The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 02, 1947, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HOUSEHOLD
nimasa
If decorative candles become
soiled wipe them gently with ab
sorbent cotton dipped in alcohol.
—•—
A piece of medium sandpaper
placed over the kitchen sink will
come in handy more than once for
cleaning pots and pans.
—•—
Instead of nsing tacks to fasten
the edges of oilcloth under the
table or shelves use adhesive tape.
It looks neater and is easier to do.
—•—
Egg beaters should be washed
Immediately after using. Keep
cogs out of water.
To clean bottles, jars, or cruets
thoroughly, place egg shells and
warm soapy water in them and
shake well. Clean in no timel
(fStirffyNose
Spoils ‘
Sleep
A little Va-tro-nol
fvaignr in each nostril
w quickly opens up
nasal passages to relieve stuffy tran
sient congestion. Makes breathing
easier. Invites restful sleep. Works
One! . . . Grand for relieving sniffy
distress of head colds. Try It I Follow
directions la the package.
VICKS VA-TRO-NOL
Buy D. S. Savings Bonds!
A COLD WOULD YOU WAIT
UNTIL IT TURNED INTO PNEUMONIAf
Would You Run Your Cur 100,000 Mlleu Ru.
Changing OIIT Thu Answer It Nu.
Well, why not take core of your battery
Before tt fall* you. The public haa never
been taudht to care for his battery. Now
while your battery la new or Riving you
aervjce, put duble power In your battery.
Duble power does this- -stops ever bet!
lug. Prevents asrrsslen. beeps platss clean.
Ns sulpballon—uulphatton Is BO* of bat
tori' trouble. Will not freeze. Batteries
with DUBLE POWER In It will last from
ni*i°nr AU ,hl* ond more wl,h
P.UBLE POWER In your battery for only
fl.CO. Ask your dealer or write or call
C. B. MENzEL, Distributor. Phone 8-SBftO.
tt«> 80. 4th 81.. Connell Bluffs. Iowa.
Can use several sub-distributors to work
With or thru garages or oil stations.
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you (eel
punk as the dickens, brings on stomach
“upper agvin.
i CALDWELL'S is the wonderful sen
na laxative contained in good old Syrup
Pepsin to make it go easy to take.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin prepara
tion* in prescription* to make the medi
an# more palatable and agreeable to
So be sure your laxative is con
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
MSIST ON OR. CALDWELL'S—the fa
Toritt of million* for SO yean, and feel
that wholtaome relief from constipa
tion. Even ftaicky children lovo it.
CAUTION! Dm only as directed.
DR. CALDWELLS
SENNA LAXATIVE
“ SYRUt* PEPSIN
Why Jumping Beans Jump
Mexican jumping beans "jump”
because of the movements of moth
larvae spinning their cocoons inside
the beans they infest.
Drying Umbrella
Leave umbreUas open to dry
When folded damp, they are likely
to mildew.
Wind Cooling
Wind is far more Important than
temperature to the cooling of the
body.
Spoke for Agriculture
George Washington, in his last
message to congress on Decernebr i
7, 1796. recommended the use of
public funds to aid agriculture and
the establishment of boards to col
lect and diffuse agricultural infor
mation.
smuggled to Caesar
A famous legend of antiquity says
that Cleopatra instructed her man
servant to carry her into Julius
Caesar’s presence wrapped in a ,
carpet
|-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
CIO Girds for New Wage Drive;
U.N. Closes Meet in Harmony;
More Rental Units Planned
__________ n.I.c.H h„ M.wep.per ITnlnft
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinion* are expressed In (he*# eolnmni, (her are those *1
Western Nrwspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily o» this newspaper.)
Elected to head Interim French government, 74-year-old Leon
Blum receives traditional embrace from Vincent Auriol, president
of national assembly.
LABOR:
New Wage Pattern
Hardly had the hub-bub occasioned
by the CIO’s adoption of Economist
noDen Hainan s ior
mula for higher
wages within cur
rent prices died
down than United
Automobile Work
ers hit for a pay
boost of 234 cents
an hour to compen
sate for rising liv
ing costs in 1946.
Gist of Nathnn's
report, to be used as
a basis for CIO
wa» demand! in
Robert Nathan
coming months, is that record earn
ings allow industry to Jack up pay
appreciably while maintaining exist
ing price levels. Although Nathan
said that the unions should negotiate
new scales with different companies
and Industries on the basis of their
abilities to pay, he averred that the
manufacturing industry can grant a
21 per cent boost without raising
prices and still make double the
profits of the 1936-'39 period.
In view of the high earnings of
Industry and the gradual transfor
mation of a seller’s into a buyer’s
market, business leaders will hesi
tate before adding additional wage
Increases onto prices, Nathan said
UAW Demands
In subscribing to Nathan’s theory
that industry can hike wages with
out boosting prices. UAW Chieftain
Walter Reuther declared that cor
poration profits are running at a rate
of IS billion dollars a year in com
parison with 10 billion during the
war and S billion in the prewar pe
riod.
While business profits have been
rising, consumer purchasing power
has been diminishing. Reuther said.
During 1946, living costs have
climbed another 18 per cent, neces
sitating the 23W cents an hour wage
raise for the 900,000 UAW members
to maintain their ”take-home" pay.
At present, the average wage in the
industry is $1 S3 an hour.
Reuther’s claim of big business
profits was challenged by major pro
ducers. who charged that this year’s
costly strikes and shortages of ma
terials adversely affected earnings.
FRANCE:
Blum Comes Back
Leon Blum, whose Popular Front
government in the middle '30’s threw
France into a turmoil, returned to
head the new French interim gov
ernment as the compromise choice
of the left and right parties of the
nation.
Though Blum’s Socialist party
commands only 100 seats in the 600
odd national assembly, the dominant
Communist and Popular Republican
parties agreed on his leadership aft
er failure to woVk out a satisfactory
deal between themselves for shar
ing the government. Ranting over
the failure of achieving a coalition
cabinet. Commdhist Representative
Duclos accused the rightist Popular
Republicans of "renewing the class
struggle."
Reversing his liberal policies,
which led to a wave of sltdown
strikes and the bitter opposition of
capital in the *30’s. Blum announced
that he would work for stringent
economies during his brief term be
fore a permanent government is
formed. He also reiterated French
demands for internationalization
of the Ruhr and Rhineland
RELIGION:
Donations l,ag
Although the U. S. public’s
church donations have scored a new
high by passing the billion-dollar-a*
year mark, they still trail behind
consumer outlays for movie and the
ater tickets, amount to one-third of
the nation's annual bill for tobacco,
and one-eighth of its outlay for al
coholic beverages, according to
Northwestern National Life Insur
ance company.
U. N.:
Meets Test
Having "met the test” of resolv
ing major issues and differences, to
quote U. S. Delegate Warren Aus
tin, the United Nations general as
sembly adjourned until next Sep
tember with this record of accom- i
plishments:
—Acceptance of an $8,500,000 gift
from John D. Rockefeller Jr. for
purchase of a 17-acre site in Man
hattan for a permanent U N. home.
—Adoption of a resolution in
structing the security council to de
vise a system of international dis
armament to be presented to mem
ber countries in treaty form.
—Approval of trusteeships for
eight former League of Nations
mandated territories and formation
of a U. N. trusteeship committee
to which administering powers will
report.
-'-Admission of Sweden, Afghanis
tan, Iceland and Siam to the U. N.
—Establishment of the Interna
tional Refugee organization to re
settle and repatriate 1,000,000 dis
placed persons.
HOUSING:
New Emphasis
In line with findings that most
home-seekers are looking for rent
al rather than purchasable dwell
ings, the administration's new hous
ing program places emphasis upon
construction of rental property.
To encourage rental construc
tion, Federal Housing adminis
tration will extend the amortisa
tion period for such projects
beyond the usual 28 years, and
work out arrangements for ad
justing loans to protect owners
from losses In the event of un
stable economic conditions.
Whereas a maximum of $80 a
month was set on rental of In
dividual units under the veterans’
emergency housing program, rent
als now will be limited to an aver
age of $80 for a building.
With the principal demand for
more dwellings, any person will be
permitted to build a house, thus
making an apartment or old build
ing available. Vets will continue to
get first crack at homes put up for
sale or rent, however.
Because of the Increasing pro
duction of building materials
coupled with the curb on non
residential construction, mate
rials priorities no longer will
be needed.
Though non-residential construc
tion will continue to be restricted,
permission to build stores, schools,
churches and other facilities will be
granted to accommodate new neigh
borhoods.
MILITARY:
Unify Commands
With plans for a unified command
temporarily shelved by navy opposi
tion, the services agreed to the war
time practice of naming a single
chieftain for each strategic world
area to Increase the efficiency of op
erations and avoid the confusion of.
Pearl Harbor.
Under the setup, the theater com
mander Is responsible directly to the
Joint chiefs of staff in Washington.
Subordinate army and navy officers
remain at the head of their re
spective units. Strategic air forces
not assigned to theater commanders
are at the disposal of the chiefs of
staff.
General of the Army Douglas
MacArthur heads the Far Eastern
theater comprising Japan. Korea,
the Philippines, Mariannas. Bonlns
and Ryukyus. Other area com
manders include:
PACIFIC: Adm. John H. Towers.
ALASKAN: MaJ. Gen. H. A.
Craig.
ATLANTIC FLEET: Adm. Marc
Mitscher.
CARIBBEAN: Lt Gen. Willis D.
Crittenberger.
EUROPE: Gen. Joseph T. Mc
Narney.
FOOD:
Full Tables
After counting the bountiful yields
of 1946 farm production, the depart
ment of agriculture told Americans
that they would eat well again in
1947.
By Intensive tillage of substantial
ly smaller acreage than prevailed in
the '20's, farmers produced recoYd
crops of wheat, corn, rice, potatoes,
soybeans, tobacco and garden vege
tables; near record yields of grapes,
peanuts and oats, and better than
average harvests of sweet apricots,
sugar cane, sugar beets, dry peas,
sorghum and hay.
If Americans will have plentiful
supplies of cereals, vegetables and
fruits, they also are promised a full
table of meat. The department re
ported record numbers of cattle on
feed in grain belt feedlots.
Production Pattern
The department’s final estimate of
1946 farm output suggested the shift
ing pattern of production within the
past decade.
While such old American agricul
tural standbys os wheat, com, pota
toes and tobacco showed appreciable
increases in 1946 over the 1935-’44
average, rye was down to 18.685,000
bushels from 42,356,000, and cot
ton dropped to 8,482,000 bales from
12.553.000.
Because of changing needs, em
phasis was placed on other crops.
To make up for a drop in imports,
rice production was boosted to 71,
520,000 bushels from the 10-year av
erage of 55,257,000; to meet the de
mands for industrial and edible oils,
soybean yields Jumped to 196,725,000
bushels from 103,457,000, and peanut
output soared to 2,075,880,000 pounds
from 1,587,964,000; and as part of
the program to raise nutritional
standards, the harvest of dry peas
increased to 6.926,000 bags from
4.580.000.
SPORT:
Gambling Menace
In the early 1800’s, American
youth held up the statesman as a
tin god; In the late 1800’s, it was
the empire builder, and since the
early 1900’s, it has been the athlete.
Most touching example of the faith
that the average American boy put
in his athletic hero involved the
young kid who clutched at “Shoeless
Joe" Jackson's sleeve when that
great outfielder emerged from ques
tioning over his part in the Black
Sox baseball scandal of 1919. With
tears in his eyes, the kid pleaded:
“Say it isn’t so, Joe. say it isn’t so."
Unfortunately, Joe couldn’t, but
fortunately, had any kid been wait
ing outside Mayor O’Dwyer’s man
sion in New York on the morning
of December 15, Frankie Filchock
and Merle Hapes of the New York
football Giants would have been able
Playing the game on the level.
Frankie Filrhock (with ball)
leads Giant attack against Bears.
to say so. By turning down alleged
bribes from a gambling front, the
two grid stars saved pro football
from disgrace.
Efforts of the gamblers to get the
two Giants to throw the pro cham
pionship game to the Chicago Bears
marked the first known attempt by
the “easy-money” boys to corrupt
pro football and lessen the risk of
their heavy wagering.
INDIA:
Troubles, Troubles
Mother India, long sorrowing for
freedom, could see nothing but
trouble ahead as she planned the
achievement of her independence
after centuries of British domina
tion.
For freedbm seemed to mean
different things to the powerful
political factions within the country:
To the majority Congress party
chiefly embracing the Hindus. In
dependence represented a unified
nation; to the minority Moslem
league, it stood for “Pakistan" or
self-rule of Mohammedan provinces.
While the wily British professed
their desire for a free India, they
looked on apprehensively as Hindus
and Moslems locked horns. Attend
ing the constituent assembly being
held in New Delhi to frame a con
stitution for the new India, the
usually mild and compromising
Hindu Leader Nehru breathed fire:
The Moslem league was reaction
ary and the British may favor “Pak
istan” to divide India, he said, but
the Hindus were determined to solve
their own problems.
TOURIST TRADE:
Booming Again
Total tourist expenditures this
year will exceed the six billion dol
lars of 1940 despite limited produc
tion of automobiles, a study of the
tourist trade by American Road
Builders’ association reveals.
The season just closed saw travel
hungry Americans taking to the
highways. Up to September 30, a
record number of 21,682.782 tourists
had visited the 27 parks and 142
other areas operated by National
Park service.
Mastitis Control
Methods Important
Bactericidal Agents
Favorable Response
By W. J. DRYDEN
Mastitis, a communicable disease,
can be measurably checked by iden
tification of the carrier cow, fol
lowed by proper control and treat
ment
A compound for treating chronic
mastitis recently has been reported
by Utah agricultural experiment
station. It is colloidal silver oxide,
5 per cent, suspended in mineral
oil. This treatment is effective
only against mastitis caused by
streptococci.
In injecting the compound, wash
the udder with a chlorine solution.
Milk the infected quarter dry and
disinfect the end of the teat with
tincture of iodine. Ten cc. of the
compound is injected into the teat
canal, and, by massaging, the liquid
is pressed upward into the milk
cistern and into the entire quarter.
The milk should not be used for hu
man consumption during and for
15 days after treatment.
Other recent compounds proven
satisfactory for various types of
mastitis include tyrothricin, sulfan
ilamide in oil and penicillin.
loQWNO AHEAD
By Louts Wolfs
I NEED CLOTHES] RIP VAN }
MAPE Of THAT WINKLE. S
MATERIAL. YOU'RE A J
J EIGHT./
COTTON WON'T ROT OR MIL
DEW. A NEW COTTON FABRIC
THAT WON'T DISINTEGRATE
AFTER YEARS. OF EXPOSURE HA5
BEEN DEVELOPED BY THE
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
Concrete Water Tank
A concrete livestock watering
tank is watertight, furnishing an am
ple supply of fresh water in readily
accessible troughs. A concrete pave
ment six feet wide around the tank
Is highly desirable to provide a
;lean, mud-free platform for live
stock to stand on.
I__I
That’s your grandfather, son.
He raised a record crop of soy
beans back in 1943.
Slant the Farrowing
Floors to Save Pigs
An ingenious lifesaver for little
pigs—as simple as it is practical—
is the result of an accident in Ken
tucky. The results were so fortunate
that the U.S.D.A. is comme iding the
method widely as a good way to in
crease efficiency in meat production
The new method is to slant the floor
in farrowing houses, as the sow pre
i fers to lie down on a sloping floor.
The mother will select the high side
and save the pigs.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR.
BLACKSMITH and welding chop. Good
equipment and large stock of new Iron.
CHET FLACK - Holyoke. Colo.
MAKE EXTRA MONEY celling beautiful
gifts, novelties to friends. No investment
required. Low prices. Send for catalog.
TORRES COMPANY
> Saint Francis Place. Brooklyn IS. N. Y.
_FARMS AND RANCHES_
FOB SALE—440 a. fine grain and stock
farm. Very reasonable. Write for descrip
tion and pictures.
J. I. LEWIS - - Hastings, Nebr.
FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP.
I 32-v. Windcbarger complete with large
battery, 50 ft. Steel Tower. 32-v. motors.
Charles Brockman. 2021 Vine St., Lincoln.
FOR SALE: New steel wheels, front and
rear for M-M-Z tractor.
HARRY OBRIST Gresham. Nebraska
JUST RECEIVED carlqad of General On*
Row Pull type Corn Picker
General Rotary Hoes. 2, 3 and 4 row*.
4 #80 Let* Mills.
1 #223 Letz Mill
1 Papec E'.nsilage Cutter and Hay Chopper
t 114 John Deere Roughage Mill
BARKER IMPLEMENT and MOTOR CO.
Lenos * Iowa
FARMS AND RANCHES_
FOR SALE — 1.040-acre Improved ranch
farm north of New Underwood. S. D.. In
Meade County. On Elk Creek. 160 acres
broke, excellent creek bottom farm, hay,
and pasture land. Creek runs year around,
good grass and wonderful crops. A per
fect farm-ranch combination and a real
apportunity. MISCHKE HEREFORD
RANCH. CROFTON. NEBRASKA.
HELP WANTED—MEN_
LABORERS WANTED
To help process livestock during winter
months. Minimum day work rate 86 cents
per hour. Additional 5 cents per hour for
night work. Time and one-half for over
time. Applicants must be over 18 years
of age.
Write or Apply
Employment Office
THE CUDAHY PACKING COMPANY
33rd "O" Street
Omaha. Nebraska
' -——-y T
Mechanics—Experienced
Permanent Employment
GOOD SALARY
Nebraska’s newest, most modern equipped
Dodge-Plymouth Garage.
Starting date agreeable. All applications
confidential.
Apply In person or write to
Nick Neff Tire and Motor Co.
Phone 171, Fremont, Neb.
_____ LIVESTOCK_
HEREFORD BOARS. GILTS
Registered. Blocky. easy feeding kind.
O. F. Hawley A Sew. Dakota City. Nebr.
_MISCELLANEOUS_
CEDAR FENCE POSTS
Genuine No. I western red cedar fence
posts, carload lots, approximately 2.400.
Write for exact delivered prices.
CHISHOLM CEDAR CO.
Bex 41S - Sandpolnt, Idaho.
FOR SALE—Three <31 PT 23 s. excellent
condition, good paint job. $1,200 each, all
for $3,500. New Bubble Canopies. $250 ad
ditional for each plane, easy terms. Lin
coin Aviation Corporation. Lllfcoln. Nebr.
LUMBER for sale, Ponderosa and Idaho
White Pine. Mill run. Mostly green stock
S77 rough, $88 finished, f.o.b. mill. Wire or
phone collect. CHISHOLM RETAIL LUM
HER CO.. Bonners Ferry, Idaho.
FOR SALE—Piper Coupe 75 h.p. Continen
al, 40 hre. since major, hand rub pain:
ob. licensed for night flying. $2,000. with
’-way R.C.A. radio, bat., generator, $2,209
Macoln Aviation Corp., Lincoln, Nebr.
HERRICK cleaner, large slw, portable.
loll-Over scrapers, tractor heavy duty
3 and 4 ft. wide.
MILLER HASSELBALCH A CO.
215 N. 12th St. .... Omaha
_ PERSONAL__
PLATE USERS! Give your mouth a treat!
"CAMCO" Dental Plate Reliner restores
original comfortab’e fit. Odorless. Taste
less. Not an adhesive. Will not dissolve In
Mouth Easv to apnlv. $2.00 postpaid
2athay American Co., San Francisco 11, Chi.
__SEEDS, PLANTS. ETC._
CERTIFIED hybrid seed corn $4.00 to
19.00 bushel. 36 years' experience produci
ng high yielding seed corn. Dried and
troceesed In largest seed corn plant tn
be world. Send for catalogue.
IELLY SEED CO - - Peoria. HI.
VNU—U 01-47
What shall 1 buy tor hini this
Christmas? If he's a cigarette
smoker, select a carton of 200
mild, choice cigarettes. The
brand? Give him a cigarette with
long, popular acceptance—Camels
They’re sure to please. And foi
the man who smokes a pipe, givt
Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco
he world’s largest-selling pipe
lobacco. Special holiday gift wrap
pings make both Camels am
Prince Albert particularly desir
able choices. Camels are con
veniently packed—ten packages o
flavorful, mellow cigarettes to a
carton . . . Prince Albert is hand
somely wrapped in one pounc1
moisture-proof containers. All of
the packages include space for a
holiday message. Your neares’
dealer is featuring these choice
Christmas gifts now.—Adv.
BATTERY TROUBLE ENDED
$1.50 YOUR FIRST and LAST COST
ADDED TO ANY BATTERY IN 5
MINUTES WITHOUT REMOVING
BATTERY FROM CAR i
Start your car as often as you wish
without fear of battery trouble.
Play radio as long as you care to—
Your battary will not fail.
Batteries of any make used for
lighting, radio, boats, vehicles, etc.,
will operate 3 times longer if serv
iced wUb”EVER-CHARGE."
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
j OR MONEY BACK
Mail Check or Money Order
DONOHO COAL CO.
91T South 39th St., Omaha 5, Nebr.
AGENTS WANTED
Soiled Clothes
The sooner soiled clothes an
washed, the less they have to b>
rubbed; nothing is harder on fab
rics than Ingrained dirt and persp;
ration.
Alaskan Weather
Although Alaska is usually thougi
to be a cold country, the capital cil
of Juneau had only 53 days of zer
weather In 33 years. The temper
ture on the coldest of these da;
was 15 degres below zero.
Ironing Burden
Ironing burdens are considerab
lightened by a liquid combination «
starch and bluing which does awa
with the need to mix and boil starch
Almanacs Long-Lived in
U. S.; One in 250th Year
Among the oldest publications in
the United States are the local al
manacs the contents of which ap
peal chiefly to farmers, says Col
lier’s.
For example, Gruber’s Hagers
town Almanac is now in its 149th
year, the Old Farmer’s Almanac
in its 154th, Daboll’s New England
Almanac in its 174th and Foul
sham’s Almanack in its 250th
year.
Sublimsi io dhdkuJbuA
A slightly tipsy gentleman
walked into the telegraph office,
took a pencil, spent three or four
minutes in deep thought, and
wrote this message to a friend
in St. Louis:
“Tra la, tra la, tra la, tra la.”
He signed it and presented it to
the lady behind the counter.
After checking it, she said:
“That will be 64 cents.”
The gentleman paid her and
she said: “You used only eight
words.”
“What would you suggest add
ing?” he finally asked.
“Well, how about just adding
‘tra la,’ ” she said.
“No,” he said firmly, “that
would just make it sound silly.”
The Prize-Winning
Crocheted Runner
Pattern No. 5308
'T'HIS exquisite crocheted run
ner was made in Louisville,
Kentucky, and won the prize in a
nation-wide crochet contest. It’s
20 by 9 inches and can be used as
a dining table runner, buffet run
ner or on a bedroom dresser.
* * •
To obtain complete crocheting instruc
tions for the Prize Winning Runner (Pat
tern No. 5308) send 20 cents in coin, your
name, address and the pattern number.
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK
530 South Wells St. Chicago 7, 111.
Enclose 20 cents for pattern.
No_
Name__—
Add ress
This Home-Mixed
CoughSdief is
Truly Surprising
So Easy. No Cooking. Big Saving.
You may not know it, but, in your
own kitchen, you can easily prepare
a really surprising relief for coughs
due to colds. It’s old-fashioned—your
mother probably used it—but for real
results it’s hard to beat.
First, make a syrup by stirring 2
cups granulated sugar and one cup
of water a few moments, until dis
solved. No cooking needed. It’s no
trouble. Or you can use corn syrup or
liquid honey, instead of sugar syrup.
Then get 2^4 ounces of Pinex from
any druggist. This is a special com
pound of proven ingredients, in con
centrated form, well known for
quick action in throat and bronchial
irritations.
Put the Pinex Into a pint bottle,
and fill up with your syrup. Thus you
make a full pint of splendid cough
syrup, and you get about four times
as much for your money. It never
spoils. Children love Its pleasant taste.
And for quick relief, it’s a wonder.
It loosens the phlegm, soothes the Irri
tated membranes, eases the soreness,
makes breathing easy, and lets you
get restful sleep. Just try It. and If not
pleased, your money will be refunded.
for firmer grip when others
slip ask for SOLES
as well as
5 Heels by
O'Sullivan