If LEGAL NOTICES 0 (First pub Dec. 20, 1951) NOTICE OF SCHOOL LAND LEASE SALE Notice is hereby given that the Board of Educational Lands and Funds of the State of Nebraska, or its authorized representative, will offer for lease at public auc tion on the 18th day of January, 1952, at 9:30 o’clock A. M., at the office of the County Treasurer of Holt County, in O’Neill, Nebraska, the following educational lands within said county: DESCRIPTION SEC. TWP. RGE. AH 36 32 13 All, exc. SWVi swy* 36 31 10 All 36 27 16 All 16 27 12 All 16 32 9 Said sale may be adjourned from day to day until all lands have been offered. No sale will be final until approved by the Board of Educational Lands and Funds, and the Board reserves the right to reject any and all blBOARD OF EDUCATIONAL LANDS AND FUNDS Henry H. Bartling, Secretary. The Frontier, O’Neill, Nebr. I (First publ. Jan. 3, 1952.) NOTICE +OF SCHOOL LAND LEASE SALE Notice is hereby given that the Board of Educational Lands and Funds of the State of Nebraska, or its authorized representative, will offer for lease at public auc tion at the time hereinafter des ignated, at the office of the Coun ty Treasurer of Holt County, in O’Neill, Nebraska, the following educational lands within said county: ^ w ^ o : p "0 W I DESCRIPTION At 9:30 o’clock A.M., Jan uary 31, 1952: I* NEV4NEV4- SW%NW%- j NWViSW'A SEV4SWV4 -16 25 12 - NEy4_i-__34 28 i° All, exc. W^SEy4-16 27 9 ’ Aii lb oil lo I AU _36 25 13 1 At 1:30 o’clock P.M., Jan uary 31, 1952: ' All JL_36 32 9 ^ I S%NW%-16 25 9 ] j NWy4SEy4 -36 31 12 1 I All __16 27 10 . All . __ 36 29 15 i At 9:30 o’clock A.M., 1 1 February 1, 1952: All _16 29 10 i e%- E%swy4- : swy4swy4_16 29 is-« SWy4SEy4_ 4 28 11 ( All_16 28 10 J All_ 36 25 16 AU_ 16 26 16 1 At 1:30 o’clock P.M., February 1, 1952: SEy4- S%N% NEV4NWy4- NM>SWy4 16 25 10 : AU, exc. SWy4SEy4 _16 30 11 Nwy4- S^NEy4- SEy4 16 26 10 EM.SW1/4- EVz_16 25 11 All _ 16 32 16 J AU 16 28 16 ( Said sale may be adjourned from day to day until all lands , have been offered. No sale will be , final until approved by the Board of Educational Lands and Funds, 1 and the Board reserves the right < to reiect any or all bids. BOARD OF EDUCATIONAL LANDS AND FUNDS Henry J. Bartling, Secretary. The O’Neill Frontier, O’Neill, Nebr. 35-37 (First publ. Jan. 3, 1952.) SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an execution issued by o6' o theo'Slerk. of the district court of i the lath judicial district oi Ne braska, Witiun and xor bolt Coun ty, ^51 an action wherein cmian Crete banta is plaintiii and liar old C. banta is defendant, i will at 10:0(J a.m. on the 8th day oi February, 1952, at the Iront door of the courthouse, in the city of O'Neill, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction, the following described lands and tenements, to-wit: an undivided one-half ti tle and interest in and to Lots 6 and 7 in Block 10, East Side Addition to the Village of Page, Holt County, Nebraska. Terms of sale are cash. Given under my hand this 28th day of December, 1951. LEO S. TOM JACK, Sheriff 35-39c /^AMntCL Allen Porter arrived home from the Craig airfield, Selma, Ala., on Saturday, December 29, and will spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Por ter. He will return to his base on Saturday, January 5. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bazelman spent Christmas in Orchard at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Reed. Miss Bunny Seger, of Grend Is land, spent the holidays at the M. VI. Langan home. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lundeen and daughter, Wally Jean, pf Lin aoln, and Mr. and Mrs. Ruben Redlinger and family, of Page, Mrs. Georgia Butterfield, of Or •hard, were Christmas day guests af Mrs. A. E. Derickson. Miss ranet Derickson, who travels, was ilso home for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Conner, of Drchard, entertained Mr. and Mrs. r. C. Bazelman and daughter, Con lie Jo, on Sunday, December 30, n honor of Connie Jo’s birthday inniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell uuiver vere Christmas day guests at the iome of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Barn lerdt. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davis re urned to O’Neill from Grant, on December 17, where Mr. Davis las been employed by Consumers 3ower Co. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ellsbury, of Ukinson, spent Christmas eve ind day at the home of Mr. and frs. Ralph Davis. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Asher and amily spent Friday, December '8, at the Donald and M. E. Ash ir homes in Valentine. Roy ^sher accompanied them to O’ feill. Miss Lois Harder, who attends fastings college, is spending the lolidays with her parents, Mr. ind Mrs. Dwight Harder. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Coenen j md family spent the Christmas lolidays in Lexington visiting Mr. md Mrs. S. C. Jensen. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clements eft Sunday, December 23, and /isited at the home of Mrs. Elements’ sister, Mrs. Ed Psotta, it Pilger. From Pilger they vent to Lincoln and were guests if their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James Adams, rhey returned to O’Neill Thurs iay, December 27. Miss Carol Zutz, of Burke, S.D., is a holiday guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Harder and Lois. . . Edward Campbell, jr., returned to Green Bay, Wis., on Monday, after spending the holidays at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Campbell and with other rela tives. His parents drove him to Sioux City where he boarded a train. ___ 5 O O O o Prairieland Talk O o (Continued from page 2) to floral bloom, Christmas Pells and stars, choral and church groups. And all have a merry ring that dispels any gloom ihai may have haunted you. • • • American widows and children the past year received $1,400,000, 000 life insurance payments. . . Nebraska’s Boys’ Town has been the inspiration for another Boys’ Town, located at Monterey, Mex. . . In 1951 there were 7,618 miles of gas lines laid, and natural gas promises to reach O’Neill some day. . . George Washington is still in the White House, not his ghost but a gent by that name func tioning as a cook. . . The “Man of the South’’ is David Owens, of Charlotte, N.C., who gives away all the profits from his business above what is needed by his fam ily. . . The 700 Ute Indians, of Utah, are to receive $31,938,673 for land taken from them by the government more than 70 years ago. . . An old man in Nickolls county, another in Lancaster county, perished in fires that de stroyed their homes during the Christmas week. . . With 4 feet of o “ _ °° ° O C O O O u snow and winds off Lake Michi gan, Chicago,°IU., has a vivid win ter scene. . . A Nebraska teacher \6ho has been in school work in Japan, came home for the holi days. Of Japanese children she says “most of them think of Am erica as some kind of heaven.” • • • o Zero stands for nothing. It al so may mean a frost-bitten nose. This morning temperatures play ed about the 0, hoar frost adorns the blanket of snow with glitter ing jewels and out of the blue of a winter sky the sunlight falls on the diamond studded landscape. The verdure and floral bloom of other days are buried under a robe of ermine, pines are dusted with white loveliness and stal wart trees reach nude arms out into the frosty air. It is the time of snow and ice and cold, unri valed beauty of design drawn in frost and ice over my window panes, but the jingle, jingle of Sleigh bells once heard on the frosty air has been torever suiied. * * * If it survives the year put, 1952 will be 1 day longer than the year just ended. Our tradition has had it that leap year is the ladies’ chance to lasso recreant bache lors. Good luck to you, girls. _ o Among other hair-bleaching worries Governor Peterson has incurred the wrath of state bar officials. As GdVernor Val hasn't much hair that can be bleached and his good prairie land shoulders are ample for the lo&d we hope to see him survive and one day grace a seat among the nation's law makers. • * * A Spokane, Wash., surgeon went down among the jungles of Peru for a vacation. Visiting a primitive dispensary conducted by others from Yankeeland the surgeon demonstrated his skill by performing 11 pretty complicated operations on that many afflict ed natives. Up here that would have meant a sizable financial return. Doubtless having imbibed of the spirit at home that reaches out into the ends of the earth to toss around Yankeeland tax funds, the expert from Spokane donated his services to the Peru vian natives. We uusi this spirit ! of liberality was not exhausted below the equator. • • • Notwithstanding repeated de feats, the movement to change the calendar and thus disrupt the weekly cycle lives on. An idea, goojji or evil, persists until it i3 demonstrated workable or a fiz zle. The proposed calendar pro vides among other things for so called blank days, th^t is ignor ing the rise and set of sun. the shining path of the milky way and the evening and morning of an other turn of mother earth. Thinking to change times and laws. But the Hand that set the clock of time to ticking cannot be stayed by the arm of flesh. • • • Probably not many Nebraskans know that we have sucn a state function as civil defense. What ever it is bids goodbye to the gentleman who has had the $6, 500 job heading it up. He chucks the job for a similar one in an other state at a “substantial sal ary increase.” Salaries are more important than the defense of prairieland patriots who didn’t know they had such a guardian angel. • • • With our background of American inventive ability it is time some patriot with wheels in his head would think up a plan whereby automobiles and airplanes would rebound o and save the necks of the occu pants when something solid is o encountered. • • * Huldah Stahnke, the capital ci ty’s capable police woman, was busy Christmas eve, not rounding up offenders, but making calls with free gifts of turkeys at homes that might otherwise have had slim pickings at the dinner table. The turkeys were donated by a food market • • • Santa being the feminine for saint we are all wrong supposing that fabled personate was a be whispered nitwit who embodied the spirit that inspires the yule tide giving. That more properly belongs to and eminates from womanhood. * 0 • They do take chances, show their contempt for game laws. And then an aleii game warden escorts them into court where they are jarred into sensibility by being relieved of their hunt ing or trapping equipment and the last dollar. Frontier for printing 1 - S-R-S SAGESER — ROBERTSON — SHAFFER BROS. 9TH ANNUAL SALE OF REGISTERED JEREFORDS 98 HEAD — 72'BULLS — 26 FEMALES 72 BULLS — 26 FEMALES FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1952 Starting at 12:30 o'clock, at the ATKINSON LIVESTOCK MARKET ATKINSON, NEBRASKA OO Head by M. L. Sageser & Sons, Amelia, Nebr. 13 coming two-year-old bulls by Aladdin's Sensation, Pioneer Lad 30th, and Adventure; 1 coming three by Elect Brummel; 2 yearling bulls by Adventure and Aladdin's Sensation; 6 spring calves by Alad din's Sensation, Adventure and TW Flashy Helms man 8th. AC Head by C. V. Robertson <& Sons, Chambers, Nebr. 19 coming two-year-old bulls, one yearling bull, by Real Domino 39th, Chief Domino 20th, Advance * Oomino 2nd, and Nebraska Domino 8th, 25 Females—19 spring calves and G coming two-year i year-olds, by Real Domino 39th, Via Royal Domino 34th, Advance Domino 2nd, Paladin Mixer 23rd. and Chief Domino. Head by Shaffer Bros., Sargent, Nebr. 29 coming two-year-old bulls by Spartan Lamplighter, AD Lamplighter 6th, Bright Lamplighter, Laddy Domino, and Beau Garland; 1 spring bull calf by Beau Mischief 1st; 1 five-year-old female by Spar tan Lamplighter. A SET OF PRACTICAL, WELL-BRED CATTLE SELLING IN JUST GOOD BREEDING CONDITION For Sale Catalog write ATKINSON LIVESTOCK MARKET, Atkinson, Nebraska ERNIE WELLER, Auctioneer 3 O O o o °° O o o ° O 0 q, ■» FOR LOVELY SKIN use Lady Esther Four-Purpose cream and be four ways lovelier. Softens, cleanses, refines . . . and is a perfect powder base. 29c _ 55c C H A M B ERL AIN'S LOTION Soft, white hands are so easy to have if you use Chamberlain's. Avoid the rough, red look this winter. 29e -55e E= 3 E5 w i § i S3 §g =5 I CANNON TOWELS | A special Lbg'b "White Sale" event. They're soft and tl j absorbent ... as only Cannon towels can be. Flamingo, | I aqua, emerald, yellow, pink, citra. WASH CLOTH ... 12 x 12.3 for 25c | HAND TOWEL ... size 15 x 25.5 for $1 | BATH TOWEL ... size 20 x 40 .each 37c j .Liuiiilli r—— - store. ■ § ’»hit0.°r 1 — une i PACQUINS HAND CREAM It's a wonderful hand cream and ex tra rich in lanolin. Speed* away roughness. Regular and for dry skin. 25c - 49c RAG RUG Size 22 x 40 m o „ O •• P ° ... „ „ _ o o m NYLONS*] H7 ore ,0~'r nylon. m t «'ound,„a p,ice| Sheer - I auSo. 15 denier stocicino ( W1" guarantee you „ fl ™ool. In colo„ c/ Q | Ni,e T™P«. and Swee, I Buy .evera, I anrJ _ Pair now 3 ' SaV°- S“^'r tartar. | 59c 2 Pair $l]Q I I i Prepare for comfort every 7Qc Pepsodent day. Keep an ample .up- *7 q ^ ^ (q ply of Mode., on hand or powder and enjoy new comfort. SI 49 Mode., i. »u per-absorbent, I 07C — ^7C down-soft. ■ -~~ N ■■ ■■■■ —»