The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 24, 1920, Image 4

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    The Frontier
Published by Dennis H. Cronin
One Year .$2.00
StX Months....-.$1.00
Three Months _ $0.50
Entered at the post office at O’Neill,
Nebraska, as second-class matter.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertising on Pages 4, 5
and 8 are charged for on a basis of
25 cents an inch (one, column fvidth)
per week; on Page 1 the charge is
40 cents an inch per week. Local ad
vertisements, 10 cents per line first
insertion, subsequent insertions 5
cents per line.
Every subscription is regarded as
an open account. The names of sub
scribers will be insanttly removed
from our mailing list at expiration of
time 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.
MORE LOCAL MATTERS.
Dr .L. A. Burgess enjoyed a several
days visit from his father, Mr. C.
Burgess of Julesburg, Colo., the first
of the week. Mr. Burgess departed
this morning.
Arthur Waldman of Swan town
ship is in the city today. Mr. Wald
man says that during the years he has
lived in the south country he has never
seen it as wet as it has been this
spring.
C. M. Smith, one of the pioneer resi
uenns oi me soum country, uieu at
his home in Chambers last Tuesday
morning, after an illness of several
months of dropsy. Mr. Smith has
been one of the prominent residents
of southern Holt for the past thirty
years and has always taken an active
interest in public affairs. He served
on the county board about twenty-five
years ago, representing Conley town
ship. In the early nineties he was
the populist candidate for sheriff of
this county, but Was defeated at the
election. For the past ten years he
has been engaged in the general mer
cantile business at Chambers.
G. C. Hazelet of Valdez, Alaska, ar
rived in the city last Saturday for a
week end visit at the home of his
brother-in-law, W. T. Evans. Mr.
Hazelet was one of the pioneer resi
dents of this county, having been
principal of the Atkinson Public
schools thirty years ago. While at
the head of the Atkinson schools, in
the eighties, he was elected county
clerk, whifh position he huld for four
years. After retiring from office he
organized the American Chicory
Company in this city and for years
this was the largest factory of this
kind in existence. Pure food laws
and the low price of coffee, for which
chicory Was a substitute, put this en
terprise out of business. Mr. Hazelet
went to Alaska some twenty years ago
and has been engaged in business
there since that time. He was one of
the delegates from Alaska to the re
publican national convention at
Chicago and was on his way home
When he stopped here for a short visit
with relatives and old friends.
CONNOLLY-WALSH.
Frank J. Connolly and Mrs. Anna
E. Walsh were united in marriage last
Wednesday morning at 7 o’clock at
the Catholic church, Rev. M. F. Cas
aidy officiating, in the presence of a
fdw of the relatives and intimate
friends of the contracting parties.
After the (Wedding ceremony a
splendid wedding breakfast was served
the bridal couple at the home of the
groom’s brother, Patrick Connolly,
after which they left on the North
western for a wedding trip to the
bride’s former home at Hoboken, N.
J. They expect to return in about
throe weeks and will make this city
their future home. '
The Frontier joins their many
friends in wishing them many years
of happiness and prosperity.
O’NEILL LINE EXTENSION.
Sioux City Tribune. Representa
tives of business interest s in Bassett,
Rose, Duff, Purdeni and Thedford,
Neb., conferred with the railroad com
mittee of the Chambers of Commerce
last week concerning an extension of
the O’Neill branch of the Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy l-ailroad.
The extension has been proposed
by the Chamber of Commerce and
business men of the town named are
in favor of the improved connection
to Sioux City. 'This will enlarge Sioux
City trade territory in northern Ne
braska.
The desirability of the extension
was discussed at the meeting. A re
quest will doublcss be submitted to
• the Burlington railroad to extend their
line to the town mentioned.
\ --
CURRENT PRESS COMMENT.
Chicago Tribune: The candidate is
a four-square American, who has
a o ked his way up from the humblest
1 inning to the highest position from
which he is, we believe, to be called to
the highest office in the land. His
( i ; cter is unblemished and he has
proved himself in private and public
life worthy of unhesitant ocnfidence.
Ifis experience is many sided, as that
of a chief executive of our govern
ment must be if he is to fulfill his com
plicated and heavy duties with judg
ment tested by real knowledge of af
fairs.
Baltimore American: The voters
:an be sure that Mr. Harding is right
in his views of the domestic needs of
.he Nation, right in his views as to
:lie functions of the Executive, right
n his ideas of the balanced co-ordi
lation of the respective department of
;he Government, right in his sense of
he Nation’s international responsi
bilities, right in regard to all the
things that are now of such import
ince in the vista of the four years in
which there shall be a now Executive
n the White House.
Hartford Courant: Other men well
lualified to sit in the President’s chair
were considered but the choice went to
Harding, for in him was recognized an
able and worthy leader who could com
mand the united support of his party
and the adherence of a large part of
that politically unclassified body of
voters called, for lack of a better term,
independents. He is a standard bearer
worthy of the party he represents.
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle:
There is a platform of principles upon
which any loyal American may stand
proudly. A worthy ticket, a winning
ticket, has been nominated. America
expects every Republican to do his, or
her, duty in this crisis which means so
much.
Philadelphia Enquirer: By the
selection of Warren G. Harding as the
candidate of the Republican party foi
the high office of President and Calvir
Coolidgo for Vice President the con
vention at Chicago has reached £
happy solution of the difficulties thal
c.onrronteu it.
Pittsburgh Gazette Times: The Re
publican party and all the people o:
the United States arc to be congratu
lated on the manner in which thi
Chicago convention solved the situa
tion which confronted it. It was ai
open race. There were some hot, i
not odds-on favorites, but every con
testant ran on his merits alone and go
the position at the finish to which hi:
powers in competition entitled him
The common verdict is that “the bes'
man won.”
New York Sun-Herald: It is no re
flection upon any of the other mei
whom it had under consideration t<
say that the Republican national con
vention has given to the party and the
country a ticket more closely ap
proaching the ideal than any othei
combination that could have been made
up from the material at the conven
tion’s disposal. It is a ticket whicl
deserves and will receive the suppori
of every Republican—one Which everj
independent voter ought to be glad tc
support.
Los Angeles Times: In nominating
Harding for President, the Republi
can national convention has made £
capital choice. Senator Harding is £
! pood American, a trood Republican
' and a good citizen—and a good winner,
j At no time in his public career has he
been false to the traditions, the ideals,
the principles of the candidates of the
Republican party. As a fitting close
of a good day’s work the convention
named Calvin Coolidge, governor of
Massachusetts, for Vice President. No
more popular selection could have been
made.
Baltimore News: Senator Harding
is simply an able, clear-headed, steady
figure about whom to rally and
through whom to exercise such ability
for government as the Republican
party contains. He is avowedly the
champion of the sort of government
irrespective of which party controls
it—that we had under William Mc
Kinley; a stronger man by far than
McKinley, an abler man, but yet a
man who would be willing to look for
the John Hays and Elihu Roots of his
party to help him run the executive
department and who would do his best
to get the best out of that co-ordinate
branch of government, the Congress,
and still see in the latter the formal
embodiment of the power and funct
ioning of the body politic.
San Francisco Chronicle: The
Chronicle had hoped for the nomina
tion of Hiram W. Johnson. It regrets
that the decision has been otherwise
But that ends it. It is not the indi
vidual who is of most national in
terest. It is the principles and not
men to which party loyalty must be
iriven if parties and indeed, the re
public is to endure.
Philadelphia Press! Mr. Harding is
a man of brains and force and higt
character. He is a senator of strong
reliable, conservative type, who wil
bring to the White House the qualities
that make for soberiety, sanity am
safety.
St. Louis Globe Democrat: Hardinj
. resembles Garfield somewhat in -hr
• qualities, but the people of Ohio, wh<
, know him best, see a closer compari
, son with McKinley. He is, withou
. doubt, a man of the MeKinley- type
, having much the same sane soberncs;
• of demeanor, the same conservatisr
. of speech.
i Providence Tribune: There is no
. the slightest taint of heterodoxy ii
; his partisanship. He is much of th
staid, plodding, respectable and alway
dependable type of McKinley—withou
. the Hanna handicap. But as a fore
! ward looking man for these new time
, that are opening to a future imper
, ious finger to our puissant American
Mr. Harding is an own brother to Lot’
wife.
Springfield (Mass.) Union: Thi
nomi.u'i n of Senator Warren G
Harding of Ohio, came finally as th<
logical, f not the inevitable result o:
the rivalry for the nomination in thi
convention,though he had been countec
out of the probabilities at the start.
Huston Post: We stop the press t<
report that the rumor Mr. Burlesor
has called a cabinet meeting is withou
confirmation.
/ ______
-I
FLOUR, SALT ftND COAL
FLOUR, SHORTS, BRAN AND SHORTS
SALT—BLOCKS, BARRELS AND SACKS
TANKAGE
BINDING TWINE—CRICKET PROOF
AUTO TIRES AND TUBES
Farmers Union Elevator
Hugh Coyne, Manager
__
If the United States is to undertake
a mandate over any country, why not
take a mandate over Mexico and help
restore peace and order in that
country? Mexico is nearer home.
A leading Democratic paper says
that “the only chance of success the
Democratic party has is to repudiate
Wilsonism, lock, stock and barrl, at
San Francisco.”
$4.00 I
Men’s Overalls
$2.49
35c Package Excelo Cake 97f»
Flour . 4 II*
5 Large Bars Bob 9Qp
White Soap .*. 4ill*
3 Packages Rit—the 9Ap
Soap Dye . 4*rl*
2 Packages O C n
Lux .. 4JO
5 Pounds Red RQn
Beans .... JJO
5 Pound Black CQp
15c Sacks Table Q.
Salt ... JO
30c Can Early June* IQ.
Peas . I JO
30c Can Iowa Sweet • IQ.
Corn . I JO
1 Pound Horse Shoe QCn
Tobacco ._.. llJi*
1 Large Size Bag Corn
Cake Tobacco . *rJI*
1 Can Velvet 14.
Tobacco ... » *tO
1 Can Prince Albert 1 4 «
Tobacco . I *tO
Dry Summer Sausage, 9A« '
pound . J*rO
5 Pounds Head OQp L
Rice . UJl* |
1 Fancy Red Star Lemons, 9®P 1
4 Pounds Texas New /LQp 1
: Fancy Select Bananas; California I
1 Cantalopes and Peaches for Sale. f
’ $4.00 Men’s 09 AQ [
Overalls . «p4i*rJ
$3.00 Men’s Summer 01 00
’ Union Suits . $ * • J J
! $1.25 Men’s Summer /IQn
i Caps . 9-Jl*
$6.00 Men's Dress 09 00
Shirts . $4i J J
t $3.00 Men’s Dress 01 70
Shirts .. J I 11 J
J $2.75 Men’s Dress .$1.24
5 $2.25 Ments Dress QQ —
t Shirts .,. JJO
- 65c Men’s QQp
i Garters . JJO
- Modeled to your order—your
Royal Tailored-to-Measure
Clothes. Men’s All OOQ 7C
Wool Suits . yJJilU
57 STEPS
‘MELVIN’
SELLS FOR LESS \
I \
A MAN FEELS AS GOOD AS HE LOOKS j
We can actually make you look better than
you feel by cleaning, pressing and repairing
your clothes with such a high degree of cor
rectness that you are bound to note “the dif
ference.” We do it sanitarily, too. I
O’NEILL SANITARY LAUNDRY
Phone 209.
Vitt’s Grocery
WE PAY CASH FOR EGGS.
Tip Top Bread.15 cent loaves |
Bon Ton Flour, per sack...$4.25 |
(Package of Yeast with every sack.)
Karine Coffee.55c
Catsup . 35c
New Potatoes, per pound.._. 15c
We carry a full line of fresh fruit and vegetables.
J. A. Vitt, °’N“L„
| Norfolk Building and Loan I
Association. J.
Building and Loan Associations are becoming jj
jj more and more popular every day due to a bet- jj
jj ter understanding of their working principles, jjj
jj As a means of assisting the HOME SEEKER g|§
jj to acquire a HOME they are unexcelled. The jj
gj Norfolk Building and Loan Association has been jj /
B a great aid in the development of many towns jj
| and communities and with its increased power jjj
jj and ability, can be of still greater help in the j|
jj future. AVAIL yourself of these opportunities M
jj to own your own Home or Business Property.
m Call or write m
-- rssrs.
1 JOHN L. Ol IO, Agent f
1 -FOR-- j|
| NORFOLK BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION §j
. llll il Ji :ll: Jili; II; ii: g: i 1; illHife lili.lll: ll.tP
mey were mCHmp'®‘®'/^ur'i/te de‘
. ere made t0 me«V 1 agree
Unique flavor fn * y°Ur taste!
teiW'b0dy du?focnaCe 3nd »W
areareveiat,on, ?°mes«c tobaccos'
8“
faste; no unpleasan't c®aretty afte^
To get a Jine n ‘pretty odor!
’ Puff-for.puffP'^^nfpl™6'^''"
‘he woriCanfn any cSS^h
J RE,"“->* roflacco Premiums!
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