-CHUTKHIS METHODIST (O'Nellll R««. Lloyd W. MuOU, pastor Church school, 1:55 s. m ; Lor « Bredemeier, general super IMSsi Ir it. Worship, 11 a. m., "The Bibl» Conception of Ood.” Intermediate Fellowship, 6 p Touth Fellowship, 7:30 p. m. Choir practice, Thursday, 7:3( p. m. Young Adult Fellowship, Jam «ary 27, 8 p. m, Fellowshij: eoom, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crook, hosts. HOLINESS CHURCH (O'NsUl) Bev. M. H. Grosenbach, pastor Sunday, January 25: Sunday •chool, 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. Recorded music over the public address system at 7 p. m. Service starts at 7:30 p. m. Watch for dates for our com ing revival meetings. Rev. A. W. Marts, former American Sun day - school missionary on this district, is to be the evange’ist. You will want to hear him again. The public is invited to attend any or all of our services. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN (O'Neill) Sunday-school, 10 a. m., John Harbottle, superintendent. Worship, 11 a. m., Rev. Wa:d Smith in charge. Junior Westminster Fellow ship, 6 p. m., Miss Eunice Schwisow, sponsor. Senior Westminster Fellow shin. 7 n. m., Mr. and Mrs. Kalph Rickly, sponsors. Circle I meets today (Thu s dav) with Mrs. C. E. Lundgren, and Circle n meets with Mrs. J. D. Osenbaugh. METHODIST (Inman) Rev. E. T. Baldwin, pastor Church school, 10 a. m-, Har Tev Tompkins, superintendent. Worship, 11 a. m. MYF, 7 p. m. CENTER UNION (O'Neill) I Rev. M. H. Grosenbach, pastor ■ ^ Sunday, January 25: Rev. Ear) . Dix, returned missionary fiom Africa, will be with us lor the i 10 a. m. service and also for the I service at 8 p. m. ! Sunday school at the regular time, 11 a- m., Austin Searls, su perintendent. i We welcome you to these spe cial missionary services. ASSEMBLY OF GOD (OHaill) Rev. J. W. Clapper, pastor Sunday-school, 10 a. m.; mom ta( worship, 11 a. m., Bible study and prayer mest ang. Wednesday, 7:43 p. m. Jun ior church, Friday, 7-8 p. m. METHODIST (Emmet) Rev. W. C. Birmingham, pastoi Worship, 9:45 a. m., sermon b\ pastor. Sunday-school, 10:45 a m., Mrs. Guy Beckwith, superin tendent. CHAMBERS NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Mace, jr-, and Mrs. C. E. Brittell and Dew ey were supper guests of Mr. B ittell’s sister, Mr. and Mrs Ray Conard, at Neligh Sunday evening. Mrs. Clair Grimes returned Saturday from a two-weeks’ vis it with her daughter, Dr. and M:a. Loran Coppac, and daugh ter in Omaha. Charles Frady left Saturday via plane for Pasedena, Calif., to join his father and enter school. Mr. and Mrs, C. W. Rothchild and Mr. and M;s. Ray Sander son and family were Sunday guests in the Troxel Green home. Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Cooper and Arnold Zuelka drove to Palmer Sunday to visit lelatives. Steve Shavlik accompanied Frank Porter via truck to Oma ha Monday. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Medcalf and grandson drove to Ains worth Sunday to visit their son, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Medcalf, and son, Marilyn Mille and Sue Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Duke Reed spent Monday ‘evening in the Troxel Green home. Mr. and M s. Richard Porter and son returned to their home Sunday from Amelia where they had been staying with her pa rents, Mr. and M s. Frank Bach aus. Mrs. T. E. Alderson left Jan uary 14 for Milford to stay with her daughter, M s. Kenneth Sta ley, during her illness. Supper guests last Thursday evening in the Richard Jarman home were Jo Ann and Jo Ellen He: tel, Dosald Haake, Mary Lou Walter, Eldon Harley and Lor aine Haake. They all attended the basketball game in the eve ning. O'NEILL AUTO REBUILDERS S Blocks North of Bus Dopot SPECIALIZING HI BODY & FENDER ★ Repairing it Repainting LINDQUIST & SONS PHONE 133 # MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1948 staninq...&TUART ERWIN | Barbara Wooddell William Wright Hobart Cavanaugh SIVERM OTHER IHTEREST1KG m EDUCMIONAl TALKING PTCTURtS FREE! TO ALL FARMERS 1 AND THEIR FAMILIES Lloyd Collins Implements American Legion Auditorium Free Lunch at 12 Noon - Show Beg:ns at 1 P. M. If you don’t have tickets or need more— ASK US FOR THEM TO.JO ENJOYS HIS MEAL Hidcki Tojo (foreground), Japan’s wartime premier and now No. 1 war crimes suspect, still is able to enjoy his food despite the fact that he at tempted suicide two years ago. Now on the stand before the international war crimes tri v>-ni Tojo offered, in his own defense, a 65,000-word deposi tion in which he refused to ac cept any criminal responsibili ty for Japan's warlike behav ior. J j The Frontier Woman j 1 By BLANCHE SPANN PEASE Hi there, all you nice peo ple! —tfw— Proof that milk of human kindness still runs strong was exhibited recently when a Ewing mother lost her 9 year-old son. who was ill only a couple of days. Only five months before she had lost her husband. There are four more children. The community took up a purse and made her a gift of it. I think the right kind of people must live around Ew —tfw—p I received a pressure pan for Christmas and it surely saves me lots of time I would otherwise have had to spend in the kitchen, not to men tion the saving in fuel and vitamin content and such. But what I really started to say was to warn you to take good care of your pressure pan. Don’t whack the edge of it with a spoon or the potato masher. You may dent it and cause an air leak. Wipe the lid dry immediately after you take it from the pan. Keep the vent on the lid clean. You should be able to see day light through it. When you store your pressure pan, store it with the lid on upside down. —tfw— If you have recently made a new comforter for the bed be sure to whip on a quilt protector at the top. This can be made of muslin, prints or any so:t of material. Whip it on so that it can easily be ripped off and laundered. It will keep your new com orter clean and protected for a long time. Going to do some painting or varnishing this year? Set the paint or varnish can on a paper plate. It will provide a place for you to lay the brush when it is not in use, and it saves all sorts of drips and dribbles of painting getting to where they shouldn’t be. Smear the door lock and knob with vasaline before painting the door. When its dry you can remove the vasaline and any paint that might have smeared the knob — but didn’t — because you were such a brignt girl —tfw— A Slick Trick Next time you make a cas serole dish try a surprise trick on your family. Use condensed canned soup instead of white sauce in the casserole dish. For instance in a chicken cas serole, mushroom soup in its condensed form, instead of white sauce, is simply deli cious 1 Asparagus soup works good in vegetable casseroles and mushroom soup is good, too, in tuna combinations. —tfw— Next time you put up the children’s lunch, cut the sand wiches in smaller sizes. Even the slightest break in the mon otony of school lunches pleases children. Give that plain round cookie a face, use rais ins and candy corn to do it. For hair, try a little cocoanut. —tfw— In England they call cran berrys "red whortles." Ah me, ihe look on our grocer's face when we ask him for a pound of whortles, on ac count of we want to cook up a dish of whortle sauce. Prize-Winning Letter — ‘'Homemaker, O’Neill” wins our today’s th ee-months’ sub scription to The Frontier. Dear Mrs. Pease: Since I enjoy The Frontier Woman I’ll try to do my share by writing you a lette.. With the holidays over, I have a little more time and I have been piecing some quilts. I qnilt them on my sewing machine after I have the pieces. It isn't quite as pretty as when the work is hand done but it is done so much more quickly and easily and the quilts wash and wear very well and look nice too when on the beds. All during the war there was such a simriage of prints and plain materials that most folks had to stop piecing quilts but now there are plenty again but they are lots more expensive. I like to use a plain pastel color for the back ing of my quilts. Quilts blocks make nice “pick up” wo. k. You can work up a block or two while lis tening to a radio program, and while waiting for the family to show up for dinner, or sitting in the car waiting for the family to get ready to go home. I have a couple of recipes we like real well that I thought I would pass on to you. I hope your readers will like them FRIED APPLES ft BACON They really go good togeth er. I use tart winter apples and cut into inch cubes to make about 2 quarts. Fry bacon in a heavy skillet and as soon as crisp, remove, drain on absorbent paper, and keep in a warm place. Leave about 4 tablespoons of bacon fat in the skillet, fill it with the ap ples, sprinkle on V* cup of su gar, cover and cook slowly until the apples are tender. Then remove the cover, tu n the apples gently so the pieces will keep their shape, and let brown lightly. They are then almost transparent. Place them on a platter and surround them with the crisp bacon. APPLE- FLOAT Apple float is easy to make and it is a little diffe ent way to serve apple sauce. Two cups thick apple sauce, 4 egg whites. Sweeten the apple sauce to taste while hot, add a little salt, and set away to cool. Beat the egg whites very stiff, and fold the cold apple sauce into them. If desired, add 2 or 3 teaspoons of lemon juice or sprinkle a little nut meg or cinnamon on top, or add a spoonful of whipped cream to each serving. HOMEMAKER, O’Neill. —tfw— It's Nice to Know— That boiled eggs will peel more easily if in the first place you do not boil a strictly fresh egg- A day or two older is better. Bring to a boil In cold water, then simmer, do not boil for about 20 minutes, and then run cold water over the eggs. They will peel more eas ily. That your rye and whole wheat flours, corn meal, oat meal and other breakfast ser eals should be stored in seal ed glass jars as soon as possi ble after bringing them home from the stores. Store in a cool place. You’ll find they keep well this wey. That you should save the cooking water from your veg etaables. Use them in gravies, soups, sauces, health cocktails and fruit juices in gelatin des serts. Or drink them! —tfw— After you get that paint job done on the cupboards (or was it a clear varnish job,) finish it up light with a good waxed friish. Try painting black enamel triangles on those painted cupboards where the wear and soil area is. You’ll like the way it helps. —tfw— It looks to us from where we sit as though we’re going to be sorry about all those remarks we made about ladies’ hats- The ones coming up now look like half-bushel baskets. —t w— In the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to where it has been all winter long. —tfw— Don’t tiy to show your mate whose boss in the family. She’s known right along. Send Ut a Letter for The Frontier If you Frontier readers are enjoying this new feature in The Frontie-, won’t you send us a letter for use in aur de partment, We do need letters so much, and for each one we print, we give a three-months’ subscription. You can write about any thing you like. Send us sea sonable recipes and helps if you wish. Help us to make this feature a little better all the time. Send your letters to Mrs. Blanche Pease, The Frontier Woman, Atkinson, Nebraska That’s all ter this week, eee you next week. Sincerely, BLANCHE SPANN PEASE The Frontier Woman AMELIA NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Ed White, Mr. and M s. Earnie White and Mr. and Mrs. Earnie Johnston were O’Neill callers last Thursday. Mr. White and Mr. Johnston completed the transaction in which Mr. Johnston bought the White ranch. Jackie Lee and Zoellen Gil man entertained seve al of their friends at a skating party Satur day evening. At a late hour, Mrs. Lee Gilmn served a lunch- j eon. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Cearns and Judy, Mr. and M s. George Cearns. Betty and Mary Jo, Mrs. Lula Cearns, Mr. and Mrs. Em mett Carr and Garen Ann, Mrs. Ge:tie Minnahan, all of O’Neill; Mrs. Delia Ernst and Mike Cearns were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Art Wald man Sunday. Mrs. Lindsey and Florence were Sunday dinner guests at the E. A. White home. Mrs. Lee Sammons left last week for Amarillo, Tex., where she will join her husband, who is doing carpentry work there ^ Mr. and M s. Dale Butterfield moved to their new home Satur day on the place known as the Cheever Moss place. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rees were dinner guests Sunday at the Bob Rees home Rev. and Mrs. Dixon spent last week in Lincoln. Hansens Entertain— INMAN— Mr. and Mrs. Clar ence Hansen entertained the In man bridge club at their country home south of Inman on Satur day evening. Mrs. Art Tomlin son and Kenneth Smith held high scores, while Mrs. Kenneth Smith and James Coventry held low scores. Mrs. Hansen served1 a lunch at a late hour. JH£Y -ALSO N££D TO LlrAR-N CHR.IST'5 WAY. BRJMG T4S« CillLSi&rN TO OHURLOH SCHOOL This Advertisement Sponsored by: INMAN METHODIST CHURCH FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (O'Neill) LATTER DAY SAINTS CHURCH (Inman) PAGE METHODIST CHURCH CHAMBERS LUTHERAN CHURCH CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH (O'Neill) CHAMBERS METHODIST CHURCH HOLINESS CHURCH tO'Neill) METHODIST CHURCH (O'Neill) O'NEILL TRANSFER ★ Fletai rout* your freight O'NEILL TRANSFER An OTein firm. 4 — TRIPS WEEKLY — 4 O’NEILL—Phone 341J OMAHA—Phone JA3727 "Tear Fiinu|t Appreciate*” * JOHN TURNER, Prop. t 4 "Thanks Neighbor. •.! ” Remember that zero morning when the fellow next door gave you a push that started “Old Betsy”. . . and got you off to work on time? Appreciated it, didn’t you? And you’ll gladly return the favor anytime he needs a nudge. Well, that same kind of neighborliness helps a lot in getting the most value out of party line telephone service. Everyone on the line appre ciates the thoughtfulness of short calls . . . allowing time between them for others to use their phone . . . replacing the receiver softly when the line is in use. Yes, the simple business of being a good neighbor usually means you’ll have good neigh bors. NORTHWESTERN BEU TELEPHONE COMPANY Tj/stopy cf ELECToicrry] l/hefather OF ELECTRICAL science LNEOOVEI? 2500 YEARS AGO. HE WAS THE GREEK,THALES, WHO FIRST PISCOVERED MAGNETISM INI THE LODESTONE. HAVING NO NAME FOR THIS MAGNETIC PROPERTY HE SAiO/'THc LODESTONE HAS A SOUL. SINCE IT MOVES IRON'.' L/HE PRIMITIVE mariner's? COMPASS - A STEEL NEEDLE MAGNETIZED BY RUBBING ON A LODE STONE AND THEN SUPPORTED IN WATER WAS MAN’S FIRST PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF ELECTRiClTV. Through years of scientific development, clcctririty lias become truly the basis for modern living. Throughout Nebraska, •rrved by Consumers 1'iihlie Power District. electrical facil ities, owned by the people, are constantly being improved nod expanded to bring to Ne braskan: an outstanding elec tric service at the lowest pos sible cost.