The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 06, 1917, Image 4

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I Roosevelt Stuffed the Kaiser. 1
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i « mm—mamma—mmm—m— ■
Roosevelt Told The Kaiser He Could Lick The Whole World. The Kaiser Believed Him. Now The Kaiser Is Going To Get Fooled. Don’t Let Any One
Stuff You With The Idea You Can Buy As Good Merchandse For The Money Elsewhere As Yop Can Here Or You Will Get Fooled As Bad As The Kaiser.
John Brennan Is The Oldest Merchant In O’Neill. Outside One Other, He’s The Only Merchant In O’Neill Who Was Born Here. He’s Making Good In His
Own Home Town. He’s Going To Die Here. As Bad As O’Neill Is, It’s Good Enough For Him. People Come For Forty-five Miles To Trade At His Store. Others I
Living Right Next Door Go Three And Four Blocks Away Just To Show What They Can Do. Like The Fellow Who Traveled From Ohio To California And Up To
Alaska Looking For Gold. When He Gave Up, He Went Home To Ohio, An Old Broken-down Man. While He Was Sitting On The Back Porch Scratching With I
His Crutch He Uncovered The Richest Mine In The East. But He Was Too Far Gone To Enjoy It. Stop Running Around. Come Home. Your Gold Mine Is Here At p
Your Elbow. The Best Store—The Best Goods—The Best Prices. Your Lifelong Neighbor Is Ready To Wait On You—The Devil You Know Is Better Than The
One You Don’t Know. Old Friends Are The Best. They Are The Closest—Will Do The Most For You, And Stay With You The Longest. p
A FRIEND Is One Who Knows All Your Faults And Loves You Still. To Have Friends You Must Be A Friend. p
15c LAMP On
* Chimneys ..
25c PANCAKE Qr
Turners .
! I 25c CHAIR Qr
Bottoms . ww
EXTRA SAUCERS, 0r
without cups, each .
25c WHITE WITH GOLD 1fl„
Banded Plates . IUw
:Jt $L50 BROOMS (Jg^
| $L25 BROOMS ggp
30c COFFEE
for .
Try this Coffee and don’t miss buying
the Towling and the Oil Cloth.
75c TABLE
Cloth for .
If you don’t buy your Mitts and G’oves
here you lose money.
$50.00 SEWING ©07 Cf)
Machines for . yul rJU
Guaranteed Twenty Years.
BLANKETS
You only buy Blankets once in ten
years. You better get good ones.
Blankets have more than doubled. Don’t
let anyone stuff you. Any kid six months
old knows stuff is going up.
TRY OUR $2.95 SHOES
6 BARS SOAP 27q
You forgot to notice the price on
Ribbons last week. Don’t miss one line
in the ads. The one you miss may be
the best.
3—15c PACKAGES BORAX 9Q
Washing Powder . £dC
50c CANS MAZOLA, Q7
(you see it advertised,) . O I C
I CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
ON STOCKINGS
30c TOWLING 2 "| Q
35c OIL CLOTH, O | r
3 yards to customer, yer yard., t I C
6—10c CANS OF MILK
6—10c PLUGS CHEWING Cil*
Tobacco . w*rC
6—10c CANS SMOKING C/|
Tobacco . 34C
THRIFT STAMPS {?
It’s hard on my profits to give the
prices I do and still give Thrift Stamps. ;
But during this war we must not try to |
make profit. I am going to give stamps
just the same. If you buy $5.00 worth
of goods from me I buy you a 25c Thrift
Stamp from the Post Office, which makes l||
you 5 per cent Cash Discount.
NOTICE
You did not notice the prices last week
on Sweaters, Tire Chains, Hose Sup
porters, Cookies, Table Cloth or Flannel
Shirts. You better look again.
JOHN BRENNAN ^f'cioK T\AAr II. 5* JOHN BRENNAN
HAS THE GOODS Vdoil I/06S Alt HAS THE GOODS
iiwiiiimiii ¥ ii ini m—i» ii'ni—i mm m iiiiih > i mu.iimmiMw mi—i. iinnnmiMimiMWMiii .—
The Frontier
Published by D. H. CRONIN
/
One Year...?1.50
Six Months...75 Cents
Entered at the post office at O’Neill,
Nebraska, as second class matter.
Every subscription is regarded as
an open account. The names of sub
scribers will be instantly removed
from our mailing list at expiration of
tim paid for, if publisher shall be
notified; otherwise the subscription
remains in force at the designated
subscription price. Every subscriber
must understand that these conditions
are made a part of the contract be
tween publisher and subscriber.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertising on Pages 4,
6 and 8 are charged for on a basis of
50 cents an inch (one column width)
per month; on Page 1 the charge is
C1.00 an inch per month. Local ad
vertisements, 5 cents per line, each
Insertion.
Questionaire Mailed December 15.
The Local Exemption Board of
Holt County will begin mailing Ques
tionaires to registrants on December
15th. The New Selective Service
Regulations which become effective on
I 1
r WEBSTER’S
NEW INTERNATIONAL
a DICTIONARY contains a clear,
i accurate, final answer. It is an
indispensable self-help to success.
Hundreds of thousands of people
in all walks of life use, profit from,
•ad enjoy this vast fund of information.
I Are You Equipped to Win?
The only dictionary with the new di
vided pane, characterized * ‘A Stroko of
Genius.’’ Type matter is equivalent
«" that of a l5-volume encyclopedia.
REGULAR and INDIA-PAPER Editions.
WRITS for Specimen Pages, Illustra
tions, etc. FRsB, aset of pocket maps
KIUBWI I
that date provide for the Classifica
tion of all registrants who have not
already been inducted into the Mili
tary Service of the United States.
All certificates of Exemption or Dis
charge issued prior to December 15th
are revoked by the new rules and
registrants formerly called who were
exempted or discharged are required
to complete the Questionaires as
though they had not been called and
examined. The rules provide a
penalty for the failure to answer
questions asked in the Questionnaries,
and persons who fail to answer ques
tions and return Questionnaries for
feit valuable rights by so doing.
In as much as the burden is placed
on every registrant to keep informed
of the status of his case, it is essential
that he notify his local Board of any
change of residence he may have made
since Registration Day. General
Crowder has wired this office request
ing that the broadest and most ex
tensive and continuous possible publi
city be given to the rule that all
Registrants who may have changed
their place of abode and post office ad
dresses must communicate immedi
ately with their Local Board, furnish
ing their present address, so that
Questionaires will reach such Reg
istrants without delay.
The President has called upon Coun
cils of Defense and members of the
Bar Association, Notary Publics, Local
Physicians, and all public officials to
render such service as will be neces
sary to assist registrants in properly
answering the questian contained in
the Questionaire, to the end that all
delay and errors be eliminated as
much as possible.
In Camp Hicks.
Camp Hicks is fourteen miles north
of Ft. Worth, Texas. There are
several squadrons here besides the
cadets and instructors. We are under
English instructions which is much
different than the U. S. The squad
ron is divided into flights. A flight; B
flight; C flight; and Headquuarters
flight. Each flight have their own
planes to take care of. The fellow
who takes care of the engine is called
a Fitter, the one who takes care of
the rest of the plane is called a rigger.
There are two fitters and two riggers
to a plane.
The 17th Squadron are to leave here
next week. They are a scouting
squadron. We are a bombing squad
ron and will have charge of the large
war planes on the other side of the
pond.
The expression “The Blooming Bloody
Thing,” is the pass word here, and a
swager stick under your arm is a
popular part of the dress.
The barracks are very nice, having
everything to make it home like and
the shower bath is the most popular
place of all.
I haven’t the pleasure of having any
of the O’Neill boys with me, but I will
say that the 22nd Aero Squadron has
a bunch of men that are a credit to
the U. S. A. and I am glad I was
transferred to such a good squadron.
They have been in the service for
eight months and are anxious to go
across to try their luck bringing home
the Kaiser.
This being Thanksgiving Day I
must mention about the dinner we had.
It was a real home dinner as you will
notice from the following menu:
Turkey, roast beef, brown gravy,
cranberry sauce, dressing, mashed
spuds, cream peas, cream corn, olives,
celery, apples, bananas, bread and
butter, coffee, ice cream, mince pie,
nuts, cigars and cigarettes.
Some feed I claim for an army. The
dinner cost $401. We had a piano
playing while we ate.
We got Red Cross Comfort Kits to
day from Kentucky, every kit having
every thing that a soldier needs.
There was a name in every one of
them, the name of the person who
sent it, so the boys are all busy writ
ing letters of thanks.
To the boys in the other camps I
would say a letter once in a while
would be appreciated very much as I
like to keep in touch with my friends
from O’Neill.
It’s about time for taps now so I
had better get my bunk made up be
fore the lights go out. Don’t forget
where I live and that letters from
O’Neill are always welcome.
Yours truly,
Pat B. Harty,
22 Aero Squadron, Camp kicks,
Ft. Worth, Texas.
SPECIALS.
Electric Light Bulbs, size 25 Watts,
price 25 cents.
Every Ready Daylo Flashlight, large
size, Special 75c.
Every Ready Dry Cell Batteries, 3 for
$1.00.
Shot Gun Shells, 65c box.
Axle Grease, 2 pails 45c.
Shoe Repair Sets, 75c and $1.25.
Galvonized Washtubs, heaviest grr.de
size 2 at $2.50.
Rayo Lamps with Shade and fully
Nickled, $2.75.
Extra Chimneys, exact fit, 20c.
Extra Wicks, Rayo, 15c.
Regular $2.00 Oil Cans with Pump
filled, with 5 gallons Oil, $2.00.
Lanterns, Large Tank and Storm
Proof, regular $1.50 value at $1.00,
filled.
Furniture Polish, $1.00 Cans, 70c.
Wizard Mops 50c with handle.
Cold Blast Lantern Chimneys 10c.
Number One and Two Lamp Globes
10c, 3 for 25c.
Hylo Separator Oil in Can, 75c gallon.
NEIL P. BRENNAN.
Kelly-Wolfe. ,
Pan J. Kelly and Miss Mildred
Wolfe, both of this city, were united
in marriage at Omaha last Thanks
giving morning at St. John’s church,
Rev. Father McNeff officiating. They
returned home that evening and have
gone to housekeeping .on the farm of
the groom’s father, northeast of town.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John J. Kelly pioneer residents
of this county and is a young man of
sterling integrity and industrious hab
its. The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Wolfe, living just
east of the city, -who are also among
the pioneers of this county, and she
is a charming and winsome young
lady with many friends in this city
and vicinity.
The Frontier joins their many
many friends in wishing them a long
and happy journey on the matri
monial sea’s.
I PUBLIC SALE!
As I have rented my farm I will sell at public auction at my place, 5 miles
northeast of the O’Neill Fair Grounds, the following described prop
el erty, commencing at 10 a. m., on j
MONDAY, DECEMBER 17th
36 Heaol of Cattle
V; Eighteen good milch cows, all in calf from a good Red Poll Durham Bull,
one of these cows is fresh now, there will be more of them fresh by day of sale;
|i| five heifers and three steers, coming two years old; ten spring and summer
Ip calves, seven steers and three heifers.
6 Hea^d of Horses
::i; Four good mares, one three years old, one five years old and the other two
fj| ten and twelve years old; one colt coming two years old and one five months
III old.
31 Heaid Red Dviroc Jersey Hogs
Seventeen head weighing from 125 to 200 pounds; one sow, weight about
: 250; nine fall pigs, weight about 60 pounds; four thoroughbred Duroc boars.
Four Dozen Chickens, Four White Orphington Roosters.,
Farm Machinery, Etc.
Corn sheller; six-foot McCormick binder; stacker; sweep; one McCormick
six-foot mower; Minnesota six-foot mower, used last season; grinding stone;
Molne lister; Janesville lister; riding cultivator; pulverizer; riding plow;
walking plow; three- section iron harrow; lumber wagon and box; hay wagon
\{\ and rack; wagon with hog rack; hog shute; twelve-foot rake; new top buggy;
hog trough; two-row eli; new DeLavel separator; incubator; broadcast seed
er; two sets of work harness; set buggy harness; 200 bushels ear corn in crib;
ten bushels potatoes; cook stove; heating stove; two beds; table; center table,
lounge, organ, dresser, sewing machine, rugs, chairs, clock, dishes, churn,
; cream cans and numerous other articles.
!■ PLENTY OF FREE LUNCH SERVED - AT NOON
TERMS—One year’s time will be given on all sums of $10 and over, with ap
proved security and 10 per cent interest from date. Under $10 cash. No prop
erty to be removed from premises until settled for.
CON A. SHEA, Owner.
Col James Moore, Auctioneer. J. p. Gallagher, Clerk
:-L