THE FRONTIER D. H. Cronin, Editor and Owner Entered at Postoffice at O'Neill, Nebraska, as Second Class Matter SUBSCRIPTION One Year, in Nebraska.$2.00 One Year, Outside Nebraska 2.25 Display advertising is charged for on a basis of 25c an inch (one column wide) per week. Want ads 10c per line, first insertion. Subsequent insertions 5c per line BRIEFLY STATED Judge Mounts made a business trip to Ainsworth Thursday. Miss Mary Lou Gilday went to Stuart on Tuesday for medical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Smith of Grand Island spent the week-end here visiting friends. Business Women’s Dinner at the Presbyterian church at 6:30 p. m., Tuesday, June 8th. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Johnson of Sioux Falls, S. D., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Protovinsky. Homer Mullen of Scribner spent the week-end here visiting with his wife and other relatives and friends. Mrs. Art Turner of Winner, S. D.. came on Monday, called here by the death of her uncle, Frank Connolly. Bui Olson of Omaha spent the week-end here visiting his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Olson, and other relatives and friends. Dardy Connollf of Scottsbluflf came Tuesday to attend the fu neral of his uncle, Frank Con nolly, who passed away Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Gallagher of Grand Island returned home Sun day, after spending the week-end here visiting relatives and friends. Norb Fernholz and Don Mc Kenna returned to Hastings on Tuesday, after visiting relatives and friends here over the week end. Margaret Ellen Donohoe and Mrs. Delahoid of Marty Mission, Marty S. D., spent Memorial Day here visiting Miss Bernadette Brennan and friends. Mrs. Lynus Northouse and son of Battle Creek returned to their home on Thursday, after visiting relatives and friends here Mr. and Mrs. Dean Streeter, Miss Elaine Streeter and Gene left Monday for Lincoln to visit relatives and friends for a few days. Mr. Streeter and Gene re turned home on Wednesday while Mrs. Streeter and Elaine remain ed for a longer visit. Bill Kubitschek, son of Dr. and Mrs. F. J. Kubitschek, left Thurs day for Omaha to visit relatives and friends for a few days. From there he will go to Camp Dodge, Iowa, to begin his Army training. He will be sent to an officer’s candidate school. Mickey Tomlinson, who has been attending school at Nebras ka City, came home Saturday to spend the summer visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Tomlinson, and other relatives and friends. Miss Rose Mary Biglin of Hot Springs. S. D., came last Friday to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Big lin, and other relatives and friends. Her sister, Ruth Ann, who had been visiting her for several days, returned home with her. Miss Mabell Osenbaugh and Miss Pauline Tlngley of Lincoln left for that place Wednesday, af ter visiting Mabell’s parepts, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Osenbaugh, for the past week. Miss Osenbaugh will return home in a few weeks to spend the remainder of the sum mer here. Mr. and Mns. J. W. Buckman and daughter, Wiljha, and Mrs. William Wallace of Gann Valley, S. D., spent the week-end here visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Wal lace. Mr. and Mrs. Buckman re turned to their home on Sunday, while Mrs. Wallace and Wilma reained for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tweedy and family of Hartington, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Tweedy and family of Norfolk and Mr. and Mrs. William Walker and daugh ter. Janice, of Norfolk, visited Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Cavanaugh and family last Sunday. Have you ever noticed how a man appeared without teeth? Usually his chin is sticking out of line, h»8 mouth is open, and unnecessary wrinkles have ap peared on his face caused by the jaws coming too close together. What a blessing ii is that suit able dentures can correct this con-1 dition.—Dr. Fisher, Dentist. 4-1 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Swanson of Herman spent the week-end here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Toy, and other relatives and friends. Miss Anna Toy re turned home With them and will visit there and with other rel atives and friends in Omaha for i few days. “It Takes Both” t«V ' V W‘V It takes both . ■ . two fingers to five the Victory sign. It takes both . . . War Bonds and Taxes to make that Victory come true. Continue Jour purchase of War Bonds, at fast ten percent of your income. Pay your Victory Tax and your in come tax cheerfully and gladly. Both are in lieu of an Occupation Tax to Hitler, u. S. Trtanry Dtfartmvnt QUIT SHAKING THAT POPP! BLACK MAPKfcT PRICES Mrs. Helen Simar spent Mon day in Atkinson visiting relatives and friends. Miss Arlene Elkins of Norfolk spent the week-end here visiting realtives and friends. Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Sherbahn spent Memorial Day in Wayne visiting relatives and friends. Miss Genevieve Graves of Sioux City was a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clausson on Sun day. Miss Della Bartos spent Sunday in Page visiting her fatreh, James Bartos, and other relatives and friends. Bill Biglin, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Biglin, left Sunday for Camp Dodge, Des Moines, Iowa, to begin his Army training. Miss Mary Lois Mohr spent Sunday in Atkinson visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Mohr, and other relatives and friends. The Misss Margaret and Audrey Reimer and Miss Violet Ely left Thursday for Kansas City, Mo., where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Patterson entertained the junior choir of the Presbyterian church at a party at their home last Thurs day evening. Pvt. Norman Gonderinger of Miami Beach, Fla., arrived here last Saturday to spend a ten-day furlough visiting relatives and friends in Atkinson and friends here. Mr. and Mrs. George Davies of Lincoln were in the city Satur day for a few hours visiting with friends. They came up to attend Memorial Day exercises. Mrs. Frank Oberle returned home last Friday from Casper, Wyo., and Ainsworth, where she had visited with her daughters and friends for three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. John Conard and daughter, Mary Lou, of Emmet and Mrs. James Walling visited Mr. and Mrs. Cobb Olson and family in Wayne last Sunday. Miss Catherine Armstrong and Mrs. McCartney spent Sunday in Butte visiting with relatives and friends. Mrs. McCartney return ed home that evening, while Miss Armstrong remained for a few Havq* vi*sit The D. D. Club had a party last Thursday at the home of Mrs. Charles McKenna in honor of Mrs. John Grutsch, who left recently for California. The guest was pre sented with a lovely present. Miss Verna Russell spent the week-end at Page visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jed Rus sell, and other relatives and friends. Her sister, Mrs. Fred My ers of Portland, Ore., is visiting her parents. Ambrose Rohde made a bus iness trip to Norfolk on Wed nesday. Miss Grace Suchy spent the week-end in Omaha visiting rel atives and friends. Miss Noreen Murray spent the week-end in Kearney visiting rel atives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. B. J| Shemwell spent Sunday in Niobrara visit ing Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barn hart. Miss Lavern Borg of Grand Is land spent the week-end here visiting her parents and other rel atives and friends. Miss Doris Schofield and Miss Doris Appleby left Tuesday for Los Angeles, Calif., where they expect to spend the summer. Miss Irene Gilday and Miss Madalaine Cavanaugh returned Tuesday from Omaha, where they spent a few days visiting friends. Mrs. John Grutsch left Tuesday for San, Luis Obispo, Calif., where she will make her home. Her hus band is stationed there with the U. S. A. Miss Doris Harvey spent the week-end in Page visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harvey, and other relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Bachman formerly of this city, now living in Phoenix, Arizona, came Friday to visit relatives in Stuart and friends here. Word has been received here that 2nd Lieut. Harold Connors, of Camp Bowie, Brownwood, Texas, has been promoted to the rank of 1st Lieutenant. Mrs. Dick Robertson, Mrs. Al fred Drayton and Mrs. Harry Lansworth gave a shower at the Lansworth home Wednesday af ternoon in honor of Mrs. Dwight Hammerlin. Miss DeLoris Storjohn, after spending the past week with her folks, went to Ainsworth where she has accepted an F. S. A. job as Home Management Supervisor for Rock, Brown and Cherry counties. Miss Helen Biglin went to Grand Island on Wednesday to meet her sister, Marie, and Miss Mildred Picatelli, both of Salt Lake City, Utah. They returned home with her and will spend a few weeks here visiting relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Davidson and P. B. Harty went to Omaha on Wednesday to meet Okie Davidson, U. S. N., aviation met alsmith 2-c, who is statioped at Pensacola, Fla. They returned home Thursday and Okie will spend a furlough here visiting relatives and friends. j§§l|||251l| THE NEW VICTORY TAX IT is important to understand the new Victory Tax, as it is a charge against your 1943 income. Almost every worker will have to pay it. If you have a regular job, your employer will deduct for the government 5% of your income over $12 a week. Others, including professional people and agricultural workers, will pay their tax in one sum after the end of the year. Certain post-war refunds or current credits are granted which will eventually re turn a portion of the tax you pay, but they will not reduce the 5% withheld each pay day. O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK O’NEILL, NEBRASKA Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Ration Program On The Air Every Monday Mom A new radio program which will be known as “Getting the Most Out of Your Work With Rationing” will go on the air for the second time Monday morning, June 5th, at 10:30 o’clock, over Station WNAX The program, which will be packed with per sonalities and problems common to all committees, will be heard every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at the same time. Harry J. Gleason, district di rector of the Sioux City district office of price administration, will discuss the various phases of ra tioning as found at all local war price and ration boards. He will chat informally during the fifteen minute period, with the idea in mind that he is talking person ally with the board members and employees under his jurisdiction. It will give all listeners a much better understanding of the func-' tioning of the Office of Price Ad ministration and the local boards,: and will make much clearer to everyone the part they can play themselves in order to best com ply with the regulations covering the use of the various commodi ties already rationed. Everyone should listen every time, as there will be some form of continuity from week to week. In other words, reference from the program before will be car ried over, and part of the pro gram will center around the ans wering of Mr. Gleason’s mail di rect from his desk. Sometimes he will interview a board member, sometimes his program will give explicit in structions on changes in rationing whiqh are continually being made. Tune to 570 on your dial — WNAX—at 10:30 a. m., Monday, May 31st. The program is under the sponsorship, at the present time, of Tolerton Warfield Com pany of Sioux City, operators of Council Oak Stores located thru out the district. Father Of O’Neill Lady Passes Away In Omaha David C. Duncan, 76, 1903 W street, retired city fire department captain, died Sunday at a local hospital. He retired from the de partment 12 years ago. He was a member of the Omaha Retired Firemen’s association and the Fra ternal Order of Eagles, aerie No. 154. Survivors: Wife, Myrtle: daughters, Mrs. Clay Johnson, O’Neill, Nebr.; Mrs. D. F. Allen, Mrs. Carl Carlsen and Miss Rose Duncan, all of Omaha; sisters, Mrs. Ann Base. Mrs. Hugh Farmer, both of Omaha, and Mrs. James Peterson, Scottsbluff, Nebr.; brother, Charles Duncan, Omaha; six grandchildren. Funeral: Tuesday, 2 p. m., at the Brewer Korisko chapel Twenty-fourth and K streets, the Rev. Joseph E. Johnson officiating. Burial in Graceland Park—World-Herald. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shierk, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mullen and Mrs. Frank Phalin left last Saturday afternoon for Wagner, S. D., where Mrs. Shierk remained to spend Memorial Day with her mother and other relatives. The rest of the party continued on to Sioux Falls, where Mr. Shierk visited his mother, Mrs. Phalin visited her son, James, who is stationed, there, and Mr. and Mrs. Mullen visited his sister. They re turned home early Monday morn ing. The R. E. H. Club entertained at a 7:30 dinner at the M. and M. Cafe Monday evening, followed by cards at the home of Marion Dickson, in honor of Mrs. John Grutsch, who loft Tuesday for California, where she will make her home. Views of i ' Congress j By Dr. A. L. Miller, M. C. We think it is wonderful the way our people are serving their country; in the war effort without the thought of material compen sation. This was brought forcibly to our attention by a letter in one of the daily papers written by R. C. Rose of Taylor, Nebr. He quot ed from a letter he had written to the Nebraska Senators as follows: “We serve as rationing officials, on the selective service and advisory boards, re-employment boards and in U. S. O., Red Cross and war bond drives. Above and beyond this we are asked to buy all the bonds we can, turn in our scrap and the names of all known saboteurs of the war effort. Thousands of Nebraska people serve countless hours without pay other than the satisfaction of knowing they are doing their bit in helping along the fight for freedom.” Mr. Rose’s question which follows should make those responsible for the situation do a little thinking. He asks, “How do you, and how does this adminis tration, think we feel about being asked to do the things we are do ing to span the oceans in an at tempt to scalp the axis and at the same time watch while John L. Lewis continues his operations unmolested?” On Thursday, June 3, The Ne braska Society of Washington, D. C., will have a reception in honor of the Congressional Delegation. Every Nebraskan who is living in Washington is invited. We learn from the president, Lyle F. O’Rourke, who formerly lived at Valentine, that there are approxi mately 5,000 people from our state living and working here. An interesting illustration of some of the things that take place under authority of the Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act was given by Congressman West, Democrat of Brownsville, Texas. He stated that we have increased the cattle population of this country to 78 million, the greatest number of cattle ever raised in the United States, and far more than the normal consumption. Under the Trade Agreements with Mexico, which became effective about six weeks ago, the import duty on cattle was reduced from 3 cents per pound to 1 % cents, and it fur ther provided that, after the end of the national emergency. Mex ico shall have a quota of 725,000 head a year to import into the United States at 1% cents a pound tariff. He went on to say that pasture land on the United States side of the Rio Grande is worth twenty times as much as it is on the Mex ican side. Taxes are about fifty times more, and labor is paid five times as much. An amusing fact —if such a fact can be called amusing—was brought out that as soon as the treaty was signed Mexico immediately placed a lu cent per pound export tax upon all cattle shipped to the United States from that country. Thus the Mexican treasury now gets the l!£-cent tariff instead of ours. Are we good neighbors or just plain suckers? Your representative flew to Omaha to address the convention of the National Association of County Officials. The subject of his talk was, “Government in Business,” and in it he brought out the tendency of government to become centralized in Wash ington and the tendency of the central authority to compete with and control all branches of pri MEN - WOMEN WANTED IN VITAL SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY AT RICHMOND, CALIF. (San Francisco Bay Area) Workers with no mechanical experience whatever hired as helpers at 95c per hour. Working six days per week, time and one-half for sixth day—ap proximately $214.00 monthly. Skilled craftsman working under above conditions hired at $1.20 per hour — approximately $270.00 monthly. Women hired and brained as welders only. FARE ADVANCED TO CALIFORNIA HOUSING GUARANTEED For ALL Employees AGE LIMIT—21 TO 60 FOR MEN IS TO 45 FOR WOMEN No men hired with 1-A Draft Classification. Must be physically and mentally sound. CANNOT HIRE ANYONE IN ESSENTIAL INDUSTRY OR AGRICULTURE If you live opt of town consult your nearest United States Employment Service Office before coming to Norfolk. Company Representative Interviewing and Hiring Hear a discussion of the job. All questions answered. MONDAY AND TUESDAY June 7 and 8, 1943 From 9:00 a. m. to 7:00 p. m., at office of United States Employment Service WAR MANPOWER COMMISSION 0421 Norfolk Avenue_NORFOLK, NEBR. > *■ * * I > -kf Buy Defense Stamps With the Money You Save Here. Mister, You Can Still Get an All Wool Suit at Brown-McDonald’s $24.50 - $32.50 But When These Are Gone—Quien Sabe? All wool, mister! Yes, sir, all wool. And that means something these days with wool getting as scarce as hen's teeth. If we hadn't bought them before gov ernment cut manufacturers' wool requirements down to 40% of normal, we couldn't offer you suits of comparable quality at $24.50 and $32.50. Finely tailored, good fitting, well styled suits of pure wool worsteds. That's why one will turn you out on next Sunday looking like a gentleman from a page in Esquire. That's why they'll hold their shape and good looks for "the duration." That's why an all wool suit at this price is a smart investment in good ap pearance for a long time to come. Genuine Fur Felt Insures Service Smart Styling Insures Your Good Appearance Brimmed and crowned to accent your rood facial points. A color to suit your complexion, blend with, or smartly con trast with your shirt or tie. Thriftily priced. $5.00 SHIRTS . Brand New For Easter! Luxurious In Detail! $1.98 SANFORIZED SHRUNK Carefully tailored of fine count patterned fabrics or lustrous white broadcloth. Every one sanforized shrunk. We'll glad ly replace FREE of charge any shirt that shrinks out of size. Hand Tailored Richly Colored Ties $1 I vate business. These tendencies j not only take the control of local matters from the people but build gigantic bureaucracy that be comes more and more free from the control of Congress, the duly elected representatives of the people. No one seems to know the rea son why news reporters were kept away from the Food Confer ence in Hot Springs, Va., by a detail of soldiers, unless it was to test how the people of the coun try would react to keeping them away from the Peace Conference that will follow this war. Every one from the State Department down seem to be against the or der. They all say it came from higher authority. Most people think the President’s known aversion to news men is the cause. We still have Sudan Grass Seed, also Cane and Atlas Sorgo. Now is the ideal time to plant for forage. ELLIS GRAIN COMPANY