The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 01, 1948, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE FRONTIER .... O'NEILL, NEBR.
CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher_
Entered the postoffice at O’Neiil, Holt county, Nebraska^
fts second-class mail matter under the Act of Congress of March
S, 1879. This newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press
Association and the National Editorial Association.
Established in 1880— Published Each Thursday
Terms of Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per year; else
where in the United States. $3 per year; abroad, rates provided
on request. All subsc. iptions are strictly, paid-in-advance.
AMELIA NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. George Fogle
left last Thursday morning for
Detroit, Mich., to purchase a
new car before going to their
. ' new camp in Louisiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Urban
and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wheland
came March 23 from Hastings
to visit a few days at the Silas
Johnston home. Mr. and Mrs.
Earnie Johnston were dinner
guests there March 24.
Mrs. Peter Frahm went to
Hastings by bus Friday to visit
her daughter, Mrs. Keith Shell
hase, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Nelson,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ericson
and daughter, Mickie, came
from Minneapolis, Minn., Fri
day to visit friends and rela
tives and attend the golden
wedding celebration of Mr. and
Mrs. M. L. Sageser.
Prof, and Mrs Lower Sages
er and Sandra and Floyd Sa
geser, all of Manhattan, Kans.,
spent their Easter vacation
with home folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnie John
ston, Rev. and Mrs. Biltoft and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed White were
Sunday dinner guests at Ear
nie White’s.
Mr. and Mrs. George With
ers, Mr. and Mrs. DeLance
Withers and family were Eas
ter dinner guests at D. D.
Withers.
Miss Syrena Withers spent
her Easter vacation with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. D.
Withers.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Green
borg, of Atkinson, and Mr. and
Mrs. Orland Fryrear spent Eas
ter at Will Fry rear’s.
The William Thompsons
have rented their farm to Jim
Bilstiens. The Thompsons plan
to go to Washington and the
Bilstiens will have possession
about May 1. _
Mr. and Mrs. John Lamason
and Miss Marie Hiess, of Page,
visited Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Sa
geser on their golden wedding
anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Watson
gave a family dinner Sunday.
Those present were: Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Watson and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Watson
and Keith Greenstreet and
friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Fancher, of
Ainsworth, came Friday to vis- |
it their daughter, Mrs. Clyde .
Widma i, and family, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bower Sageser, who
spent their Easter vacation
here. Mrs. Widman’s brother
and sister came Sunday and
their parents returned to Ains
worth with them that evening.
Mrs. Lindsey and Florenr
spent Easter with the P. L.
Strenger family at Norden.
Harold Waldo visited his
wife and infant daughter, Ju
dith Anne, at the hospital in
Norfolk Sunday. Mrs. Beryl
Waldo visited them Friday:
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Ed
wards and family visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Snelson, at Long Pine Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Barnett
and the Glen White family
and H. S. White were Easter
guests at Lawrence Barnett’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Blake Ott and
Gloria, Mrs. Mamie Sammons,
Miss Margie Ann Sammons, all
of Amelia, Mr. and Mrs. Mor
ris Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Walt
er Ericson and daughter,
Micky, of Minneapolis, Minn.,
and the Forest Sammons fam
ily were all guests at A. E.
Sammons home on Easter.
Jack, Zoellen and Connie
Gilman spent Sunday at Har
old Gilman’s to help Sandra
celebrate her birthday anniver
sary.
Mr. and Mrs. William Arn
halt, sr., of Bassett, attended
the golden wedding party at j
Link Sageser’s Sunday and
visited other old friends in the 1
community.
Mr. and Mrs. John Shipman
came Friday to visit Mrs. Ship
man’s mother, Mrs. Delia Er
nst. She accompanied them
to Grand Island the next
morning to visit other rela
tives.
D. D. (“Cap”) Withers is the
new operator at the Atkinson
Co-op station in Amelia.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pierce,
Mrs. Raymond Wickham and
Raedee attended church ser
vices at the Lutheran church
in Chambers Sunday morning
and then drove on to O'Neill
to visit Mrs. Gordon Brown at
the O’Neill hospital. Others
calling on Mrs. Brown were
Mr. and Mrs. Tenus Madsen
[and Mrs. Hugh Carr.
O'NEILL AUTO
REBUILDERS
5 Block* North
of Bus Dopot
SPECIALIZING IN
BODY & FENDER
if Repairing
if Repainting
LINDQUIST &
SONS
PHONE 133
Public Dance
AMERICAN LEGION BALLROOM
— O’Neill —
JACK COLE
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Tuesday, April 13
Adm.: $1 Per Person, Including Tax
Announcement
Announcing the opening.of my new filling
station, 2l/> blocks south of the signal lights on
highway 281. Selling Champlin Presto gaso
line and Hi V-I oil. Your business will be
appreciated.
Garage and Auto Repair Shop in Connection.
Stanley Soukup
PUERTO RICO'S POWER CONVERSION ... The 10 mi’lion
dollar Caonillas hydroelectric and irrigation project, located
between San Juan and Ponce is the first step in Puerto Rico’s
move to change her principal source of power from steam to
hydroelectric power. This 230-foot high “junior TVA” is
nearing completion.
PRAIRIELAND * f
ROMAINE
. . . TALK SAUNDERS
LINCOLN—A banquet March
22 at the Cornhusker ended a
2-day love feast of Nebraska
Republicans, who came in
droves across prairieland from
the Wyoming line. It was a
notable gathering of fine ap
pearing men and women from
McCook, Alliance, Scottsbluff,
Grand Island and other out
state communities that stormed
Lincoln. Among the celebra
ties from other states were
Governor and Mrs. Earl War
ren and the governor’s secre
tary, who found their way
across deserts, mountains and
prairieland from Sacramento.
Calif. The governor’s presence
was in respense to an invita
tion to address Republican pa
triots on Founders’ Day.
The governor explained he
had accepted the invitation
before his name was filed
here to go on the primary
ballot as a candidate for the
nomination for president, and
he was not going to make a
political speech. And the
entire gathering was notable
for a lack of sharp thrusts at
other political groups.
Both the young Republican
and women’s organizations
were in convention previous to
the Founders’ day gathering
and program. Mrs. Addison
B. Green of Holyoke, Mass.,
was the guest speaker for the
ladies organization. Friends of
the various candidates for the
presidency milled about the
Cornhusker lobby and the gen
eral sentiment expressed was
that either of the candidates
to be endorsed at the Phila
delphia convention would re
ceive full support in Nebraska.
Through the courtesy of a
friend I was handed a S3
banquet ticket, so was one
of the multitude that gather
ed at the tables in 2 large
rooms. The capacity of the
Cornhusker t o entertain
crowds was put to the limit.
The youngest to circulate
among the crowd Monday was
little Dan Wherry in knee
pants who came in from Te
cumseh with his grandfather.
The oldest was an 89-year-old
patriot, Frank B. Moore, of
Lincoln, who "button-holed”
you in behalf of Gov. Dewey.
I looked in vain for a familiar
face from O’Neill.
• • •
If it were anyone but Prof.
George who had the manage
ment of those armies of juven
ile musicians meeting in O’
Neill they would have my
sympathy. But Mr. George
has a way with young America
that permits him not only to
be at his best among them but
has cordial cooperation be
cause, as'one young lad ex
pressed it-to- me, "He is a great
[ Kuy.” *
m ft m
Scarcely a week rolls into
the scroll of time that The
Frontier does not record the
story of a pioneer of prairie
land having been visited by
the grim reaper. Two such,
whose early days were identi
fied with the beginning of de
velopments in Holt county,
were given to the readers last
| week.
Mrs. G. Ezra Moor found
rest in death after some
years suffering on a bed of
pain. And so a beautiful life
that had lent a glow to ev
erything worthwhile and up
lifting for more than a half
century not alone in the In
man community but radiated
to wid'-r circles surrendered
to the inevitable.
The community feels the loss
but in the deeper sense the
blow falls on Ezra, to whom I
can only offer the feeble con
solation of one who has gone
through the deep waters and
closed the door on a desolated
home. Out beyond the far
unknown we will await the
summons to join the loved and
lost when things of earth have
iOrevu perished.
• • •
Irrigation continues mildly
agitated. Agitation will go on
whether it be in search of
means to produce more, train
ing our boys as soldiers, more
and bigger schools or the rem
edy for juvenile delinquency.
It is not so long ago the cry
of “over-production” was heard
and here came a gent to knock
the meat on the hoof in the
head, plow under the growing
grain, and set fire to that
which had been harvested.
Upon the whole, Nebraska
prairies produce enough year
by year under the ministration
of natural elements, with an
off-year now and then that the
good earth may have one sea
son of rest. Irrigate, but look
out—here comes a government
agent to tell you that you are
creating an over-production.
One such former agent now
comes before us asking for
votes to put him in the White
House.
• • •
Thomas E. Dewey is not an
Eastern man. He is a native
of Michigan and has taken
East a sizable slice of the cen
tral states’ honesty, integrity
and administrative ability. He
was born in 1902 and is now at
life’s zenith. He has a liking
for agriculture and has a farm
under the welcoming shadows
of Berkshire hills. In nature’s
mysterious laboratory he has
discovered something of the
orderly processes governing the
unchanging movements of the
universe and drawn lessons to
inspire the soul with the ele
ments of a genius who feels
the pulsebeat of the neighbor
on the next farm or that of
the whole nation. Farmer,
statesman, head erect in the
crowd and bowed in humility
and admiration in the presence
of the handiwork of the Cre
ator when “the evening star
drops low in the heart of the
sunset’s afterglow.” This brings
to the Dewey philosophy of
government the warmth of the
human touch.
* * *
Forly-iwo years back in
the affairs of Holt county
patriots the largest private
home in the county was
brought to completion on a
section of land south of
Stuart owned by J. H. Brown,
a pioneer of that commun
ity. The house was 32 feet
square, 3 stories and con
tained 20 rooms.
• * •
The board of education, chil
dren and youth, fathers and
roomers in Minneapolis, Minn.,
nave been betrayed by strik
ing school teachers. At the
beginning of the school year,
the teachers accepted the re
sponsibility of keeping the
schools going. In disregard of
this contracted responsibility
two-thirds of the teaching
force is now on strike, closing
the city’s schools to the thous
ands of pupils. It is not only
a bad example for the young
but such disregard of con
tracted agreements reflects dis
credit on an honored profes
sion and partakes of the spirit
of the rowdy.
• * *
Marsh 21 usheres in the ver
nal equinox. Out of the north
blows a March wind, clouds
have gathered across the sky
and out there over the brown
hills of Lancaster may be seen
strips of black earth where the
plowman has started another
season’s round of farm work,
then gone to the house to re
pose in warm idleness for a few
more days. A few more weeks
and the sower will go forth to
sow. Seed time and then har
vest, perpetual as the granite
hills, enduring as the sullen
sea, as certain as the eternal
stars. And without the boun
ties of nature man must per
| ish from the earth.
Spending Sunday at the Ray
Snell home in Page were Mr.
and Mrs. W. W. Waller and
family.
REGIS
HOTEL
All Rooms
with
Bath
OMAHA
Home of the Popular
White Horse Inn
and
Cafe Regis
New Patterns and Colorings
For Every Room in These
Price Groups
12*-15*-23*
39*-49*-51*
OtStr Qu*l;»y P4H*rn, 8S Roll Up
Western Auto - A. P. .Jaszkowiak, Owner
HONEY TO LOAN
ON
AUTOMOBILES
TRUCKS
TRACTORS
EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
CENTRAL FINANCE
CORP.
C. E. JONES. Manager
O'NEILL : NEBRASKA
EMMET NEWS
Miss Arlene Beckwith, of
Norfolk, spent the Easter hol
idays with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Beckwith.
Mr. anl Mrs. Henry Benze
and family called at the Ber
nard Dusatko home at O’Neill
March 24.
Mis. Frank Foreman and
daughters were expected home
Wednesday. They have been
visiting friends and relatives
in Amarillo, Tex., for the {last
3 weeks.
The Cole family purchased a
new Mercury station wagon
last week.
Mrs. Cecil McMillian return
ed Saturday from Omaha
where she has been visiting
her children.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Peacock
and sons were supper guests
at the Homer Lowery home
Sunday.
Miss Beth Wilson, of Bur
well, visited at the Guy Cole
home over Monday and Tues
day.
John Weber and Lloyd, of
North Platte, called at the Joe
Winkler home Monday.
Mrs. Henry Kloppenborg
called on Agnes Gaffney Sun
! day afternoon.
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Daily
and family, of North Platte,
spent the Easter holidays at
the W. P. Daily home.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Abart
and Darcy spent Sunday at the
Paul Schultz home at Atkin
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Calkins
and Fred Perry, of O’Neill, and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Newton
spent Sunday at the Dean Per
ry home.
Miss Lois Cole, of Lincoln,
is spending the Easter holidays
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Cole.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ern
est and family visited at the
Homer Ernest home Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Potts and
Wilma called at the Ralph
Bowman home Saturday eve
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ernest
and family visited at the Otto
Lorenz home Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pease
and family called at the Henry
Patterson home last Thursday
j evening.
Try Frontier Want Ads!
I ~~
Ralph Switzer, of Meadow
[ Grove, visited Monday at the
home of his brother and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Switzer.
Mrs. Belle Summers, of Page,
returned to her home Satur
day after a 2-day visit in the
home of her son and wife, Mr.
i and Mrs. Frank Summers.
Mr. and Mrs. William Strong
and family were Easter dinner
guests in the Bill Perry home.
Mr. an^ Mrs. John Cuddy
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Stanton and family
left Sunday evening for their
home in Sioux Falls, S. D., af
ter a visit at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. A. F. Stanton.
Venetian blinds. 7-day de
. livery, made to measure, metal
or wood, all colors. — Brown
McDonald's. O'Neill. 33if
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Simonson
and family were Easter guests
in the home of Mrs. Simonson’s
sister, Mrs. Arlen Kirk, of
Spencer.
Mrs. H. L. Lindberg and
Mrs. D C. Schaffer went to
Sioux City last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rubeck
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Johnson and family, of Wake
field, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Peter
son spent Easter in Grand Is
land.
Easter guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Rubeck
were Mr. and Mrs. John Hon
eywell and Raymond Urban,
Df Chambers.
SUMMERLAND
Ewing
Sunday, April 4
Music by
JERRY MAYBURN
And His Orchestra
Coming from Omaha
FRED J. JUNGMAN
Candidate for
STATE LEGISLATURE
28th District
Will appreciate your support.
Primary Election April 13, 1948
Non - Political Ballot
More than 40 years a resident of Boyd, Rock, and
Holt Counties, the past 25 at Atkinson. Qualified by
experience in public life, many years of success as a
farmer, cattle feeder, and business man. Member
board of directors Atkinson Service Club, former mem
ber Atkinson public school board. Veteran of World
War I. Holt County Commander American Legion,
District vice-commander, past commander Farley
Tushla Post No. 86, Atkinson. Two sons served in
World War II.
ALL-AMERICAN RED HEADS
World’s Champion Girls’ Basketball Team
VS.
PIERCE CARDINALS
Midwest AAU Finalists
IN
Basketball’s Greatest Show
AT
O’Neill High School Gymnasium
Thursday, April 1,8:15 p.m.
• THE RED HEADS, greatest girls’ basketball team ever
assembled and featured in Colliers and other national maga
zines, playing the Pierce Cardinals, one of the best men’s teams
in Nebraska.
• Razzle-dazzle basketball . . . boogie-woogie dancing, drib
bling, piggy-back basket shooting, entertainment at its best.
• You’ll laugh at the antics of the Red Heads and you’ll mar
vel at their basketball ability in basketball’s greatest show.
• See Hazel Walker, 10 times national free-throw champion,
in a between halfs* exhibition contest against local free throw
tossers.
O’NEILL, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 8:30 p. m.
• ADMISSION: Adults, $1.00 (tax inch); Students, 60c (tax
inc.); 300 reserved seats at $1.25 (tax incl.) on sale at Slat’s
Cafe and O’Neill Drug.