The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 07, 1935, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    The Frontier
D. H. Cronin, Editor and Proprietor
Entered at the Postoflice at O’Neill,
Nebraska as Second Class Matter.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertising on pages 4,
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of 25e an inch (one column wide)
per week; on page 1 the charge is
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ads. 10c per line, first insertion,
Eubsequent insertions, 5c per line.
One Year, in Nebraska $2.00
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Every subscription is regarded as
an open account. The names of
subscribers will be instantly re
moved from our mailing list at ex
piration of time paid for, if pub
lisher shall be notified; otherwise
the subscription remains in force
at thedesignated subscription price, i
Every subscriber must un
derstand that these con- i
ditions are made a part of
the contract between pub- '
lisher and subscriber.
WHATS DOING IN
THE LEGISLATURE
(Continued from page 1.)
147, the uniform narcotic drug act
passed at the request of federal
authorities; H. R. <50, with the
emergency clause, to outlaw suits
brought against counties under
township organization for the pur
pose of forcing a division of county
road tax funds hitherto collected,
and giving townships, villages and
second class cities the right to
share therein. A companion bill
making the same provision as to
cities of the first class is now be
fore the senate. H. R. <50 means
that hereafter counties under town
ship organization and those having
the commissioner system will all be
on the same basis in regard to the
expenditure of road funds for the
benefit of all parts of the county,
while in the meantime they are
relieved of any burdens arising
from past failure to divide the
funds.
Passed by the house and now be
fore the senate is a bill to discon
tinue after July 1, 1937, use of 10
per cent of fishing and hunting
license fees for state park purposes.
The house also adopted a resolution
* urging congress to establish a na
tional park along the North Platte
river from Bridgeport to Guernsey
Lake in Wyoming.
The feeders’ uct giving caretak
ers of livestock a first lien on the i
stock to assure payments for ac
counts due, has been signed by the
governor.
S. F. 10 which would transfer the
* tare and custody of the capitol
building and grounds from the
state land commissioner to the gov
ernor, appears headed for certain
passage. An amendment is being
tacked on, however, which will al
low Land Commissioner Leo N.
Swanson to finish out his two-year
term under the present setup.
The house killed a bill which
would have empowered the govern
or to approve codes drawn up by
business groups,or recognize exist
ing national codes as state law.
Advocates of a state NR A still
have some hope left, however, as a
bill similar to the one killed re
poses in the senate labor committee.
Another bill to get the axe in
the senate was one forbidding
county boards to delegate super
sivion of relief of poor to any other
person or group.
The house’s “substitute" liquor
control act has finally made its ap
pearance, its chief characteristics
being no state retailing, setting up
of a saloon-type liquor store, and
no cafe sales.
Chairman E. J. Dugan of the
liquor committee says he is op
posed to the measure and will ask
the house to place the Wright bill
intact upon the house general file
instead of the substitute bill. Steele
(R) of Kimball, a dry, and Have
kost, classed as a moderate, did
much of the work of framing the
substitute bill.
The bill provides that no priv
ate dealer would be permitted to
buy liquor except from the state
liquor commision, thus requiring
the commission to go into the
wholesale business, with the op
tional privilege of manufacturing
liquor. Restaurants would be re
fused a liquor license, and hotels
would be allowed, to take licenses
only for salon-type barrooms. No
drinks could be sold anywhere ex
cept in duly licensed establish
ments (use of the word “saloon”
is strictly prohibited) across the
bar and with standing room only.
Packaged liquor might be sold
only in liquor stores, and no lic
ences would be issued to grocery(
drug or any other existing type of
store. There w-ould be no local op
tion for one year, and after that
option would be on the basis pro
vided in the Wright bill. Only
places recommended by local auth
orities could be licensed by the
commission and fees would remain
substantially as they are in the
Wright bill.
Beer under the substitute bill
would be left largely alone. The
state as a wholesaler would not
handle beer.
The house unicameral committee
at the Lincoln hotel last week
listened to and unofficially approved
a -18-district plan presented by
Prof. J. P. Senning of the state
university. He had previously pre
sented to the same committee a
plan having 47 districts, but he de
clared that the new plan shapes the
districts more favorably, specially
in the west where they take cog
nizance of the main highways and
would thus make campaigning eas
ier for the candidates.
Senning stated that under his
new plan there would be one repre
sentative for every 28,000 people.
Eastern Nebraska would have 31
representatives and the western
part of the state 17. The division
point would be an imaginary line
extending diganolly across the
state from Cedar county and down
thru Kearney county. The com
mittee had taken no official action
on the proposed plan early this
week.
Working on the presumption
that congress will pass President
Roosevelt’s $1,000,000,000 work re
lief bill from which Nebraska would
get in the neighborhood of 85 mil
lion in the next 2 years, the state
planning board has listed nearly
800 projects submitted by more
than400governmental subdivisions,
and has dispatched the listings to
Washington. If all these projects
were undertaken, the cost would
be around $70,000,000.
The largest project submitted
was the $25,000,000 Tri-county
power and irrigation project which
is already before PWA officials.
The pending North Loup project
also was presented. Among the
other projects submitted at the
Hastings and North Platte meet
ings were:
School improvements at Hasings
for the public schools and for Hast
ings college, public library at Old,
improvement of electric system and
park erection of a new American
Legion hall at St. Paul, 40 miles of
highway in Custer county, seven
mile pipe line to bring water to
Nelson, 81 miles of highway in
Howard county, $50,000 supplement
to Whitney irrigation system, a
$200,000 underpass and a $10,000
incinerator at North Platte, power
plant and other improvement at
Sidney to cost about $875,000, a
$50,000school auditorium at Scotts
blutf, and $10,000 worth of new
buildings for the state experi
mental farm near North Platte.
The planning board says that it
has not assumed, at this early
stage, to endorse any of the pro
jects specifically, but rather it has
listed them tentatively only as “ap
pearing to qualify for consideration
fully on their merits at the proper
time, or as soon as the PWA takes
under consideration projects for
development in Nebraska.’’ The
main idea is to effect needed per
manent benefits and at the same
time relieve unemploymnet.
The board was in session eight
days in the period of three weeks
since it was established until Feb.
26, when the last hearing was held
at North Platte.
10TI1 BIRTHDAY SALE!
Conu* celebrate with us our 10th
Birthday Sale, starts Murch 8th.
The presents are yours, in some of
the greatest bargains we have ever
been able to offer—45-plate Bat
tery, $4.4!) exch. Guaranteed Flat
Wall Paint, $1,4!) gal.—and hun
dreds more.
NEBRASKA NEWS
OF STATE AFFAIRS
By Janies R. Lowell
The legislature is experiencing a
unique sensation as the result of
criminal charges having been filed
against one of its members for the
first time in memory of old timers.
The legislator in question is Dr.
Joseph F. Kasper, state senator
from Saunders, county. He has
pleaded not guilty to three counts
of receiving stolen property" and
a fourth count of being "an acces
sory after the fact." The charges
grew out of statements made to
Omaha and Wahoo police by Ray
J. Smith, handit suspect taken by
Omaha officers two weeks ago after
a gun battle in which Smith’s pal
and a policeman were killed. Kasp
er is free on $20,000 bond.
Fearful of a halocaust in event
of fire at the Hastings state in
sane hospital, the state board of
control has asked the legislature to
provide fuhds to fireproof the
buildings. There are 700 patients
crowded into one firetrap of a
building, including 250 bedridden
persons, it was stated. Governor
Cochran indorsed virtually the
whole amount asked for fireproof
ing at this institution.
The governor has appointed C
Y. Thompson, West Point, to the
state board of conciliation between
mortgage debtors and creditors.
Harmon-Huigens
A very simple marriage cere
mony was performed by Rev. Wil
liam Windoph in the chapel of St.
Ludger’s Academy Tuesday morn
ing at 6:30 when Grace M. Huig
ens became the bride of Emmet A.
Harmon of O’Neill. They were at
tended by Dorothy Ann and Bern
ard Huigens, sister and brother of
the bride. Only immediate rela
tives were present.
The bride is the eldest daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Huigens of
this city. She is a graduate of St.
Ludger’s Academy and attended
Midland business college at Fre
mont. For the past five years she
has been engaged in stenographic
work and was employed as a pri
vate secretary for L. C. Walling,
superintendent of the Interstate
Power company at O’Neill.
The groom is a prominent young
attorney of O’Neill, Nebraska.
Immediately after a three course
wedding breakfast at the home of
the bride’s parents, the newly weds
left for a short wedding trip to
Des Moines, Iowa, and will be at
home to their friends at O’Neill,
Nebraska, after March 15, 1935.
—Creighton News.
FREE SOAP!
5 bars of White Naptha FREE
with each 5(Jc deal—Two trainloads
for our Anniversary Sale. Colgate’s
Crystal White Chips, Cocoa Hard
water—Jergen’s Toilet Bars—a raft
of other bargains.
District Court Filings
The federal Land Bank, of Om
aha, has filed suit in the district
court to foreclose a mortgage of
$25,000,000 against Bridget Carr,
et al., on the following described
real estate situated in this county:
The south half of section 9; north
west quarter of southwest quarter
of section 10; northeast quarter,
section 11, except a strip 200 feet
in width across the northeast
quarter of the southwest quarter
of said section; known as the right
of way of the C. & N. W. railroad;
also a strip of land 150 feet wide
across said southwest quarter of
said section immediately south of
and abutting upon said right of
way, also except beginning 370
feet west and, 40 feet north of the
southeast corner of the northeast
quarter of the southwest quarter,
thence west 250 feet, thence north
250 feet, thence east 250 feet
thence south 250 feet to place of
beginning; northwest quarter of
northeast quarter, northeast quart
er of northwest quarter, southeast
quarter of southeast quarter of
section 14; northeast quarter; west
half of section 15; northeast quart
er of section 28, north half; north
half of southwest quarter of sec
tion 20, all in township 27, north of
range 10, west of the 6th P. M.,
containing 2,175 acres more or less.
In their petition they allege that
the loan was made on November
18, 1925, and was to draw five and
one-half per cent interest and was
to be paid in semi-annual payments
of $781.25 on the first of April and
October of each year. They allege
that they failed to pay the fifteenth
semi-annual payment due on April
1, 1933, and that they have made
no payments since. They allege
that there is now due the sum of
$25,540.68 with interest thereon
from February 1, 1935 at 8 per
cent. They ask the court to de
termine the amount due and if
same is not sold, within a reason
able time that the land be sold.
The Federal Land Bank of Om
aha has brought suit against John
McNulty, et al., on a note for $13,
000 given on February 8, 1926, and
seeks to foreclose the mortgage
given on the following land: north
west quarter of the southwest
quarter, south half of the south
west quarter of section 5; north
west quarter of southwest quarter;
south half of the south half of sec
tion 6; north half of section 7;
north half of section 8, all in town
ship 31, north of range 12 west of
the 6th P. M., containing 960 acres
more or less. They allege that they
failed to pay the ninth semi-annual
payment on the note, which was
due on July 1, 1930, and that they
have made no payments since. That
they also failed to pay the taxes
due for the years 1929 to 1933 in
clusive. They allege there is now
due the sum of $16,716.68. They
ask the court to determine the
amount due and if same is not paid
within a reasonable time that the
land be sold.
In another suit the roderal Land
Bank of Omaha seeks to foreclose a
mortgage given by John McNulty
for $5,000 on November 3, 1023,
on the east half of southeast quart
er of section 1, all of section 12,
all in township 31 north, of range
13, west of the 6th P. M., contain
ing 720 acres. They allege that the
defendant failed to makg the four
teenth semi-annual payment on the
loan, due Sept. 1, 1930, and also
failed to pay the taxes on the land
for the years 1929 to 1933 inclusive,
and that there is now due and un
paid the sum of $-5,627.73. They
ask the court to determine the
amount due and if same is not paid
within a reasonable time that the
land be sold.
Theodore C. Medlin has filed suit
for a divorce from Natella Medlin.
In his petition he alleges that they
were married at Lovell, Wyo., on
August 27, 1924 He also alleges
that he has been a bona Aide resid
ent of Lincoln, Lancaster county,
for more than a year immediately
preceding the filing of the petition.
He further alleges that while liv
ing at Kearney the defendant left
him and went to Provo, Utah, and
that it was more than two years
ago. He asks for a divorce and
such other relief as the court may
deem just and equitable.
Fred Martens has brought suit
against Olive Feezer, et al., to
foreclose a mortgage given on
March 11, 1926, for $3,000 on lots
2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, in Block 3, in the
original town of Atkinson, Nebr.
He alleges that the note is long
past due and he asks judgment for
$3,000 with interest thereon at 6
per cent from the 11th day of
September, 1931. In a second
cause of action he asks judgment
for $500 on a note for that amount
given on August 10, 1926, on the
same property. He asks the court
to determine the amount due and
that if same is not paid within a
resonable time that the property
be sold.
Supervisors’ Proceedings
O’Neill, Nebraska,
Jan. 8, 1935, 10:00 A. M.
Holt County Board of Supervis
ors met on this date as requqired
by Statute for the purpose of org
anizing for ensuing year.
Members present Carson, Cook,
Matousek, Reimer, Stein, Stein
hauser, Sullivan.
Board called to order by Clerk.
The clerk appointed Carson, Re
imer and Eteinhauser as a commit
tee to ascertain if bonds of newly
elected Supervisors have been prop
erly filed and approved. The com
mittee reported that Bonds had
been propertly filed, and approved.
Board proceeded to the election
of a Chairman for the ensuing
year.
Motion by Carson, and seconded
by Steinhauser that the name of
John Sullivan be placed in nomin
ation as a candidate for Chairman
for the ensuing year.
Carried.
There being no further nomin
ations it was moved by Steinhauser,
seconded by Carson, that nomin
ations be closed and that the clerk
be instructed to cast the unan
imous Vote of the Board for John
Sullivan as Chairman.
This motion was carried and John
Sullivan was elected Chairman for
the ensuing year.
12:00 noon. Qn motion Board
adjourned until 1:00 p. m.
John Sullivan, Chairman. -
John C. Gallagher, Clerk.
O’Neill, Nebraska,
Jan. 8, 1935, 1:00 P. M.
Holt County Board of Supervis
ors met as per adjuornment.. All
members present. Meeting called
to order by Chairman. At this
time, the Chairman together with
Matousek, went to Atkinson to at
tend a meeting of the Rehabilita
tion committee.
Remainder of Board spent after
noon in checking and auditing Road
claims.
5:00 p. m., on motion, Board ad
journed until January 9, 1935.
9:00 a. m.
John Sullivan, Chairman.
John C. Gallagher, Clerk.
O’Neill, Nebraska,
Jan. 9, 1935, 9:00 A. M.
Holt County Board of Supervis
ors met as per adjournment. All
members present. Meeting called
to order by Chairman. Minutes of
previous meeting were read and on
motion were approved as read.
The Chairman submitted the fol
lowing list of Committees for the
ensuing year:
Court House — Matousek, Stein,
Steinhauser.
Finance—Stein, Cook, Matousek.
Printing—Carson, Stein, Reimer.
Tax—Steinhauser, Cook, Carson.
Bonds—Cook, Reimer, Stein.
Bridge—Carson, Reimer, Stein
hauser.
Settlement With County Officers
—Reimer and entire board.
Claims — Matousek and entire
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA
In the Matter of the Applica
tion of Kiva Taylor for a
Mothers’ Pension.
ORDER
Now, on this 9th day of January,
1935, this cause came on for hear
ing upon the application of Kiva
Taylor for a mothers pension; and
was submitted to the Court. On
consideration whereof the Court
finds that the applicant is entitled
to a mothers pension of $10.00 per
month for the months of January
and February, 1935.
It is, therefore, considered and
adjudged by the Court that the ap
plicant, Kiva Taylor, be and she
hereby is granted a mothers pen
sion for the months of January and
February, 1935, at $10.00 per
month.
It is further ordered that the
pension for January be issued and
paid to her as soon as the order
shall be made by the Board of Sup
ervisors, directing the clerk to
make payment; and that the pen
sion for February be paid February
first, 1935.
It is further ordered that the
Board of Supervisors make the
necessary order for the payment of
same.
ROBERT R. DICKSON,
Judge.
State of Nebraska ]
ss.
County of Holt
I, Ira H. Moss, the duly elected,
qualified and acting Clerk of the
District Court of Holt county, Ne
braska, do hereby certify that the
above and foregoing is a true and
complete copy of the original order
in the above entitled cause now on
file in my office.
Dated at O’Neill, Nebraska, this
9th day of January A. D., 1935.
IRA H. MOSS,
Clerk of District Court.
[District Court Seal
15th Judicial District
Holt county, Nebr.
It was moved by Carson and
seconded by Steinhauser that above
order be approved and warrant
ordered drawn in accordance there
with.
Motion by Stein and seconded by
I Cook that The Frontier be desig
j nated as the official paper for the
year 1935.
12:00 noon. On motion, Board
adjourned until 1:00 p. m.
John Sullivan, Chairman.
John C. Gallagher, Clerk.
O’Neill, Nebraska,
Jan. 9, 1935, 1:00 P. M.
Holt County Board of Supervis
ors met as per adjournment. All
members prents. Meeting called to
order by Chairman.
On motion, the following official
Bonds were approved:
Mose Gaughenl augh, Clerk, Em
met Township.
Riley Canaday, Clerk, Deloit
Township.
T. E. Maring, Treasurer, Pleas
ant View Township.
Frank Allen, Treasurer, Iowa
Township.
P. J. Lydon, Treasurer, Lake
Township.
A. Fauquier, Treasurer, Conley
Township.
James D. Beck, Clerk, Cleveland
Township.
Louis W. Barthel, Treasurer,
Josie Township.
Joe McNichols, Treasurer, Grat
tan Township.
Clark Gaughenbaugh, Treasurer,
Francis Township.
Rex Coburn, Treasurer Saratoga
Township.
H. J. Harte, Clerk, Inman Town
ship.
A. G. Clarke, Treasurer, Inman
Township.
Harry McGrow, Justice of Peace,
(Continued on page 5, column 4.)
Feed and Flour
Another car of Feed and Flour
here Saturday. Bran and Shorts
cheaper off the car.
VIM CUBES Cl 7C
Per Hundred - - - - V * * * **
(Have proven a good horse and
calf feed.)
DAIRY RATION Cl QC
HP/z Per cent - - - - yliwvl
SWEET LASSY CO 1 C
CUBES.Id
(Never too hard, to chew.)
FEEDING MOLASSES Cl Eft
In Barrels ----- v I idO
(Mix with water and spray over
hay or straw. They sure eat it.)
ARAB HORSE FEED CO OC
For Work Horses - -
(Cheaper to feed than grain alone.)
O’Neill Hatchery
Everything in Feeds and Flour.
EVERY time you waste a
dollar you throw an encour
aging bone to the Wolf of
Poverty.
THE
O’NEILL NATIONAL
BANK
Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits,
$125,000.00
This bank carries no indebted
ness of officers or stockholders.
1
, •••■■ - '•••V .' • ’
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,
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to buy your new car, may
we suggest that you sec and drive these
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give much more quality than you are
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Much more beauty—much more ability
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Compart Chevrolet's low delivered prices and easy G.M.A.C,
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Phone 100 C E' LUNDGREN’ Mgr' O’Neill, Nebr.