The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 20, 1947, Page TWO, Image 2

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    The Frontier
O'Neill, Nebraska_
CARROLL W. STEWART
Editor and Publisher
Entered the Postoffice at O’Neill,
Holt County, Nebraska, as sec
ond-class mail matter under the
Act of March 3, 1879. This news
paper is a member of the Nebras
ka Press Association and the Na
tional Editorial Association.
___ - *- —-- ■
Established in 1880
Published Each Thursday
Terms of Subscription:
to IT -It and adjoining counties.
12 p<-i year; elsewhere, $2 50 per
rear
Mrs. Foreman’s Mother
Expires in Arkansas
EMMET — Mrs. Frank Fore
man was called to Dutch Mills,
Ark., last Thursday upon receipt
of news of the death of her moth
er, M s. James Bailey.
Victory Club Convenes —
EMMET — The Victory card
club met at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. John Cleary Sunday with
progressive pitch being played.
High score went to Mr. and Mrs.
George Pongratz and low to Mrs.
G D. Janzing and George Ran
dall. |
A lunch was served late in the
evening.
EMMET NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Grothe
and family were Sunday dinner
guests at the Paul Roth home in
Atkinson.
Mrs. Mary Lewis returned Mon
day from a six week’s trip spent
in California, where she visited
relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Winkler
of Venus, and Rav Winkler, of
North Platte, were Sunday dinner
guests at the Joe Winkler home.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kramer
and daughter were Sunday guests
at the George Pongratz home.
Cleo Dell Jones, of Linclon,
and Velma Jones, of Clearwater,
spent the weekend visiting at the
Glenn Burge home.
Mr. and Mrs. William Schmohr,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Beckwith and
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lorenz were
guests at the George Hartford
home Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Burge moved
Money to Loan
ON
AUTOMOBILES
TRUCKS
TRACTORS
EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
Central Finance Co.
C. E. Jone*. Manager
| O'NEILL i NEBRASKA
into their home in O’Neill last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Peacock
and Kenny visited at the Homer
Lowery home in O’Neill Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Eli McConnell
and family, of Atkinson, and Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Saunto and Ann,
of O'Neill, were Sunday guests at
the Alex McConnell home.
Mrs. Henery Bonze and girls
visited at the Joe Winkler home
Sunday afternoon.
Mr and Mrs. Lloyd Johnson
and family of O’Neill were Sun
day guests at the William Grothe
sr., home.
(Crowded out lcst issue.)
Walter Schmohr returned home
on Thursday after spending sev
eral weeks visiting relatives at
DeWitt.
Jerrold Dusatho was a Sunday
dinner guest at the Henry Benze
home. . _ „ ,
Fred Garwin and Jewell Black
more w. re guests Sunday at the
Guy Beckwith home.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Burge have
put chased the Morton home in
O’Neill where they expect to
make their future nome.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Burge and
son, Gary, returned from Omaha
after visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Benjamin Backmann.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Weichman, of
Stuart, were Sunday guests at
the Joe Winkler home.
Mrs. Mary Buhmann, of Mc
Cook, arrived Monday to visit at
the Robert Fox home.
Mrs. George Hollopeter, of In
diana, arrived Thursday to visit
her father, D. H. Allen, who is a
patient at the Stuart hospital, and
her mother, Mrs. D. H. Allen and
aunt, Mrs. Agnes Gaffney.
Henry Patterson spent Tuesday
in Lincoln on business and on his
return home stopped at Omaha
to visit his mother, Mrs. Osborne
Patterson, for several days.
Misses Lottie and Clara Babl
visited Mrs. Henry Benze Satur
day afternoon.
PAGE NEWS
Esmond Weber drove to Den
ver, Colo., Saturday, taking his
mother. Mrs. A. O. Weber, and
niece, Judith Trowbridge, to stay
with his daughter at their home
there while his wife came here to
stay until after their sale which,
was held Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weir and
daughters, of Fullerton, visited
her mother, Mrs. Dora Townsend
Sunday.
To Serve Sale Lunch —
PAGE—The Get-to-gether club
met with Mrs. Robert Harvey Fri
day afternoon with 16 members
present. Mrs. Calvin Harvey was
j a guest. Valentine gifts were ex
changed. Members of the cluh
: are serving the lunch at the Web
j er sale this week.
Nissens to Return —
PAGE—Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Nis
sen, who have been living at Os
mond for sometime, have bought
the Earl Hurst home and expect
to make their home here again
when the Hursts move to Burwell
after school closes.
.
BUND VET RAISES CHICKENS
Operating a sizable chicken
farm near Waxahachie, Tex.,
although blind, World War II
veteran Otis L. White is shown
(above) stapling a new fence
into place. Young Jimmy
White, who has complete confi
ence in his pop. assists by hold
ing his cane. White had 200
broilers reatjy for market when
this photo was taken.
jPRAIRIELAND j
} X SAUNDERS
T' A I ATKINSON
• • • ^AV Route 5
LINCOLN—Lloyd Hammond,
sentenced in 1932 at O’Neill to
serve 25 years imprisonment
upon conviction of being impli
cated in the holdup and death
of Fred J. Sexsmith, was be
fore the pardon board again last
week.
Some new things in prison
policy were disclosed when he
told the board that he had at
one time'been assigned to serve
as “houseboy” in the Lincoln
homes of the three former
members of the board of con
trol and as such “ironed and
cleaned up around the house.
This went on for “eight or nine
months” until he was suspected
of befrig involved in liquor
deals.
It is said that petitions pro
testing Hammond’s release car
ry 398 signatures, of which 152
are O’Neill citizens.
* * *
Looking in upon the Unicam
eral in session you may be re
minded of the high school de
bating society and feel that a
distinct service would be ren
dered the state if appropria
tions were made and adjourn
ment sinedie. __
... •
Cast adrift in an unfriendly
world the children of Father
Abraham are humanity’s sorri
est and at once its hardiest
group. In the face of a hostile
people of Earth, the Jew has
acquired more wealth than all
others and made some of the
greatest contributions to scien
ce, culture and literature.
The accident of race and col
or—how men hug their petty
prejudices. Unhappy Palestine,
the ancestral hom° of the He
brew, given to them by the
Creator of all lands more than
3.500 years back in the misty
past.
When mocking priest and
frenzied rabble stood before
Pilate and cried out, “His blood
be upon us autl upon our child
ren!” the shadow was cast
across the centuries for the
Jew, while his blood-brother
from the Arabian desert has fed
on goats and grown great.
Human emotions are univer
sal, fundamental, and out of
the harshness of the ages there
focuses on the Jew his hardest
hour and yet within him throbs
the universal heartbeat. Per
haos Shylock, in Shakespeare’s
“Merchant of Venice,” has best
i ' !
1 Royal Theater NEBRASKA
ION THE SCREEN ...
“IH County Fair”
— and Other Movies !
ON THE STAGE ...
“Smiling Jess Blodgett”
— The Master Magician
• PHIZES TO THE LUCKY TICKET HOLDERS.
• TICKETS GIVEN AT ENTRANCE DOOR.
BRING THE FAMILY TO OUR BIG FREE SHOW !
Shelhamer Oil & Equipment Co.
Your International Harvester Dealer
setforth the emotions of us all:
“I am a Jew. Hath not a Jew
eyes? Hath not a Jew hands,
organs, dimensions, senses, af- |
feetions, passions—fed with the
same food, hurt with the same j
weapons, subject to the same
diseases, healed by the same j
means, warmed and cooled by
the same winter and summer j
as a Christian is? If you prick
us do we not bleed? If you
tickle us do we not laugh, if j
you poison ns do we not die?
And if you wrong us shall we
not revenge?”
* * *
The OPA may be gasping
its last but is not overlooking
anything. On January 7 Gov. j
| Peterson took over the state
! executive mansion on the cor
i ner of Fifteenth and H as the
governor’s official .,oUsehold. j
A day last week Mr. Peterson
| received this from the OPA:
We have information that
j on January 22 you moved to
; 1445 H street, Linclon, Neb.
Are you paying rent for this ^
unit? If so, did you read your
1 landlord's copy of the offi- )
cial OPA regestration? Did
you signa change of ten
ancy form? What is your
landlord's name and ad
dress?
The governor’s reply has not
been made public.
• • *
James M. Jones has arrived
from Pennsylvania to take over
the management of the pen
itentiary, with plans which
seem to indicate a coddling
center for the lawless in place
of an institution where crimin
als face the inexorable penalty
for a life of crime.
When John Hopkins, o f
Eagle Creek, went to Lancaster
as warden and took two-fisted
gents like Tom Coyne along to
help him do the job desparados
had a wholesome fear of the
Nebraska penitentiary.
• • •
You get through the third
door and you are in the pre
sence of his excellency the
governor, if the smiling ladv
at the desk doesn’t graciously
dismiss vou with a sweet. “Sor
ry, th governor is busy. Can
vou call at 4 o’clock,” At which
hour you are riding the trail
for home.
• • "
The American Medical asso
ciation admits the numerous
remedies for a cold are “ineffec
tive.” Laymen long ago dis
covered that.
INMAN NEWS
•
Miss Linda Mel Smith, of Page,
spent Thursday visiting her aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Myrle
Caster.
Mrs. Robert Taylor returned to
her home at Beatrice Tuesday af
ter spending several weeks visit
ing her pafents, Mr. and Mrs. G.
Ezra Moor.
Mrs. Howard Miller returned to
her home at Ewing Friday after
spending several days with her
mother, Mrs. Etta Trowbridge, in
the Anna Smith home.
John Cary, of Henderson, la., I
came Thursday to visit his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Cary.
Miss Carolyn Watson went to
Bassett Friday to spend the week
pnd with Marilyn McClurg in the
Warren McClurg home.
The Misses Vivian and Ruth
Stevens, of Norfolk, spent the
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Stevens.
Robert Hutton, of Omaha, spent
the weekend here visiting his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Hutton.
Eunicb Chudomelka spent the
weekend in the Henry Kloppen
borg home near Emmet.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Baier and
family, of Wayne, are visiting in
the Roy Gannon home. Mrs.
Baier and Mrs. Gannon are sis
ters.
Marjorie Mossman, of Lincoln,
came Saturday to spend the
weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Mossman.
A. N. Butler left Sunday for
Independence, Mo., where he will
visit his daughter, Mrs. Harold
Brower, and family, and other
relatives.
Miss Bea Gallagher returned
Wednesday from O’Neill and
Sheldon, la., where she had been
visiting Mrs. Neil Chase and oth
er relatives.
Mrs. Merlin Luben and son,
Gary, of Clearwater, spent the
weekend visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Fraka.
Eugene and James Harte, who
are students at Norfolk junior col
lege in Norfolk, spent the week
end in the Leo Harte home.
Mrs. Mayme Harte left Satur
' day for Sheldon, la., where she
I will visit her sister, Mrs. Neal
f Chase.
Mrs. Robert Stevens and Nor
bert Clark, went to Burwell Fri
day to atend the wedding of
i Kieth DeLashmutt, son of Mrs.
• Arthur Clark.
t
Buy Ranch —
PAGE—Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Hurst have bought an irrigated
combination ranch and farm six
miles southeast of Burwell and
will move there this Spring after
the close of the school year.
Mr. Hurst has been the superin
tendent here for four years. He
will retire after teaching for 16
years.
Begin Quilt —
PAGE — The Chatter and Sew
club met with Mrs. Alton Brad
dock Friday afternoon with 11
members present. They began |
piecing a quilt which, when com
pleted, will be given to some chil
drens’ home or an institution.
George Hammond, a student at i
Creighton university, spent the!
weekend here with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Hammond.
Mis. Gorge Hammond and son,
Michael, are on an extended visit
here.
ROYAL
THEATRE
O'NEILL
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
FEBR. 21-22
Big Double Bill
DOCTOR against DOCTOR!
Warner Baxter in
Just Before Dawn
A Crime Doctor Picture
with Addle Robeits, Martin
Kosleck, and Mona Barrie.
Wild Bill Elliott as Red Ryd
er in
Colorado Pioneers
with Bobby Blake, Alice
Fleming and Roy Barcroft.
Adm. 38c, plus tax 8c, Tot.
46c; Children 10c. plus tax
, 2c, Tot. 12c; Matinee Satur
day 2:30.
SUN., MON. & TUES.
FEBR. 23-24-25
Katherine Hepburn and
Robert Taylor in
Undercurrent
Adm. 42c, plus lax 8c, Total
50: Matinee Sunday 2:30,
Adm. 38c. plus tax 8c. Tot.
46c: Children 10c, plus tax
2c. Total 12c.
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
FEBR. 26-27
Gail Russell, Claire Trevor,
Ann Dvorak, and Adolphe
Menjou in
The Bachelor’s
Daughters
Adm. 38c, plus tax 8c, Total
46c: Children 10c, plus tax
j 2c. Tot. 12c.
I1-*
LUOK (JUT r UK
SCARLET FEVER
Scarlet fever, a contagious dis
ease, is most common among
children less than 10-years-old.
But older children and adults
may also “catch it.” No one
should be needlessly exposed to
this disease which may have very
serious and dangerous complica
tions. These hints were passed
on this week by Dr. W. S. Petty,
recently reappointed director of
the Nebraska department of
health.
Scarlet fever is caused by
germs belonging to the strepto
coccus family. These germs which
cause scarlet fever are of several
different types. The type we see
most often is the one which pro
auces a origin iea ra&u. wi y^^
pie do have scarlet fever without
having the rash. This is because
they happen to be immune to the
toxin which proudces the rash^
However, scarlet fever without
the rash is just as contagious as
the other form. It can even be
more easily spread because it is
not recognized.
‘‘If someone in your family has
a sore throat or an acute cold fol
lowing exposure to scarlet fever,
call your doctor. It may be scar
let fever even though the ordin
ary signs do not appear,” Dr.
Petty says.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Weier
| drove to Sioux City Sunday to
1 visit friends.
{ Try FRONTIER want ads!
PERRIGO f
OPTICAL COMPANY II
♦♦
SERVES YOU AGAIN !
OUR ASSOCIATE |
DR. A. H. PENROD, O. D. H
♦♦
OPTOMETRIST «
♦ ♦
♦ ♦
♦♦
. . . will again make his regular
visit to your commmunity.
HE WILL BE IN — 1
O’NEILL at the GOLDEN HOTEL H
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24 f
\TKINSON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 |
TnniTWTTnm.
mmrnw
Clever Purse Styles
Plasiic-like alligator, calf or
morocco grains.
1.98 - 3.25
(Plus tax)
I
Colorful Corsages
Gardenias or field-flowers in \
soft, pastel hues.
29c i 35c I
Boldly
Flowered Scarf
Sheer Rayon-Crepe !
Bright four - color combin
tions. Rolled edges: large
27-inch square.
1.59
^ ■.. I
I
Exquisite
Handkerchiefs
Embroidered Designs !
Imported from Switzerland.
Whi‘e cotton voile or rich
spun rayon.
25c - 49c
i
Closeout on Toys
____ _. _ _~ *
Coaster Wagons £,lbbcr ,T>es S r\r
8 Steel Wheel H M^
10.00 Value—CLOSEOUT
Others Now Below Cost! ^ OCT *
Formerly 6.95 /Ml
CLOSEOUT ...
_____ _
Do!l Beds ^Vaiue 1 CA
CLOSEOUT . _
-----1 I
Kiltj Cars ._ 50c
! i£Z.l u 7 95
NOW.. J *
I Doll Carriages Reduced to Sell! ty no
{ ° Formerly 5.00 / • u
NOW.......**
! ~~~
; BEN F P: A N E !
; A. E. BOWEN, Owner O’NEILL