The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 20, 1930, Image 3

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    Out Our Way
By William*
/ OM,DAvye-X >
GOT SOME GOOD
NEWS FOR WOO
1 crueT'GrvwE'
r voo« Bow a
[|\ croe am* i'm
go»m ib PoT
WIKA OM AE
WO OR HELPER
/ha-ha-iHeW l\HE
OL DA\y& HERE AM*
WH’ Boll o' *tH* woods
"THikjHs. HE'E. POiM’
Hina A FAWOR , BUT
HE AiMT • IF WOO
CamT GET AmW HELP
OoT OF A EO*sl,AROOMO
-TH' HOUSE , HO\aj WOO
GOvjki A GET* AmW _
OOT OF HIM HERE ?
WcU_TH‘ olI MAM 'll
earm Both Paws
AM’ TrV SOm’lLSPEWD
Okie OF EM — BO]'
at That, vt'll. be
BETTe r'm ft WAS,
\MlWH TH' OL MAM
EARWIM ome PaW
AKi' TH* SOW
S>PEMDim’ HALF
OF rf
/
PI
i> /
I RECi. U S. R«T orr
-T^E. HAKlDlCAP.
vJRWiU.1 *M*»
OlSM BY Nl« SERVICE, INC.
msmm
Miss Dorothy Wilhelm, 18-ycar-old representative of the Wabash
railway, who won the National Dairy show’s milk maid marathon at St.
Louis. She milked.29 cows in one hour for a total of 249 pounds of milk.
Farm Groups Urge
Surfaced Highways
To AH Rural Areas
BY FRANK WeIlER,
Associated Press Farm Editor.
Washington — — National
farm groups look with inter .‘:t on
the stand of the American Country
Life conference at the Wisconsin
college of agriculture for “a sur
faced road jjp every farmer’s gats.”
The American Farm Bureau fed
eration, which long has had a “farm
to market road” committee, says
the inadequate condition of local
roads handicaps the rural popula
tion both socially and commercial
ly.
It was found at the conference
that of 3,000,000 miles of roads in
this country only 300,000 miles, or
10 per cent, are set apart as state
and federal highways. The remain
ing 90 per cent are local roads.
While some have been given an
all-weather surface, not less than
80 per cent of the farmers still re
side on dirt roads which, even in the
best farming communities, are often
virtually impassable to motor traffic
on account of mud and snow.
State and federal governments
are expending about $750,000,000 a
year on their 10 per cent of the
roads, and the local communities
about an equal amount on the re
maining 90 per cent.
Letters were read to the confer
ence showing that many farmers
Game Bird Protection.
From'Portland Oregonian
Dr. William T. Hornaday is not
assuming the role of alarmist when
he predicts that, unless Congress
adopts remedial action our Ameri
can game birds will soon be virtually
extinct. There are 6,414,454 licensed
hunters in the United States, net to
mention those in Canada, nor the
thousands of recruits who have en
listed since the iast tally. They sue
now allowed a maximum of ;ifteen
ducts and feur geese a clay. And
many of them ere enthusiasts.
Well?
Among sportsmen there is a gen
eral sentiment, though it may not ,
have to keep their automobiles and
trucks stationed at the side of hard
roads and transport their families
and produce to them in horse
crawn conveyances.
Transportation, says the farm bu
reau, is one of the most vital factors
contributing to success or failure of
farm operations, and that before
state highways will have proved as
beneficial as they were designed to
be, there must be adequate means
of access to them.
It favors construction of surfaced
roads whose wearing qualities w.ll
be adequate and whose cost of con
struction and maintenance will be
no greater than demands of traffic
warrant.
Iowa Farm Notes
Farm Page Iowa Farm Notcs-G box
Organization of a farm business
association composed of farmers in
Calhoun, Greene, Boone and Web
ster counties, is going forward, some
60 farmers already having joined.
Tlie association will be patterned
after the Four-County Farm Eusi
ncss association of Hardin, Grundy,
Franklin and Butler counties.
Thanksgiving turkeys are to cost
less in the vicinity of Clinton, ac
cording to advance information re
ceived by farmers there. Most of
the gobblers come from Texas, Io
wa and Illinois.
Detailed studies of livestock mar
keting conditions In eight sauth
represent majority opinion, for tur
ther reduction of the open season
and bag limit of wild ducks and
geese. It is evident to these citizens
that the sport the*’ love, with the
constantly increasing demands
made upon it, the ever widening
area of cultivated territory, must
suffer with increasing shrewdness
unless something is done very pres
ently. The Blackfeet watched in '
vain to northward for the return of |
the buffalo. The eastern states be- j
lieved that the passenger pigeons i
would come again. We have Jittle I
warrant in experience for assuming 1
that all will be well witn our water
fowl.
The obligation qf any heritage of I
west Iowa counties are to be sur
veyed by J.' H. Lister of Washington,
representative of the Federal Farm
board. Lister will visit the following
counties: Pottawattamie, Harrison,
Shelby, Audubon, Cass, Mills, Mont
gomery and Adams.
Benton County Shipping asso
ciations marketed 10 carloads of
hogs co-operatively during Septem
ber, records of the association
showed. Fifty-seven farmers con
signed hogs to the shipments, which
totaled 235.050 pounds.
•Cornstalks from Clay county
farms again will be shipped to Du
buque this season, to be used in the
manufacture of matzebcard. Ceunty
Agent Busenbark believes that
mcney derived from the sale of
stalks will aid in making up the de
creased income from corn.
The site cf a brick and ti}o plant,
founded near Spencer in 1060, soon
is to become a first-class dairy
farm. The ground on which the
plant was located was sold last
week to Fred Hedge and son of
Spirit Lake, for $150 per acre. It
consists of S3 aefes.
Blast Reduce.- Perfected
For Airplane Catapults
Washington- -The navy de
partment has developed a blast re
ducer on chip's airplane catapults
which eliminates danger and cuts
down the terrific detonation.
The mechanism is b.-ing installed
on the Salt Lake City, new 10.000
ton cruiser being overhauled at the
New York navy yard. Its principal
unit is a cylindrical chamber, per
forated with many email holes, in
which the blast cf the powder gun
on the catapult has been dissipated.
It is much like an automobile mulb
ler.
New Grandpa Exposed.
From Sheboygan Press.
All the rest of the family has
come up for its share of criticism
for speed and extravagance. Some
how grandpa was overlooked. Bui
a minister has found him out.
“Grandfather is no longer a long
bearded, collarless old man sitting
on the back porch reading h s
Bible,’’ says the minister. "No! If
he is up-to-date he must wear nice
ly creased, tailored English tweeds
silken hosiery, a close cropped Van
Dyke beard. Ke must smoke cig
arets and like jazz. It’s not funny;
it's tragic."
It's not tragic; it’s expensive
Think how a grandfather like that
adds to the high co^t of living.
Probably he was at the bottom of
it all the time. Think what hu
laundry bills must be, with nc
square yard of whiskers to protect
and hide hi3 shirt front and a
clean collar every day besides
Thing of the bill lor neckties ana
what he must pay the barber. Then
there’s the old con cob pipe and
the package of plug cut, no use tc
anybody and too good to throw
away—wasted, that’s all. Doubt
less his silk stocks account for the
slump in wool. And if being well
groomed affects his eyesight so ha
can't read the Bible truly ths
world and grandfather both are in
a tad way.
But where v.as that ministei
looking that he misled nil the
grandfathers who keep well in
formed and neatly dmesed without
being ridiculous, who arc plain
old-fashioned, godly men? Not ou
cur perches.
Quite Engaging.
Betty: I’ve been engaged to ont
man seven times.
Bessie: Well, I’ve been engaged
to seven men at one time.
the sort is that it should be handed
down undiminished. It ought even
to be bettered. A generation that
takes no thought of the generation
-which follows 13 godless in a rcai
and condemnatory sense. No reason
exists save the reason of hecaless
ness and greed for the future dis
appearance of native Amencar.
game birds. If they are sensibly con
served they will remain to nurture
our people, body and spirit, when
the population of the country is
several times as great.
Planes of the Pan-American Air
ways flew 3,522,076 in the last year
without_an accident.
To Complete Milady1 a
Fall Wardrobe
A wrap of black velvet and white
fox is the latest design to com
plete the wardrobe of the stylish
young miss. It is softened by
diagonal folds across the front
and back which supply hip drap
ery.
(InUraatioa&l N»wsreel)
Bride Again
HASTE—A few minutes after
Helen B. Sheares (above) poetess
and song writer, obtained a di
vorce, she married Bernard H.
Ridder, New* York publisher, di
vorced only a few minutes himself.
Heir to Millions Dons
Overalls at Work
Edmund duPont, of Philadelphia
and Wilmington, pictured in over
alls at a station of a pipe line com
pany, near Paola, Kansas, where
he is determined to learn the oil
business through actual experi
ence and is working like other
workmen, despite the fact that his
father is one of the biggest stock- j
holders of the cornpany.
View Eclipse in
South Seas
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Mitchell are .
among the party of scientists
■who viewed the eclipse on Niua
fou or Tin Can Island, in the
South Seas. It was on that
tiny spot in the South Seas that
astronomers and scientists had
gathered from all over the world
to obtain the pictures that would
furnish them with additional
data about the sun.
Ubioinational Kewsrtal}
Noted Britisher May Be
Next Viceroy of India
Indian Oiief Smoke*
20th Century Peace Pipe
^ \ wmm v s
Sir Herbert Siimuol, one of the
sillars of the British Liberal Party,
is said to be destined for the im
portant post of Viceroy of India
’o succeed Lord Irwin, when the
latter returns to England in Ap il.
Sir Herbert was a prominent fig
ure in Britain’s war-time govei.i
ment.
(International Neir*/eel)
Chief White Horse shows himself
at peace with the world at the r.jps
of 10S, upon his return from a
two-andonc-ha!f-ycnr lecture tour
of Europe, Asia and Africa. The
distinguished Rrd*-kin i*» a leader
of more than f>00 tribes, speaka
11 languages and bortats 17 ehiT
(Iren, of whom the elde.'H in 77 and
the youngest f>0.
<1 nlei iitti lcnnJ Ntvisi tcl|
Carthage Hospital Tragedy
Dr. W. B. Chapman (right),
head of a private hospital at
Carthage, Mo., shot Bernard F.
Grinder, when the latter is said
to have forced his way into the
room of Miss Imogen* Wood
fill (left). Following til*,
shooting, Dr. Chapman per
formcil an operation on the
wounded mnn( bat was urable
to save his life. A coroner**
jury exonerated Chapman.
llnteruailvaai N««»«■**