The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 03, 1952, Page 7, Image 7

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    LEGAL NOTICES I
(First pub. March 20, 1952)
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO: Ralph E. Rowell; Lelia E.
Powell; Lelia E. Turner, The
heirs, devisees, legatees, personal
representatives and all other
persons interested in the estate of
Madison C. Powell, deceased,
real names unknown; The heirs,
devisees, legatees, personal rep
resentatives and all other per
sons interested in the estate of
Edith B. Powell, deceased, real
names unknown; The heirs, de
visees, legatees, personal repre
sentatives and all other persons
interested in the estate of Jose
phine M. Powell, deceased, real
names unknown; Eunice M.
Cowles, Administratrix of the
estate of Edgar P. Cowles, de
ceased; Mary G. Brenneman;
George Brenneman; Miranda
Brenneman; Lavina Gough; Hen
rietta Hernly; Raymond Leon
ard; Herman Leonard; D. W.
Brenneman; Daniel W. Brenne
man; William P. Shade, Executor
oi the Last Will and Testament
of Eli Brenneman, ceceased; The
heirs, devisees, legatees, person
al representatives and all other
persons interested in the estate
of Eli Brenneman, deceased, real
names unknown; Ava Barclay;
Beatrice Barclay; Barbara Bar
clay; Blanche Flannigan, former
ly Blanche Barclay; C. W.
Payne; Agnes Sargisson; Agnes
Becker; Pearl Gertrude Terry;
Lillian Mae Reilly; Paul William
Sargisson; Edith Eleanor Reilly;
Edna Hannah Clary; Harvey
Payne Sargisson; Walter N. Sar
gisson; Walton Charles Sargis
son; George Thomas Sargisson;
J. J. Eimers and A. T. Bennett,
Administrators of the estate oi
Payne Sargisson, deceased; The
heirs, devisees, legatees, person
al representatives and all other
persons interested in the estate
of Payne Sargisson, deceased,
real names unknown; All per
sons having or claiming any in
terest in the Southeast Quarter
of the Northwest Quarter and
East Half of the Southwest Quar
ter of Section Four; Southeast
Quarter of the Northeast Quar
ter, North Half of the Southeast
Quarter and Southwest Quar
ter of the Southeast Quarter
of Section Eight; Northeast
Quarter of the Northwest Quar
ter, South Half of the Northwest
Quarter, North Half of the
Northeast Quarter, Southeast
Quarter of the Northeast Quarter
and South Half of the Southeast
Quarter of Section Nine; South
west Quarter of the Southwest
Quarter of Section Ten; North
west Quarter, North Half of the
Northeast Quarter, Southeast
Quarter of the Northeast Quar
ter and Southwest Quarter of
the Southwest Quarter of Section
Eleven; North Half of Section
Twelve; Northwest Quarter of
Section Fourteen; West Half of
the Northwest Quarter and
Southeast Quarter of the North
west Quarter of Section Fifteen;
Southeast Quarter of Section
Twenty-one; Northeast Quarter
of the Southwest Quarter, North
Half of the Southeast Quarter
and Southeast Quarter of the
Southeast Quarter of Section
Twenty-three; North Half of the
Northeast Quarter of Section
Twenty-eight, Township Thirty
two North, Range Fifteen, West
of the 6th P. M. in Holt County,
Nebraska, real names unknown,
Defendants.
You and each of you are here
by notified that on the 18th day
of March, 1952, William J. Froe
lich, Irma F. Froelich, William
J. Sinek and Margaret P. Sinek,
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 i
said William J. Froelicn, irma F.
rroelicn, William J. Sinek and
Margaret P. buiek, as tenants m
common, to the real estate here- |
inaoove specuicaiiy oescribed, as
against you and each of you, and
to secure a Decree of Court that
you have no interest in, right or
title to, or lien upon said real es
tate, or any part thereof; and for
general equitable relief.
You are required to answer
said petition on or before the
2tttn day of April, 1952.
Dated this 15th day of March,
1952.
William J. Froelich, Irma
F. Froelich, William J.
Sinek, Margaret P. Sinek,
Plaintufs,
By: Julius D. Cronin
Their Attorney
46-49c
(First pub. March 20, 1952.)
William W. Griffin, Att’y
NOTICE OF HEARING OF
PETITION FOR FINAL
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNT
Estate No. 3758
COUNTY COURT OF HOLT
COUNTY, NEBRASKA.
ESTATE OF JOHN W. FINCH,
DECEASED.
THE STATE OF NEBRASKA,
TO ALL CONCERNED:
Notice is hereby given that a
petition has been filed for final
settlement herein, determination
of heirship, inheritance taxes,
fees and commissions, distribu
tion of estate and approval of fi
nal account and discharge, which
will be for hearing in this court
on April 9th, 1952, at 10 o’clock,
A.M.
LOUIS W. REIMER
County Judge.
(COUNTY COURT SEAL) 46-48
(First pub. March 27, 1952)
Julius D. Cronin, Attorney
NOTICE FOR PETITION FOR
ADMINISTRATION
Estate No. 3813
In the County Court of Holt
County, Nebraska, March 25th,
1952. In the Matter of the Estate
of Chester Calkins, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given to all
persons interested in said estate
that a petition has been filed in
said Court for the appointment
of Harold L. Calkins as Admin
istrator of said estate, and will
be heard April 17th, 1952, at 10
o’clock A.M., at the County Court
Room in O’Neill, Nebraska.
LOUIS W. REIMER,
County Judge.
(COUNTY COURT SEAL) 47-49c
(First pub. April 3, 1952)
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids will be received at
the office of the Department of
Roads and Irrigation in the State
Capitol at Lincoln, Nebraska, on
April 24, 1952, until 10:00 o’clock
A. M., and at that time publicly
opened and read for SAND GRA
VEL FOR SURFACING and inci
dental work on the O’NEILL
BARTLETT Patrol No. 81039
State Road.
The approximate quantity is:
2,900 Cu.Yds. Sand Gravel
Surface Course Material
The attention of bidders is di
rected to the Special Provisions
covering subletting or assigning
the contract.
Compliance by the contractor
with the standards as to hours of
labor prescribed by the ‘‘Fair La
bor Standards Act of 1938,” ap
pi'oved June 25, 1938 (Public No.
(18, 75th Congress), will be re
quired in the performance of the
work under this contract.
The minimum wage paid to all
skilled labor employed on this
contract shall be one dollar and
five cents ($1.05) per hour, except
that a minimum wage of one dol
lar and twenty-five cents ($1.25)
per hour shall be paid to:
Crane^ Operators
Dragline Operators
Power Shovel Operators
The minimum wage paid to all
intermediate labor employed on
this contract shall be ninety-five
(95) cents per hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
unskilled labor employed on this
contract shall be seventy-five
(75) cents per hour.
flans and specifications for tho
work may be seen and informa
tion secured at the office of the
County Clerk at O’Neill, Nebras
ka, at the office of the County
Clerk at Bartlett, Nebraska, at
the office of the Division Engin
eer of the Department of Roads
and Irrigation at Ainsworth, Ne
braska, or at the office of the De
partment of Roads and Irrigation
at Lincoln, Nebraska.
The successful bidder will be
required to "furnish bond in an
amount equal to 100 percent of
his contract.
As evidence of good faith in
•submitting a proposal for this
work, the bidder must file, with
his proposal, a certified check
made payable to the Department
of Roads and Irrigation and in an
amount not less than three hun
dred fifty (350) dollars.
The right is reserved to waive
all technicalities and reject any
or all bids.
Department of Roads and Irri
gation.
H. L. AITKEN, State Engineer,
J. M. CROOK, Division Engin
Gcr
RUTH HOFFMAN, Cotmty
Clerk. Holt County,
H- F. THOMAS, County Clerk,
Wheeler County. 48-50
(First pub. April 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 on the 30th day of April,
1952, at the time hereinafter des
ignated, at the office of the
County Treasurer of Holt Coun
ty, in O’Neill, Nebraska, the fol
lowing educational lands within
said county:
At 9:30 oclock A. M.:
Description Sec- Twp. Rge.
SW ^4-OrA4rX WV4 16 31 11
ixy2oEV4-rN n-16 31 15
rrac. w’w-36 31 16
tun_36 28 15
w n . rri 31 10
£j^uNE^4-iNr.V4kN W V4 16 32 13
At i:so o crock P. M.:
rjescripuon Sec- Twp. Rge.
r\ W >4-r\ W^4*WV4 16 29 11
NVi_16 31) 14
w*j-NkNEy4-swy4SEy4 —
_38 26 12
A\Wy4NEV4-NWy4 .36 26 9
Ail_16 26 14
Said sale may be adjourned
from day to day until all lands
have been offered. No sale will
final until approved by the Board
of Educational Lands and Funds,
and the Board reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
BOARD OF EDUCATIONAL
LANDS AND FUNDS
Henry H. Bartling, Secretary.
48-50c
‘Native Grass Pays/
Says Bredemeier
By L. f" BREDEMEIER
Range Conservationist
An annual increased produc
tion of about 125,000 pounds of
beef is the effect of only one of
the conservation practices which
cooperators of the Holt Soil
Conservation District have estab
lished since the District started
in 1944.
This potential production is
made possible by the seeding of
native grasses. Of the 4,887 acres
of permanent seedings made in
the district, 3,013 consisted of na
tive grasses such as the blue
terns, switchgrass, Indian grass,
sand lovegrass, the gramas, etc.
These are the grasses that nature
gave us after the thousands of
years she used to evolve our soil
and vegetation. They have with
stood the uses, abuses, and tests
of time.
Most of these 3,000 acres of
seedings were made on land that
should never have been in culti
vation and when the grass is es
tablished Swill never in the im
agination of the present genera
tion be cultivated again. The
soils are either shallow, gravel,
sand or seriously blown and erod
ed. These 3,000 acres were either,
still in cultivation or had been ta
ken out and left idle from 1 to
15 years. The vegetation consist
ed of weeds, weedy grasses and
pioneer grasses as the rosette pa
nic grasses and sand dropseed.
The returns from such areas
ranged from nil to an estimated
20 pounds of beef per acre.
Observations and studies indi
cate that the native ranges in
good to excellent condition are
producing from 50 to 70 pounds
of beef per acre. Most of the 3,
000 seeded acres are capable of
producing such gains.
Consequently, if we allow for
the 20 pounds produced by "go
back" grasses before seeding,
we have an increase of 30 fo 50
pounds per acre as a result of
the seedings. Such gains on
3.000 acres mean 90.000 to 150,
000 pounds more beef. An av
erage of 125,000 pounds at 20
cents gives a return of $25,000
for one year from 3,000 acres.
It is no wonder that coopera
tors with the Holt Soil Conserva
tion District are seeding an ever
increasing acreage of native
grasses. There have been a num
ber of elements that contributed
to the acceptance of this practice,
besides the progressiveness of the
farmers and ranchers. The PMA
payments have helped as has the
educational program carried on
by the county agents. The orig
inal stimulus and driving force
behind the movement has largely
come from the Soil Conservation
Service personnel assigned to the
district who brought with them
the technical knowledge and ex
perience of the Soil Conservation
Service in working with the na
tive grasses for about 15 years.
The supervisors of the Holt Soil
Conservation District have help
ed greatly by making the seed of
these grasses available locally,
and by making available machin
ery for sowing it. This is one of
the big reasons why the Holt dis
trict has seeded more acres of na
tive grasses than any of the sur
rounding districts.
At top of this page is a record
of progress in the Holt district.
Many cooperators have inter
esting stories of success with the
native grass seedings. There are
also some experiences less en
couraging. However, seldom has
there been a complete failure
with such grasses. In some cases
it takes longer for the grass to
become established than seems
necessary. As a result of obser
vations and studies of seedings in
Holt county and throughout the
state, a few objectives should be
kept in mind.
First, elimination or reduce
drastically the competition of ex
isting vegetation such as weeds
ana weeay grasses. Second, pre
venHoiowing by maintaining a
cover and by the proper type ot
tillage. Third, pack and roll af
ter tne seeding operations. There
are a number of ways of accomp
lishing these objectives, the de
tails of which will vary to fit the
individual situation. Best results
have been obtained when the
seeding is made in a high stubble
of spring small grain, millet, cane
or sudan. Duckfooting of existing
“go-back” vegetation during a
dry period so as to get a good kill
will also work satisfactorily. The
disc has been used on existing
vegetation with fair results. The
disc tends to cut in excessively
on the sandier spots where the
vegetation is thinnest and tends
to leave the spots a little too
bare. At the same time it tends
to ride over the soddy and heavy
trashy spots where the need for
tillate is the greatest. The pack
ing is done with a regular roller
or packer.
Experience with legumes, es
pecially hairy vetch, in native
grass seedings in recent years
with more rainfall, point to the
possibility of using legumes to
speed up the establishment of
such seedings.
The death rate method and
date of seeding may vary in each
case depending on the kind of
soil, the kind of grasses being
sown, the quality and age of the
seed and the kind of equipment
to be used. It is the job of the
Soil Conservation Service techni
cian to diagnose each case and
make the recommendation on the
basis of these and related factors.
At the same time he helps work
out the best way to accomplish
the three objectives:
(1.) Eliminate competition.
(2.) Prevent blowing.
(3.) Pack.
Native grasses which have beer
seeded can be managed along
with the native ranges. Thgii
season of growth and use are the
same. The preferences by live
stock also correspond. Frequent
ly old farmed patches and areas
to be seeded will be fenced in thr
same pasture with native rangr
because of size, location, accessi
bility to water and the herd man
agement of the ranch. If thesi
areas were seeded to introducer
grasses we have a difficult man
agement problem. The season o
growth and use is earlier for th
introduced grasses than for th
native. Cattle cannot be turner
into a pasture having both kind:
of grasses without hurting eacl
of them at one time or another
A pure seeding of any one of the
native grasses, such as sand love
grass for grazing purposes, alsc
j requires special managemenl
from that of a mixture of native
grasses. When a single species of
native grass is seeded primarily
for grazing and not for seed pro
duction, it should be a large
enough area so that it can be
fenced in a separate pasture and
managed as one.
The introduced grasses as in
termediate, crested and tall
whaaigrass and bromegrass
have a place in range seedings
in Holt county. Their primary
advantage lies in the fact that
with them we can lengthen the
grazing season.
These grasses grow early in
the year when nitrification pro
cos's in the soil is slow. They
also have a higher nitrogen and
moisture requirement than the
native grasses. Practically all
me soils in Holt county are na
turally low in nitrogen with the
sandiest being the lowest. Con
sequently, tne introduced grass
seeuings are most satisfactory on
tne medium and heavier textured
soils. Areas where there is an
considerable advantage. An old
accumulation of moisture by ov
erflow or sub-irrigation has a
alfalfa field or a previous crop of
sweet clover are especially pre
ferred. It is also much preferred
to maintain these or other le
gumes in the mixture with these
grasses so as to hold up their pro
ductivity. Commercial fertilizer,
especially, nitrogen will need to
be added where legumes are ab
sent from the stand. Eventually
it will probably be necessary to
plow up fields seeded to these
grasses and start over.
Those who have old farmed ar
eas where the top producing
grasses are lacking cannot afford
not to seed them. To plan their
seeding program they should de
cide what use will be made of the
grass. How it will fit into their
grazing management program
and will they be able to manage
and utilize it properly? Will* it
give the maximum net return?
Will the grass under considera
tion give the most production pv
, er a period of years on the soil
! and moisture under considera
| tion.
Thomas Anderson went to Nor
folk on Sunday where he attend
ed an insurance company meet
, ing. He returned home the same
i day.
PROGRESS OF HOLT COUNTY CONSERVATION
Year All Permanent Native Grass Native Seed
Seedings Seedings Sold by Dist.
1944 131
1945 429 207 1,519
1946 705 495 1,608
1947 217 150 4,701
1948 1,258 664 3,359
1949 294 205 1,186
1950 999 695 5,807
1951 854 597 8,070
TOTAL - 4,887 3,013 26,250
Twomatte
\tAJ4mversaiy-J9f2
Mutual Insurance is 200
years young March 25, 1952—
eager to serve tout needs in
the future as it has in the past.
20,000,000 Americans arc
enjoying the advantages of
Mutual Insurance—the advan
tages of safety engineering, of
cooperation in minimizing risk
and the natural earned savings
that result.
If the word “MUTUAL” does
not appear on your insurance
policies, you owe it to yourself
to investigate the many advan
tages of “MUTUAL” insur
ance.
BE HAPPY
“GO MUTUAL”
CAPITAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
{MUTUAL) Lincoln
FARMERS MUTUAL INSURANCE
COMPANY OF NEBRASKA— Lincoln
FARMERS UNION COOPERATIVE
INSURANCE COMPANY — Omaha
NEBRASKA HARDWARE MUTUAL
INSURANCE COMPANY — Lincoln
PROTECTIVE FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY — Saward
STANDARD RELIANCE INSURANCE
COMPANY — Lincoln
STATE FARMERS INSURANCE
COMPANY — Omaha
UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Lincoln
CATTLE
SALE
I
Every Tuesday
, Starting at 12:30 P.M.
“Your consignments
solicited"
1 'ell Them Where They Have
The Buyers
I
Atkinson Livestock
Market
Atkinson, Nebraska
, Phone 5141
| '
MONEY TO LOAN |
ON
AUTOMOBILES
TRUCKS
TRACTORS
EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
Central Finance
Corp.
C. E. Jones, Manager
O'Neill : Nebraska J
Chances are you don’t even know what it is. Yet it’s so prevalent
... and serious... that it is a major topic in national magazines.
#
A HIDDEN MENACE TO HEALTH IS MALNUTRITION.
The alarming fact is that many of us who consider
ourselves well-fed are its unsuspecting victims I
m w w w k i ■ ■ k
LWipMiiiNWVin
get up late and bolt your breakfast to
get to work on time?
• START TO SAG around four p. m.
...feel so drowsy, you can hardly
keep your eyes open?
• GET SCREAMING nerves when the
children are rowdy? Does your house- \
work “get you down”?
• BEG OFF when your wife suggests
a movie? So tired after your da/s
work you fall asleep over the paper? |
If vitamin and iron |
deficiency caused I
pain (instead of I
negative symptoms |
like fatigue, ■
nervousness and
irritability) people
wouldn't have to ho
warned to do some
thing abeut it I
The need for adequate daily vitamin &
iron intake couldn't be made plainer!
i
’ | ■ I ■flK] IlmII . I 1 fl Ji 4k|iliTl
72 CAPSULES 4) WltlWBifPlffii
Sealed in air-tight, dust-proof, easy to ^ BUj^uLyUlU|fiyPpH|
E carry, daily dose wrappers. ■Si>nWW»T^^TXnTypB
(144 s
__
GILLIGAN Rexall Store - O'Neill
- -1 /
__——
I
Equipment, accessories and trim
illustrated are subject to change
without notice. White sidewall tires
at extra cost when available.
^—
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N
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f. Powerful High-Compression Engine
2. New Dual-Range Hydra-Matic Drive*
3. New High-Performance Economy Axle
Yes—drive it yourself—
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amazing—and the most
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At the wheel of a new Pontiac you have
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) ' ;
WM. KROTTER CO.
PHONE 531 O’NEILL
A i • . * A