! I U CATION A L NOTES ( nued from page five whatev 4*. I have been notified by other < unty superintendents that this has he n practiced in other counties also. 1 * there is any thing that I feel a scl o< 1 district should have I will give them personal information. Sc) 1 fficials over the county are busy i i •• ing, repairing and painting buildn in preparation for the open ing of ’ ool next Monday, September 3rd. are pleased to see the in teres: en in putting school build ings ;u -ounds in the best possible condit Several new buildings are in the i w* of erection and will be ready foi the opening of school. With i ly one or two exceptions all teacher- lave been hired for the com ing ye.ii A Pre-Opening Program will be held for the Rurul Teachers of the Cou ity on Wednesday, afternoon, August 20th. The County Nurse fr»m Antelope County will be present and address the teachers on Health and Sanitation in the Schoolroom. Sup plies will be given out and instruct ions will be given to the teachers for the coming year's work. A Parent-Teacher's Association In stitute was held at four different places in the state during the past month. These meetings were spon sored by the National Congress of Parent-Teacher’s and were conducted by Mrs. C. E. Roe, Field Secretary of this organization. Mrs. Rose is one of the most capable experts in the Parent-Teacher’^ Association work in the United States. She knows every phase of the work and has conducted Institutes along this line in colleges and Universities throughout the United States. Parent-Teacher As sociations promise to be one of the largest and most worthwhile organ izations in the world in the very near future. It is one of the most import ant since it has for its sole aim and purpose the welfare of our children. LUELLA A. PARKER, County Superintendent. CELIA NEWS. Chas. Fink is not very well, and unable to do any work. A heavy rain and hail storm went over this community Tuesday after noon. The young people gathered up a tub full of hail in a little while and froze some ice cream. Thanks to Harm Damero, who generously furnished the ice, enabling a few of the neighbors to enjoy a fine treat of ice cream at the Johnson home Sunday, a week ago. Threshing is about completed and (lie yield was quite satisfactory. live made 11 to 13 bushels per acre; the last which was Ohus. Smith's, re turned 1300 bushels from 100 acres Cony Prickle threshed out 2200 bu. of ,.ye—Gee! it’ll take a lot of water, audit’s so dry. Sat s tay evening saw a tremendous crowd celebrating in Atkinson. This comm nity was pretty well represent ed th i. The crowd was so large that U ua rather hard to recognize any individuals, but we were pleased to noth the presence of the Hon. Judge Ro rl R. Dickson, W. O. James and I!, Coburn. Hans Rogue stayed P' 'tty close to the cafe. Johnson was there too, but is too modest to have hir. name in print. The Arch McKathnie family had quite a scare ©Tie morning last week on coming cut to milk the cows they found ten of them lying down .un able to got up. The cow's had been herded out the day before in a field of young corn that was badly burnt and had evidently filled to full mak ing them very sick. Dr. Hitchcock was called and worked with them, bringing eight up on their feet the same day, two were affected con siderably worse than the others and the doctor didn’t think they would pull through, but they finally responded to the treatment and m two or three days were all right. Ira H. Moss and Mike Kirwan have been elected delegates to the state convention of the Izaak Walton League which will be held September 10 and 11. SURROUNDING AM) PLEAS A NT VIEW ITEMS Albert Klingler was a dinner guest of Alvin Walnofer Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Deschots view ed the dam at the Niobrara Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Tasler spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. John Warner and son. May Warner and Loucille KMngler visited Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Marfng Sr. Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Johring and family spent Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Klingler. George Ries Jr. and sister, Hener etta, are in charge of the Ries home while they are visiting in Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Warner , of O’Neill, Mr. and Mrs. Kelley, of Ona wa, Iowa, visited the Warner’s sons at the ranch Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rise and dau ghter, Katherene, and Pete Rammell autoed to Lincoln Monday to spend a few days with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Heartman, of Creston, Iowa, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Babl and family last week. They all viewed the dam at the Niobrara Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Kerr and family and grand daughter, Alice Kerr and Lavern Anderson, of Fairfax, South Dakota, visited his niece, Mrs. Albert Klingler and family Wednesday. Mrs. Harvey Rouse and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller and son, Freddie, of Grand Island, Nebraska, and Mrs. Bon Richard's, of Edgar, Nebraska, visited their sister, Mrs.} Hannah Richards last week. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey Miller and family enjoyed a visit from their daughter, Garnett, of Olie, and rela tives of Mrs. Miller, of Aberdeen, South Dakota, last week. They re turned to their homes by auto, Mon day. Stockholders Meeting The Annual Meeting of the Stock holders of the Farmers Union Ele vator Co. will be held on Monday, September 3rd, 11)28 at 1:00 o’clock P. M. Elevator Warehouse. J. B. Donohoe, Secretary. OUR REGULAR BIG ANNUAL COMBINATION S A L E WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3rd. If you have anything tc sell, come in and list it. If you want to buy, wait for this Sale. JOHN L. QUIG, Manager O’Neill National Bank, Clerk Col. James Moore, Auct. Let The Frontier Print Your .Job Write for demonstrations to ''OAKLAND AEKfAMERICAN SIX PRODUCT OF CENERAL MOTORS S. G. Coover, Page, Nebr. Authorized Dealer Wanted: Engineer job to run stean or oil engine thresher. In at this office-or write Box 224 O’Neill, Nebraska The bakery can save you a lot of worry this ho veather. Buy your bread and pastry here. McMillian & Markey henry ford BACKS HOOVER Auto Manufacturer Tells Why He Is Heart and Soul With Candidate. SAYS FARMERS WEED HIM Quality of Hoover’s Ability Is a Fact Already Demonstrated by His Record. By HENRY FORD In an interviews with Samuel Crowther of the Saturday livening Post. I AM for Hoover for President be cause he has shown that he can size up any Job, pick the right man and direct it through to success. Through fourteen years—ever since Belgium—he has been handling some of the biggest jobs in the world. He has made a success of every one of them. He has shown that he is not afraid of size. The greatest Job that the world has ever known is now before this coun try. It Is so big that noue of the old line politicians even knows that it exists. We have developed thi3 coun try Just enough during the past six or seven years to know that much which was thought to be impossible can be made possible under the right leadership. The task is to make such use of the experience we have gained that we can build rightly for the future, j Otherwise we are going to lose all i that wo have gained. Wo have the men, we have the money and we can make the tools for the Job. But all these will be useless without leadership. That leadership, because the thing is na tional, must be in the President. Hoover Has Proved Leadership The quality of Hoover’s leadership requires no experimenting. It is a demonstrated fact. But of what value Is experience in the management of public affairs? What difference does it make who is President? We all have our personal prefer ences, but a mere preference is not important. If it be true, as Is said, that no real issues are before the country, then any man of reasonable i nbility will make an acceptable Presi dent. It Is quite true that we have no real political issues. But we have an economic problem which looms great er than any of the old Issues. It is not in politics. It cuuuul he describ ed in the old language of politics. No one is much concerned now with liberty and Independence as tied up ! with the right to vote. We have all i the rights our forefathers struggled for. We are concerned with new and different rights and responsibilities. The great issue is to develop this country to a point where every man and woman has the opportunity both to work and to play. We have proved that wages can be made high. We have now to prove that they can be continuously paid— that there will be no periods of un employment over which the worker cannot finance himself. No man is wise enough to say how j the future should be planned. But we have right at hand many enor mous developments which will keep uS! of us busy. Transportation Brings Prosperity This country could not have de veloped without transportation. That gave us national markets. These are mass markets, and thus we have been able to use better methods of manu facturing and got higher wages and lower prices. The first rapid trans portation came through the railroads. Then came the automobile. The mo tor vehicles were at first thought to be competitors of the railroads, but now we know that they fit in to gether. Business breeds business, and now we have not enough transportation. We must use the great waterways that have been put here for u3 to use both for transport and for power. Damming them for power improves them for transportation. Besides, the accumulation of these large bodies of water assists the rainfall. We have the Great Lakes and the Mississippi partly in use, but they are doing only a fraction of what they can be made to do. And many other projects only await further planning and coordina tion. For we know that we are in need of all kinds of transport—by air, by land and by water—and that each has its place and that each will make | business for tlfe others. This coun try needs to have its industry more spread out. Electricity and transport will do this. This program will circulate billions of dollars. Don’t say it will cost bil lions of dollars; say It will circulate billions of dollars. That is the true way of saying it. We have the money and will have much more, for every dollar thus spent will produce several dollars. And undertaking this work will mean that for many years—perhaps forever —we shall not have to bother about unemployment anywhere. Both the farm and the factory will share in every dollar that is paid out to the men actually on the work. It does not matter to me who does the work or who owns this work when done. It is use, not ownership, that counts. The bare statement of what this country mu3t do for its own well being also describes the kind of President it needs. It is not that the President is the director general of the nation or any other kind of abso lute ruler. But someone has to be spokesman of the progressive need of the country. Hoover Knows Language of Progress Hoover knows the language of mod ern progress better than any man. As an engineer, he has already plan ned tho water and hydroelectric de velopment of the country; and as a public officer with a knowledge of cause and effect, he knows the great present and future influence of these developments. From time to time foreign nations have been foolish enough to imagine that by some system of control they could raise the prices to us of raw materials that we had to have. Some of the controls were official and others were semi-official. The British control of rubber was undertaken from the best of motives, but the temptation to boost the price was too strong and so rubber went above a dollar a pound. Hoover did not ask for legislation or make any protest—any foreign na tlon has the right to charge us what it pleases. It is up to us to defend ourselves. He called a meeting of the rubber men. They learned Just how much rubber was already in the country and what could be done to ward reclaiming rubber. That broke the artificial price and saved the users of automobiles at least half a billion dollars. Incidentally, it caused some of us to make a start toward getting our own sources of rubber. A man less versed in the ways of the world and of business would have made a great many speeches and probably had the country talking war —and accomplished nothing but the generation of a great deal of bard feeling. Can Do Big Things This man Hoover not only has Ideals but he can do things. He knows what to do and where to And the right men. Among what are said to be issues are prohibition and what is called farm relief. We cannot elect a Presi dent who says in advance that he will take the oath of office with a mental reservation not to support the Constitution. Some farmers are well off and others are not. But I cannot regard the farm as distinct from industry or as in oppositin to industry. The one depends on the other. If the far mers do not earn money, then a great industrial market vanishes. If the workers do not earn, then the great marke't for farm products drops. Un doubtedly the freight on farm prod ucts is too high, just as is the freight on all products, but this will be cured only by providing more and better methods of transport In the general plan of the development of the coun try. The farm is small business in a world of big business and only through the development of the coun try can it become big business. The man who earns money on the farm is doing so by applying the methods which have made industry. That the vast majority of farmers are not fail ures is shown by the buying power of the farm slates. The pensioning of various indus tries has been tried time and again everywhere in the world. It has never worked and can never work. And no more can it work with farm ing. In addition, this is a world of lowering prices. Progress is in the direction of learning how to pay wages and earn money with low prices. That has created big busi ness. It will create big farming. We are now in the transition period and that is always a period of temporary hardship. Country’s Development Just Begun In short, we are not using what we have. There is a tendency to think ot the country as already de veloped, when actually the develop ment has scarcely begun. We have already gone further than any other nation. We have done this by taking advantage of science in a large social way for the benefit of all. The whole country Is In flux. If an industry or an industrial unit tries—-even for a little while—to stand still, it never catches up again. New methods in farming are com ing in as quickly as are the new meth ods in industry. New methods are adopted in both industry and agricul ture only because they make a fuller use of materials and men than did the old methods. We have reached our present point without plan, but to go much further we need the opening of the country on so broad a basis that the Govern ment itself must aid. The old sys tem is going out of business; there Is no cure but the wisdom to welcome the new era, which will not alone solve our present problems but abol ish them utterly. Herbert Hoover has the grasp not only of this country but of the world, and hence of this country’s relations with the world. He is a young man; he belongs to the new era. He has the ideas of the new era and the proved ability to put them Into practice. That is why I am for him. Brilliant Record Ohio State Journal Herbert Hoover was fully prepared by nature, education and experience to organize and direct the work in the department of commerce. As engineer, economist and student he brought to his task an unusual ability. As an ex ecutive he has directed the work ot organizing and rounding oat that im portant department. Greatly Reduced Rates To SIOUX CITY Account RODEO Sept. 1-2-3 Tickets on Sale Aug. 31—Sept. 1-2-3 FINAL LIMIT SEPT. 4 Half Fare for Children Ilaggage will be Checked. Consult Agent for Details ONLY $14.05 ROUND TRIP TO RAPID CITY, SOUTH DAKOTA, VIA CHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN RY. Tickets on sale daily until Sep tember 30. Return limit 15 days from date of sale. Half fare for children. Baggage checked. Stopovers per mitted at all stations on route within final limit. A splendid opportunity to visit the wonderful Black Hills country. For full information and tickets apply Agent, Chicago & Northwestern Ry. No. 6-8-10-12-14. FOR RENT. Private Garage for rent.—See R. H. Parker. 2-tf For Rent—Furnished house two doors west of Presbyterian church.— Mrs. Catherine Smith. 13-tf For Rent—Sleeping rooms or light housekeeping rooms; nice for school girls or teachers.—Call 236J. 12-3 For Rent—Apartments or light housekeeping rooms. Also single sleeping rooms by day or month. 20 rooms in my residence. Would like to show you these light housekeeping rooms.—Julia E. Parker. 5-tf FOR SALE 480 ranch and farm land, 14 miles northeast O’Neill.—E. D. Henry. 1-tf For Sale—Detroit Vapor gasoline range. Inquire of Mrs. C. E. Stout.9tf For Sale—About 500 feeders, mostly good Whitefaces. Call or write Alex Jauracek. 13-2p Sweet Bermuda onions at $2.25 per half bushel.—Lewis Kopecky, Inman. 13-tf For Sale—Player Piano as good as new. Will take your old piano in as part payment. See A. E. Bowren. 14 For Sale—A bargain in E*4 30-29 10 and SEVi 18-29-10, Holt County.— W. J. Hammans, Afton, Iowa. 13-2 For Sale or Trade—160 acres good hay land 2*4 miles east of Stafford, cheap, easy terms.—Mrs. L. M. Dun can, 1920 K Street, Lincoln, Neb. 14-1 MISCELLANEOUS Wanted—Gill for general house work.—Mrs. E. F. Gallagher. 13-tf Farm Loans see R. H. Parker. 49tf Girl wanted for store work.—The ■ Bakery. 11 -tf Dressmaking—Clara Aim. 34-tf. KODAKS, FILMS, KODAK FINISH ing.—W. B. Gnaves. O’Neill, 30-tf Wanted—For general housework in small family, girl experienced with small children. Call at this office.14-2 Plowing or breaking done vrith tractor. See Lee Wyant or Phone 94. 49-tf Would like to hear from owner who has five or more room house in O’Neill for rent. Write J. M. Wil helm Rapid City, South Dakota. 14 2 FARM AND RANCH LOANS, 5 AND V6 per cent, no commission.—F. J. Dishner, County Agent Joint Stock Land Bank. 17-If What could you do if a good posi tion were offered you today? Take a course at Nettleton Commercial College, Sioux Falls, S. D., and be ready. 14-1 Notice is hereby given to all in Road District to mow weeds or same will be mowed by road over seer ana charged to property.—Char les Baker. 14-2 Another million Atwater Kent Ra dios in a Million more homes will be that many more satisfied radio list eners. A. E. Bowen is the Atwater Kent dealer in O’Neill. He will show you the new sets, speakers and cabi nets for the season, which are beyond comparison. 14-1 In one minute all the mosquitoes in a room can be killed. Simply take a FLY-TOX Hand Sprayer, fill with FLY-TOX and fill the upper half of the room with the fine atomized spray. It will slowly settle to the floor killing all the insests in the room. Spray the ceiling hangings and closets where the mosquitoes hide, and also spray on the screens. FLY-TOX will not stain the walls, draperies or the most deli cate fabrics. It has a pleasing fra grance, is absolutely harmless to people but sure death to insects. Does not matter whether windows and doors are open or closed. FLY-TOX is the scientific development at the Mellon Institute of Industrial Re search by Rex Fellowship. Every bottle guaranteed.—Adv. Laundry I have taken over the agency for the Craven Laundry of Norfolk parCells called for AND DELIVERED, OR THEY MAY BE LEFT AT THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP. Phone 327 Arthur Ryan FOR SALE. Fordson tractor, first class condi tion; also 5 h. p. Cushman engine used very little. Write.—Sobotka’s Imple ment Service, Inman, Nebr. 12-tf 5% INTEREST NOW. I have private money for choice farm loans at 5% interest. 5% R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebr. 5% (First publication Aug. 30) NOTICE FOR PETITION FOR AD MINISTRATION. Estate No. 2032. In the County Court of Holt County, Nebraska, August 25, 1928. In the Matter of the Estate of Lucy Elizabeth Grass. Deceased. Notice is hereby given to all per sons interested in said estate that a petition has been filed in said Court for the appointment of Elsie M. Hough as Administratrix of said estate, and will be heard September 20, 1928, at 10 o’clock A. M., at the County Court Room in O’Neill, Ne braska. (County Court Seal.) C. J. MALONE, County Judge. 14-3 fNow you can get a good room in the heait of the q city for only $|25 HOTEL WELLINGTON O M MIA ROOMS WITH BaTH~$2.50 _Frca C,a-age _ 1 Overland Trucking Service Day or Night Phone 44 Await Spengler I BUY HIDES, WOOL AND METAL. First door west of Beha hotel. M. J. LYDON, O’Neil! __ Telephone 227J. Dr. C. H. Lubker Douglas Methods Phone 316, O’Neill, Neb. DR. J. P. GILLIGAN Physician and Surgeon Special attention given to disease of the eye and cor rect fitting of glasses. W. F. FINLEY, M. D. Phone, Office 28 O’Neill :: Nebraska DR. L. A. CARTER PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Glasses Correctly Fitted. One block South 1st Natl. Bank. ——Phone 72 O'NEILL :: :: NEBRASKA Uhl Brothers DRAT AND TRANSFER Heavy Hauling Specialties. Service at any time. Phones—302—288 John N. Stauffer City Dray Line Dray amd Transfer Piano Moving. Phone 32S O’Neill Nebraska Graduate Veterinarian H. L. BENNETT Phone 304. Day or Night. O’Neill, Nebraska