The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 13, 1945, Image 4

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    ARE YOU DRIVING A
C6AP/NG l£AfA?
1
THEN CHANGE
TO THIS
Your car doe«n*t have to ba an old
Jalopy to run like a “Leaping Lana.”
Seduced wartime speeds and too
arach atop-and-go driving can aap ita
pep and power, earning it to I6ae ita
aaaooth operation. •'!
So let your favorite mechanic
check the motor and tune it up. Then
change to Champlin HI-V-I . t. tlie
new fighting aviation oil.
Champlin HI*V-I (High Viscosity
Index) motor oili ia refined by an
entirely new aolvent process . .. from
100% Paraffin Base Mid-Continent
Crude . . . the finest obtainable. It
not only resists sludging, but actually
washes away sludge already present
in your motor.
Through regular use, Champlin
HI-V-I tends to increase compres
sion, and to reduce valve sticking.
You’ll get by with less oil, and your
car will run smoother, last longer.
CHAMPLIN REFINING CO.
Enid, Oklahoma
Producer*, Refiners and Distributors
of Petroleum Products Since 1916
tSMEMBER, tka Armed S•rvle** lavt tint call oa all Champlla product«
CHAMBERS NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Theo Moss, Mrs.
Charles Grimes and Mrs. Gene
vieve Bell drove to Neligh Sat
urday to attend the Antelope
County fair.
Alfred Walter took his sister,
Mrs. Rena Feyerherm to Wayne
Saturday, because of the sudden
serious illness of her son-in-law,
William PheiL
Mrs. H. O Stevens and son,
Dale, of Atkinson, were Sunday
guests at the E. R. Chrpenter
home. Thef were accompanied
home by Pfc. and Mrs. Dean
Stevens, who had spent a week at
the Carpenter home
S. Sgt. Keith Newhouse left
Hiursday for Lincoln and on to
Leavenworth, Kansas, after a
thirty day furlough spent with
his parents, Mr and Mrs. T. E.
Newhouse.
T-5 Glen Taylor left Monday
night for Leavenworth, Kansas,
following a thirty day furlough
spent with his wife and son.
Mrs. Merle Hansen received
word from her husband, Pvt.
Merle Hansen, who has been in a
.hospital on Leyte, that he was
being sent home in a few days.
Mrs Dean Stevens (nee Marian
Carpenter) was honored at a mis
cellaneous shower at the home of
Mrs. Evert Miner Saturday after
noon. About sixty friends of the
bride gathered and Were seated
on the shady lawn. The program
prepared by Mrs. Merle Hansen
and Mrs. Lee Mitchell jitiplr^yed
in yet&, songs and a md^k tipnl
ding the life of the bride /fbn')
babyhood td the day . of her mar
riage. Those who assisted with
the program were: .Mr$. Robert
•Carrier, Mrs Wayne Itbwse^Gen
«Oe Held, Phyllis wood, ^eia
CnandalL Blaine . A/Uuns, Shirty
2g?». and .
Many beau*ifnl and useful,gifts
were presented the bnAe#" jitter
which refreshments of pie a^d
4 Offer* were serves^. .
ffc Lela Ermer arrivinf’^jome
Sunday o.f last week from Moun
tain Home, Idaho, for a. t^e^ity
day furlough with her p>arei5hj,'
Mi and Mrs. Fred Earner* and
aether relatives and fri«o&
S. 1-c Ralph Cooke arrived
Thursday from Madison for a f w
days visit with his mother, Mrs.
Letha Cooke. He left Tuesday
morning for Shoemaker, Cal.
The Valley Center School, Dist.
127, opened Monday with an en
rollment of twenty-two. Miss
Phyllis Carpenter is the teacher.
John Walter, Sr., and Mrs. Pete
Brown drove to Stuart Saturday
to visit their sister, Mrs. Chris
Gathje who is in the hospital
there. They were accompanied
by Mrs. Cliff Gillette, who went
to visit her daughter, Mrs. Wesley
Cobb, who is also it> the hospital.
The following guests enjoyed
dinner at the Omar McClennahan
home Monday evening, in honor
of S 1-c Ralph Cooke. Mrs. Letha
Cook and Bernard, Mrs. Frank
Porter and Mrs. Wayne Rowse.
Cpl. Arnold Sorensen left Fri
day for Camp Grant, 111., after
a thirty day furlough with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sor
ensen.
F-s George Kosh arrived at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Koch Thursday, from Brem
erton, Wash., where his ship is
being repaired. He has two weeks
leave.
Mrs. Louis Walter had Sun
day dinner at the Ed Dewey home.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Adams took
their daughter, Elaine, to Sioux
Falls Sunday, where she will at
tend college. '
Mrs. Lela Crandall left Friday
for Sioux City, where she will re
sume her college work.
Lurlin Collins, of New York
[City, was calling op friends at
.Chamb&s the first of Che week.
He cacn^'hcre by plane Sunday.
ifr., and^ Mrs. T E. Newhouse
have, received the APO number
of ttyjir son, £vt Jim jNewhoure.
He wds stationed at Camp Adair,
0n'&*- Pi,..' ,.!
j was received for last
Ve«4t'S paper, but linotype trouble
.prevented us from getting it into
type.’—Editor.)
Mfsa Luetta Leaz, who Is at
tending school « Omaha, ar
Vivtd ho»ni‘ Friday night to spend
the Week-eiid.
■ Mr. and Mrs Emerson Mitchell
FIVE BILLION DOLLAR
P FAMILY BUSINESS
WHEN Grandma waa a farm girl, she tended the
chickens, milked the cows, churned the butter
(72 percent of the nation’s butter was home-churned
then; less than 20 percent today). When she pro
duced more eggs and butter than the family could eat,
she would trade the rest for "pin-money” or frills.
Today, Grandma’s "pin-money” has become BIG
money. Last year it added more than five hill inn
dollars to the income of U. S. farmers. That’s more
than hogs brought in—or cattle—or sheep. Just look:
And believe it or not, dairy products alone returned
more money to farm families than the entire corn
and wheat crops combined!
Any way you look at it, cows and chickens is a
great industry. It is nation-wide, too. California
and Texas are crowding close on the leaders—Wis
consin, New York, Minnesota, Iowa, and Pennsyl
vania. From millions of small dairy herds and
chicken flocks in every state, as well as from large
scale operations, comes the enormous volume of
dairy and poultry products that are such a vital
source of our nations food.
1944 Gross Farm Incoma
Dairy Products..
Poultry Products
Hogs..
Cattle and Calves......
Sheep, Lambs and Wool
2.796.000. 000
2.607.000. 000
450,000,000
LET’S KEEP THE
MACHINE IN GEAR
In these clays of mechanized farm
ing practically everyone is famil
F. if. Simpton jar with the gears that make tho
wheels of trr ors, combines, and other equip
ment go ’round. We know that should one gear
be removed or get out of line—or even if a sin
gle gear-tooth is broken—the machine won’t
run smoothly, if at all.
It is much the same with the livestock and
meat industry. The three main gears are the
producer, the processor and the retailer. When
any one of these "driving gears” gets out of
order, then the entire industry suffers. Coordi
nation of their interests can contribute greatly
to the smooth functioning of the industry as a
whole. None of us gains by insisting too vigor
ously that our part of the industry is the only
one which has problems that matter. We gain
more by trying to look at our particular prob
lems as they affect all of us. In other words,
whatever hurts or helps tho producer hurts or
helps the processor and the retailer also.
The livestock and meat industry is an im
portant part of the national economic struc
ture. We at Swift & Company believe that we
can contribute moot to the welfare of America
—and ourselves—by promoting harmonious
practical working relations between producers,
processors and retailers.
A^iemllural Rutarwi Dtpm tnunl
Here We Are Again!
This series of advertisements is renewed in this issue and
will appear monthly. We again invite you to send in
good ideas which will help others in the business of
farming and ranching. We will pay you $5 for each good
idea accepted by the judges, whose decisions are final.
And don’t forget to come in and see us whenever you
are in Chicago—or if you haven’t time to visit, phone
us at Yards 4200, Extension 710, or write us at any time
about any matter which pertains to agriculture. Remem
ber our address: F. M. Simpson, Agricultural Research
Department 128, Swift & Company, Chicago 9, Illinois.
Corn COBS Help
Fatten Steers
Ohio
by Paul Gqrlaugh -
Agricultural Experiment
Station *'
Com cobs are worth 50% of their
weight in ground shelled corn!
1 hat is the outstanding result of cattle-feeding
tests conducted here, with Dr. Wise Burroughs
and L. E. Kuakle. Steers fed corn-and-cob meal
graded the same (mostly choice) as similar steers
fed grovmd shelled corn. They gained as rapidly,
and dressed cut 601-”% against 61%. All rations
were balanced with 2 pounds soybean meal and
4 to 5 pounds cf hay per steer per day.
Incidentally, one lot of steers in the tests was
fed "double cob meal” in which an extra cob was
ground up with each ear of com. And here’s a
surprise . . . these steers did nearly as well as
those that got straight com-and-cob meal or
ground shelled com. It may be more profitable
to feed corn cobs to cattle than to bum them in
the kitchen stove.
On the basis of these tests, a ton of com-and
cob meal is just as good for fattening cattle as
1,800 pounds of ground shelled com. And the
com-and-cob meal costs less because both time
and money are saved by eliminating the shelling
operation.
LIVESTOCK MOVIES FOR YOU
We will lend you films for school, church, or other farm
meetings: "Livestock and Meat,” "A Nation’s Meat,”
Cows and Chickens... U. S, A.,
and two brand new animated
movies—**By-Producta” and ’’Meat
Buying Habits.” All for 16-mm.
sound projectors. You pay transpor
tation one way only. Write Swift
& Company, Department 128,
Chicago, Illinois.
* * NUTRITION IS OUR BUSINESS — AND YOURS * *
Right Eating Adda Li fa to Your Ymara, and Yaara to Yam* Ufo
| cA(a/i//ia SCogatt tflecifie fb%
! SKILLET DINNER
Pan fry 1 lb. bulk sausage meat with 2 tablespoons I
I onions until brown. Pour off the drippings. Add 2 I
I cups cooked rice, 1 Vt cups canned tomatoes and Vi |
[cup chili sauce. Blend well. Cover and cook over I
very low heat for 30 minutes. Do not raise the cover. j
Serve with lettuce salad and crusty bread. Serves I
6 to 8. j
CULL THE NON-LAYERS Mow!
I
Hens in your flocks that
are still producing egga
regularly in the early fall
months are superior lay
ers. They are the oneeto
save for breeding stocky
writes H. L. Kempster,
cnairman oi me depart
meat of poultry husband
ry at the University of Missouri.
Mr. Kempster says it s easy to select the good
layers. They are the hens with white bleached
shanks and with old, frayed and brittle plumage.
The slick hens with yellow legs and smooth
feathers are the ones that should be used for
poultry meat. They should be culled out of your
flock to make room for mature, ready-to-lay
pullets now on the range. As it doesn’t pay to sell
laying hens, try to examine all individuals in your
flock carefully. A red comb and moist, expanded
vent are sure signs of a layer. If the vent is dry,
puckered and yellow, you may be certain that
hen has stopped laying for some time.
ROY GUY REALLY
KNOWS SHEEP
When Roy F. Guy, head
lamb buyer for Swift & Com
pany at Chicago since 1931,
was a lad of 17, he answered
an ad in a Kansas City news
paper. That led to his first
job with Swift as a $4-a-week
messenger boy. Before his Roy F. Guy
first year ended, he had in show ring
doubled his salary and was getting a start in calf
buying. At the ripe age of 22, Boy Guy was head
calf buyer at Chicago. He held this post for 10
years and then went back to the starting line to
learn lamb buying. In his 46 years with Swift,
Roy Guy has bought many million lambs and
judged in many a show ring. But his greatest
pride is in the boys he hired and trained who have
made good with the Company. "I always told a
new boy to be careful in choosing his Company
i i. and to stay with it»” be aaya.
Swift & Company
UNION STOCK YARDS
CHICAGO 9, ILLINOIS
and sons, of Wichita, Kansas, ar
rived here last Thursday for a
visit at the Carl Mitchell home.
Mr. and Mrs. John Couch drove
to Creighton Thursday on busi
ness.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gibson and
Marie were Norfolk shoppers
Thursday of last week.
Cpl. Eugene Hoerle left Sunday
morning for a camp in California,
after spending a thirty day fur
lough with home folks.
Mrs. Dean Stevens had her ton
sils removed Tuesday of last
week in Atkinson.
Mrs. Merle Hansen and son,
David, drove to Neliglh Friday
morning to attend the funeral of
Mr. Brennan, who passed away
at his home. Mr. Brennan’s
daughter, Mrs. Lottie Hansen, of
Boise, Idaho, also attended the
funeral. Mrs. Lottie Hansen and
her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Merl
Hansen and little grandson,
David, had a nice visit together
before returning to their homes.
Mr. and Mrs. Louts Neilsen en
joyed a 6 o’clock dinner at the
Clarence KLh/ fbume Sunday
everting.
Mr. and Mix. Omar McCIenna
han and boys and Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Gibson, Marie and Donald,
had Sunday dinner with Mrs.
Edith MbClennahan in Chambers.
Elaine Adams, Lela Crandall,
Mrs. Merl Hansen and son visited
at the Thane L. Mitchell home
Sunday afternoon.
Sgt allace Mitchell arrived in
Chambers Monday afternoon from
Burr Oaks, Kansas, where he had
bettn' visiting relatives and
friends and will now visit his
father, Carl Mitchell and the
Frank Tracey’s. He brought his
grandmother, Mrs. Short, of Kan
sas back with him and she will
visit there for a short time.
Donajd Grimes drove to Atkin
son Sunday morning to get Pfc and
Mrs. Dean Stevens, who were
visiting his parents there. They
will remain here for some time
at the E. R. Carpenter and Don
ald Grimes homes.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tracy and
children attended the Bassett
fair last Sunday.
Mary Lou Spath held a slum
ber party at her home Friday
evening. Eight girl friends at
tended. A good time and very
little slumbering was reported by
all.
Pvt. Orvalle Svatus arrived
ihome Thursday night from Camp
Fannin, Texas, where he has been
in training and will spend a fur
lough with home folks. Pvt
Normand Reninger, also aj Fan
nin, was planning to come with
Orvalle, but informed Hus parents
through a telephone call, that he
and several of, his, buddies were
being held at, the paxnp, and had,
furloughs, cancelled for the pres
ent.
Miss Lorraine Mitchell, a cuts*'
in the Mary Laxinmg Hospital-at
Hastings, came to- Chambers by
bus Saturday for a visit with her
(lather, CUrl Mitchell, Mr. and
Mrs. Fhrnk Tracy and girls and
other relatives and friends. She
(has a fifteen day vacation. •
Mrs Everett Miner and child
ren returned to their home Sat
urday night, after a visit with
relatives and friends at Pleasant
l
on, Kearney and Ravenna. Mrs.
Miner took her brother-in-law,
Donald Miner, who had spent the
summer here, back to Ihis home at
Ravenna.
Mrs. Arthur Tangeman and
Miss Ardith Roth gave a party for
the young people of the Metho
dist Sunday School, in the church
basement Friday evening. There
were around twenty children
from pre-school to high school
age present. Phyllis Carpenter
assisted with the games. A
lunch of pop and cookies was
served.
Luetta Lenz returned to Oma
ha Monday morning, after spend
ing the week-end at her home.
Miss Marilyn Harley accompan
ied her back and will begin
studies in the electronic school
there.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Mitchell
and boys had sppper with Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Mitchell and sons
Thursday evening and spent the
night there. •• i
Mrs. Blanche Edward#. Pje
kuys and Gen* .Primus hayy
moved into their, house in Qiam
bers and Gene has entered the
Chambers school.. 1 > , ..
Mr and .Mre.' Wilbur Odbom
and family of Meadow Grove,
-and Mrs. Letha • Cooke- and Ber
nard, Mrs.: Wayne Bowse and
daughter had dinner at the Frank
Porter home Sunday.
A large family dinner was
held Sunday at the Clyde Klltz
home, in honor of Mr and Mrs.
Burton Kilt* and family, of Dal
las,1'Texas who-have been visit
ing Mr. Kiltz*S mother. 'Mrs.
Addie Kiltz and other relatives.
They left Tuesday for their home,
accompanied by his mother, Mrs.
Addie Kiltz, who will spend the
winter there.
Betty Salsbury, of Topeka,
Kansas, left Sunday night for her
home, after a visit at the C. V.
Robertson home.
Mary Lou Spath went to Oma
ha Monday morning to do some
shopping. She returned Tues
day night.
Frank Porter took the young
peoples group of the Baptist
Church to Long Pine to the Park
Friday, where they spent a very
enjoyable week-end. Mr. Porter
was accompanied by his wife and
daughter, Mrs. Wayne Rowse.
They all reported having enjoyed
especially the boating and swim
ming.
Federal Land Bank
Loans
No Fees—4% Long Term
Repayment Privilege
THE
SAFE SURE SECURE
LOAN
NATIONAL FARM LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Boyd. Holt 8c Wheeler Counties
Lyle P. Dierks. Sec.-Trees.
O'NeilL Nebr.
Mrs. John Kellar received word
from ‘her daughter, Mrs. Lynn
Hanna, that their daughter, Dor
othy, had recently had her ap
pendix removed at the hospital '
(Continued on next page)
INSURANCE!
.ifV kli»wi>
A Liability Jumrum peiicy under the new
iaw wjH eo#t a*.'MhUtrCiiiier 'dwt O$:00L
pick up $JMW: tmck iHil; town ear $10.00;
tfae*- atiartisr tw» trick and wrier $!?*«;: three
quarter tens to twe tons HIjOO.
L. G. Gillespie Insurance Agency
Telephone 218-W. , O'NEILL, NEB.
prj