The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 02, 1922, Image 9

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    "Who said Kellogg's Corn
Flakes? Ob, goody, Jane,
bet we're going to have
KELLOGG’S lot our sup
per.’nett we won’t dreamt
Leave it to the laddies to
pick Kelloggs Com Hakes
then are neve? tough orJeafheryf
Put a bowl of KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes and a bpwl
of imitations in front of any youngster! Then see
KELLOGG’S disappear! Try the experiment yourself!
It’s great to know the difference in corn flakes—the
* difference between the genuine and the “just-as
goods”! Kellogg’s have a wonderful flavor that would
win your favor by itself—but when you know that
Kellogg all-the-time crispness! Well—they just make
you glad! Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery or
hard to eat!
Kellogg’s will snap-up kiddie appe
tites something wonderful! And, our
word for it—let the littlest have their
fill—just like Daddy must have his!
You’ll never know how delicious
corn flakes can be until you eat
KELLOGG’S! You will know the
KELLOGG package because it is RED
and GREEN! Look for it!
CORN FLAKES
Also makers of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked and krumbled
Vote For
M.F. NORTON
For
County Surveyor
WOMEN OF THE ISSUE.
Aforetime, woman was supposed to
be emotional, ultra-sentimental, to ar
rive at her conclusions by instinct and
intuition, and to be an easy mark for
the trickster. It must have been the
poets who, in their gush about “wo
man, lovely woman,” tried to shelve
her on a pedestal.
Present indications are that she is a
very sane, “hard-headed” individual
who knows what she wants and why.
Ask any intelligent woman on the
street, who has been studying politics
—and who cf them has not?—“Do you
think it makes any difference which
party is in power, and do you know
how you are going to vote?”
She is all ready for you and can give
you reasons, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, why she
is going to vote the Republican ticket.
She can name them to you on her
fingers. They are:
1. Peace. This is a big enough
reason to overshadow everything
else. It means America will mind
its own business and keep out of
entangling alliances. In friendliness
with the nations, it led in the move
ment for linitaticn cf armaments and
settlement of disputes around the con
ference table instead of on the battle
field.
2. Tariff. Women are strong for
protection to home industries, to keep
America employed and incomes com
ing. They know the evil effects of
buying abroad, of filling our markets
with foreign imports.
3. Economy. The Budget idea—
established by this administration—is
no stranger to women. They heartily
approve of the millions and millions
saved by Republican economy in the
lines of government business. Forty
dollars per family—in taxes—is not to
be despised.
4. Farming. Whether or not she is
directly connected with agriculture,
every intelligent American woman
knows that farming is a basic industry
in this country; and, unless it pros
pers, all suffer. Farming was facing
ruin at Democratic hands. This ad
ministration has made cond'tions fa
vorable for agricultural prosperity,
and prospects are improving.
5. Welfare. Women of the nation
appreciate the law passed by this Con
gress looking to the salvage of the
lives of thousands of American moth
ers and babies. It shows Republican
synlpathy with welfare measures,
which loom large in the feminine
mind. Very little welfare legislation
bas over been enacted in state or na
tion by the Democratic party.
-o
MRS. JOHN HANSON.
Mrs. John Hanson, one of the early
settlers of Holt county, died Wednes
day of ailments incident to old age, at
the country home of her son, Peter
Hanson, six miles north of Amelia, at
the advanced age of 79 years. Burial
was in the Chambers cemetery Thurs
day.
Mrs. Hanson is survived by two
sons, Peter and O. L. Hanson, of south
ern Holt county ar.d one daughter,
Mrs. James Davidson of this city, to
whom The Frontier joins in extending
sympathy in their hour of sorrow.
PRE-HALLOWE’EN SHOOTING.
Chester Boyer, sixteen year old son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Boyer, was shot
and wounded in the back Monday
evening while passing through an al
ley in the southeast part of town,
along which several advance parties of
Hallow’een celebrants had been over
turning outbuildings to the great ire
and indignation of the owners thereof.
Young Boyer and Elda Calkins had
left the residence of Larry Calkins, at
which Boyer was staying, a few min
utes before the shooting and had ta
ken a short cut through the alley
toward town, according to their story.
The two boys were about a half block
away from the alley when they heard
a shot and Boyer received the wound
in the back. The bullet, apparently
from a small revolver, entered the
back near the center of the spinal
column, glanced and plowed on around
a rib, lodging in the flesh above one
hip, an X-ray photograph disclosed.
The wound is not serious, according
to the (physicians unless infection
should set in. The identity of the
person firing the shot had not been de
finitely established at the time of go
ing to press, although several charges
have been made.
WOMAN’S CLUB.
The Department of Music of the
Woman’s club met at St. Mary’s
Academy, Friday afternoon. Follow
ing is the program:
Leader—Maude Sauers.
Composers—Edward Mac Dowell,
Ethelbert Nevin.
Roll Call—Comlpcsition by either
composer.
Paper—Public School Music and Its
Effects, by Susan B. hr" ••staff.
Short Biography of Nevin—Con
stance Biglin.
Piano—Nevin a Ver. an Love
song; by Goodnight, Rana Powell.
Mac Dowell’s Influence cr. American
Music—Minnie Cowperthwalte.
Voice—Mac Dowell, To a Wild
Rose, Genevieve Biglin.
Characteristics of Nevin’s Music—
Genevieve Harty.
Voice—Nevin a, Idyl; b. My Jean,
May Reardon.
Discussion of Public School Music.
GRAND CONCERT.
The Musical department of the Wo
man’s club presented Alex Skovgaard,
the Danish violinist, and Alice Mc
Clung Skovgaard, pianist, at the K. C.
opera house Saturday evening to a
fair sized audience. Skovgaard is a
violinist of rare ability, while Mrs.
Skovgaard received continued ap
plause for the many difficult piano
selections. Following is the program:
Sonata in E Minor .Emil Sjogren
Alice and AXEL Skovgaard
Le Deluge . Saint-Saens
Allegro from “Suite Fantastique”
... Nicoleieff
Mazurka de Concert . Wieniawski
Alex Skovgaard
Frolic of the Waters . Ravel
Flower-Waltz from “Nutcracker
Suite” . Grainger
Alice McClung-Skovgaard
Andante from Concerto ...Mendelsshon
j The Guitar . Carl Reinecke
i Melodic . Edwin Lemare
j Menuet from Quintet in E Major
... Boccherini
Indian Snake Dance ... Cecil Burleigh
Axel Skovgaard
j Prelude Op. 32 No. 10 Rachmaninoff
j Waltz Caprice .,. Scott
j Arabesque . Debussy
| Erotikon . Greig
Finnish Dance . Palmgren
Etude de Concert . Liszt
Alice McClung-Skovgaard
Arrangements of Classical
Compositions (Selected)
.,,. Fritz Kreisler
Sierra Morena . Axel Skovgaard
Axel Skovgaard
ASHTON FOR COUNTY
SUPERINTENDENT
John Y. Ashon, nominee fop the of
fice of County Superintendent of Holt
County, is a successful school man
with an honorable record and twenty
five years experience back of him. He
knows school conditions and every
phase of school work, and is qualified,
in every wy, to be of real service to the
schools of Holt County. He promises,
if elected, to visit your school, to keep
(posted on the School Laws so as to be
competent to give sound opinions on
questions as they arise, to give to your
difficult school problems hi3 most se
rious attention, to cooperate with
school boards, patrons and teachers
for the making of better schools, and
to conduct the affairs of the office in a
business-like, efficient, and econo
mical manner, and without favoritism.
Ashton is not a politician nor a chronic
office seeker; he has never run for office
before. He belongs to no ring, nor is
he tied tip with any other candidate.
He is trying to win the office on his
owrn merits, and in a clean, manly
way. He was raised on a Holt County
homestead, graduated from higli
school and from Normal school, holds
State Professional Life Certificates,
taught five years in Holt County
Rural Schools, and twenty years as
superintendent of city schools in Ne
braska. Superintendent of O’Neill
City Schools, 1921-22. He is a man of
middle age, of Christian character,
with high standards and ideals, is
clean in his morals and habits, and
stands for law and order and good
citizenship. Look for Ashton’s name
on the non-political ballot and vote
for him. Election, November 7, 1922.
(Political Advertising.)
RANDALL FOR GOVERNOR.
Omaha Bee: As the weakness and
false pretensions of his opponent
come to the voter, the Randall com
paign developes stronger and
stronger. Nebraskans do not want to
be fooled. They cannot be, as the
facts become known.
Just as those who knew him best
prophesied, Randall is proving the type
of man that the Nebraska voter can
tie to. This applies to the farmer, the
worker and voters of all classes.
Randall is not given to boasting or
ranting.
He does not make false promises.
But he has behind him a record as
a farmer and a legislator.
He is a man experienced in state
affairs.
As state senator in the last term,
Randall had a close-up on the entire
taxation situation. He helped to work
out the budget by which the special
session reduced state taxes one-third
for the year 1922.
This is actual accomplishment of
the republican administration. It
compares with false promises made
by Randall’s opponents.
The Nebraska state platform recog
nizes squarely the taxation problem.
It pledges further reduction in taxes.
Randall and the republican ticket
are running on this platform. More
over, in the hands of Randall and the
republican ticket, the taxation prob
lem will be in experienced hands,
hands that have already accomplished
results that the taxpayers can see in
his tax receipt for the year 1922.
Randall’s platform does not call for
the abolishment of the agricultural
and labor departments of the state
It calls for strengthening and devel
oping the usefulness of these depart
ments while cutting the corners on
expense.
Although opposed by a campaign of
unprecedented and proven falsehood,
not once has Randall’s word been suc
cessfully challenged.
Randall’s campaign has been educa
tional. His opponents have resisted
every effort of Randall to pin them
down to definite things and thereby
have shown up the falseness of their
promises.
Randall stands for the retention
of the state-wide primary. He stands
for enfoi'cement of prohibition. He
stands for economy but he sees no
economy in overturning an entire
system of government.
Randall has made no new and
strange alliances. His campaign is
not machine made. The choice of Ran
dall in the primary was a clear cut
primary choice and not a machine
combination masquerading under the
guise of the primary.
Randall is gaining steadily because
the people of Nebraska have had
enough of false theories. They have
had enough of false promises and
world philosophy.
. Randall should he elected and with
him a republican legislature and the
entire state ticket. The Nebraska
state government must not be a house
divided against itself.
With Randall as governor and the
legislature in reasonable accord, Ne
braska can continue its progress and
not fall into a slough of reaction, false
theories and unredeemed promises.
FOR STATE SENATOR.
John A. Robertson, democratic can
didate for state senator from this dis
trict was born in Jackson couny, In
diana, Jan. 22, 1807. Came to' Holt
county in a “prairie schooner” in 1883
Farmer and Stockman. Lives on.
owns and operates a farm of several
hundred acres, has a large family and
is very much interested in the educa
tional, moral and financial welfare of
this state and district. Has taken an
active part in he fight for tax reduc
tion. Member of House of Represen
tatives from Holt county in 1895 and
1897 and of the state senate in 1913,
1915 and 1817. Has never held any
other county or state office. Author
of the “Mothers Pension” law in Ne
braska and supported all ^progressive
legislation when representing this dis
American Legion
| Will Give Away
Dollar Bills
I to Everyone Attending the
Indoor CarnivaJ
K
I
j -on
i
November 11th
A Program of Speaking and Singing in the Afternoon 2:30—3:30
And In the Evening the Doors to
The Great Indoor Carnival
Will Open with a Complete Change of
7 o’clock 7 o’clock
_
I --
CONCESSIONS
The Dolly Sisters
and their troup of
Dancing Girls
_
Andy Gump Will
Be Here
Dollar Bill
Hulu Hulu Dancers
Faires in the Well
Eating and Drinking
Booths
Riding Devices
DANCING
\
All will be
Within the Law
Fox Trots
One Steps
Lame Ducks
Turkey Trots
Waltzes of the
Dreamy Old Kind i
__L
FUN
Confetti
Horns
Baloons
Rubber Balls
Badges
Flowers
All things for a
Good Time
Everyone is Cordially Invited to Come and Enjoy Themselves
trict. He has the experience, the
ability and the knowledge of public
affairs to properly represent this dis
trict. VOTE FOR HIM.
19-4
(Political Advertising)
FOR SHERIFF.
As the size of Holt county prevents
my making a personal call upon each
voter I take this opportunity of pre
senting my candidacy for election as
sheriff of Holt county. I served seven
years as deputy under Sheriff Henry
Grady and consequently am familiar
with the duties of the office. I respect
fully refer to my past record among
you and 'promise that if elected I will
perform the duties of the office im
partially and to the best of my ability,
and will enforce the laws without fear
or favor.
ROBERT N. BRITTELL.
(Political Advertising.)
THE IRISH WORLD SPEAKS.
The Irish World, August 5, 1922.—
The Democratic machine in Nebraska
has succeeded in having Senator Hitch
cock renominated in the primaries.
Hitchcock fought hard to secure the
ratification of the League of Nations
with its infamous Article X, which
Sought to commit the United States
to the military and naval defense of
the Hritish Empire. The Democratic
Senator from Nebraska was the ack
nowledged leader of the Senatorial
clique that thought more of carrying
out White House orders than of their
duties as representatives of souvereign
states.
it is the month of February, lyiy,
Former President Wilson on a flying
visit has hurried home from the Paris
Conference. He summons for con
saltation some members of the Senate
and of the House. In the course of the
succeeding interview Representative
Ragsdale of South Carolina put this
quetion: “Mr. President, what does
the League of Nations propose to do
as regards Ireland?” Here is Wilson’s
answer as reported next day in the
New York Sun: “It was decided to
leave the case of Ireland to Great
Britain as a domestic mattei outside
| the province of the League of Na
! t'ons.”
A few days later the matter became
a subject for discussion in the Senate
by Senator Borah putting a few lead
ing questions to Senator Hitchcock,
the recognized mouthpiece of the Wil
son Administration in the Senate.
Thereupon the following conversation
took place:
Borah: “Would it be permissible
for the Senator to state what he (the
President) did say with reference to
Ireland?”
Hitchcock: “The President practi
cally said northing with reference to
Ireland. The Irish question was not
under consideration.”
Borah: “But there were questions
asked?”
Hitchcock: “Tlere was a question
asked which was greeted with laughter
and there was nothing more said
about it. It was not an issue in the
conversation and had nothing to do
with it. We were not discussing inter
nal questions but international ques
tions.”
Borah: “Does the Senator say the
President made no response to the
question which was presented to him
with reference to the independence of
Ireland?”
The Irish World of March 8, 1919,
in commenting on this passage of arms
between the two Senators, said: “This
rejoinder of Senator Borah called for
a direct ldply. But Senator Hitchccok
evidently was unwilling to give one.
He continuel to beat round the bush.”
»ucn is tne senatorial candidate tor
whom Nebraskan Democrats of Irish
blood are asked to vote next Novem
ber. He is wholly unworthy of their
political support both from an Ameri
can viewpoint and from a personal
viewpoint. No sincere believer in the
principles set forth in the American
Declaration of Independence would re
fer to the Irish Republic in the man
ner Senator Hitchcock did when he
spoke of its proposed recognition by
the United States Government as “a
joke.” lie in that way told millions
of his fellow citizens that the cradle
land of their race bj unfit to enjoy the
blessings of political liberty.
Irish-Americans in every State of
the Union will look to the men and
women of our blood in Nebraska to
resent this insult in a befitting man
n- r. A ballot cast for Senator Hitch
cock by an Irish-American Democrat
will bo an indorsement of the Nebras
ka Senator’s view that all talk about
an Irish Republic is a huge joke, which
should evoke only derisive laughter
the world over. Let us hope for the
honor of our race that not one such
vote will be recorded in Nebraska
next November.
Have your Christmas Pho
tographs taken this month.
We can now give you more
time, better care than if
postponed until the rush of
December.
Classy styles at $5.00 to
$15.00 per dozen.
O’NEILL PHOTO CO.
O’Neill, Nebraska.
I YOUR LITTLE DAUGHTER
Would be delighted with the fine
toned piano we can sell you. Small
weekly payments. Guaranteed
quality. Ask us for particulars.
A. Hospe Co., Omaha, Nebr.
E. D. HENRY, Agt, C'ZTdll