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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1922)
NEBRASKA CULVERT AND MFG. CO. AUSTIN-WESTERN ROAD MACHINERY ARMCO CULVERTS Everything In Road Machinery Western Representative L. C PETERS O’Neill :: Nebraska III. !»■/ f George M. Harrington 1 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW PHONE 11. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA. U——J DR. L. A. CARTER ffiaPhysician and Surgeons (Successor to Dr. E. T. Wilson.) Glasses Correctly Fitted. Office and Residence, Naylor Block -Phone 72 O'NEILL :: :: NEBRASKA Mainwoiid Abstract Co^ai|) —Title Abstractors— Office in First National Bank Building <J. D CRONIN Attorney - At - Law Office: Nebraska State Bank Building -Phone 57 O’NEILL :: :: NEBR. W. F. FINLEY, M. T). Phone: Office 28, Residence 276. O’Neill Nebraska FRED L. BARCLAY A STUART, NEB. k' ikes Long or Short Time Loans Or Improved Farms and Ranches. If you are in need of a loan drop lum a line and ho will call and see you Frank Campbell Real Estate Agency Collections Attended To. Insurance written in Best Companies. List your farms or houses with me to sell. Justice of the Peace Companies I Represent— Hartford Fire, Assets .. .$40,878,401.31 Ins. Co. North America $23,770,663.00 A merican Eagle.$2,886,852.00 The strongest is as cheap as the w eakest companies. O’Neill Nebraska DR. J. P. GILLIGAN Physician and Surgeon Special Attention Given To HISEASES OF THE EYE ANU CORRECT FITTING OF GLASSES THE O’NEILL ABSTRACT COMPANY —Compiles— “Abstracts of Title” THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY. , START ^ A SAVINGS ACCOUNT with the NORFOLK BUILDING & LOAN WHY? Because we make your loans and build your homes. START TO-DAY Norfolk Building & Loan Ass’n John L. Quig, Agent CLne Baijitapy )j)ileat Market We have a full line of Fresh and Cured Meats, Pure Horn* Rendered Lard. DR. O. K. TICKLER ^Veterinarian^ PHONE | DAY 108 | NIGHT O’Neill,.Nebraski I V PAID LOCALS. Paid announcements will ap pear under this head. If you have anything to sell or wish to buy tell the people of St in this column. Ten cents per line first in sertion, subsequent insertions five cents per line each week. FARM LOANS—R. H. PARKER.37tf FOR RENT—THREE ROOMS AND bath.—Scott Buiding. 35-tf FOR RENT—ROOMS WITH OR without board.—Mrs. Dyson. 43-tf CABBAGE PLANTS FOR SALE— north of library. Grown in open air. 49-lp FOR SALE—TOMATO AND CAB bage plants. Third house west of Beha Hotel. 49-3p MONEY READY FOR FARM Loans. Low Rates of Interest.— Joel Parker, 35-tf FOR SALE—BIG THREE-YEAR old jack. Inquire of R. V. Goodman at west barn. 49-tf I CAN SELL YOUR RESIDENCE property in O’Neill if it i3 close in. —R. H. Parker, O’Neill. 45-tf THOMPSON IMPERIAL RINGLET Barred Rock eggs for hatching, 100 for $3.—J. Stein, Meek, Neb. 47-3 STRAYED—EIGHT HORSES AND four two-year-old mules. Finder please notify Jack McKenna. 49-tf I WANT ABOUT 100 LARGE large ranch loans from $25,000 to $100,000 each.—John L. Quig. 47-tf WANTED — ROOMS FOR LIGHT houskeeping. Prefer furnished rooms. Inquire at this office. 48-tf. FOR SALE—TOMTO AND CAB bage plants. Second house east of II 1* _A .1 1. ..T1 1 ACl O TWO SECOND HAND CARS TO trade for corn at 50c per bushel or for shoats. Inquire at this office. 46-tf WE WANT YOUR BARB WIRE AND Fence Business. Carload of Ameri can Wire just received.—Seth Noble. 49-4 FOR SALE — HOUSE AND LOT, known as the Morrison house—In quire of Mrs. Hannah Donohoe,O’Neill, Nebraska. 44-6p AMERICAN FIELD FENCE AND Barb Wire for sale by Seth Noble. Carload just received. See us before you buy. 49-4 WANT TO BUY FOR CASH, TWO row eli. Must be right and worth the money.—J. II. Shultz, on the Chas. McKenna farm. 48-2 Will the boy who ^ picked up the wrist watch at the curb at the cigar store, return it to Irene O’Donnell and receive reward. 47-1 FOR SALE—A GOOD BARN WITH large hay-loft, with a quantity of loose lumber and wire fencing thrown in. Inquire at this office. 47-tf FOR SALE OR RENT—MY RESI dence property four blocks west of Beha hotel. Will be vacant June 1st— Mrs. W. H. Bedford, Page, Neb. 49-tf MURPHY’S ICE WAGON IS WORK ing every day, and is in the business to stay. See him on the wagon, or call Phone 192. Service guaranteed. 49-4p THE PARTIES WHO TOOK THE runninggears of a wide tire wagon from my shop, had better return it and save further trouble.—Wm. Hagen sick. . 49-2p FOR SALE—ON ACCOUNT 01 having to move the building occu pied by the M. F. Kirwin barber shop, I wish to sell it.—Inquire of Florence McCafferty. 48-tf FINE PLANTS—CABBAGE, TOMA toes, and cauliflower, $1 per 100; sweetpotato, 75c per 100. All sent postpaid.—Central Plant House, Nor folk, Nebraska. 49-2p THE NEBRASKA STATE BANK IS the only bank in O’Neill operating under tho Depositors Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska. Avail your self of this PROTECTION. 8-tf KODAK FINISHING. DEVELOP ing any size roll, 10c; Pack, 25c; Post Cards, Gc; 3Vix5Vi, 2%x4%, 3Vix4V4, 5c; 2Vix3Vi, 2Vix4Vi, 4c; l%x2Vi, 3c.—W. B. GRAVES. 30-tf FOR SALE—ONE SPAN OF GOOD work mares, weight 2700, sound and ready to go into hard work . Also one wide tired wagon and set of heavy work harness.—Phone 18F4.—A. C. Morton. 49-lp I NOW HAVE MONEY TO LOAN on farms and ranches. Do you need your loan renewed, or do you need a larger loan. Let me figure with you on Farm and Ranch loans.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. 18-tf INCUBATORS SET FOR ANY one. Eggs furnished to me, 10c per chick. Eggs furnished by me, 15c per chick. Will set any kind of eggs. Order ahead. First ordered, first served.—Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hansen, Agee, Nebraska. _ 48-tf I HAVE some private money to loan on farms and ranches here, in the following amounts: $1,500, $2500, $3000, $2000, $4000. This money has been placed in my hands to loan and can be had immediately.— See R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Neb. 33tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE. Improved quarter equipped fordairy ing, 2% miles from Lincoln pavement. Want 100 to 320 western Nebraska farm land.—Virgil Smith and Wife, Emerald, Nebraska. 49-1 SAVE YOUR MONEY SAVE THE STEEL Bring dull safety razor blades here to be sharpened like new. Golden Hotel Barber Shop. SIEGFRIED’S SWORD IN BERLIN Weapon Had Long Been in German Capital, Though the Hero Was Really a Belgian. The theft of the sword from the statue of Siegfried in Berlin raises the question. Wlmt has Berlin to do with Siegfried’s sword or with Sieg fried himself? That hero was no Prussian, but rather a Belgian—at any rate, a Netherlander—and it was a Burgundiap princess that he mar ried. In his day the Borusslans were an obscure tribe and scarcely heard of in Burgundy and along the Rhine. Moreover, the difference in char acter makes it hopelessly incongruous fan the Prussians of today to exploit Siegfried as one of tljeir national lie roes. Hagen of Tronje would be more fit, chosen at the moment when he treacherously murders Siegfried, whan he steals Krlemhikle's fortune or when lie brutally slays the infant Ortlieb. But Siegfried was honorable, Sieg fried was brave. Siegfried was chival rlc, Siegfried was not a Hohenzollent. To exploit Siegfried and his Bal loting as emblematic of Prussia, or in deed of the .Germany of today, is gross impertinence perhaps. It is well that the sword is gone. The statue itself should follow it into retirement from a place where it does not belong. —New York Tribune. Now Believe London Is Dead. The Danes are at last convinced that Jack London Is dead. A rumor had Iwwvw mM/.l.r ill.. •mtiintr flium f/t the effect that the American author was living a secluded life on a South sea island and would not emerge until lie had finished a momentous novel. A young Dane returned to Copenhagen tlie other day. fresli from San Fran cisco. He said he had taken a walk with Mrs. Jack London, near the Lon dons' California home. Coming to a boulder, lie leaped over it. Mrs. Lon don said: “Do you know what you have just done?" The Dane confessed ids ignorance. “You have jumped over my husband's grave,” she said. The Dane apologized for ids seeming lack of respect, took tlie next train for South Brooklyn, and embarked on the Oscar II for tlie Danish capital, where lie related Ids experiences. Jack Lon don’s Danish publisher, Herr Martin, said: “I never did quite believe that rumor.”—New York Evening Post. And Now the “Finale-Hopper." That section of Manhattan called tlie Acropolis of America, extending from Riverside drive to Morningslde Park, hus a new designation for ultra-modern girls—“finale-hoppers.” They are tlie young women who are u year ahead of the present or think they are doing now what the rest of their sex will be doing at some time in the future. A finale-hopper is never in style. She is a trallblazer, a pathfinder. She an ticipates style. As soon as what she is doing is taken up and adopted by the crowd she drops it and turns to something else that is absolutely new. That applies to music, art, dancing, dress and even slang. She is ever on the still hunt for anything fresti that has never before been done or known.—Raymond G. Carroll, in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. CHURCH DIRECTORY. S. PAUL’S CHURCH EPISCOPAL Second Sunday of each month Holy Communion at 8:30 a. m. Vespers pers and sermon 7:30 p. m. Fourth Sunday vespers and sermon 7:30 p. m. Rev. W. A. Render, Pastor. ST.PATRICK’S CHURCH CATHOLIC Sunday Services: First Mass 8 a. in., Second Mass 9 a. m„ High Mass at 10.30 a. m. Vespers 7:30 p. m. Daily Mass 8 a. m. Catechetical Instruction for First Communicants 3 p. m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. .Confession, Saturday from,3 p. m. to 0 p. m. and from 7 p. m. to 9:30 p. m. Children’s Confession, First Thursday every month at 1:30 p. m. Very Rev. M. F. Cassidy, Pastor. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday morning service 10:30 a. m., n.i_ ni_i 1 i an _ m_• i:_ kjenuui ii.uv c*. 111-1 viuiouuu Endeavor G:30 p. m., Evening Service 7:30 p. m. Midweek Service, Wednesday 8:00 p. in.; Choir Rehersal 9:00 p. m. Choir Rehearsal Saturday, 8 p. m. Rev. George Longstaff, Pastor. PUBLIC LIBRARY HOURS. The Public Library will be open each day except Monday from this time on until further notice: Afternoons, 2:00 to 5:30. Evenings, 7:00 to 9:00. Sundays, 2:00 to 5:30 p. m. MARY McLAUGHLIN, Librarian. SUNDAY SCHOOL NOTICE. The Eden Valley Sunday School is held every Sunday at 2 p. nr, Mrs. Charles Hansen, superintendent. Preaching services by Rev. S. H. Omart at 3 p. nr, each Sunday. Next Sunday he will give us a black board sermon. The text is: “Reviewing the Stones.” Everybody is cordially invited to attend both services. *** STUART HAS NEW POSTMASTER. (Stuart Advocate.) “Cap.” E. A. Walter, for sixteen years the efficient mail carrier on R. F. I). No. r, has been duly installed as Postmaster in this city, taking charge of -the office the first of the week. Miss Daisy Gardner holds her posi tion and “Cap.” will soon have his new duties well in hand. W. L. Ulrich, the retiring Post master, who has served the patrons of the office in an efficient and courteous manner for a number of years, will devote his time and energies to the insurance business. Where Real News 1 Is Paramount I In the country newspaper, sensations, scan- ||| dais—the recording of human misery—is al most taboo. At least it certainly is secondary llll to the printing of real news about people and |||| things. For the province of the country paper—your I Home Town Paper—is to give community in terests first place, printing the more or less sensational personal items only when neces sary to keep faith with subscribers who pay III for ALL the news. Therefore, your Home Town Paper can give you, in full measure and overflowing, 100 per cent pure news about the people in whom you are most interested—your relatives and friends of the Old Home Town. Subscribe today for your Home Town Paper HORSEMEN ATTENTION. . - 1 My Percheron stallion, Rowes Sil ver King, No. 118,080, will be on the ! stand at my place known as the old i Sauser place, after May 1st. Terms—$15, $5.00 cash at time of : service, balance due when mare is i known to be in foal. Care will be taken to prevent acci dents but will not be responsible should any occur. Mares mortgaged, changed ownership or is removed from county the insurance is forfeited and service fee becomes due at once. 44-tf WM. G. ARMBRUSTER. 1 DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? It’s usually a sign of sick kidneys, j especially if the kidney action is dis- ( ordered, passages scanty or too fre- j quent. Don’t wait for more serious , troubles. Begin using Doan’s Kidney ( Pills. Read this O’Neill testimony. A. W. Gunn, carpenter, says: “My j kidneys acted irregularly and I had , to get up a number of times at night to pass the * secretions which were [ highly colored. I had a lameness in , the small of my back and kidneys that , bothered me a great deal when I lifted , I ..i. T'l _* T71 _ T>:n~---4 i jl' otm o iviuiivj a hao wi* vvir | ed the trouble and I wasn’t bothered for years until I caught cold which : settled on my kidneys disordering 1 them. I took a few Doan’s again and I they relieved me so 1 have not been bothered since.” I Price (>0c, at all dealers. Don’t j simply ask for a kidney remedy—get ! Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that I Mr. Gunn had. Foster-Milburn Co., i Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. (First publication May 4, 1922.) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate No. 1498. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, April 27, 1922. In the matter of the Estate of William j Simpson, Deceased . j CREDITORS of said estate are hereby notified that the time limited for presenting claims against said Do you want a FARM OR RANCH LOAN 3 We are in a position jj again to handle some jj good farm or ranch 5 loans. Come in. ) JOHN L. QUIG, O’Neill, Neb. 9 38-13 3 - ] istate is September 1, 1922, and for he payment of debts is April 27, 923, and that on June 1, 1922, and on September 2, 1922, at 10 o’clock A. M., ach day, I will be at the County Court loom in said County to receive, ex unine, hear, allow, or adjust all claims ind objections duly filed. (Seal) C. J. MALONE, 48-4 County Judge. (First publication April 13.) SHERIFF’S SALE NOTICE. By virtue of an order of sale issued >y the clerk of the district court of lolt County, Nebraska, on a judgment ind attachment in the case in which dollie Rathbun is plaintiff and Emil tacek is defendant, I will sell at pub ic auction to the highest bidder for ash, at the front door of the court louse in the City of O’Neill, Holt bounty, Nebraska, on the fifteenth lay of May, 1922, at one o’clock P. d., the following described lands and enements attached in said action to atisfy the judgment and costs in said iction: The west half of the south iast quarter, the northeast quarter of f the southeast quarter, all in sec ion seven, and the northwest quarter if the southwest quarter of section light, all in township twenty-nine lorth, range ten west;of the 6th P. M. n Holt County, Nebraska. Dated April 12, 1922. PETER W. DUFFY, 45-5 Sheriff. Hides Furs Trappers: We want your furs and are always in the market to buy them even when other dealers are not buying. No matter what kind of skins, we can surely satisfy you. Raccoon, mink, rats, beaver, mar ten, fisher and fox are our speciali ties. , Country Dealers:—Your entire lots are solicited and you are as sured of prompt cash returns. If remittance is not satisfactory, your furs will be returned to you express prepaid. Large dealers’ lots bought by wire. Write for full particulars and Price List. Also handlers of Horse Hides, Cattle Hides and Tallow. WESTERN HIDE AND FUR CO., 4312 Camden Avenue, Omaha. Neb. 1° c i ■ to the n !] i> ~en^ '• dfiaundrij J 1 _ HA A.A M.CO. J Now is the time to be getting your Uniforms ,i, |gf or other garments fixed up for Decoration || « Call “209” and we will call and deliver it for 1 t1.' We are as close as your Phone. i ^ O’Neill Sa.r\ita.ry | LaAVirvdry . ... . »