The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 08, 1936, Page TWELVE, Image 12

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    (First publication Oct. 1, 1936.)
LEGAL NOTICE
All persons interested in the
estate of Margaret O’Connell, de
ceased, both creditors and heirs,
are notified that on September 26,
1936, Edward O’Connell filed a
petition in the County Court, of
Holt county, Nebraska, alleging
that Margaret O’Connell, a resid
ent of Holt county, Nebraska, died
intestate on June 29, 1931. being
the owner of an undivided one
third interest in Lots 13 and 14 in
Block 19 in the Original Town of
O'Neill, Holt county, Nebraska;
that petitioner is an heir at law
of deceased; that no application
has been made for the appointment
of an administrator for her estate;
that her heirs are her children Lil
lian Nolan; Edward O’Connell;
Frank O’Connell, Jr.; and Jermone
O’Connell; that the prayer of the
HELP WANTED
WELL known manufacturer can
use three men of good clean char
acter in Holt county able to meet
the public. Married men over 25,
with cat given preference; tilling
station or similar experience help
ful. Give full details. Address
P. O. Box 740, Omaha, Nebr. 19-3
LOST AND FOUND
STRAYED—Black Bull Calf, with
white face; weight 475 Ios., from
the Schwisow pasture. Reward.
—R. R. Morrison, 21-2
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
CATTLE For Fall Pasture.—L. W.
May, O’Neill. 21-lp
ONLY PHILCO HAS IT.—Gilles
pie Radio Co. 14-tf
I HAVE eastern money to loan on
farms and ranches. I also loan
money on city property.—R. H.
Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. -tf
SENSATIONAL “War Memoirs”
of David Lloyd George, England s
war-time premier—one full page
in next Sunday’s Omaha Bee
News. Subscribe thru this office
or direct. 2ltf
FOR RENT
FARM, March 1, 1937, near Meek
and Agee.— Grace L. Badgley,
Rosemeud, Calif. 20tf
WANTED TO BUY
WHEN you have butcher stuff,
either hogs or cattle for sale, see
Barnhart’s Market. 48-tf
FOR SALE
COLONIAL Eclipse Hard Coal
stove, in good condition.—Mrs. J.
H. McPharlin. 2l-2p
LOTS 13 and 14 in Block IB, ONeill,
Nebr., formerly occupied by War
ner Hardware. Inquire of Mrs.
A. E. Stevens, 1807 Rasa street,
Sioux City, Iowa. 21-3p
’29 PLYMOUTH engine; piano ac
cordian.—Vic Halva Shop. 21-lp
DRESSED turkey fries, frozen, 60
cents a piece.—Call Phone ton
HEATING stove, large size; cheap.
Paul Young, O’Neill. 20-2p
1 HAVE a few choice young Polled
Hereford hulls that 1 will offer for
sale for a short tiroo.—J. Stein,
O’Neill. __
TWO black faced bucks.—Clifford
Addison, Opportunity._D>-4P
BALED HAY.—R. II. Parker.
O’Neill. Nebr. 12-tf
ONE 1934 V8 TRUCK, Cheap. In
quire ut this office. 10-tf
HOME LOANS
FARM LOANS
RANCH LOANS
I Am N ow Making Loans
JOHN L. QUIG
Dr. J. L. SHERBAHN j
Chiropractor
Phone 147
Half Block South of the Ford •
Garage—West Side of Street !
E Diamond—Watches—Jewelery |
Expert Watch Repairing
I O. M. Herre—Jeweler
In Reardon Drug Store
W. F. FINLEY, M. D.
Phone, Office 28
O’Neill :: Nebraska
j DR. J. P. BROWN
Office Phone 77
j: Complete X-Ray Equipment
Glasses Correctly Fitted
Residence Phone 223
petition is “Petitioner prays that
the Court determine the time of
the death of Margaret O’Connell;
that she died intestate; decree who
are her heirs and their degree of
kinship and determine the right of
descent of the real property above
described.’’ You are notified that
said petition will be heard October
21, 1936, at 10 A. M. in the County
Court Room in O’Neill. Holt county,
Nebraska.
C. J. MALONE,
20-3 County Judge.
(First publication Oct. 1, 1936.)
LEGAL NOTICE
All persons interested in the
estote of Frank O’Connell, Sr., de
ceased, both creditors and heirs,
are notified that on September 26,
1936, Edward O’Connell filed a
petition in the County Court of
Holt county, Nebraska, alleging
that Frank O’Connell, Sr., a resid
ent of Holt county, Nebraska, died
intestate on June 29, 1921, being
the owner of Lots 13 and 14 in
Block 19 in the Original Town of
O’Neill, Holt county, Nebraska;
that petitioner is an heir at law of
deceased; that no application has
been made for the appointment of
an administrator for his estate;
that his heirs are Margaret O’Con
nell, his widow, and Lillian Nolan,
Edward O’Connell, Frank O’Con
nell, Jr., and Jerome O'Connell, his
children; that the prayer of the
petition is “Petitioner prays that
the Court determine the time of
the death of Frank O’Connell, Sr.;
that he died intestate; decree who
are his heirs and their degree of
kinship and determine the right of
descent of the real property above
described." You are notified that
said petition will he heard October
21, 1936 at 10 A. M. in the County
Court Room in O’Neill, Holt
county, Nebraska.
C. J. MALONE,
20-3 County Judge.
NOTICE OF
GENERAL ELECTION
Notice is hereby given that on
Tuesday, November 3, 1936, a
GENERAL ELECTION will be
held in the several precincts of
Holt county, State of Nebraska,
for the election of the following
officers, to-wit:
One President.
One Vice President
One United States Senator
One member of Congress for the
Third Congressional District
One Governor
One Lieutenant Governor
One Secretary of State
One Auditor of Public Accounts
One Commissioner of Public
Lands and Buildings
One State Treasurer
One Attorney General
One Railway Commissioner
One Representative for the
Twenty-eighth Legislative Dis
trict
One Judge of the District Court
for the Fifteenth Judicial District
of the State as apportioned by law
One Supervisor for the Second.
Supervisor District
One Supervisor for the Fourth
Supervisor District
One Supervisor for the Fifth
Supervisor District (to fill va
cancy)
One Supervisor for the Sixth
Supervisor District
And for the election of the fol
lowing officers in each township
within the County, to-wit:
One Township Clerk
One Township Treasurer
One Township Assessor
One Justice of the Peace
Also for the election of ONE
Road Overseer from each road dis
trict within the County
Also for the election of ONE
County Judge
Which election will be open at.
8:00 o’clock in the morning and re
main open until 8:00 o'clock in the
afternoon of the same day.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I
hereunto subscribe my name and
affix the seal of the County of
Holt, this 5th dav of October, 1936.
JOHN C. GALLAGHER,
County Clerk.
[Seal] 21-1
NOTICE TO VACATE ROAI)
Notice is hereby given that a
petition has been filed in the office
of the County Clerk of Holt county,
Nebraska, praying that all that
part of Road No. 209 lying west of
the center line of Section 11, Town
ship 31, Range 11, be vacated and
that the said road be changed to
the center line of the said described
section.
A hearing on the above petition
will be held by the Holt County
Board of Supervisors at their office
in the Court House on Tuesday,
October 27, 19:16. at 2:00 o’clock
P. M.
JOHN C. GALLAGHER,
21-1 County Clerk.
IS THIS AMERICA?
Two WPA workers, wearing
Landon campaign buttons applied
for work at the Terminal Ware
house in Lincoln. They were met
with this statement:
“You have a lot of guts to come
here looking for work wearing a
Landon pin. There will be no need
of your applying for work here as
the Roosevelt administration isn't
supporting the republican party.”
The high taxes induced by
wasteful spending, the unfixed
state of the governmental budget,
the inefficiency and incompetence
of those who are in charge of gov
ernmental agencies, the unending
abuse of business men by import
ant officials in government—all
I those things added together make
uncertainly, stagnation, discour
agment, depression and more men
and women out of jobs. It is im
possible to encourage business to
“go ahead’’ as long as business is
kicked in the seat of its collective
pants by government officials who
THERE GOES THE DINNER BELL
9-°^
are trying their best to blame bus
iness for what is happening and
has happened in Washington.
ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS
At the time this is written the
election is just five weeks in the
future. The issues—such as they
are—are drawn. The rattle of po
litical machine-gun fire grows con
stantly louder.
The average citizen has neither
the time nor the inclination to keep
up with a presidental campaign in
its hectic closing period. To do
that, he would have to read a
dozen speeches each week; peruse
a score of columns authorized by
observers ranging all the way from
GOP-stalwart Mark Sullivan to
New Dealer Jay Franklin, and
keep up with hundreds of thous
ands of words of news-matter sent
out by the big press associations.
In the week ending September
27, a number of highly dramatic
and potentially important incidents
occurred. Both the President and
Governor Landon took to the radio
to expound, their views on various
issues. And, on a lower political
level, scores of party followers car
ried on for their chiefs.
Most dramatic event was Wil
liam Randolph’s attack on the
President, in which he said that
Mr. Roosevelt had the support of
“enemies of the American system
of government”—that is the Com
munists. This was promptly de
nied by Earl Browder, official Com
munist presidential nominee.
Of more practical importance in
the vital matter of vote getting
was the attention paid to the long
debated, subject of farm crop insur
ance by both contenders. Mr.
Roosevelt announced in a press
conference that he had appointed a
committee to formulate plans, said
that “crop insurance and a system
of storage reserves should operate
so that surpluses of fat years could
be carried over for use in lean
years.” A day of two later Gov
ernor Landon made public part of
a yet un-spoken speech, in which
he too endorsed crop insurance.
Inasmuch as crop insurance is
mentioned in neither party plat
form, unprejudiced commentators
thing that both candidates were
out to get the jump on the other
with something new and compell
ing—that a stalemate resulted.
Unusually aggressive was Gover
nor Landon’s speech on social se
curity, in which he assailed admin
istration methods, though he ap
proves of such a plan in principle.
He said the New Deal was a “cruel
hoax," that it endangered, “the
whole cause of social security,"
and pledged his party to the enact
ment of a “pay-as-you-go" old age
pension system which would “pro
vide for every American citizen
over 65 the supplementary pay
ment necessary to give a minimum
income sufficient to protect him
or her from want."
On the radio, the President con
tinued his policy of making well
phrased. calm speeches, in which
he criticises his opponents only by
inference. His big drive is yet to
come—he apparently feels it is
more or less a waste of motion to
make major speeches as early as
this.
In the meantime, the endless
speculation as to who will win con
tinues. The Literary Digest poll,
on the basis of early returns, gives
Landon a big lead — most other
polls give Roosevelt a small but
seemingly safe margin. State
primaries so far have shown little.
Anti-New Deal democrats have
been badly beaten for the most
part, as have the Townsendltes.
The Maine election is said by re
publicans to make a GOP victory
certain, while democrats pooh
pooh it. As a matter of fact, in the
past when democrats have carried
elections in Maine a democratic
president has always been elected.
When republicans have won by tre
mendous majorities, a republican
president has always been elected.
But when the election was rela
tively close, as it was this year,
the following national election has
always been close as well. In that,
the Maine results echo the views of
most political experts—the next
President will win his office by a
very slim margin.
The following paragraph is taken
from a speech delivered by former
Governor Lowden of Illinois, at
Waterloo, Iowa, last Tuesday even
ing:
“If all incomes of over $5,000 a
year and all net profits of all the
corporations in the United States
for the last year in which figures
were available were taken by the
government, they would fall more
than a billion dollars short of meet
ing government expenditures for a
single year. Then the truth be
gan to dawn that the great body
of the people mpst in the end pay
the major part of all taxes.”
TAXES MORE THAN WAGES
(Continued from pae 6.)
more labor. Excessive taxation is
the worst enemy of prosperity.
It is most discouraging for any
business to pay more in taxes than
it does in wages and dividends!
Think that over the next time you
wonder why you don’t get better
dividends, a raise in salary—or a
job.
■ I
DAILY JOURNAL
$1.25 :i months, $4 Year
People taking 20c a week papers,
by delivery pay $10.40 a year, and
due to not being paid ahead can
easily switch. They get their
other mail through the postoffice.
The Daily Lincoln Nebraska State
Journel can give two to ten hours
later news out on rural routes and
in many towns because it is the
only large daily between Omaha
and Denver printing at night, in
fact after 5 p. fn. The Journal
prints editions right up until train
time day and night. The Morning
Journal comes in time for mail
delivery the same day. Dailies
printed on the Iowa line edit for
Iowa readers. The Lincoln Journal
sells for one to two dollars a year
less than any other big state daily,
and is priced as low as day late
afternoon papers. With the Lin
coln Journal you practically get
the Sunday free, for other morning
papers charge as much for daily
only as The Journal does including
Sunday. Don’t give money to
strange solicitors; order direct or
through our office. By mail in Ne
braska and North Kansas, three
months Daily $1.25, with Sunday
$1.50; a year Daily S4.00, with
Sunday $5.00.
BRIEFLY STATED
Fred H. Swingley was down
from Atkinson Tuesday.
H. E. Coyne returned Monday
night from a business trip to Chi
cago and Omaha.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Mills return
ed Sunday from Broken Bow, where
they had been visiting the past two
weeks.
Mrs. Goldy Liddy returned to
O’Neill Sunday after a month spent
visiting with relatives in Columbus
and Omaha.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Farrell and
family drove to Omaha Saturday
and spent Sunday visiting with his
mother, and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Costello, of
Ewing, were dinner guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Cronin
last Sunday evening.
The Presbyterian Ladies Guild
will serve their anuual chicken .din
ner at the church basement Thurs
day evening, Oct, 15, at 6 o'clock.
Cletus Sullivan, who had been
quite ill at his home for the past
week is up again and back at his
duties at the Interstate Power Co.
Miss Helen Givens, who had been
visiting relatives and old friends
here for the past ten days, return
ed to her duties in Omaha Wed
nesday.
Della Harnish arrived in the city
Saturday evening from Alberquer
[ que, New Mexico, to spend a month
here visiting at the home of her
parents.
Mrs. Alma Peterson, of Moline;
111., arrived in the city last Satur
day for a visit at the home of her
father, County Surveyor M. F.
Norton.
Mr. and-Mrs. F. N. Cronin and
Mrs. P. B. Harty and daughter,
Miss Ann, drove to Sioux City this
morning. They will return this
evening.
--
Mrs. Catherine Colman and son,
Donnie, went to Grand Island Sat
urday morning and spent the week
end with Mr. Colman. The return
to this city Monday evening.
Frank Latenser, of Omaha, the
architect of the new court house,
arrived in the city Tuesday night
and spent Wednesday looking after
the progress of construction of the
building.
—
M rs. M.F. Eveland received word
the latter part of last week of the
death of her brother, Marcus Frame
Cooper, of acute indigestion, at his |
! home in Florida, Sept. 23. He was
57 years of age.
Don Enright, Mr. and Mrs. M. J.
Enright and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Fallon drove to Sioux City Sdnday
to visit Mr. Enright's Brother,
William, who is in a hospital there.
-!
The new home of L. E. Downey
on Clay street is rapidly nearing
completion. Lathers aie now busy
getting the house ready for the
plasterers. It will be 22x26, one
story and basement.
J. B. Mellor drove to Omaha this
morning where he will attend a
showing of the new Lincoln Zephyr,
a product of the Ford Motor Co.,
which is to be exhibited at all deal
ers show rooms on Saturday of this
week.
Work on the postofficc building
is progressing rapidly. They are
now laying the forms for the pour
ing of the concrete for the first
floor and before the end Of next
week the building will be well ad
vanced.
Clarence Stannard drove down
to Omaha Wednesday morning,
where he will have a few kinks
taken out of his car, that were put
there a couple of weeks ago when
it turned over with him northeast
of this city.
Miss Dorothy PetersOn and her
sister, Mrs. Art Cowperthwaite, ac
companied by Mrs. C. J. Malone,
Mrs. L. A. Carter and Mrs. George
Miles, drove to Wichita, Kansas,
Tuesday. They are expected to re
turn home Friday.
W. J. Froelich, C. E. Stout, H. J.
Birmingham and F. J. Biglin drove
to Norfolk last Sunday to have a
short visit with Senator George W.
Norris, who delivered a political
address from radio station WJAG
there Sunday afternoon.
W. J. Froelich came out from
Chicago Friday night for a couple
of days with his family. He was
taken to Sioux City Monday after
noon by F. J. Biglin, who was ac
companied by his son, Joseph, and
i H. J. Birmingham. They returne ^
| home that evening.
Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Donohoe left
Monday morning for Omaha where
| they will spend a week visiting
with Mrs. Donohoe's father, Mich
ael Holland, and with other rela
tives and friends in the metropolis.
Carpenters started this morning
on the erection of a home for Mrs.
I Eunice Sanders on Everett street,
' just east of the corner ‘ of Fifth
j street. The home will be a cottage
; 22^28, with 8-foot ceiling, and stuc
| co on the outside. The foundation
Uvas put in last week,
M. E. CHURCH NOTES
Sunday School at 10 a. m.—Pre
I motion Day.
Morning Worship at 11 a. m.—
Anthem by the choir. Sermon by
the pastor.
■ Epworth League, 6:30—Gerald
ine Yarnell, leader.
Evening Service at 7:30—Songs
you like. 'Sermon and discussion
period. A. J. May, Pastor.
_ j
AUCTION
SALE
at 2 o’clock ; p. ni.
Saturday, Oct. 10
on lot north of Arbuthnot &
Reka service station.
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS
■
Chairs, Rockers,
Dressing Table, Buf
fet, Kitchen Cabinet,
Stoves, Dishes, etc.
TERMS—CASH
ANNA KIRWIN
Col. JAMES MOORE, Auct.
FOR over half a century the con
stant endeavor of this company
has been to refine the best possible
grade of motor oils and lubricants*
Year after year has seen new de
velopments and many improve
ments* At all times you are assured
the very highest grade of oil that
experience, skill and equipment
can produce.
EN-AR-CO MOTOR OIL
The new En-ar-co Motor Oil, we
believe, is the finest of all. And we
are convinced that a thorough trial
of it in your auto, truck, tractor or
Diesel engine will improve the serv
ice of your motors and make you
a life-long friend.
WHITE ROSE
KNOCK-PROOF
GASOLINE
REGULAR PRICE
Mellor Motor Co.
Filth & Douglas O’Neill, Nebr.
wm