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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1925)
jppwH Neb. State Hiitovlcal SO1 The Frontier. ♦ \ _ ' ‘v . » _. ..... . ———— ■* VOLUME XLV. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1925. NO. 52. —V If You Succeed % Your success is cumulative. You cannot progress alone in business and every forward step of yours car ries along other people on the same road. In this way your city becomes prosperous and great. In exact ratio to your success or faiure your city succeeds or fails. That’s why we, as bankers, desire to see you succeed. That’s why we make a point of rendering service to depositors and endeavor to safeguard them from financial reverses. Come In Any Day. We’ll Welcome You. -~.t—-r--: The Nebraska State Bank L-/ I .■ ^z======m ■ S We Have A New Line Of Popular Priced House Dresses For Ladies ;! Bungalow Aprons ... 50c : iji Full Dress Aprons.... 60c Children’s Suits and Dresses...$1.10 li; Sateen Bloomers for Girls.. 45c Pillow Cases, Hemstitched, each... 40c Ladies’ Patent Leather Belts.. 25c i Ladies’ Ribbed Top Hose. 25c Bowen’s Racket Store j nmtim^CALn:NEWs!n:m:t Rev. George Longstaff was in Elgin last Sunday. Episcopal services will be held in O’Neill Tuesday, June 9th. Elmer Bay is home from Omaha where he has been attending school. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spires visited with friends in Fullerton last week. An eight pound son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Grant White last Sun day. Mrs. P. J. Flynn, of Plattsmouth, has been visiting friends here this week. Alfred Pierson drove down from Lake Preston and spent Sunday at, the J. C. Harnish home. C. M. Paly was in Chambers Tues day. and Bassett Wednesday looking after real estate business. Ed Bridges is driving up Friday from Omaha for a week end visit with Mr. and Mrs. James Connolly. John Davis and Elizabeth Shroeder were married at her home in this city Wednesday, by Rev. J. A. Hutchins. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Angst drove over from Creighton last Wednesday for a short visit with O’Neill friends. W. R. Riddlesbarger will leave Fri day morning for California where he will complete work at Stanford uni versity. Miss Rose Taylor has accepted., a position in the dental office with Dr. Burgess and will spend the summer in O’Neill. The windows at the public library have been calked and equipped with metal weather strip during the past two weeks. The Woman’s Working Society of the Presbyterian church will meet with Mrs. H. W. Tomlinson, Thurs day, June 4th. The Woman’s Missionary Society of the Presbyterian church will hold a Food Sale at Ben Grady’s store, on Saturday, June 6th. The O’Neill concert band will give an open air concert in the band stand Saturday afternoon following the Decoration Day exercises. Miss Edith Hoffman came home from Fullerton the first of the week, where she is employed as one of the teachers in the high school. T. T. Waid has sold his residence in the southeast part of the city to John Rhode, who expects to move to the city in the near future. T. T. says that he is going to buy a round trip ticket to California and spend several months fishing in the Pacific ocean for some of those big ones. Mrs. J. A. Hutchins enjoyed a visit over Sunday from a former school mate, Miss Nell Connell, who has been teaching at Burk, South Dakota. Miss Connell went to Fullerton Tuesday for a visit with a brother. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Henry and daughter, Miss Elizabeth and son, Paul, drove to Loreto, Nebraska, last Sunday, for a short visit with friends. Miss Elizabeth went to Geneva with her brother, Paul, for a visit. James Connolly reports that the Ghost Lights are unusually bright on his and the Gallagher farms these evenings. The lights dance and frolic about, chasing each other just as the nymphs use to do in the story books. The services at the Presbyterian church next Sunday morning will be the installation and ordination of the new elders. This will be Rev. Geo. Longstaff’s last Sunday as the pastor of the Presbyterian church in this city. Grand Master Robert R. Dickson of the Nebraska Masons has received an invitation from the Right Hon orable The Earl of Donoughmore, K. P., who is also the Most Worshipful Grand Master of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of Ireland, to attend the festival of the Bi-Cen tenary of the foundation of the Grand Lodge of Ireland, at Freemasons Hall, Dublin, Thursday, June 4. Judge Dickson, owing to the short ness of the notice, will be unable to attend. The grand master also has received an invitation to attend the annual communication of the grand lodge of Iowa at Davenport, June 9 to 11 inclusive. The dates are the (.same as those of the Nebraska grand i lodge meeting and as a consequence i the judge will be unable to accept the i invitation. J. J. Fitzgerald, of Lead, stopped off Wednesday night enroute home from Yankton, for a short visit with his daughter, Mrs. W. F. Willging, and family. Mrs. Willging and little son will return to Lead with hifh Fri day morning, for a month’s visit. The Frontier failed to mention last week that the Boy Scout ball team won the game of ball with the Joy school team played on May 16th This was the third time that these teams have met, and the Scout are c.uite jubilant over cho fact tlftt they won two of the games. H. C. McDonald went to Min neapolis, Minnesota, this morning where he will begin employment as lineman for the Tri-State Utilities Company. He expects to be here in about thirty days with the linemen who will begin work on the con struction of the high-line through here. A delegation from Verdigree was before the county board at their ses sion last Tuesday, in regard to the designation of a road as a state aid project, which will enter the county south of Knoxville and extend west to the O’Neill-Spencer highway. The board passes a resolution favoring the project. The program and pie supper given by Miss Winifred Murray in School District No. 16, last Thursday night, was a grand success both socially and financially. Miss Winifred closed a very successful nine months’ term of school in that district last Friday afternoon with a picnic for the child ren and their parents. Verl McKim and wife came up from Wayne today, where they have been taking special instruction at the nor mal, and are visiting at the home of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. McKim, at Opportunity. Verl has accepted a position as instructor in the state university and will be gin work there next fall. The O’Neill Country Club is mak ing final preparations for the Annual Invitation golf tournament which will be held June 14, 15, 16. The course is in excellent condition and exten sive improvements are being made at the club house and grounds for the event. Large delegations are expect ed |yotr the nearby towns. Mrs. M. Donnelly and daughter, Marcella, and Miss Katherine Dillon, went to Greeley, Nebraska, today to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Dillon and to attend the com mencement exercises. Their youngest brother is a member of the class this year. Miss Katherine will go to Kearney June 1st where she will at tend summer school. J. C. Harnish, E. D. Henry, J. H. Meredith, W. C. Templeton, Morris Johnson, James Davis, A. E. Bowen, Dr. A. H. Corbett, B. T. Winchell, W. P. Curtis, Harry Bowen, H. J. Zimmerman and J. S. Ennis drove over to Lynch Wednesday evening to attend a ceremonial of the Imperial Order of Muscovites put on by mem bers of Kremlin Sodak. A feature match for the opening of the Invitation Golf tournament in this city June 14, 15, 16, will be a contest between Lyle Jackson, of Ne ligh, and George Farnam, Jr., mayor of Ainsworh. Mr. Jackson is strongly mentioned as a candidate for the supreme court commission, and Mr. Farnam, who is 26 years of age, enjoys the distinction of being the youngest mayor in the state. Corn planting is completed in Holt county with the exception of those who are compelled to replant on ac count of the ravages of the cut worms which have been working hard in some localities. Many of the farmers have finished cutting the first crop of al falfa, which in most cases, was damaged by the several freezes the past few weeks. In some localities the fruit crop will be fairly good while in other places the freezes kill ed the crop for this year. County Attorney Julius D. Cronin Friday filed complaints against the four children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Porter and the two children of Mrs. Gladys Clark charging them with being dependent and neglected. Plead ings against Gladys Clark were also prepared seeking to have her com mitted to the home for the feeble minded. The former charges were set for hearing Monday morning and upon the failure of the children or their parents to appear Deputy Sheriff Bergstrom was dispatched to bring them into court. Arriving at their home he found the place locked and upon inquiry of the neighbors learned that they had left for an un known destination sometime Saturday j night. Mrs. Clark is a daughter of Mrs. Porter. They resided upstairs in the old Brennan home just west of the Starlin garage. June Toilet I Goods Sale We have constituted June a special Beauty | month and offer you the opportunity at that time to 1 purchase these well-known Beauty products at the 1 money-saving prices shown here. 1 $1.00 Cara Nome Talcum will be given away | with Cara Nome Face Powder at $2.00 1 75c Cara Nome Perfume will be given away 1 with Cara Nome Twin Vanity Cases at $2.00 I 25c Jonteel Soap will be given away 1 with Jonteel Face Powder at 50c I 50c Arbutus Vanishing Cream.will be 39c I 50c Lemon Cocoa Butter Lotion...... will be 39c I 75c Harmony Lilac Vegetal ..will be 59c g 50c Harmony Quinine Hair Tonic.will be 39c Z 1.00 Toilet Water.will be 79c 1 25c Jonteel Talc....will be 19c I 1.50 Jonteel Twin Vanity Case.... will be 98c | 50c Jonteel Rouge...will be 39c i 50c Toilet Water...will be 39c 1 10c Rexelive Soap..(per doz.) will be 98c | odc juneve raicuin....will be 23c 35c Riker’s Antiseptic Tooth Powder ..will be 29c | 50c Hair Fix.....will be 39c 50c Petroleum Hair Rub...will be 39c 25c Rexall Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste will be 19c | 50c Rexall Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste will be 39c 50c Riker’s Brilliantine...will be 39c 15c Nursery Castile Soap....will be 10c 75c Rexall Theatrical Cold Cream._.will be 59c 1 50c Jonteel Compact Face Powder.. will be 39c 1.00 Jonteel Compact Face Powder..will be 69c Special for the Men 25c Gentlemen’s Talc will be given away with Bay Rum (8 oz.) selling at 50c ! A special treatise on the subject of Beauty Culture | will be given free to every lady customer during June—The Beauty Month. Yours very truly, -■■■-*— C. E. Stout The Rexall Store V— ) Mrs. J. C. Harnish and daughter, Miss Edna, went to Omaha Tuesday for a visit with their son and brother, Frank Harnish and family. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Toohey drove up from Sioux City last Saturday and spent Sunday with their cousin, Mrs. C. M. Daly and family. O’NEILL DEFEATS EMMET AT EMMET LAST SUNDAY . O’Neill defeated Emmet Sunday afternoon on the JSmmet diamond in one of the best games of the season, by a score of 7 to 4. Batteries: O’Neill, Person and Doyle; Emmet Troshinski and Farr. SEVEN DAYS SPECIALS! 36-in. Peter Pan Gingham, per yard____ 39c 36-in. Tissue Gingham, silk stripes and a large assortment of patterns and colors, per yard 49c Whitney’s Percales, lights and darks, per yard 19c h GROCERIES Fresh Seedless Raisins, per package.. 10c Peaunt Butter in Pails, weight 16-oz., per pail 25c i | Skinners’ Macaroni and Spagetti, per package 9c Favorite Corn Flakes, 4 packages... 25c Rolled Oats, large package, per package.. 25c Pure Cider Vinegar, per gallon . 40c Fine Roasted Coffee, per pound._. 40c Palmolive Soap, $ bars to a customer, only, 3 for 25c Sugar, 13-lbs. for... $1.00 Ladies’ Oxfords in black, brown and Patent leather. This lot is in broken sizes. $5.00 and $6.00 values to sell for.... $2.98 Men’s and Boys’ Every Day Work Shoes. Guaranteed all leather. This number is a SPECIAL BARGAIN. Come early and get your size. Per pair.....$1.98 All our Men’s Suits, Ready-To-Wear, Dry Goods I and everything in the store are marked at low prices ! for cash. D. ABDOUCH “THE CASH AND CARRY STORE”