The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 11, 1925, Image 1

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    The Frontier.
*■ j 4
VOLUMN XLVI. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1925. 5 N0 2.
The Formal
1 opening
Of Our New Grocery and Meat Market will be held
SATURDAY
Demonstrators will serve lunches from 11:00
a. m. to 10:00 p. m. You are invited and urged to
call and enjoy the lunches with us.
NOW OPEN
The Store and Market are now open. New
goods are arriving daily.
Have arranged for city delivery service to start
Monday morning, June 15th. ,
Ross E. Harris
Phone 47. Phone 47
In the Scott Building. O’Neill, Nebraska.
% i in.linn.i
LOCAL NEWS.
»
Ira H. Moss was in Omaha the lat
ter part of last week.
The O’Neill ball team are playing
at Stuart in the tournament today.
Mrs. Della Shaw returned home last
Saturday from a visit with her son,
W. R. Shaw, at Tonawanda.
Miss Marie Biglin arrived in O’Neill
Monday evening from Wichita Falls,
Texas, for a two weeks’ visit.
The Harnish sisters drove to
Omaha last Thursday for a visit with
their brother, Frank and family.
A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. E. C. McElhany, of Page, at
the hospital in Plainview, last Thurs
day.
Miss Maxine 0 Donnell came home
from the state university Monday
evening to spend the summer vaca
tion.
Mrs. Earl Claussen and baby are
visiting with Mrs. Claussen’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Wyman, of Clear
water.
John Nolan went to Bassett Wed
nesday morning to attend a meeting
of the stockholders of the Perry
Brothers circus.
Mrs. F. D. Ross, df Detroit, came
last Friday and will spend the month
of June with her mother, Mrs.
Elizabeth McMillan.
A dispatch from Butte, Nebraska,
announces the marriage at that place
last Saturday, of Albert Purnell and
Mrs. Lillian Greeley, both of Atkin
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Biglin, Miss
Irenaeia Biglin and Miss Geraldine
Cronin were in Omaha several days
last week visiting friends.
Regular services will be held at
the First Presbyterian church Sun
day, with the Reverend J. B. Burke,
of St. Edwards, as minister.
James F. O’Donnell returned Wed
nesday morning from Gordon, where
on Tuesday he attended the conven
tion of the bankers of Group 6.
Ross Harris and H. E. Coyne have
joined with the other merchants in
the promotion of the free matinees
each Saturday at the Royal theatre.
Miss Florence McCafferty came
home from Omaha last Thursday
evening. She fell arid broke an arm
recently and is taking a forced va
cation.
Mrs. George Longstaff arid
daughter, Miss Elsie, went over to
Dorsey, and Lynch for a visit with
old time friends before going to their
new home at Hanson, Nebraska.
Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Purcell and
daughter, Miss Luella drove to Nor
folk Sunday for a short visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Shay.. Miss Lu
ella remained in Norfolk for a longer
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Warner, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Warner and Mr. and
Mrs. C. R. Manson entertained at an
old time dance in the Wise building
Tuesday evening. Refreshments were
served.
Albert Madsen, of Norfolk, attend
ed the commencement exercises at
St. Mary’s academy Wednesday even
ing, witnessing the graduation of his
Your Check
Your check in payment of obliga
tions or in making purchases is your
certificate of membership in the huge
circle of people who do business in a
businesslike way.
Other people prefer to receive your
check in doing business, for a check
is the most easily handled form of
cash.
Start paying by check today. It’s
the convenient, proper, way.
The Nebraska
State Bank
daughter, Miss Vera Madsen, who will
teach next year.
John Phalln came home from
Creighton college, Omaha, Tuesday
evening.
Mrs. Elmer Surber entertained the
Etavirp club at her home last Friday
afternoon.
C. D. Heelan, a rancher from near
Valentine, spent Monday visiting
with a cousin, Mrs. Mary Zastrow.
Lyle Curtis came up from Lincoln
the first of the week for a visit with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Curtis.
Miss Winifred Murray and Miss
Margaret Howard went to Wayne
Sunday where they will attend normal
this summer.
Minno Bellar, the ten year old son
of Mrs. John E Bellar, suffered a
broken right arm Monday evening
while cranking a Ford car.
Mrs. George- Bsharah, of Bruns
wick, spent Sunday of last week with
her father, W. W. Abbott, and sister,
Mrs. G. A. Mitchell, in this city.
Wm. Froelich is expected home in
a few days from Washington, D. C.,
where he has been attending law
school, for the summer vacation.
Jim Whitney, employed by Emmet
Revelle, near Star, sustained a badly
injured foot when a horse he! was
riding fell upon him last Sunday.
James McPharlin came home from
Creighton college, Omaha, Wednes
day morning, and will spend the sum
mer vacation with the home folks.
Mrs. Augusta Martin returned home
Wednesday of last week from an ex
tended visit with her daughter, Mrs.
Opie Chambers, at Tucson, Arizonia.
Mr. and Mrs. George Bay drove
over to the home of the latter's
father, Fred Kaczor, residing north
of Spencer, last Sunday, for a short
visit.
Paul Beha drove to Omaha Tues
day. He will return home Friday ac
companied by his brother, Joe, who
has been attending Creighton the
past year.
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Clauson were
in Omaha the first of the week where
D. H. took the Masters degree in
Masonry. They returned home Tues
day night.
Victor H. Schricker, Loretta Ne
braska, and Miss Hazel Hohman, Ew
ing, Nebraska, were granted a mar
riage license in Council Bluffs, Iowa,
last Monday.
W. B. Graves drove to Lyons, Ne
braska, Tuesday, returning Wednes
day with his wife and family who
were visiting relatives and friends in
that vicinity for the past two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Chambers, of
Sunny Side, Washington, were guegts
at the J. M.. Hunter home Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chambers are travel
ing overland; they went to Norden
Wednesday for a visit with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen McCaffrey and
two children drove up from Kansas
City, Missouri, last Monday for a
visit at the home of Mrs. McCaffrey’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Meredith.
Mrs. McCaffrey was formerly Ruth
Meredith.
The hrontier was greatly in error
last week when we mentioned the baby
Shetland pony belonging to A1 Rich
ardson. The pony is the property of
little Miss Helen Richardson who has
been the possessor of the mother of
the baby Shetland for the past three
years.
Miss Iris Carson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Carson, of Steel Creek
township, who is in Lincoln where
she will attend summer school, wras
a guest at a breakfast given by Miss
Eforothy Fitzsimmons of that city,
Monday morning. Twenty-two guests
were present.
Joe Eakes, former manager of the
Western Union office at this place,
has been promoted from the manage
ment of the office at Sidney, Ne
braska, to be manager of the Nor
folk office. The appointment was
effected last Monday.
Miss Demaris and Miss Irma Stout
are expected home from Omaha next
Sunday. Miss Demaris has been
teaching in Omaha during the past
year and will be home to spend the
summer vacation. Miss Irma has
been visiting in Omaha the past two
weeks.
Mrs. Cora Littlebridge accompa
nied by her daughter, Miss Doris,
and Lee Brown and Lee Larson, left
Tuesday morning, for their home in
Aberdeen, South Dakota, after
several days visit at the Tom Gal
lagher home, twelve miles north of
O’Neill.
Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Smith, of Ew
ing, arrived in the city Monday night
from Osmond where they had been
visiting their son Earl and family for
a few days. They will visit a few
days with ther daughter, Mrs. E. D.
Henry and famiy before returning
to Ewing.
Mrs. John A. Robertson went to
Plainview last week for a visit with
her daughter, Mrs. Lottie Weidman,
and Mrs. E. C. McElhany, of Page.
She will also visit a daughter Mrs.
Elsie Anderson, at Concord, and a
daughter, Mrs. Helen Sundall, at
Wakefield, and a son, Ray, at Da
kota City.
Post Commander P. B. Harty, Ad
jutant Gerald Miles and Hurley
Jones have been named as delegates
and Loren Richardson, William Gatz
and Stanley Soukup alternates to
the state convention of the Ameri
can Legion by Simonson post. The
convention will be held at Columbus
July 27, 28, 29.
The board of supervisors have been
in session as a board of equalization
since Tuesday morning. A number
of complaints from different parts of
the county have been heard. They
will adjourn as a board of equaliza
tion this evening.
A bunch of Indians from the reser
vation in South Dakota, passed
through O’Neill Monday evening with
about fifty bucking horses which
they are taking to the Madison, Ne
braska, rodeo, that will be held in
that city July 3rd and 4th.
Will Metcalf, accompanied by J. M.
Hunter and E. P. Porter went to the
lakes south of Valentine last Friday
in search of bass. Evidently the bass
were notified that these piscators were
coming and immediately went, into
hiding. Good catches are reported
up until the day that they approach
ed the lakes, but nothing since.
ST. MARY’S ACADEMY
ENTERTAINS SUNDAY
The alumni of St. Mary’s Academy
gave the first of a series of enter
tainments it is staging in raising its
pledge of |2,500 in honor of the silver
jubilee of the academy this fall, at the
academy Sunday afternoon. The af
fair, at which the attendance was
very large, included a delightful
luncheon, a program and Monte Carlo
whist. Mrs. W. J. McDonough won
high honors and a beautiful prize
at whist and Miss Pauline Wirer the
all-cut prize. The program included
vocal solos by Misses Genevieve Big
lin and Eileen Enright, a musical se
lection by Masters John Robert and
Gene Gallagher, a violin solo by Miss
Helen Wirer, reading by Misses Ar
lene Kentell and Teresa Bazelman, a
minuet by Misses Helen Reardon and
Grace Quilty and Masters Jimmy
Brown and Jimmy Harty. It con
cluded with a chorus number by the
Academy Glee club.
WALTER RAY SIMMONS
GETS NINETEENTH REPRIEVE
Walter Ray Simmons, under sen
tence of death for the murder of
Frank Pahl, of Spencer, in 1922, has
been granted another reprieve which
will expire July 9th. Simmons was
to have occupied the electric chair
sometime last Tuesday.
Governor McMullen announced the
new reprieve after he with the other
two members of the state pardon
board had concluded a conference
with Simmons which began at 9
o’clock Tuesday morning. '
The governor said the board would
meet in special session Tuesday to
decide whether or not they will give
Simmons another hearing some time
between now and July 9. If the new
hearing is not granted, and if further
legal efforth by Simmons’ attorneys
are unavailing, Simmons must die
July 9th.
A threat to carry the Simmons case
before the people and to use it as a
means of whiping the capital punish
ment law from the statutes was made
by Judge E. P. Holmes, Simmons’ at
torney.
Later: The state board of pardon
Wednesday, granted Simmons a re<
hearing, which has been fixed for
July 10th, at ten o’clock in the morn
ing.
Simmons’ attorneys say that they
will make a diligent hunt for the
man and woman whose testimony, as
it is told to them, will be that it was
Jack Currier and not Simmons who
killed Pahl. The thirty days was
made necessary by the law, which
provides for a notice to all persons
interested. Whatever is done then
will be final.
ST. MARY’S ACADEMY
GRADUATES TWENTY-ONE
Twenty-one young ladies, compos
ing the senior class of the high school
6f St. Mary’s academy, were gradu
ated at the academy commencement
held in the academy assembly audi
torium Wednesday night. Miss Joyce
Kent, who was valedictorian, also has
been awarded a scholarship at St.
Teresa, Winona, Minnesota, for
scholastic standing. The address to
the class was delivered by the Rev.
Thomas A. Kelly, S. J., of Creighton
university and the conferring of hon
ors were by the Rev. M. J. Grady.
The salutatory was delivered by Miss
Loretta Enright. The remainder of
the program was as follows:
“Grand March de Concert,” Wol
lenhaupt, Miss Evelyn Pruss.
Duet, “Fantasie Caprice,” J. Lin
inger, the Misses Agnes Bazelman
and Vera Madsen.
Vocal solo, “Narcissus,” Ethelbert,
Miss Agnes Carr. Violin obligato,
Miss Pauline Wirer.
Piano solo, Le Lever de Soliel,
Pattison, Miss Loretta Enright.
Class poem, Miss Pauline Wirer.
Violin and Piano, Brindisi Op. 49,
D. Alard, the Misses Helen Wirer and
Joyce Kent.
Chorus, “Abou Ben Adhem and
the Angel,” Louis Adolph Coerne,
Class of ’25.
At the piano—Mis3 Loretta Ryan.
Following is the list of graduates—
Agnes Bazelman, Agnes Carr, Anna
Connolly, Marguerite Donlin, Loretta
Enright, Marie McLeod, Alice Minton,
Magdalene Mudloff, Jeanette Murphy,
Loretta Ryan, Kamilla Uhl, all of
O’Neill; Mary Dunne, Ovitt, Neb.;
Katherine Jardee, Long Pine, Neb.;
Margaret Kane, Joyce Kent, Vera
Madson, Norfolk, Neb.; Rose Tim
mermans, Stuart, Neb.; Rose Velder,
Fairfax. South Dakota; Helen Wirer
and Pauline Wirer, Phoenix, Ariz.
1
8-Days Special Prices
From Friday, June 12th, to Friday, June 17th j
North Star Bleached, wide sheeting, guaranteed not to turn
yellow. Value 65c. Special, per yard __ 49c
Art Embroidered Pillow Cases, value 65c, Special _ 49c
Ladies’ Mercerized Hose, in all colors, plain and fancy _ 49c
Calumet Raking Powder, lib. large size, per can__ 29c
Old Scout Coffee, per pound __, _____ 38c,
HU-Co. Mustard, per glass ______9C
Skinner Maccaroni, per package ___ 9c
Dried Peaches, per pound .. ..... ____ 15C
Syrup, Karo, dark, per gallon _______ 65c
Bananas, per pound ____ _ __ 10c
Fancy Cookies, price .15 and 40c; now, per pound ... 28c
Cream-O-Wheat, per package ........ 25c
Grapenuts, 2 packages for ... ..... 35c
Crystal White Laundry Soap, 11 bars for .... ...50c
Brooms, extra heavy, each _L_.. 35c
Snowflake Flour, guaranteed, per sack ___ $2.35
We now have a large stock of Ladies' and Mens’ Shoes on dis
play. ,
We just received a new shipment of the latest styles in Men’s
Dress Caps.
“The Cash and Carry Store”
D. Abdouch *
O’NEILL INVITATION
GOLF TOURNAMENT
WILL BEGIN SUNDAY
The receipts by tournament offi
cials of acceptances of invitations and
promises of attendance at the fourth
annual invitation tournament of the
O’Neill Country club starting next
Sunday from Glenn Littlefield of Cas
per, Wyo.. Bobby Reickoff of Orange
City, la.; John W. Hiber of Hastings,
Neb., and J. Parnell Golden of Cas
per, Wyo., assures an attendance of
noted golfers at the gathering.
Littlefield, who is stopping off en
route to the Trans-Mississippi tourna
ment at Omaha, is twice champion of
Wyoming, runner-up at Del Monte,
Cal., and winner of the invitation
tournament at Kearney, Neb. Bobby
Keickoff of Iowa, attends Kiski col
lege and at present is playing in the
Pittsburg tournament.
He will stop at Orange City for
two days before coming to O’Neill
where he is looked upon as a strong
contender for championship honors.
John W. Hiber is a several times for
mer north Nebraska champion and J.
Parnfell Golden forjnerly held the
northeast Nebraska championship
most of the time until he moved to
Wyoming. In addition to these the
attendance of the following is as
f ured:
William Sheehan of Winner, S D.,
a thrice Iowa and twice South Da
kota champion; Harry Tollefson of
Kearney, George Swingle of Lincoln,
Frank Morgan and W. C. Hunter of
Wayne, D. T. McKcnnon and Art
Breyer of Norfolk, Lyle Jackson of
Neligh, George Farnam and Joe Bald
win of Ainsworth, all of whom have
to pay excess baggage in carting
around their prizes and trophies.
Additions to the long list of prizes
already here are arriving daily and
the offering is more extensive than
ever before tendered by the local club.
An attendance of more than two
hundred is assured and extensive so
cial affairs are being planned for the
visitors enjoyment for the ladies and
a grand ball the concluding evening
of the tournament.
Miss Roberta Arbuthnot came home
from the state university at Lincoln
Thursday.
WHY MILK REMAINS SWEET
I have just installed a new Reid Milk Cooler and Areator. The
milk passes over the coils and cold water passes through them.
The milk is cooled from 98 degrees to 55 degrees as fast as it is
milked. The milk looses all the animal heat before being bottled
and will remain sweet much longer. Due to the rapid increase in
business since installing the cooler I believe it is a great help to
my customers.
I have also built a large cooler holding 1200 pounds of ice for
storing our butter and other dairy products. This insures you
receiving them in the best of shape.
All the leading dealers in town handle our butter! When buy
ing, ask them for it.
SANITARY DAIRY
PHONE 84. F. W. LANCASTER, Owner.
Co-operation
Our Policy
Every man or woman who handles
money should study his banking con
nections carefully.
Your first deposit in this bank may
mean more to you than you realize.
This bank carries no indebtedness
of officers or stockholders.
Resources over $600,000.00.
The
O’Neill National
Bank