The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 25, 1940, Page FIVE, Image 5

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    Over the County
INMAN NEWS
The Y. M. Club met at the Roy
Gannon home Saturday evening for
their monthly party.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Noe of Or
chard visited here at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Chicken Sunday.
Pat Brittel, Norbert Clark and
Earl Stevens were home from the
CCC camp at Madison over the
week end.
School was closed Thursday and
Friday on account of the drifted
roads and extreme cold weather.
Miss Helen Anspach was confined
to her home here all last week with
a severe case of flu. She resumed
her work at the Ben Franklin store
at O’Neill this week.
Mrs. John Conard and Mary Lou
and Miss Doris Luben of Emmett
were here Sunday visiting at the
John Anspach home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Chudomelka and
daughter, Arna, and Mr. and Mrs.
L. Kopecky and son, Lewis, were
dinner guests at the Lod Janousek
home at O’Neill Sunday. The oc
casion was the birthday annivers
ary of Mary Ann Janousek.
Word comes from Stuart that
Rex Butler underwent an opera
tion Monday at the Stuart hospital
for appendicitis. The operation
was serious as the appendix was
ruptured. Rex is getting along as
well as could be expected.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hancock of
O’Neill visited here at the home of
Mrs. Mary Hancock Sunday.
The 2:00 Club will meet with
Mrs. J. L. Thompson on Wednes
day of this week. The lesson will
be company dinners and a company
dinner will be served.
Rev. E. B. Maxcy has been iP
with the flu the past few days. He
ll some better now.
I
EMMET ITEMS
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hershiser
and son, Francis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ellingson visited at the
Henry Wayman home Tuesday.
Word has been received that Mrs.
Grenfall was improving and Rev.
Grenfall hoped to be home by Sun
day, but because of the storm re
mained in Lincoln.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tunender are
the parents of a baby girl born
Thursday morning.
Mrs. John Conard and Mary Lou
drove to Inman Sunday afternoon
to visit Mrs. Anspach.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cole entertain
ed at a pinochle party Sunday
evening at their home.
Mrs. Kenneth Ellingson returned
to her home Sunday after spending
a few days with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Wayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Anderson
are the parents of a baby girl born
Friday morning.
Mrs. Clara Cole has spent sev
eral days in bed the past week suf
fering from a cold and flu.
MEEK AND VICINITY
August Karel purchased a 1935
Dodge car from Walt Stein last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Johring and
Roy Spindler made a business trip
to Butte on Tuesday.
A large crowd attended the oys
ter supper at the Maurice Graham
home on Friday evening.
Will Devall and son, Arthur, and
Deraid Graham, spent Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Horace
Rouse.
Pete Peterson, an old-time and
well known resident of this com
munity, passed away suddenly at
his home on Saturday evening,
January 20. The funeral was held
Tuesday afternoon at the Pieasan.
Valley church and burial made in
the west cemetery.
John A. Robertson was surprised
on Monday evening, January 22,
when several of his children and
their families came to help him
celebrate his birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hansen drove
to Sioux City on Monday where
Dan will receive medical care.
Lyle Luber was absent from
school in Spenctt- several ‘days last
week due to chicken pox.
Arthur and Clarence Devall were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. El
mer Devall on Sunday.
Roy Spindler is having trouble
getting his dental work done dur
ing this stormy weather.
Andrew Johnson and son, Hiram,
are sawing ice for James Donlin, at
O’Donnell’s Lake at this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Jones and
family were callers Saturday even
ing at the W. S. Devall home.
Jim Karel has been on the sick
list the past week.
Mrs. Delia Harrison and Mary,
and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Duvall and
sons were dinner guests of Mrs.
E. H. Rouse Tuesday. Horace Rouse
called there in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hansen and
Gerald and Mr. and Mrs. Madison
Henifin and family spent Sunday at
the Maurice Graham home.
Steven Price, teacher of the Le
onia school, couldn’t make his us
ual trip home over the week end
due to the bad roads.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Linn were
afternoon callers at Elmer De
vall’s on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Conard and
Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Sleight mo
tored to Neligh on Tuesday to at
tend the funeral of Miss Betty Lou
Jones, a niece of Mrs. Conard and
a cousin of Mr. Sleight.
Harold Fox celebrated his sixth
birthday on Monday, January 22.
THE DAYS OF
LONG AGO
Fifty-Five Years Ago
The Frontier, January 22, 188".
It was 35 degrees below zero
Monday morning.
Fifty Years Ago
The Frontier, January 23, 1890
O’Neill Market report: Hogs,
$3.20 per 100; Steers, $2.25; Fat
Cows, $1.75; Wheat, 55c and 60c;
Oats, 20c; Rye, 20c; Buckwheat,
26c; Ear Corn, 20c; Shelled. Com,
20c; Potatoes, per bushel, 20c; But
ter, 12%c; Eggs, 16c.
Hon. B. S. Gillespie, on last
Thorsday, was confirmed as regis
ter of the United States land of
fice in this city.
Forty Years Ago
The Frontier, Janoary 25, 1900
Up to January 1, Frank Shoe
maker shipped 150 cars of hay for
the season. This amounts to about
1,500 tons and netted Mr. Shoe
maker above all expenses, $1,500.
A force of men are busy clean
ing the brick of the old convent,
preparatory for commencing on
the new structure. The building
will be in readiness for use by
September 1.
A sudden and very violent change
of the weather overtook us yester
day and for a while clouds of dust
filled the air till vision was almost
totally eclipsed and the wind chill
ed the marrow.
A. J. Meals left for Omaha last
Sunday morning and Tuesday left
that city for the coast where he
will make all arrangements for
the shipment of their outfit to the
Klondike country February 1.
Ralph Evans, A. T. Potter, Lloyd
Gillespie, William Keeley and John
Grady of O’Neill and Jim Brown
and Henry Fleming of Atkinsfon,
accompany Messrs. Meals and
Hazelet from this country, and we
understand John Hazelet will join
the party on the coast.
Thirty Years Ago
The Frontier, January 20, 1910
The Burlington was “up against
it” again last week. A freight got
stalled in the snow near Orchard
last Saturday afternoon and the
passenger due here at 11:35 Satur
day night did not reach O’Neill un
til noon Monday, having remained
at Orchard until the track was
cleared.
A deal was consumated last week
between David Stannard and C. C.
Reka by which Mr. Stannard again
becomes the owner of the building
formerly occupied by Mr. Reka as
a cigar and confectionery store on
Fourth street. This building was
sold by Mr. Stannard to Mr. Reka
a dozen years ago.
The following announcement ap
peared in last Friday’s Omaha Bee,
as a special telegram from Wor
cester, Mass. “One of the most
IT’S HERE
The New Master Maytag
Holds 50 percent more clothes
and What a Beauty!
SEE IT AT ONCE
The Corkle Hatchery
& Maytag Co.
O’NEILL, NEBRASKA
prominent engagement announce
ments of the New Year is that made
today of Miss Marion Olive Willard
of Worcester to Lieutenant Owen
Riggs Meredith, U. S. A. of O’Neill
Nebr. Miss Willard is the talented
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
H. Willard, who made the announce
ment to Worcester circles today.’’
John Bland, for many years sup
erintendent of the O’Neill public
schools, dropped dead from heart
failure in the barn yard on his
farm a mile north of Fremont.
A forewell banquet was tendered
John A. Golden at the EVans Hotel
last evening, prior to his removal
to Creston, Iowa, where he will
make his future home.
Twenty Years Ago
The Frontier, January 22, 1920
The Hanford Produce Company
informed the citizens of the city
they could have a creamery and ice
plant with the Hanford Produce Co.
sign board thereon when the city
seen fit to purchase its second
hand electric light and heating
plant now’ occupied by the company
here. The business men of the
city did not look very favorably
on the proposition.
Members of the local I. 0. O. F.
lodge had about decided to build a
two-story business block on the
site of the old postoffice. This is
the building now occupied by Anton
Toy and the Odd Fellows Hall.
Ten Years Ago
The Frontier, January 23, 1930
Mrs. O. A. Bell passed away this
morning at the home of her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Can-, on
west Douglas street. Her home
was in Chelsea, Mass., and she was
here on a visit when attacked with
a severe cold, which resulted in her
death. She was 35 years of age.
William Messner passed away at
the home of his son, Clayton, eight
miles southwest of O’Neill. He
was 82 years of age.
Jasper H. Ritts died in a hospital
at Eugene, Oregon, last Sunday
evening. The remains are expected
to arrive in O’Ntill Friday morn
ing and funeral services will be
held Saturday afternoon at 2:00
o’clock from the Methodist church.
Mr. Ritts had been in Oregon visit
ing at the home of his daughter
when taken ill. He was 57 years
of age.
J. A. Boies died at his home near
Stafford on January 17, at the age
of 73 years. He had been a resi
dent of the county for 37 years.
The weather has been the main
topic of conversation for the past
three weeks. Since last Friday the
mercury has continued to stay
around the zero mark. Friday
morning the thermometer register
ed 24 below; Saturday 7 below;
Sunday zero; Monday 15 below;
Tuesday 17 below; Wednesday 10
below; Thursday 1 above.
■ " ~
Use The Frontier Want
Ads For Quick Results
[Basketball
| Games
O’NEILL
PUBLIC SCHOOL
vs.
CREIGHTON
| JANUARY 26
! Grade Game Starting
at 7:00 p. m.
I BLOOMFIELD
JANUARY 30
Second Team Game
7:30 P. M.
A group of members from the
prairie states are holding weekly
meetings on the Massingale cost-of
production bill and the Lemke farm
refinance bill. Massingale told the
Third district representative that
he will not object to changing the
title of his bill to "The Parity pay
ment bill.” He believes he can get
more votes for the bill with the
new title. Each petition to get
each of these bills on the floor for
consideration now has over 100 sig
natures. 218 signatures are need
ed. Both authors of these bills
made this statement to their
friends:
"Let us give the farmer cost of
production, and refinance his
farm indebtedness without sub
sidies. This need not cost the
government one cent. Remem
ber that the solution of the
farm problem is not a demo
cratic or republican problem,
it’s a non-partisan problem and
we want all of you to attend
our meetings.”
Ed O’Neill of the Farm Bureau
believes we have to vote about
$600,000,000 for parity payments
for 1941. Secretary Wallace be
lieves we have to have a stream
lined processing tax to make the
program self-liquidating. The
Prairie States Group in the House
thinks the cost-of production bill
and the refinance bill plus help from
nature to give us rain and good
crops would solve the entire prob
lem. Until something is done
about the three proposals most
farm district members seem willing
to give the present problem a fair
trial and vote parity payment mon
ey out of the treasury.
Hundreds of names on petitions
continue arriving usking the farm
ers in our district be given the
same corn and grain acreage in
1940 as 1939. The Secretary of
Agriculture has already denied this
plea. He feels we should turn to
sorghums and other drouth resist
ing grains. Anyway, the 1940 pro
gram is made up and no change can
be expected now.
Some experts here feel that Uncle
Sam is about 30% involved in the
European War. These experts ad
mit that the public opinion now is
such that we will not get involved
in the war physically and that we
may not send soldiers and sailors
to foreign shores to fight, but, un
officially, we are in it through fin
ance, material of various kinds, and
even in shipping. Sympathy for
little Fnland is general through
out the House membership. If
congressmen could do something
to help Finland defeat Russia with
out involving this country in an
other foreign war, they would not
hesitate to do it without much de
bate. But they seem worried about
the proposed government loan to
Finland. Some feel this would be
an official act which may lead di
rectly to our participation in a for
eign war. Many feel that much en
couragement should be given the
Hoover movement to collect money
from private sources for Finnish
relief and in no way involve the
government, officially.
Believe it or not, there are 9,000
employees in the Department of
Justice. Only 25% of them are se
t LOANS *
AUTO OR FURNITURE
You can borrow money from us to pay all your
debts, then have but one place to pay.
Present contracts refinanced—payments reduced
LOW RATES
Payments to suit your income.
Strictly Confidential
Securities Acceptance Corporation
NORFOLK, NEBRASKA
Local Agent, J. M. Hayes, O’Neill, Nebraska
>-.—
*1356.00 A DAY!
Nebraska’s beer tax collections for 1939 averaged
more than $1,356.00 a day—brought the state a total
of $495,242.80. That’s why thinking Nebraskans are
enthusiastic about the State s brewing industry and
the self-regulatory program that is safeguarding it!
Over 90% of the state beer taxes collected in Nebras
ka are used for public welfare work. Every Nebraskan
who buys beer can help us protect this important
revenue by supporting only those retailers who oper
ate in the public interest—those who observe the law
and refuse to permit abuses.
Nebraska Brewers & Beer Distributors Committee
CHARLES E. SANDALL, State Director
710 First National Bank Building Lincoln, Nebr.
%
IT is not the monthly bills that
worry so much as the lack of
money in bank to meet them.
The
O’NEILL NATIONAL
BANK
Capital. Surplus and This Bank Carries No
Undivided Profits, Indebtedness of Officer*
$140,000.00 or Stockholder*.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
lected from the civil service. The1 job in nearly every state in the
FBI spends $858,000 every year for union, can even be found in foreiirn
travel. G-men who must be on the countries.
YOUR FRIEND_AT MEALTIME_
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, JAN. 26 and 27, 1910
WHAT'S MOST IMPORTANT?
Thrifty shoppers are concerned about “price" but they give even
closer attention to the “value" they get for what they pay. This
accounts for the continuous popularity of the Council Oak Stores,
where “Real Value" is reflected in the Everyday Prices in all de
partments. Note the following “Special Values" for Week-end
Shoppers.
QUANTITY BUYERS!
Hoarding houses and farmers are now ready to buy quantity cuts
of beef. Inspect the beef on sale at the following prices.
G F FRONT QUARTERS 12
B F HIND QUARTERS 15
PORK LOIN
ROASTS & CHOPS 'ZZ 15c
BEEF ROASTS .. 18c
BULK KRAUT, Lb.5c
SLICED PORK LIVER, Lb.5c
PURE PORK SAUSAGE, Lb. 7'/2c
FRESH BEEF TO BOIL, Lb..10c
PORK NECK BONES, 5 Lbs.lie
QUANTITY PORK BUYERS
Fresh Pork is today our most inexpensive meat. ABk our Meat
Cutters for special price on a whole, half or quarter of a dressed
pi(T
SWEDISH RYE 24 10°
Many will be pleased to learn we again have Genuine Swedish
Rye bread for a week-end feature. Baked by an original Stock
holm formula. Sold only at Council Oak.
SUPERB BRAND
TABLE SYRUP 44c
A delicious low cost spread for pancakes. Suitable for use as a
carbohydrate supplement to milk for infant feeding. Approved
by American Medical AsB’n.
"PERFECT PANCAKES EVERYTIME"
ROBB-ROSS PANCAKE FLOUR AAC
FAMILY BAG . JBI
“The finest eating rakes and the most cakes for the money” can
only be made from Robb-Ross pancake uour.
LARGE SIZE
SWEET PRUNES
2 POUND 4PC
BAG 10
CRISCO
POUND CAN 18c 4AC
S-POUND ... W j
SUPERB BRAND
RED KIDNEY BEANS N°AN2 9
For a tempting salad mix Chopped Sweet Pickles with those
beautiful red beans.
MORNING LIGHT
SWEET PICKLES 28
CLAPP’S PREPARED
CAnn 2 CANS CHOPPED 21c
rUUI/ 4 CANS STRAINED.
Add to baby’s comfort by correct feeding. The strained or chop
ped Clapp’s Baby FcmkI as prescribed by your physician can be
bought at Council Oak.
“TOBASCO-FLAVORED”
BROOKS CATSUP 'ZZ,B 13c
Adds zest to Oyster Cocktails. Excellent condiment for meat,
fish and fowl.
”DE LUXE” ASST’D
CHOCOLATES
5 POUND BOX .
WALNUTS
NEW CROP |1C
CADETS—Lb. 1/
FIRST PRIZE 1| C
BUDDED—Lb. 4 I
BROKN GRAPEFRUIT 3 c^r 25'
Tree-ripened hand peeled grapefruit. 80% whole segments.
Ready to serve without waste or preparation.
PLAIN AND ICEI)
COOKIES 2 'ZT ...... 25c
Fresh Raked Oatmeal Cookies and Cocoanut Dainties. One kind
or assorted.
BLUE ROSE RICE 21 “I; IV
Fancy, whole grain, white rice. A quick cooking rice for soup
and raisin pudding.
RED BAG COFFEE ~ 39
Coffee with a rich, smooth flavor at a popular price. Sold only
in the whole berry and ground fresh when sold.
P & G HAND SOAPS
WEEK-END SPECIALS
LAVA HAND SOAP T 8C
KIRK'S CASTILE 2 9C
WRAPPED AND SIZED
WINESAP APPLES ,T \v'c
LARGE ORIGINAL BUNCHES
GREEN TOP CARROTS r„ 4/zC
SWEET NORTHERN GROWN
WAXED RUTABAGAS, „ W
CRISP SOLID HEADS
WISC. CABBAGE ,Zn W