i - . «■■»»■» DR. L. A. CARTER Physician and Surgeon Glasses Correctly Fitted. Office and Residence, Naylor Blk. -Phone 72 O’NEILL :: :: NEBRASKA W. F. FINLEY,M.D* Phone, Office 28 f O’Neill Nebraska dr. j7p gilligan Physician and Surgeon Special Attention Given To DISEASES OF THE EYE AND CORRECT FITTING OF GLASSES THE O’NEILL ABSTRACT COMPANY —Compiles— “Abstracts of Title” THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY. H. L. BENNETT GRADUATE VETERNARIAN Phone 304. Day or Night. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA. George M. Harrington I ATTORNEY-AT-LAW I PHONE 11. I O'NEILL, NEBRASKA. 1 r - ------- —— ----- , NEW FEED STORE! In the Roberts Barn in connection with the Feed Barn. All kinds of feeds and hay carried in stock. We make de livery. We ao custom grinding. Office, 336. Res. 270 or 808 ROBERTS & HOUGH ... Wanted — Cattle To Pasture GOOD RUNNING WATER, AND SHADE. Roy Clark, OPPORTUNITY, NEBRASKA. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sunday Morning Service, 10:80 a. in., Sunday School, 11:80 a. m.. Young People’s Service 6:30 p. m., Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. Midweek Services: Tuesday, 7:80 a. m.; Young People’s Prayer Ser vice Wednesday 7:30 p. m., Regular Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7.80 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 11:80 a. m., Christian Endeavor 6:45 p. m. Evening service at 7:30 p. m. Sunday. Midweek Service, Wednesday 8:00 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 i^ommunicants 3 p. m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Confession, Saturday from 8 p. m. to 6 p m. and from 7 p. m. to 9:30 p. m. Children’s Confession, First rhurad jy 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 Sunday and Monday, from 2:00 until 6:00 p. m. MARY McLAUGHLIN, Librarian. O’NEILL CONCERT BAND. Meet Monday night of each week at band hall at 8:00 o’clock. Please be prompt. Clifford B. Scott, Leader. E. D. Henry, Secretary-Treasurer. TATI) LOCALS. Paid announcements will ap pear under this head. If you have anything to sell or wish to buy tell the people of it in this column. Ten cents per line first in sertion, subsequent insertions five cents per line each week. FARM LOANS—R H. PARKER.87tf The Frontier, only $2.00 per year. FOR SALE:—MY DRUMS. Ted Cooper, O’Neill. 39-tf HOUSE FOR SALE IN EAST PART of town.—Mrs. John Fallon. 45-4 Don’t forget the W. C. T, U. Food and Apron sale April 11 and 12 KODAKS, FILMS, KODAK FINISH ing.—W. B. Graves, O’Neill. 30-tf FOR SALE—HOUSE AND EIGHT lots. One or all.—Harry L. Page. 29-tf FOR SALE—FORD TOURING CAR in excellent condition. — Walter Stein. 44— FOR SALE^-PRACTICALLY NEW cream separator.—J. H. Meredith. 45-tf FOR SALE:—MY RESIDENCE Prop erty in west part of town.—Pat O’Donnell. 42-8p We Have Carbon Paper For Sale. E'OR SALE, PURE BLOOD BRONZE turkey eggs, 35c each.—Mrs. C. F. Baker, RFD 1. 45-4p 840 ACRES LOCATED ON EAGLE Creek for rent.—Inquire at O’Neill National Bank. 44-2 DARK PURE BRED S. C. REDS— $3 a hundred.—Phone Emmet—Mrs. Jerrold Dusatko. 41-12p FOR SALE:—REGISTERED ABER deen Angus bulls.—Harry Ressell, Chambers, Nebraska. 45-2 WANTED—CATTLE AND HORSES to pasture. Plenty of water.—Ed Hubby, Meek, Neb. 42-tf FOR SALE—EARLY OHIO POTA toes suitable for seed, 40c per bu. —Martin Conway. 44-3p WANTED—WORK BY DAY OR hour r* widowed lady with child ren to support.—Phone 303. 43-4 I WANT SOME FARM AND RANCH loans. If you want money come in and see John L. Quig. 32-tf FOR SALE—ONE DODGE TOURING Car in good shape.—P. C. Dono hoe, O’Neill. 40-tf FOR SALE—AT 46c PER BU. 1,000 bu. White Kherson seed oats.—J. Martin Conway. 41-6p FOR SALE—R. C. WHITE WYAN dotte eggs, 25c per dozen.—Mrs. Harry Resseil, 'Chambers. 45-2 FOR SALE—THREE TUBE REGEN eiative radio receiving set complete. Wilbur Baker, O’Neill, R.F.D.1. 45-2p PURE BRED BUFF ORPINGTON Baby Chicks, 12c each. Eggs 50c per 16, or $3.00 per hundred.—Mrs. J. K. Ernst. 40-tf FOR SALE, HOUSE, BARN, CHICK en house and two lots.—Mrs. A. Darr, southeast of Burlington depot. 40-tf FOR SALE — PUREBRED S. C. White Orpington eggs, 75c per set ting; $4.00 per 100.—Mrs. George Dahms, Emmet, Neb. 44-4 WANTED CATTLE TO PASTURE; also 1,000 bushels Yellow Kherson seed oats for sale at 45c per bushel. —Herman Stein, Meek. 44-tf TWO MEN WANTED TO SELL Singer Sewing Machines in and around O’Neill Write or see G. H. Guy, Ainsworth, Nebraska. 19-tf THE NEBRASKA STATE BANK IS the only bank in O’Neill operating under the Depositors Guaranty Funu 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 5 or 10 years, or if you need a larger loan I can make it for you.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 21-tf LOST—WRIST WATCH BETWEEN the residence of Mrs. A. L. Willcox and the O’Neill National bank. Finder please leave at this office and receive reward. 43-tf LOST—A LEATHER JACKET BE tween the filling station and Joe Marring’s. Finder leave with Fred McNally at filling station and receive reward. 45-2p PUREBRED PLYMOUTH ROCK eggs for hatching, 16 eggs, 50c; 100 eggs, $3.00; baby chicks, 12 cents each for all season.—Mrs. Frank Pribil, Jr., Phone, 3F210. 43-6 FOR SALE—BUFF ORPINGTON and Rhode Island Reds baby chicks, 12c each; eggs, $3.00 per 100; 50c for 15. One large Bourbon red tom turkey, $6.00.—Mrs. G. A. Fox. 43-4 FOR SALE—CHOICE R. C. RHODE Island Red eggs. The stock is from The Harrison Red farm at $1.25 for 16. —Mrs. R. L. Arbuthnot, 2nd door west of library. 45-4 I HAVE A CASH BUYER FOR A farm if the price is right I also have some City property to trade for a farm and pay the differ ence in cash.—R. H. Parker, O'Neill. 45-tf I HAVE SOME PRIVATE MONEY to loan on farms and ranches, so if the old mortgage on your farm comes due on March 1st, it might be well to come in now and make a new loan and pay the old one off.—R. H. Parker, O'Neill, Nebraska. 37-tf THE PERRIGO OPTICAL CO., OF Fremont, Nebr., is the only firm who can boast of 20 years’ continuous optical service in northern Nebraska and southern South Dakota. “There’s a reason.” See them at Golden Hotel, Saturday, April 19th. 44-2 IF THE MORTGAGE ON YOUR farm comes due about March 1st, I can probably make a new 5-year loan for you to pay the old one off with. Hundreds of mortgages will be due March 1st and the people who come to me first will be served first, because we may not be able to reach all of them.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill. 86-tf She Called Him j “The Brute” j By MORRIS SCHULTZ t «y, 1923. Western Newspaper Union.) KEMBLE walked out of the special ist’s office with u feeling of ex traordinary elation. All iil3 troubles had suddenly disappeared under the effect of that unexpected verdict. lie walked out into the sunshine and took his way homeward. Th* brute was thinking of a l >t of things hut principally about May. Would she he glad or sorry? He knew May would not sorrow over much if he were to die. He and May had been married five years, and those five years had been the unhappie.-d portion of his life. The brute. May i ailed him, hut he had never been ph; -hr'Iy brutal to her. They had sila;ii\ failed to agree. They were the type of people who ought never to have married. That whs what the trouble was. They had loved en< h oilier in the beginning, and at f.r i they had striven so hard to come to seme sort of un derstanding; hut wlien I hoy found that was impossible they had ceased to care, and had gone on their way in bland Indifference to each other. Some times Kemble had wondered whether May was capable of loving at ail. She was so detached, so like an automa ton, she cared for nothing outside her housework. , . . He reached his home at last, and the sight of it struck him (Utterly, as If It hnd been something that lie had never seen before. The furniture looked strange, and he watched May as If she had been a strange woman. “Did you see the doctor, Howard?” He nodded. “What did he say wns the matter with you?” “Oh, nothing much,” answered The Brute. “It Isn’t serious?” “No.” And he thought for a moment that a flash of regret passed over her face, quickly masked by the usual Indiffer ent expression. And lie wondered what she would do If he were to die. lie would at least leave her comfortably provided for. Probably she would marry again very speedily. Some man would marry her for her money. And then, probably, May would realize tlmt he had not been quite such a brute after all. Had It been disappointment that he was going to get well after nil? Dur ing the following days the constraint between them seemed to deepen. Once or twice The Brute caught sight of tear stains on May’s face. He was sorry, for he was really a soft-heart ed brute, though May had never real ized that. She had never tried to un derstand him. How did It come about that May left that letter she had been writing unsealed? She trusted The Brute! That thought flashed through his mind and made him proud. She trusted him not to read the unsealed note ly ing in her blotting pad when she had rone out shopping. She did not think him a dishonorable brute, then—simply a brute. And If he read it, It was only be cause Just now he felt an overwhelm ing desire to know something more of the workings of May’s mind. That justified him Jin his own ns he drew the letter out of Its enclosure. But the reading of It came to The Brute as a staggering shock. It was, In fact, a love letter, and written to a man whom The Brute knew very well. It was written to Brampton. But It had never entered his mind that May and Brampton could possibly be In love with each other. “And so, darling,” The Brute read, “there seems no chance of future hap piness for u». His illness, on which we built such hopes, Is not a serious one. He and I will continue to live together, and quarrel with each other— you know what a brute he Is—and we shall grow old and faded, and you and I can never be anything more to each other than we are now. It breaks my heart, dearest, to have to write to you like this, but there you are!” The Brute put the missive carefully back In Its enclosure and stood for a while in thought. He felt strangely happy to think that May had found some one whom she could love. He was happy that she had that need of love. He looked out of the window and saw her coming up the street. She looked attractive, she was still in her prime; yes, phe and Itrampton could be very happy together. And The Brute rejoiced with all his heart thnt he had not told her, that he would never tell her that the spe cialist had given him two months of life and then a sudden death. (First publication March 27.) NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that Holt County will accept bids up to noon April 22nd, 1924, for the construction of a gutter on the west side of Block 10, O’Neill City; same to be built in accordance with specificatons on file in the County Clerk’s office. The board reserves the right to re ject any or all bids. By order of the County Board. E. F. PORTER, 43-4 County Clerk. (First publication April 3.) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate No. 1651. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, April 3, 1924. In the matter of the Estate of Donald McClellan, Deceased. CREDITORS of said estate are ; hereby notified that the time limited for pwwerttlng claims against said estate is July 80th, 1924, and for the payment of debts is March 26th, 1926, and that on April 30th, 1924, and on July 31st, 1924, at 10 o’clock A. M., each day, I will be at the County Court Room in said County to re ceive, examine, hear, allow, or adjust all claims and objections uuly filed. (County Court Seal.) C. J. MALONE, 44-4 County Judge. (hirst publication March 27.) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate No. 1536. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, March 22, 1924. In the matter of the Estate of James B. Berry, Deceased. CREDITORS of said estate are hereby notified that the time limited for presenting claims against said estate is July 25th, 1924, and for the payment of debts is August 1st, 1924, and that on April 25th, 1924, and on July 26th, 1''24, at 10 o’clock A. M., each day, 7, will be at the County Court Room in said County to receive, ex amine, hear, allow, or adjust all claims and objections duly filed. (County Court Seal.) C. J. MALONE, 43-4 County Judge. (First publication March 20.) LEGAL NOTICE. Fred B. Lee and A. Y. Weir, Trus tees; A. T. Bennett and J. J. Eimers, administrators of the estate of Payne Sjjrgisson, deceased; Union Mort gage & Cattle Loan Company; J. M. Shea, Trustee for C. W. Payne, Bank rupt; Edgewater Realty Company, a corporation; Fred O. Humphreys; Harry E. Dawe; Bessie Dawe; Agnes Sargisson Becker and E. R. Becker (real name unknown) her husband; Pearl Gertrude Terry and Paul Terry, her husband; Lillie Mae Reillv and Jonn Keiuy, hex- husband; Paul W. Sargisson and Della Sargisson, his wife; Edith Eleanor Keilly and Charles B. Reilly, her husband; Edna Sargisson Clary and John Clifford Clary, her husbaxxd; Harvey Payne Sargisson; Walter Nedum Sargisson; Walter Charles Sargisson; George Thomas Sargisson and John Doe (real name unknown) defendants are noti fied that on March 13th, 1924, Gustav Gradert, plaintiff, filed a petition and commenced an action in the District Court of Holt County, Nebraska, against you the object and prayer of which are to foreclose a mortgage executed by Payne Sargisson to C. W. Payne on June 15, 1918, to secure a note of $17000 and interest, which mortgage was recorded on November 16, 1918, in Book 122 of mortgages at page 664 in office of County Clerk of Holt County, Nebraska, and conveyed the Southwest Quarter and the South Half of Northwest Quarter of Sec ion 8; the East Halt of Section 17; the North Half of Northwest Quarter of Section 17; the Northeast Quarter and East Half of Southeast Quarter of Section 18; the East Half of East Half of Section 19; all of Section 20; all of Section 21; the North Half and the Southeast Quarter of Section 28; the South Half of Southwest Quarter and the Northeast Quarter of Southwest Quarter of Section 28; all in Township $30,000,000 Annually From Nebraska’s Milk Pail At nightfall, slowly wending their way homeward, down the lanes of Nebraska’s farms, come half a million cows. Nebraska’s milk cows add some $30, 000,000 annually to the state’s wealth through the production of about 200,000, 000 gallons of milk, from which are made about 65,000,000 pounds of butter, 2,600, 000 gallons of ice cream, 600,000 pounds of cheese and about 5,000,000 pounds of condensed milk. During the past three years the number of milk cows in Nebraska has increased about 15 per cent. All of Nebraska’s industries are growing and this requires more and more telephone service. At the present rate that Neb raska is growing, the Bell System must spend about three-fourths of a million dollars annually for new local and long distance telephone property in this state. The growing demand for telephone service requires vast sums of money from investors to furnish new telephone facilities. Nearly half a million people have already purchased Bell System stock or bonds. We shall be pleased to have you as an investor in the business. Ask our Manager or any telephone employee for full infor mation about Bell stock or bonds. At Nebraska prospers, the telephone it succettful. Therefore, we constantly strive to provide reliable telephone service at the lowest possible charges consistent with reasonable wages to employees and a fair return on the money invested in the business. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. BELL SYSTEM One Policy - One Syetem - Unlee real Service 32 North, of Range 16 West of 6th Principal Meridian in Holt County, Nebraska. Plaintiff allages he is the owner of said note and mortgage and prays that the premises above de scribed be sold to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 28th day of April, 1924. GUSTAV GRADERT, 42-4 Plaintiff. V Real News Paramount 9 In the country newspaper, sensations, scandals—the recording of human misery—is almost taboo. At least it certainly is sec ondary to the printing of real news about people and things. For the province of the country paper—your HomeTown Paper —is to give community interests first place, printing the more or less sensational personal items only when necessary to keep faith with subscribers who pay for ALL the news. Therefore, your Home Town Paper can give you, in full meas ure and overflowing, 100 per cent pure news about the people in whom you are interested—your relatives and friends of the Old Home Town. m “The Frontier”