The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 15, 1920, Image 6

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    ZEProgpra-ie^:
-THURSDAY, APRIL 15
Fox Corporation
—featuring—
WILLIAM FARNAM
—in—
“TRUE BLUE"
- FRIDAY and SATURDAY -
April 16 and 17
—featuring—
THEDA BARA
—in—
•KATHLEEN MAUVEREEN”
TWO REELS SUNSHINE COMED1
Admission, 20-45c.
Saturday, P. M., 15-30c.
- MONDAY, APRIL 19 -
Select Picture Company
—featuring—
ALICE BRADY
—in—
“THE INDISTRUCTABLE WIFE”
- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20 -
Lecture Course With
LOUIS H. GEARHART AND
CONCERT COMPANY
One Lady and Two Men.
- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 -
Metro Production
—featuring—
ANNA Q. NELSON
—in—
"WAY OF THE STRONG”
A five act all star cast Romantic
Drama of the Yukon and the Greal
Northwest, taken from the novel bj
same name Written by Ridgewcll Cub
lum.
—-THURSDAY, APRIL 22
—featuring—
GLADYS BROCKWELL
—in—
"THE SNEAK”
A Romance of Riches and Rags.
- FRIDAY and SATURDAY -
April 23 and 24.
National Production
—featuring—
MARY PICKFORD
—in—
“THE HOODLUM”
Mary PickforcPs 3d last production
Watch for the Stecker and Caddocl
World’s Champion Wrestling Matcl
of January 30, 1920, Madison Square
Garden, New York, Monday and Tues
day, May 3-4. 1920.
MORE LOCAL MATTERS.
The Sisters of St. Francis of SI
Mary’s Academy desire to mak
grateful acknowledgement of th<
generous donations made by th
parishers of St. Patrick’s and othe
citizens of O’Neill to the recent bazaa:
held at St. Mary’s. This active in
terest, which helped to make the even
a financial as well as a social succesi
is appreiated, indeed, by the facultj
and the students of St. Mary’s.
The parrot seems to be peeved tha1
correspondence in the outside news
papers gave the impression that there
was a factional fight between the
women of O’Neill, over the schoo
board election Tuesday of last week
The correspondence perhaps gainec
his impression from reading an an
nouncement on the front page of the
parrot the week before election, in
structing the voters to scratch the
name of Mrs. Hubbard, a nominee foi
the school board, and to write in the
name of another.
The democratic tirade in the Holl
County Independent, branding as Ger
*T*HERE is one
i ■ * thing about our
\ business (hat interests
i * you all the time—that
| J is the matterof getting
1 • top-notch service
i and long li/e out ot
the battery on your
i f car. That means a job
for you and a job for
i • us. Even batteries with / 1
| , Threaded Rubber In- 2 !
| j sulation must be kept ''' j |
i charged and must have i I
| 0 water put in once in
awhile.
McDermott
& i i
A SMITH :
Distributors
| O’Neill i i
I Valentine, I
mans, pro-Germans and slackers those
| who attended the Senator Norris
' meeting for Hiram Johnson Wednes
| day night, sounds good coming from
one' who shrieked for Wilson four
years ago because “he kept us out of
war”, and then ran his legs off and
worried himself nigh into nervous
prostration trying to keep members
of his own family out of the service.
Any one who lost a son over there,
or in the camps in America, should
appreciate this.
The Holt County Independent,
. speaking for the democratic party,
included women among those whom
it condemn for going to hear the
traitorous utterances of Senator Nor
ris Wednesday night. Even the
women who spent sleepless nights and
anxious days, fearful that the names
of their own loved ones would appear
in the lists of those sent back as
“killed in action”, and the women
. whose loved ones finally did appear
in those lists. But, then, the Inde
pendent claims to be the mouthpiece
of that great democratic statesman,
Arthur Mullen, and with him believes
that “niggers and women don’t amount
to much anyhow.
INDEPENDANT BRANDS NORRIS
HEARERS AS PRO-GERMANS.
The Holt County Independent, which
claims to be the political organ of
Senator Hitchcock, Arthur Mullen and
J. J. Harrington in Holt county, says
that you ai-e either a German or a
pro-German if you went to hear
Senator George Norris speak for
Hiram Johnson for president at the
K. C. Hall Wednesday night and en
joyed or applauded the utterances of
Senator Norris. In fact, if you en
joyed the address you were one whom
the Council of Defense had to cite be
fore them to make you buy bonds or
because of your pro-German incli
nations. The article was not written
by the talented (?) editor of the In*
dependent. It contains words of
several syllables.
The Independent in speaking of the
meeting says: “It was particularly
noticeable that among the men present
were many of those who had to be
cited before the County Council of
Defense because of their refusal to
■ buy liberty bonds or because of pro
German inclinations. * * * Only
a few progressive republicans, in
1 eluding the chairman of the meeting,
‘ and a dozen or more Germans and
• pro-Germans really enjoyed his
speech.’’
A ROLL CALL.
The following is a roll call of a
* '
few of those who the democratic Holt
County Independent says were Ger
mans or pro-Gormans because they
attended and applauded at the Norris
meeting:
Loran Simonson, John Nolan, Wil
liam Fallon, Francis Martin, Neil P.
Brennan, W. J. Hammond, Herbert
Hammond, William J. Biglin, Frank
O’Connell, Edward O’Connell, Arthur
Ryan, John Sullivan Thomas Murphy,
J. M. Hunter, Ed. F. Gallagher, Wil
liam Joyce, Edward M. Gallagher, T.
F. Birmingham, David Stannard,
Frank Phalin, Ben Grady, Henry
Grady, R. J. Marsh, S. L. Berry, Chas.
Daly, John Carr, Peter Duffy, Thomas
Joyce, Charles McKenna, Charles
Stout, Mark Howard, N. G. Miller, S.
0. Campbell, Fred Watson, Thomas
J. Donohoe, W. T. Hayes, J. Victor
Johnson, Albert Purnell, J. U. Yantzi,
J. A. Naylor, J. B. Mellor, Dr. A. H.
Corbett and four or five hundred more.
-ft
AMERICANISM IS ISSUE
FOR CAMPAIIN OF 1920
Republican Congress Ready To Go To
Country On Protection of Our
Interests Alone.
Washington, April 2.—Now that
the treaty has been defeated at the
behest of President Wilson because
the Senate insisted that 'it protect
American interests, it is becoming
more apparent that the issue of the
coming campaign is to be American
ism. *
Already the Republican leaders are
preparing to meet that issue. They
recognize that the Republican House
and Senate have taken action since
their election in 1918 which will make
the affirmative on that issue their only
defense. The Democratic party lead
ers, on the other hand, have taken the
negative, on that issue and are ready
to make a fight on it, though in this
they are divided.
First comes the failure to ratify the
league of nations covenant and the
peace treaty. Every reservation writ
ten into the covenant was meant
merely as a future protection to the
United States. In no way did they
nullify the instrument. Article X was
simply a determination of the strong
nations to keep the world in status
quo, which would have accrued most
to the benefit of England. The reser
vation to it merely declared the right
of Congress to determine hvhether the
United States should war to uphold
boundaries. All the good which might
have come out of the league of nations
with the United States in it remained
in it, and the slight reservations pro
41.
John Barleycorn’s last
order wilt he bier. i
And beer won’t quench
his thirst very much.
STUBBORN AS A MULE
SHIRTS
That have been improperly
laundered — ironed out
of shape—with bands as
kance and humps in the
bosoms that will not down,
didn’t come from this
LAUNDRY
Our shirts are as tractable,
yielding and pliant as a
well-trained bird-dog—
A POINTER FOR YOU
TO FOLLOW.
O’NEILL SANITARY LDY.
Sam A. Arnold,
O’Neill, : : Nebraska
_ SALE!
As I haye rented my place and shortly will remove to Wyoming I will sell the
following described property at public auction, at the farm, 8 miles north
and 2i/2 miles west of the O’Neill cemetery, 6 miles north and 4y2 miles
east of Emmet, commencing at 2 o’clock, p. m., on
Wednesday, April 21st
12 Head Horses and Mules
; J One span mares, black and bay, weight about 1200, 5 and 8 years old, both
I heavy with foal from Jensen’s jack; 1 span mares, bay and gray, weight about
J 1000 and 1100, 7 and 9 years old; 1 black gelding, weight 1200, smooth mouth;
I; 1 sorrel gelding, weight 900, 10 years old; 4 young mules, 2 coming two and 2
j coming yearlings; 1 steel gray mare, coming 3 years old; 1 Shetland pony.
23 Head of Cattle
Four good milch cows, 2 giving milk now, others fresh soon; 2 heifers, 1
I with sucking calf; 3 young steers; 14 lase summer’s calves.
44 Head of Hogs
I Fifteen good brood sows, all heavy with pig; others mixed shoats.
Corn and Oat$
’’ 400 bushel of corn; 130 bushel millet seed; 200 bushel of oats. !i
Farm Machinery, Etc.
j One John Deere eli; 1 Moline lister; 1 corn planter; 1 cultivator; 1 2-row eli;
1 16-cutter disc; 1 endgate seeder; 1 saddle; 1 Moline cultivator; 1 Deering 5
foot mower, nearly new; 1 hay rake; 1 Goodenough 16-inch sulky plow; 1
Acme grain binder, neary new; 1 3-section steel harrow; 1 hay stacker; 1
[ broad tire and 2 narrow tired wagons, 2 with boxes and 1 with rack; 1 buggy;
1 Ford automobile; 15 bushel barley; 6 dozen Plymouth Rock chickens; house
hold goods and other articles too numerous to mention.
FREE LUNCH AT NOON. SALE STARTS AT 2 O’CLOCK P. M.
! TERMS—One year’s time will be given on all sums over $10.00 with ap
proved security and 10 per cent interest. $10 and under cash. No property I
I to be removed until settled for.
JOHN J. MECHALEY, Owner.
| Col. James Moore, Auctioneer. James F. Gallagher, Clerk.
posed by the Republican Senate took
no good away and yet protected
America. For this the Republican
Senators who desired to fake the
slightest change were denounced by
the President on his westward tour as
“insects.” For this they were more
recently denounced as opposed to the
best interests of America. And for
this he gave the order to his followers
in the Senate to kill the treaty, and so
it was killed. In the coming campaign,
r
then, on this issue the Republican Sen
ate believes it will be sustained for
preserving America from subserv
iency to empires and European designs
in the name of world idealism.
Second, Congress has taken the view
that Americanism means the mainte
nance of initiative and the free play of
individuality. For this reason it has
opposed the Plumb plan to communize
the railroads or to continue them
(Continued on page eleven.)
rNorfolk Building ana Loan |
Association. f|
Building and Loan Associations are becoming £ 1
more and more popular every day due to a bet- If
ter understanding of their working principles. y
As a means of assisting the HOME SEEKER r|
to acquire a HOME they are unexcelled. The £ |
£ £ Norfolk Building and Loan Association has been E |
: | a great aid in the development of many towns j| |
:i and communities and with its increased power y
: I and ability, can be of still greater help in the 11
|| future. AVAIL yourself of these opportunities 11
i| to own your own Home or Business Property. ||
: | Call or write £ |
I JOHN L. QUIG, Agent 1
£1 -FOR--— ™
|| NORFOLK BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
How woxdd YOU
like a
like this?
—and for
34 Years Work.
THAT is the kind of increase in salary
the minister has received. His living
expenses have risen just as fast and as far
as yours.
But he is paid on the average just 52 cents
more per church member than he was paid 34
years ago.
The Minister Never Fails You
Every officer of the Government with a war
message to deliver appealed to the ministers first
of all.
But 80% of the ministers receive less income
than government economists figure as a minimum
for the support of an average family.
When hospitals need money they enlist the
support of the ministers—and receive it
But when sickness visits the minister or the
members of his family they must be treated in a
charity ward. His pay is less than a day laborer’s.
8 out of every 10 ministers receive less than
$20 a week—about half the pay of a mechanic.
We Pay Him Half the Wages of a Mechanic
And of these pitifully inadequate salaries, how much do
you contribute? Nothing if you are outside the church;
an average of less than 3c a day if you are a church
member.
All of us share in the benefits of Christian ministers to
the community. They marry us; bury us; baptize our
children; visit us when we are side. In their hands id the
spiritual training of the youth.
We Are All Profiteers at Their Expense
Part of the Interchurch World program is this—a living
wage for every minister of Jesus Christ; an efficient plant,
and a chance to do a big man’s job.
If you want better preachers, help to pay the preachers
better. It’s the best investment for your community—and
for your children—that you can ever make.
v _
iNTERCHWCfi S
WORJJ) MOVEMENT
45 WEST 18th STREET, NEW YORK CITY
The publication of this advertisement is mode possible
through the co-operation of 30 denominations.
' 1 .. '