The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 06, 1947, Page TWO, Image 2

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    The Frontier
O'Neill. Nebraska
CARROLL W. STEWART
Editor and Publisher
Entered the Postoffice at O’Neill
Holt County, Nebraska, as sec
•sad-class mail matter under th«
Act of March 3, 1879. This news
Cper is a member of the Nebras
Press Association and the Na
tional Editorial Association.
Established in 1880
Published Each Thursday
Terms of Subscription:
In Holt and adjoining counties.
6 per year; elsewhere, $2.50 per
Parents Entertain —
INMAN—The members of the
Inman public school faculty, pep
elub and the Tigers’ basketball
team were entertained at a six
o’clock dinner given by the par
ents of the basketball players.
. "■ ■ 1 ■ %
ROYAL
THEATRE
O'NEILL
FRIDAY fc SATURDAY
FEBR. 7-8
— Big Double Bill —
It’s Great to Be
. Young
with Leslie Brooks, Jimmy
Lloyd, Jeff Donnell, Robert
Stanton and Wilton DeLugg
and His Swing Wing.
— also —
Roy Rogers, the king of the
cowboys, and “Trigger”, the
( smartest horse in the movies,
1 in
Sunset in El Dorado
.'with George “Gabby” Hayes,
Dale Evans, and Bob Nolan
and The Sons of the Pio
neers.
Adm. 38c, plus tax 8c, Tot.
46c; Children 10c, plus tax
2c, Tot. 12c; Matinee Satur
day 2:30.
SUN.. MON. & TUES.
FEBR. 9-10-11
Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire,
and Joan Caulfield in
Irving Berlin's
Blue Skies
in Technicolor
Adm. 42c, plus tax 8c, Total
50: Matinee Sunday 2:30,
Adm. 38c, plus tax 8c, Tot.
46c; Children 10c, plus tax
2c. Tot. 12c.
(WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
FEBR. 12-13
_ Joan l^eslie and Bob Hutton
i m
Janie Gets Married
Adm. 38c, plus tax 8c, Total
46c; Children 10c, plus tax
2c. Total 12c.
*4 ■■' .■ ■■■■ ■ ■ - ' ' *
1 Uncle Hank Says:
__^_■»- =
A RtRl
UP tN \
A HtGI
PACKA<
Purdue Ag Station Says:
Bulletin 508: "In recent experiments, complex mixed supple
ments containing meat, soy meal, cottonseed meal, alfalfa
leaf meal and linseed, produced faster gains and finished hog
more evenly than simple supplements (tankage)."
Shamrock 40 percent Hog Supplement will do far better
than tankage. It is especially rich in vitamins for Brood
Sows and Nursing Pigs.
Ohio Ag On Limestone:
"Poultrymen ask whether Limestone is as good as oyster
shell. The answer is "yes" providing the limestone is 90 peT
cent or better calcium carbonate."
Shellmaker is at least 97 percent calcium carbonate. It is
far harder than oyster shell so it really grinds grain.
SHELLMAKER — 50 Lbe. _55
LEGAL NOTICE
(First publication Jan. 23, 1947.)
LEGAL NOTICE
Case No. 14273
To all persons having or claim
ing any interest in the North Half
of 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. Liebprt, 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
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.
." ' ’ mmW”
(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
!«1 i state, to-wit: Lots L 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
! William W. Griffin
ATTORNEY
i First National Bank Bldg.
| O'NEILL
W. F. FINI-EY, M. D. |
OFFICE PHONE: 28
First National Bank Bldg, {
O'NEILL
!| pRAIRIELAND «&». I
l X SAUNDERS
TALK ATKINSON
... i rvi^ix Route 5
LINCOLN — That veteran of
many legislative sessions, Sen.
Petersen, flaunts in the face of
Nebraska citizens the thing
they voted down. He has in
troduced a bill setting up a
state retail sales tax. That was
the ghost in the defeated school
amendment. Another senator
wants to saddle us with a state
income tax. There’s nothing
the matter with our present
system. The trouble is with
the spending agencies. Reck
lessness with public funds has
created a mental frenzy for re
vamping the whole tax struc
ture. Our state legislature
should be flooded with pro
tests against the passage of
these two bills.
• • •
A gray December morning in
1890 I met Billy Hough on a de
and to have you and each of you
decreed to have no title to, lien
upon, of other interest in said
real estate.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before 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
1 HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA
IN THE MATTER )
OF THE APPLI- )
CATION OF )
JAMES T. SHUM- ) NOTICE
ATE, GUARDIAN ) OF SALE
OF JAMES J. ) OF REAL
j SHUMATE, A MI- ) ESTATE.
NOR, FOR L I - )
CENSE TO SELL )
REAL ESTATE. )
Notice is hereby given that ir
pursuance of on Order of thi
Honorable D. R. Mounts, Judg(
of the District Court of Hoi'
County, Nebraska, made in thi;
said cause on the 2nd day of Jan
uary, A.D., 1947, for the sale o
the real estate hereinafter des
cribed, there will be sold at pub
lie vendue to the highest biddei
for cash, at the Front Door of th<
Court House in the City of O’
Neill, in the County of Holt anc
State of Nebraska, on the 13tl
day of February, A.D., 1947, a
the hour of ten o’clock A.M., th<
following described interest ii
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 oper
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.
(First publication Feb. 6, 1947.
NOTICE OF SUIT
To: The heirs, devisees, lega
tees, personal representatives anc
all other persons interested in the
estate of Waldo E. Adams, decea
sed, real names unknown; and at
persons having or claiming any
interest in the South Half oi
Section Six, Township Twenty
nine North, Range Ten, West °i
the 6th P.M. in Holt County,
Nebraska, real names unknown,
Defendants.
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 4th day of
February, 1947, L. D. Putnam and
Mary Wilma Putnam as plaintiffs
filed their petition in the District
Court of Holt County, Nebraska,
against you as defendants, the
object and prayer of which is to
quiet and confirm the title in
them, the said L. D. Putnam and
Mary Wilma Putnam, as joint
tenants, to the following describ
ed real estate, to-wit: The South
Half of Section Six, Township
Twenty-nine North, Range Ten,
West of the 6th P.M. in Holt
County, Nebraska, as against you
and each of you, and to secure a
Decree of Court that you have nc
interest in, right or title to or lien
upon said real estate or any part
thereof; and for general equit
able relief.
You are required to answer
said petition on or before the 17th
day of March, 1947.
Dated this 4th day of February,
1947.
L. D. PUTNAM and
MARY WILMA PUTNAM
Plaintiffs.
By Julius D. Cronin
Their Attorney 39-42
Money to Loan
ON
AUTOMOBILES
TRUCKS
TRACTORS
EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
Central Finance Co.
C. E. Jones. Manager
O'NEILL t NEBRASKA
* -——-. 4
serted street in O’Neill. He
greeted me with the announce
ment, “Sittin’ Bull is dead.”
In the Nebraska Historical
Society museum at the state
| house is a very good portrait of
Sitting Bull — low forehead,
narrow between crafty eyes, a
combination of the fatherly and
sinister facial expression.
Sitting Bull was dead that
December morning—dead from
a shot through the heart fired
by a red man, Lt. Bullhead, an
Indian police from the Pine
Ridge, who with Lt. Shave
head, another Indian police,
had gone out under orders of
Col. Drumm at Ft. Yates to “se
cure the person of Sitting
Bull.” What followed resulted
in the battle of Wounded Knee,
a feeble expression of the last
forlorn hope of the Sioux.
Sitting Bull had been the in
spiring spirit of the ghost dance
working the reds on the reser
vation in Nebraska and South
Dakota into a frenzy. To sub
due the turbulent tribesmen it
became necessary to arrest Sit
ting Bull. He resisted and was
shot down.
Evelyn Yellowrobe, a great
granddaughter of this same Sit
ting Bull, teaches a class in
English at Vassar college.
The Sioux are not what they
used to be.
Among the brigade sent out
by the big newspapers to re
port the Pine Ridge uprising
was John McDonough, up to
about ’87 publisher and classical
editor of The Tribune, done on
a Washington handpress in tjie
bank basement where is now
housed the modem machinery
of the Holt County Indepen
; dent. McDonough went to New
York City from O’Neill, cov
ered the battle of Wounded
Knee for the New York Sun
; and was reported to have mar
ried a French actress. The same
New York Sun quoted editori
als from The Frontier in the
hectic days that followed.
• * * •
Raymond Bly, a rancher liv
ing west of Amelia and asses
sor in Swan precinct, has been
spending a week in Lincoln, a
guest in the home of Dr. and
Mrs. John Curry, when he was
not occupying a hospital bed
following less serious surgery.
Mr. Bly is a brother of Mrs.
Curry.
* * •
The Nebraska Ayrshire asso
ciation met in Lincoln Febru
ary 5. I know of no represen
tatives of this breed of cattle
west of the Sixth P. M. . . . The
4-H clubbers also have met at
the capital city and county as
sessors move into the picture
at the Lincoln this week . . .
Top spellbinders pose before
the camera, speeches entertain,
instruct or become a bore and
all hands gather for the big feed
. . . Three children, including
a 15-year-old girl, who attempt
ed the rescue of two smaller
ones of the family, perished in
the flames that destroyed the
tarpaper shack they called
home at Bellevue. The father,
serving a term in the peniten
tiary, was taken to the funeral
—a heartbreaking tragedy that
might well inspire a governor’s
pardon for that man to provide
a home for those left of the
family . . . Ogallala school dis
trict will raise the money by
1.6-mill levy to pay the teacMI
ers a ‘living costs” bonus of
$100 to $200 . .
Have you read THE FRON
TIER classified ads?_tf
-'
MARCH 1st POSSESSION
Farms for Sale
80 to 360 ACRES
Featuring:
• 360 acres 6^ miles, northeast Verdigre. Well-balanced
stock farm; plenty alfalfa and wild hayland. 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
k _ 1
» - --
'THE WINDJAMMER" Starring‘Bazooka" BOB BURNS
.tTo be shown here on JOHN DEERE DAY...
Free to farmers, in this and
neighboring communities, is
the big John Deere Day Pro
gram. to be held at the O’Neill
public school auditorium on
Tuesday, February 11.
According to Lloyd Collins,
the O’Neill John Deere dealer,
this year’s John Deere Day
program will provide a full
measure of top-notch enter
tainment every farmer and his
family will long remember.
The main attraction is a 55
minute Hollywood feature,
“The Windjammer,” which
stars “Bazooka” Bob Burns,
famous radio and screen come
dian. The “rib-tickling” story
is built around a windy char
acter, Bob Newton by name,
who claims to be able to make
animals talk. His experiences,
and those of his charming
daughter, in filming a talking
animal picture in Hollywood
will be enjoyed by everyone.
In the supporting cast are
such well-known artists as
Gale Robbins, Scott Elliott,
Kenneth MacDonald, Ida
Moore, Eddie Kane, Dan Dun
can, and Sam Flint.
Four Other All-Talking
Pictures
In addition to “The Wind
jammer”, four other new, all
talking pictures will be shown.
They include “Headliners in
Tractor Value” — the story of
the new John Deere Models
“A” and “B” Tractors for 1947
. . . “New Power for the Small
er Farm"—an important an
nouncement of a new tractor
with a complete line of inte
gral equipment for the small
acreage farmer . . . “Conserva
tion Farming with Regular
Equipment” — an educational
picture on how to kee£ your
soil “at home” with the equip
ment you have on your own
farm . . . and “New Pages in
John Deere Progress” — a
r> wsreel on newly developed
John Deere integral and drawn
machines for 1947.
The Lloyd Collins Implement
firm cordially invites every
farm family in this area to
come to this big farmer’s, day
program. He promises a good
time to everyone who comes.
According to Mr. Collins, ad
mission to the John Deere Day
Program is by ticket only. Any
farm r who has not received
tickets can get them free by
inquiring at the store before
the day of the show.
/
O’Neill Public School Auditorium
Tuesday, February 11
First Show: 9:30 a. m., for school children only. (No tickets required.)
Second Show: 1:30 p. m., everyone invited. (Tickets free by inquiring.)
FREE Lunch at Noon at the School
'' V
SPONSORED BY:
. *
Lloyd Collins Implements
— O’NEILL —
• The New Hospital Needs Your Contribution! ♦ >
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