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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1941)
Over die County"7 INMAN NEWS ... f ' -- Miss Ardith Smith of Wayne State Teachers College, visited her parents Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Smith over the week end. Miss Elaine Retke, a student nurse at Sioux City, Iowa, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otta Retke over the week end. Miss Dorothy Sobotka of State Teachers College, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sobotka over the week end. [ ' r ■ kil-v ■ ! Rev. Mkxcy, accompanied by * Rev. and Mrs. Leq. Carpenter I of Page, Hazel Fraka. Marjorie Moore and E. L. Watson of In man left Tuesday for Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Caster and daughter, Ida Mae, accompanied by Lovilla Stevens, Patty Jean Bartsch, Mrs. Cliff Sawyer and sons, drove to Chambers Sunday to visit relatives and friends. Mrs. Willard Anson and sons of ! Orchard visited friends and rel j atives in Inman Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Sholes visited Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tucker and family of Ewing Sunday. - --— . /Tfcy. '■ --- Mr. and Mrs Ted Hopkins and family returned home Saturday from Beulah, Idaho, where they visited friends and relatives. Mrs. John Anspach of Atkinson spent Friday in Inman looking after business. Mrs. Earl Miller entertained a group of ladies at a quilting tea at her home Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Englehaupt and daughters spent the week end in Burke. South Dakota, vis iting at the home of Mrs. Engle haupt’s sister, Mrs. Donald Shoe maker and family. _* * \ i “ * BUY DBKNSB STAMPS ^ AND BONDS s. Both Out for Defense Defense stamps and bonds are busy bringing in dollars. Telephones are busier than ever before due to the tremendous increase in use of local and long distance service caused by national defense and the general . speed up of business. We are meeting promptly the enormous na tional defense needs for telephone service and making every effort t' mir "nize the restric y bve effect upon telephone service generally. I • . NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY I' " . < /•? f * *», . Mrs. Earl Mfllcr left Sunday for Cherrokee. Iowa where she will visit her sons, Mr, and Mrs Elmer Crosser and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crosser, and family. It is reported that Elmer has just re turned home from the hospital having undergone an operation for appendicitis. Mrs. Ann Mitchel of Clear water is visiting for several days this week at the Arthur Engle, haupt home. Mark H. Claridge of Blair, was in Inman Sunday looking after business. Ross Clapp drove to Plainview Sunday afternoon where he vis ited his mother. Mr. and Mrs. Mannel Crosser left Monday on their vacation. They will visit in Neligh and Newport. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Brit tle are staying in Inman looking after things while they are gone. Mr. and Mrs. John Jarman of Verdigre and Mrs. Bessie Paua cek of Spencer, visited Thursday at the L. Kerbel home. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kerbel and daughter, Mrs. Rose Menec and three little daughters and Mrs. Arnold Kerbel and son Edward, came down from Spencer and i Mr. Minanils from Verdel, last j Sunday and helped Lambert Ker , bel celebrate his birthday. Mr and Mrs. Lewis Kopecky, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Chudomelka and' Eunice of Inman, and Mr, and Mrs. John Valla of O’Neill, were also guests. All reported a very enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Morsback of Neligh visited relatives in Inman Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morsback who has been visiting in Neligh returned home with them. EMMET ITEMS Mrs. Guy Cole returned home from Lincoln Wednesday night. Miss Gladys Schmohr returned to her work at the Cole home Friday after a two weeks vaca tion spent in the south eastern part of the state. Mrs. John Auspach came down J from Atkinson Friday to spend a I DANCE MAXINE COTTON AND HER ORCHESTRA Cry stall Ball Room ATKINSON Friday, Septem^ 19 Admission: Man 30 cants. Ladies 20 cents * • 1 . __! 1 New oil lasted 5,683 miles longer than the runner-up , in Death Valley Death-Test ...CERTIFIED Your own engine gauge-stick can tell you best about Conoco Nth motor oil. Next best is to buttonhole the moat frugal car owners you know around town. Some have never yet added a quart since chang ing to Conoco Nth. And you can see why right here—by the mileage figures from the Certified Death-Test of Conoco Nth oil vs. five other big brands. The whole big success of Conoco Nth started down in Death Valley—so hot » you can’t sweat. Here 6 new stock cars, strictly alike, each got one 5-quart fill of some one oil being tested. Then the Offi cial Referee clamped on the locks; never a drop of oil could be added. Eyed by impartial officials every in stant, the cars all reeled off their 57 miles hourly. Here and there on the desert a carcass lay bleaching—and desert death awaited these car engines, too. For none could finish till its oil hit bottom—finish ing the engine beyond repair. CONOCO N# gave nearly Twice the miles averaged by the others tested! The 5-quart fill of Conoco Nfh lasted 13,398 miles ... Certified. Conoco Nth outlasted one big brand by 8,268 miles. Even the best of the five was outlasted 5,683 miles by Conoco Nth oil. Such a real difference must have a real source. And two real life-givers created by man ... two modern synthetics ... are in Conoco Nth motor oil. You know of modem vitamin synthetics, making up for Nature’s life-givers lost in some modem food processing. Similarly, 6 BIG-NAME OILS bought retail by Referee. One 5-quart fill per car. Not another drop throughout the hot desert Death-Test. the extreme refining needed by oils for current cars has been destroying Nature’s best life-givers! But in their place today Conoco N<ti brings your engine the two patented Conoco synthetics. One of these—man-made under the famed Germ Processed oil patent— will keep your engine OIL-PLATED with lubricant that can’t all quickly drain off of inner surfaces. So oil-plating is on guard against wear in advance! And the latest Conoco synthetic — man-made under U.S. Pat. 2,218,132— will check "festering" of oil that’s en couraged by foul leftovers from every engine’s normal firing. This common oil trouble is now checked or inhibited by the new man-made Conoco life giver— Thiulkene inhibitor. You’ll never Death-Test your Conoco Nth oil in sinister Death Valley, any more than you repeat other proving-ground tortures. You’ll still drain and refill at recommended intervals. But how you’ll expect to stretch the distance before add ing a quart, judging by this big fact: 5 heavily advertised oils in the Certified Death Valley Test were outmileaged 74% to 161% by Conoco Noil. Economy like that counts up into dollars! Change to N'/i oil today at Your Mileage Mer chant’s Conoco station. Continental Oil Company—Pioneers in Bettering Amer ica's oil with Synthetics PPDTIPirn ^ hereby certify that u l n 11 r IL u the Death Valley Teat and related work were thoroughly and fairly conducted. Engine Destruction oc curred in each case at the mileage stated. Consulting Engineer, who during Acodemie yeor is Professor of Automotive Engineering, Purdue University few days with her daughter, Mrs. John Conard. Muss Leona Fern BeckwUh en tertained the Emmet school at a watermelon feed at her home Thursday afternoon. The occasion was Leona’s thirteenth birthday. Ervin Kloppenborg had a lot of hard luck Sunday. He was coming into town horseback to attend the picnic and his horse fell with him on the highway, breaking a bone in his foot ^ust above the ankle. Ervin has been attending school in O’Neill and was on the football team there. The churcr pihcnic Sunday was very well attended and apparent ly enjoyed by everyone present. Aside from the excellent dinner the event to draw an interested crowd was the ball by the old timers. The old timers really playerf ball,, some of the more quiet ones, but one or two innings but the good sportsmanship was there as it was twenty and thirty years ago. A lot of them haven’t had a bat in their hands in that length of time unless it was to show their sons "This is the way I hit the ball for a home run the time I played against so-and-so." Her% are a few remarks heard at the game; “Is that Bob Ford out there? Yes and he is just as good as he ever was.’” Guy Cole never could run, Could he? Perhaps not but he always got on base." “Teddy Miller has sure slowed up a lot hasn’t he?” “Wonder where Dr. McKee is? He must be getting old I guess.” "Bob Ford is about the only one that has kept that school boy figure, isn’t he?” “I’ve been watching the Froshynski boys play good base ball for thirty years. Wont they ever retire?.” —■— — M I . Rev. 'fhomas Peacock left Tuesday for Lincoln where he will attend the anhual confer ence of the Methodist Church, lie expects to be gont until Tues day of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Sewell Johnson and daughters attended the fair at Chambers last Friday. DANCE Harry Collins and his Gentle men of Sweet Dixieland Swing Crystal Ball Room, ATKINSON Tuesday, September 23 Admission: Men 50 cent! plus tax: Ladies 20 cents Coming—Sammy Havens FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 AND 20 ASSURED SAVINGS Economy is of deep interest to housewive s; and they also desire to make their per sonal selections from brands they know to be dependable. At Council Oak are found all the popular Nationally Advertised brands along with the complete line of “Su perb” brand foods which they recognise as the last word in quality. BEEF ROASTS Native Corn Fed Beef. Ten der, Juiey, Well Covered Roasts. Per Pound, 10*» 25c and ljC Bacon Squares Per 1 *\r Pound .. lwL Spare ribs Per Pound .. Beef I FROM SELECTED FORK LOINS ROASTS & CHOPS, lb., 27c & 19c | FRESH BEEF TO BOIL, Per Pound. Leg of Mutton Per Pound !■■■ nr — Mutton Roast Shoulder *■ 1 Cut, pound 11C Mutton Chops M. 10c r» Mutton Stew Per Pound [""“SUPERB” Fruit Cocktail Assorted diced fruit in heavy syrup. cZ 29c Church’* Unsweetened GRAPE JUICE njXS; 15c You Should Try Campbell’s r, -..8? 10c Superb Brand Peanut Krush 16 ST".. 19c Dwarfies topped Wheat Package .... 6c Suii'Sweet Prunes “Tenderized”... 2 Cartons 23c - ■ ■ ... i ■■ - —■1 ■■■ POAIf 1I7Q Coeoanut Topped Marshmallow Cake Dam IL ICa with Strawberry Jelly . M Cm ID. 1»JC candy ;rr.w’,,,M:.13c CATSUP 3—14-o*. Bottles ... 25c Superb Mince Meat on Carton R*cipe. Dimepkg. 8c Superb Brand PIE PUMPKIN ST'cTUc Unbleached Seedless RAISINS 2ET1.15c Council Oak Coffee Exchange the empty bags for 22 carat Gold pattern dishes. Pound .. . 26c ; 3 iff ., 75c MA BROWNS1!BREAD OUR EVERY FRIDAY FEATURE Long Thread COCOANUT SiI-£. ... 12c SPRY “.r^ 59c "Tac-Cut’* Coffee May be had in reg ular or drip grind, racked in tin or glass. Pound ...27c 2^ , 52c Aunt Dinah Molasses 17c Macaroni and Spaghetti 2& ... 13c Morning Light Toilet Paper 3 j* 11 c COLORADO PEACHES See us lor price on Box Peaches. This is your last week to buy Fancy, Finn. Colorado Box Peaches at a popular price. For Sauce, Pie and Jelly Wealthy Apples .6 25c Flame Tokay Grapes, 4 lbs. . .25c Sunkist Lemons DOZEN ..... 25c Iceberg Lettuce, large head . .7c RICAN Sweet Spuds 6 Hr.25c j LUX FLAKES Large Pkg., 22c, Q Small Pkg.«/C LUX TOILET SOAP 3 19c RINSO Small Package . Large Package .210 Giant Package . dfC LIFEBUOY SOAP 3 Sir..19c