The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 28, 1918, Image 1

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

    '
‘ *
■
~
#
__
r- —-” i 1. >»!.*«.:„~i
VOLUME XXXIX. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1918. ~NO. 25.
LOCAL MATTERS.
J. J. Harrington an J. J. Thomas
^ were Atkinson visitors last Tuesday.
Lloyd Bergstrom went to Inman
Tuesday to attend to some business
affairs.
Miss Anna Donohoe went to Ewing
Monday and spent a week visiting
with friends.
T. J. Coyne went to Omaha last
week and will remain for a few days
visiting with friends.
Miss Mayme Coffey came up from
West Point last Saturday and spent
Sunday visiting with friends.
Miss Kathleen Doyle left Monday
morning for Pierce Where she will
spend a week visiting with friends.
Andrew Gallagrer, of Laurel, for
many years a resident of this city,
was an O’Neill visitor last Saturday.
Mrs. William Riley was up from In
man the first of the week visiting at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter
Ryan.
Rev. Father Giblon returned Friday
night from Omaha, where he had been
for a couple of days visiting with
friends. ttfS
Simon Simonson, of Agee, market
ed three hogs on the O’Neill market
this week, receiving $193.20 for them.
Some hogs.
Editor M. W. Hiatt, of the Cham
r- . bers Sun, was an O’Neill visittor last
Tuesday and favored this office with a
pleasant call.
W. J. Hammond returned Monday
night from Hartington where he had
spent a couple of days attending to
legal matters.
Dr. Margaret H. Frost returned
from Norfolk Sunday night after
spending several days there taking
medical treatment.
Geo. Davies, Cashier of the Inman
State Bank, was in the city Tuesday
attending to business matters, and
visiting with friends.
The Misses Mary and Bee Ryan
left last Sundey morning for Sioux
City, Iowa, where they will spend a
week visiting friends.
Dr. R. H. Gallagher, of Page, and
Sam Coover, of Omaha, formerly a
resident of Page, were in the city Sat
urday visiting with friends.
Sheriff Peter Duffy went to Lincoln
Mnnday morning and will remain for
a few days looking after business mat
ters connected with the county.
Mrs. Clint Townsend, of Page,
came up last Saturday and spent the
day visiting with her daughter, who
is attending St. Marys Academy.
Miss Nellie Ryan left last Sunday
morning for Roanoke, 111., where she
will spend a month visiting at the
home of her sister, Mrs. T. Duggan.
W. H. Decker, who is employed in
the office of the secretary of state,
| came up from Lincoln last evening
and is visiting O’Neill friends today.
The plans of Ohio republican
; friends to run General Pershing for
: president in 1920 have been knocked
: to smithereens. The Norfolk News
objects to it.
One of the big business problems
next year is going to be how to ab
sorb the vast army of democratic of
fice-holders soon to be released in the
several states.
Joe Ziemer, who is in the Navy and
stationed at the U. S. S. Vermont,
which is now in Philadelphia, and who
has been visiting with his folks here
for two weeks left last Friday to re
turn to his ship.
Emmet Hickey, who is in the S. A.
T. C. at Omaha and attending the
Creighton University at that place ar
rived here the latter part of last week
and remained for a few days visiting
with relatives and friends.
Anyone wishing to contribute to the
Belgian fund, whom the solicitors
have been unable to see personally,
may leave their donations at any of
the banks or send same to Mrs. J. F.
O’Donnell, chairman of the local com
mittee.
Captain E. H. Whelan arrived last
Saturday night to spend Thanksgiv
ing with his family. He is stationed at
Rock Island, Illinois, and is of the
opinion that his company will be
mustered out of the service before the
first of the year.
Miss Anna McNichols arrived here
Monday morning from Gordon, Nebr.,
where she has been for a few weeks
helping to attend “Flu” victims. She
will spend a few weeks here visiting
with relatives and will then return to
her home at Lincoln.
A democrat and a republican to
gether were perusing the headlines an
nouncing the retirement of McAdoo
from the cabinet. Said the democrat:
“What do you think.” “What you
think I think I think,” replied the re
publican. “I think so too,” agreed the
democrat.
Nebraska draft boards have been
asked by Capt. Walter Anderson, of
Lincoln, state representative to Pro
vost Marshal General Crowder, to
finish all classification work and be
ready to submit final reports for
transmission to Washington by De
cember 9th.
J. H. Davison has moved his harness
shop from the McCafferty building to
the Warner building one door east,
formerly occupied by Al. Virgin with
his plumbing shop. The new building
is much larger than thtf old one and
Mr. Davison now has a fine room in
which to displa’y his harness stock.
%
S®|“ —P
$2.00 Per Year January 1 1
The editor has long deferred a raise in the subscription price
of The Frontier, but the time has come when the raise must
be made in order to make both ends meet. For the past year
the price of everything that enters into the production of a
newspaper has advanced, the postage rate more than doubling
last July. In order to meet this increased cost it becomes
necessary to increase the subscription price to $2.00 per year
and it will become effective January 1, 1919. Most of the
weekly newspapers of the state have advanced their sub
scription price within the past year, to meet the increased
cost of production. We had hoped that it would be un
necessary to increase the subscription price, but we find that
it is impossible to produce a paper at the old rate of $1.50 per
year and make both ends meet, hence the raise.
We will accept renewals and back subscriptions at the old
rate of $1.50 per year until January 1, when the price goes to
$2.00. Subscribers who desire may pay five years in ad
vance at the present rates, but will not accept subscription
for a longer period at that price. Our readers are asked to
take due notice of this matter and get in with their sub
scription before January 1 and save fifty cents a year. It
Ig will be to your advantage and we will be satisfied.
gg| Respectfully yours, HH
{■ DENNIS H. CRONIN. J§
afternoon at the age of sixteen years
six months and three days, of pneu
monia following an attack of in
enflqenza. Mr. and Mrs. Wade came
to this county live years ago and were
living on the James Binkerd farm near
Dorsey. The funeral was held Wed
nesday afternoon, interment in the
Dorsey cemetery. Besides his parents
deceased leaves three brothers and
four sisters to mourn the death of a
kind and loving son and brother.
The infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Wallace died at the home
of Mrs. Wallace’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. B. Hood, on the T. D. Har
rington farm northeast of this city,
last Sunday, at the age of three days.
The funeral was held Tuesday after
noon interment in the protestant
cemetery in this city. The family
moved here from Fullerton a couple
of months ago, Mrs. Wallace coming
with her parents as her husband is in
the service of his country in France.
He was seriously wounded a month
ago and is now in a hospital in
France.
Mrs. Leonard Heiss died at her
home near Page last Monday, after an
illness of two weeks of pneumonia,
following an attack of influenza. The
funeral was held Wednesday after
noon at Page, services being conduct
ed by Rev. Fagan, interment in the
Page cemetery. Mrs. Heiss was the
daughter of Pulaski Reed one of the
pioneer residents of the eastern part
of the county. She was united . in
in. marrriage to Leonard Heiss on
March 8, 1889. To this union six
children were born, three boys and
three girls, who with her husband is
left to mourn the death of a kind and
loving wife and mother.
Red Cross Christmas Roll Call.
During the week of December 10 to
28, will be held the Red Cross Mem
bership Roll Call which is, in reality
the annual membership campaign.
With the close of December 1918 ail
Red Gross memberships, except life
expire. The Roll Call is to be held
not only for the purpose of renewing
the expiring memberships but to ob
tain new ones as.well. Walter W.
Head, Vice President of the Omaha
National Bank has been chosen as the
State Director of this Roll Call for Ne
braska. He has already opened of
fices, adjacent to the other state Red
Cross offices, in the Farnam building
in Omaha and entered actively into
the work. He is at present engaged
in selecting Committee Chairmen in
the various towns in the state and ex
pects to have the list of their names
ready to announce by the end of the
week.
Relative to the Roll Call Mr. Head
makes the following announcement:
“In calling upon the people of Ne
braska, who are members of the Red
Cross, to renew their membership I
am confident that not one of them will
fail to do so. I am equally confident
that those who are not already mem
bers will take this opportunity to join.
In the various drives that have gone
before, Nebraska has made an enviable
record. She stands at the top and
forefront of other states in the union
in this respect and is going to keep up
the record. Our slogan for the coming
Roll Call is. “EVERY MAN, WO
MAN AND CHILD IN NEBRASKA
A RED CROSS MEMBER.” That
means a one hundred per c£nt mem
bership. I knew that we can do it
and we will.
The continued need rf T.’.*l Cross is
best expressed in a message tele
graphed to us from National Red Cross
Headquarters which reads as follows:
“On February 10, last year, nearly
six weeks before the United States
declared war, the National Red Cross
Headquarters advised its chapters to
prepare for War. That which has fol
lowed in the records of the Red Cross
in helping to win the war and to re
lieve the suffering growing out of it,
constitutes something of which every
American citizen has a right to be
proud. Every Red Cross worker must
feel a sense of satisfaction in having
had a share in it all.
“But even with peace, let no one
suppose that the work of the Red
Cross is finished. Millions of Ameri
can boys still are under arms; thous
ands of them are sick and wounded.
Owing to a shortage of shipping it
may take us a year or more to bring
our boys home from France. But
whatever the time, our protecting
arms must be about them and their
families over the whole period that
must elapse before normal peace life
can be resumed. Our soldiers and
sailors are enlisted until the comman
der-in-chief tells them there is more'
work for them to do. Let every Red
Cross member and worker, both man
and woman, show our soldiers and
sailors that to care for their health,
wealth and happiness we are enlisted
for no less period than they.
* “The cessation of hostilities may
reveal a picture of misery such as the
world has never seen before, especi
ally in many countries which cannot
help themselves. The American peo
ple will expect the Red Cross to con
tinue to act as their agent in repair
ing broken spirits and broken bcsiies.
Peace terms and peace conditions will
determine how we can best minister
to the vast broken areas which have
been harrowed by war and for this
great act of mercy the heart and
spirit of the American people must
continue to be mobolized through the
American Red Cross.
“On behalf of the War Council, we
accordingly ask each member of our
splendid body of workers throughout
tne land, to bear in mind the solemn
obligation which rests with each one
of us to carry on.
“We cannot abate for an instant in
our efforts or our spirits. There will
be an abundance of work to do and.
at the moment of peace, let no Red
Cross worker falter. Our spirit must
now call us to show that not the roar
of cannon, nor the blood of our people
alone directs our activities, but that
a great people will continue to respond
greatly and freely to its obligation
and opportunity to serve.”
Official Election Returns.
Supervisor District No. 1—
Benson, dem.; Johnson, rep.
Cleveland . 12 20
Coleman . 12 28
Dustin . 8 21
Pleasant View 19 24
Rock Falls . 33 32
Sand Creek .... 12 37
Saratoga . 9 26
116 188
Supervisor District No. 3—
John Sullivan, dem.-rep. .... 467
Supervisor District No. 5—
Kelly, dem.; Hubbard, rep.
Chambers . 26 120
Conley . 11 41
Inman . 67 59
Lake . 21 28
McClure . 11 20
Shamrock . 19 16
155 284
Supervisor District No. 7—
Hayes, rep.; Moss, by petition
Atkinson . 62 60
Atkinson,1st w 40 39
Atkinson, 2d w 28 21 .
Atkinson, 3d w 47 37
Stuart . 203 59
370 216
Card of Thanks.
We desire to express our heart
felt thanks to the kind friends who
so kindly assisted us during the ill
ness and death of our beloved
daughter and sister, Mayme V. Mar
ing, and for their expressions of
sympathy.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maring,
Kathryn Maring.
The World-Herald, having failed to
defeat Governor-elect McKelvie by its
pro-election tirades and attacks, now
is devoting its columns to long winded
editorials urging the new governor to
take care of democratic lame ducks
attached to the payroll of the state
board of control. The World-Herald’s
Sunday editorials on b'rds and vari
colored autumn leaves are better read
ing.
George Prettyman has filed suit in
the district court asking for a divorce
from Grace Prettyman, to whom he
was united in marriage at Butte, Ne
braska, on or about September 1, 189G.
In his petition he alleges that she de
serted him at Butte, Nebraska, on or
about September 15, 1912, and has
absented herself from his home since
that time. He asks for an absolute
divorce.
Kenneth L. Lakey, only son of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Lakey, died at the
home of his parents in this city last
.Monday afternoon, after an illness of
a couple of weeks, of pneumonia, fol
lowing an attack of whooping cough,
at the age of ten month and twenty
four days. The funeral was held
Tuesday afternoon, the funeral serv
ices being in charge of Rev. Walker,
pastor of the Methodist church.
Judge R. R. Dickson, chairman of
the County Board of Health, says that
the flu conditions in the county are
improving and that if they continue to
'mprove during the next week that the
ban on public sales and other public
gatherings in the county will be
raised on December 7, a week from
next Saturday. Should a fresh out
break of the disease appear in any
nart of the county the ban will be kept
on.
Dorothy A. Torrey, adopted daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Torrey, of Emmet,
died at the home of her parents near
Emmet last Monday, of pneumonia,
at the age of two years and twenty
four days. The body was shipped to
Ewing Wednesday morning and was
interred in the cemetery there that
afternoon.
J. H. McPharlin has opened a bar
ber shop in the Thomas pool hall,
using the door formerly opening into
the Golden Lunch room as an en
traitce. He lost all his old furniture in
the fire that destroyed his shop last
September and has equipped his shop
with new furniture and has a nifty
up-to-date shop.
Mrs. Angeline Mills died at the
home of her sister, Mrs. Kebb Kel
logg, in this city last Monday after
noon after an illness of several
months of tuberculosis, at the age of
thirty-four years, seven months and
six days. The remains were shipped
to her former home at LeMors, Iowa,
Wednesday morning, being accompa
nied by Mr. and Mrs. Webb Kellogg.
I Beginning Saturday, Nov. 30th
The Auction Store will Resume Business
We want to close out the entire stock in as short a
!j|j time as possible. You will find good quality merchant
dise of nearly everything carried by country merchants.
Such as: Dry Goods, Shoes, Hosiery, Blankets,
Sweaters, Mackinaws, Sheep Lined Coats, Overshoes,
Underwear, Yarn, Overalls, Wool and Cotton Shirts,
Women's and Childrens Coats and Suits and Overcoats.
You can't make a mistake af this Auction for it is
Your Money Back on all Purchases if Desired
This is going to be a Rapid Fire Sale. Come expect
I ing to bid and bid fast. The Flu has set us back two
I months but it is over and you don't take any more
lip chance than at home. Attend this sale from the first
day. It will save kou at least one half.
Virgil Vap Connent died at the home
of his parents north of Page last
Thursday evening, after an illness of
ten days of the flu, at the age of fif
teen years, eleven months and seven
teen days. The funeral was held last
Saturday afternoon, interment in the
cemetery at Page. Mr. and Mrs. Van
Connent are among the pioneer resi
dents of eastern Holt and their many
friends tender them their sincere
sympathy in their hour of sorrow.
Ur. William F. Lewis died at his
home in Anoka Friday night of pneu
monia following influenza. Dr. Lewis
was a pioneer coming to this part of
the country before Boyd countv was
organinzed. He has lived in Mexico
and the Rosebud country moving to
Anoka about two years ago. He
leaves three daughters and one son
The funeral was held Monday after
noon under the auspices of the Ma
sonic order. Interment was in the
Butte cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. John Carr and
daughter, Cecelia, Of Stafford, left
Monday morning for a few days’ visit
in Omaha and Rockwell, Iowa, from
there they will go to Wisconsin to
visit their son who is attending Cam
pian college at Prairie du Chien. Mrs.
Carr and daughter will then go on to
New York City where they will make
an extended visit of two or three
months among relatives. Mr. Carr
will return home. Later, he will join
Mrs. Carr in New York City.
A big reception is being planned in
New York City for the soldiers re
turning from over seas. One block in
the city will be assigned to each state
and it will be properly decorated in
honor of the home-coming of each
state’s sons. Governor Neville has
appointed Norris Husee, formerly
editor of the Norfolk News, as chair
man of the committee to represent Ne
braska at the home coming and if ad
ditional members of the committee
are needed they will be appointed
later.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pendergast of
this city received word the latter part
of last week that their son, Everett,
had died in France of pneumonia.
Everett was one of those who left
Holt county this summer and was in
France within a couple of months
after leaving here. He was married
about a year ago to a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Brown who live near
Chambers. Everett was an industri
our young man and had hundreds of
friends in this city and vicinity who
will regret to learn of his death.
Earl Leslie Wade, son of Mr. and
, Mrs. J. H. Wade, of Dorsey, died at
the home of his parents last Monday
MODER^WflR IS DIVIDED
iBY O RG/l/M I ZflTI (XAL
The problem of our country
today is the organization of all its \
resources and efforts. • The Federal %
Reserve System is the banking 1
organization which is caring for the I
nation’s financial needs. Support it I
by dealing with a member' bank. I
THE /
O’NEILL NATIONAL # .
BANK Ms
Capital, Surplus and Undivided
Profits, $125,000.
Remember Sale Starts
Saturday, November 30th
And Will Continue Until All is Sold. Two Sales
Daily at 2:30 and 7:30 P. M. Store Room
on Corner Opposite K.' C. Hall.
The Auction Store
O’Neill, Nebraska.