The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 23, 1921, Image 5

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‘‘Oi’ve got a job an’ a pass to St,
Louis on th’ Wabash. Yez can go to
hell.”
The State College of Agriculture
offers the following suggestions for
reducing losses in shipping hogs in
hot weather: The hogs should be
handled as quietly and slowly as pos
sible and loaded in a cool condition.
They should be brought to the yards
in plenty of time to rest and cool off
before loading. Plenty of drinking
water should be available, but many
do not feed near loading time. Bed
the car well with sand and wet it down
thoroughly. Don’t use- cinders or
straw for bedding. Where ice is avail
able it is well to place a couple of cakes
in the car. Don’t overload. Often
times money is saved by loading only
15,000 pounds in a 36-foot car, instead
of 17,000 pounds minimum.
SAVE MONEY!
1 can write you an insurance policy
on your residence property, covering
fire, lightning, tornado, wind storm
and cyclone, for $15 per thousand for
five year term. Similar farm policy
$25 per thousand.
L. G. GILLESPIE
O’Neill, Neb.
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
S. PAUL’S CHURCH EPISCOPAL
2nd Sunday each month, Vespers, 8
d. m. Monday following 2nd Sunday
Holy Communion 8:30 a. m. Tuesday
following 4th Sunday, Guild meeting
and Instuclion 2:00 p. in., Vespers at
8:00 ]>. in.
Rev. W. A. Render, Pastor.
ST.PATRICK’SCHURCH CATHOLIC
•Sunday Services: first Mass 8 a.
m., Second Mass 9 a. m., High Mass
at 10.30 a. m. Vespers 7:30 p. m.
Daily Mass 8 a. m.
Catechetical Instruction for First
Communicants 3 p. m. Tuesdays and
i'hursdays.
Confession, Saturday from 3 p. n..
to 0 p. m. and from 7 p. m. to 9:30
-— p. m. Children’s Confession, First
Thursday every month at 1:30 p. m.
Very Rev. M. F. Cassidy, Pastor.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Sunday morning service 10:30 a. m.,
Sunday School 11:30 a. m., Christian
Endeavor 7 p. m., Evening Service 8
p. m.
Midweek Service, Wednesday 8 p. m.
Choir Rehearsal Saturday, 8 p. m.
Rev. George Longstaff, Pastor.
_-A—.____
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH.
Sunday Morning Service, 10:30 a.
m., Sunday School, 11:30 a. m., Young
People’s Service 7 p. m., Evening
Service, 8 p. m.
Midweek Services: Tuesday, 7:30
p. m.; Young People’s Prayer Service
Wednesday, 8 p. m.; Regular Prayer
Meeting, Thursday, 8 p. m., Choir
Practice, Young People’s Choir, Fri
day, 8 p. m., Morning Choir Saturday,
7:30 p. m.
Rev. C. F. Steiner, Pastor.
PUBLIC LIBRARY HOURS.
The Public Library will be open
each day except Monday from this
time on until further notice:
Afternoons, 2:00 to 5:30.
Evenings, 7:00 to 9:00.
Sundays, 2:00 to 5:30 p. m.
MARY McLAUGHLIN, Librarian.
WEEKLY MARKETGRAM.
Washington, D. C., For Week Ended
June 20, 1921:
Hay—Markets continue inactive.
Receipts light but equal to demand
which is principally from city trade.
Prices practically unchanged. Demand
fair at Chicago and Cincinnati fop
gpod grades of Timothy. Low grades
slow sale everywhere. Little Alfalfa
moving- Some new Alfalfa arriving
out of condition. No. 1 Timothy quoted
New York $28.50, Pittsburgh $21, Cin
cinnati $19, Chicago $22, Atlanta $27,
Memphis $28. No. 1 Alfalfa Jackson
ville $31, Memphis $21.50, Kansas
City $19. No. 1 Prajrie Kansas City
$13,50, Memphis $16, Chicago $19.
Feed—Increased offerings by north
western mills continue to depress
prices of wheatfeeds. Red Dog scarce
in Pittsburgh and Chicago markets.
Supplies of oil meals in excess of de
mand and easier tendency is noticable.
Cornfeeds showing strength, price
from now on will be largely dependent
upon weather conditions, demand
rather light. Sentiment of trade bear
ish light speculative buying reported.
Alfalfa meal situation quiet- Beet
pulp dull. Quoted bran $14.25, Mid
dlings $14.50 .Minneapolis. Linseed
meal $28 Minneapolis; beet pulp $25
New York; 36 per cent cotton seed
meal $29.50 Memphis; No. 1 Alfalfa
meal $18 Kansas City; White Hominy
feed $28.50 St. Louis $24.50 Chicago.
Fruits and Vegetables—Irish cob
bler potatoes from eastern shore of
Virginia down 26-75c per bbl. in east
ern markets, ranging New York and
Baltimore $2.75-$3; Philadelphia $3
$3.25; Pittsburgh $3.50-$3.6Q; Boston
S$.76-$4. Total movement of New po
tatoes slightly heavier than a week
Florida tomatoes in six basket car
riers down 50c per crate New York
at $3-$3.50. Mississippi and Texas to
matoes generally lower in consuming
markets, closing $1.25-$1.75 per 4
basket .carrier.
California Salmon Tint captalopes
recovered 35-40c from the seasons low
point, standards 45’s closing $1.75-$2
f. o. b. cash track. Prices declined
75c-$l per crate in most consuming
markets, closing $3-$4.25.
Georgia Hiley peaches down $1-$1.25
per six basket carrier in New York,
closing $8-$3.50. Demand moderate;
supplies of good stock limited.
Florida and Georgia Tom Watson
watermelons, medium size, firm New
York at $500-$850 per car. Good de
mand at Florida shipping points;
prices up $25 per car, ranging $200
$500 f. o. b. cash track to growers.
Dairy Products—Butter markets
firm; trading active; quality good for
this season, but percentage of under
grades light. Price tendency upward.
Closing prices 92 score: Yew York
33%c; Chicago ?3c; Philadelphia 34c;
Boston 86e.
Cheese market active under good
consumptive and storing demand.
Production still heavy. Some of cur
rent make beginning to show effects
of hot weather.
Prices at Wisconsin primary mar
kets average: Twins 14c: Daisies
14 Me; Double Daisies 14c; Longhorns
15; Young Americas 1514c.
Live Stock and Meats—Hog prices
at Chicago advanced 20c-30c per 100
lbs. The past week, medium and light
weights advancing most. Beef steers
generally steady. Butcher cows and
heifers ranged 25-75c lower. Fat
lambs advanced sharply, ranging from
$1.50-$1.75 per 100 lbs. higher. Fat
ewes up 25c-50c; Yearlings firm. June
20, Chicago Prices: Hogs, top $8.60
bulk of sales $8.20-$8.45; medium and
— good beef steers $7f>0-$8.65; butchei
cows and heifers $3.75-$8.25; feeder
steers $5.75-$7.25; light -and mediuir
weight veal calves $7.50-$9.50; fal
lambs $9.75-$12.75 yearlings $6.50
$10; fat ewes $3.25-$5.
Stocker and feeder shipments fronr
11 important markets during the weel
ending June 10 were cattle and calve:
32,680; hogs 6,763; sheep 10,93.8
The trend of eastern wholesale fresl
meat prices was downward. Beef los
$1-$1.50; lamb $2-$3; pork loins gen
evally $1 lower. Veal steady to $
lower; mutton unchanged. June 2<
prices good grade meats: Beef $14.50
$16; veal $l6-$19; lamb $22-$25; mut
ton $10-$16; light pork loins $21-$24;
heavy loins 117-$19.
Grain—Chicago July and September
wheat declined from high points on
the 12th and ranged lower throughout
the remainder of the week. News
mostly bullish but outside trade very
limited and buying support insufficient.
Weakness in stock market and cotton
market induced weakness and sharp
decline in grain prices on the 20tli.
Disappointing threshing returns com
ing in from Oklahoma, Kansas, Mis
souri and Indiana. Red Rust being
found over large area in northwest.
Cash premiums easier in all markets.
Export demand generally slow. Visi
ble supply wheat 11,280,000 bushels an
increase of 1,210,000 bushels for week.
Visible supply corn 22,960,000 bushels
an increase of 1,011,000 bushels for
week. In Chicago cash market No. 2
Red Winter Wheat $1.36; No .2 Hard
81.38; No. 3 Mixed corn 62c; No. 3
Yellow corn 62c; No. 3 White oats 37c.
For the week: Chicago September
wheat down 7 3-8c at $1.29*4; Septem
ber corn down half ct. at 63 3-4c. Chi
cago July wheat down 15c at $1.25;
July corn down 2c at 63c. Minneapolis
July wheat down 10*4c at $1.31; Kan
sas City July 13%c at $1.16 3-4; Win
nipeg July 7*4c at $1.74.
Cotton—Spot cotton reached the
lowest price of the season closing at
9.98c per lb. This is a drop of 112
points for the week. New York July
futures down 161 points at 10X7c.
FAIRNESS OF HARDING
IS LIKED BY CONGRESS
Attitude Toward Labor, Agriculture
and Industry Appeals to
Nation’s Lawmakers.
Washington, June 20.—Members of
Congress have been carefully studying
the general policy outlined by Presi
dent Harding toward labor, manufact
uring and agriculture in his speeches
of the past few days. With this policy
they agree. Hence accentuated har
mony between the Republican execu
tive and the Republican Congress.
These are the utterances which they
have singled out as expressive of the
policy of the new administration:
“Justice, like charity, must begin at
home. We must be just to oprselves
and to our own, first of all. This is
not selfish, for selfishness seeks more
than a fair share; we seek only that
which is rightfully our own and then
to preserve that to ourselves and our
posterity. The war sadly disjointed ■
things in the world, and we are now
seeking to restore the proper balance.
In our efforts to do this, to achieve
justice without selfishness, we will d° :
well to cling to our firm foundation. I
believe ip the inspired beginning. ■
There we will find that national great
ness was founded on agriculture, that
later we developed industry, and ulti
mately commerce, both domestic and
foreign.
“The country has emerged from the
hectic prosperity following the war,
and is suffering fpom depression- We
are confronted by the need to place
our own house in order, and no more
important feature of that effort can be
visioned than to place our agricultural
industry on a sound basis, and provide
machinery and facilities for financing i
and distributing crops. If we do this,
we merely will be providing the farmer 1
with facilities similar to those enjoyed
by the business community generally. <
The farmer is entitled to all the help i
the Government can give him without
injustice to others, because it is of the
utmost importance that the agricult- :
ural community be contented and pros
perous. '
“Turning to industry, our policy
must be to give it every facility pos
sible, but to keep Government outside
of participation in business qn its own
account. It is not necessary for the
Government to intrude itself in the
business activities which are better
conducted throughv private instrumen
talities, merely in order to demon
strate that the Government is more
powerful than anything else in this :
country. ’
WILL PROTECT MOTHERHOOD.
_ ]
Washington, June 20.—Protection of
maternity and infancy by providing op
portunity for mothers everywhere to
receive suitable instruction in child
hygene is given in a bill favorably
reported to the Senate by Chairman
Kenyon, of the Senate Committee on
Education and Labor.
The measure is the result of dis
closures by the Children’s Bureau that
23,000 mothers died in 1918 from
causes connected with childbirth. The 1
Bureau also demonstrated:
High maternal mortality rate
above the average for the United
States as a whole.
The fact that 80 per cent of the
mothers had received no advice oi^
trained care during pregnancy.
Many mothers had no trained at
tendants of any kind at confinement.
In accessibility and often entire l^ck
ot' hospitals, doctors, and nurses.
Practically no organized effort to
meet the need for instruction in pre
natal and infant hygene and for train
'
ed care during pregnancy and con
finement.
An almost prohibitive cost for pro
viding adequate care of confinement
in scattered and isolated rural dis
tricts. The very districts where advice
and supervision during pregnancy and
letter help at confinement are most
needed are the ones least able to obtain
ir. without financial aid.
HOW THE FARMERS STAND.
Chicago, 111., June 20.—Returns
trom a questionnaire sent out by the
American Farm Bureau Federations
had been received tonight from ten
states, including Iowa, South Dakota
and Nebraska. The questions and the
result of the returns so far received
follows:
“Do you favor commodity financing
based on bonded warehouse receipts?”
Yes 31,424, no 1,289.
“Do you favor live' stock financing
based on adequate pledge of animals
and feed?” Yes 46,652, no 236.
“Do you favor development of a
personal rural credits system based
on proper safeguards?” Yes 36,904,
no 1,441.
“Do you request that authority be
granted the federal reserve board so
to classify rediscounts as to give
priority to loans for basic production
of all kinds?” Yes 4,946, no 1,651.
“Do you favor increasing the limit
on federal land bank mortgage loans
from $10,000 to $25,000?” Yes 26,031,
io 8,169.
“Do you favor asking congress to
submit to the states a constitutional
amendment prohibiting the issuance
of all tax free securities?” Yes 32
-)23, no 4,596.
“Are you in favor of continuing the
excess profits tax?" Yes 37,280, no
2,675.
“Are you opposed to the enactment
of a general sales tax?” Yes 17,947,
io 22,393.
“Will you be able to move a larger
amount of agricultural products if the
American Farm Bureau Federation
secures an adequate reduction in
freight charges?” Yes 39,569, no
1,235.
“Do you favor the building of farm
:o-market roads prior to the construct
ion of transcontinental highways?”
fes 38,279, no 1,424.
“Do you favor the Great Lakes-St.
Lawrence waterway?” Yes 36,975,
io 3,223.
“Do you favor other waterway de
velopment for transportation, rt
damation and power?” Yes 9,455, no
' 597.
“Do you favor placing the packers
inder regulation by the government
ind the vesting of such regulation in
he department of agriculture?” Yes
16,459, no 2,151.
“Do you favor legislation making
llegal the practice of short selling in
agricultural products?” Yes 38,884,
io 1,752.
“Do you favor the truth-in-fabric
egislation?" Yes 41,713, no 823.
“Do you favor enabling legislation
'cr co-operative marketing” Yes 41,
>68, no 676,
AS A SPECIMEN.
Birmingham Age-Herald: “Where
n the demnition blazes is that new
eporter, Jobbles?” belowed the city
ditor.
“I sent him out to cover a lecture
>n the ‘Missing Link,” said the assist
int city editor.
“You did, eh? Well, I hope you told
dm to sit in the rear where he would
l’t attract much attention. At a
reefing of that kind hp’s liable to bp
Irafted.”
THE DIPLOMAT.
“Didn't you know that it is against
;he law to beg for money?’ said the
ady to the tramp at the back door.
“I wasn’t goin’ t' beg for money
na’am.’’ , ,
“It’s just as bad to beg for bread.’
“I wasn’t going to beg for no bread,
na’am.”
“What were you going to beg for
hen, pray?”
“Only for one o’ your photographs,
na’am.”—Yonkers Statesman.
TOOT-TOOT!
A sufferer whp livps clpse to a rail
road yard in the suburbs wrote the
’olloiwing to the railroad company
■omplaining about the racket made by
i switch engine:
“Gentlemen: Why is it that your
switch engine has to ding and dong
nid fizz and spit and bang and hiss
md ponts and grate and grind and puff
and bump and chug and hoot and toot
and whistle and wheeze, jar and jerk
:nd howl and snarl and puff and growl
and thump and boom and clash and
jolt and screech and snort apd snarl
and slam and throb and roar and rattle
and yell apd spmke and smell apd
shriek like hell all night long?1’—
Boston Globe.
OBVIOUSLY FEMININE.
Boston Transcript: “Oh, Bob,
you’ve let in a lot of flies!”
- - -
“I’ll get after them, dear.”
“You’ll never kill them all.”
“Well, I’ll kill these three, anyway
—they’re females.”
“How do you know?”
“They made a dash fbr the mirror
the lirst thing."
WOULD WATCH IT.
Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph: —
“Well. Pat,” said Bridget, “what kind
of a bird have you brought home in
the cage?”
“Well, it’s a raven,” replied Patv
“A raven. And what aid you bring
homea bird like that for?”
“Well, I read in a paper the other
night that a raven has been known to
live for three hundred years. I don’t
believe it, so I am going to put it to
the test.”
OF COURSE NOT.
Indianapolis News: A resident of
the rural districts, Louis by name,
brought a load of hogs to the local
stockyards and they were sold by Ben,
another native of the fatherland. Later
in the day Louis was digesting the ac
count of the sale, when Ben approach
ed and inquired:
“Louie, did your hogs weigh as
n'uch as you thought they would?”
Louie replied: “No, they didn’t but I
didn’t think they would.”
THEY’RE QUITE ALIKE.
A rather successful Hoosier school
ma'am has for one of her ambitions
never to look her profession so that
people can gues.%jt when they see her.
So whenever she goes on a vacation
she poses as a stenographer ,a clerk
or a member of some other profession
than her own. When she left at
Easter time she said that this.time she
“was going to be a widow for a week.”
She succeeded in carrying off her
pose successfully, too, until the day
before she started home. Then on
that day she overheard the colored
elevator boy talking to a man she had
met. “So she am a widow?” he said.
“Yes,” the man nodded his head.
“I ain’t surprised,” the boy retorted
with conviction. “I said that the day
she come. I say that woman’s either
a widow or a school teacher. Both of
’em always have such a pert, ‘I have
bossed the world, way.”—Indianapolis
News.
YOU CAN’T BEAT ’EM,
Case Eagle: An Irishman came
into the office of the president of Illi
nois Central Railroad and said:
“Me name’s Casey. Oi Worruk out
in the yar-rds. Oi’l loik a pass to St.
Louis.”
“That is no way to ask for a pass,”
said the president. You should intro
duce yourself politely. Come- back In
an hour and try it again.’'
At the end of the day back came the
irishman. Doffing his hat, he inquired,
‘Are yez the man I saw before?”
“I am.
“Me name is Patrick Casey Oi’ve
been workin’ out in the yar-rds.”
“Glad to know you, Mr. Casey, What
:an I do for you?”
FIVE RULES
for BUYING TIRES
1 Any of the standard makes are good tires. Select the brand you
hear most about that delivers long mileage uniformly, tire
after tire. ]
2 Don’t be misled by looks. They have nothing to do with miles i
delivered on your car. Buy a safe practical non-skid, that
prevents slipping the moat. The Miller Geared-to-the-Road
is now the nation’s choice for big ears or small.
3 Select a tire you would buy the second, third and forth times.
Keep your Service received uniform. A complete tire
„ service on all four wheels is the modern and economical
way to buy.
4 Deal with an honest merchant—one who doesn’t recommend
tires on the basis of discount to him. Your future
patronage is worth more to the man who obtains for you ♦
the best he can buy.
5 Beware of tire sales. Remember in the end, you don’t get any
more than you pay for. Getting adjustments is an expen
siv way for you to try and get even with the game.
THE O’NEILL TIRE STATION
L. F. SOUCEY
Miller
GEARED-TO-THE-ROAD j
> ci Would iiouwxik a
far wotcUfa $5,000?
Enter 11 Wjiach I
Mr. Edison’s $lo,ooo Prize Contest
Mr. Edison spent 3 million dollars in developing a phonograph
of si^ch absolute realism that its Re-Creation of music cannot be
distinguished from the original music.
Mr. Edison wants a phrase of not more than 4 or 5 words that
will differentiate this instrument from all other sound-reproduc
ing devices and emphasize the ,fact that it is an instrumentality
by which the true beauties and full benefits of music can be
brought into every home. If you are not a New Edison owner,
we will gladly loan you a New Edison on
Three Days Free Trial
Then you can learn for yourself just what distinguishes the New Edison
from phonographs and talking machines. Then you can test the famous
life-like realism, and experience what music will do for you.
Mail or bring the coupon to our store, and we will deliver a Nf w Edison to
your home, without expense or obligation to you. Also ask us for folder
giving fulLdetails of the $10,000 Pri/.e Contest. Act quickly, because
j we have only a few instruments to loan.
Warner (§L Sons
@ O’Neill. Nebr.
I — i