“RADIO” I HAVE THE AGENCY FOR INGERSOLL RADIOS AND AM IN A POSITION TO INSTALL ONE OF THESE UP-TO THE-MINUTE RECEIVING SETS IN YOUR HOME ANY DAY. THESE SETS ARE MODERATELY PRICED. PRICE RANGES FROM $75.00 UP WITH THE $75.00 SETS YOU CAN GET ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA __ Art Wya.nt YANTZI & SON Pays ths Highest Cash Prices -for POULTRY, EGGS & CREAM Call and get prices before selling your produce. Office No. 131. Residence No. 298 We solicit your patronage. L ■■... PAID LOCALS. ij Paid announcements will ap pear under this head. If you have anything to sell >r wish to buy tell the people of ? it tn this column. I'en cents per line first in * rt:on, subsequent insertions (ive cents per line each week. FARM LOANS—R H. PARKER87tf I HAVE SOME HORSES FOR SALE or trade—Peter Keifers. 22-tf PLYMOUTH ROCK COCKERELS for sale—J. W. Hi key, 0’Neill.33-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE—FORD Truck.—R. V. Eidenmiller. 33-2 FOR SALE, REGISTERED POLAND China boars.—J. W. Hickey. 33-tf WANTED—EXPERIENCED MAR ried man on farm.—Neil Ryan.31-3 EAT AT “THE SUBWAY.” 7-tf. TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan &Markey.7-tf KODAKS, FILMS, KODAK FINISH ing.—W. B. Graves, O’Neill. 30-tf 1 >VANT SOME FARM AND RANCH loans. If you want money come in and see John L. Quig. 32-tf LOST—LITTLE PURSE CONTAIN ing valuable ring and some change. Leave at this office. 32-2 FOR SALE—BOURBON RED TUR key toms, $4.00 each.—Mrs. L. E. Barrett, O’Neill, Nebraska. 33-2p FOR TRADE A SEVEN PASSEN ger car in good condition, for hay.— 621 Richard Blk., Lincoln, Nebr. 32-2 I HAVE A SMALL FARM AND some cash to trade for a larger farm. See R H. Parker, O’Neill. Ne braska. 40-tf PHONE ORDRES FOR CHESTNUT Hard Coal to Seth Noble. 28-tf THE NEBRASKA STATE BANK IS the only bank in O’Neill operating under the Depositors Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska. Avail your self of this PROTECTION. 8-tf IF YOU NEED THE OLD LOAN ON your farm renewed for another 6 or 10 years, or if you need a larger loan I can make it for you.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 21-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. 7-tf EASTERN CHESTNUT HARD COAL for Magazine stpve will arrive soon. Seth Noble. 28-tf WANTED—MEN AND TEAMS OR trucks, to haul clay on Ewing road project. Ten thousand yards to move, average haul two miles. Call H. F. Nightengale, Ewing< 26-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. 7-tf FINE FARM TO RENT—COMPRIS ing 240 acres, 40 rods from the round hduse in O’Neill, Neb. See Judge Car Ion. 20-tf TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan & Markey.7-tf LEAVE YOUR ORDER FOR PENN sylvania Hard Coal for Base Burn ers with Seth Noble. Car due to ar rive soon. 28-tf EAT AT “THE SUBWAY." 7-tf. I JUST MADE ONE FARM LOAN of $16,000.00 and one of $26,000.00 and one of $40,000.00. I am prepared to make Farm and Ranch Loans as large or as small as you want. If you want a small loan see me, or if you want a large loan see me.—R. H. Par ker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 24-tf I HAVE $1,000.00 PRIVATE MONEY to loan on approved town or farm property.. Also (mon^y to loan on farm property at 6% per cent includ ing commission.—L. G. Gillespie. 32-tf FOR SALE—BUFF ORPHINGTON Cockerels, $2.00 each.—Roy Cole, O’Neill. 32-2p IF YOU WANT THE BEST OF EX PERIENCED, » CONSCIENTIOUS OPTICAL SERVICE AT REASON ABLE PRICES AND SATISFACT ION GUARANTEED, CALL ON PERRIGO OPTICAL COMPANY AT GOLDEN HOTEL, O’NEILL, SAT URDAY, FEB. 3rd. 33-1 NOTES FROM THE NORTHEAST. Ralph Phillips and family were Sun day visitors at the Wertz home. Robert Phillips has purchased an outfit to saw wood and grind feed. He will also look after custom work. Baled hay shipped from Page is a record for the town. We are inform ed that several hundred tons are and will be stored for shipment at a later date. Ray Shellhart was a Sunday caller at the home of your correspondent. Ray is a near, relative of the Trul lingers, former residents of Willow dale township, who were well and fa vorably known by the old settlers. His father filed on land here in 1886. Ml?s Lena Cole, Miss Morna Wertz and Leslie Wertz were present at a seven o’clock dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grant, given in honor of their daughter, Miss Inez, Friday evening. The evening was spent with cards and dancing. Those present were highly entertained and thoroughly enjoyed the hospitality of the family. We stepped in the open doorway of the New Year; we looked back through 1922 with some regrets—the events and disaster, the source of uncon trollable elements. Industrial condi « Is a Woman's Time i L Worth 20c an Hour? p “Women will make themselves more - f L appreciated,” says a recent writer, “if . they will place some value on their L time.” p If you value your own time at only ‘ L 20 cents an hour, for example, you will p see your washday problems in a differ L ent light. P The average family washing and L ironing requires 10 to 20 hours work, p Add to this the necessary supplies, cur L rent, water, and a dozen other inci p dentals, and you’ll discover that not only L can you save your health and time, but * you can actually have all this work done * our way for no more than it is costing you now. H Try this more modern, more eco nomieal method of washing and see how H much better it will make you feel in s every way. Phone us today. ! O’Neill Sa.rvita.ry i Lev.\jrvdry ’ ..VW VW. W - W —VW .-Ml .1 tions are improving but optimism should combine caution and conserva tism. It is time to be constructive but should be void of unnecessary ex penses or obligations. While enjoying an evening walk in the suburbs of Star, I met the weather man and casually remarked that the balmy weather was a saving of fuel and feed, and that winter pasture is more valuable than summer pasture witl) the present existing conditions. His prompt answer was: “I notice your straw hat, summer coat and light shoes.” In time of peace prepare for war." Have an abundance of feed near your stock, preather conditions S change and heavy snows are pos ! about February 1st. EDUCATIONAL NOTES. The Nebraska State Teachers’ As sociation will hold its next meeting in Omaha January 18, 19 and 20. Round trip tickets can be purchased from your town at fare and one-balf. Iden tification tickets can be secured by writing the Nebraska State Teachers’ Association No. 224 Funke Building, Lincoln, Nebraska. The following districts report socials been held recently: District No. 132, Mrs. Ina Stoecker, teacher, proceeds $13.00; District No. 131, Mrs. Kather ine Ruterbories, teacher, proceeds $30; District No. 4, Ruth Donnelly, teacher, proceeds $41.05; District No. 145, Eva Harmon, teacher; District No. 16, Charles Fox, teacher, proceeds $27.00. January 20, 1923, will be the date of the next teachers’ examination. Ques tions in County and Life certificate subjects will be given on that date. Forty dollars was the total amount awarded to the various districts of the county as premium money for their educational exhibit at the Holt County Fair. All schools in the county are required to send ati educational exhibit to the county superintendent each year. Specimen books for this work can be secured from the county super intendent by writing for them or call ing at the office. Premium lists will soon be sent to all schools. District No. . 88 (The Emporia School) will soon have their modern two-room school completed. This is an important step forward education ally. Its being a large school, the patrons decided the work could be done so much better by two teachers than by one. There are a number of other large rural schools in the county which should have two teachers in stead of one in order to give the children the benefit of the instruction to which they are entitled. When erecting new school buildings great care should* be exercised in regard to proper lighting and heating. At tne neginmng oi tne present term District 18% (Deloit School) re 'norted their school as having new ad instable chair desks and play-ground equipment as follows: Four swings, two see-saws and basket ball equip ment. The dates for the eighth grade ex amination have not yet been set by the State Superintendent* but as soon as we receive this information, blanks on which to list all eighth grade pupils will be made to all teachers in the county. All pupils desiring free high school tuition must have their applications on file in this office by June 1st. Ap plication cards for this purpose can be "secured at this office. Students who attend high school can secure these cards from their high school superin tendent. Last year three hundred seven pu :!s received eighth grade diplomas ■ this county. Three hundred sixty-three answer •^npers from this county were sent to -he State for grading at the close of the teachers’ examination December 2, 1922. It is the duty of all teachers and school officers to report to the county superintendent all children who are not attending school as required by IflW ANNA DONOHOE, County Superintendent. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? It’s usually a sign of sick kidneys, especially if the kidney action is dis ordered, (passages scanty or too fre 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 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 or bent. Doan’s Kidney Pills corrected the trouble and I wasn’t bothered for years until I caught cold which settled on my kidneys disordering them. I took a few Doan’s again and they relieved me so I have not been bothered since.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Gunn had. Foster-Milbum Co., Mfrs., Buffalo. N. Y. ( First publication Jan. 18.) (Julius D. Cronin, Attorney.) IN THE COUNTY COURT OF HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA. In the Matter of the Estate of Martha E. Wiley, Deceased. NOTICE OF HEARING. To the Heirs at Law, Creditors and All Other Presons Interested in Said DR. L. A. CARTER ^Physician and Surgeonsi Glasses Correctly Fitted. Office and Residence, Naylor Block -Phone 72 O'NEILL :: :: NEBRASKA THE O’NEILL ABSTRACT COMPANY —Compiles— “Abstracts of Title” THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY. Estate: You are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in ihis Court on the 17th day of January, A. D., 1923, by James E. Wiley, alleging that Martha E. Wiley died b .estate on the 28th day of December 1920; thtft at the time of her death she was a resident and inhabitant of Holt County, Ne braska, and that she was possessed of the following described real estate situate in the County of Holt and State of Nebraska, to-wit: The East Half of the East Half of Section Ten (10), Township Thirty-one (31), Range Nine (9), West of the Sixth Principal Meridian; that said petitioner has an interest in said real estate being an heir at law of the said Martha E. Wiley, deceased; said petitioner prays that a time and 'place be set for hear ing on the petition and that notice thereof be given to all persons inter ested in said estate both creditors and heirs; that upon such hearing the Court enter a decree of heirship and determine the time of death of said Martha E. Wiley and adjudge and de cree that she died possessed of the real estate above described, and that the Court find and decree that James E. Wiley, a son, Emma Ellis, a daughter, Arthur W. Wiley, a son, Mary Ferguson, a daughter, and Rob ert E. Wiley, a son, were the sole sur viving .heirs at law of said Martha E. Wiley, deceased, and that said real estate descended to them as such heirs at law, and that further administra tion of said estate is dispensed with. You are therefore notified that a hearing will be had on said petition in the County Court Room in the city of O’Neill, Holt County, Nebraska, on the 17th day of February, A. D., 1923, at ten o’clock a. m. and that if you fail to appear nt said time and place to con test said ipetition, the Court may grant the prayer thereof. (Seal) C. J. MALONE, (33-3) ' County Judge. Subscribe for The Frontier and keep posted upon the affairs of this great courty of ours. (First publication Jan. 4.) NOTICE. WHEREAS, Robert Bailey, Convict ed in Holt County, on the 16th day of September, 1921, of the crime of Grand Larceny, has made application to the Board of Pardons for a Parole, and the Board of Pardons, pursuant to law have set the hour of 10 A. M. on the 23rd day of January, 1923, for hearing on said application, all per sons interested are hereby notified that they may apbear at the State Pen tentiary.at Lincoln, Nebraska, on said day and hour and show cause if any there be, why said application should or should not be granted. D. M. AMSBERRY, Secretary, Biard of Pardons. N. T. HARMON, 31-2 Chief State Probation Officer. (First publication Jan. 4.) NOTICE. A. D. Faris, Marie Faris, L. G. Brown, Mary Brown, real name un known wife of L. G. Brown, G. P. Brown, real name unknown, Brown, real name unknown, wife or husband of G. P. Brown, real name unknown, J. A. Morris, real name un known, and Ann Morris, real name unknown, wife of J. A. Morris, de fendants, will take notice that on Jan uary 2, 1923, C. G. Newell commenced an action in District Court of Holt County, Nebraska, against you the ob ject of which is to foreclose a mort gage executed by A. D. Faris and Marie Faris to C. G. Newell on East Half Section 35, Township 30 North, Range 9 West 6th Principal Meridian in Holt County, Nebraska, recorded in Book 125 of mortgages at page Z of mortgage records^®# Holt County, Ne braska, plaintiff, alleging there is due on said mortgage $7,458 and interest. You are required to answer said pe tition on or before February 12, 1923. C. G. NEWELL, 31-4 Plaintiff. (First publication Jan. 4.) NOTICE OF PROBATE OF WILL. Estate No. 1561. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, January 4, 1923. In the matter of the Estate of Wil liam Wilger, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that a peti tion has been filed in said Court for the probate of a written instrument purporting to be the last will and tes tament of William Wilger, Deceased, and for the appointment of Herbert Jansen, as executor thereof; that Jan uary 25, 1923, at 10 o’clock A. M., has been set for hearing said petition and proving said instrument in said Court when all persons concerned may ap pear and contest the probate thereof. (County Court Seal.) C. J. MALONE, 31-3 County Judge. (First publication Jan. 4.) SHERIFF’S SALE. By yirtue of an Order of Sale, di rected to «ne from the Clerk of the District Court of Holt County, Ne braska, on a judgment obtained be fore Hon. Robert R. Dickson, Judge of the Fifteenth Judicial District of Holt County, Nebraska, on the 9th day of March, 1922, in favor of Ernest D. Henry, as executor of the last will and testament of Hiram R. Henry, de ceased, as Plaintiff, and against C. C. Goodrich, Atlas Land Company, a cor poration, Patrick E. McKillip, A. Lu gene McKillip, his wife, Peter Voije choski, Anna Voijechoski, his wife, and The Travelers Insurance Com pany, a corporation, as Defendants, for the sum of Fifteen Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty-nine and no.-lOO Dol lars, together with interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from said date and costs taxed at $29.80 and accruing costs, I have levied upon the Following Real Estate taken as the property of said Defendants, to sat isfy said Order of Sale, to-wit: West Half of West Half and North east Quarter of Section Twenty-two (22), and Northwest Quarter of Sec tion Twenty-seven (27), all in Town ship Thirty (30), North of Range Ten (10), West of the Oth P. M., in, Holt County, Nebraska. And will offer the same for sale to the highest bidder for cash, in hand, on the 5th day of February, A. D., 1923, in front of the front door of the Court House in O’Neill, Nebraska, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M., of said , : *. ■ : nw» day, when and where due attendance will be given by the undersigned. Dated at O’Neill, Nebraska, this 4th day of January, 1923. PETER W. DUFFY, 31-5 Sheriff of Said County. 1 i ' W. F, FINLEY, M. T) Phone: Office 28, Residence 276. O’Neill Nebraska OR J. P< GILLIGAK Physician and Surgeon Special Attention Given To DISEASES OF THE EYE -AND CORRECT FITTING OF GLASSES (the Bai/itapy )flfteat Market We have a full line Of Fresh and Cured Neats, Pure Home Rendered Lard. DR. O K. TICKLER sV eterinarians PHONE | DAY 108 | NIGHT O’Neill,-- - - Nebraska J. D. CRONIN Attorney - At - Law Office: Nebraska State Bank Building -Phone 67 O’NEILL :: :: NEBR. Dodge Brothers MOTOR CAR Winter never fails to bring this car renewed praise. It is because the starting system and carburetor seem to be almost immune from cold weather troubles. The response is prompt, even on the coldest mornings. The cord tires, with their safety tread, are also particularly desirable in winter. They not only act as a safeguard against skidding, but greatly reduce the possi bility of having to change tires under disagreeable weather conditions. Close fitting curtains, which open with the doors, enable the owner to drive in comfort the whole year round. ARTHUR C. WYANT O’NEILL, NEBRASKA