The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 11, 1936, Page TEN, Image 10

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    (First publication May 21, 1935)
SHERIFF'S SALE
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of an Order of Sale issued,
to me by the Clerk of the District
Court of Holt county, Nebraska, in
an action pending in said Court
wherein The Federal Land Bank of
Omaha, a corporation, is plaintiff
and Jeremiah P. Hanley, are de
fendants, I will sell to the highest
bidder for cash at the front door
MISCELLANEOUS
WANT TO BORROW $1,000 on
good Holt county 160 acres, one
naif in crop. Will nay 7 per cent.
Address No. 10, The Frontier,
O'Neill. ■4-lp
AMAZING OFFER! Delineator,
Pathfinder, pictorial Review, one
year each and OMAHA BEE
NEWS, 3 months, Daily and Sun
day. by mail on Nebraskan and
iowa rural routes., only $2.65.
ORDER HERE TODAY!! 48tf
1 HAVE eastern money to loan on
farms and ranches. - -I also loan
money on city property.—R. H.
Parker, O'Neill, Nebr. 2tf
HELP WANTED
WANTED—Man or woman to op
erate cream station in O'Neill.—
Apply at this office. 4-2p
WOMAN 35 to 50 to take complete
charge of home for several weeks.
—Phone 232. O’Neill.
WANTED TO BUY
WHEN you have butcher stuff,
either hogs or cattle for sale, see
Barnhart’s Market. 48-tf
FOR RENT
IMPROVED lfiO acres, 14 miles
east of O'Neill.—Farmers Nation
al Co. 312 So. 12th, Norfolk. 3-2p
FOR SALE ~
1935 G.M.C. truck with box Terms
can be arranged.—Inquire Barn
hart’s Market.__4
NEW Perfection oil cook stove,
nearly new; ’27 Ford T coupe.—
Call this office or phone 354-J.
VETERANS, use your bonus to
buy this 39 acres of good corn
land inside city limits of O’Neill,
Nebraska. A little ranch in town.
Address Owner, 1810 Silver Lake
Btvd., Los Angeles, Cal. 4-4p
PASTURE and Hay Lands in Holt
county for sale. Wrrite P. H. Gll
lan, Columbus, Nebr. 2-3p
USED FARM MACHINERY—
Farmall tractor, McDrg 10-20,
McDrg 15-30, McDrg 22-38 all
steel thresher; 1 No. 2 all steel
cylinder corn shellar, manure
spreader, grain binder, 10-ft trac
tor binder. Farmall cultivator,
Farmall mowers, horse mowers,
rakes and sweeps. Ford coach,
Chevrolet coach. International 100
inch grain truck equipped with
stock and grain body; Internation
al heavy duty truck, suitable for
sheller or hay press.—F. M. Seat
ing & Sons, Atkinson. 1-4
Doctor
FREEDA M. CLARK
Physician and Surgeon
CHAMBERS. NEBRASKA
Office in l-ee H»tel
Bankers Life Ins. Co.
of Nebraska
Leads the World in Insurance
• written in its own state.
IVAN C. PRUS8, Anent
O’Neill, Nebraska
Successor to Robert J. Marsh
HOME LOANS
FARM LOANS
RANCH LOANS
I Am Now Making Loans
JOHN L. QUIG
Dr. J. L. SHERBAHN
Chiropractor
Phone 147
Half Block South of the Ford
Garage—West Side of Street
Diamond—Watches —Jewelery
Expert Watch Repairing
0. M. Herre—Jeweler
In Reardon Drug Store
W. F. FINLEY, M. D.
Phone, Office 28
O’Neill :: Nebraska
DR. J. P. BROWN
Office Phone 77
Complete X-Ray Equipment
Glasses Correctly Fitted
Residence Phone 223
of the court house in O’Neill. Ne
braska, on the 22nd day of June,
1936, at 10 o’clock A. M., the fol
lowing described premises in Holt
County, Nebraska:
The south half of section 15,
in township 29 north of range
11 west of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, all in Holt County,
Nebraska,
to satisfy the sum of $8880.92 found
due plaintiff and interest thereon
and $20.70 costs of suit and accru
ing costs.
. Dated this 16th day of May,
1936.
1-5 PETER W. DUFFY,
Sheriff of Holt County, Nebraska.
(First publication May 21, 1936)
Williams & Williams, Attorneys.
NOTICE OF REFEREE’S SALE
Notice is hereby given that, pur
suant to an order made by the
District Court of Boone county,
Nebraska, in an action of parti
tion pending in said court, wherein
R. J. Mullin, et al., are plaintiffs,
and Della Palmer, et al., are de
fendents, the undersigned, T. D.
Mullin, sole referee, duly appointed
in said cause, was ordered to sell
the following described real estate,
to-wit:
South half of Section 20,
Township 28, North, Range 11,
West of the 6th P. M., Holt
County, Nebraska,
and the
Southwest Quarter of Sec
tion 29, Township 28, North,
Range 11, West of the 6th P.
M., Holt County, Nebraska.
Now, therefore, notice is hereby
given that by virtue of said order,
judgment and decree, the under
signed, T. D. Mullin, sole referee
in said action, having taken oath
required by law, and having given
bond as provided by the order ol'
said court, will, on Tuesday, June
23, 1936, at the hour of one o’clock
p. m., of said day, sell at public
auction, the above described real
estate, at the west front door of
the court house in O’Neill, Holt
County, Nebraska, as a whole, to
the highest bidder, for cash.
Said sale will remain open one
hour.
Dated May 21, 1936.
T. D. MULLIN,
1-5 Referee.
(First publication May 28, 1936.)
NOTICE FOR PETITION FOR
ADMINISTRATION
Estate No. 2553
In the County Court of Holt
county, Nebraska, May 26, 1936.
In the Matter of tne Estate of
Lawrence H. Snell, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given to all per
sons interested in said estate that
a petition has been filed in said
Court for the appointment of
Hazel Snell as Administratrix of
said estate, and will be heard June
18, 1936 at 10 o’clock A. M.. at
the County Court Room in O’Neill,
Nebraska.
C. J. MALONE,
County Judge.
(County Court Seal) 2-3
Julius D. Cronin, Attorney
(First publication June 11, 1936.)
NOTICE OF PETITION FOR AP
POINTMENT OF ADMINIS
TRATOR DE BONIS NON
Estate No. 2302
In the County Court of Holt
county, Nebraska, June 8, 1936.
In the Matter of the Estate of
Hugh J. McKenna, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given to all
persons interested in said estate
that a petition has been filed in
said Court for the appointment of
James P. M a iron as Administrator
De Bonis Non of said estate, and
will be heard July 2, 1936, at 10
o’clock A. M., at the County Court
Room In O'Neill, Nebraska.
C. J MALONE,
County Judge.
(County Court Seal) 4-3
J. J. Harrington, Attorney
(First publication June 11, 1936)
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids will be received at
the office of the Department of
Rads and Irrigation in the State
House at Lincoln, Nebraska, on
June 25. 1936, until 10:00 o clock
A. M., and at that time publicly
opened and read for SAND
GRAVEL SURFACING and inci
dental work on the STUART
NAPER U. S. WORKS PROGRAM
HIGHWAY PROJECT NO. WPSO
117. FEDERAL AID ROAD.
The proposed work consists of
constructing 6.7 miles of GRAVEL
ED road.
The approximate quantities are:
8,825 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel
Surface Course Material.
The attention of bidders is di
rected to the Special Provisions
covering subletting or assigning
the contract and to the use of Do
mestic Materials.
The minimum wage paid to all
skilled labor employed on this con
tract shall be fifty-five (55) cents
per hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
intermediate labor employed on
this contract shall be forty-five
(45) cents per hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
unskilled labor employed on this
contract shall be thirty-five (35)
cents per hour.
The attention of bidders is also
directed to the fact that the State
Director of Reemployment, Lincoln,
Nebraska, will exercise general
j supervision over the preparation
of employment lists for this work,
and to the fact that the contractor
and subcontractors will be bound
by the regulations effective Janu
ary 15, 1935, jointly promulgated
by the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Secretary of the Interior
pursuant to the provisions of Pub
lic Act No. 324, 73rd Congress, ap
proved June 13, 1934 (48 Stat. 948),
entitled, “An Act to effectuate the
purpose of certain statutes con
cerning rates of pay for^Uabor, by
making it unlawful to prevent any
one from receiving the compensa
tion contracted for thereunder, and
for other purposes.”
Plans and specifications j for the
work may be seen and information
secured at the office of the County
I Clerk at O’Neill, Nebraska, at the
office of the District Engineer of
the Department of Roads and Ir
rigation at Ainsworth. Nebraska,
or at the office of the Department
of Roads and Irrigation at Lincoln,
Nebraska.
The successful bidder will be re
quired to furnish bond in an
amount equal to 100% of his con
tract. ...
As an evidence of good faith in
submitting a proposal for tni3
work, the bidder must file, with
his proposal, a certified check made
payable to the Department of
Roads and Irrigation and in an
amount not less than one hundred
fifty (150) dollars.
The right is reserved to waive
all technicalities and reject any or
all bids.
DEPARTMENT OF ROADS
AND IRRIGATION
A. C. Tilley, State Engineer.
C. L. Carey, District Engineer.
4-2 John C. Gallagher,
County Clerk, Holt County.
(First publication June 11, 1936)
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids will be received at
the office of the Department of
Roads and Irrigation in the State
House at Lincoln, Nebraska, on
June 25. 1936, until 10:00 o’clock
A. M., and at that time publicly
opened and read for GRADING,
SAND GRAVEL SURFACING.
CULVERTS and incidental work
on the LYNCH-SOUTH U. S.
Works Program Highway Project
No. WPSO 415-B. Federal Aid
Road.
The proposed work consists of
constructing 3.0 miles of Graveled
Road.
The approximate quantities are:
43,200 Cu. Yds. Excavation
13,125 Cu. Yds. Top Soil or
Sand Clay Blanket Course
5,475 Cu. Yd. Miles Hauling
Top Soil or Sand Clay Blanket
Course Material.
1,704 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel
Surface Course Material.
59 Cu. Yds. Class “A” Con
crete for Box Culverts and
Headwalls.
6,088 Lbs. Reinforcing Steel
for Box Culverts and Head
walls.
88 Lin. Ft. 24" Culvert Pipe.
96 Lin. Ft. 30” Culvert Pipe.
104 Lin. Ft. 36” Culvert Pipe.
52 Lin. Ft. 42" Culvert Pipe.
The contractor in the execution
of the work under the contract for
the grading items in accordance
with the provisions of the specifi
cations and the special provisions
to the specifications shall provide
a total of not less than 7,938 man
hours of employment to persons di
rectly employed ofi the contract
secured from the designated Em
ployment Agency or certified for
assignment to the work by such
agency.
The contractor in the execution
of the work under the contract for
the culvert items in accordance
with the provisions of the specifi
cations and the special provisions
to the specifications shall provide
a total of not less than 1,594 man
hours of employment to persons
directly employed on the contract
secured from the designated Em
ployment Agency or certified for
assignment to the work by such
agency.
The attention of bidders is di
rected to the Special Provisions
covering subletting or assigning
the contract and to the use of Do
mestic Materials.
The minimum wage paid to all
skilled labor employed on this
contract shall be fifty-five (55)
cents per hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
intermediate labor employed on
this contract shall be forty-five
(45) cents per hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
unskilled labor employed on this
contract shall be thirty-five (35)
cents per hour.
The attention of bidders is also
directed to the fact that the State
Director of Reemployment, Lincoln,
Nebraska, will exercise general
supervision over the preparation of
employment lists for this work,
and to the fact that the contractor
and subcontractors will be bound
bv the regulations effective Janu
ary 15, 1935, jointly promulgated
by the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Secretary of the Interior
pursuant to the provisions of Pub
lic Act No. 324. 73rd Congress, ap
proved June 13, 1934 (48 Stat.
948), entitled, “An Act to effectu
ate the purpose of certain statutes
concerning rates of pay for labor,
by making it unlawful to prevent
any one from receiving the com
pensation contracted for there
under, and for other purposes.’’
Plans and specifications for the
work may be seen and information
secured at the office of the County
Clerk at O’Neill, Nebraska, at the
office of the District Engineer of
the Department of Roads and Irri
gation at Ainsworth, Nebraska, or
at the office of the Department of
Roads and Irrigation at Lincoln,
Nebraska.
The successful bidder will be re
quired to furnish bond in an
amount equal to 100r/e of his con
tract.
As an evidence of good faith in
submitting a proposal for this
work or for any portion thereof
as provided in the bidding blank,
the bidder shall file, with his pro
posal, a certified check made pay
able to the Department of Roads
and Irrigation and in an amount
not less than the total amount, de
termined from the following list,
for any group of items or collect
ion of groups of items for which
the bid is submitted.
Grading Items,, six hundred
(600) dollars.
Sand Gravel Surfacing Items,
one hundred (100) dollars.
Culvert Items, one hundred
(100) dollars.
The right is reserved to waive
all technicalities and reject any or
all bids.
DEPARTMENT OF ROADS
AND IRRIGATION
A. C. Tilley, State Engineer.
C. L. Carey, District Engineer.
4-2 John C. Gallagher,
County Clerk. Holt County.
Remember the good old days
when a college professor was sup
posed to know a lot?
Tugwell's Waste
Goes On and On
-i "
Spends 278 Million; Houses
Far Short of Program;
Pajrroll Huge.
Washington.t^When the Dis
trict of Columbia court of ap
peals' held fhatttie President’s
transfer of Relief funds to Prof.
Rexford Guy Tugwell’s reset
tlement administration was un
constitutional, it did not save
the hundrfms o£ millions of dollars
of the taxpayers' money which have
been spent by uh.it ode congress
man has called “the most extrava
gant, the most unjustified and the
most useless” of the New Deal al
phabetical tfqfrnnfa Neither did ,lt
iput 'a sfop to future spending by
the ItA, for the decision will be ap
pealed to higher courts. ..
Between Mj»y t of 1935 snd March
23 of this year, Tip well has received
$278,347,171, Of which $31,950,000.
or nearly one «f»mir'ln every nine,
has gone for “administrative" ex
pense. Otiwr expenditures: sub
marginal lgipi! percfiases, $44,120,
328; subsistence homesteads, $15,
275,735; rural rehabilitation and
resettlement, $124^79,046; direct re
lief, $16,109,354; suburban develop
ment, $31,000,000, and land develop
ment, $15,OO0,QOO.
Payroll Numbers 17,056.
What started out as only a hand
fur of executives in the RA has
swelled to a payroll of 17,005. The
payroll for administering the vari
ous units in 27 Washington build
lngs alone is $25,062,085 a year. Six
teen executives are paid $7,000 to
$9,000 annually; 11 from $6,000 to
$7,000, and 55 from $5,000 to $6,000.
Professor Tugwell determines the
amount of laad which the UA will
purchase and the use to which it
shall be put. In less than a year he
has placed under option 10,020,630
acres of land and has purchased
8,583,840 acres.
Houses Fail to Rise.
Tugwell has spent $278,347,171,
but few houses, comparatively, have
ever been completed. In most cases
the lands on which they are built
are too poor, to raise crops profit
ably and' few families are attracted
to move in. Still fewer Industries
are being mo-ted to the projects.
Where houses have been completed,
walls are oftteh'bracking and roofs
leaking already. Tugwell’s payroll
for labor ' alohe Is $.10,000 a day
enough to build tfeni houses a day—
but less than1 ten houses a month
are being completed.
In tfle South,* In Minnesota and In
other1 locations the UA has given
the jobs up as hopeless and la at
tempting to peddle the projects to
private eorportitions, at enormous
loss to the public purse.
I j|* i , • .
> Spending in Lucid Term*
Washington.t-t The *11,001,083,884
spent by the Roosevelt administra
tion up to thai middle of May for
Industrial “pump-priming” and re
lief la nearly, twioe the amount of
all the money In circulation in the
United States..
We (joub£ wJiefclW 'the' price of
agricultural lgpd will,ever rise, so
long as so. many farpters seem so
anxious to admit that farming is
a failure/'
* ' ;-■< ■ l.■■ —
Security Hull say3 that his pro
gram of lower tariffs will gite us
\ . ,|4 ♦ «
Don't Miss These
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Bargains!
COATS
aid
SUITS
Reduced taCieax
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Newest styles'. newest
fabrics!'Sizes 12 to 44/
• SWAGGERS
• FISHTAILS L
• MAN-TAILOREDS
• STROLLERS]^
? DRESS-UP STYLES v
HURRY JN^ See > this
amazing group^at^rock-1
bottom * prices.? Real buys!
,1- c- PiftttSUfo
! ■ ■ s • ,
international security. Without
admitting this what will it do to
our economic security?
We hope that Secretary Hull
doesn’t do any more to lower the
tariff on nuts. We have an over
supply in the United States right
now.
__.!• *
The United States is engaged in
an impossible job. It is trying to
write a tax bill that will pot be a
burden to the average consumer.
It’s just got to be a burden, one
way or another.
-Li-1
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 10:00—Mr. C. E.
Yantzi, superintendent. We were
glad to see the large crowd out
last Sunday.
Morning Worship 11:00 — “The
Joy of Service.” ‘
, Evening Service 8:00 — Gospel
song service and sermon.
We invite you to attend.
H. D. Johnson, Pastor.
M. E. CHURCH
A. J. May, Pastor
10 a. m.—Sunday School—Rev.
D. S. Conrad, Superintendent.
11 a. m. — Mofning Worship.
Subject, “A Church and A Mis
sion.” Special music by the choir.
7 p. m.—Epworth League.
8 p. m.—Evening Service. All
members present of both choirs
will help us with a thirty minutes
program of old songs and new
songs. Sermon subject, “Does it
really matter?”
BRIEFLY STATED
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Miller, of
Wahoo, and Mrs.Joe Dus, of Brain
ard, were visitors at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Lod Janousek last
week.
Mrs. Lloyd Whaley, of O’Neill,
submitted to a minor operation in
the Norfolk hospital on Wednesday
of last week. She is getting along
nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Todsen and
children drove down to Grand
Island Sunday for a few hours
visit with relatives, returning home
that evening.
Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Clift and
children, of Long Pine, drove down
Wednesday morning and spent the
day visiting relatives and old
friends in this city.
Miss Adel'Calvin, of Lincoln,
formerly an employee of the re
employment office in this city* ar
rived Tuesday night for a short
visit with friends here.
Hugh Ryan, who is a pre-dental
student at Creighton University,
will go to Lincoln the end of the
week where he will attend summer
school at the state university.
Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Marcatte and
son, Paul, of Garvin, Minn., and
Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Gregoire, of
Marshall, Minn., were guests at
; the W. H. Stein home over the
| week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bowen, of
Crookston, Minn., arrived in the
city last Saturday night for a
weeks visit at the home of Mr.
Bowen’s parents, Mr. and Mr3.
Harry Bowen.
Miss Angie Kohland, the popular
and efficient clerk at the Corner
Drug store, is back in her old place,
after an absence of two months at
her honle in Tilden recovering from
a protracted attack of the flu.
Francis Hughes came up from
Lincoln last Monday night, visited
here for a day and then went to
Bloomfield that afternoon for a few
days visit at home, before his re
turn to Lincoln where he will at
tend summer school.
C. C. Reka and Leo Mullen drove
to Sioux Cfty Tuesday morning re
turning that evening being accom
panied by Mrs. Reka who had been
in a hospital there recovering from
an operation for sinus trouble.
She is getting along nicely.
Judge and^Ifa, R. R. Dickson
went down to (TmSn^I'ast Sunday
night, where IKlJuffge will attend
the annual meeting of the Masonic
grand lodge, while Mrs. Dickson
will visit friends and incidently
take in the races for a few days.
Mr. Roberts, of the Roberts Con
struction company was in the city
Tuesday getting things shaped up
for the starting of the paving work
on the two blocks of Fourth street
north of Douglas. A force of men
started work Wednesday morning.
M. Miller, state agent for the
Travelers Insurance company, and
Gaius Cadwell, both of Huron, S.
D., arrived here Tuesday night to
meet officers of the company who
were here from the east that day.
They returned home Wednesday
morning.
Mrs. Hans Egger and daughter,
Sharon Kay, of Columbus, Nebr.,
arrived in the city last Friday for
a visit here at the home of Mrs.
You get an iasurance policy B
that tires purchased from V
Gamble Stores will give a ®
definite number of months of K
service. You can’t get less B
—Prices are wholesale, or ■
dealers’ net billing. g
Egger’s mother, aftd with other
relatives and friends. Mrs. Egger
went to Creighton Tuesday for a
visit with friends there returning
to O’Neill Wednesday morning.
- ,,
Mr. and Mrs. Abe O’Sullivan, of
Denver, Colo., stopped in the city
Wednesday night on their way to
Gregory, S. D., for a visit w'ith Mr.j
O’Sullivan’s mother. They expect1
to return to O’Neill tomorrow, ac
companied. by his mother, for a few
days visit here with his brother,)
J. B. O'Sullivan, before returning
to their home in Denverv
■ --
C. E, Yantzi returned last Satur-.
day night from Syracuse, N. V.,
where he went a couple of weeks
ago as a lay delegate to the geneiy
al eonfertfnoe of the .Presbyterian
churches, While awa^ Christh
spent .a day in panada,!Jmd visiter ■
many points of interest fh New ;
York state. He says that he hat
a. delightful flme hjs trjp
' -1- 'T
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. O’Donnell rfij
turned Wednesday evening frotfl,
Omaha where they had been visitt*
ing a few days and incidently takf’
ing in the races. They were ac*
companied home by Mrs. Jay Jj
Simpson, of Leavenworth, Wash !
a sister of Mrs. O’Donnell, who wpi,
visit at the O’Donnell and Judg<|
Dickson homes for a few weeks. •,
__’
f *
A
Friday, June 12, to Juhe 19
Salad Dressing:
Large Jar .‘
OLIVES Mi
Quart Jar JAA*
APPLE BUTTER J7r
Quart Jar .A/A
Libby’s
Pineapple Juice \ Cg*
No. 2 can
COCOA
'/j-Lb. Can ww
TEA ICr
Green Japan—Per Lb.
RINSO 17r
Regular Size Pkg. 2 for A# V
Large Size — 23c
A r ’ ■; j; ■ .
SOAP CHIPS 7Qr
5-Lb. Package .
CHERRIES
No. 10 Can Red Pitted .<7V
See Our Display of Genuine
Chromium and Aluminum Wdre V
Values Up To $1.98
Your Choice for
99c ■
with $5.00 Purchases Punched
on a card.
J. P. PR0TIV1NSKY
. A* • •*
i
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COME SEE!! COME BUY!!
OUR PRICES
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! EVERY DAY!
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By making a purchase of $2.00 or jj
more, you will receive 1 doz. oranges, gjj
This coupon is good only at the m
m O’NEILL FOOD CENTER!
| ONE DOZEN ORANGES FREE!!!|
YOUR FOOD CENTER