LXVI O’NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20,1945 Nt). 32 SMALL DOSES ■■HBrnM-m ii ii !■ 11— i ■■■■■! —i—i in - PAST AND PRESENT By Romaine Saunders Rt. 5, Atkinson &3 smmmm ; t I-TT-3, | I [ ♦♦ THE curtain drawn, the XX world's undying story an- H i nounced 700 years before H ait was written on the sacred XX page. For unto us a child is born, unto us a «! son is given: and the government shall ZZ ; be upon his shoulders, and his name ZZ ; shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, ZZ the Mighty God . . . Isa. 9:6. The Board of Supervisors had a heart. With Chrstmas just around the corner the board met Tuesday to allow salary claims of county workers. Union leaders are forecasting an unemployment problem “equal to any the nation ever f-ced.” Well, boys, haven’t you brought it on yourselves. Washington issues an ultima tum to China that “strife must cease." The Chinks have a big sleeve to laugh in and wink a slanting eye at the Yankee indus trial strife. Iran, the faint remnant of i the once great empire of the great Cyrus which stretched from India to Ethiopia, a “hundred and twenty provinces,” like poor little Palestine, seems destined to be the mouse for the Lion and Bear to toy with. Wages have increased from a dollar a d.y to a dollar an hour. There was more solid content ment when the dollar a day work er sat down on the sawbuck at noon and ate his dinner of crhck-1 ers ,snd cheese than he can buy anywhere in the country today with his dollar an hour. — About an inch of snow lies un-! disturbed by winds out there in the street while those little weather tubes indicates a temper ature around zero. Weather re ports credit Buffalo, N. Y., with 40 inches of snow and more piling up. It was a clear half a night job finding a highway out of Buffalo last summer and I pity any stranger caught there in three and a half feet of snow. Anyway there is nothing modest about the C. I. O.’s esti mate of their worth on the job. j Two a day raise for all hands and no extra output. Steel workers, j auto workers, electricians and now , the railroads say the trainmen have plans for a two billion in crease in their pay per annumn. All of which is to come out of the people of the small towns, vill- j ages and those toiling on the land. _ ■ ■■ ■— Governor Griswold informs the pressure groups that there are to be no political roads built in Nebraska. Surveys- are to be made and highways authorized on the basis of needs. No doubt there are other sections of the state needing better travel routes but none that I know of present the crying need that the sand hill cattle country does. The move ment of beef to market is a major Nebraska undertaking every year and the state road builders may well look the sand hills over. Elsewhere in this issue will be found the life story and death notice of the mistress of O’Neill's first grand residence, Mrs. Dave Darr. I was one of a group of young blades first to be enter tained at a social function at the Darr mansion, as we spoke of the towns’s recently erected stone j front. Miss Mazie acted as host-1 ess and graceously refrained from any sort of a break that would remind her guests of their more humble abodes. This residence passed into the hands of John McHugh, then to Ed F. Gallagher and is still in the Gallagher fam ily. That was the beginning of fine homes in O’Neill, the first step from the simple four-wall , abodes of the town’s beginning and it has now become a city of fine homes. f “Youth is not a time of life, it is a state of mind; it is a temper. of the will, a quality of the imag ination, a vigor of the emotions, a predominance of courage over timidity, of appetitite for ; dvent ure over love of ease.” Is that so? I suspect the fellow who wrote that for one of those wordly-wise monthly publications is near the border-line and is try ing to kid himself by turning a wistful gaze toward life’s sunrise. Youth is a fact; maturity is a fact; age is still another fact, inexorable, absolute. Fountain of Youth, monkey glands, face lifting, the longing and striving can not withhold the onward sweep of time one moment. Childhood, impetuous youth, staid maturity, serene age —these are life’s stages. Happy those who pass gracefully from childhood’s joys to the quietness of venerable years. The 25th of December does not even approximate the date. But that is immaterial. The greatest fact of history, the greatest hu rrv.n event since Father Adam bowed to the divine decree and left his happy garden home for a thorn cursed world, is called to memory again this coming De cember 25. Maybe we have been so absorbed in buying and plann ing thr-it the deeper significance of Christmas has been lost sight of for the moment. But before the day closes many hearts will thrill to the simple story of Beth leham, a story that lives and touches lives with kindly impulse in a world of bitterness, cruelty i-nd bloodshed. Life is made the richer, the fuller, because we ac cept the story of Bethleham in its beauty and simplicity. Has Daily Weather Record for 30 Years Do! you want to know what the weather was like any day in the past thirty years? Just ask Bob Schulz. Mr. Schulz has made a hobby of keeping tabs on the weather. And its simplier than turning to an almanac. At the close of business he makes a note on the day’s sales record what the weather has been for the day. He says there is a striking simil arity in weather conditions from year to year. Storm periods, high and low temperature do not fail of falling at regular intervals and are not more than a week earlier or a week later from seas on to season. He learned to swim and catch fish where the- waters of the Baltic sea splash the Ger man shore line but has acquired the “weather habit’’ in Nebraska the past thirty years. EDUCATIONAL NOTES The date for the regular Teach ers’ Examinations is Saturday, January 19. They will be given at O’Neill, Stuart, Atkinson „nd Ewing. The April and July examinations will be given in O’Neill only. The time schedule will be the same as used in previous examinations with Arithmetic being given at 8 o’clock. A Special Examination for Tem porary Examinations will be given at O’Neill on Saturday, January 5. ela McCullough, County Superintendent. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the shareholders of the O’Neill National' Bank, O’Neill, Nebraska, will hold their annual meeting in the banking rooms of said bank between the hours of 9:00 a. m. and 4.00 p.m., on Tuesday, Jan uary 8, 1946. The purpose of the meeting is for the election of a Board of Directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of such other business as may properly come before the meeting. F. N. CRONIN, Vice President Dr. and Mrs. F. J. Fisher left Tuesday morning for Los Angeles, Cal., to spend the Christmas holi days with the Doctor’s mother. They expect to return home about January 4th. Mrs. Frank Griffith departed Saturday morning for San An tonio, Texas, for a protracted visit at the home of her daughter. Dr. Fisher, Dentist. 24tf Mrs. Dave Darr Dead at Age 94 John Horiskey, of Cody, Wyo., sent us last week the follow ing taken from a Basin, Wyo., newspaper regarding an early settler of this city and county, widow of David L. Darr, once a prominent banker of this city: “The Rev. J. A. Estey of Powell officiated at the funeral services held here Sunday at the Atwood morturary for one of Basin’s ear liest residents, Mrs. Ella Darr, who died Thursday, November 29 at her home. “Mrs. Clark Musgrave and Miss Jones of Greybull, sang ‘In the Sweet Bye and Bye,’ ‘Nearer My God to Thee,’ and ‘Shall We Meet Beyond the River?,’ accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Estey. “The pallbearers were Frank T. Brigham, Josh Ellis, Chas. A Hime, James A. Berry, Charles Galusha and Mike Brandt. “Ellen Sophia Jones, daughter of Thomas W. and Adeline Jones, was born at Monroe, Wis., July 12, 1851, and was at the time of her demise 94 years, four months and 17 days. At Munroe, in 1867, she was married to Frank Hoyden. Two daughters were the result of this (union, one of them, Mrs. G. M. Cleveland, died in Basin in 1936; the younger daughter, Mrs. M. B. Rhodes, of Basin, is the survivor. “In 1880 the deceased then a widow, settled with a brother at Redbird, in northeastern Nebras ka. The following year she was united in marriage with David L. Darr, a pioneer merchant of that place. “In 1898, while they were resid ing at McCook, Nebr., Mr. Darr came to Basin and organized the Big Horn County bank, of which he became cashier, and afterward president. Big Horn county then comprised the territory now in cluding Big Horn, Park and Wash akie counties and part of Hot Springs county, and was the county’s first bank. “In August of that year, Mr. and Mrs. Darr took the train from McCook to Sheridan, after first shipping their personal effects. Upon arrival at Sheridan, fore seeing a delay of several months in transporting their goods to Basin, they reshipped to Billings with the exception of the cook stove, some dishes, bedding and clothing; this they loaded into a wagon and the two drove over the Big Horn mountains to Basin, where they passed the remainder of their lives. “Mr. Darr died April 20, 1929. “Mrs. Darr had been a member of the Rebekah order for nearly 60 years and was instrumental in the institution of Eliza Rebekah lodge No. 26, in 1909. During Basin’s infancy, she was promin ent in social and civic affairs, was one of the original members of the Baak Lovers’ Club, organized in 1906, which was the forerunner of the Basin Woman’s Club. Ill health had of late years pre “Besides her daughter, deceas ed is survived by four grandchild ren and four great-grandchild ren. “The body was laid to rest in Mountview cemetery under a beautiful mound of floral tributes. “Interment was in charge of Atwood and Atwood, morticians.” DECEMBER WEATHER H L Mois. December 1 . 48 29 .15 December 2 _ 32 20 .65 December 3 _ 23 05 December 4 _28 06 December 5 _ 39 18 December 6 _44 27 December 7 _ 46 28 December 8 _ 44 28 December 9 _35 09 December 10 _15 09 December 11 . 20 02 December 12_ 25 08 December 13 27 12 .10 December 14 _ 23 08 December 15 _20 7 December 16_10 —13 December 17 _ 14 —12 December 18 _4 7 Hugh Ray departed Saturday on a drive to Blue River, Wis., for a few days visit at the home of his parents. Seen on the street: 25 dogs, a gent able to whistle a tune with the temperature at 4 below, a battered and blood spotted auto mobile, a Cher/y county car pull ing a trailer loaded with a saddle horse, a big truck from the other, side of the Mississippi, a fine looking class df people scurrying along to get in out of the cold. Assemble for a Bit of Fun What has become to be known as the annual* employees party was held last Saturday at the Golden by Consumers Publlic Power. A business meeting was held during the afternoor and at 6 o’clock the sixty-five in attend ance sat down to a turkey dinner. It was a dinner rather than the frills of banquet and no speeches. This Power District serves fifty-two towns and covers most of north Nebraska* Towns rep resented at the gathering last Saturday were: Valentine, Bas sett, Ainsworth, Neligh, Elgin, Creighton, Hartington, Wausa and Butte. The purpose of the annual gathering is, as one official ex pressed it,more for a bit of fun than anything else after a year of close attention to work though business can not be entirely for gotten. Following the turkey feast dancing and cards amused the guests and furnished the oppor tunity for all to get better ac quainted. It was strictly an affair for the employees and their wives. C. & N. W. Railroad Taxes A narrow stdip of land stretch ing from the Missouri river to the northwest c«g-ner of the state,j that yoiv can step across any- ' where in five seconds, two shin-1 ing steel rails, some dreary depots and empty box cars from which the assessors in twenty-eight Ne braska counties extracted as taxes in 1945 $277,901.58. Holt county received more than thirteen thousand dollars of the total sum. The amount receivel by Holt and five neighboring counties will be of interest to Frontier readers and is as follows: Holt $13,666.65, Boyd. $8,927.32, Ante lope $9,744 92, Knox $10,170.44, Rock $5,649.34, Brown $8,017.18. The sum that came into the Holt county treasury was divided as follows: State $1,849.21, County! $1,838.89, Township $1, 062.28, School $7,930.63, City or Village $985.64. Total $13,666.65. It is noted that more than half of this sum went to the support of the schools. These are the taxes on the Northwestern railroad. Mrs. Glen Tomlinson and Mrs. Ray Hill took Douglas Hill to Rochester, Minn., a week ago for medical examination. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Dailey, of Inman, have received the an nouncement of the marriage of their son, Orville K. Dailey, seaman first class, to Miss Marion W. Weston of Portland, Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. John Melvin are anticipating a/ visit from their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Shelton of St. Louis, who expect to start for O’Neill Satur day to spend the Christmas week here. Word from Bob Brittell, at one time deputy sheriff here, informs friends that he. has bought a home and cabin camp at Van couver, Wash., where the family are making their permanent home. St. Mary’s Academy and the O’Neill Public Schools will each close Friday afternoon, December 21, for the holiday vacation. The Public School will resume activ ity again on Welnesday, Jan uary 2, and the Academy on Monlay, January 7. Lt. Margaret Bosn, USN, arriv ed home Tuesday from Brooklyn, N. Y., to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Bosn. Lt. Bosn has received her discharge from the navy. Lt. Dorothy Bosn, USA, also arrived home Monday to spend the holi days with her parents. Lt. Bosn is stationed at Ft. Snelling, Minn. ■- -f — ~ —— ■*— Holt County Men In On the Win Six farmers and ranchers from Holt county received state recog nition at a recent P. F. L. meeting in Omaha, and were awarded a total of $170.00 in War Bonds and Stamps. These men were recog nized for their methods and re sults obtained in producing beef from native grass pasture, har vestvesting native hay with mini mum labor requirements and in establishing and maintaining stands of grass or legumes to be used in crop rotations. The Pasture Forage Livestock pro gram is sponsored by the Exten sion Service, with the Omaha Chamber of Commerce co-operat ing and giving awards as follows: Carl Hallgrimson, Stuart, first, beef from grass, $50 War Bond. He produced 94 lb. beef per acre of pasture. Record was kept on 75 head of yearlings. They were weighed on the pasture in the spring and weighed off in the fall Carl believes the management of the pasture, watering facilities and salting practices helped to give him this high gain. Alfred Drayton, O’Neill, second, beef from grass, $25 War Bond. By rotational grazing 150.head of yearlings made an average gain of 263 pounds per head in four months and seven days, and pro duced 50 pounds beef per acre of range. Robert Clifford, Atkinson, fourth, beef from grass, $10 War Stamps. This range land was probably undergrazed and a large acreage used, with twenty-nine poitnls of beef per acre. Skrlla Brothers, Stuart, First, hay making, $50 War Stamps. Lawrence and Don averaged thirty-six minutes to cut, rake, sweep and stack a ton of hay. The contest field was 160 acres. It produced approximately 165 ton of No. 1 hay. The power trail mower helped them to make the good record. Don has just been released from the army. Both boys flew their own plane to Omaha for the meeting. Lynn and Harvey Tompkins, Inman fourth, hay making, $10 War Stamps. Here it took one hour and thirty-three minutes to put up a ton of hay. It was very fine quality, and was put up early in the seasom. Due to wet con ditions at th'.t time, more time was required to put up a ton of hay. The condition of meadow was excellent this fall and is being used for winter range for Black AngUs cattle. Ray Siders, O’Neill, second, grass growing, $25 War Bond. Disked a four acre field of corn stalks twice. Broadcast 12 pound bromegrass, three pound alfalfa with h If bushel oats per acre. During 1945 he grazed 24 year ling steers from June 3 to July 13. In addition, 24 shoa's grazed the field from May 1 to October 1. Holt county had probably the largest number of persons to be recognized by the state. This is a boost for the county. The County Agent wishes to stress that even more interest in P. F. L. is needed for the coming year. One of the highlights of the state finishup meeting was the address given by the mayor of Kansas City, John B. Gage, which stress ed the care of the soil and live stock and the decentralizing of labor and industry. Approxi mately 500 farmers and ranchers attendel the meeting. Eugene Owen tarried in town a few minutes Tuesday on his way from the ranch in the Phoenix neighborhood to Lincoln where he went for Mrs. Owen who is in college and comes home for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs A. E Bowen had a telephone talk with their son, Donald, at Farragut, Idaho, last Friday noon, Donald having call ed them by telephone. He is serving at the Idaho navy station in the capacity of musician. Marriage Licenses Martin B. Miller, O’Neill, and Miss Ophal M. Johnson, Spencer. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tomlinson , cnjoyel u family get together latt Sunday at their son, Arthur Tom linson's home near Inman. Resile the senior Mr. and Mrs. Tomlin son there were present a daugh ter and her husband from Cham bers, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Turner, a daughter from Inman and her husband and family, the James Coventry’s and Glen Tomlinson, of O’Neill. — BRIEFLY STATED Tom Coyne is in St. Vincent’s hospital at Sioux City seriously ill. Merry Christmas and Il.ppy new Year to everyone ever where. Mrs. Loren Nelson will leave this week for Columbus, Ohio, on a business trip. Supt. Ira, George, of the O’Neill Public schools, was in Lincoln last week looking after school matters. Sister M. Calixta, of Chicago, and Miss Genevieve Biglin, of Sioux City, are spending the holidays with relatives in the city. The Northwestern passenger and mail train from the east has been from two to eight hours late the past week. Its time in O’Neill is 5:17 a. m. Yesterday the mail train pulled in at 12:30, out at 12:45. « Lt. Stephen Price didn’t wait for a discharge from the army to j take on a job at the Spelts-Ray lumber yard. But he expects release from Uncle Sam’s forces | early next year and, in the mean time will help out the lumber ; men. * The fire department hustled out a cold night 1 st week-end in response to an alarm turned in from the Nu Way Cafe. A chimney accumulations of soot j and ashes was making a lurid streak skyward that resulted in nothing detrimental to the build ing. O’Neill youngsters are invited to be up town at 3:30 Friday afternoon. Santa Claus invites you to meet him in person, accept his bag of gifts and enjoy an hour’s association with him. This promises to give you a good start for the holiday season. As schools close at 3:00 you can be on time for Santa’s initial ap pearance and take it all in. Mariane Hansen vs. Charles Lawrence, a suit in county court to recover $1,000 alleged dam ages. Alegations set forth that defendant loaded a consignment of cattle at Ewing to be delivered at plaintiff’s place east of O'Neill, plaintiff being a passenger in the truck. The truck left the high w y and overturned when the defendant, who opera ed the truck, is alleged to have slept. The suit is for personal injury. Facts were presented to the court Tues day and recess taken for a day while attorneys prepared cita tions for the guidance of the court in its findings. J. J. Harrington represents plaintiff and J. D. Cronin the defendant. i December eclipse of sun or moon means subzero tempe ature. Tuesday evening betwen 7:30 and 8:00 o’clock the earth inter posed its shadow over the moon, effecting a near total eclipse by 7:45. A clear sky, a calm even ing and the early appearance of the lunar ball over the treeaops above the eastern horizon made ide^l conditions for O’Neill citi zens to witness the celestial phenomena. If you were out early Wednesday morning you would have observed that the ear!h no longer stood in its light and the moon’s full orb in all its golden glory looked up on the cold and sleeping town at an hour when hoLiT frost had pushed the mercury down to 7 below. Frank Howard accompanied by his daughter, Margaret, went to Soux City today and Frank expects to undergo hospital treat ment there. His friends here trust he will find help to regain l his customery vigor and good health. O'Neill Couple Married 50 Y rs. A reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Curtis in the southwest part of the city Tues day afternoon was the occasion for the observance of their fiftieth wedding anniversary. As a singular coincident fifty guests registered during the after noon. Ladies Qf the Rebekah’s, under the direction of Mrs. L. G. Gillespie and Mrs. Peter Hert ford, were the instigators of the plan to bring a number of friends to the Curtis home on the occas ion of their golden wedding, and the loads of gifts and large purse of money brought to them the occ sion became golden in a material sense as well as in the warm throb of human friend ship. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis started life together fifty years ago down in Custer county and have shared life’s lights and shadows along the way. Their deepest sorrow was the loss of an only son some years ago. They came to O’Neill in the early nneteen hundred and axe held in high esteem to this community. Besides the O’Neill friends who called during the afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Evans of Berwyiv Ncbr., and Miss Marion Curtis* of Sioux City, a granddaughter* were here to join in the reception and congratulations. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis are leaving soon for a visit at Berwyn with Mr. and Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Evans being a sister of Mr. Curtis. They desire The Frontier to express for them their sense of gratitude to the | friends who made this occasion i such that it will ever remain a I pleasant memory. The ladies served cake and coffee to the friends who called. F. B. I. Nab A Deserter James W. Skeels was arrested at the Western Hotel Wednesday night and taken to the county ji a. F. B. I. agents have been his trail since September, 1943, when he is charged with desert ion from the army air field at Lincoln. An agent from the Omaha division of the F. B. I. came to O’Neill and in conjunct ion with Policeman Bert Peter son and Sheriff Hubbard the arrest was made. Skeel’s home is at Hammond, Oregon. He has been employed here and in Boyd county for some months. The provost marshal's office has been notified of his arrest and a military police is expec ed here to return the pris oner to the army base from which he deserted for milit ry trial. Death of Pioneer Woman Mrs. Ella Riley died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James Cronk in (his city last Saturday tfternoon at 1:20, af er an illn-ss of several months of diabetes and other ailments, from which sl\e had suffered for several years, at "the age of 72 years eight m nths and one day. Funeral service* were held from St. Patrick’s church Tuesday morning at 10 o’clock Mnsgr. McNamara offi ia - ing and burial in Calvary ceme tery. Ella Marley was born in Scr n ton, Pa., April 14, 1873. and, came to this county with her parents in 1881, the family coming here from Iowa. The family located on the Elkhorn river near Inman where Mrs. Riley grew to woman hood. In 1895 she was mited in mar riage to William H. Riley, the ceremony being performed in this city. To this union one daughter was bprn, Mrs. James Cronk, with whom Mrs. Riley had made her home for several years, as her husband p ssod away n 1918. Mrs Riley leaves to mourn her passing her daughter and three sisters: Mrs. Tessie Babcock . nd Miss Sarah M,.rley, Douglas, Arizona, and Mrs. Frank Line man, Adel, Iowa. Her parents were among the pioneers of the Inman community and she spent practically her en tire life in this county. She had many friends and neighbors in the eastern part of the county, where she was well known, who will regret to learn of her passing.