REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS WD—Mary Ann Schmit, et al to Esadore Earl Cleveland Jr & wf $1- 60 ft x 170 ft in SW corner Blk 8- McCafferty’s Annex- O’ Neill WD — Cecelia Friel, et al to Harry R Smith 12-27-54 $635- Lot 9- Blk 28- O’N WD — F G Albright to Ervin Mosel 2-15-55 $16,000- SWy4 30 NVfeNWtt 31-28-9 WD—Harriet Lindt to Donald W Krotter et al 3-10-42 $500 SWy4 30-30-16 WD—F J Gilg & Harry E Res sel to Leo A Brill & wf 2-11-55 $800- Lot 26- Gilg & Ressel’s Subdivision- O’Neill WD—Gilg & Ressel to Thomas L Liddy & wf 2-11-55 $800- Lot 24- Gilg & Ressel’s Subdivision O’Neill SHERIFF’S DEED—Leo S Tom jack to Chrystal Enbody 2-7-55 $30.89- Lots 19 & 20 Blk 2- Col lins Add- Atkinson SD—Leo S Tom jack- Sheriff +o Ernest Howard 2-7-55 $20- Lots 3 & 4 Blk 1- Page WD — Dwight L Raymer to March E Warner & wf 8-5-53 $3500- Lots 2 & 3 Blk 33- Wix son’s Add- Atkinson - -——“ ! FOR WOMEN P BETTER— '• Flannel Gowns and Pajamas, now _ 1.88 Fur Trim Overshoes, now-3.50 White Plastic Jackets, quilted lined __ 5.00 Millinery, now _ $1> $2 Leather Billfolds_$1 plus tax Nylon Duster Robes, now - - 5.00 Better Wash Frocks, reduced to_ 2.00 Girls’ Overshoes reduced, now __ .... 2.50 Jr. Girls’ Plastic jackets, now _ 4.00 FOR MEN Reversible Spring Jackets, 2-tone 6.88 BLUE— Chambray Work Shirts, I 4J/2-1 7 _- 1.00 Grey Matched Shirt, now-2.00 Grey Matched Pants, now_2.50 MEN’S— Broadcloth Pajamas, A, B, C, D _2.00 Men’s Lined Dress Gloves, now 2.00, 3.00 Men’s Work Anklets_ 5 pair 1.00 Reversible Satin School Jackets, now 6.00 Men’s White Handkerchiefs __ 12 for 1.00 MEN’S— White Canvas Work Gloves_5 pair 1.00 Men’s Brown Jersey Gloves __3 pair 1.00 I FOR BOYS I Reversible Spring Jackets, size to 8_3.88 10 to 18_4.88 Blue Jeans, size 6-8- 0-12_1.00 Boys’ Mittens, cotton-25c All others now-65c Infant’s Snow Suit, now ____ _ _3.00 Infants’ Sport Shirts, size 1 to 4- 1.00 Infants’ Smartalls, size 1 to 4_ 1.00 INFANT’S— Striped Polo Shirts, size 1 to 4 ____ 2 for 1.00 FOR THE HOME Foam Rubber Iron-Board Pad and 2 Covers, 3-piece set for_2.00 Border Print Pillowcases_2 for 1.00 18x30 Rug, nonskid back __ 1.00 All Wool Blankets, clean-up, now $7, $9 Piece Goods Assortment, yard _ 38c 6 Hand Towels, boxed, now _ 1 00 TOYS—CLEAN-UP -Zi PRICE BETTER D0LISU Size-Now S4 V "Our telephony service is the cheapest service we buy" I look at it this way: Our telephone makes life a lot happier for me and my family. There are times when it’s been a real life saver, too—like the day Jimmy fell down the basement stairs. * I can call anyone in town, and call as often as I want—24 * hours a day, every day of the year. All I do is reach out and lift the receiver—and equipment worth thousands, maybe millions of dollars is ready to go to worK ior me. 1 aon t nave to ouy any equipment myself, nor do • I pay extra for repairs. v Sure, we pay a little more for our telephone than we used to t —though the price has gone up a lot less than most other things. * But Bob, my husband, figured out that even today our tele phone actually costs us less than one cent an hour. Imagine_ for all that service! Y-,*" -IfeKv U That’s why we think our telephone service is the cheapest service we buy "\ Northwestern Bell Telephone Company The Frontier Woman ... Better Order Nursery Stock Now By BLANCHE SPANN PEASE, Homemakin? Editor T~v_»X 1__ 1_x •_»x il_x f _ i ii « . Don’t look now, but isn’t that March peering around the corner? When March is the order of the day, it can’t be too long until spring—at least on the calendar. If you haven’t ordered any nursery items, plants, bulbs or such that you want to put out in the spring, make haste . . . make haste! Time’s a wastin’ and you want plenty of time to browse before your back starts to ache with the real work. Armchair gardening is the easiest and most expansive (and sometimes the most expensive of all). It will be time, any time now, to be ordering garden seeds, too, and what fun it is to plan a garden on paper. Bob is the gardener at cur house and we always sit down and plan just what he wants to raise this year. He knows just how much space he has and de cides how he wants to allot it and what he wants to plant and if he’s going to order anything new. Of course, there always is something new of one kind or another that he wants. He has been talking about a windbreak of bush cherries on the south side of the garden so I ex pect I’ll have to be ordering those. It should have been done before this. We have a few of them else where and we think the shrub it self is rather pretty and orna mental and it grew very nicely for us before. We are not particu larly enthused about the fruit as we have cherries (tame ones) in Ihe orchard. — tfw — Gothenburg ‘Constant Reader’ Wins Subscription— Dear Blanche: It has been quite some time since I have written to your col umn, although I fully intended to write. If you have the new type over shoes—similar to rubber gloves — and they are difficult to get into, just sprinkle a little talcum pow der inside. They will slip on as “slick as a dollar.” If lined over shoes are difficult to get into, slip a piece of waxed paper under the heel of your shoe. They, too, will slip on much easier. The waxed paper can be left in, until you remove the overshoes. We have had an exceptionally lot of cold weather and some snow this winter. I should like to include a de licious, yet inexpensive, dish. TUNA NOODLES Cook and drain about a pack age (8-ounces) of flat noodles. Then add a can of tuna fish and a can of cream of mushroom soup. Season to taste (some like it high ly seasoned). If you desire, sprin kle crushed potato chips over the top and bake in a moderate oven for about one hour. At school we have a pineapple plant which is 4-years-old. Our peanut plants are just coming up. We shall again carry out our usual plan for mother’s day, that of giving each mother a pot of tomato plants The youngsters are ever so proud to take the plants and a card they make home to their mother. ‘A CONSTANT READER’ — tfw — Let’s Eat More Beef— BEEF BIRDS Two pounds beef round steak, i/2 cup chopped celery and leaves, one onion (chopped), four table spoons fat, two cups soft bread crumbs, salt and pepper to taste,< herb seasoning (if desired). Have the round steak sliced about %-inch thick. Cut into strips two or three inches wide and about four inches long. Pound the pieces to flatten them and to help make the meat tender. For the stuffing, cook the celery and onion in two tablespoons of fat for a few minutes. Add the Jjread crumbs and seasonings and mix thoroughly. Put stuffing on each strip of meat, roll, and skewer or tie in place. In the remaining two tablespoons of fat, brown the birds slowly on all sides, then cov er and cook until tender in a mod erate oven of 350 F. Allow about 1% hours. Or, finish the cooking on top of the stove. Serve the pan drippings with the meat. CURED PORK WITH SWEET POTATOES One and % pounds sliced ham or shoulder, three cups raw sliced sweet potatoes, two tablespoons sugar, one cup hot water, one ta blespin drippings or other fat. Cut the ham or shoulder into pieces for serving. If the meat is very salty, parboil it in water and drain. Brown the meat lightly on both sides and arrange the pieces to cover the bottom of a baking dish. Spread the sliced sweet po tatoes over the meat, sprinkle with sugar. Add the hot water to the drippings in the frying pan and pour over the sweet potatoes and meat. Cover the dish and bake slowly until the meat and sweet potatoes are tender, basting the sweet potatoes occasionally with the gravy. Toward the last, remove the lid and let the top brown well. F?eld Day, Hereford Show Are Scheduled BUTTE—A field day and Here ford show will be held Monday and Tuesday, February 28 and March 1, at the Butte Livestock Market under the sponsorship of the Butte Community club and the Niobrara Valley Hereford associ tion. , K. C. Fouts, staff member at the University of Nebraska college of agriculture, will give two talks Monday. At 10 a.m., he will give a hoof-trimming demonstration and at 1:30 p.m., he will discuss the future of beef production. A judging contest will be held Monday morning beginning at 10:45 o’clock with adult, senior and junior divisons. Two classes of bulls, one class of females and one class of steers will be judged. W. Everett Brown of Valentine will judge the Hereford how on Tuesday which is to begin at 10 a.m. At 1 p.m., a Hereford sale with Howard Schnell of Dickinson, N.D., as auctioneer, will be held. Additional Schools Turn in Polio Funds The names of the following schools and their contributions to the march of dimes fund were not sent in for publication with the original list: District 80, Mrs. Dor othy Sanders, teacher, $3.78; dis trict 136, Dewey Halligan, teach er, $3. Coming events for the rural schools include: March 16: Holt County Rural Teachers’ association, 8 p.m. March 28-April 1: Group spell ing contests. April 16: County spelling con test, 1 p.m. April 20: Rural school chorus practice, 1:30 p.m. April 27-29: Eighth grade ex aminations. May 11: Eighth grade promotion exercises, 2 p.m. Atkinson Junior CDA Observes Week— ATKINSON — The Atkinson court of the Junior Catholic Daughters of America is observing junior week February 20 to 26. Juniors and their counselors will offer mass and receive holy communion junior day, February 22. It is also planned to present a layette to the first baby born in Atkinson Memorial hospital junior day. If no baby is born on that day the layette will be offered to the one born closest to that day of junior week. Mrs. John Piray of Ft. Dodge, la., its visiting at the home of her -son-in-law, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Grady. The Sewing club met Wednes day afternoon, February 16, at the home of Mrs. L. A. Becker. Special DOUBLE Gold Arrow Stamps given on Youngstown Cabinet Sinks now in stock; also— NATURAL GAS Hot Water Heaters Good until 15th of March HUNT’S Plumbing & Heating O’Neill — Phone 399 >--—— Justice Court Franklin Lineberry, driver for Buckingham, overweight, $50 and costs, January 17, Donald F. Richardson. Lloyd R. Christensen, over weight, $75 and costs, January 15, Jack W. H. Crouch. Walter E. Hein, driver for Ar nold Rife, overweight, pending, January 14, Donald F. Richardson. Dudley D. Strasburger, speed ing, night time, pending, January C, R. L. Gude. Add Reese, speeding, night time, pending, January 6, R. L. Gude. Wherry Taylor Hutchenson, driver for Auto Transports, Inc., excessive height, $10 and costs, January 13, Kenneth W. Kirk. Joe Judge, allowing minor to operate, $10 and costs, January 8, R. R. Shorney. Virgil W. Winningham, driver for Auto Transports, Inc., exces sive height, $10 and costs, Janu ary 13, Jack W. H. Crouch. John E. Stewart, driver for Auto Trans., Inc., excessive height, $10 and costs, January 12, Jack W. H. Crouch. Charles L. Clevenger, speeding, night time, $10 and costs, Decern her 30, C. Cochran. Willis W. Rockey, speeding, night time, $10 and costs, January 30, C. Cochran. Forrest E. Maple, speeding, night time, $10 and costs, Decem ber 30, C. Cochran. Hugo K. Winter, speeding night time, January 1, $10 and costs, R. L. Gude. Lawrence F. Pribil, speeding, night time, $15 and costs, January 1, R. L. Gude. Roger L. Babutzke, faulty brakes, $1 and costs, December 31, R. L. Gude. Atkinson Planning Banquet for 4-H Leaders— ATKINSON — The Atkinson Chamber of Commerce has begun plans for the annual banquet v/hich honors Holt county’s 4-H club leaders. Dr. James E. Ramsay, Cham ber of Commerce president, has appointed the following commit tee to complete arrangements for the banquet: Harvey Grof, chair man; Charles E. Chace, B. H. Wil son and Warren Kelly. The date has not been announc ed. Atkinson Benefit Party Is Postponed— ATKINSON—The Utile Dulci club’s library benefit card party, which was scheduled for Friday night, was postponed because of bad weather. No new date has been set for the party, but ticket holders will be able to use their tickets at a later date. Phone us your news! New School Building Studied at Atkinson ATKINSON — The Atkins)n board of education has begun con sideration of plans for a new ele mentary school building. Howard J. Strong and Associ ates, a Norfolk architectural firm, is working with Supt. Harold Hutcheson of the Atkinson schools., and advisors from the state department of education and the University of Nebraska on preliminary plans which should be ready for consideration by the lo cal board of education some time this week. O’NEILL LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Dale Curran en tertained at a card party at their home Sunday evening. Miiss Patricia DeBolt, student at Wayne State college, visited from Saturday until Monday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. D. DeBolt. Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Bason re cently of O’Neill are moving to Omaha where Dr. Eason will re sume practice as an associate of Dr. Paul Muffly at 50th and Un derwood st. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Beckwith of Columbus visited from Tuesday, February 15, until last Thursday with friends and relatives in O’Neil. & t r » r I AS I HAVE DECIDED to quit ranching, I will sell at public auction the following de scribed personal property, on the premises, located 12 miles north of O’Neill on U.S. Highway 281 and 6 miles east; OR 14 miles southwest of Redbird; OR 4 miles south of Midway St<5re and 6 miles east; on the old Wrede Ranch, on — W ednesday, March 2 I Starting at 12 O’Clock Noon - Lunch Will Be Served 110 Head of Cattle 6—Milk COWS, dairy breeding 26—Short Yearling STEERS, Hereford 50—Hereford Stock COWS, 5-yrs.-oId 2—Bucket CALVES 24~Short Yearling HEIFERS 2—Reg. Hereford BULLS, 3-yrs.-old 3-HORSES, all well broke. Oklahoma Quarter Horses. Extra Good Cow Ponies 14—FEEDER PIGS, weight 100 pounds j Ranch & Farm Machinery j 195b Roto Baler, Allis Chalmers, new ’49 Oliver 3-Plow Crawler Tractor Massey-Harris Tractor, ’49 M-H Power Mower 2—Hay Rakes, rubber running gears Kelly Ryan Mounted Side Delivery Rake New Hereford Quarter Horse Spread Cushion Seat Saddle, double rig 100-Gal. Fuel Barrel Grinder, 10-in. John Deere hammermill Rubber Tire Wagon, good ’48 Jeep, good condition 2— Wheel Trailer, rubber tires ’52 Ford Car, 4-door, radio, heater, seat covers Pr. Tractor Chains, 10x38 3— Feed Bunks Belt — Bridle 4— 10-Gal. Fuel Cans 2—50-Gal. Fuel Barrels 2—5-Gal. Cream Cans No. 518 DeLaval Cream Separator with electric motor, new Electric Battery Charger Electric Sickle Grinder Miscellaneous Tools 200-Bu. Ear Corn 100-Bu. Cherokee Oats, good 40 Bales Alfalfa, 4th cutting 40 Tons Prairie Hay, stacked I Household Goods M / rx • • — . _ I O—Laming Chairs & 1 able 4—Chairs & Table, dinette Davenport & Chair Occasional Chair Tilt-Back Rocker Serving Table 2—Waterfall Bedroom Suites, complete Speed Queen Washing Machine 55 1H Refrigerator, 8J/2-CU. ft. space Hardwick Skelgas Stove 2—Oak Chairs Pair of Pillows Radio Table Magazine Rack Floor Lamp 2—Radios — End Table 2—Kitchen Stoois Foot Stool Linoleum, 12x15, gray leaf pattern Smoke Stand Small Chest Medicine Cabinet Baby Stroller, like new Pots, Pans, Dishes, Jars iliKMS: Cash. No property to be removed until settled for. LeRoy D. J ihnsozi Owner I COL. ED THORIN, O’Neill, Auctioneer O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK, Clerk 'yf :~!1~r.wrwur i" ..iHiirit -t.-.,. . • in-iinnmnn-.