The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 21, 1955, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FOR SALE °
FOR SALE: Wisconsin Holstein
milk cows. Heifers and cows,
o all springers.—Virgil David. 4
miles west of Chambers.
i' n_c 51-52c60
FOR SALE: Brome grass seed.—
See Hugo Holz or Dr. L. A
Gf> Carter, O’Neill. 47tf
° c FOR SALE: Six-room house to be
moved. Located 17 mi. north of
O’Neill on highway 281.—O. J.
Drueke, O’Neill. 50tf
'o«>- --
FOR SALE: Our calf scours cap
o sules are very effective. One
’dose does the job. —Dr. H. L.
Bennett, O’NeilL 49-52c
* o ° BEST BUYS!
o
1953 Nash Statesman, 2-door.
Heater and over-drive. Very
clean. A bargain. o
1949 Rlymouth, 2 - door, radio,
heater. Clean. Bargain.
1951 Ford 2-door. Very clean. Bar
gain. O o
1951 Plymouth: 4 - door, radio,
heater,o very clean. New paint
job. A bargain .o. $700
Camping trailer, fully equipped,
o A bargain.
,1951 Plymouth, 2-door. Clean.
1948 Ford tudor. Exceptionally
clean. °
COME IN AND SEE USf
We like to trade!!
Shierk Motor Co.
o °o °
Phone 430
212 South 4th — O’Neill
o FOR .SALE: 29’ Landola house
trailer, modern and in excellent
condition. — Don Rzeszotarski,
Atkinson. 50-51p60
- -y c ------
0 FOR SALE;: Purebred Hampshire
> r boars and open gilts. Reason
ably priced.—Henry Stelling &
Son, Orchard. 0
o n ° 47-49-5,ltf
FOR SALE: Nemaha0seed oats.—
<2, - Clarence Gokie, O’Neill. 45tf
°o FOR SALE: 1942 Aeronca TAC
plane. 65 h.p. Continental in
very good condition. A dandy
plane for a student or new pri
vate who wants to put in a lot
of economical time.—Bill Bow
c ker, O’Neill, phone 468-W. 51c
o Agricultural Lime
IF YOU are in need of "agricultur
al lime, we are now shipping it
in and can quote you delivered
prices anywhere in the county.
Telephone 5111.
o J. F. BRADY COMPANY
Atkinson, Nebraska 45tf
Q FOR SALE: Everbearing straw
berries plants and rhubarb
roots.—Mrs. Art Doty, Spencer.
o j, o o 51c
0 USED CARS
3 C '
1953 Pontiac 2-dr. 8 Dlx.
c 1952 Pontiac 4-dr. 8 Dlx.
1951 Dodge 4rdr. Coronet.
1950 Pontiac 8 2-dr. Dlx.
1948 Mercury 4-dr.
1948 Pontiac Sedan Cpe.
1949 Olds. 98 Sedan Cpe.
1952 Pontiac 2-dr. 8 Dlx.
Ail of the above cars carry our
Pontiac Goodwill Used Car
Guarantee. See us last before
you trade.
o GMAC FINANCING
- o
‘ WM. KROTTER CO.
°0o PONTIAC SALES & SERVICE
WEST O’NEILL
FOR COMPLETE DETAILS, and
o free help in engineering your
sprinkler system and informa
tion on liberal credit terms, see
oc BILL BOWKER
c Phones 207 & 468-W
O’Neill, Nebr. 32c
O i * ' . ^
0 SALE: 15 and 20-ft. bottom
less stock tanks. — Kelly’s
Plumbing, O’Neill. 51c
FOR SALE: 5-room house with
full basement, completely mo
dem, attached garage. REA. 1
acre of ground. 1 mile north of
stop light.—Don McClellan,
O’Neill. ° 50-51p65
WILL BE selling 6 good young
milk cows at the O’Neill Live
stock Mkt. at the regular sale
r Thursday, April 21. 50-51c
Farm ° Machinery
•50T baler., 0
o o £38 cultivator to fit H.
238 cultivator to fit F-20.
M&M hydro cultivator.
Oliver cultivator.
F-12 cultivator.
250 cultivator, H&M.
° John D,eere cultivator.
P-ft. disc.
0 IHC eii.
John Deere mounted lister.'
q Mowers—all makes and models.
IHC planter, like new. o
0 2-bottom plow.'
2-rake hitch on rubber.
12-ft. rake. 0 0
14-ft. rake. 0
John Deere sweep.
Fuel MTA. j
1847oM.
941 M. °:
1948 H. ^
1944 H.
1942 H.
a 1950 C. °
1949 C.
Farmall 30. o
$ Farmall 20.
Farmall 12.
O t' O O
cShelhamer Equip.
Phone 570 — O’Neill
Try Frontier want ads!
° 8 °
o
O
c
°
FOR SALE OR TRADE: One 110
volt Iowa Super electric cream
separator, 800-lb. capacity; 110
volt electric portable National
2-unit milking machine.—May
be seen at John Sobotka’s, In
man, or contact J. W. Sobotka,
Inman. 49-51p
FOR SALE: One 500-gal. extra
heavy pressure tank'at a good
price. Could be used for either
L.P. gas or water. — Augie
Thiele, Clearwater, 13 mi. south
and 2% east of Ewing. 51-52p
FOR SALE: Insurance of all
kinds.—See Virgil Laursen. O’
Neill, phone 434. 29tf
CHERROSOTE
Gilligan’s Rexall Drug
Phone 87 — O’Neill 36tf
FOR SALE: Aeromotor wind
mills, and towers, galvanized
stock tanks, 8- and 10-foot
sizes. — John Sobotka, Inman,
Nebr. o 7tf
FOR SALE: Cossack alfalfa seed.
State tested.—John Pruss, Em
met. > 46tf
BULK
oGARDEN
SEED
A full line of garden seed, lawn
seed and fertilizers.
O
Wm. Krotter Co,
UPTOWN HARDWARE
Phone 496
CARS & TRUCKS
1947 White with fifth wheel.
1942 Ghevy %-ton.
Shelhamer Equip. Co.
Phone 570 — O’Neill
New Machinery
290-490 J-D planters.
Clipper fanning mill.
12-Ft. Easy Flow fertilizer
spreader.
J-D spreaders.
730 lister.
Listed corn cultivators.
Farmhand loaders, bulldozers,
grapple forks.
J-D-D oils, greases and batteries.
Bale ties, cable.
Plymouth baler and binder
twine.
Used Machinery
1936 John Deere A.
’944 John Deere B.
1946 H John Deere.
IHC F 20 tractor.
IHC 2-row,listed corn cultivator.
J-D 4-wheel spreader.
No. 52 two 14” bottom plows. o
IHC 182 lister.
AB G-5 40 J-D lister with fertil
izer attachment.
2—16-inch J-D plows.
4-section lever harrow.
Hydraulic manure loader.
IHC No. 30 loader.
We trade and give terms on John
Deere Credit Plan. Come in
and see us!
Harry R. Smith Impls.
Your John Deere Dealer
Phone 562 — O’Neill
55 STUDEBAKERS
ARE NOW ON DISPLAY!
USED CARS
1953 DeSoto club coupe.
1951 4-door Studebaker (Land
cruiser).
1949 Chevrolet.
1946 4-dr. Studebaker Champion.
1946 Ford tudor.
1952 Studbaker 2-ton truck.
IHC %-ton pickup.
SMITH MOTOR CO.
“Home of Studebaker”
_Phone 562 — O’Neill
FOR SALE: 65-BTU space heat
er, natural gas. — Phone 263,
O’NeilL 30tf
FOR SALE: 1948 GMC 450 series
tractor equipped with air and
vacuum, two-speed. Will trade
or sell for $500.—Everett Gor
gen, phone 524-M, O’NeilL 42tf
O’Neill News
Mr. and Mrs. George Ham
mond left Tuesday morning for
Omaha where Mr. Hammond will
attend the funeral directors con
vention being held there Wednes
day and Thursday. At a recent
meeting he was elected president
of the funeral directors associa
tion of this district.
S-A James McKenny arrived
Tuesday, April 12, from Great
Lakes naval training center, Chi
cago, 111., where he recently com
pleted 10 weeks’ basic training.
S-A McKenny will report to Nor
folk, Va., for further assignment
Monday, April 25. He is visiting
I at the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Harding.
Mr. and Mrs. Anton Nissen of
Page visited Sunday evening at
the home of their sdn-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Ebyc
John Tiefenthaler of Butte
visited Sunday and Monday at
the home of his son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Benson and family. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lanman
spent Tuesday afternoon in
Creighton yisiting Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Vlcan and Mr. and Mrs.
William Buskirk.
° o
MISCELLANEOUS
notice
There will be a minimum
charge of $3.00 to anyone using
our dehorning chute.
Signed: KUBIK BROS.
51p50
O. E. C-Oakie”)
DAVIDSON
Plumbing & Heating
“The Best Work for the
o Least Money”
GAS WATER HEATERS
& FURNACES
Phone 126 — O’Neill
Expert
Watch Repairing
McIntosh Jewelry
Phone 166 O’Neill
Arthritics
You are invited to visit
Bartow’s Uranium Center
Gordon, Nebr.
“Uranium Pads” for home use.
Phone 315-J
50-52pl80j
nvjuvrxn
Sales & Service
B I G L I N ’ S
Phone 38 — O’Neill
I HAVE just returned from a
winter tour of Florida and 7
of the Southern states, and I
am back at my office again,
and have plenty of Eastern
money to loan on farms and
ranches. Also loan money on
city residences and business
buildings.—See or write R. H.
Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. 51tf
SEE US for new SPARTAN or
SAFEWAY mobile homes. 25%
down, 5% int.; up to 84 months
to pay. — Contois Motor Co.,
Neligh. 30tf
L. Guthmiller
REPAIR SHOP
Half Block East of
Texaco Station
SPECIALIZING in all kinds of
automobile, truck and tractor
repair. Acetylene welding.
ROOFING
OF ALL TYPES
For free estimates and informa
tion, contact
Clarence Strong
Independent Roofing Co.
Phone 321-R — O’Neill
__ 50-51c
HUNT’S
Plumbing & Heating
COLEMAN BLEND AIR
FURNACES — Gas or Oil
Kohler, American & Briggs
PLUMBING FIXTURES
Paw Paw for Your Septic Tank
Water Systems
Gas & Electric Water Heaters
Phone 399 — O’Neill
We Give Gold Arrow Stamps
I AM at my office again in
O’Neill, Nebr., and have East
ern money to loan on farms j
and big ranches. No loan too1
large if plenty of security.—See
or write to R. H. Parker,
O’Neill, Nebr. 51tf
L-O-A-N-S
4% Federal Land Bank
Long Term
PRE-PAYMENT PRIVILEGES
ELKHORN VALLEY
NATIONAL FARM ASS’N
O’Neill, Nebr.
TRY OUR three-way vaccine,
prevents blackleg, malignant
edema, hemorrhagic, stops cat
tle rustlers with one shot.—Dr.
H. L. Bennett, O'Neill. 49-52c
REAL ESTATE
! FOR SALE: Pool room at O’Neill
with three snooker tables. Con
tact—Ponton Real Estate, O’
Neill, phone 106. 49tf
I HAVE opened an acreage ad
jacent to O’Neill and will sell
either ip acreages or lots. _
Harry E Ressel. O’NeilL lltf
iOR SALE: Two building site
lots. South front, water, sewer
gas.—Don Lyons, O’Neill. 49-52p
FOR SALE: Good 160-acre im
proved farm near O’Neill.—Geo.
C. Robertson, O’Neill. 45tf
FOR SALE: Locker plant consist
ing of concrete block building,
50x22, with 115 locker boxes,
nearly all rented.—Geo. C. Rob
ertson, phone 534. O’Neill. 45tf
FOR SALE: 8-room house on 2
lots, modern, located 2 blocks
south of bus depot on Fremont
street.—See P. C. Donohoe, O’
Neill. 45tf
IS YOUR insurance costing too
much? Are you properly in
sured?—See Ed Thorin, agt_,
O’Neill, Nebr. 44tf
FOR SALE: Hereford bulls, com
ing 2-yrs.-old.—George Syfie,
O’Neill. 50-5 lp60
.1 11 »
Back from California—
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fox, sr.,
Carol and Raymond returned Fri
day from Norwalk, Calif., where
they had spent the winter.
0 „ o w .. .
FOR RENT
FOR RENT OR SALE: A good
24x90 building, % block north
of Goldenc hotel, suitable for
laundry, dry cleaning, clothing
store, variety store, building
and loan office, furniture store,
teen-age shop, maternity and
tiny tot shop, beauty shop. It
has a good new, automatic fur
nace, display window, good
construction, basement for stor
age. Would remodel for suit
able tenant.—Call F. J. Dish
ner, O’Neill 37, or write to
Mrs. I. J. Kinsman, 3011 19th
St., Columbus, Nebr. 51tf
FOR RENT: Partially fur
nished 4-roam apartment with
bath. Heat, lights and water
furnished.—Call phone 537, O’
Neill. o 36tf
FOR RENT: Sanders for floor
and furniture. — Spelts - Ray
Lbr. Co. 47tf
_i
FOR RENT: Floor polisher and
waxer.—Spelts-Ray Lbr. Co.
FOR RENT: Business building,
116 S. Fourth st.—Kieth Abart,
O’Neill.
FOR RENT: Furnished apartment
with full bath. Close in. —Clara
Aim, phone 440-J, O’Neill. 48tf
WANTED
WANTED: Pasture for 20 year
ling Angus cattle. — Robt. H.
Munter, Coleridge, Nebr.
51-52c
WANTED TO HIRE: Reliable
girl or middleaged lady for
housework on ranch—Mrs. Lyle
Watson, Chambers, Nebr.,
phone 2614. 51-lp
WANTED: Responsible party to
take over small piano on low
monthly payments. Can be
seen in this vicinity. For partic
ulars write Box 584, Sioux
Falls, S.D. 50-51C
HALVA’S ELECTRIC SHOP
Generator & Motor Winding
New and Used Motors
far Any Job 25tf
GILL ELECTRIC: See John Gil
strap for all your electrical
wiring and equipment. I ser
vice all makes of appliances.—
O’Neill, phone 527-LR. 45tf
CARDS of THANKS
I WISH to thank my friends and
relatives who remembered me
with cards, letters, gifts and
flowers while I was a patient
at the Lutheran hospital af
Norfolk and since returning
home. A special thanks to
Pastor Claycombe for his vis
its and prayers and to those
who helped out at home. Your
thoughtfulness will never be
forgotten.
51c MRS. HILBERT HOGK
I WISH to thank all those who
remembered me with cards,
letters, gifts and visits while
I was in St. Anthony’s hospi
tal and after I returned home.
Also a special thanks to Doc
tor Brown and the entire hos
pital staff for the wonderful
care I received.
GARNETT KAY GILLOGLY
I WOULD like to thank my
friends and relatives for the
visits, cards and gifts I receiv
ed after my appendectomy at
St. Anthony’s hospital. And to
Doctors Wilson and Langdon
and the entire hospital staff,
“Thank you, also.”
50c MERNA BUTTERFIELD
LOST & FOUND
LOST: April 16, between Knie
vel’s store and O’Neill, one 8
ply 7:50x17 Goodrich mud tire
and wheel. Finder please notify
— Augie Thiele, Clearwater,
Nebr. 51-52p
Mrs. Hahlbeck Is
Poppy Chairman
EWING—Mrs. Clifford Hahl
beck was appointed poppy day
chairman at a meeting of the
American Legion auxiliary unit
214 last Thursday evening at the
Legion club. Plans were made for
the county meeting of the Amer
ican Legion and auxiliary whim
will be held in Ewing in May.
Mrs. L. M. Carter, president,
announced that the application
sent to the Comhuskers uirL’
state had been returned due to
fact that the quota had been fill
ed. Catherine Bauer, daughter of
Mrs. Rose Bauer, had the honor
to be chosen. Irene Kaczor,
daughter of Mrs. Eva Kaczor,
was chosen alternate. Both girls
are students in the junior class
of the Ewing high school.
Tonight (Thursday) the auxil
iary members will serve the
firemen’s dinner at the Legion
club.
-__
Davy Serves Aboard
Minesweeper—
LYNCH — Serving aboard the
wooden-hulled minesweeper USS
f orce is Roger L. Davy, elec
trician’s mate second class, USN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn R.
Davy of Lynch.
Before entering the navy in
February, 1952, he attended
Lynch high school.
Tune in "Voice or Tne Fron
I tier”, thrice weekly!
>-—--—
Make Plans for
Children’s Show
i CELIA— Mrs. LeRoy Hoffman
attended the Young Homemakers
extension club meeting at the
home of Mrs. Gerald Rothchild
on Wednesday, April 13. Twelve
members were present.
Five dollars was given to the
Red Cross. Mrs. Vernon Siebert
gave a report of the last council
meeting. Plans for home demon
stration week were discussed.
There will be an extension
program in the American Legion
auditorium, O’Neill, April 30.
,There will be a children’s style
show. Garments featured will
have been made at home.
The layette for the University
hospital was finished and sent to
O’Neill. Next meeting will be
with Mrs. Ray Goeke on May 11.
Other Celia News
Alex Cleary and O.'A. Ham
merberg were Friday morning
visitors at the William Maloun
home. Mr. and Mrs. Hammer
berg were Friday afternoon and
supper guests and Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Colfack and family were
evening visitors at the Maloun
home.
George Schaaf spent last
Thursday night with Bobby
Knudson. Dick Schaaf stayed
Friday night and Saturday with
i him.
lsia nuaa w'as a Tuesday eve
ning, April 12, visitor at Butte.
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Lauridsen
and sons accompanied Jim Laur
idsen to the Louis Lauridsen
home Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Connie Frickel
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Pease to Ainsworth Wednesday,
April 13, to attend a track meet.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Focken
had a party at their home Mon
day evening, April 11. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs. Hans
Lauridsen and sons, Isla Ruda,
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks
End family, Mr. and Mrs. Franx
Schaaf, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Col
fack, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Smith and family and Mrs. Mary
Thorin.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hendricks
and family were Sunday evening
visitors at the Mark Hendricks
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hipke and
family were Sunday afternoon
visitors at the Emil Colfack home.
Joe and Mark Hendricks at
tended a farm sale near Cham
bers Wednesday, April 13.
Mr. and Mrs. William Maloun
and O. A. Hammerberg were last
/Thursday O’Neill visitors.
D. F. Scott spent last Thurs
day with the Charles Dobias fam
ily.
R. M. Pease of O’Neill spent
Sunday at the Ray Pease home.
Connie and Victor Frickel were
Sunday afternoon visitors at the
Pease home.
Vickie Frickel spent Friday
night with Carol Schlotfeld.
Albert Johnson of Lyons was
a Wednesday, April 13, dinner
guest at the Earl Schlotfeld
home.
w iviiu kjpv-u «,
Monday, April 11, at the Jesse
Mellor home.
Mrs. William Maloun and son
and Mrs. O. A. Hammerberg were
Saturday morning visitors at
Ainsworth.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pease and
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Spann were
Saturday supper guests at the
. Albert Spann home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sicheneder
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dister
haupt were Tuesday, April 12,
Butte visitors.
Mr. and Mrs. Connie Frickel
and family attended the baked
ham supper put on by ladies of
the Presbyterian church Tuesday
evening, April 12.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pease, Mr.
and Mrs. William Spann and R.
M. Pease of O’Neill were Friday
Norfolk visitors.
Joe Hendricks and Dick
Knowles went to Bassett Monday,
April 11, where Joe bought a 2
ton truck.
Leon Hendricks helped Joe
Hendricks Tuesday and Wednes
day, April 12 and 13.
The Joe Hendricks, Mark Hen
dricks, Victor Frickel and Emil
Colfack families attended the Holt
county spelling contest in O’Neill
Saturday. Harold Frickel, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Frickel, was
second in the fourth grade con
test.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Focken,
twins and Dannie spent Monday,
April 11, in Yankton, S.D.
LeRoy Hoffman and Victor
Frickel attended a voters’ meet
ing at the Immanuel Lutheran
church Wednesday evening, Ap
ril 13. Gerald and Vicki lirickel
were overnight visitors at the
Hoffman home.
>. ~ ——
Soldiers Study Leathercraft
Leatherwork is one of the most popular crafts at the infantry
center special services craft shop at Ft. Benning, Ga. Seen at work
during off-duty hours are (left-to-right): Cpl. Donald E. Beck
with of O’Neill, Cpl. Carl Vail of Steamboat Springs, Colo., Pfc.
David Krotter of Brigham City, Utah, and Pfc. Walter Trueblood,
jr., of Kansas City, Mo. The craft shop also has facilities for
building model airplanes, weaving, making jewelry and working
with ceramics, wood and plastics.—U.S. Army Photo.
Trowbridge, Ickes,
Kennedy Elected
PAGE—Rev. J. LaVerne Jay,
district superintendent, was in
charge of devotions and presided
over the business meeting of the
fourth quarterly conference at
the Page Methodist church Fri
day evening.
New members elected for a
,three-year term on the board of
trustees were: Harley Kennedy,
Elmer Trowbridge and Neven
Ickes, jr.
New members elected to thw
board of stewards were: John
L&mason, Mrs. Harold Heiss,
Norman and Richard Trowbridge,
Jvan Heiss and Mrs. Robert Van
Horn.
Other officers were: Mrs. Alton
Eraddock, communion steward.
Dale Sauffer, Sunday-school su
perintendent; R. L. Heiss, lay
leader; Mrs. Raymond Heiss,
benevolence treasurer and reserve
lay delegate; Merwyn French, sr.,
church treasurer; Mrs. Edgar
Stauffer, recording secretary;
Mrs. H. S. Harper, financial sec
retary.
Some changes in personnel
were noted in the church commis
Jons.
Retiring* President
Is Honored—
CHAMBERS— The Woman’s
Society of Christian Service of
the Chambers Methodist church
met with Mrs. Lloyd Gleed last
Thursday with Mrs. Sarah Ad
ams as cohostess. Twenty-three
ladies were present.
The president, Mrs. Ray Beed,
conducted the business session.
Plans were discussed for several
ladies to attend the district meet
ing in Wayne on 'Tuesday, April
19.• The Chambers society join
ed the other societies of the dis
trict in presenting the retiring
president, Mrs. LeRoy Jensen of
Flainview, with an honorary life
membership. A bake sale was
planned for Saturday, April 23.
Mrs. T. E. Alderson gave the
devotionals and lesson, assisted
by several of the ladies. Lunch
was served by the hostesses at
the close of the meeting.
Glen Tomlinson was a guest
Sunday at the home of his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Tom
linson. He met his wife’s sister,
Mrs. Ray Hill of Orchard, who
returned to Spencer with him to
e with Mrs. Tomlinson, who was
dismissed Sunday from the Sa
cred Heart hospital in Lynch.
Pleasant Brook Clubbers
Finish Aprons—
The Pleasant Brook 4-H club
met at the Maynard Stearns
home on Tuesday, April 12. There
were 16 members and one visitor
present. The club has two new
members—Linda and Sandy Al
berts.
Members brought their finish
ed aprons and discussed making
the potholder. They started mak
ing a safety poster
The club will have a wiener
,’ioast at the next meeting on
May 10 at the Thomas Kaczor
home.
Finish Layettes—
Mrs. A. D. Jilg was hostess at
the Golden Rod club meeting held o
Wednesday, April 13. There were 0
10 members present. Mrs. Leo 3
Hines was a guest. The group
finished their layettes for the
University hospital in Omaha and
are working on a° charity goal of
their own selection. The next1 o
meeting will be May 11 at the
home of Mrs. Herman Janzing.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Straube
and daughters of Broken Bow
visited over tthe weekend at the
home of her mother, Mrs. Emma
Lawrence. Mrs. Straube and the0 °
girls remained to visit for a week
when he returned to their home.
--:
111 1 k
“OLD RELIABLE” o
MARKET REPORT :
Tuesday, April 19th
Auction
Cattle receipts 483 head. QCA
very liberal run Of good quali
ty, green cattle ’was well cre
ceived with all classes steady
to stronger, o Light yearlings
sold from $22.00-$24.00 cwt.
on better kinds with plainer
kinds on down to $17.00 cwt.
Light yearling heifers topped:
at $18.15 with all the better o
kinds selling from $16.50 to
$18.00 while the less desirable
kinds moved a little slower
from $14.50 to $16.00 cwt.
Short ' 2-yr.-old steers sold
from $19.00 t& $21.75 cwt.
Fleshy kind of heifers bulked 0
from $15.00 to a top of $1$.95
on some warmed up kinds.
Cows with calves at sidq went
at $130.00 to $140.00 per pair.
On butcher cows all prices o
were steady with the better0 o
kinds in good demand. Fat
cows from $11.50 to $13.50;
high cutters $10.00 to $11.25.
Canners and low cutters $7.75
to $9.50. Bulls mostly $12.0$:
to $13.50 cwt.
0 o
Next Auction
Tuesday, April 26th
"We appreciate your consign-;
ments whether they be large
or small”
o o
THE OLD RELIABLE
Atkinson Livestock
Market
Phone 5141
o
Atkinson, Nebr.
J o
Reminder: NIGHT SALE
83 — Minn, and Wise. DAIRY CATTLE
To Be Sold at Auction on—
Thursday Night, April 21st — 7:30 P.M.
On the Arnold Thiele farm, in pavilion, located 2% miles
southwest of Clearwater, Nebr., on good all-weather road.
OFFERING INCLUDES: 36 top quality calves; 20 first and sec
ond calf heifers; 20 heavy springers; 4 open Brown Swiss
heifers; 1 Holstein ball. FREE HEIFER CALF .to be given.
Matchless Cooking
at its Best!
Spring Showing of NfiW
Mrs. America Roper Gas Range
It’s fun to cook, bake and can on a new Mrs. America
Roper Gas Range. It gives you cooking that is so fast... •
with heat so adjustable . . . and so clean and convenient.
Designed to modernize your kitchen, it takes floor space
just 29" x 40" and can be installed flush to back wall
and to cabinets at both ends. You’ll thrill at its big 19"
oven with look-through door, its silent-roll broiler with
chrome grill, 4-hour electric timer, and surface cooking
that adjusts instantly from "high broil” to "keep warm”.
o
BUY NOW! Get these
2 kitchen Aids FREE
With your new Mrs. America Range, you receive
2 wonderful gifts FREE. A West Bend Portable
Mixer that mixes, whips, beats and blends. Your
friends will say, '1 wish I had one, too,” when
they see your new West Bend Portable Mixer.
Retail value $19.50. And a 3-piece set of West
Bend Stainless Steel Bowls . . . good for a life
time and so easy to keep clean. You have a bowl
just right for every mixing chore. All three are
designed to use with your electric mixer. Worth
$6.75.
See Your Favorite GAS APPLIANCE DEALER
or Kansas-Nebraska Store
I ? n CP
_. .__ - c
SMaUfMSbuJLMUMaM x )
For Dependable GAS Service
' ° °S 0
rv O .
ry
Q
I ®.. f| ■ ■: ® ® ' 0 o ° c