The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 05, 1931, Image 4

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    SANDWICHES
Cold Roast Beef 10c
Hot Roast Beef —. 15c
With Potatoes ...... — 20c
Cold Roast Pork 10c
Hot Roast Pork 15c
With Potatoes 20c
Boiled Ham ... _ 10c
Brick or Cream Cheese . 10c
Peanut Butter Special _16c
Pork Special 15c
Sardines 15c
Peanut Butter 10c
Pork Sausage 10c
Onion 10c
Toasted Cheese . 15c
Denver 86c
Fried Ham 15c
Ham and Egg _ 20c
Bacon 16c
Hamburger „ - 10c
On Bun_ 5c
Eggs 10c
Salmon 15c
Ham and Cheese ... 20c
THE GRAND CAFE
THE FRONTIER
D. H. CRONIN, Publisher
W. C. TEMPLETON,
Editor and Business Manager
w
Entered at the Postoffice at O’Neill,
Nebraska as Second Class Matter.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertising on Pages 4. 5
•nd 8 are charged for on a basis of
£6 cents an inch (one column wide)
per week; on Page 1 the charge is
40 cents an inch per week. Local ad
vertisements, 10 cents per line first
insertion, subsequent insertions 5
rents per line.
Every subscription is regarded as
• n open account. The names of sub
scribers will be instantly removed
from our mailing list at expiration of
time paid for, if publisher shall be
notified; otherwise the subscription
remains in force at the designated
subscription price. Every subscribe!
must understand thnt these conditions
•re made a part of the contruct be
tween publisher and subscriber.
BABY CLINIC WILL BE
HELD IN O’NEILL
A Baby Clinic, under the supervi
sion of the local chapter of the Red
Cross, will be held in O’Neill, Mon
day, March Kith from 10 to 4 o’clock.
Anyone in O'Neill or vicinity having
a child of pre-school age, that is, six
years or under, are urged to bring
them for an examination. ,
A meeting of the nursing commit
tee and local doctors will he held to
morrow to complete plans.
Watch next week’s paper for com
plete details.
MAKING TROUT STREAMS
MORE PRODUCTIVE
(By G. H. Nichols)
Many times I am askod by old set
tlers of north Holt, why we do not
have as good trout fishing as once
was enjoyed along the several trout
streams. In trying to answer the
question I want to cull attention to
the different conditions that exist
now compared to those bygone days.
I remember the first time 1 fished
a trout stream in Holt County. The
day was a hot One and not a breath
of air was there t o relieve as I
fought my way along the stream
through a tangle of weeds, brush and
over-hanging trees. There were but
few places where the sun could pene
trate the foliage and effect the tern
RoyaI
JLV THEATRE M-J
O’Neill. Nebraska
HOME CF HOOD PICTURES
Matinee Saturday 2:30; 10-25c; night
admission 1O-40C.
Matinee Sunday 2:30, adm. 10-35c;
night admission 10-50c.
Friday and Saturday, starch 6*7
Conrad Nagel and Bernice Claire in
NT MBERE1) MEN”
Live behind the bars for a few thrill
ing moments. See the convict camps,
labor gangs, mess hall. Get the feel
ing that sends these men rush:ng in
wicked frenzy to love or ruin. It's a;;
strong as the unwritten law that
binds two young hearts.
Sunday und Monday, March 8-9
Robert Ames and June Walker, in
"W AR NURSE”
It had to come, the story of the wo
men of the war. Most of the story of
the war is written in gun-powder
and steel. Here is another part of it,
the women behind the lines. A drama
of two nurses who faced love at the
front in different ways. Women have
never loved so deeply as the nurses
who knew that the men whom they
were sending back to the trenches
might be dead—tomorrow.
Tuesday and Wed., March 10-11
John Wayne, Virginia Cehrrill and
Marguerite Churchill, in
“GIRLS DEMAND EXCITEMENT”
No flat tires in this rumble seat ro
mance-just a Hock of self-starters
with free-wheeling ideas. A co-ed
comedy to complete your education
and hand you laughs.
Thursday Fri., Sat., March 12-13-14
Wheeler & Woolsey, the comedy
team of “Dixiuna” and "Rio Rita” in
“HALF SHOT AT SUNRISE”
It’s one of the most absurdly ridicul
ous, nonsensical mpsspots of assort
ed comedy that ever was cooked up
from celluloid. Two A. E. F. privates
madly A. W. O. L., in Paris. How
they get away with it is the story,
embellished with some of the fun
niest lines and situations ever de
vised.
perature of the water. Thus it was
that 1 found trout hiding ready to
take fly or hopper even before the
lure hit the water.
Last summer I went over the same
part of that stream. It was as bare
as a drainage ditch. I tested the
water and found it above 80 degrees.
Of course there were no trout there,
although I found the springs flowing
with no less volume than back in the
days when trout were abundant.
There was just too much sunshine.
But let us not be discouraged and
say those good old trout fishing days
are gone forever, because the same
conditions were found in far eastern
trout brooks a few years ago, and
they have Been overcome and the
brooks Brought back to the old pro
ductive stage.
The work of reclaiming and re
stocking the trout streams of Holt
county is just as important as re
stocking our warm water lakes and
ponds with other game fish. It isn’t
so much a matter of providing
amusement for fishermen as the im
portance of an increased production
of fish food ut home. Holt county,
with at least 160 miles of trout wat
er, can be made to produce tons of
the finest fish food that ever swam.
The feed will be there in lavish
abundance and there are nursery
pond sites in unlimited numbers
where trout fry may be reared to
fingerling size. In time, if the
streams are again brought back to
their natural state, there is not the
least doubt but one or more hatcher
ies w'ill be built at the sites of some
ofthe large springs. Anyway there
will be a plentiful supply of fry so
that there will be no lack of finger
lings for waters that are fitted for
them. Where streams run through
pastured land sections may be fenced
and retards and dams made to pro
vide homes for the fish. Once stock
is kept away from a stream, vegeta
tion will spring up both in and along
the waters edge. Grasses and weeds
will grow and in time trees will again
shade the waters, reducing the tem
perature many degrees. The dams
and retards will cause deep holes to
form and brush and fallen trees be
come feeding places for fish. Shrimp
and other insect life multiply accord
ing to the amount of brush, rocks
and vegetation there are in streams.
Where there are weeds and brush,
hoppers, the best of feed for large
trout thut can be found, will soon
abound in numbers to be shaken into
the water and the mouths of hungry
trout when the wind is strong. Last
summer I counted fourteen hoppers
in the stomach of an eleven inch
nruuK iroui, caugni on meet ureea,
where weeds fringed the rtream. A
small trout caught on the Verdigri
Creek where it meandered through a
hare pasture hadn’t a thing in its
stomach except a few small shrimp
and one or two water beetles. Al
though it, was probably as old as the
one caught in Steel Creek, it did not
weigh one-half as much and was not
as well proportioned.
There are many ways to build re
tards without a great deal of labor
or expense. Trees anchored to
stumps or other trees with tops down
stream form excellent hiding and
feeding places. Logs placed across a
stream where there are banks on
each side make small waterfalls and
holes are washed beneath them. In
such holes trout hide away from
their natural enemies . Brush piles
wired to stumps or trees soon create
swirls that afford resting places for
young Hsh. Permanent dams may he
built by wiring the butts of small
trees to logs and burying the tops of
the trees in the bed of stream above.
The natural wash of sand and gravel
will in time imbed the trees more
firmly and prevent Hoods from re
moving them. Under the logs, holes
will be washed. Old woven wire fen
cing anchored to trees will in time
catch drift wood and trash and make
good homes for fish. Care should bo
taken in choosing places for retards
where there is no chance for the
stream to be forced out of its natur
al course.
On Steel and Verdigris creeks the
t,j«nnu\ rorestation and Parks tom
mission has built a number of re
tards and dams. These creeks were
chosen because of there being sever
al trout nursery ponds nearby from
which several thousand fingorling
trout were released into the creeks
last fall. It did not take the little
fellows long to find these new homes
and if one is found away from home
it will lose no time darting back to
the friendly cover if disturbed.
A number of ponds were built by
owners of large springs and trout
reared in them. This is good and I
hope more of them will be built. But
pond reared fish are not so solid as
stream reared ones and besides there
is not the sport connected with catch
ing them. Trout that are continually
fighting the current and hustling for!
food that must be taken on the wing i
so to speak, furnishes meat that'
chews well. Not tough, but firm
enough to bring the teeth into just
the right sort of action. While 1 do
like to sit down in a restful position
and catch fish with the old cane pole
and bobber tackle, the real thrill
comes from matching wits against a
wild and wily trout in its native wat
ers. The uncertainty whether he will
snag your line under a root or make
his get-away into a nearby brush pile
adds zest to the encounter. Most of
sportsmen want to give their prey a
fighting chance, that is why stream
fishing is great port.
Speaking of pond building for
trout reminds me that by using the
same energy and a small part of the
cost, fancy rod. of any trout stream
may he made as productive as a pond.
There is a fine brook running through
a pasture. Fence off a section of it.
Build retards and dams along the en
closed course. A nchor logs next to
each hank where the stream makes a
curve. Holes will wash behind the logs
and a trout home is made. Do this
and the fish will not have to he invit
ed to come. In due time there will
he tenants in every abode.
—Buy it in O'Neill—
At Big Savings!
Qenuine CrdOOUfEAH Balloons
UT5*E WORLD’S GREATEST TIRE”
Compare These Prices with
Mail Order Prices!
Lifetime Guarantee! Mounted Free
Building Millions More Tires Than Any Other Company and En
joying Lowest Costs, Goodyear is Offering the Finest Tires and
Greatest Values You Have Ever Seen. -:
Tires in Stock! No Waiting
. fhlhfindeK
STANDARD 4-PLY
4.10—21 $4.98
4.50— 20 $5.60
4.50— 21 . $5.69
4.75—19 . $6.65
5.00— 19 . $6.98
5.00— 20 . $7.10
•
6-PLY
HEAVY DUTY
4.50— 20 . $8.55
4.50— 21 . $7.48
4.75—19 . $9.26
5.00—19. $10.19
5.25—21 ... $10.25
7.50—20 (34x7.50)
Truck Balloon $29.95
HIGH PRESSURE
30x3 . $4.29
30x3 >/2 Reg.$4.39
30x3 y2 Ovs..$4.48
30x5 8-ply HI) $17.95
32x6 10-ply hd $29.75
Mellor Motor Co.
I Phone 16 O’Neill, Nebraska
PETER HENRY ANDERSON
Peter Henry Anderson, or Grandpa
Anderson, as he was called by every
one, was born in Myeby, Sweden,
January 20, 1844, and died at his
home tive miles northwest of Page,
Nebraska, February 24, 1931, at the
age of 87 years, l month and 4 days.
He was united in marriage to Miss
Annie Johnson in Myeby, Sweden,
January 12, 1808. To this union six
children were born, his wife and two
children having preceded him in
death.
Those left to mourn his death are,
Alfred J. and William A., of Page;
Mrs. Edith Foore, of Sevenith, Al
berta, Canada; Mrs. C. E. Morby, of
Spokane, Washington; one sister,
Mrs. Hanna Johnson, of Genoa, Illi
nois; eleven grand-children and three
great grand-children.
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson came to
America in 1808, to Genoa, Illinois.
From there they moved to Butler
County, Nebraska, and then to Holt
County, where he has resided until
the time of his death.
Funeral services were held at the
Methodist church in Page, Friday
afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, conducted1
by Rev. Sam. McKoown, and burial I
was made in the Page cemetery.
EDUCATIONAL NOTES
During the past week County Sup-!
erintendent Luella A. Parker has
been visiting the Normal Training
High School, making arrangements
for the Normal Training classes to
go into the rural schools to do their
practice teaclyng.
Teresa Porigratz, a Senior Normal
Trainer, of St. Mary’s Academy, of
O’Neill, has earned passing grades
in all of her teacher’s examinations
withan average of 87 10-17% and
Helen Thoemlel, of the Ewing High
School has passed all of her exam
inations with an average of 85 14-17.
Miss Barbara Hazel, Red Cross
Nurse, went to Inman on Tuesday
morning for two days health work
in the school there.
Mr. Bowers, Accredited High
School inspector, is inspecting the
high schools of the county, Monday
and Tuesday of this week.
Watch for the dates of the Spell
ing Contests.
o-o
!
CURRENT COMMENT
FROM WASHINGTON
o---o
For several years, the U. S. has
found it necessaary to keep a force
of marines in Nicaragua, to promote'
peace and good order there A thous-j
and of them will be withdrawn in i
early summer, and a complete evac
uation by fall is the end in view. The
stabilization in government in Latin-!
America is a task of large propor
tions, and who knows how it will fin
ally be accomplished? Some states
man with a genius for unification
may appear, to do for our neighbors
to the south, what Bismarck accom
plished for Germany. The rod of con
trol in the Americas may some day
pass from our hands to the hands of
a great Latin-American Union.
Dr. Einstein’s wife tells the report
ers that in Germany the papers let
her live in peace and quiet, but clos
es the interview, in substance, that
public discussion is a rare privilege
for the housewife. Until human na
ture changes, it will never be quite
ffee from the harmless vanity that
secretly welcomes a dignified en
trance into the newspaper column.
Mr. Snowden, English Chancellor
of the Exchesquer, does not like his
country's plan for settling American
war debts, and states that posterity
will curse those who are responsible.
If there was any British cursing
when the Yankee pocketbook was
opened, it was done in a low breath,
and inaudibly.
Tubal Cain was the first known
worker in metals. It islikely that he
was not aware that the maerial un
der his hand could be meled. Pitts
burgh would give him the surprise of
his life. That city is about to oper
ate a blast furnace having a capacity
of more than a thousand tons in 24
hours.
The T reasury thinks that this
year’s income tax clean-up will be
haif a billion or less. The Treasury
is interested in the half billion; the
rest of the country is interested in
the ‘less.”
Those who think that Sunday is no
longer a day of rest, may have their
fears allayed by a search for some
thing really of interest in the Mon
day morning paper.
‘‘Mawson Examines Antarctic
Pack.” He may have been suspicious
of a crooked deal.
DRAINAGE MAKES WEATHER
FICKLE, CLAIMS PROPHET
With two bills before Congress
blaming floods and the disastrous ef
fect of droughts in America on over
drainage, a weather man has pre
sented further reasons for alarm over
the increasingly effective efforts of
the country to shed the rain from its
back as fast as it falls.
W. H. Alexander, senior meteor
ologist of the weather bureau at Col
umbus, Ohio, declared that the re
moval of standing water from the
fact of the land induces more fickle
weather and greater extremes in
temperature as well as a less health
ful atmosphere for both plant and
animal life.
“The life-giving quality of the at
mosphere as well as its degree* of
comfort is largely determined by the
amount of moisture in the air,” Mr.
Alexander said.
‘‘Bodies of water, both largo and
small, are the chief source of this
moisture, or humidity and may smallj
bodies serve the same purpo.* as a
large one. They become, in a very j
important way, just so many ‘oases'
in the atmosphere, and so help to
form conditions favorable to the de
velopment and sustenance of animal
and vegetable life.”
“The tendency of a body of water
is to render weather conditions
slightly more equable. The tempera
ture extremes, for example, are
never so great near the water as
[ over the land areas,” he pointed out.
The two bills before Congress
would seek to prevent floods and
droughts by establishing reservoirs,
lakes, ponds and farm terracing. By
| these means experts claim they could
hold back the water that falls in
rainy seasons, bring about a normal
flow of rivers and streams, prevent
the washing off of valuable farm soil,
avoid the parching of crops by re
storing sub-soil moisture, and other
wise re-establish artificially the na
tural conditions existing in this coun
try before the cutting away of for
ests and the drainage of lowlands.
LOCAL NEWS
Miss Loree Sauers spent the week
end with relatives in Atkinson.
Miss Violet Struby was ill last
week with a light attack of “flu.”
Clarence Zimmerman has been con
fined to his home since last Friday,
suffering with tonsilitis.
Atkinson Graphic: A daughter
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Karr, Sunday, February 22nd.
N. F. Loy returned last Sunday
from Loretto, where he had spent a
few days visiting his daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Lett Johnson went to
Sioux City, Iowa, Saturday to spend
a few days with their son, Marvin.
F. K. McCarty drove over from Du
buque, Iowa, the latter part of last
week for a visit with O’Neill friends.
Mrs. George Herrick, of Water
bury, is visiting at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Elmer Surber and
family.
Judge Robert R. Dickson and court
reporter, Ted McElhaney went to
Butte, Monday, to hold a jury term
of court.
Vance Beghtol, of Hastings, Ne
braska. arrived Monday noon for a
few’ days visit at the Dr. L. A. Car
ter home.
A marriage license was issued last
Saturday to Clyde Moore, of Ran
dolph and Miss Clara M. Nulier, of
Atkinson.
The George Crellin family is en
joying a visit with George’s sister,
Mrs. Mae Kennard, of Los Angeles,
California.
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Webster and I).
L. Crellin, of Neligh, and Mrs. Mac
Kennard, of Los Angeles, California,
were Sunday visitors at the home of
George Crellin.
Scott Hough came home the first
of the week from Winner, South l)a-j
kotu, where he has about completed i
tin- contract of moving a large en I
from t tighten to Winner for
the Interstate Rower Company.
assaarfl
Thos. S. Mains, of Stuart, has ac
cepted a position with the Mellor
Motor Co., and assumed his new du
ties Monday morning.
Mrs. Catherine Smith left on the
bus last! Thursday afternoon for
Grand Island, where she will make
her home with her daughter, Mrs. J.
S. Evans.
O'NEILL HIGH SCHOOL NOTES
‘‘The Big Cheese”
“The Big Cheese,” a clever three
| act comedy, presented Wednesday
evening at the K. C. hall by the Sen
iors of the Public School, was a suc
cess. The characters, were well tak
en as follows:
Bob Brewster, the lawyer, Ralph
Tomlinson; Willie Larkin, “a mighty
captain of industry,” G eorge Ab
douch; Samuel Brewster, President
j of the Brewster Cheese Co., Raymond
Collingwood; Ted Spratt, the messen
ger, Robert Lamb; Doris Bancroft,
from Vermont, Gladys Hough; Ver
na Callaway, a friend of Doris, Hel
en Toy; Betty Brewster, daughter of
Samuel, Kathryn Grass; Mable Hog
an, switchboard operator, E nt m a
Berglund.
l/uiin*; iiutiluups me orcnesira
played several selections arid a clog
dance was well given by Sebanna
Smith, Theresa Sparks, Bennett Heri
ford and Leonard Bergstrom.
M iss Kraemer, Senior sponsor,
coached the production.
To Six Weeks’ Exams
There was once a very bad man
Who was named Six Weeks Exams,
He was bad, as bad could be;
He made our ringers ache
And took away our glee.
Here’s to this awful guy,
May him we never see
E’en in the sweet bye and bye.
The Senior Normal Trainers, Misg
Elsie Pucilek and Mrs. George Rob
ertson accompanied Mrs. Luella Par
ker on school inspection, Thursday.
“Parents”
We desire to appeal to the parents
to check over the six week’s report
card with your child.
Our teachers have spent many
long hours in preparing these cards
to show the right measurement of
students under their charge; please
do not, therefore, cast these cards
aside carelessly. The schedule for
th«' average student in high school
permits but two and n half hours of
school study for class preparation.
This is nut a sufficient time allot
ment, If your child is failing, you
should see to it that the child studies
at least two hours each day at home.
Work missed by absent students
must be satisfactorily made up. Some
students are nat making this adjust
ment and are therefore getting low
marks. It would he most expedient
if the parents would chits up this
work with their child, the teachers,
or the principal.
We olieit your co-operation and
e i "itd.v at ali times to woik with
you ffir the betterment of your child.