CLASSIFIED FOR SALE FOR SALE: 160 acres improvec farm Va-mile north and 4 mile: west of Page. Seven - roorr house, good barn, comcrib granary, henhouse and well house. Good well and wind mill. On mail route and only li-mile to school. 50 acres ol rye goes with the farm. Price $4?50 with March 1st posses sion. — J. T. Fletcher, Broker, Orchard, Neb. 34-35 FOR SALE: Six-room house with five acres of land, one-half mile west of O’Neill.—Lynus How ard. 30tf FOR TOP quality registered Hereford bulls, attend Sageser Robertson-Shaffer 4th annual sale January 23rd in Atkinson, _Neb. 34-35 FOR SALE: 3080 acre hay and cattle ranch near O’Neill, Neb Good set of buildings. Nice ranch. See: R. H. Parker, O’ Neill, Neb. 24tf for. . New Merchandise Large Terry #Qr TOWELS ... Small Terry QQ TOWELS ... cloths.. 8c & 20c Terry IQ POT HOLDER. Nation-Wide Q1A SHEETS .*. Nation-wide 47 CASES ._... Bleached QQ- 0 4Q MUSLIN Iron Board 1 4Q PAD & COVER ■•’7 0IL- 4 V CLOTHS . White Sheet 1 QQ BLANKETS Mattress Full size 0 QO PADS ...*-70 Spun JLQ PRINTS ._._ 07t Chenille Bed / QA SPREADS _°-7U Cottage 1 CQ SETS . I**7 Lace Panel 1 10 CURTAINS .■•■7 Men’s Zipper wool C AA Plaid JACKETS Boys’ Zipper Q CA Wool JACKETS Men’s Leather IQ CA JACKETS . ,0'W Men’s Brown Q1 CA OVERCOATS Men’s Whipcord Q CQ PANTS ..L^1 Men’s Tex Green Q QQ Shirt-Pant SET.**70 Men’s Wool 7Qr BOOT SOCKS .I7t Men’s Q QQ FELT SHOES 9” **70 - _A FOR SALE: 240 acres of pasture land 9 miles northeast of O’ Neill, Neb. This is good buffa lo and gramma grass pasture. ! Any farmer living north of O’ Neill could use a pasture like this. See: R. H. Parker, O’ Neill, Neb. 24tf |FOR SALE: Piano, excellent con dition.—Phone 255J, O’Neill. 34 FOR FARM INSURANCE cost ing $7 a $1,000 the first year, $2.50 each subsequent year, with no renewal premium; TOWN DWELLING and con tents insurance as low as $10 a $1,000 for five-year term; LIABILITY insurance on farm cars, $12.50, and town cars, $15, for one year. See: L. G. GILLESPIE INSURANCE AGENCY, O’Neill, Neb., Sure ty and probate bonds of all kinds 20tf FOR SALE: SmaU upright oak piano; height 43 inches, depth 24 inches, length 51 inches. — Harry Petersen, O'Neill. 34 IF YOU WANT A GOOD FARM OR A RANCH, we have the fol lowing for sale: 160 acres im proved; improved 200 acre farm on hiway; 480 acre farm; well improved 680 acre farm; a 720 acre and a 760 acre farm, cheap; 800 acre exceptionally good farm; we have following ranch es: 640 acre hay ranch; good 960 acres; 1,610 very good; 5, 520 acres; 1,960 acres; all lo cated in good cattle country.— RAITT REALTY COMPANY, Ainsworth, Neb. 34 GAMBLE’S can insulate your home now. Call for FREE es timate.—Gamble’s, O’Neill. 4tf MISCELLANEOUS WANTED: Place to room and board for a high school boy. Please notify: Mr. Ira George, O’Neill. 34 ATTENTION FARMERS! Farm ers are required to file a first and final income tax return January 1 to January 15, 1947. To those I have nerved in the past and to others needing help at this time, I solicit your bus iness.—R. II. (“Ray”) Shriner, O’Neill. 32-34 NOTICE: My little black cocker spaniel dog disappeared before Christmas. If you have her, bring her back or call me.— Linda Bredemeier, phone 139 LJ, O’Neill. 34 SANDING MACHINE FOR RENT WORN, BLACKENED flooring can be restored with a dear grain surface by sanding. Do the work yourself. Efficient, easy to operate machine. Costs very little rental per day. GAMBLES O’Neill 21tf LOANS Buy that home or farm with a GI LOAN Regular farm loans at lowest rates. See local correspondent or KLOKE INV. CO., Omaha 2, Neb. 23tf James G. Fredrickson Kieth A. Abart — Auctioneers — Ready to Serve You Phone 2 O'Neill HELP WANTED: Experienced girl for general housework.— Mrs. Hugh J. Birmingham, O’ Neill. 30tf Dr. Fisher, Dentist. adv DANCE At SUMMERLAND Ewing Sunday, Jan. 5th Music by KAY MILLS and Orchestra Basketball ! * i i Public School Gymnasium Friday, Jan. 3 j 1 The Ex-Gobs and Ex-GIs in { “ARMY” vs. “NAVY” I 7:30 p. m. { 'n I ST. AGNES (of Alliance) j - vs. - j ST. MARY’S (of O’Neill) 8:30 p. m. 1 CARDS BOUNCED AT NORTH PLATTE St. Patrick’s Quint Tops St. Mary’s Cardinals Score 45-19 NORTH PLATTE—The G'cen ind-White of St. Patrick’s found sweet revenge for a gridiron hu miliation last October when they rose to new heights and snowed under a plucky St. Mary’s acade my quintet of O’Neill, 45-19. The Friday night show was St. Patrick’s all the way while a good-sized crowd looked on. It was the most scoring the Platters had done thus far this season. Big Bill McGovern looped in 15 tallies to lead the point-getting. The Cardinals left here early Friday via charter bus and re turned Saturday. Following the game, the Platters were hosts to their visitors at a social affair. There was no preliminary game. The boxscore: ST. PAT’S (45) fg ft pf pts ! McShane, f 2 0 2 4 Langford, f 10 12 McGovern, f 7 1115 Schraefer. f 10 12 Houldshed, c_4 2 1 10 Johnson, c . 0 1 4 1 Ryan, g 0 111 Andcnsorf, g 0 0 10 Mueller, g 12 2 4 Conneally, g 3 0 2 6 Totals 19 7 16 45 ST. MARY’S (19) fg ft pf pts Miles, f . ..... 0 12 1 Harty, f 0 0 0 0 Hickey, f .. 1 5 4 7 Gatz, f ..... 0 0 0 0 DeBacker, c _ 0 0 0 0 McNichols, c . 3 0 3 6 Sauser, c ... 0 0 10 Hynes, g 10 12 Bohn, g — .... 0 0 0 0 Tomjack, gt 1113 Koci, g .0 0 0 0 Totals ... 6 7 12 19 Page, Chambers Coming Here Next Week — The O’Neill high school Eagles will entertain Page here Monday night, and the St. Mary’s acade my Cardinals will be hosts to the Chambers Coyotes on Tuesday night in a pair of intracounty basketball games. DEMO UPSET TOPS HOLT 1946 NEWS Continued rom Page One . . . F. J. Dishner was elected mayor in the city election. The election was quiet with only 378 votes cast for mayor. Dish ner succeeds John Kersenbrock. . . . The Commercial club en tertained the Selective Service boards and appeal agents from nine counties. . . Plans for the new O’Neill hospital, prepared by Martin Aiken, a Lincoln ar chitect, were accepted by the general committtee. . . Harry Vogt, who purchased a dry cleaning plant here from the late Ben Harty, has sold the plant to C. A. Weatherford, of Sioux City. . . Among the deaths: Melvin E. Thayer, at O’Neill, fatally injured when struck by a block of falling ce ment while at work on a con struction job; Loula Parker, at Lincoln; Agnes D. Kelly, at Omaha; Frank Oberle, at Ains worth; John Celary, at O’Neill. MAY The Center Union church cel ebrated its 41st birthday anni versary. . . Robert Parkins, of O’Neill, represented Nebraska in the national oratorical con test sponsored by Northwestern university. . . D. H. Cronin, 76, editor and owner of The Fron tier since August 13, 1896, an nounced this week the sale of the newspaper to Carroll W. Stewart, 28, of Hartington, a World War II veteran. Wrote Mr. Cronin in his farewell to his readers: “We have enjoyed our newspaper career in the empire of Holt. . . One of the saddest things in the life of a newspaperman is that of re cording the passing. . . of many of the closest friends and chums of youth. . . I expect to contin ue to make my home in O’Neill and will be seeing you as the days roll by. . . You, my friends and enemies (if I have any) have my best wishes for a long life full of prosperity and hap piness.” Mr. Cronin is the dean of the state Unicameral legisla ture. He will also retire from politics. . . An unseasonal cold wave struck in midmonth, in flicting considerable damage on all classes of crops. Every thing suffered a setback. . .The trainmen's strike forced the North Western to recruit en gineers, brakemen and officials to sustain one-train-per-day service during late May. . . The Chambers Sun resumed publi cation following an enforced wartime shutdown. . . World War II veterans swelled the Memorial day parade. . . Among the deaths: Oscar O. Newman, at O'Neill: Michael H. McCar thy. at O’Neill, struck by an au tomobile; Mrs. George Bowen, at Page; Pat O'Connor. at Lynch: Emil Snyggs, at O’Neill; Ross Albert Allen, on highway near here, by earbonmonoxide fumes; Mrs. Keith Houchin, at North Platte. JUNE Guy S. Williams, of Omaha World-Herald “Rolling Along” fame, visited O’Neill. “A be guiling bit of the auld sod it is,” he wrote. “Sure a little bit of Ireland fell from the sky one day—and landed smack in the middle of County Holt, Neb., begorra. They named it O’Neill. The town is skirted by the Elk horn river, which at this point is called the River Shannon, and the shamrocks grow right dowm to the river’s idge. Sure and a lovely spot it is, me lads —a lovely spot indade.” . . . Solicitation for the new hospi tal w'as begun. . . The Kelly Well company, of Grand Island, began drilling a new well for the city water supply. . . Norris W. Coats, of the Stuart Advo cate. was elected president of the Holt County Publishers’ as sociation. . . Sen. Hugh Butler defeated Gov. Dwight Griswold in the GOP primary for United States senator nomination. The duel attracted nationwide at tention. Harold Stassen, Min nesota’s presidential potential, stumped the state in behalf of Griswold. John L. Copeland, of Mariaville, led the four-way race for nomination for the Unicameral. Balloting in the primary was light in Holt. . . The Commercial club was offi cially redesignated the Cham ber of Commerce and the group affiliated with the national chamber. . . Two-hundred and fifty former O’Neillites reunit ed in Omaha. . . Dr. Paul W. Tipton, of Omaha, won the Country club’s open golf tour ney. He was the defending champion. . . Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Watson, of Amelia, observed their golden wedding anniver sary. . . A dry spell during the critical growing season in the Spring caused a sharp drouth in the county’s output of blue grass seed. . . Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam G. Beha passed the 50th milestone in their wedded life . . . Among the deaths: Mrs. George L. Fink, at Page; Anton Soukup, at Page; Thomas Con nolly, at Stuart; Bernard H. Dollarhide, formerly of Atkin son, in a Bubuque, la., hotel fire; John J. Young, near At kinson, in a highway accident; Ashley M. Paulette, of Webster Grove, Mo., a tourist, injured on highway 275 near Ewing; Fred B. Jones, at Portland, Ore., Mrs. William C. Farrand, at Dorsey; Otto E. Clevish, one of O’Neiil’s last three Civil War veterans, at O’Neill; Mrs. C. B. Shade, at Stuart; Mrs. Viola M. Hoxsie and Mrs. Charles Hard ing, sisters, at O’Neill, dying 52 hours apart; Thomas Griffin, at Lynch. JULY The Fourth was a quiet af foi- rity fo-mallv; infor mally, noisy. Fireworks were available after a wartime short ,rtr> . . H. W. Tomlinson and wife were married 50 years. . . Nine hundred O’Neill residents signed the “right-to-work” peti tion for a proposed amendment to the state constitution. . .As soc«ing was completed with val uations slightly increased. . . An automobile driven by Miss Lottie VanOstrand, of Clear water, was sheared in half by a North Western train near Clearwater. . , The small grain harvest was good. . . The Le gion of Merit has been award ed to ex-Maj. John F. Grady. . . Two automobiles were stolen from near St. Patrick’s Catho lic church. . . A sign of the times: Anthony Craig and fam ily. Californians since the war caused industrial mobiliation, returned to Page. . . Holt coun ty’s total personnel dead and missing in World War II is 48, according to an honor list re leased by the War department . . . Among the deaths: Em met A. Doyle, at Evanston, 111.; Mtrs. Josephine E. Hart, at Page; James Soukup, at O’ Neill: M'-s. Elvina Scofield, at O’Neill; Mrs. E. W. Perrigo, at Tatt, Calif.; William Kutscher, formerly of Chambers, drowned in Puget Sound. Wash.; Bryce Hock, a World War II vet, at Butte, struck by propellor blade; William Nollkamper, at Omaha. AUGUST Glea H. Wade is the new commander of the American Legion. . . The American Le gion Midgets were routed 28-0 by Lincoln in the state midget baseball tourney. . . The fire men had a brisk workout dur ing the first week: seven alarms . . . Stores adopted a new hour ! schedule, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. . . . Tlie city will expand its sewer system on a recommen dation to the council by the planning board. Forty-three blocks will be affected. . .The ! Frontier reproduced by special permission the Collier’s maga zine story concerning the epic flight of a B-29 named “Irish Lassie,” in which Lt. Leonard C. Fox, of Emmet, the copilot, was a hero in a hairbreadth | flight over Tokyo. . . Mrs. Ida Townsend, of Page, reaches 90 . . . Mrs. Anna Swanson, of O’ Neill, was seriously injured in an auto-train crash on Omaha’s outskirts. .*. Donald Lindquist, \ 12, was the county’s first polio case as the outbreak assumed epidemic proportions through out the state and nation. . . Atkinson’s “Hay Days” went over with a bant. . . D. H. Cron in, dean of the Unicameral, was on hand for the special session called by Gov. Griswold. . . An initial $520,000 loan has been approved by the rural electrifi cation administration for the four-county Niobrara Valley Electric Membership corpora tion. . . Toy’s store has been sold to J. L. MeCarville, sr., and his son, J. L., jr. formerly of Bonesteel, S. D. . . Short ages or no shortages, O’Neill bristled with building activity —a movement that began as a postwar facelifting and by the yea’-’s end may assume the pro portions of the biggest building boom in history. There were 12 new business buildings eith er recently completed, in the process of construction, or in the drafting board stage. . . Among the deaths: Stephen B. Carpenter, at Chambers; J, B. Fullerton, at O’Neill; Mrs. Wil liam Reige, at Norfolk; E. Roy Townsend, at Page. SEPTEMBER Both O’Neill public school and St. Mary’s academy report ed record attendances as the 1946-’47 term began. . . Ewing voters turned thumbsdown on a proposal to sell liquor by the drink. The score: 139-95. . . The McIntosh Jewelry opened —a new firm name in the city directory. . . September was ushered in with a three-inch moisture deficiency. . . An en gineer of the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation told the Chamber of Commerce that Holt county “definitely has irrigation possi bilities.” The engineer, C. E. Burdick, was working on a pre liminary survey. He predicts “100,000 irrigable acres in the county.” . . . M. J. Golden won ; the city golf crown. . . The American Legion is confronted ! with a housing problem. Its 1 skyrocketing membership has created the need for more room . . . Miss Lucille Hickey won honorable mention in a nation wide search for a “typical nurse.” . . . Among the deaths: John T. Biglin, at Hastings; An na Donohoe, at O’Neill. OCTOBER j Dolores Fredrickson, of I Sparks, was elected S. Mary’s academy homecoming queen. . . September and October were the wettest in history of the weather station here. . . A 76 cent price was paid for the top stocker-feeder calf at the tenth annual stocker-feeder show and sale here. The owner: Eddie Rector, 9; the purchaser, Charles Tasler. . . Miss Mary Louise Birmingham was one of 10 outstate countesses at the Ak-Sar-Ben coronation ball. . . The army of huntsmen “jump ed-off” at 6:28 a.m. on October 19 for the pheasant hunt, but birds were not plentiful and cover was abundant. Open water well completed by a Grand Island firm, and imme diately negotiated with the same firm for a twin well near by. . . The American Legion has invited the district organization to meet here in 1947. . . “Mon tana Jack” Sullivan breezed in to town for one of his regular visitations. . . Among the deaths: Albert Petersen, at O’ Neill; Lester L. Coon, at Page. *— • ' NOVEMBEP Three thousand head of cat tle escaped injury in a spectac ular $35,000 fire at the Atkin son Livestock Market. . . Rev. Eugene B. Maxcy, for 10 years the Methodist pastor at Inman, is retiring. . . Cornpicking was retarded because of excessive moisture. . . The Chamber of Commerce successfully spon sored a merchants’ day and a farmer - rancher day. . . The strike of the Nation’s softcoal miners caused some inconven ience but produced no serious results here. Officials and coal dealers were prepared to take emergency measures if neces sary to conserve fuel. . . A lone blemish marred the O’Neill high school grid record, a 6-13 loss to Ainsworth. St. Mary’s academy finished the season with four wins and three losses . . . Ex-Lt. Bernard F. Coday, of Atkinson, was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism under enemy fire. . . The Protestants held a union thanksgiving service. . . Leon and Harvey Tompkins and Clarence Ernst won state recog nition in the annual pasture forage-livestock fifnishup pro gram at Omaha. . . Among the deaths: R. Lewis Cunningham, at Page; Mrs. Charles Edwards and Miss Doris Vargason, both of Chambers, fatally injured in a highway accident near Cas ner, Wyo.: Mrs. Clifford Gil lette, at Chambers; Mrs. Hen ry Hookstra, at Sioux City; John J. Harley, at Norfolk; Archie Martin, at Long Pine; Mrs. William Decker, at Lin coln. DECEMBER Contributions to O’Neill’s > new nonprofit hospital were 1 ruled “deductible” from an in dividual’s “taxable net income,” j the hospital committee mem bers learned from a deputy commissioner of internal reve nue, Treasury department, Washington, D. C. 1716 drive for funds for the 200 thousand dollar undenrtaking was press ed. . . The corn loan rate was fixed at $1.06 per bushel. . . A five-generation group gathered for the photographer, headed by Mrs. Mattie Johnson. The others: her daughter, Mrs. Christine Walters; Mrs. Wal ters’ daughter, Mrs. Samuel Robertson; Mrs. Robertson’s daughter, Mrs. Noel Long, of Denver, Colo., and Mrs. Long’s daughter, Sandra Lee Long, an infant. . . Ben Kuroki, the Her shey Japanese-American who turned in an amazing war rec ord in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and the Pa cific, visited O’Neill. His biog raphy has been published by Harper & Brothers, New York City. It is the story of his struggle against the enemy abroad and his fight at home against intolerance and preju dice on the part of some Ameri cans. . . Displaced workers from the West coast began to trickl^ back into this region. . . A flip of a coin gave William Hanley the victory over Marvin Clou6e in the race for assessor in Grat tan precinct. . . L. D. Putnam paid $56,000—more than $23 vper acre—for the 2,400-acre Pat O’Connor ranch. . . The tradi tional “blanket of snow,’ which proverbially covers the Christ mas scene, was excepted this season. There was no snow in sight. . . Mrs. John Zahradnicek, of near Atkinson, unc overed $3,440 in an old organ. . . Among the deaths: Mrs. Fannie Gallagher, at O’Neill; Mrs. Re becca Bursell, at Vermillion, S. D.; Ela Allen, at Blaine, Wash.; Mrs. Clara B. Miles, at O’Neill, widow of the late George A. Miles; Mrs. Jennie Wilcox, at Granite Falls, Wash.; W. E. Williams, at CorpusL Christie, Tex. # Mrs. L. Shilery returned to Lin coln Friday after spending the holidays with her daughter, Mrs. R. L. Bode. INCOME TAX For assistance in making your reports, call on Geo. C. Robertson O’Neill W 4 Announcement A representative of our firm will be available at Golden hotel, O'Neill, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m„ Friday and Saturday, January 10th & 11th, to those who desire our services In the . preparation of 4 INCOME TAX RETURNS An appointment may be made in advance, if desired, by contacting Hotel Golden. SOBOTKA and SCHOENING PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS — TAX SPECIALISTS Norfolk, Nebraska Members National Association of Tax Accountants _ ^ *Tr*-_jrxs+' FRESH FRUITS & YEG'ABLES CALIFORNIA SUNKIST — ORANGES 1Qr PER DOZEN.... 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