The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 30, 1947, Page TWO, Image 2

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    The Frontier
O'NeilL Nebraska
CARROLL W. STEWART
Editor and Publisher
- Sntered the Postoffice at O’Neil]
Holt County, Nebraska, as sec
end-class mail matter under th<
Act of March 3, 1879. This news
Eper is a member of the Nebras
Press Association and the Na
Hon.d Editorial Association.
Established in 1880
Published Each Thursday
Terms of Subscription:
In Holt end adjoining counties
S3 per year; elsewhere, $2.50 pei
year. __
LEGAL NOTICE
®Mrst publication Jan. 23, 1947.)
LEGAL NOTICE
Case No. 14273
To all persons having or claim
ing any interest in the North Half
•f the Northwest Quarter and the
Southeast Quarter of the North
west Quarter, Section 5, Town
ship 32, Range 12, Holt County,
Nebraska, real and true names
unknown: Leone Ann Liebert
also known as Ann Leone Lieb
ert also known as Leone Ann
Korab and F. Liebert, first real
and true name unknown wife
and husband.
You are hereby notified that
on the 13th day of June 1946, Ad
elina Sedlacek, as plaintiff filed
her petition in the District Court
of Holt County, Nebraska, against
you and others, the object and
prayer of said petition is to
establish and confirm the in
terest of the plaintiff and the de
PIOHEERS/^30 YEARS
AND STILL LEADING THE WAY
WITH AMERICA'S BEST
FARM AND RANCH LOANI
LONG TERM—LOW INTEREST
PRE-PAYMENT PRIVILEGES
No Fees
Get Your
LAND BANK LOAN
through your
Elkhorn Valley
INat'l Farm Loan Ass'n
LYLE P. DIERKS
See: eta: y-1 rej. urer
O'NEILL
fendants in said real estate and
to partition the same, if physical
partition is impossible, for sale of
the said real estate and division
- of the proceeds according to the
respective interest of the plain
tiff and defendants as determined
by the court and for general equi
• table relief.
You are required to answer said
! petition on or before the 3rd day
" of March 1947, or the allegations
' therein contained will be taken
as true and judgment entered
against you accordingly.
Dated this 20th day of January,
1947.
ADELINA SEDLACEK.
Plaintiff.
By J. T. MURRAY,
37-40 Her Attorney.
(First publication Jan. 23, 1947.)
William W. Griffin, Attorney
LEGAL NOTICE
To: Patrick Fahy; Mary Fahy,
first and real true name unknown,
wife of Patrick Fahy; Emmingner
S. Kinch; Hiram Hammons; Mary
Hammons, first and real true
name unknown, wife of Hiram
Hammons; All persons having or
claiming any interest in Lots 1, 2,
and 3, in Block 24, Original Town
of O’Neill, Holt County, Nebras
ka, real names unknown, Defend
ants: you are hereby notified
that on the 21st day of January,
1947, Frank J. Dishner and Mar
tina G. Dishner, as plaintiffs, filed
their petition and commenced an
action against you in the District
Court of Holt County, Nebraska,
the object and prayer of which is
to have the plaintiffs decreed to
be the absolute owners in fee
simple of the following described
real estate, to-wit: Lots 1, 2, and
3, in Block 24, Original Town of
O’Neill, Holt County, Nebraska;
to have the title to and possession
of said premises forever quieted
and confirmed in the plaintiffs
and to have you and each of you
decreed to have no title to, lien
upon, or other interest in said
real estate.
You are required to answer said
petition on or be “ore the 3rd day
of March 1947, or the allegations
thereof will be taken as true and
judgment rendered against you
accordingly.
FRANK J. DISHNER and
MARTINA G. DISHNER,
37-40 Plaintiffs.
(First publication Jan. 23, 1947.)
Julius D. Cronin, Attorney
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
HOLT COUNTY. NEBRASKA
IN THE MATTER )
OF THE APPLI- )
CATION OF )
JAMES T. SHUM- ) NOTICE
ATE, GUARDIAN ) OF SALE
OF J \ M E S ,T. ) CT REAL 1
SHUMATE, A MI- ) ESTATE.
NOP. FOR LI - )
CENSE TO SELL )
"L'Al ESTATE. )
N' ire is hereby given that in
PEOPLE ARE ASKING
THESE QUESTIONS ABOUT
f ARMY ENLISTMENT
'ght
Q What educational benefits do I get under the Gl Bill of Rights?,
j A* W you serve honorably on active duty for a period of 90 days,
one day of which is served between September 16,1940, and the
date of termination of the present war, or you are discharged
i * because of an actual service-incurred injury or disability in
curred within that first 90-day period of service, you are, upon
i discharge, entitled to one year of education in the college, trade
!, or business school of your choice for which you can qualify. In
addition, each month of active duty, including the first three,
prior to the termination of the war, entitles you to another
| month of post-service education, up to 48 months.
Your tuition, laboratory fees, etc., up to $500 per ordinary
school year will be paid by the government. Also, you will re
ceive $65 a month living allowance; $90 a month If you have
dependents.
Q. What about family allowances?
I A. For men enlisting or reenlisting now, family allowances will
continue until six months after the war is officially ended.
Q. What are my chances of going overseas?
* A. If you enlist for 3 years, you may select to serve in any over
* seas theater which has openings, especially Japan or Korea.
> Q. Can / still choose the branch of Mervice I want to serve in?
‘ A. Yes. You can pick any branch which has quotas to be filled, if
you enlist for 3 years.
| Q. Is there any way I can reenlist in my old grade?
A. Yes, you can, if you reenlist for a 3-year term within 20 daya
after your honorable discharge.
Q. Is there any other way I can reenlist in grade?
A. Yes, if you held one of certain military occupational specialties,
and were discharged on or after May 12, 1945, you can reenlist
in a grade depending on the length of time you held the desired
M. O. S.
VkH your mar*it U S. Army #oc rutting Station lor antwon to any other
quottioni you may have, or lor further detail on the above quettbnt.
• UrtN to; Sound O"Warrior* of “
floaco." "Voice of ft* Army." and "Proudly
me Halt." on year radio.
tar Regular Army Serves the Nation
and Mankind in War and Peace __
ENLIST NOW AT YOUR NEAREST U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION
POST OFFICE BLDG.. O'NEILL NEB,
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., daily except Sunday
j PRAIRIELAND romaine
« X SAUNDERS
! TAT K ATKINSON
... I Route 5
LINCOLN—If a legislative
bill with emergency clause be
comes a law Nebraska printers
will get a break. The measure
provides a raise from 10 cents
a line first insertion to 15 cents
and from 8 to 12 cents each sub
' sequent insertion for the pub
lishing of legal notices.
Holt county was a gold mine
of legal notices through many
years. Doc Matthews, founder
of The Frontier, extracted from
the richest vein in land notices.
Jim Riggs, the sheriff sales,
and Sam Eves, tax foreclosures
under the “land grabbing syn
dicate.’’ Others gathered siz
able crumbs—the Mineola Sun,
Dustin Dispatch, Emmet Echo,
Amelia Journal and Shamrock
Pickins—all long defunct.
Six papers tried it in O’Neill
—two in Ewing, Atkinson and
Stuart, one in Chambers, one in
Inman and in later years one
in Page.
From the pens of the editors
of all these flowed rich rhetoric,
flights of eloquence and blister
ing political, sometimes person
al, paragraphs—masters all of
sublime as well as poignant
literary style.
* * #
The housewife, having
learned she was legally entit
led to half of her husband’s
earnings, was happy to inform
him of the fact when he came
home in the evening. The man
brightened up. “I’m glad to
learn that,” he said, “now I can
keep half of my earnings in
stead of giving it all to you!”
pursuance of on Order of the
Honorable D. R. Mounts, Judge
of the District Court of Holt
County, Nebraska, made in this
said cause on the 2nd day of Jan
uary, A.D., 1947, for the sale of
the real estate hereinafter des
cribed, there will be sold at pub
lic vendue to the highest bidder
for cash, at the Front Door of the
Court House in the City of O’
Neill, in the County of Holt and
State of Nebraska, on the 13th
day of February, A.D., 1947, at
the hour of ten o’clock A.M., the
following described interest in
real estate, to-wit:
An undivided one-half right,
title and interest in and to the
West Half of Section Twelve
(12), in Township Twenty-five
(25), North, Range Twelve (12),
West of the 6th P.M., in Holt
County, Nebraska.
This said sale will remain open
one hour.
Dated this 23rd day of January,
A.D., 1947.
JAMES T. SHUMATE, Guar
dian of James J. Shum
37-39 ate, a Minor.
Hope springs forever in the
human breast. A brief month
ago another year was greeted
as hopeful souls looked out
across the gloom of the affairs
of men to anticipate a brighter
and better future.
The New Year. So far on
the horizon there glows no sig
nal fires of Utopia. The roar
of battle has ceased, but where
is the mollifying ointment for
intentional wounds,
The cold eye of science sees
not the gleam of a brighter fu
ture but the red glow of time’s
eternal sunset — with one way
out,if the miracle of destruction
can be made the miracle for the
healing of the Nations. After
six thousand years of failure,
can it suceed now?
* * *
A Scottsbluff man sails the
air for the island of Guam to
build a tile factory . . . Eighty
acres of unimproved land eight
miles from West Point, Cuming
county, sold at referee’s sale for
$250 an acre . . . Two Ewing
men, 25 and 27, and an 11-year
old Holt county girl are involv
ed in a rape case in Madison
county ... A Nebraska woman
has gone through the state
courts only to have her sen
tence for drunken driving sus
tained. The ladies are enjoy
ing full equality with men. . .
At this writing, one legislator
has something for Nebraska
teachers, an anti-strike bill.
* • *
Every branch of state govern
ment so far heard from asks
for more money, including the
seven supreme court judges
who want increased allowances
for junketing trips in addition
to $7,500 per annum each in
salaries. State Tax Commis
sioner Robert Armstrong is
sympathetic. He wants the val
uation of taxable property in
Nebraska increased a cool bil
lion dollars. Sounds like the
talk we used to hear back in
Washington. What need has
Nebraska for a tax commission
er?
• • -
The residue, as legal phrase
ology puts it, of the estate of
the late occupant of the White
House is slightly und r two
million dollars, and FDR was
the greatest spender in Yank
eeland—of other’s money.
* * *
About 20 billion dollars of
Uncle Sam’s “dough” has been
contributed to international
projects the past few years.
Foreign entanglements are
coming high.
* * *
The German police dogs are
said to be the smartest of sev
eral breeds under military test.
A superrace of dogs?
ll |J
I FIRST ANNUAL SALE jj
I — OF THE — _ J
t 1
Holt County Aberdeen-Angus
I < |: |
Breeders’ Association
AT THE
| FREDRICKSON LIVESTOCK COMM. ]
COMPANY
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7th j
SALE BEGINS AT 1:00 O’CLOCK
_ COWS & BULLS — ^g
: For Sal* Catalog Writ*
j RAY SIDERS, O’Neill, Sale Manager j
■■ ■
MARCH 1st POSSESSION
Farms for Sale
80 TO 360 ACRES
Featuring:
360 acres 6% miles northeast Verdigre, Neb. Well-balanced
stock farm; plenty alfalfa and wild hay land. Good improve
ments.
WELL-IMPROVED 80 acres 9 miles southwest of Verdigre.
Buildings all painted and repaired this past summer. Good
water. Land level to rolling. Good small farm.
Several unimproved farms of 120 to 160 acres. Also have some
old buildings for sale, reasonable, on cash basis.
Low Down Payment — Long Terms
Max N. Copper
BLOOMFIELD, NEBR. PHONE 5
In office Saturdays and Wednesday afternoons
*
Skimmed milk is a dime a
quart (and who would want it?)
the other kind is 17- and 18
cents. Dave Weisgarber down
across the track peddled it to i
O’Neill householders, who did
not have a cow in Barney Wei
ton’s herd, for a nickel, and the
matron who went out with a !
vessel that would hold more |
than a quart when she heard
Dave’s bell ring returned to the ,
house with it full for the price
of a quart. No pinch-penny
business when O’Neill was a
pioneer town.
* * ♦
The pastor’s frugal compan
ion spent her time sewing strips
of cloth together for rag car - j
pets, which he considered not
appropriate employment for
the wife of a clergyman and
urged her to discontinue such
work. The lady had a mind
and a purpose of her own until
one day she heard the resource
ful pastor approaching their
house lustily singing: “In Hea
ven above where all is love,
there’ll be no rag carpets
there!”
• * •
Asked how one so young be
comes an expert on skates, the
little fellow replied: “By get
ting up every time I fell down.”
A bit of life’s philosophy that
applies elsewhere other than on
the ice.
* • *
Ford announces price reduc
tions. Many of us will have to
forego a new car until reduc
tions represent something more
than chicken feed.
P33MEKU33
My Nose Is Plugged, |
/'m full of Woe
lt's CAN-PHO-SAL |
/ Need, by Jot!
Yes, when chides or older Cjhdn
fowl sufftr from clogged
nostrils and difficult breathing, use Dr.
Salsbury's CAN PHO SAL to help loosen
them up. Vaporise, spray,
or use as nasal wash.
.■■■■ J
| r
9—~ BaiiVimt
r Of rOUiTry maaitmui
ond All Of hoc N—d>
Coll oo Uc
O'NEILL HATCHERY
PHONE 169J
NEBRASKA'S WASTE
WATERS HARNESSED
FOR THE BENEFIT
OF ALL NEBRASKA
Nebraska’s public power and irrigation program
brings tremendous advantages to Nebraska—all
Nebraska benefits from this cooperative state-wide \
program. '
I
I By impounding and utilising the waters of
f Nebraska’s streams, one of our state’s greatest
resources, which previously flowed to the ocean
unused and wasted, valuable flood control and
■oil conservation are provided. Water is made
available for irrigating thousands of thirsty
acres, and low cost electricity is mad* available
for pump irrigation in rural areas where natural
Irrigation is impractical. Through irrigation
alone, millions of dollars of additional agricul
tural income is brought to Nebraska, and, all
over Nebraska, an increased supply of electric
power at attractively low rate*, is provided to
encourage industrial development and better
living.
Y our Consumers Public Power District
created, owned, and operated by Nebraskans—
-
and entirely self-supporting— is a vital link in '
this coordinated state-wide program. For,
through Consumers network of power generat
ing and distributing facilities reaching virtually
to the four corners of the state, the benefit#
of Nebraska’s combined water and power re
sources are brought to cities, towns, villages ,
and rural areas alike.
Thus, while providing vital financial support
for the combined program, through the dis
tribution and sale of power, Consumers Public
Power District is a major factor in the agri
cultural and industrial development of the
communities it serves. And yet, along with
the advantages of more efficient electric
service resulting from the state-wide integrated
system, Consumers saves electric users over
one million dollars annually through reduced
electric rates.
MOVE TO LYNCH polio fund.
PAG E—The Duane Grays ---
spent Saturday at the home of
his mother, Mrs. Evelyn Gray. . w
They moved the first of the week WlOnPV I AOf)
from Atkinson to a ranch one IV rjVail
and one-half miles west of Lynch.
Km-S PUNERAL AUTOMOBILES
PAGE—Mr. and Mrs. Plen
Nickels, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ste- 'fRUCKS
vens and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph trictouc
Brittel attended funeral services s
at Neligh Sunday for a relative, EQUIPMENT
Mr5- Jud^_ FURNITURE
HOA Club Meets — pi , I T’* p
PAGE — The HOA club met LiCnim TMailCC LO.
with Mrs. Elmer Williamson r *. r-——- _
Tuesday afternoon. The hours
were spent doing needle work. u • HfcBttAbit A
The club voted to give $5 to the
| We Can Do It!
• Fenders repaired.
• Body repairs.
Wrecked cars rebuilt.
• Repaint jobs, partial or complete.
• Glass replaced.
• Front axles corrected.
I!
• Wheels balanced.
CARS OR TRUCKS
— ANY MAKE —
WRECKER SERVICE
NO JOB TOO BIG !
I J J
Good, dependable work at fair prices.
Experienced workmen, uptodate equipment.
Body Shop j
Midwest Motor Co., Ltd. I
’ * |
O’NEILL PHONE 100
Have you donated to the O’Neill Hospital Fund? J
---J