The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 14, 1919, Image 6

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    Fourth of July Statement.
Amount (collected .$962.3!
Amount paid out:
Catherine Morrison .$ 4.2<
D. H. 'Cronin . 19.3(
Atkinson Graphic . 2.01
Galena Lumber Co. 6.1(
Ruth Scott . 2.0<
Stilwell . 3.W
D. H. Clauson . L51
Rogers Tent & Awning Co. 33.8£
Western Union . 50.01
Norfolk Daily News . 3.0i
N. L. Robut .'. 3.0(
Miss Miles . 5-01
Marjorie Downey . 1.0(
George A. Miles . 44.1’
Mike Kirwin. 8,(K
Hanford Produce Co. 3.<M
Page Boggs . 2.0(
Phil Ziemer . 10.91
Inman Leader . 4.0(
Mayfield & Masters . 24.11
Sioux City Tribune. 4.31
World-Herald . 9.81
Cecil Conklin . 26.01
Mitchel Shelly . 1.01
Dan Murphy . 2.01
Arbuthnot . 2.01
Murphy . 6.01
Chicago & Northwestern . 44.61
E. Porter . 5.01
Clark Hough .*. 1.01
H. E. Zimmerman . 100.01
Frank O’Connell . 7.51
H. Elliott . 25.01
Pat Brown . 100.01
Garry Benson . 2.6(
H. H. Elliott . 25.01
Mrs. McKenna . 5.01
John Patterson . 150.01
Helen Walters . 1.01
Florence Kent . 2.0(
Gladys Ryan . 2.01
Page Reporter . 2.71
George McCarthy . 2.0i
' Dan Murphy . 2.0'
Chas. Johnson . 1JX
John Patterson . 50.0
Rolland Rider . 1.0
Clark Hough . 1.0'
Roland Rider . 1.0
Dan Murphy . 2.0»
Sisters of St. Francis . 15.0
Gerald Calwert . 1.6
George Longstaff. 5.0
Robert Right . 2.0
E. H. Whelan . 25.0
Raymond Masters . 1.0
Raymond Masters . 1.0
Page Boggs . 1.0
Page Boggs .-. 1.0
Harold Hough . 1.0
Harold Hough . 1.0
John L. Quig, telephone and
Telegrams ....~. 16.7
Total .$883.0
Leaving a balance of.$79.2:
John L. Quig, Treasurer.
CIVIL SERVICE REOPENED
TO DISCHARGED YANKS
Under an opinion of the Attorne;
General rendered to the Civil Servic
Commission, United States soldiers
sailors and marines who missed op
portunity to enter service examina
tions because of their military o
naval service may now be given i
chance to qualify for Government
i employment.
The Civil Service Commission,wish
ing to give discharged service men
i every opportunty to qualify for civil
i positions, asked the Attorney Gen
i eral for an opinion as to whether it
i would be legal to open, for the benefit
i of honorably discharged soldiers,
sailors and marines, examinations
which had been closed. The Attorney
General having expressed the opinion
that such action is legal in view of
the spirit of a recent act of Congress
which provides for preference in ap
pointment to civil positions for dis
charged soldiers, sailors and marines,
the Civil Service Commission will
open only to honorably discharged
service men examinations which were
pending on April 0, 1917, the date of
America’s declaration ot war, or
which were subsequently announced,
and for which registers of eligibles
; now exist.
Sixty days from August 1, 1919,
will be allowed soldiers, sailors and
marines in which to be examined for
positions for which examinations have
already been held if they were dis
charged from the military or naval
service prior to August 1, and sixty
days from the date of their discharge
will be allowed those discharged sub
sequent to August 1, 1919.
i -
Getting Out of the Mud.
A resourceful motorist whose car
Inis teen stuck in the mud does not
always have to fall back on a pair
of mules to get free. For such an
emergency the United States Tire
Company offers some suggestions
that have proved valuable.
The first calls for having stored
^ away somewhere in the car a stack
^ of old newspapers. When the car
^ gets stuck and the wheels refuse tc
| take hold, feed in some of the old
^ papers between the tire and the mud
^ Usually only a few will have to be
worked in before the wheels will be
gin to grip and the car start forward.
This method of handling a difficult
situation is so simple and so uni
formly successful, that every motorist
should know of it and carry a pile
cr old newspapers, unless he is
equipped with some other apparatus
for such a contingency.
Here is the other method suggested
by the United States Tire Company:
Put the car in low, and if you cannot
feed the gas with your foot evenly,
so~that the wheels will revolve slowly,
put your emergency brake on. Do
not put it on so that the wheels will
not revolve at all, but tightly enough
to keep them from revolving rapidly.
With the wheels turning slowly, the
maximum pull is delivered to them
by having the car in low gear, and«o
long as they turn slowly they can get
the benefit of the tremendous power.
It is not always wise to fill the hole
with stones or bricks, for their rough
edges are hard on tires. Small
branches of trees are better, as they
offer much better tractive space.
Should this method fail, quite often
a slight push that would not much
more than move a baby buggy will
furnish just the added amount of
nowor necessarv to get the car going.
Statement of the Ownership, Manage
ment, Circulation, - Etc., Required
by the Act of Congress of August
24, 1912.
Of The Frontier, published weekly
at O’Neill, Nebraska, for April 1, 1919
State of Nebraska, Holt county, ss.
Before me, a notary public in and
for the state and county aforesaid,
personally appeared D. H. Cronin,
who, having been duly sworn accord
ing to law, deposes and says that he
is the publisher and owner of The
Frontier and that the following is, to
the best of his knowledge and belief,
a true statement of the ownership,
maagemcnt of the aforesaid publi
--
! NEB
I VICTORY, JE FAIR
) Our First Bi Of World War.
> RE-UNiO VETERANS
; i9^~--7
LINCOLN NEBRASKA
August 31 to Sept.
; UNQUESTIONABLY dIQQEST AND BEST PAIR EVER ATTEMPTED
* LIVE STOCK SHOW OF BEEF AND DAIRY CATTLE
COUNTY AND INDIVIDUAL DISPLAYS OF AGRICULTURE
POULTRY SHOW-APPLE SHOW- MANUFACTURERS'
EXHIBIT - MACHINERY-TRACTORS • SCHOO'. AND
EDUCATIONAL displays including BOYS’and girls'
GARDEN ■%, CANNING
CLUBS
BEST AND CLEANEST ATTRACTIONS
’ *25000 PRODUCTION IN FIREWORKS OP BATTLE OP SAINT MIHlEI
AND PEACE JUBILEE
THREE RING CIRCUS • AUTO ■ HARNESS-AND RUNNING
RACES
FAMILY OUTING • RELAXATION • DIVERSION * IDEAS
\GREATER NEBRASK “
..“SERVICER gg
i r
. . .!mm
CAMELS’ expert blend of choice
Turkish and choice Domestic
tobaccos answers every cigarette
desire you ever had! Camels give
such universal delight, such unusual
enjoyment and satisfaction you’ll
call them a cigarette revelation 1
If you’d like a cigarette that does
not leave any unpleasant cigaietty
aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty
odor, smoke Camels! If you
hunger for a rich, mellow-mild
cigarette that has all that desirable
cents a package cigarette “body”—well, you get
® some Camels as quickly as you can 1
Camels’ expert blend makes all this
Camels are sold everywhere in scientific- delightful quality possible. Your
ally sealed packages of 20 cigarettes; or personal test will prove that Camel
ton packages (200 Cigarettes) in a glass- r- • ,, ,
ine-paper-covered carton. Wo strongly Cigarettes are the only cigarettes
recommend this carton for the home or yOU ever Smoked that lUSt Seem
office supply, or when you travel. , , , , ,
made to meet your taste 1 You will
R. J. Reynolds tobacco company prefer them to either kind of to
wuuton-smUm. n. c. bacco smoked straight 1
Compare Camels for quality and
I satisfaction with any cigarette in
the world at any price 1
cation for the date shown in the t
above caption, required by the act of 1
August 24, 1912, embodied in section i
443, Postal Laws and Regulations,. p
1. That D. H. Cronin, of O’Neill,
Nebraska, is the publisher, editor and
business manager.
2. That D. H. Cronin, of O’Neill, s
Nebraska, is the owner. j
3. No bondholders or mortgagees.
D. H. CRONIN, Editor
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 13th day ofAugust, 1919.
(Seal) C. P. HANCOCK,
Notary Public.
My commission expires Apr. 12, 1922.
O’Neill vs. Pumpkin Center.
Sunday two of our noted ball teams,
O’Neill and Pumpkin Center, clashed
on the Pumpkin Center diamond, the
score being 23 to 3 in favor of the
Pumpkin Center boys. It proved to
be a very interesting game all the
way through and was greatly enjoyed
by the large crowd assembled there.
The battery for O’Neill was “Bill”
Martin and Jens Johnson, but on ac
count of receiving an injury in the
^rogrrsi m:
GOOD MUSIC.
FOR AUGUST 15 AND 16
On account of the Old Setlers’
picnic on August 14th we will not
open the Theatre on Thursday, August
14th but on August 15th we will run:
Select Pictures
-Featuring
CONSTANCE TALMAGE
-in
“Sauce for the Goose”
Also
New Screen Telegram—(Weekly.)
SATURDAY, AUGUST 16—
3 P. M. and Night.
Paramount Production
-Featuring
VIVIAN MARTIN
-in
“Fair Barbarian”
Also
FATTY ARBUCKLE
-in
“Camping Out”
One of His Very Latest Releases
bird inning the latter was relieved
y Mr. Gist, a former Western League
layer, who proved to the utmost his
reat ability as a catcher.
The battery for Pumpkin Center was
laurice Graham and Edward Matt
hews. Graham would have pitched
a shutout game if he had the proper
support. But never-the-less the
Pumpkin Center boys proved their
| ability to play bail and hauled in the
I laurels as usual. ***
Royal Theater
Tuesday
Afternoon & Night, Aug. 19
“Queen of the Sea”
FEATURING
Annette Keller man
•‘Qvieen of the Sea.” Cost $1,000,000.00
The director used 50 miles of films.
More than 1500 persons appear in it.
200 beautiful girls pose as mermaids.
The stab is Annette Kellerman, the Modern Venus.
Work began June 24, 1917, ending May this year.
Scenes were taken in Bar Harber, Bermuda, Jamacia, Florida,
Mexico and California.
One of the biggest undertakings was the decoying of a flock of
10,000 sea gulls into a locality and keeping,'them there for three days.
Some of the Big thrills in
“QUEEN OF THE SEA”j
1. Annette Kellerman’s 85-foot dive from a cable into the sea.
2. Swimmer’s life-and-death battle in the boiling surf.
3. Heroic rescues of men from a ship afire in mid-ocean.
4. Tremendous storm that batters vessel to pieces.
5. Desperate fight in sea cavern with balls of fire as weapons.
6. Chained Women attacked by ferrets in the dungeon of the screen B
villain.
7. Heroine’s miraculous escape from death under revolving knives.
8. Terrific combat beneatth the waves between mermaids and sirens
9. Girl’s amazing fall from the clouds into the yawing ocean.
10. Sword conflict in the dark between dismounted cavalry forces.
| Admission - - - 25-35c
in
‘Chain’ " \ 'Vaco*
Good Tires For
Your Car
There are just two kinds of tires—good
tires, and others.
Good tires last longest. They save
time, trouble and temper. Also money.
It will pay you to use them.
We have exactly the ones for your
car—good tires, United States Tires.
Five types—one for every need of price
or use.
Better get in touch with us.
United States Tires
are Good Tires
*We KOW United States Tires are good tires. That’s why we sell them.
Warner & Si ms