LOST AND FOUND DENTAL PLATE OF TEETH. Leave at this office. Reward. HELP WANTED GIRL for general housework Must be good cook and tidy house keeper. Call at this office. 11-tf MISCELLANEOUS GIRL will take care of children. First house east of Sunset Lodge. I HAVE eastern money to loan on farms and ranches. I also ^ loan money on city property.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. 2tf EVERYBODY is Playing “MOVIE FACES IN THE OMAHA BEE NEWS contest Win $1,200.00 in cash prizes. Reprints can be ob tained at 3c per set of three, plus 3c postage. 13-tf. SALESMEN WANTED SALESMAN for Holt county. Un usual opportunity. Experience unnecessary. Car required. No investment. Write S. F. Baker & Co., Keokuk, Iowa. 13-b FOR RENT_ FURNISHED, modern sleeping rooms, close in. Inquire at this office. _ 12-lp MODERN HOME, Furnished; suit able for rooming house if desired. See E. J. Eby. 12-2 LIGHTHOUSE EEPING rooms, unfurnished except light, water and heat.—James P. Marron, Phone 7, 12; WANTED TO BUY WHEN you have butcher stuff, either hogs or cattle for sale, see Barnhart’s Market. 48-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE for Hay, Chevrolet Trucks and Cars.—Obcrshaw Chevrolet Co., Oakdale, Neb. 13-2 ONE USED DELCO Farm Light Plant, good condition, with a set of 160 amp. batteries.—Fred L. Hoefner, Hooper, Nebr,_13-2 BALED HAY.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. 12-tf OR RENT—Half section hay land. John Kersenbrock, O’Neill 13-tf REGISTERED HEREFORD Bulls, 10 to 15 months old.— W. G. Sire, Inman. 9-6-p ONE 1934 V8 TRUCK, Cheap. In quire at this office. 10-tf GOOD 4-ROOM house, on farm. Will have to be moved. Phone 14-F3 13-2p jmtatmmmmmmmmmnnm::! Doctor FREEDA M. CLARK Physician and Surgeon j CHAMBERS, NEBRASKA j Office in Lee Hotel HOME LOANS FARM LOANS RANCH LOANS 1 Am Now Making Loans JOHN L. QUIG Dr. J. L. SHEKBAHN Chiropractor Phone 147 Half Block South of the Ford Garage—West Side of Street Diamond — Watches —Jewelery Expert Watch Repairing O. M. Her re—Jeweler In Reardon Druu Store W.F. FINLEY, M.D. Phone, Office 28 O’Neill :: Nebraska i I DR. J. P. BROWN Office Phone 77 Complete X-Ray Equipment Glasses Correctly Fitted Residence Phone 223 GOING TO PAINT? Buy now at Gamble's Mana ger’s Sale—Cut prices on all Outside Paints—Barn Paint, gal. $1.09—House Pair.t, gal. $1.69—Floor Paint, qt. 59c. FREE Wrist Watches, Pocket Wat ches, Bicycle Carriers—With the purchase of Bicycles at Gamble Store’s Manager’s Sale. 7 oz. Canvas Gloves, 3 pair 25c (rjTfTvT|J7J| J q! ,| -{J (First publication August 6, 1936) notice to delinquent Notice is hereby given that the rentals on the lease contract to the foilwing described lands in Holt county as set opposite the name of the holder thereof, are delinquent and if the amount which is due is not paid within sixty days from the date of this notice, said contract will be declared forfeited by the Board of Educational Lands and ' Funds, and said forfeiture will be entered of record in the manner provided by law, OWNER J. A. BOIES Description S^NE Sec, 14 27-10 OWNER A. E. SPITTLER Description EHNW Sec. 12 26-9. 12-3 LEO N. SWANSON, Commissioner of Public Lands and Buildings. (First publicntion July 23, 1936) 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 Alice M. Reed, Esther Cut ler, Joseph Libe and Mary A. Max well are plaintiffs and Sarah Wabs and others, (this being case No. 13037) are defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of the court house in O’Neill, Nebraska, on the 24th day of August, 1936, at 10 o’clock A. M., the following described premises in Holt County,Nebraska: West half of the west half of section eighteen and the southeast quarter of the south west quarter of section eighteen, all in township thirty-two, range twelve, west of the 6th P. M., Holt County, Nebraska, to satisfy the sum of $1,018.81 found due plaintiffs and interest thereon and $29.85 costs of suit and accruing costs. Dated this 21st day of July, 1936. PETER W. DUFFY, 10-6 Sheriff of Holt County, Nebraska (First publication July 30, 1936.) NOT 1CH TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department of Roads und Irrigation in the State House at Lincoln, Nebraska, on August 20, 1936, until 10:00 A. M., and ut that time publicly opened und read for TWO BRIDGES and incidental work on the O’NEILL SOUTH PROJECT NO. 313-F, FEDERAL AID ROAD. The approximate quantities are: BRIDGE AT STATION 148 Repairing 1-18” und 2-16" Spans, Concrete Slab Bridge. BRIDGE AT STATION 165 1-70” and 2-45” Spans, Deck Steel Girder Bridge. 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 wrage paid to all1 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-fivo (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 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 effectu ate the purpose of certain statutes concerning rates of pay for labor, by making it unlawful to prevent any one from receiving the compen sation contracted for thereunder, 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 100% of his contract. As an evidence of good faith in submitting a proposal for this work, the bidder must file, with his . | proposal, a certified check made payable to the Department of Roads and Irrigation and in an amount I not less than eight hundred (800) | dollars. The right is reserved to waive I all technicalities and reject any or all bids. DEPARTMENT OF ROADS AND IRRIGATION. A. C. Tilley. State Engineer, i C. L. Carev. District Engineer. 111-3 John C. Gnllaeher, County Clerk, Holt County. The other day a Dodge county i truck, with trailer attached, pulled (out of O’Neill loaded with nine 'tons of Holt county hay. PROMISES and * PROMISE REEMPLOYMENT “It is no time for delay when 11, 000,000 of honest, industrious and willing men and women are tramp ing the streets and roads of our country looking for work . . . and we of the democratic party will not wait.”—Franklin D. Roose velt, Baltimore, October 24, 1922. “It is a primary purpose of my administration to cooperate with the states and with industry, to secure work opportuities for as many of the unemployed as pos sible, by which they will find em ployment 'through nortnal chan-; nels.”—Franklin D. Roosevelt, \ Statement, June 4, 1933. “The Federal government must1 and shall quit this business of re lief. I am not willing that the vitality of our people be further sapped by the giving of cash, or market baskets, or a few hours of weekly work, cutting grass, raking leaves, or picking up papers in pub lic parks.”—Franklin D. Roosecelt, Message to Congress, January 4, 193B. BRIEFLY STATED A daughter was born Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sullivan. A new truck has been bought for service at the Seth Noble yard. Matt Beha came up from Omaha the first of the week. Miss Mary Horiskey was at Or chard for a day last week. Master James Golden is home from a protracted visit at Hamp ton, Iowa. Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just yawn the depression out of existence? Mrs. Lysle Curtis, of Sioux City, is visiting relatives and old friends in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith and Bernard Matthews were up from Norfolk Sunday. Sheriff Peter Puffy was among the O’Neill ites who attended the, Burwell rodeo Wednesday. J. A. Mann, W. J. Biglin and son, j Billy and Father Burke took in the ! rodeo at Burwell yesterday. Mrs. Evelyn McManus returned! last week from a protracted visit with relatives in California. Remember the old-fashioned teacher who used to tell us that a penny saved was a penny earned? The infant of Mr. and Mrs. Bart ley Malloy, of Emmet, was buried in Calvery cemetery here yester day. It is said that there are ten mil lion people unemployed in the United States—besides those who have Federal jobs. Mr. and Mrs. James Rooney ex pect to leave the end of the week for a visit at Tecumseh, where Mr. Rooney’s people reside. Sixteen is the age for youngsters to obtain a driver’s license but it takes them younger than that to get the speed out of a car. The Misses Teresa and Grace Connolly departed Thursday last for a visit at Casper, Wyoming, where they have a brother. Well, there’s one thing to be said for the Indians. If we had let them run the country they wouldn’t have tried to harness the tides or to plant a tree belt across the tree less plains. Sister M. Calixta, daughter of Mrs. O. F. Biglin, and sister Meria Helen, sister of D. A. McCarthy, departed Wednesday for Omaha after a week’s visit with relatives and friends here. Furniture Sale We will sell our Furniture | at Auction on August 22. i 1336. Watch next week for | location and complete list of | Furniture and many other 1 articles. Mr. and Mrs. Bert I’owell. | PERFORMANCE REEMPLOYMENT InMarch, |1936, there were UN EMPLOYED, according to: The American Feder ation of Labor-12,184,000 National Industrial Conference Board 9,649,000 As of January 1936, at least 19, 000,000 people were receiving relief benefits according to Relief Ad minister Hopkins.—(House Of Rep resentatives hearings on First De ficiency Bill, 1936.) The following table shows the growth in the number of cases on relief. (A case may be an individ ual on an entire family.): Month July, 1933 ... 9,908,068 July, 1934 ... 4,355,393 July, 1935 ... 4,530,832 March, 1936 „ 6,300,000 (Federal Emergency Relief Ad ministration reports; Franklin D. Roosevelt, message to Congress, March 18, 1936.) H. F. Slaughter, wife and daugh ter, of Valentine, were guests at the J. L. Quigg home Sunday last. Dr. J. P. Brown w'ent to Omaha Sunday with a patient, Harry Wey man, for special medical attention. The doctor returned Thursday. Of course it is hard to fool all of the people all of the time but the New Dealers are willing to fool 51 per cent of ’em for another four years. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Birmingham accompanied b^r J. D. Cronin, start ed yesterday for the Yellowstone and points in Montana and Colo rado, to be gone two weeks. Supt. Roy Carroll is home from Lincoln where he spent several weeks in the summer school at the state university. The O’Neill schools will open on September 7. STEFAN SEES HOLT HAY The greater part of the United States where livestock is fed is looking to one county in the Third Nebraska district for its real help this year, according to Congress man Karl Stefan, who has just re turned from a visit to at least twelve counties in this district. “Holt county will feed untold thousands of cattle this year, he says. “The southern part of Holt county, which is the locality of thle greatest growing section in the worlcy^ is today deluged with appeals fbr hay. Thousands of head of ciifctle are being shipped there to feed. Hundreds of farm ers from drouth areas are there buying hay or looking for pastue for starving cattle. Scores of trucks are leaving there daily, loaded with hay and destined to localities where there is no feed. Holt county and Rock county hay growers state that they have about one-hundred thousand tons of new hay which can be sold now. Half of last year’s crop of hay is also still on hand. In these ter rible times the importance of Holt county as the greatest hay growing county in our district comes to the foreground. Holt county becomes the savior of the feed situation. Only a few months ago, hay farm ers in Holt county faced a hay sur plus. They had half of last year’s crop of hay on hand. A fair sized crop of new hay was being harvest ed. Farmers then offered their hay for $1.25 a ton in the stack. Buy ers wouldn’t take it at that low price, fearing a tremendous crop of hay elsewhere as the result of the additional grasses and legumes being put into production under the soil conservation program. Then came the drouth and farmers faced a feed shortage. No rain fell in July and grass quit growing. Farm ers became desperate. Today hay in Holt county is selling from $7.00 to $13.50 a ton. Buyers are plenti ful. They come from eastern Ne braska, South Dakota, North Da J kota, Montana, Wyoming and evei I other states, “Holt county rye, of which there was considerable and for which I there was little or no market some months ago, will bring revenue tc the rye farmers. Some months ago this rye was selling around 33 cents. The elevators in some parts of Holt county are paying 82 cents a bushel for this rye. “If rain conies now there will be just a little late corn in Holt county, bqt very little. An eleva tor at Atkinson was quoting Ar gentine corn delivered from Kansas <•» 0 0-h ‘ . II ‘ ’ ’ * ' ' City at 92*6 cents on Monday. “Elsewhere in the Third districe there will be no corn. If rains come now, there will be fall past ure and some feed. So far as the feed situation is concerned the Third dinstrict will be somewhat better off than in 1934. “Before the drouth and at the time when farmers believed that thy were going to have a good crop of hay, the hay farmers in Holt county faced a real problem With no market for their hay they felt that the soil conservation program would result in great injury for them. They figured if the govern ment was going to take thousands of acres of corn, grain and cotton land out of production and plant that land with such soil building crops as grasses, alfalfa and leg umes, this would result in putting into production untold amounts of hay or feed which would replace ! a market for the prairie hay of Holt county. The Wisconsin farm ers appeared before Secretary Wal lace with the same argument, only the Wisconsin farmers who are dairy farmers argued that this plan would result in bringing into being untold number of new dairy herds to compete with the Wisconsin milk and butter production. The Wis consin dairy farmers secured some benefits through the new program and the Nebraska hay farmers of Holt county also requested some benefits through the program. The secretary of agriculture, however, ruled wild hay as a “neutral crop” and not subject to benefits. This left the hay farmers of Nebraska to face the old law of supply and demand. If there was to be a hay crop there would be no demand for their hay. Then came the drouth and supplied the demand.” The congressman since return ing is carrying out his plan to visit eVery county to transact congres sional business. The Third dis trict has twenty-one counties and is the largest district in the state in point of population. HOW FAR HAVE WE GONE Americans can not view the trag. ic events in Europe without wonder ing how far they have gone along the same road. U & I STORE Ph5r Fri., Sat. & Mon. Specials • 3 Free Deliveries daily. Phone your orders P & G Soap, large bars, 6 for . . 23c Oxydol, large package . . 21c Soda Crackers, 2-pound box . . 17c Jell-o, assorted flavors, per package 05c Sugar, 10-pound cloth bags . . . 57c Sugar, powdered or brown, 3 lbs. 21c Peanut Butter, 32-ounce jar . . . 29c Apple Butter. 38-ounce jar . 23c Red Srlmon, Del Monte, 1-pound can 27c Peas, extra fancy Early June, No. 2 can 15c Maxwell House Coffee, per pound 28c Butter Nut Coffee, per pound . 32c Matches, 6 boxes to a carton . . 19c Rice, fancy grade, 3 pounds . . . 21c Oleomargerine. Red Rose, 2 pounds . . 38c Lard, Amours Star, per pound .... 17c Lettuce, large head 10c Celery, large bunch 15c FRESH MILK AND CREAN >_ RALPH TOMLINSON, Prop. The Atlantic ocean is not wide enough to conceal from American view the red clouds hovering above the troubled horizons of France and Spain. Our people instinctively reject the thought that we are capable of abandoning the peaceful pur suit of the ideals that have made us a happy and progressive nation. And yet America must reflect soberly upon the evidence of its own trend toward the disasters that have involved these distressed countries. How capable are our leaders of foreseeing these dangers, and of forestalling them? America cannot forget the words of Donald R. Richberg who, as general counsel for the National Recovery Administration, said: “The loing-diseussed revolution is actually under way in the United States. It is here.” The nation again recalls the words of Rexford Guy Tugwell, under-secretary of agriculture, who said: “The autocrats must get out of the way with the moral system that supports them. We shall have to recognize our enemies and go forward with closed ranks. It will not be pleasant. These historical changes never are.” The nation, with an anxious eye upon the future, now looks for the hidden meaning in the portentious words of James A. Farley, demo cratic national chairman, who said: “Mr. Roosevelt will not allow himself to be defeated.” Does this phrase imply the com pulsion of a dictatorship? If it does, all that is needed now is a firm alliance with France and Spain, and the dictatorship will be* complete.—Omaha Bee-News. STORZ OFFERS A NEW TREAT I From the quaint, beer-famous town of Pilsen, in Bohemia, comes the formula of this sparkling, zesty new beer. For more than 600 years Pilsener style beer has been one of the favorite beers of Europe. Today Pilsen is one of the leading beer ' producing cities of the world. Nor.’ Stort brings you a new beer, made to this fa ned formula . I I % with Europ e an FJ av or The new Storz Pilsener Club Beer is light in color, light in taste — yet full of strength and vigor. It has authority — plenty of it, yet none of the heavy, malty taste that characterizes Bavarian-type beers. Brewed from the finest grain, carefully aged and mellowed for __ i months—Storz Pilsener Club is a beer you want to get acquainted __ with. For sale now at dealers, taverns fpfpil and restaurants. Order by the case or by the bottle — or try a T 9 cold glass “on tap.” It is the finest ,j II H of all popular priced beers — a‘| y ^ beer you’ll be proud to serve on ¥ m all occasions. H| A Product of Storz Brewing Company, Omaha, Quality Brewers Since 1876