The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 31, 1918, Image 5

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    The Back-flue Is
The Back-bone
Of A Range
No range can last longer
than its Back-flue
Yet the back-flue is the catch
all of a range. There concen
trates soot and acids and salts
and moisture and everything
that goes through a range.
True, you seldom or never see
the back-flue of a range—but
when it rusts out the range is
done for.
Some ranges don’t last as
long as its back-flue, but when
the sweaty asbestos was clad
with copper to stop inside rust
the Copper-Clad Range lasted so
long that a better back-flue be
came necessary. Nothing is too
good for a Copper-Clad so a
solid one-piece malleable back
flue was provided—the first ever
put on a range—and the only
one. It can’t crack, break, nor
rust.
The Copper-Clad Range is as
pretty as a picture and cleans
like a dish.
Warner & Sons, O’Neill, Neb.
MORE LOCAL MATTERS.
Matt Mechale, who is now located at
Casper, Wyoming, was in the city the
first of the week having came down
to attend the funeral of his mother,
who died ^t Winner, S. D., last week
and was buried in the Catholc cere
tery here last Monday.
Clarence Johnson, of Chambers, was
in the city today. Mr. Johnson brought
up a load of sweet clover seed which
he sold to a seed firm at Shenandoah.
Iowa, for which he receved the neat
little sum of $300. Mr. Johnson says
that he saved about 700 pounds of the
seed which he will use himself next
season.
D. P. Harrington, who has been
visiting at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Harrington north
east of this city the past three months,
leaves this evening for a visit with
relatives at Butte, Mont., and Seattle,
Washington. March 15 he goes to
Portland, Oregon, where he has been
appointed to a position in the post
office, having passed the civil service
examination some months ago.
Edward Gatz, who has been in the
employ of the Gilligan & Stout drug
firm for the past several years, has
resigned his position there, and left
this morning fcr Omaha, where he
will visit for a short time. He will
go to Des Moines, Iowa, from Omaha
and will enter the employ of a
drug firm there. J. C. Graham, for
merly a druggist of Emmet, has taken
the position left vacant by the resig
nation of Mr. Gatz.
Nebraska has been having more
than her share of cold weather the
past week, but we have one consola
tion, and that is that it is general all
over the country, the south suffering
from frigid weather as well as the
north. Commencing last Friday night
it has been below zero every day and
night since, last night being the cold
est when it got down to 26 below.
This has been a very severe winter,
even the oldest inhabitants failing to
remember a December and January
as cold as this one has been.
A return dance was given to the
Martez chib Saturday night at the
Golden Hotel by the young gallants of
the city. Committees were selected
for the dinner, programs and the
dance. Mrs. Evans’ ingenuity was
very much in evidence with the first
dance a domino dance, the girls masked
and dancing together and their part
ners selecting the right one. A flag
dance was real spectacular and the
camouflage afforded much amusement.
Below are a few of the prices at which we are
| selling goods every day in the year. Look the prices
over and you will see that no store in O’Neill com
| pare with us when it comes to giving our customers
| good bargains. Now that we are to have early clos
| ing remember that you will have to do your trading
| before 6 o’clock and come to the great bargain center,
across the street from the drug stores.
Dark Karo Syrup, per gallon... 75c
I White Karo Syrup, per gallon. 85c
Half Gallon Dark Karo Syrup.. 39c
5 Pound of Bulk Coffee......$1.00
4 x/i Pound of Bulk Coffee ...$1.00
1 Pound of 30c Gold Dust Coffee.. 25c
1 Pound of 30c Steel Cut Coffee.. 25c
1 Pound of 40c Drinkum Coffee at... 35c
Ohio Blue Tip Matches, per box.. 5c
IJbmpson s silver state tomatoes, per can. lsc
Belle Flower Peas, per can.... 15c
Two Cans Belle Flower Peas for.. 25c
J No Vary Peas, per can..._.__. 18c
; Two Cang No Vary Peas for..... 35c
| 15c Bar of Cocoa Castile Soap for._. 10c
| 15c Peet Bros. Glycerine Soap for..... 10c
| Grape Nuts, per package..... 15c
| Eagle Lye, 3 cans for........ 25c
| $1.00 Kream Krisp for...... 75c
| 60c Kream Krisp for....... 39c
f Tuxedo Tobacco, per can....... 10c
Velvet Tobacco, per can...... 10c
j 2,000 Yards of Percales, 36 inches wide, worth
25 tc 30 cents per yard at.... 20c
Abdousch [
.. .. I
! A three course dinner was served at
seven-thirty. Dancing began at
nine. The music was furnished by
Mrs. Reardon at the piano and Clark
Adams at the drums.
The many friends and old time
neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Beaver, of Meek, tendered them a
surprise party at their home last
Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Beaver will soon leave for Wyoming,
where they will make their future
home and their neighbors assembled
on the above evening to bid them God
speed and wish them success in their
new home. About one hundred people
were present and an enjoyable time
was had by all at the hospitable
Beaver home. A beautiful present
was tendered them so that they would
ever hold in grateful remembrance
their many Holt county friends.
Leigh World: On Friday evening
the pupils of the sixth and seventh
grades bid their teacher, Miss Anna
Fallon, farewell. Miss Fallon, who
has been a successful teacher in this
school for a number of years, will be
greatly missed by her pupils as well
as the entire school. They all feel that
no one can excell Miss Fallon as a
teacher and a friend. In remem
brance of their dear teacher the sixth,
seventh and eighth grade pupils pre
sented her with a handsome cut class
dish which she greatly appreciated.
Miss Fallon tendered her resignation
as teacher at Christmas, and while the
school board complied with her wishes
to be released, they did so reluctantly.
Mrs. Barbara Mechale died at her
home at Winner, S. D., last Friday,
after an illness of but half an hour, of
heart disease. The remains were
brought to this city and interred in
the Catholic cemetery Monday morn
ng, at the sde of her husband who
passed away about eight years ago,
Mrs. Mechale was sixty-three years of
age at the time of her death. She
was a resident of this county for a
number of years, living about twelve
miles northwest of this cty. Some
seven years ago the family moved to
Winner, S. D., where she resided up
to the time of her death. She is sur
vived by eight chldren, five boys and
three girls, all of whom were present
at the. funeral. The children are:
Matt, of Casper, Wyoming; John, of
this city; Nick, Jake, William, Anna,
Marie and Catherine, of Winner. S. D.
Mrs. C. E. Stout and her corps of
assistants, who have charge of the
War Savings Stamp sale in the post
office, had a splendid sale during last
week the first week the stamps were
on sale at the postoffice. Ed. F. Gal
lagher, chairman of the Holt County
Thrift Stamp Campaign Committee;
promised the young ladies a supper at
the Golden Hotel if their sales for the
week reached $10,000. The sales the
first week reached $7,700, the last two
days of the week being so cold that
not very many people were in town or
they would have exceeded the $10,
000.00 mark. Mr. Gallagher says Mrs.
Stout and her capable assistants done
such good work that he is going to
give them the supper anyhow and
they will partake of the feast tomor
row evening. It will take hard work
on the part of the citizens in all parts
of the county if Holt County sells its
allotted share of thrift stamps, but
with hard, energetic work it can be
accomplished. Everyone should put
their shoulder to the wheel and push,
and their hands in their pockets and
dig.
Wyant Garage Burned.
The Walter Wyant garage, on
lower Fourth street, was gutted by
fire this moring and five automobiles
were destroyed, entailing a loss that
Mr. Wyant estimates at $3,000.00;
$2,500.00 loss on the cars and $500
damage to the building.
The car desroyed were: A New
Liberty Six, valued at $1,300; one
new Ford Copue, valued at $550; one
new Ford Touring car, $400; two
second hand cars, one valued at $150
and one valued at $100. The building
being of brick about the only damage
to it was to the roof. Mr. Wyant
carried no insurance on the cars or
the building so it was a total loss.
The fire was discovered about 11
o’clock and had gained such headway
when discovered that about the only
thing the department could do was to
prevent the flames from spreading to
the other bulidings adjacent thereto.
The Art Wyant garage, joining it on
the north, contained some cars but
they were taken from the building,
but the fire was confined to the Walt
Wyant garage.
Ross Hammond’s Address.
Notwithstanding the severe cold
about seven hundred people were at
the K. C. opera house last evening to
listen to the address delivered by Ross
L. Hammond, editor of the Fremont
Tribune, on conditons in France and
Belgium as he saw them on the occa
sion of his visit to the scene of fight
ing in November, when he accom
panied a party of ten congressmen to
the battle torn fields of P’rance.
The meeting was presided over by
Rev. M. F. Cassidy. After Miss
Genevieve Bigln had favored the
audience with a vocal solo Father Cas
Blend Coffee, 40c Per Pound, G0p
1 Package of Fancy 1 f5«
Dates . I Uli
2- 5c Packages of Yeast Hit A
Foam .,. U«Jl»
3— 10c Bars of 9Hr*
Toilet Soap . 4Ub
2 No. 2 Cans ’ OC.
Tomatoes . 4vb
18c Package Seeded 9Rf»
Raisins, 2 for . 4 Jb
35c Large Package 9Af*
2 Pounds 18c Extra Fancy 9Qf*
Dried Peaches . 40b
Best Oleomargarine, OH.
per pound . Odb
4 Pounds of Fancy Black 49a
Hand Picked Beans . tr4b
15c Ivory ftO
Starch . UOb
50 Pounds of Extra Fine CRa
Table Salt . COG
50c Bottle Pure Maple and QKa
Cane Syrup. OJb
12 Pounds of Whole Wheat QQn
Flour . 03C
80c Pound Fancy Tea, RHa
Pound . wUC
30c Bottle Of!a
Olives . 4Ub
20c Armours Veribest IRp
Pork and Beans . ■ vl b
35c Armours Veribest 9Ra
Ham Loaf . 4UC
00c Pound Best 49a
Cocoa . tr4b
$1.00, $1.25, $1.50 $1.75, $2.00 Q0„
Men's Winter Caps, choice... 3 Jb
$2.00 Men’s Winter ©1 IQ
Shirts . V 11 I 3
$4.00 Men’s Union ©O QQ
Alls . $4i3J
$2.25 Men’s Blue ©1 QQ
Overalls .
65c Men’s QQp
35c Boys’ Suspenders, 9Qa
2 Pair for . 4Ub
M!n:*. 43c
UP WHERE THE PRICES
ARE DOWN.
Q ^ STEPS
“MELVIN”
SELLS FOR LESS
sidy introduced the speaker of the
evening. Mr. Hammond is a pleasing
speaker, with a wonderful vocabularly
and notwithstanding the frigid
air of the room the vast audience
sat spell-bound as they listened to the
story of conditions in France and
Belgium as he saw them.
Mr. Hammond said that he had
recently returned from a trip of
fifteen hundred miles along the battle
front and the sounds heard during that
journey still continue to ring in his
ears; the booming of cannon, the
bursting of shells, the humming of
aeroplanes and the spatter of small
arms. Hillsides covered with graves
and hospitals fulled with wounded are
sights that he seen and never can
forget.
He said that while he was in no way
responsible for the present admnistra
tion, since the war begun he has been
and would continue to be a loyal sup
porter of the government but he be
lieved that we are facing the greatest
crisis in the history of our govern
ment, that the greatest men in the
nation should be called to assist in the
conduct of the war, and for that
reason he favored a collation cabinet.
He said that in making up that cabinet
he would put the man that is the best
equipped man in the world for the
position and one that would make the
cold chills run down the back of the
Kaiser, Theodore Roosevelt, as
secretary of war. The outburst
of handclapping that greeted
thi3 statement was conclusive proof
that the audience thought Teddy was
the man- for the place.
He said that he left Paris for a trip
to the battle fields in automobiles with
an escourt of two French officers. He
described their first stop on their
journey when they reached the village
Moue, on the Marne, eighteen miles
from Paris, near Verdun, where the
German army was stopped on their
triumphal march through France. He
described Verdun as the greatest bat
tle field in history. Verdun before the
war, he said, was a prosperous little
city of 50,000 and now it has not an
inhabitant, the town being completely
destroyed. The fort at Verdun, which
was so successfully defended by the
French, was built in 1640 and on the
hills around that fort he said that
300,000 French and over half a million
Germans had given their lives. He
said that it is estimated that six men
died on every square yard of ground
around the fort.
He was a witness to one battle
| where the Germans were hurling
shells over their heads and the French
were responding with shell for shell.
Aeroplanes, the giant beetles of the
clouds, were in the thick of the fight.
They are the calvary of the clouds.
They are tragic and entrancing, the
eye of the army, and he said that as
soon as America coud get into action
the thousands of aeroplanes that they
are now getting ready for the battle
front that it would end the war, for
they wero absolutely necessary for the
success of the army.
He said that his party visited the
American troops in France. He said
that they were a little bigger, a little
more erect, clearer of eye and moe
like the ideal soldier than anytheyhad
seen in their journey, the boys from
the United States. He urged the
people not to get impatient and told
them that the American army would
have to dredge harbors, build docks;
that the lumber for the docks would
have to be cut in the forest in Franc?.
Railroads would have to be built to
carry the supplies from the docks to
the front and that this country would
have to man them.
The party also visited the Flanders
front, in Belgium, and met King Al
fred. He said that Belgium, which
formerly contained a population of
7,000,000 is now only a little country
1x20 miles and Belgiums little army is
holding part of the line on that front.
Mr. Hammond’s speech was in
tensely interesting and was greatly
enjoyed by the audience. At the con
clusion of his address the audience
rrose and sang America.
QUESTIONS TO ANSWER
ON INCOME TAX.
Individuals Should Answer These
Questions Before Seeking the
Aid of Federal Experts.
The Internal Revenue Collector has
issued a series of questions which
farmers will have to be prepared to
answer before they can intelligently
make out their income tax returns.
The questions which cover ' all
classes of income and running ex
penses, should be answered by each
individual before he seeks the aid of
a federal expert.
Under the head of income each
farmer should be prepared to answer
these questions:
How many acres do you own ?
How many does your wife?
How many acres have you sold
this year and at what price?
How much land did you buy and at
what price?
Give the amounts you have receiv
ed from the following sources:
Received on interest.
Received on rents .
Oats sold .
Wheat sold .
Barley sold ...
Flax sold .
Rye sold .
Clover seed sold ’..
Alfalfa seed sold .
Timothy seed sold .
Potatoes sold .
Fruit sold .
Dividends .
Salary or allowances from other
business.
Received for road, jury, county or
Send Your Soft Collars
to the laundry
Don’t Attempt To Do Them
At Home
To properly launder Soft
Collars—keep them look
ing brand new — requires
special facilities which only
your laundry has.
Let them do your Soft
Collars, just as they do your
starched, and be assured of
collars
—that retain all their shapeliness,
freshness and snap.
—that are free from wrinkles.
—that stay white insetad of turn
ing yellow.
You’ll find the results far
more satisfactory, and inci
dentally save your household
a lot of troublesome bother.
Geo. P. Ide & Co., Troy, N. Y.
O’NEILL SANITARY LDY.
township work ...
Produce consumed on farm.
Hay or straw sold.
Bees or honey sold ...
Turkeys, ducks or geese sold.
Hogs sold ..
Cattle sold ...
Sheep sold .
Horses sold....
Mules sold ...
Chickens sold.-.
Eggs sold ...
Butter or cream sold .
Received for service of animals....
Received from sale of lard, posts,
ties, cordwood, royalty on mineral
lands, etc.
Value of produce traded at stores
for merchandise .
Other items ...
Under the head of expenditures
farmers should be able to state the
sums paid out for the following:
Interest paid .
Rent paid .
Repairs on farm buildings ...
Repairs on fences.
Repairs on machinery .
Taxes paid (bring last receipt).
Insurance (farm buildings) .
Hired help ...
Feed bought .
Miscellaneous expenses .
Live stock.
Total expense ....;.
Products consumed on the farm will
be classified pt an income of $600
annually unless evidence is given
that it should be changed.
Pity the Child.
“I wish I had a baby brother to
wheel in my go-cart, mamma,” said
small Elsie. “My dolls are always
getting broke when it tips over.”—
Chicago Daily News.
Friend—Doctor how do you manage
to stand the high cost of living?
Surgeon—By cutting out something.
—Brooklyn Citizen.
—the home drink
Besides its popularity at drug stores, fountains and
restaurants, Bevo has found a welcome place in the
home. A family beverage—-a guest offering—a table
drink that goes perfectly with all food.
As a suggestion for Sunday supper—Sweet red or
green peppers stuffed with cream cheese and
chopped nuts or olives, served on lettuce leaves. ,
French dressing. Cold meat. Toasted crackers.
Bevo for everyone. A beverage that tastes like no
other soft drink. Pure, wholesome and nutritious.
Bevo—the all-year-’round soft drink.
Sold in bottles only and bottled exclusively by
Anheuser-Busch—St. Louis
24B
Dance!
Friday, Feb. 8th
At K. C. Ha.ll
You are invited to attend
|^Musi^^^^Adams^Orchestr^