lIhe frontier Editorial & Business Offices: 10 South Fourth Street O'Neill, Nebr. ' CARROLL W STEWART, Editor and Publisher_ Entered the postoffice at O'Neill, Holt county, Nebraska, as second-class mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. This newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press Association, National Editorial Association and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. ‘ Established in 1880— Published Each Thursday Terms of Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per year, ^Ise where in the United States, $3 per year; abroad, rates provided on request. All subscriptions are strictly paid-in-advance. The Next 75 Years Here is an interesting question—what is going to happen in O’Neill during the next 75 years? We have a comprehensive and accurate picture of what has happened during the past 75 years. The history of that period has been published and proclaimed to the world in The Frontier s mammoth Diamond Jubilee Edition. That edition, consisting of 64 pages in eight sections, of which more than three thousand copies were printed, totaling 206,016 pages and containing news and advertising matter, which, end to end, would reach about three blocks, tells the graphic and fascin ating story of the town’s past history. This great weekly newspaper, which was an outstanding achievement in country journalism and would have been a credit to a city daily, records the history' of O Neill between 18/4 and 1949, especially the period of 1874 to 1900, and it is ample and convincing proof of the extraordinary progress the community has made. Obviously, the edition, both by reason of ilt contents and its literary and typographical excellence, has attracted wide attention and The Frontier has received numerous congratu latory messages and orders for extra copies from near and far. The Diamond Jubilee Edition was intended to commemorate the first 75 years of the history of O’Neill and it will be followed by a big community celebration, in which both old and young will join and which will also be a fitting observance of this notable year. It will no doubt be one of the greatest celebrations of its kind ever staged in this part of Nebraska and will be a fitting rlimax to a long and important era of Midwestern history. And thus the first 75 years of O’Neill’s history comes to an appropriate close with The Frontier’s big Diamond Jubilee Edi tion and a rousing community celebration, and the question sug gests itself: What about the next 75 years? We have a detailed, picturesque and accurate record of the past 75 years—that is now history, but what about the future? What about those 75 years which now seem to stretch end lessly aw’ay in the misty and uncertain days which are yet to come? Of course, we don’t know. The most astute historian doesn’t know and would not undertake to predict for the future is always vague and unpredictable and all the smartest of us can do is to guess and conjecture. However, we may do that and The Frontier’s guess is that O’Neill and Holt county will continue to forge ahead and progress and prosper during the next 75 years as they have during the past. That is, we believe, a safe and conservative opinion, based upon facts which have been revealed in the unusual history of this community up to the present hour. The past is history—unchangeable history: the future will be determined by the hopes, aspirations and efforts of the people of O’Neill and surrounding territory. It is a tremendous chal lenge to us all. No, we can not predict or prophesy with any degree of certainty, but there is one thing we can always do and that is argue from the known to the unknown and. on that basis, we may reasonably assume that the next 75 years will also be a period of progress—probably even greater progress than the last 75. There are several reasons for assuming this. In the first place, there are a number of projects now being worked on which will assure community activity for years to come; in the second place, the progressive character of our people is a guarantee of continued progress and, in the third place, the normal trend of healthy towns like O’Neill is always upward and onward. So to The Frontier, the outlook at the end of the first 75 years and the beginning of the second is very bright and promising. There will be very few of the present inhabitants of this area, even including the babies, who will be around to participate in the celebration commemorating the next 75 year period; but it will likewise be an outstanding historical event. Time’s a-Wasting /URGENT W/NISHED business □ Prairieland Talk — Bankers and Bakers Move into Picture to ‘Conserve the Soil’ By ROMAINE SAUNDERS LINCOLN — Nebraska clod I hoppers better look out. We are going to be conserved, preserv i ed and oickled. Another group 1 organization is announced. This time it is the bankers and bakers 1 that have moved into the picture to “conserve the soil." An other uplift band of patri ots moves up on the farm ers to show them how to do it. What this new group will contribute to the welfare of prairieland is Romaine not difficult Saunders to foresee. The men and women working the land they own know more about preserving its usefulness than the custodians of the coun try’s filthy lucre and the dough mixers. The men and women on rent ed land are going to get all out of it they can. While it is recog nized in both plains and moun tain states that much land has j been taken over by the plowman 1 that should have been left in sod, no conservation group has come forward with a purpose to return this cultivated land to grass. • • • Frank Williams, on a visit to Lincoln from the industrial cen ters on the Illinois side of the Mississippi fiver, says the wheels are slowng down and men are out of jobs formerly employed in turning out farm machinery. I Among other things one gent has ; mentioned as “soothing cluck ing” down there at Washington comes now a presidential call for greater production. Business knows if politicians don’t that production can only go along with the demand for goods. Peo pie have had their fill of paying high prices for stuff and now curtail on buying. There was held last week at the University of Nebraska what was designated a clinic, some of the wise ones giving lectures to | baldheads and others about the ; “Missouri river basin." For a ’ century past settlers along the , Big Muddy river have been tak- j ing care of themselves pretty | well but the busybodies must have something to promote and j Missouri seems the most likely victim just now. Government fools away money on and the functionaries, army brass and university instructors will find enough to do in the various realms in which they have been placed without taking over a job to revamp the handiwork of I the Creator. • • • The Old Timer says he would like to know about a 75-year-old house over a t Lynch as at ihal remote period the tepees of the Santees were the human habitations of the region. • • i Mother Earth has swallowed another victim. A dirt slide bur ied a workman in a ditch on South Forty-Second street. A few minutes in the agony of suf focation and his troubles were all over. The worries of life, the struggle for life and mainten ance of home that the man with the shovel only can know are over for him. But there in a mo ment of time desolation settled down upon a home when the bit ter word came to the young wife ' and two small children. Acci dental death, the burial permit j will indicate. What horror- - haunted tragedy lurks in that cruel word. Accident. Must man to win his bread for himself and ' his dear ones do so under the shadow of possible doom? Is ’.here no way to furrow the earth and lay the conduit with out the sacrifice of a life that overwhelms some hearts with sorrow? The accident is report ed; we say it was too bad, and the smug old world moves on. Readers Like, Dislike Jubilee Edition (Editors note: Since our mammoth Diamond ■ Jubilee Edition went into the mail June 30, The Frontier has received hundreds of congratula tory messages and a stray condemnation or two. Hundreds of extra copies have been sold and mailed to most of the 48 states and sever al countries abroad. One woman cancelled her subscription because of a reference made by < the Jubilee editor that she thought was unnec essary. An agitated Phoenix, Ariz. reader—a former resident—wrote in and that letter— along with a cross-section of complimentary ones—is reproduced below): ★ ★ ★ STATE OF NEBRASKA Executive Office Lincoln, July 11, 1949 Mr. Romaine Saunders, Editor The Frontier Diamond Jubilee Edition, O’Neill, Nebraska. Dear Romaine: Just got back to the office today, and, among other things, I found the Diamond Jubilee Edi tion of the Frontier on my desk. It is an excel lent piece of work, and I want to offer my con gratulations to you, to Publisher Cal Stewart and the entire Frontier staff for turning out such a fine paper. As a former newspaper man, I can fully realize the work that such an edition entails. However, the enjoyment that many oldtimers, and others, will get from it will more than repay you for your efforts, I am sit e. Good luck to you always. Sincerely, VAL PETERSON. ★ ★ ★ CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES f House of Representatives Washington, D. C., July 5, 1949 Carroll W. Stewart, Publisher, The Frontier, O’Neill, Nebraska. Dear Mr. Stewart: I have just finished reading the Diamond Jubi lee Edition of The Frontier and I want to com plirnent you on the fine service you rendered your community by publishing it. It will afford the people of O’Neill and vicinity a lot of inter esting information about the past and the devel opment that has come through the years. Please express my congratulations to Mr. Romaine Saunders for the excellent job he did in assemb ling the material for the edition. With kindest personal regards to all the mem- j bers of your staff, I am, Sincerely yours, A. L. MILLER, M. C., Fourth District, Nebraska. ★ ★ ★ NEBRASKA STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY State Capitol, Lincoln, 6 July 1949 Mr. Carroll W. Stewart Publisher The Frontier O’Neill, Nebraska. Dear Mr. Stewart: I have just seen a copy of the Diamond Jubilee | Edition of The Frontier. It is magnificent. You, I Mr. Saunders, and all who had anything to do with it are to be congratulated on a tough job very well done. I’m proud to have an article in it. Very sincerely yours, JAMES C. OLSON, Superintendent. Phoenix, Ariz. July 14, 1949 Frontier: , I was disappointed in your 75th edition. Too much Romaine Saunders. , . . Very skimpy about M. F. Harrington. McNichols, Horiskey's. ... If I had time I could remember dozens of others— early teachers, professors, farmers. . . . MIKE SULLIVAN. ♦ ★ ★ THE HAMBURG REPORTER Hamburg, Iowa, July 16, 1949 Frontier, O’Neill, Nebr.: Have been reading, as time permitted, your ex (Continued on page 4-A) Hollywood, on the hunt for such things, lists 10 most dra matic sound as follows: The ba by’s first cry, the shriek of a siren, blast of a foghorn, the slow drip of water, galloping herd of horses, distant train whistle, the thunder of breakers on the rocks, the roar of a forest lire and the howling of a dog. A country editor came out once with his view of what constitut ed the most pleasant sound, which ran something like this: Though a man may have a rasp ing voice that like a scythe doth mow you, ’tis sweeter than sweet music when he says, Here’s what I owe you! • • • In the display window of one of those swank stores where they try to impress you with “quality” by the medium of high For a Good Time VISIT THE OLD PLANTATION CLUB Elgin. Nebr. ★ • Fine Food • Dancing • Entertainment ★ Members and their guest* are invited to visit the Old Plantation Club. prices, hung a lady’s dres6 that a man might wad up and put in his pocket price marked $97, a line drawn over the $97 with $70 written in, what they would take —maybe less—for that morsel of feminine attire. Show windows about town are a study in price tags that have been marked dowm. • • • 11 was the regret of both the publisher and the editor of the Diamond Jubilee number of The Frontier that photographs of a few of O'Neill's prominent people of a past generation could not be found. Pictures of these would have given a completeness to that feature of the paper. Producing such a paper was a large undertaking but all concerned went into it with enthusiasm. The result has been gratifying, yet within the scope of 64 pages there was not room for all the mai ler that had been prepared. Thai the fruitage of the effort has met with popular favor is also gratifying and has ex ceeded expectations. That I have had a part in placing in thousands of homes stories and material of pioneer life in Holt county gives me per sonal pleasure. WJAG . . 780 on your dial! IT’S NO BARGAIN No matter how low the price, IT’S NO BARGAIN il the food you buy is of poor quality — likewise IT’S NO BAR GAIN if you must pay exorbitant prices to obtain quality Here at COUNCIL OAK we believe that our customers de serve quality merchandise at low prices and our every effort is expended towards that end We are proud of the reputa tion we have made throughout the years in the achievement of that goal . . . The slogan “YOU CAN BUY WITH CON FIDENCE AT COUNCIL OAK’’ was not born in the mind of an advertising agency — it was on the lips of grateful customers who had found quality at low everyday prices We cherish that customer confidence and will continue to do our utmost to preserve and DESERVE it. * PINEAPPLE JUICE 6^$1 FRUIT COCKTAIL __3N^$1 PFAfHFS SUPEBB 9 No. 2Yz eor I ii/lvllljO Halves or Sliced ... .. ... 4m Cans CELERY, Bunch.19c TOMATOES,Lb. 115c CORN, 6 for 111 19c PLUMS, Basket.1.09 CANTALOUPE, Lhir 9c AmSJLbsTZI 29c Lug PEACHES andlPRICOTS FOR CANNING ! FREE PARKING SPACE Use parking lol made available by City Council in alley back of store. Customers welcome to use our back entrance. SUPERB GOLDEN CORN O *o.« 00* WHOLE KERNEL . Mm Cans UUv PORK & BEANS 0 OZ* In Toninto Sauce W Cans ftVV CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP C 10V4-O*. It 4 ft The One Hot Dish V Cans VWV CHURCH’S PUKE GRAPE JUICE 40* INntnrally Sweet. Quart Bottle .. VVV FOR COLD DRINKS ZEPHYR NECTAR 0 IE* III* 8-o*. Bottle*.. Mm FOR IWV ROBB-ROSS GELATIN A 1Q« 7 Delicious Flaror* _ ■ PEGS. ■»« SALAD BOWL SALAD DRESSING AO* Makes A ns Salad Better. Quart Jar *WV FRESH PAK DILL PICKLES 0Q* Crisp and Cool, QnArt tar... mVV THE BETTER GRADE CHUM SALMON AO* For Salmon Loaf. 1-Lb. Tan Can . ■ ■ V THIN CRACKERS EVERYDAY. . 2 box 39c COOKIES SSSfwoD.1 &33c COCONUT ?“fBEDBDAEGD 15c CARNATION MILK, 2 for. 25c Warm Warm Weather Calls for Sugar Cured . . READY-TO-EAT . r_ 43c ^ I PER LB. Mild Cure SUMMER SAUSAGE For the Cold Meat Tray 59c lb. Cello Wrap BACON SQUARES 27c lb. Sirloin STEAK Govt. Inspected Per Lb. 59c TENDER, TASTY SHOULDER CUTS BEEF ROASTSu STANDING RIB ROASTS, lb. 57c FRESH GROUND PURE BEEF c BEEF SHORT RIBS, lb__ PIECE OK SLICED g%"9 FRESH SIDE PORK <.„27c Spring Fryers K PRICES FOR JULY 22-23