The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 11, 1947, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE FRONTIER
O'Neill, Nebraska
CARROLL W. STEWART
Editor and Publfcher
Entered the Postoffice at O'Neill,
Holt County, Nebraska, as sec
ond-das'! marl 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.
WSCS Meets —
i.xiViAiN — The Inman WSCS
met last Thursday afternoon in
the country home of Mrs. Anna
M. Clark for a regular meeting.
Hostesess were Mrs. R. E. Moore,
Mrs. Harry Thom en, Mrs. Jen
nie Crosser and Mis. Justin
Buttenield.
Ralph Moore sharpened scis
sors for the benefit of the‘‘makt
money" committee of the WSCS.
Grays Honored —
INMAN — The Adult Fellow
ship of the Inman Methodist
church entertained at a party
at the church parlors last Thurs
day night honoring Supt. and
Mrs. R. L. Gray.
The evening was spent socially .
and the Grays were presented a !
gift. Refreshments were served.
Coloradoans Arrive—
'■ii^uH1 HI) — Relatives here
were surprised Monday morning
by n visa bv Wernes Eisert ana
family, of Scottsbluff, and Mr.
Cannon and family, of Sterling,
Colo. They are visiting relatives
a t Creighton, Middlehraneh,
Minneola and Kedbird.
Mis. E. M. Bauman and Mrs.
Rena Johnson spent Sunday vis
iting in Emmet at the home of
their sister and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Potts.
For a Good Time
VISIT THE
OLD PLANTATION
CLUB
Elgin Nebr.
• Fin* Food
• Dancing
• Entertainment
Members and their guests
are invited to visit the Old
Plantation Club.
REDBIRD NEWS
Pat Osborn autoed to Lynch
on bui'.iess Monday.
Edw ud Carson, one of the
board of directors of the Farm
ers Ui ion, attended the meeting
at Lynch Monday.
Jusii atewa i, of Lynch, on
September 1 started to carry tire
: Lynch-Star mail for Don Stew
j uie regular mail carrier.
Edward Krugman, sr., of Min
neola. called at Redbird Mon
day- _
| John Hull went to Ed Car
jon’s Monday to help with the
farm work.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ressel, of
nbr s, visited with the
latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Will Hartland's, on Sunday.
Henry Hull, of near Verdel,
visited at Mike Hull’s Monday
joe Madura, o f Scottville,
drove to Lynch Tuesday on bus
j
George Kruse and Elmer
Luedtke went to Spencer Wed
nesday after a truckload of ce
ment tile.
.-''hcllmever autoed to
Crofton Wednesday to visit his
son and family, Mr. Ernest
j, -(-'llmevor.
Harry Truax returned from
Omaha Wednesday where he
had been visiting relatives since
i ■ rl if
Mrs. Will Hattland is visiting
her daughter, Mrs. Alice Whet
| ham. ol Niobrara, this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kaasa, of
Boyd county, visited at Pete
••s •"■irtny evening.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart, of
Wagner, S. D.. came last Thu s
day for a visit with her parent:
Mr and Mrs. Art Bessert. Mr.
Stewart returned home Sunday
'' '’rs. Stewart iemained for
a week’s visit.
Will Podany and family au
toed to Lynch Saturday to at
tend the Chambers-Lynch ball
Mrs. Mike Hull vi.“'ted Mrs.
Pete More Saturday.
Harvey Krugman ai d family,
of Opportunity, visited with rel
atives at Redbird Sunday after
noon.
T \ buthnot took his aunt,
*•— TTans"n to h°r home
In Lusk, Wyo., on Friday.
O’NEILL
AUTO
REBUILDERS
Get-Acquainted
AUTOMOBILE
PAINT JOB
Labor S40
Malarial S b
Save 15% on
Fender Straightening
Wreck Rebuilding
UNDQUIST & SON
5 mk. No. th of
Bus Depot
J LIBRARY CHATTER
By Mi s Bernadette Brennan
Gratis i Township Librarian
The Newberry medal, award
ed to the author of the most
Histinguished contribution to
American literature for children
during the past year was won
by Carolyn S. Bailey for her
‘ Miss Hickory.” Thi Caldicott
medal, a similar one that goes
to children’s book illustrators,
was given Leona: d Weisgard for
his art woik in “Little Island.”
These were chosen from over
1.000 books published for chil
dren during the past year.
“Twenty-One Balloons” and
; “Pancake-Paris” won two of the
three first prizes awarded at the
spring book festival sponcored
by the New York Herald Tri
bune. The child study associa
tion gave honorable mention
awards to “Old Con and Pat
ri< k” and “Bright April.” Illus
trations f.om “Poji,” “Animal
Ir n,” “Bright April” and “Miss
Pu'nnyfeather and the Pooka”
are to be found among those
chosen to make-up “A Treasury
of American Book Illustration."
The books mentioned for
these honors are all to be found
along with the Junior Literary
Guild books (published in the
past 18 months) in our junior
section.
The magazines most wanted
by and for children are always
here. “Boy’s Life.” "Popular Me
chanics,” “True Comics,” “Chil
dren’s Activities,” “Child Life,”
and “Wee Wisdom.”
GIRL SCOUT NEWS
By Patricia Mullen
The Irish Lassies Girl Scout
troops I and IT had a meeting
at Mrs. Merle Hickey’s Sunday
evenin®. The new patrol lead
ers appointed were: Patrol I.
Marily i Mangan; pat ol II, Sara
Lou M >ss; patrol III Mary Kath
erine Turner; scribe, Patricia
Mullen.
We discussed plans for our
party in September and appoint
ed the following girls hostesses:
Dorothy Donohue. Patricia Mul
len, Marilyn Mangan, Mary
Murphy and Judy Martin.
We had a cook-out in the
back yard after patrol III enter- j
tained us with a play and pulled '
some tricks on the others.
Marilyn Lindburg and Sharon
Hancock are two new Scouts.
Later in the evening we went
to the theater.
Recent Bride Honoree —
INMAN — Mis. Robert Burg
strum was guest-of-honor at a
post-nuptial shower at the home
of her aunt, Miss Mildred Keyes,
on September 3. About 60 guests
weie present. The evening was
spent informally and Mrs. Burg
strum showed pictures of he.
wedding which took place August
24 in Omaha.
She recieved many gifts to
take to her new home. Refresh
ments of ice cream, light and
dark cake were served.
to«e system in RCA Victor history.
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0wuL
i
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. . . TALK
By
ROMAINE
SAUNDERS
LINCOLN — A three-cor
nered row is on again over at
the penitentiary. The attor
ney general, tne board of con
trol and the warden of the
pen have exchanged some caus
t i c charges and “explana
tions.” Two of the three mem
bers of the boaid of control
with the warden show no dis
position to either investigate
or remedy evils charged by
the attorney general.
Whether his charges are
true or imaginary Nebraska
citizens can t approve of the
penitentiary officals assum
ing a dictorial and arrogant
altitude in matters of this
kind. The new warden is
an Army man and maybe
military ways don't work so
well with a group of con
victs, who seem to get the
idea now that they as wards
of the stale should be cod
dled, cultured and entertain
ed. It is staled the guards
support the warden. Nat
urally — he gives them
their job.
• * •
The opening day of the state
fair drew an old time crowd
that milled around in the heat
and dirt and sweat. Succeed
ing days brought out fewer
excitement hunters. As fairs
go, this year's show was about
up to par with those of pre
vious years. Doing a state
fair is a hot, tiresome jot and
among the 70 thousand mob
you don’t know a soul. You
can go down to Chambers
and see an interesting exhibi
tion and have the added plea
sure of visiting with friends
and neighbors you have known
all your life. But it presents
in contrast what “we the peo
ple” are interested in. In a
city of a hundred thousand
only about a thousand showed
up on the statehouse steps to
witness the unveiling of the
Bryan statue.
I encounter occasionally
an old iipier who for ^reasons
I have not asked is depen
dent on that thing they call
assistance and lives in small
rented quarters. I saw one
the other day hunting a spot
as he had to get out to
make room for students or a
GI. Others are having to
vacate and find shelter
where they can. Coming to
the end of the trail pennl'ess
and friendless is the topnot
ch of hard luck, and nu ybe
this fast-moving generj tion
feels the old age assistance
should be replaced with
chloroform.
• * •
Four boys from Abyssinia
and black as midnight are in
j Lincoln to take on some Amer
i ican culture as interpreted at
! Union college, one of the capi
tol city’s many institutions.
One of the four from East Af
rica has mastered four lan
guages. May be. like the
swamp Yankee, he has come
to Nebraska to learr “how to
talk” at least one o" his four
languages.
• • •
It is reported from the
statehouse that the general
fund was enriched during
August by 341 thousand dol
lars in cigaret tax and 249
thousand dollars in liquor tax.
Such a monthly rakeoff in
favor of the tax collector will
insure Nebraska patriots both
their firebrand and fire water
as a matter of public policy.
• • *
Wage earners and salaried
professionals are getting theirs,
while those with small fixed
incomes that can not be in
creased are getting it in the
neck
LAST
DANCE
of the
SEASON!
at
NEBRASKA’S
HIDDEN
PARADISE
SUNDAY
September 14
Music by
PAT BOFFMAN
and His Orchestra
If you live on a star mail
route 25 miles from a post
office you have better mail
delivery than those dwelling
elcng a swank boulevard in
the city. The gray-clad mail
carrier of the concrete streets
observes the numerous annual
holidays that have found a
place in the calendar, while
his counterpart out in the open
spaces traveling the star routes
never lets up for a holiday.
And in addition to the holi
days, most city workers get
two weeks "vacation with
pay."
• • *
President Green of the AFL
lets it be understood that or
ganized labor will not fight
back with strikes but will
show its resentment of labor
laws in the 1948 election. If
organized labor wishes to
match its strength against the
whole country at the polls it
may be accomodated.
• * *
Where did those scientists
who have been telling us that
the sun was losing its heat
and we were heading into an
ice age get their information?
• • •
The gray-haired partisans of
the “Boy Orator of the Platte”
will continue to be partisans;
let them cherish the fond de
lusions. Those of this later
generation who pass along K
street from 16th to 14th will
take a squint at that magni
ficent figure dominating the
approach to the state house
and ask, “Who was that guy?”
* * *
The role of his illustrious
sire as the country’s Santa
Claus may be the inspiration
back of Elliot Roosevelt’s
Christmas tree growing ven
ture.
FREE
GLASS
If you have COMPRE
HENSIVE INSURANCE
we will install your glass
free. See us for further
details.
Skalowsky Glass Co.
Phone 186
Some Lincoln tailo. Lag shops
have been given cc atracts to
rip the black-and-w site bind
ing braid from thousands of j
soldiers’ caps and rebind with
black braid. As war is a black
business the bf t of white on
the caps is bein j removed. The
contract price seems to war
rant subletting the ripping for
five cents a cap. Thus you
you can sit in the basement
and make $6 a day.
• • •
A Lockhead P-80R jet-pro
pelled plane recently cut down j
the air travel record across I
country to 623.8 miles per
hour. We may know what
the mileage record means if
we don’t know what P-80R
stands for.
• • *
American scientists uncover
ed the mystery and brouf.it
into service the atomic for es
and the cry of Russians or
the inventors t o relinqu ish
control doesn’t make sense.
1
I
BRING OUT
THE BEST!
Is your radio reception and
tone as clear as it should
be? If not bring it here
for expeit repair service. . .
and our prices are right.
GILLESPIE’S
“Home Appliance
Headquarters”
“Home On the Range” has
assumed the status of a clas
sic among American songs. The
ouffalo don’t roam, the deer
and antelope don’t play tp
any extent down in Kansas,
but that state has adopted
this little ballad as the state
song. It was written back in
the 1870s by a Kansas coun
try doctor. Whatever his ac
complishments may have been
in medicine, if any, he left
as a musical heritage the most
popular nothing in song since
Joseph Rodman Drake “tore
the azure robe of night and
set the stars of glory there.”
Try FRONTIER want ads.
EMMET HAY CO.
Guy Cole
Emmet, Neb.
Trie Fawier-'Eancher Owned
CO-OP
Senris the Farmer
and Rancher Best
Get a
CO-OP
LAND BANK LOAN ,
for greater SAFETY of
farm or ranch ownership!
SEE YOUR
NATIONAL |
FARM LOAN j
ASSOCIATION I
i
Mtmbtr Federal Land Bank Syitem j
I
Boyd — Holt — Wheeler J
Counties
LYLE P. DIERKS, Sec.-Treas.i
— O'Neill —
Hail
Bonds
Plate Glass
Livestock «
REAL ESTATE. LOANS. FA' 1M SERVICE. RENTALS
Automobile O'Neill —Phone 106 Farm Property
Wind & Tornado. Trucks & Vracior, Personal Property
Fire
Theft
Rents
Liability
R. H. SHRINER
GENERAL INSURANCE
HOMEGUARD PAYS FOR ITSELF
FUEL BILLS
UP TO
IN FUEL SAVINGS ALONE
Homeguard Will Pay For Itself In 3 to 5 Yearsl
V
You’ll b« surprised in how few years a Homeguard in«nlirirti|
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summer
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lessens upkeep
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