The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 29, 1921, Image 4

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    The Frontier
Published by Dennis H. Cronin
One Year,..$2.00
Six Months .i. $1.00
Three Months.. $0.60
Entered at the post office at O’Neill,
Nebraska, as second-class matter.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertising on Pages 4, 6
and 8 are charged for on a basis of
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per week; on Page 1 the charge is
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vertisements, 10 cents per line first
insertion, subsequent insertions 6
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Every subscription is regarded as
an open account. The names of sub
scribers will be instantly 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.
- PELTZER-PASHKE.
Chambers Sun, Sept. 22: There was
a very pretty wedding performed last
Friday evening, September 16, 1921,
at 8 o’clock at the home of the bride’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pashke,
when Rev. H. C. Fricke pronounced
the beautiful words that united in
marriage Mr. Ruben Leon Peltzer and
Miss Olga B. Pashke. Ruben is the
second son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert t
Peltzer of Stanton, Nebraska and Miss
Olga is the only child of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Pashke of this city. They left
Saturday morning for Stanton where
they will make their home this winter,
and in the spring will live on a farm
near Stanton. The Sun joins their
many firends in extending congratula
tions to this happy couple.
SHOLES-CHRISTIANSON,
Inman Leader, Sept. 22: Delber
Sholes and Miss Helen Christianson,
both residents of this community,
were married Tuesday at 8 o’clock at
the Methodist parsonage in Inman,
Rev. Green officiating. The couple
were attended by Miss Daisy Sholes
as bridesmaid and Percy Christianson
as best man. Immediately after the
ceremony the newly weds drove to
Orchard and from there they will go
on to Omaha for a short honey moon,
and attend a state gathering of the
89th Division of which Mr. Sholes was
a member during the world war. On
their return to Inman they will go to
housekeeping in rooms in the Halloran
apartment in west Inman.
This couple are well known to resi
dents of this territory who extend
congratulations and best wishes. The
bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
N. C. Christianson and is a graduate
of the Inman.schools. The groom is
the eldest sori of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Sholes living west of Inman.
MOOR-ERSKINE
Inman Leader, Sept. 22: A pretty
wedding was solemized at the home
>f Mr. an4 Mrs. E«ra Mmr five milps
south of Inman Wednesday forenoon
it 11 o'clock when their daughter,
Evadne, was united in marriage to
Mr. Sidney Erskine of Sioux City, Rev.
Green officiating. The bridal couple
were attended by Miss Mildred Riley
as bridesmaid and Preston Riley as
best man. After the ceremony the
bridal party and guests sat down to a
three course wedding dinnSr.
The bride is a charming young lady
well known to residents of this con.
munity, having been born and raised
in the farm where the wedding took
place. The groom is a young business
man of Sioux City where he is en
gaged in the automobile business. He
formerly lived with his parents south
»f Inman on what was known as the
Klondike ranch. The happy couple
left Wednesday afternoon in company
with the bride’s parents on an auto
mobile trip through Iowa and Min
nesota, after which Mr. and Mrs.
Erskine will return 'to Sioux ,City
where they will make their future
home. Their many Holt county friends
extend congratulations.
VOCOK DEFEATS IVY.
Jerry Vokoc, the fighting Bohemian
if Verdigre, took Jack Ivy of San
Francisco, to an awful cleaning at the
K. C. theater last Thursday night in
jne of the best ten round bouts ever
seen in this section of Nebraska. The
jffair was under the auspices of the
athletic department oif the Knights
>f Columbus and was the first bout to
ie held in O’Neill under the new box
ng law. The attendance was good
and the fans were enthusiastic over
he go. Both men were fighters who
wanted to fight, and they did fight
every second of the ten three minute
rounds. Arthur Ryan officiated as
referee.
Vokoc was the heavier of the two,
weighing in at 179% pounds three
lours before the fight, and Ivy at 172.
rhe latter was by far the most sci
»nced and he carried a punch which
would have put most ordinary scrap
iers to sleep. He delivered it numerous
;imes to the Knox .county man, but
he latter apparently was unaware of
its deadly effect and refused to go
down. Vokoc, while lacking science
ind ring generalship, is a natural
lighter with a most wicked wallop, as
Ivy acknowledger! to his second after
the fourth round, and with training
;ould become a great fighter in the
light heavyweight class.
No one, at the beginning expected
Vokoc to win, not even his friends and
sympathizers who were legion, and
this made the bout the more interest
ing. It apparently was Ivy’s fight
for the first six rounds, althougn
Vokoc exchanged blow for blow, and
everyone waited for Vokoc to tire and
go down under punishment. But this
he failed to do. Each round found
him coming up apparently as fresh as
ever and unworried, while after the
sixth he began to land some telling
ones which worried, punished and tir
ed his opponent. Ivy claimed a foul
early in the game, when Vokoc de
livered a backhand blow in a break
away and the latter was cautioned,
out the only flagrant and premedita
ted foul was in the seventh whert Ivy,
who had been knocked to the ropes,
hung there apparently in a daze and
then catching Vokoc off guard swung
on him, clinging to the rope with his
right r.s he delivered a left and using
the rope to assist him in the delivery.
The htott should have pot Vokoc away,
but he failed to notice It ana didn’t
even bother to claim the foul.
Vokoc from the beginning of the
last half of the eighth round until the
last gong in the tenth had Ivy at his
mercy and floored him at will. Eleven
times he knocked him down and each
time Ivy stayed on the floor for a
portion of the count, to rest. Sheriff '
Duffy several times attempted to stop :
the fight, but Ivy didn’t want it that :
way and at no time was in actual dis
tress. While outbested and outfought
he at all times was able to continue
the fight and might have lasted for
five or six rounds more had the bout
been scheduled to go that far.
The fight demonstrated that both
are exceedingly good men, with Vokoc,
because of his superior resisting quali
ties the better of the two. They botn
are magnificently built and clean look
ing, although of different types. Ivy 1
has the shoulder build of the regular
pugilist, Vokoc is more along the
lines of a runner, although he didn’t ■
do much running Thursday night.
And neither did Ivy for that matter.
In another engagement between the
two men Ivy, now understanding his
opponent’s methods, might give a bet
ter account of himself and there al
ways would be the possibility otf his
winning. It will be very hard to find
another fighter in Nebraska to give
as good an account of himself with
the Bohemian as he did, and there
are none at present in Omaha who
could do so. It is to be hoped that
O’Neill and Holt county fans will
have the pleasure of seeing each of
the two men in action here again, but
against other opponents. Both created
favorable impressions. Either one
because of his fighting qualities would
draw a capacity house.
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
IN NEBRASKA
Washington, D. C.—According to
the census of 1920 there are 190,593
children 7 to 13 years of age in the
state of Nebraska, and of this num
ber 178,910, or 93.9 per cent, iwere re
ported as attending school. In 1920
the percentage attending school was
92 9, thus indicating a slight improve
ment as regards school attendance be
tween 1910 and 1920. Of the children
14 and 15 years of age in 1920, 86.0
per cent were attending school and of
those 16 and 17 years of age, 49.7 per
cent.
The percentage of children attend
ing school was a little higher in the
cities than in the country districts, the
percentage (for children in the urban
population 7 to 13 years of age being
95.2, while in the rural population it
was 93.4. “Urban,” according to the
census definition, includes all towns
or cities and other incorporated places
of 2,500 population or more.
SENSATION WONDER
DUROC-JERSEY AND POLAND
BOARS
Prize winners at the county fair
just past.
Unusual opportunity to get a High
Class boar, one that won a first or
second prize at the Holt County Fair
this year, (had to be a good one,) I
have them and you can buy the top
for $50.00. That is the lowest jfrice
I ever heard on a boar winning a prize
at the fair where fcjxere were as many
good hogs shown as there was this
year. ,
Durocs—Sired by Sensation Won
ONE BRAND’ I
ONE QUALITV’ I
One Size Package |
All our skill, facilities, and lifelong knowledge of the
finest tobaccos are concentrated on this one cigarette—
CAMEL.
| -
into tms ujnu; BKAMD, we put the utmost quality. g
Nothing is too good for Camels. They are as good as it’s
possible to make a cigarette. R
Camel QUALITY is always maintained at the same high, *
exclusive standard. You can always depend on the same
mellow-mild refreshing smoothness—the taste and rich
flavor of choicest tobaccos — and entire freedom from
cigaretty aftertaste.
And remember this! Camels come in one size package
only—20 cigarettes—just the right size to make the greatest =
saving in production and packing. This saving goes =
straight into Camel Quality. That’s one reason why you ^
can get Camel Quality at so moderate a price.
Here’s another. We put no useless |
frills on the Camel package. No “extra i
wrappers!” Nothing just for show! I
Such things do not improve the smoke \
any more than premiums or coupons. And \
their added cost must go onto the price I
or come out of the quality. v |
One thing, and only one, is responsible I
for Camels great and growing popularity 1
—that is CAMEL QUALITY. f
amelj
_lt^J-REYNOLDSTOJ3ACCOCO^Wla.ton-3.I.m.N.C.
ler, Dams B.jC’s choice by Invincible
SC and Critic Lucy Orion and Kink of
Jrions strains.
I have 8 of this breeding still left, :
md have saved the very best of the ■
lerd and will meet the present con- i
litions on prices from Top $50.00 to
;he younger ones-at $35.00. You may
lever get a chance to get boars that
how up, and that are as good as these
igain for that price, and they have
lot been over-fed for show.
My Poland prize winner is from a
itter of eight, all alive yet. Two
jilts out of this litter took 1st and
!nd prize in their class. A mighty
food record. Sired by Clans Yankey
iwned by Wm. and Clyde Mathers and
i boar that I don’t think can be beat
’or his age in the county. Their Dam
s Long Model breeding. One other
r’oland (blemished on front leg hardly
loticable,) litter mate to above, but
>n account of this he will go for $35.
I must sell these right away to
nake room for my fall litters which
ire here now and if you want one of
hese boars you must act before Nov.
1st. I will not keep them longer than
hat.
Come and look at them and come
soon and get your choice. You are
ilways welcome, and I enjoy showing
hem to you. I will show them with
iny herd in the county.
I had 16 hogs at the fair and they
irought home eight ribbons.
Those who bought boars of me last
fear claim an improvement in their
lerd. Every boar guaranteed a
ireeder, also papers guaranteed. I
lave nothing but purebreds all sub
ject to register, and immune, from
cholera.
O. B. & MERLE HATCH
One mile west Nebr. State Bank.
MOW YOUR SECTION LINES.
All land owners in Paddock Town
ship are hereby notified to mow all
section lines adjoining their places or
i will mow them for them and charge
he same against their taxes.
A. G. JOHNSON, Road Overseer.
Subscribe for The Frontier and keep
posted upon the affiair3 of this great
:ourty of ours.
HER SENSE OF FITNESS.
Little Ethel had lost her grand
ather. A few days after the funeral
he asked her mother if she could play
he piano a little while.
“No, dear, don’t you know that we
are in mourning?” her mother replied.
“Well,” insisted the disappointed
child, “I don’t think it would be wicked
if I only played on the black keys.”—
Judge.
r i .,»,iii ■ —■■■■— ■' iii■—■—■—I i ri ~ TMUTi.-r
Brown’s Boar and
Gilt Sale of
Duroc-Jerseys
51 HEAD
Consisting of 25 Spring Boars; 18 Spring Gilts; 1
Aged Boar; 1 Fall Boar; 3 Fall Gilts; 3 Yearling
Sows; 40 Fall Pigs in Small Bunches.
Sale Will Be Held at Lynch, Nebraska,
At home, 3 blocks from Depot
Monday, October 3, 1921
♦ |i
Commencing at 2 o’clock Sharp \
C. J. Brown
All Hogs Have Been Double Treated. We Consider |
Them Immune to Cholera.
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THE OMAHA DAILY NEWS f
N EW $ 2500 PICTURE PUZZLE j
fr^v""\\r *VA¥‘ "r-s
Extra Copies of the Picture Puzzle Will be Mailed on Request
How to Solve the Puzzle
with the letter S. Just take a look at the picture—there are all kinds of things that start with
S, like snake, squirrel, stool, sun, sand, saucer, shoe, saddle, salt and spindle. See how easy
it is? Get a paper and pencil. Sit down and study the picture carefully. There are some of
them that are very plain and none of them that are hard.
The Judges will use Webster’s dictionary in deciding the one who has the nearest correct list of
”S" words. Read very carefully the rules and other printed matter on the page, for then you
wc ouic iu gci y <ju.i cmswci in iigiu.
It certainly is a lot of fun and doesn t
take long. Just a few minutes in the
evening.
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ture that begin with the letter “S” will be awarded
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John W. Gamble - Vice-President First Null Bank. Omaha
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A. Van OrsDel - - - Board of Education, Omaha
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If your answer to the “S-Word” Picture Puzzle is awarded first prize bv
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