Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 14, 1944)
Flyers Map Bad Luck for Japanese They talk it over, lower photos and load them up, upper photo, for attacks that repaid In part the debt owed I the Japs for their surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. B-29s carry tons of destruction on each trip into the land of the "setting sun." Few medals are awarded, but the hits are effective. ‘Carrying Coals to Newcastle’ Members of the U. S. Army Engineer Petroleum Distributing company are shown unloading airplane of pipes from India to be used in the building of the India-Burma-China pipe line. The line will relieve the load of the road as well as the air force in furnishing the essential gas needed for planes attacking the Jap strongholds. * ..i-i.i.. .. i ... ii" ■■ in. ■■ i. 1 ■■ ■■ - ■ — .- 1 ■ - ■ 1 — SPARs All-Out for V-Bonds V-hKV i Vvj'\ w * ~ ■"> £yerjp*tu£c V the &fii*n With a SPAlt on tfuty tn Washington, Ol C., awns' renrftKyrin'd tffym the Siith War Loan^roll was railed at tjT. .3- coast BraSkJuarters. More than 85 per cent of the enlisted TSPAfls through out the country bought bonds during the last war bond ca'ntpiilgn, and hope to better this record during the Sixth Rond drive. In addition to Individually signing umfor bonds, these SPAM* havcmided materially the campaign in dtfycjftcuwUtf'tai-.dn i*Ksh%£Rn as othei«m|ti«is+ where tiilfW §>f|l 9^1 TO S E How Food Prices Have Risen - -—— -] TELEFACT HOW SOME FOOD PRiCES HAVE 190 ,-^-GONE, UP_ SINCE 1919 , - ~ JH ■: ‘..a Chart show) ___„ fn j«*» .i#«aiGi4«i fi( ktcs since 1939, despite price control, ce! ngs and general effort to equalize living costs and gfciQges, tteiicw session *f congress• %IU kee' several "bills presented .re^neily , the on<Utiop. , Several bills already call for In creased wages tor federal employees. ,i^wrsiwfrt; ■ i aifraMHfe-Tjar wii «dKMIli sinwa* j i <431 •. ■ Answer Eisenhower • ■ ■■■ :! 4*; S . •, r “J Tbls “hand packer” enables aerl- j at gunners and ammunition plant i test gunners to link ten cattrldgenat a time into belts of any length, to help supply tl>e, ammljpii tlbn nK;ded :,by tttuitaifil Rtedbhowelr an* hijgfiiht- j Oil trpop#ii^:urop^ % ,y ' \ « 'B$kyo A ' ’’ , ^ „. , trt»fv« 3rrJ*>* Mai- Jack* f; Cotton pf Qlpnd^Kwv, C41if., «n*j of the pifotfc pt-.jw^ firjs* B-E9s to raid Toky o', landed at Sai-_ . pan with General HanStlT, report ing: that hits had set Tokyo afire. How General Rommel Was Shot Lieut. Harold O. Miller, left, who strafed a German staff car carrying German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. Upper right shows photo made from camera of fighter plane when ear was spotted. Lower right shows the fatal shot causing his death. The injuries received by bullets, in Are and wreck were fatal and led to his death during the invasion of France. The death was officially reported. Nazis Headed for United States .t r —imm '7nri'‘'fiiMWiiiMMiTmiinwi Hundreds of German soldiers, captured in the Allied drive across France and into the Reich, jam the deck of a coast guard manned troop transport headed for America. The prisoners of ♦ar will be held in internment camps in the United States until peace clears the way for their return to their homeland. V-2 and Portable Platform I _____ is an artist’s cpnrpption, baSrrkon authority of how V-2 nuy k«- h'.irli’d {nm\its portable | truck. In the'drawing tbe launching ramp,, l raised to a 45-degt%e ~BBgI«^ivHH^i^^^^Tmximum : jfxmibing ofinMamlii 'Harbor^ ^ D moil Isiifii99qa jRsuhsvs Moqxs; liw lW!f-"' I -J,( ,( ?JD«strwrtioi of Japanese shipping to Manil^ bfiYb<fr Is .dUjfntt ;ally [IjUSUaiaO srfhis photo which Van taken at tiho'lwigm Of the'r cent strike by carrier-based planes. Many parts, of the city were left in 11: mes, and a large number of new installations were wrecked. Several Jap nese warships were reported sunk and damaged. Select Stettinius Edward R. Stettlnlus, new secre tary of state, named by President Roosevelt to take the place of Cor dell Hull, resigned. The Dumbar ton Oaks security plan is his prime interest and has top priority on the state department list of musts. His selection met with general approval on both sides of congress as well as official Washington. D-Day Landing Hero Pvt. Carlton W. Barrett (left), of Saratoga Springs, N. Y., Is awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor by General Lee In Paris. He re ceived the award for “extraordi nary gallantry” on D-Day in the landing at St. Laurent-Sur-Mer, Nor mandy. Half-Million Fire }DUL Y'ttUOJ K-0& — Abovw shows v aconr at the hartfv;: mUilou-dollar fire which destroy’d a 200-fMlrhigh storage building, vator.An CMciKo.Qvkteft contain'd' mWCTBUSOtlC® «aUl*®*ternn^nt mvnoi) > jTUeyffi^e, tyi^l smoulder $or several d«y»v ffc fa tkclieypd,,: .Cf 1 odcna^Cl .BteBiJoK .vlnuoD > rj 1481 ;j 9-r*:9 tin* ip RflQTiqggp tiirh bra. ■ o~ 't, tnoib s.3 |8 , ., Tbe^p two,,young club nuemberfJof the Hollywood club are looking fu riously to the future, learning w«Dd turning and doing verr well too—Vi> solving future American problems. | ASK Me *) l ; ANOTHER f l l A General Quiz " ? The Questions 1. What surnames are most common in our army? 2. What two structures deter mine the height and width of our warships? 3. Corse is the poetic form of what word? 4. What great midwestern city, situated on a river, is named aft er Sikak, the skunk? 5. What name is given the in herent right of a state as a sov ereignty to take private property for public use? 6. What is the largest island in the world? The Answers 1. Smith, Johnson, Brown, Mil ler and Jones, in that order. 2. The Brooklyn bridge deter mines the height, while the Pana ma canal determines the width. 3. Corpse. 4. Chicago. 5. The right of eminent domain. 6. Australia. CHILDREN’S COLDS* COUGHING quickly relieved by Penetro— Grandma’s old-time mutton suet idnadeveloiied by modern sciow intoacounter-irri tan t, vaporising salve that bringsquick, comfort-j ing relief. 25c, double sue 35c. PEN ETR□ BASS CONTAINS MUTTON SUET SNAPPY FACTS I ABOUT RUBBER -11 Demand for military font* has had a strong influence on the supply of cotton needed for the manufacture of tiros and other rubber items. Accurate tire Inflation means more now than ever before. Too much pressure encourages impact breaks; too little causes excess flexing and heat—a heavy mile age waster. A compliment to the tech nicians responsible for the development of synthetic rub ber Is the fact that tires and tubes required by the U. S. Ordnance Department are about IS per cent converted to a substitute for natural rubber. RFGM^ch] .1 if v. .>!■ o3 >!n.nH AJ&Ud l yd • t O !: • I —rrr r 1 -’"T -a -- U ICOLbMBERIES i v otq .eo dlqj&gOifaznillbd vis * o°<Q : ’7 > ^imvc’c rn^m_I MutK 6^Iil7r| Or thanfeSS/of One i; i>BU¥>WAR BONDS J ceto f the Safflttfcz&ft&MaaAASD vfcunins —try takifl^lgpd-tasting Scott’s&mul WSuntW Na|i°ftl sur rWocpmend rwblffli bring back, energy and-staadnal Ikuy St ott’s ■ ttU&U M fci i A ftro