Here’s where oil quality * shows up a a* especially mvtuu-s i n i—— ww inpi—Hr~i ri \ 1 1 F aVlNTEK driving tests the quality oi an oil at every bear ing, at every pin, between pis ton anil cylinderwall—wherever lubricution is required. 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TAGO LE N E MOTOR OIL ; " \ _j anm— 'J i_ * Mellor Motor Company Ford Dealers Phone 16 THE FRONTIER D. H. CRONIN, Publisher W. C. TEMPLETON, Editor and Business Manager Entered at the Postoffice at O’Neill Nebraska as Second Class Matter ADVERTISING RATES: Display advertising on Pages 4. 1 and 8 are charged for on a basis o: £6 cents an inch (one column wide per week; on Page 1 the charge i 40 cents an inch per week. Local ad ▼ertisements, 10 cents per line firs Insertion, subsequent insertions I cents per line. LOCAL NEWS. Sanford Parker and son Arthu came up from Omaha this morning Mr. Sanford Parker will be in charg of the affairs of the Nebraska Stat Bank as assistant receiver, in cas the bank is not reorganized, but i any event he will be in O’Neill fo some little time arranging the affair of the bank. Mr. Parker is an ol timer in this vicinity; he spent al most fifty years here before going t Omaha to reside a few years age He was receiver of the land offic here for eight years. His many Hoi county friends wil be glad to agai welcome him to O’Neill, but regre the cause of his coming. Fred Lowery has moved to the Peter Reifers residence west of the Beha hotel. L. K. Hough is in Omaha this week attending a convention of the Texas Company. The Nu Fu Club met at the home of Mrs. Ivy Dale last Friday after noon. Mrs. W. J. McDonough won the high score and Mrs. C. J. Kim brough, the second high, at Bridge. i - ’ Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Herring left i for Lincoln last Saturday for a short , visit before returning to their home . in Eugene, Oregon. They were called ^ here by the death of Mrs. Herring’s . father, Jasper Ritts. The auto licenses are being renew ed quite rapidly this month; accord ing to the records at the County Treasurer’s office we find that 2400 r renewals and 700 new licenses have . been issued so far this year. t? - » Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McElvain have » moved to the Harry Sisco residence ^ in the southwestern part of the city; r Mr. and Mrs. Arlo Hiatt have moved s to the McElvain residence; Mrs. H. i W. Ritts has moved to her own home. 3 Mr. and Mrs. John Honeycutt ex . pect to leave for Gordon, Nebraska, s next Monday where Mr. Honeycutt t has a contract to pitch ball for the l Gordon ball team this year. Gordor t is in the Northwest Nebraska League which consists of six towns. Miss Mildred Malone spent Sun day with Mrs. Luella Brooks, at At kinson, Nebraska. Mr. and Mrs. O. Ellsworth will leave Friday morning for their new home at Alvo, Nebraska. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Osenbaugh, ac companied by Mrs. Walter Warner and Mrs. Dean Streeter, drove to Norfolk Tuesday. Mike Horiskey departed for Cali fornia last Sunday morning where h( expects to spend a three week’s va cation as mail clerk on the Burling ton. Roy Troyer of Hudson, Ohio, earn* last Friday evening for a short visil with Jack Ernst. Roy was a resident j of this vicinity a number of years ago. Mrs. Harry Bowen, Mrs. W. P Curtis, Mrs. Pete Hereford, Benneti Hereford and Russell Bowen drov« to Norfolk Wednesday and spent tht day. Dr. Charles G. Gomon, (listrid Superintendent of the Norfolk dis triet, will preach in the Methodis church Sunday morning at elever o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Frank .Osborn, o ! Norfolk and Mr. and Mrs. Fran ! Hunter, of Star, were guests at th home of Mrs. Margaret Hunter las | Monday. A manage license was issued to John L. Wood of Creighton, and Miss Edna Hopkins of Inman. The Ladies Guild of the Presbyter ian church will meet with Mrs. L. A. Carter on February 20th. Mrs. W. C. Templeton and Mrs. Robert Smith will assist Mrs. Carter. S. L. Berry, personal referee, sold the Wabs land north of Phoenix last Monday afternoon. Wm. Storjohann purchased the sw’/l of 4-32-12, the seV4 of 4-32-12 and the nw!4 of 34-33-12; Sarah Wabs purchased lots 1 and 2 in 27-33-12, amounting to 80 acres. TROSHYNSKI—MURPHY — Michael A. Troshynski, of Atkin son, and Miss Lauretta A. Murphy, of Emmet, were united in marriage by Monsignor M. F. Cassidy in St. Patrick’s church in this city last Tuesday morning at eight o’clock, in the presence of a number of relatives and friends. They were attended by a brother and sister of the bride and groom, Miss Helen Murphy, of Oma ha, ar.d Dan Troshynski, of Atkinson. Following the ceremony a wedding ! breakfast was served at the home of the bride’s sister, Mrs. G. E. Miles. The newly weds will reside on a t farm northwest of Emmet where Mr. . Troshynski has been farming for , some time. t The Frontier extends congratula tions. I HIGHLANDERS, ATTENTION! Because of the closing of the Ne braska State Bank, through which the draft for the January dues to the head office was draw’n, it was neces sary to make another assessment to cover these dues. The draft did not get back to the bank in time to be paid before the bank closed. In order that you may not become delinquent see the secretary, Mrs Fannie Gal lagher, at once. GEORGE A. MILES, Illustrous Protector. JOHN HARVEY John Harvey was born near Pleas ant Hill, Pike County, Illinois, July 28, 1844, and passed away at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Mary Crawford, nineteen miles north of Stuart, Nebraska, Monday, February 3rd, 1930, at the age of eighty-five years, six months and seven days. At the age of twenty years he enlist ed in the Civil War but was rejected on account of a crippled hand. In j 1865 he crossed the plains with oxen to Denvei’, Colorado; in 1870 he went to Boone, Iowa, where on December 24, 1871, he was married to Clara Ann Ross; to this union eight child ren were born, two of whom died in infancy. In 1878 he emigrated from Boone, Iowa, to Holt County, Nebr., and homesteaded in Paddock township near what is now' Meek postoffice; he was one of the oldest settlers of the county and saw many hardships. On September 24, 1884 his wife passed away and left him with six small children; her dying wish was for hin\ to keep the children together. He ful filled that promise; he was father and mother to them until they were grown. During his later years he has made his home with his children. He leaves to mourn his death his six children, William H. Harvey, of Agee; Mrs. Wrm. Crawford, Stuart, Nebraska; Nathan M. Harvey, Alta, Canada; Mrs. C. S. Patterson, Owan ka, South Dakota; Mrs. Lloyd Craw ford, Portland Oregon; Mrs. C. E. Miller, Gross, Nebraska; thirty-two grand-children and thirty-five great grand-children. Funeral services were held from the Paddock Union church conducted by Rev. De Vermerman, of Spencer, Nebraska; burial was in the Union cemetery. Nathan M. Harvey, of Alta, Can ada, and Mrs. Lloyd Crawford, of Portland, Oregon, were unable to be present at the funeral services. The other children were present. Mr. Harvey was a pioneer in the west; he drove an ox team to Den ver in 1865 and was a freighter and assisted in building the Union Pacific from Omaha to Salt Lake from 1865 to 1870; during those years he saw much of the Indians who were not as quiet and gentle as they are today; Mr. Harvey often told of several fights with the Indians; at one time he was corralled with a number of others for three days; relief came just in time to save them. The following well known poem is contributed to the memory of the de ceased by Sheridan Simmons: To my old friend, John Harvey: THE OVERLAND TRAIL Here is a song of the days, those heroic old days, When the west tried the metal of resolute men; ’Ere the sun of progression had melt the haze Of the mystery hiding this land from our kin. Here is a song cf those heroes, those cusses so tough, Who cracked their great whips as the schooners set sail; Who sang their wild songs, as their pipes they would puff, While pounding along on the Over land Trail. To this fearless old legion who swung their great whips Over the backs of their laboring bulls, Who chose not the language that rolled from their lips, As the wheels furrowed sand in the hardest of pulls. The signal from scouts who w’ere sleuthing ahead, The parking of wagons in panic less haste, The wild savage yells that would awaken the-dead, The Indian’s sally defiantly faced. The battle, the flight, the reds in re treat, Some graves over which the lone ^coyotes would wail, And away moves the train through the shimmering heat That quivered and danced on the Overland Trail. But few are now dodging the reaper’s keen blade, Who tottered down life's ever-nar rowing veil, Who sit and dream of the parts they had played, While pounding along the Overladd Trail. • The tourists, who now in rare luxury roll, In palace cars over the glimmering rails, Give never a thought to those valiant old souls Who went pounding along on the Overland Trail. HELEN WESELY KNOWLES Helen Elizabeth Wesely was born in Butte, Nebraska, March 11, 1899, and died at her home in Esbon, Kan sas, February 7th, 1930, at the age of 30 years, 10 months and 20 days. Complications following influenza and heart trouble were the cause of her death. Her early childhood was spent in the vicinity of Butte and Atkinson. In June, 1915, she was united in mar riage to Guy M. Knowles. To this union seven children were born, two of whom preceded her in death. The five children remaining to mourn the loss of a faithful mother are: Sam uel, age 14; Ralph, 10; Edward, 8; Frank, 6, and John, 3; also her moth er, Mrs. Anna Kelling, of Atkinson, and four sisters: Mrs. Lloyd Whaley of O’Neill; Gladys, Olive and Beulah Kelling, of Atkinson. Her remains were taken to her childhood home in Atkinson for inter ment. CARP OF THANKS To the many friends and neigh bors who so nobly assisted us follow ing the death of our darling mother and sister, we extend our sineerest thanks. The Knowles Children Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Whaley WOMAN’S CLUB NOTES There will be a meeting of the Literary department of the Woman’s Club next Wednesday, February 19. Leader .. Mrs. S. A. Liddell Review, “Song of Indian Wars,” by Neihardt Mrs. Malone Discussion Mrs. Gilligan “THEY HAD TO SEE PARIS” When the socially ambitious Mrs. Pike Peters springs a valet on her husband, Pike Peters, in “They Had To See Paris,” Fox Movietone all talking comedy drama starring Will Rogers as Pike, he rebels. He does n’t want a dress suit and he refuses to tolerate a dresser. “I ain’t got but one thing in the world to do, dress myself, and you go and hire an able-bodied man to help me do it,” complains Pike. “They Had To See Paris” is filled with similar Rogerisms. See it at the Lyric Theatre, Atkinson, where it will remain until tomorrow night. The supporting cast includes Mar guerite Churchill, Fifi Dorsay, Owen Davis, Jr., and Irene Rich. Lyric Theatre ATKINSON Patronize Your Home Theatre First! Then Visit the Lyric Theatre at At kinson and Hear Sound Pictures at their Best. World’s Smallest Theatre Equipped with “Western Electric” Sound System. —PROGRAM— Friday and Sat., Febr. 14*15 WILL ROGERS America’s Greatest Humorist in his first ALL TALKING movietone pic ture, “THEY HAD TO SEE PARIS” With Irene Rich, Fifi Dorsey. Let him tell you about Night Life in Gay Paree! Matinee Saturday at 2:30. 10c & 40c Sun. Mon. Tue. Feb. 16-17-18 JOAN CRAWFORD —IN— “UNTAMED” With Robert Montgomery and Ernest Torrence. Beautiful Joan’s first talk ing picture sweeps you from Central American jungles to New York so ciety, in a tale of dramatic contrasts and unusual romance. Matinee Sunday at 2:30. Matinee: 10c and 40c. Nights: 10-50c Wed. & Thurs., Febr. 19-20 BARGAIN NIGHTS Buy Tickets at Box Office. 10c for Children :: 25c for Adults See “THE GIRL FROM HAVANA” With Lola Lane and Paul Page. Mys tery, romance, beneath the Palm trees, an ALL TALKING Fox Movie tone comedy-drama. Friday & Sat., Feb. 21-22 “BIG NEW S” With Robert Armstrong and Carol \ Lombard. EXTRA! Don’t miss this great newspaper melodrama. Also comedy and News. Prices 10c & 40c. Matinee Saturday at 2:30 WATCH THIS COLUMN ! CASH DOES IT SUGAR, Granulated, KQo 10 pounds UJb JELLO, n Dime package . Uu YEAST FOAM, £ Fresh package _ (Jb SARDINES, American, % Oil, 3 cans for _ IHb COFFEE, 50c grade Steel Cut,97^ per pound .—...— Of b PEANUTS, fresh salted, Q 'j pound .— Jb CANDY, Molasses Kisses, Qn % pound u b CANDY, Maple Nut Fudge, \ "7 n % pound . lib WALNUTS, English soft shell HQ n per pound cljb PANCAKE FLOUR, Advo, nr large size package Zjb SYRUP, Medium size bottle OQ for ZoC TOBACCO. Horseshoe, 71 pound plug* flu BUCKWHEAT Pancake Flour large size Owb Choice of 300 Patterns *00 CO All Wool Men’s Suits £OiUU John J. Melvin Sells for Less 57 Steps i