The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 29, 1925, Image 8

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    TO THE DEPOSITOR:
National Banks Fail—
When they do depositors lose heavily. Why?
Because deposits In National Banks a*6 nod
guaranteed.
State Banks Fail—
When they do depositors a*e paid In full.
Why? Beeous© deposits In State Banks are
prtoeeted by (he Depositors Guarantee Ftind
'f "Matt V Nebraska.
The Nebraska State Bank
of O'Neill is the only bank In O’Neill which
offers you this protection.
You will protect yourself and please us by
depositing your money with us.
& Per Cent Paid on Time Deposits
Nebraska State Bank
O’Neill, Nebraska
The time has gone by when a man
«onlll expect to get credit merely by
Jingling the keys in his pocket.
'me boys playing ball make a ter
riMe noise, but anyway the parents
don't have to worry as to where they
iire.
'One reads in the blble that David
■was annotated with oil to be king
«/vcr Israel, bat it would be safer in
these times to use some other fluid.
I Spinal Analysis. Physical
Diagnosis
DR. C. H. LUBKER
Chiropractor
Phone 316. O’Neill, Neb.
1 DR. J. P. GILLIGAN
I Physician and Surgeon
fl Special attention given
fl to disease of the eye and
1 correct fitting of glasses
I W. F. FINLEY, M. D. I
Phone, Office 28 I
O’Neill :: Nebraska |j
»
.. r
_
Nebraska Culvert and
Mfg. Co.
Austin-Western Road
Machinery
Armco Culverts
I Everything in Road
Machinery. Western
Representative. S
L. C. PETERS
O’Neill :: Nebraska
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmam
I 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 do custom grinding.
Office 336. Res. 270 or 303
ROBERTS & HOUGH
PAID LOCALS.
FARM LOANS—R. H. PARKER—37tf
KODAKS, FILMS, KODOK FlNISH
ing—W. B. Graves, O’Neill. 30-tf
NO. 2 HAWKE7E CAMERA, SPEC
lal $1.98, Graves Jewelry Store. 27tf
FOR RENT—GOOD HOUSE, CLOSE
in—Edlward O’Donnell. 29-tf
FOR SALE- MODERN HOUSE AND
8 lots. Call or write, Mrs. Nona
Bedford, Page. 27-9p
STUDEBAKER SEDAN IN EXCELLE
nt condition for sale at a bargain.
Walter Stein, 33tf
,OST—ONE WHITE AND FOUR
Gray Geese on Sunday, January 11.
’lease notify Henry Schacht. 35-1 p
FOR RENT—ON SHARE OF FOR
cash, 760 acres of hay land. Good
house and barn.—Peter Reifer. 8-tf
THE FRONTIER WILL PAY FIVE
cents per pound for good clean cot
ton rags. i
FOR RENT—9 ACRE TRACT WITH
improvements, i^-mile east of Gold
en Hotel. Inquire of O’Neill National
Bank. 36-3p
FOR RENT—640 acre farm, 4% miles
southwest of Inman, Nebraska and a
hay barn in Inman. Mrs. Ella Riley,
O’Neill, Nebraska. 33tf
PUREBRED BARRED ROCK COCK
erels $1.00 each, if taken soon. Pul
lets $8.60 per dozen.—Mrs. A. P. Sau
8er, O’Neill, Nebr. 34-2p
CASH PAID FOR FALSE TEETH,
dental gold, platinum and discarded
;ewelry.—Hoke Smelting & Refining
~'o., Otsego, Michigan. 36-4
FORM AND RANCH LOANS, 6 AND
three-fourth per cent, ntS commis
sion.—F. J. Dishner, County Agent
Joint Stock Land Bank. 17-tf
sjTJ* M) «nrv In
ur Oil station, owner can have e;
>y proving ownership and paying
dvertising. O’Neill Gas & Oil Co
F YOU NEED THE OLD LOAN O
your farm renewed for anothter 5 r
10 years, of if you need a larger lo
: can make it for you.—It H. Parke
YNeill, Nebraska. 21 -tf
i%% INTEREST AND NO COMMIS
sion. I am now loaning Money on
Farms and Ranches at interest
and no commission to pay. New Loan
Company I Just got.—It. H. Parker.
O’Neill, Nebraska. 3-tf
WILL THE PERSON WHO BO.
iwwed ii.y steel mitre box and "
please return them. I have use fo
them now. Yon can get them agai
when you want them.—T. V. Gcldc
34-2
ARE YOU ALL RUN DOWN?
Many O’Neill Folks Have Felt Tha'
Way.
I'ee.1 all out ot sorts ?
Tired, achy, blue, irritable?
Back lame and stiff?
It may be the story of weak kid
neys!
Of toxic poisons circulating about
Vpsetting blood and nerves.
There's a way to feel right again.
Help your weakened kidneys with
Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic.
Doan’s are recommended by many ,
O’Neill people.
A. W. Gunn, carpenter, O’Neill,
says: “My kidneys acted irregularly
and I had to get up many times at
night to pass the secretions. I had a
lameness in the small of my back that
bothered me a great deal when I lift
ed or bent over. Doan’s Pills cor
rected the trouble and I wasn’t bother
ed for years until a cold disordered
my kidneys. I took Doan’s again and
they relieved me so I haven’t • been
bothered since.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr.
Gunn had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs.,
j Buffalo, N. Y.
Far North Alto Hat
Itt “Emerald UltT
Were not the title ^re-empted,
Kodiak, In the Katmal district of
Alaska, might have been called the
"Emeruld Isle" quite as well as Ire
land, for Its situation in the Pacific
Is similar to that of Ireland In the
Atluntlc ocean. Is the assertion made
by a writer In the Washington Star.
Although the Island of Kodiak Is
100 miles from Mount Katmal, which
In June, 1912, gave one of the most
tremendous volcanic explosions ever
recorded, It was hurled nearly a foot
deep In ash. The ashy blanket trans
formed the “Oreen Kodiak" of other
days Into a gray desert of sand, but
after a period of two years the ash
laden hillsides were again covered
with verdure finer than ever before.
In the words of a resident of
Kodiak, “Never was such grass known
before, so high or so early. No one
ever believed the country could grow
so many berries, aor so large, before
the ash.”
The island owes Its climate, os does
Ireland, to the tropical ocean current
which bathes its shores. The easterft
half of the island is occupied by a
forest of spruce, whose trees reach
a great size. Then comes luxuriant
grass land, equal to any grazing land
in the United Stntes, and finding a
parallel only in the “guinea grass” of
the tropics.
Armenians Have Long
Survived Other Races
The Armenians have remained un
shaken In all vicissitudes and by theii
courage have preserved until our days
their nationality, their language and
their customs, asserts Herbert Welsh
in the New Armenia.
The races that the Armenians knew
In their infancy have finished from
the face of the earth. Their brothers,
the Phrygians, are today only a vague
memory. Among the contemporaries
of the Armenians, only the Hellenes,
the Italiotes and the Gauls have sur
vived, not, hewever, without undergo
ing many Changes, and abandoning
rouny of their former customs. Ex
cept the Greeks, one must seek the
kinsmen of the Armenians among the
nations who were brought from the
steppes of the North toward the
shores of the Mediterranean by the
same flood that brought the uncestors
of Haik toward Thrace.
It ran clearly be seen that the titles
of nobility of the Armenian race date
back to more tlmn 3,000 years before
our era, and that they are much more
ancient than tliose of most of the Eu
ropean peoples. About the time when
Rome was being founded, Haik, the
eponymous hero of Armenia, led the
Armenians to Ararat, The Persians
were just commencing their political
life when Armenia had ulready con
st!! uted herself a slate.
Astronomical Thecnies
The navul observatory says the be
lief Is commonly held among astrono
mers that Mars Is an older planet than
the earth. The old theory of the
origin of the solar system, called the
nebular hypothesis, was flrst proposed
by Laplace a hundred or more years
ogo. According to his view, the sun
was once so large that It extended as
far as the orbit of Neptune. In the
process of shrinking to Its present size
It left bits of Itself behind, each of
which became a planet; so that the
farther out a planet Is, the older It Is.
However, there are many astronomers
who do not uccept this theory; several
different theories are now given to
explain the origin of the solar system.
Preserving Trees
Large wounds In trees made by the
removal of branches of considerable
diameter may be protected by painting
the rut surface with a heavy coating of
white lead. A large number of waxes,
paints and washes have been tried, aud
the conclusion, has been drawn that
any substance which Is not corrosive
or detrimental to growth and which
will protect the heartwood from the at
tacks of rot spores, will prove a satis
factory covering for a cut surface.
Among such substances may be men
tioned white lead, yellow ocher, coal
tar and grafting wax.
Awaken* New Hope
Some enterprising California eltlaen
discovered that goldfish are much more
valuable In a pond of stagnant water
than in a glass bowl. It is said that a
few goldfish placed in sluggish water
where mosquitoes breed wifi in one
season eat every vestige of mosquito
larvae, freeing the neighborhood of
this pest. Just about the time we had
given up all lw>pe that thts metallic
colored fish had any value other fhaq
as a parlor pet, along comes this news
dispatch. There Is hope for the gar
pike yet.—Detroit News.
Oriental Rug Designs
Authorities on oriental rugs say
that the rug Itself typifies the uni
verse and the various designs the
ever-changing course of life. The
principal color, If red, typifies life of
victory; If blue, royalty; if white,
purity; If green, devotion, and If
Clack, evil. In patterns the Swastika
mrans good luck; the flower and knot,
fortune and life everlasting, th* cir
cle, Immortality. The star of six
points represents Allah.
Our Inquisitive Youngsters
“Uncle Tom, what are those little
square holes In your desk for?”
“Those are pigeon holes, my dear."
“When will the pigeons be back?"—
Boston Transcript.
PUBLIC SALE!!
As I am going to leave the country I will sell at public sale on the
Birmingham place (Known as the old Bedford place) 14 miles north, 1 mile
east of the O’Neill Fair Groiftids, one-half mile east, 2 miles south of
Meek postoffice, the following described property, on
Tuesday, February 10th
__Sale Starts at 1:00 P. M.
9 Head of Horses
One dapple gray gelding, 8 years old, weight 1600; 1 team grey geldings
smooth mouth, weight 1300; 1 bay mare, smooth mouth, weight 1350; 1
team black mares, 4 and 6 years old, weight 1300; 1 team geldings, coming
a years old, weight 1250; 1 saddle horse, smooth mouth, weight 1000.
45 Head of Cattle
£.00<* m^cb cows, be fresh soon; 15 head good stock cows; 4 two year
old heifers; 19 yearlings; 1 Shorthorn bull. These cattle are all in good
condition.
30 HEAD OF FALL PIGS Weighing from 50 to 100 lbs. each.
Farm Machinery, Etc.
One Mandt wagon; 1 wagon with hay rack; 1 hay rake; 1 John Deere stalk
disc; 1 P. & O. lister; I P. & O. eli; 1 Oliver cultivator, nearly new; 1 Moline
mower; 1 John Deere corn planter; 1 McCormick corn binder; 2 sets of
harness; 1 double ‘A” hay stacker; 50 foot steel cribbing; 150 foot chicken
wire, 1 hog chute; 1 30-gallon steel oil barrel; 10 dozen chickens; 1 dozen
guineas.
300 bushels yellow corn; 150 bushels oats; 20 tons of hay; 15 bushels
POISIIOCS*
Moore heating stove, nearly new; 1 Moore heating stove, nearv new; 1
kitchen cabinet; 1 solid oak dining room table, Mission style; 6 oak dining
o0??*0 \ai^S’ ??!SS1°? f^yle; 1 center table; 1 steel Sanitary couch; 1 rug,
9x12 leet; 1 solid satin brass bed, with springs and mattress; 1 solid oak
dresser with large mirror. Thisfurniture is all practically new.
FREE LUNCH AT NOON. BRING YOUR TIN CUPS.
■■■———i—i—_ _ _
TERMS—Nine months time with approved security. $10 and under cash.
W111. EggGr, Owner
COL. JAMES MOORE, Auctioneer. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Clerk.
FOB SALE OR TRADE.
One square block, In College Hill.
Hot Springs, South Dakota. Half
section in Montana, north of Billings.
10-tf PETER REIFER.
CORN FOR SALE.
Three miles east of Meek postoffice,
1,400 bushels Old and New. Write
John A. Lynch, 3714 Cuming St.
Omaha, Nebraska. 35-2
THE ESTIMATE OF THE EX
PENSE OF HOLT COUNTY, NE
BRASKA, AS ADOPTED BY THE
HOLT COUNTY BOARD IN REG
ULAR SESSION JANUARY 14,
1925.
Bridge_$30,000.00
County Officers _ 15,000.00
Printing _9,000.00
Clerk Hire__ 12,000.00
County Road_ 6,000.00
Assessors _ 6,000.00
Road Dragging_ 6,000.00
County Poor _ 10,000.00
Mother’s Pension_ 2,500.00
Court House and Jail _ 3,600.00
County Fairs _ 2,000.00
Court and Jury_ 1,000.00
Justice and Misdemeanor_ 500.00
Feeble Minded _ 300.00
Blind _ 500.00
Coroner’s Inquest _ 300.00
Insane__ 300.00
Board of Health_ 300.00
Miscellaneous _ 4,000.00
Judgments _ 38,000.00
Total _ $147,200.00
E. F. PORTER,
33-4 County Clerk.
(First publication Jan 29.)
(W. J. Hammond, Attorney.)
LEGAL NOTICE.
Ex. B. Carter and Pioneer Valley
Savings Bank of Sergeant Bluff, Iowa,
a corporation, non-resident defend
ants are notified that on January 26,
1925, A. W. Miner as alaintiff, com
menced an action in the District Court
of Holt County, Nebraska, against
Art E. Skaw, Sarah E. Skaw, his wife,
Ex. B. Carter, Pioneer Valley Savings
Bank of Sergeant Bluff, Iowa, a cor
poration, Oscar E. Roben and Charles
J. Hinshilwood, as defendants the ob
ject and prayer of which are to fore
close a real estate mortgage executed
by Art E. Skaw and Sarah Skaw, his
wife, to H. L. Craven, to secure a note
of $6,400, dated May 1, 1920, and
which mortgage was recorded in office
of County Clerk of Rock County, Ne
braska, on May 24, 1920, in Book “X”
of mortgages at page 361 of the rec
ords of Rock County, Nebraska, and
on June 2, 1920, was recorded in the
office of the County Clerk of Holt
County, Nebraska, in Book 127 of
mortgages at page 667 of the recordsn
of Holt County, Nebraska, and which
mortgage conveyed The East Half of
Southeast Quarter of Section 27 and
the Southwest Quarter of Section 28
and the Northeast Quarter of the
Northeast Quarter of Section 25 and
the East Half of the Southeast Quar
ter of Section 24, all in Township 32
North, of Range 17 West in Rock
County, Nebraska, and the Southwest
Quarter of Southwest Quarter of Sec
tion 19, Township 32 North, of Range
16 West in Holt County, Nebraska.
Plaintiff alleges he is the owner and
holder of said note and mortgage;
that default has been made in the
conditions of said mortgage and that
said note and mortgage are due and
payable and prays that an accounting
be had of the amount due thereon and
that the real estate above described
be sold to satisfy the sum found due.
You are required to answer said pe
tition on or before March 9, 1925.
A. W. MINER,
35-4 Plaintiff.
(First publication Jan. 22.)
SALE BY SPECIAL MASTER UN
DER DECREE.
By B. H. Dunham, Special Master,
501 Securities Building, Omaha,
Nebraska.
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given
that, by virtue of an order of sale is
sued out of the United States District
Court for the District of Nebraska,
Norfolk Division, and in pursuance of
the decree of said court rendered on
September 22, 1924, and which was
filed with the Clerk of said Court on
said date, in an action therein pend
ing, to-wit: No. 51-Equity, wherein
Frank H. Binder is plaintiff and
James Hawk, Christina Hawk, John
F. Drayton, V. B. Kadlec, real name
unknown, J. L. Fisher, real name un
known and Th. D. Sievers, real name
unknown, are defendants, whereby
three mortgages on the property
hereinafter described were foreclosed,
and the undersigned was appointed
Special Master of this court to sell
said property and execute said de
cree, and, by virtue of the authority
in me vested by said decree and order
of sale, I, B. II. Dunham, as such
Master, will, on the 6th day of March,
1925, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at
the Court House, in O’Neill, the
county seat of Holt County, Nebras
ka, sell at public auction, to the high
est bidder for cash, the property on
which said mortgages were fore
closed, which said property is situate
in the County of Holt and State of Ne
braska, and known and described as
follows, to-wit:
The South Half of the South
Half (S% S%) Section Number
ed Twenty (20), Township Num
bered Twenty-seven (27) North
Range Numbered Nine (9)' West
of the Sixth Principal Meridian,
containing one-hundred sixty
(160) acres more or less, ac
cording to government survey.
To satisfy the plaintiff in the sum
of $4,415.50, with interest thereon at
the rate of 10 per cent per annum
from September 22, 1924, until paid,
which amount constitutes a lien on
the mortgaged premises prior to the
estates, interests or liens of any of
the parties defendant to said cause;
to satisfy defendant, V. B. Kadlec, in
the sum of $3,264.50, with interest
thereon at 8 per cent per annum from
September 22, 1924, which amount
constitutes a second lien upon the
mortgaged premises; to satisfy de
fendant, J. L. Fisher, in the sum of
$3,270.00, with interest thereon at 7
per cent per annum from September
22, 1924, which amount constitutes a
third lien upon the mortgaged prem
ises; and to satisfy the sum of $73.14
costs shown on said m’der of sale, and
the accruing costs;™ he proceeds of
said sale to be applied, upon con
firmation of said sale, as follows, to
wit:
1. To the satisfaction of the un
paid costs herein that have accrued or
that may accrue.
2. To the payment to plaintiff of
said sum found to be due him, with
interest thereon, as above provided,
and his costs herein expended.
3. To the payment to the defend
ant, V. B. Kadlec, of the sum found
to be due him, with interest thereon
as above provided, and his costs here
in expended.
4. To the payment to defendant,
J. L. Fisher, of the sum found to be
due him, with interest thereon as
above provided, and his costs herein
expended.
6. The surplus, if any, to be paid
to such of the defendants herein as
may be shown at that time to be en
titled to the same.
All as provided by said order of
sale and decree.
Said sale will be held open for one
hour at the time and place aforesaid.
Dated this 19th day of January,
1925.
B. H. DUNHAM,
Special Master of the United States
District, Court, for the District of
Nebraska, Norfolk Division. 34-7
Parts Supplies Hemstitching
The Singer Shop
* New and Second-Hand Sewing Machines
J All Makes Cleaned and Repaired
W. A. GUY, Manager
O’Neill, Nebraska