The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 09, 1922, Image 8
NEBRASKA CULVERT AND MFG. CO. AUSTIN-WESTERN ROAD MACHINERY ARMCO CULVERTS Everything In Road Machinery Western Representative L. C PETERS O’Neill :: Nebraska [ George M, Harrington j ATTORNEY-AT-LAW PHONE 11. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA. * * DR. L. A. CARTER sPhysician and Surgeons Glasses Correctly Fitted. Office and Residence, Naylor Block -Phone 72 O’NEILL :: :: NEBRASKA J. D CRONIN Attorney - At - Law Office: Nebraska State Bank Building -Phone 67 O’NEILL :: :: NEBR. THE O’NEILL ABSTRACT COMPANY —Compiles— “Abstracts of Title” THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY. Cthe 5ai?itapy ^eat^arket We have a full line of Fresh and Cured Meats, Pure Home Rendered Lard. HR. J. P. GILLIGA* Physician and Surgeon Special Attention Given To DISEASES OF THE EYE AND CORRECT FITTING OF GLASSES DR. 0. K. TICKLER ^Veterinarians PHONE I DAY 108 I NIGHT O’Neill,.Nebraska W. F, FINLEY, M. I) Phone: Office 28, Residence 276. O’Neill Nebraska FIRST METHODIST CHURCH. Sunday Morning Service, 10:30 a. ni., Sunday School, 11:30 a. in., Young People’s Service 6:30 p. in., Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. Midweek Services: Tuesday, 7:30 a. m.; Young People’s Prayer Ser vice Wednesday 7:30 p. m., Regular Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7.30 p. m. Morning Choir Saturday, 7:30 p. m. Rev. J. A. Hutchins, Pastor. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday morning service 10:30 a. m., Sunday School 11:30 a. m„ Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m., Evening Service 7:30 p. m. Midweek Service, Wednesday 8:00 p. m.; Choir Rehersal 9:00 p. m. Choir Rehearsal Saturday, 8 p. m. _ Rev. George Longstafr, Pastor. ST. PAUL’S CHURCH, EPISCOPAL First Sunday in the month, Evening Prayer and sermon, 11 a. m. Third Sunday in the month, Morning Prayer and rermon, 11 a. m. Fifth Sunday in the month, Holy Communion, 8:30 a. m. Rev. L. W. Gramly, Pastor, Ewing, Nebraska. ST.PATRICK’S CHURCH CATHOLIC Sunday Services: First Mass 8 a. m., 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 6 p. m. and from 7 p. m. to 9:80 p. m- Children’s Confession, First Thursday every month at 1:30 p. m. Very Rev. M. F. Cassidy, 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 McLAUGHLlN, Librarian. O’NEILL CONCERT BAND. Meets for practice every Monday night at I. O. O. F. Hall at 8:00 p. m. Jess G. Mills, President. Elmer Davey, Librarian. I. D. Henry, Secretary-Treasurer. PAID LOCALS. Paid announcements will ap pear under this head. If you have anything to sell ■ i mh to buy tell the people of it ir this column. I en cents per line first in action, subsequent insertions live cents per line each week. W "I FARM LOANS—R fl. PARKER.37tf FOR SALE—HOUSE AND TWO lots.—A L. Roberts. 22-2p FOUND—PAIR OF NOSE GLASSES in northast part of town.. 23-1 I HAVE SOME HORSES FOR SALE or trade—Peter Reifers. 22-tf FOR SALE — ONE SEVENTEEN .stop organ—W. W. Abbott. 23-tf. I CAN LOAN $25,000.00 TO $50, 000.00 on good Farms and Ranches. See R. !!. Parker, O’Neil!, Neb. 21-tf EAT AT “THE SUBWAY.” 7-tf. FOR RELIABLE OPTICAL WORK see PERRIGO OPTICAL CO., at the Golden Hotel, Friday, November 24. 23-2 I JUST GOT IN ANOTHER CAR OF good old wheat flour. Buy now.— Con Keys. 2'M TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan & Markey.7-tf IF YOU NEED THE OLD LOAN ON your farm renewed for another 5 or 10 years, or if you need a larger loan I can make it for you.—R. II. Parker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 21-tf FOUND—A PIAR OF NOSE GLAS ses on the golf course at the ^ountry Club.—Marian Dickson. 23 FOR SALE, MY RESIDENCE PROP erty in O’Neill: house, large barn, one lot.—Art Cowperthwaite. 22-2p THE NEBRASKA STATE BANK IS the only Msnk ir. O’Neill operating under the Depositors Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska. Avail your self of this PROTECTION. 8-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. 7-tf KODAK FINISHING DEVELOP ing any size roll 10c; Pack, 25c; Post Cards, Gc; 3‘,4x5%, 27/ax47/a, 314x414, 5c: 2'/*x314, 2^x4Vi, 4c; 164x2 V6, 3. W. B GRAVES. 30-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. *7-tf FINE FARM TO RENT—COMI’RIS ing 240 acres, 40 rods from the round house in O’Neill, Neb. See Judge Carlon. 20-tf FOR SALE — RESIDENCE PROP erty consisting of a seven-room house and four lots. Inquire at this office. 17-tf LOST—ONE SAND’S ALUMINUM carpenter’s level, on the streets of O’Neill. F’inder please return to The Frontier office. 22-2 FOR SALE OR TRADE—GOOD SEC ond hand buggy.—H. W. Tomlin son. 22-2p LOST—ONE DARK BROWN FOUR year old gelding. Finder please take up and notify F. H. Lancaster, O’Neill, Nebraska, and receive re ward. 23-2 FOR SALE—MY RESIDENCE AND 18 lots in O’Neill. 8-room house, modern; barn, chicken house and other outbuildings. Will rent furnished if not sold soon.—Wm. F’allon. 21-tf STRAYED—FROM MY PLACE, 10 miles north of O’Neill, one White face heifer calf, notch on lower par of right ear, a coming yearling. Phom GF3.—L. A. Ott, O’Neill. 23-2 WHEN IN NEED OF GLASSES you make no mistake when you call on PERRIGO OPTICAL CO., of 42. Main St., Fremont. Will be at Golden Hotel, O’Neill, Friday, November 24. 23-2 ESTRAY NOTICE—PICKED UP AT place 7 Ms miles northeast of O’Neill, one brockle-faeed steer branded Y.O Bar on right hip. Owner may have same by paying for keep and this ad. —Ray Zimmerman. 21-4p TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan & Markey.7-tf FOUND—IN ROAD 1G MILES EAST and 4 miles north of Page, one 33x4Ms spare auto tire with rim. Owner may have same by calling at this office, proving property and pay ing for this notice. 19-2f. FOR SALE—MY PROPERTY, AI) jotning the fair grounds on the east, twelve acres, iwell improved. Also school land lease on forty acres one mile north and one *mile east of the fair ground corner.—H. J. Mc Kenna. 23-2 LOST—LAST FRIDAY afternoon be tween the A. R. Wertz place near Star and the John Carson place near Red Bird a J. B. Colt Carbide Lighting company brief cose. Finder return to Frontier office and receive reward.—• Glen Anderson. * 22-2 EAT AT “THE SUBWAY." 7-tf. GET YOUR SALE BILLS PRINTED HERE Hides Furs Trappers: We want your furs and are always in the market to buy them even when other dealers are not buying. No hiatter 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., 4jl2_Tiiindfii Avenue. Omaha. Neb, i “WEEKLY MARKETC RAM Washington, 1). C., Week Ending No vember G, 1922: Grain—Grain prices closed higher for the week, Chicago December wheat advancing 1 3-8c; Chicago December corn up 2c. Most strength was shown during the middle of the week on bull ish private reports on crops and world conditions. Grain prices declined early on the sixth but later buying caused reaction to higher level. Export busi ness restricted by break in foreign exchange. Visible supply v/heat 32, 278.000 bushels compared with 56, 595.000 bushels same date last year. Corn unsettled hut prices responded readily to strength in wheat. Visible supply corn 8,800,000 bushels compar ed with 18,891,000 bushels last year. Closing prices in Chicago cash mar ket: No. 2 red winter wheat $1.23; No. 2 hard winter wheat $1.15; No. 2 mixed corn 71c; No. 2 yellow corn 71c; No. 3 white oats 43c. Average farm prices: No. 2 mixed com in central Iowa about 57c; No. 1 dark northern v/heat in central North Da kota 97c; No. 2 hard winter wheat in central Kansas $1. Closing future prices: Chicago December wheat $1 16 Ij8; Chicago December corn 69c; Minneapolis December wheat $1.13; Kansas City December wheat $1.09 1-8. Hay—Markets were firm though not quotably higher, receipts about equal to requirements. Country offerings slightly freer indicating improvement in car situation. Alfalfa hay scarce. Timothy especially lower grades in ample supply in important markets. Quoted November 6: No. 1 timothy $22; Chicago, $23.50; Atlanta, $17.50 Cincinnati, $27.50 New York, $19.50 Pittsburgh. No. 2 timothy $18 Chi cago, $22 Atlanta, $16 Cincinnati, $26 New York, .. .1.650 Pittsburgh. No. 1 clover, mixed, $17 Chicago, $22 Atlan ta, $16 Cincinnati, $22.50 New York, $18 Pittsburgh. No. 1 alfalfa, $25 Chicago. $35 Atlanta, $23 Cincinnati. No. 1 'prairie $20 Chicago. Feed—Market situation unchanged from last week. Car shortage had caused considerable accumulation at mills and shipping points and result ed in firm prices for transit shipments. Production wheat feeds, oil meals and cornfecds slightly above normal. Sup plies in country dealers hands good and demand from that source poor. Resellers well stocked up and quoting at discounts below mill prices especi ally for future shipments. Export de mand oil meals negligible. Movement continues slow. Quoted November 6; Rran $22.50, middlings $24, flour mid dlings $26, rye 3middlings $22.50, Min neapolis; No. I alfalfa meal $27.50 St. Ix>uis; White hominy feed $29.50 Chi cago, $27.50 St. Louis; 36 per cent cot ton seed meal $40.50 Memphis, $41.50 Atlanta; 34 per cent linseed meal $50. Buffalo, $49 Minneapolis; gluten feed $34.85 Chicago; Beet pulp $34 Chi cago. . Livestock and Meats—At Chicago all classes of livestock declined in prices during the week. Ilcgs ranged from 10c-20c lower; beef steers and butcher cows and heifers declined 15c 25c. Feeder steers 25c-40c off and . eal calves 25c net down. Fat lambs were 5c-25c; feeding lambs 10c-25c and were practically unchanged for the week. On November 6 Chicago hog, prices were 10c-15c higher than Sat urdays average. Better grades beef •terra, butcher cows and heifers strong to higher, other grades and stockers yearlings 20c-40c lower. Fat ewes md feeders slow, about steady; bulls strong to,20c higher, veal calves tr uly to 25c lower, largely steady. o,ember prices Chicago: Hogs top, 7 5, bulk of sales $8.20-$8.70 medium • d good beef steers $6.85-$11.60; utcher cows and heifers $3.30-$10; feeder steers $500-$7.65; light and medium weight veal calves $7.75 to $10; fat lambs $12.50-$14.10; feeding lambs $12.25-$13.90; yearlings $9.25 to $12.35; fat ewes $4.50-$7.75. Stocker and feeder shipments from 12 important markets during the week ending October 27 were: Cattle and calves 184,473; Hogs 13,552; Sheep 198,153. The trend of prices in eastern whole sale fresh meat markets was also downward. Beef declined $1, veal weak to $1; Mutton and pork loins weak to $2 lower while lamb ranged from $l-$3 down for the week. On November 6, beef generally steady with Fridays prices, veal $l-$2 lower at New York, steady elsewhere; lamb steady at Boston, $l-$2 higher at other at other markets; mutton $1 lower on good grades, other grades generall steady; 'pork loins generally weak. November 6 prices: Beef $15-$17; Veal $15-$18; Lamb $20-$25; Mutton $12-$16; Light pork loins $22-$25; Heavy loins $17-$22. Cotton—Spot cotton prices advanced 119 points during the week. New York December future contracts ad vanced 117 points. Spot cotton closed at 24,89c per pound today. New York December future contracts closed at 25-37c. Fruits and Vegetables — Eastern Baldwin aplples and Northwestern boxed stock generally weaker but Chi cago gained five cents. Potato mar kets and f. o. b. shipping points show weak tone. Eastern cabbage markets weaker. Onions generally steady. Prices reported November G: New York danish type cabbage $9-$18 per ton bulk most city markets, $lG-$20 in Philadelphia, domestic stock $8-$14, eastern markets. New York sacked round white potatoes $1.15-$1.35 per 100-lbs. leading markets, 95c f. o. b. shipping points. Maine green moun tains $1.40-$1.50 in New York and Boston. Bulk stock 90c-95c f. o. b. shipping points. Irish cobblers $1.30 $1.35 in Boston, 75e-80c f. o. b. Nor thern sacked round whites 80c-$1.25 in the middlewest, G8c-73c f. o. b. Cali fornia Iceberg lettuce $4.50-$5.00 per crate in Chicago. New York and Michigan Baldwin apples $3.75-$4.50 per barrel in New York and Chicago, $3.75 f. o. b. shipping points. Rhode Island Greenings $3.75 to $4.50 New York and Philadelphia, reac hing top of $5.00 in Chicago. Eastern York Im perials $3.50-$4.00 in New York and Philadelphia, Northwestehn extra fan cy boxed Jonathans $2.00-$2.50 lead ing markets. Middlewestern yellow onions ranged $1.50-$.00 per 100-lbs. in city markets. New York stock $1.40-$ 1.75 in New York and Phila delphia. Dairy Products — Butter markets firm at steady prices during the week, Production decreasing; supplies on market, especially of fancy grades, _____ _ _ f Where Real News Is Paramount In the country newspaper, sensations, scan dals—the recording of human misery—is al most taboo. At least it certainly is secondary to the printing of real news about people and things. For the province of the country paper—your 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 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 somewhat limited. High pricse of top scores have turned more interest to terest to medium and undergrades. With-drawals from storage heavy. Closing'prices 92 score butter: New York 49 V&c; Philadelphia 50c; Boston 49c; Chicago 48V&C. Cheese markets barely steady; un dertone unsettled. Prices do not show much change from week ago but trading is slow and mostlyco nfined to small lots of goods for immediate needs. Prices at Wisconsin primray cheese markets November 4: Daisies 25 Vic; Double Daisies 24V6c; Longhorns 25Vic; Square prints 25c. ORPHANS NEED HELP. The Christian Home Orphanage, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, which cares for 250 children, and which, for nearly forty years, has been a haven for thousands of destitute children from all parts of the county, and which de pends wholly dpon the voluntary con tributions of charitable people for iits support, has felt the effects of the close times to such a degree that unless speedy and liberal help comes, the work will be seriously injured. In or der to keep its doors open to the hun dreds of little ones that apply annu ally for food and shelter, the Home is appealing to the public for donations at Thanksgiving to clear the work of debt and enable it to meet the calls that come to it daily. We urge our readers that they send a donation as liberal as possible to help this worthy institution, which needs help now as it never has before in the past. Address The Christian Home Orphan age, Council Bluffs, Iowa. (First publication Nov. 9.) NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Estate No. 1506. In the Countv Court of Holt County, Nebraska, November 4, 1922. In the matter of the Estate of John Minahan, Deceased. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified that the adminis trator of said estate has filed in said court his final report and a petition for final settlement and distribution of the residue of said estate; and that said renort and petition will be heard November 25, 1922, at 10 o’clock A. M., at the County Court Room in O’Neill, Nebraska, when all persons interested may appear and be hear concerning said final report and the distribution of said estate. (County Court Seal) C. J. MALONE, 23-3 County Judge. (First publication Oct. 19.) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate No. 1529. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, October 14, 1922. In the matter of the Estate of Eli Bitney, Deceased. CREDITORS of said estate are hereby notified that the time limited for presenting claims against said es tate is February 16, 1923, and for the payment of debts is September 14, 1923, and that on November 16, 1922, and on February 17, 1923, at 10 o’clock A. M., each day, I will be at the County Court Room in said County to receive, examine, hear, allow, or ad just all claims and objections duly tiled. (County Court Seal.) C. J. MALONE, 20-4 County Judge. (First publication Nov. 9.) NOTICE OF SALE UNDER AGIS TER’S LIEN. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an agister’s lien filed by the under signed with the County Clerk of Holt County, Nebraska, on the 6th day of November, 1922, for the sum of $115.00, there will be sold at the premises of the undersigned described as follows: The West-Half of Section Thirteen, Township Twenty eight, Range Nine, West 6th P. M., in Holt County, Nebraska, on the 6th day of December, 1922, at two o’clock P. M., one mare, 5 years old, color brown, to satisfy the amount due on said lien, with costs of sale. C. C. QUINTARD, 23-3 Holder of Said Lien. (First publication Nov. 9.) NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Estate No. 1460. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, November 8, 1922. In the matter of the Estate of Conrad Wettlaufer, Deceased. All persons interested in said estate I are hereby notified that the executor of said estate has filed in said court his final report and a petition for final set tlement and distribution of the residue of said estate; and that said report and petition will be heard November 30, 1922, at 10 o'clock a. m., at the County Court Room in O’Neill, Nebraska, when all persons interested may ap pear and be heard concerning said final report and the distribution of said estate. (County Court Seal) C. J. MALONE, 23-3 County Judge. Try BEHA’S for Neals 35c Beds 50c hoard and Room $7.5Q by week 0 s k to the _ V Kp I • Vdgundnj ©THI A.L.M.CO TRY WASHING BY TELEPHONE You just gather up all the clothes and telephone. About fifteen minutes of your time and the work of washday is over. We’ll wash and finish your clothes in the way you like; and put new freshness and life into them. Begin this week to enjoy free dom from washday worries. Telephone and we will have our representative call immediately. O’Neill SajAiteiry Le^virvdry