Neill, Nebraska, as second-class matter. ADVERTISING RATES. Display advertising on Pages 4, 5 and 8 are charged for on a basis of 80 cents an inch (one column width) per month; on Page 1 the charge is $1.00 an inch per month. Local ad vertisements, 6 cents per line, each issue. Every subscription is regarded as an open account. The names of sub scribers will be instantly removed from our mailing list at expiration of time paid for, if publisher shall be notified; otherwise the subscription remains in force at the designated subscription price. Every subscriber must understand that these conditions are made a part of the contract be tween publisher and subscriber. Supervisor’s Proceedings. (Continued from page five.) Dist. No. Gen. FHC. Bond Total 18 . 40 40 18% . 15 15 19 . 18 14 32 20 . 30 1 31 21 ...:. 45 45 22 . 20 20 23 . 30 13 43 24 . 20 3 23 25 . 26 . 25 25 27 . 20 3 23 28 . 29 . 45 15 60 30 . 42 2 44 31 . 16 5 20 32 . 26 25 33 . 42 4 36 34 . 14 14 35 . 14 2 16 36 . 20 4 24 37 . 17 2 19 38 . 40 40 39 . 26 4 30 40 . 38 10 48 41 . 15 2 17 42 . 4 4 43 . 44 . 35 10 45 45 . 46 .. 40 5 10 65 47 . 15 16 48 . 10 6 16 49 . 30 30 50 . 25 25 51 .+. 32 32 52 . 25 25 63 . 40 40 54 . 65 . 43 3 46 56 . 30 2 32 67 . 15 5 20 58 . 17 8 25 69 .. 31 31 60 . 36 35 61 . 62 . 36 15 51 : 63 . 30 3 33 64 . 26 26 65 .. 16 5 20 66 . 67 . 10 10 68 . 69 . 15 3 18 70 . 7 2 9 71 . 45 7 62 72 . 13 13 73 . 18 18 74 . 16 2 18 75 . 76 ....'. 18 18 77 . 15 10 25 78 . 79 . 15 3 18 80 . 35 3 38 81 . 27 27 82 . 37 9 46 83 . 32 10 42 84 . 23 6 29 85 . 86 . 20 20 87 . 30 5 ‘ 35 88 . 20 6 26 89 . 17 17 90 ... 30 30 90% .. 10 * 10 91 . 20 3 23 92 . 23 3 r 26 93 . 25 3 28 94 . 17 4 21 96 . 35 35 96 .. 30 30 97 . 25 12 % 37 98 .,.. 30 30 99 .. 30 30 100 . 30 30 101 . 27 16 43 102 .. 103 . 33 33 105 . 37 37 106 .*. j 107 . 8 / 10 18 108 . 30 8 38 10 9. 110 .. 25 8 5 38 111 . 40 4 44 112 . 113 .*. 30 30 114 . 115 . 25 26 116 . 117 . 118 . 20 20 119 . 15 2 17 120 .,.. 40 3 43 121 . 13 13 122 . 22 22 123 . 35 35 124 . 25 4 29 125 .. 10 10 126 . 127 . 21 21 128 . 30 4 34 129 . 32 32 130 . 131 . 21 21 132 . 20 20 183 . 184 . 41 5 46 135 . 20 5 26 136 . 16 16 137 . 35 8 10 53 138 . 15 8 23 139 . 140 . 141 . 18 3 21 142 . 40 40 143 . 25 3 28 144 . 45 45 145 . 45 45 146 . 15 15 147 . 19 3 22 148 . 20 20 149 . 160 . 45 45 151 ... 152 . 9 9 153 . 154 . 156 . 29 29 156 - 24 13 37 157 . 21 21 158 . 159 . 30 30 160 . 30 30 161 . 162 . 163 . 15 2 17 164 . 165 . 20 20 166 . 167 . 168 . 15 10 25 169 . 19 19 170 . 45 10 56 171 . 32 32 172 . 23 23 173 . 42 9 10 61 174 . 14 14 175 . 176 . 43 43 177 . 46 45 178 . 40 40 179 .v.. 180 . 20 16 10 45 181 . 12 12 182 . 183 . 35 35 184 . 35 14 49 186 . 186 . 187 . 15 15 188 .. 15 15 189 .. 45 45 190 . ' 191 . 192 .,. 13 5 18 193 .+... 45 45 194 . 27 27 196 . L96 . 18 18 197 . 21 21 198 . .99 . 10 8 18 !00 . !0i .:. 202 . 32 32 203 . 25 2 204 . 205 . 12 1 206 . 43 4 207 . 21 4 2 208 . 32 „ 10 4! 209 . 13 1 210 . 27 10 3' 211 . 28 2! 212 . 16 H 213 20 2: 214 . 215 . 35 3. 216 . 38 13 5 217 . 218 . 27 8 3 219 . 220 . 221 . 222 . 19 1 223 ., 224 . 26 2 225 . 38 3 226 . 8 227 . 23 2 228 . 21 2 2 229 . 8 230 . 231 . 16 1 232 . 13 1 233 ...:. 33 6 10 4 234 . 10 1 235 . 236 . 3 5 237 . 20 2 238 . 45 1 4 239 . 240 . 25 2 241 . 45 4 242 . 21 2 243 .. 24 2 244 . 35 3 245 . 13 7 2 246 . 42 4 247 . 35 3 248 . 38 3 249 . 250 . 251 . 45 8 5 School Disritct No. 14, specia building tax, 5 mills. School District No.' 46, specia building tax, 10 mills. School District No. 124, specia building tax, 10 mills. School District No. 193, specia building tax, 10 mills. School District No. 238, specia building tax, 10 mills. On motion the following levy wa made for the county in the year 1919 Mills on the Dollar. General fund . 7.45 mill County bridge . 4.00 mill: Emergency bridge . 1.00 mill: Special bridge indebtedness 5.00 mill: County bridge . 1.50 mill: Road dragging . 0.50 mill Soldier’s relief . 0.20 mill j County judgment . 0.05 mill: Mother’s pension “special”.. 0.30 mill: Total . 20.00 mills At 3 o’clock p. m. on motion, boarc adjourned as board of equalization. W. T. HAYES, Chairman. E. F. PORTER, County Clerk O’Neill, Neb., Aug. 25, 1919, 3 p. m. Board met in regular session, al members present but Schollmeyer anc Rotherham. Wf <«S STORAGE ^'>V C Willard J ^ TRADE MARK REGISTEREO^^^^^B M Decide on Your 1 B Next Battery NOW ■ fgffl Your next battery should be a Willard «K with Threaded Rubber Insulation because «| it is the one kind of battery that gives you 111 adequate protection against the expensive KB reinsulation that is sure to come to an j ordinary battery. ffi|| 1 j- Four years’ experience on many thousand BH Hill cars have proven the remarkable durability |sf| m of this latest Willard invention. ' *’ It eliminates the one biggest cause of B Call and let us tell you about it. We’ll ■* -/ ■B help you get every last day’s use out of B your present battery at the least possible ':; expense, but we want you to have a better b McDermott & smith I Distributers B O’Neill Valentine B Nebraska K 5 The following bids for printing de linquent tax list were opened: l O’Neill, Neb., August 25, 1919. Holt County Board of Supervisors, O’Neill, Nebraska. Gentlemen: We will print the de i linquent tax list for 1919 in the f columns of The Frontier for the fol ! lowing rates: For each description of 5 land, 6 cents; for each description of ) town lots, 4 cents. In considering the bids for this > work the Board should take into con L sideration the fact that The Frontier has the .largest circulation of any i newspaper in the county and it is worth more to advertise in it3 columns than in any other paper, as it takes more paper to do the work'with, and ) gives the advertising more publicity than any other paper by reaching 5 more people in the county. I Very truly yours, i D. H. CRONIN. * On motion printing delinquent tax * list was awarded to Mr. D. H. Cronin of The Frontier. * Josie, Nebr., April 26, 1919. 5 Robert E. Gallagher, Co. Treas. * Sir: I see by my tax receipt that ^ you have my land taxed in school } district 247 and it should be in 245. My personal tax was in 245 all right. ) This mistake amounts to several , dollars. Please correct and remit the difference. Yours respectfully, F. M. ROOSA. > [ P. S.—My land is the W% of WMs 1 _ _._=— of Section 13 and all of Section 14, in IWnship 26, Range 16, in Swan :ownship. (Returned, on back of letter): County Treasurer does not make the tax list and has no authority to change it. Hand your tax receipt and this let ter to your supervisor, F . C. Watson, (Continued on page seven) I FiNE!—- J That’s what they all say when we do jj|£, [I their Dry Cleaning and Pressing, and why [ l shouldn’t they when we have the largest and best ?§ II equipped plant in this part of the state. We in- sg It vite.you and your friends to visit our plant and w 13 see the way your garments go to their bath in ra 11 the Highest Test gasoline and then come out Sj spotlessly clean. Then see our steaming, hot presses where your garments get those soft t§ rolls or those straight hard creases. It will he a a |: trip worth taking. S i O'Neill Sanitary Laundry 1 H PHONE 209. - PHONE 209. m Call Us To Call I Hie Whole Secret of A Better Tire 1 Simply a Matter of the Maker9s Policies , This you will realize—once you try a Brunswick—that a super-tire is possible only when the name 1 certifies that the maker is follow ing the highest standards. For tire making is chiefly a mat * ter of standards and policies—cost ’ plus care. Any maker can build a good tire if he cares to pay per fection’s price. All men know Brunswick stand ards, for Brunswick products have been famous for 74 years. Formulas, fabrics and standards vary vastly in cost. Reinforce ments, plies and thickness are a matter of expense. And these vari ations affect endurance. It rests with the maker how far he wishes to go—how much he can afford to give. For there are no secrets nor pat ents to hold one back. To ascertain what each maker offers one must analyze and test some 200 tires—as our laboratories have done. Then it is a matter of combining the best features and building ac cording to the highest standards. Once you try a Brunswick you will understand how we have built model tires, regardless of factory expense. Yet Brunswick Tires cost you the same as other like-type tires. Our saving is on selling cost, through our nation-wide organization. We realize that you expect more from Brunswicks, and we assure you that you get it. ONE Bruns wick will tell you the story. And then you’ll want ALL Brunswicks. No other tire, you’ll agree, gives so much for your money. IHfc. BKUINSWKJK.-BAU'wt-CULL.t.INUBK tU. Omaha Headquarters: 1309 Farnam Street There*s a Brunswick Tire for Every Car Cord—Fabric—Solid Truck , .i -4 \ ; Cord Tire* with “Driving” and “Swastika” Skid-Not Treads | Fabric Tires in “Plain,” “Ribbed” and “BBC” Skid-Not Treads Solid Truck Tires in all sizes authorized by the Society of Automotive Engineers Leo Bazelman, Neil P. Brennan