The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 01, 1951, Page 7, Image 7

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    FOR SALE
VE CAN save you money on oil
type piston rings, made by
Ramsey Corp., makers of na
1 tionally-known Ramca rings.—
Coast-to-Coast Stores, O’Neill.
43c
For Reduced Rates on
CAR INSURANCE
See:
L.lG. GILLESPIE INS. AGY.
O’NEILL Phone 218 NEBR.
i rOR SALE: 1941 Chevrolet, ra
dio and heater, good condition.
\ Price $450. — Gene Streeter,
1 Gamble store, O'Neill. 43c
;'OR SALE: 4-room house with
I bath, northwest part of city,
$4,000. Terms can be given. —
(R. H. (“Ray”) Shriner, O’Neill,
phone 106. 43c
HAVE cash buyers for residen
; tial properties in O’Neill.—R.
i H. yV'Ray”) Shriner, O’Neill,
f phone 106. 39tf
•’OR SALE: Bed, springs and
mattress.—Call 527W, O’Neill.
43c
I?OR SALE: Hedstron baby bug
§ gy, in very good condition. —
J Gerald Dailey, O’Neill. 41c
§ OR SALE: 32-volt light plant,
1 with 50-ft. windmill tower and
■ batteries. Price $250.— Frank
■ Lechtenberg, 3 mi. east Butte,
f 42-44p95
■ OR RENT: A heated sleeping
■ room in modern home. Gentle
■ man preferred.—Call 453J, O’
■ Neill. 43c
Used Car
v BARGAINS
—1949 Ford 4 Door.
—1949 Frazer Manhattan, like
new.
i —1949 Frazer, like new.
—1950 Chevrolet.
—1942 Chevrolet.
—1942 Ford.
-1940 Ford.
1—1947 Kaiser.
—1948 Kaiser.
—1947 Jeeps.
ou get MORE car here for the
money than anywhere!
Cat and Dog Cars, all makes
md breeds. Priced $35 to $125.
ew Willys Jeeps, Pickups, Sta
tion Wagons.
ew Massey-Harris 7 - ft. com
bines, new tractors (all sizes),
list As, plows.
Outlaw Implement
Company
O’Neill, Nebr.
OR SALE: 1949 Oldsmobile 98
sedan, low mileage. — James
M. Corkle. 33c
OMPLETE LINE of paint and
varnish. Quality guaranteed. —
Coast-to-Coast Stores, O’Neill.
43c
OR SALE: Available IHC No. 9
and trail mowers. New Idea and
Lundell power mowers.—Plain
view Farm Equipment, Plain
vie,JK, Nebr. 6tf
OR SALE: Disc harrows, 10-,
15- and 18-ft. sizes. — Wm.
Krotter Co. of O’Neill. 42c
I Better
Used Merchandise
at GAMBLES
E HAVE several used electric
refrigerators, $15 and up; used
kerosene Servel, 2-yrs. - old;
used gas Servel; used Corona
do milker; used Coronado sep
arator; several used mowers;
several used pack radios; sev
eral used washers.
e us for your truck and tire
I leeds.
L4^5x20 - 9.00x20 - 10.00x20
We have the tires!
l We have the prices!
GAMBLES
—O’Neill— 43-44c
JR SALE: 1949 Pontiac club
coupe, 6 cyl.—Wm. Krotter Co.
of ONeill. 42c
K SALE: Over 30 living room
suutes now on the floor We’ll
allow up to $100 on your used
suite.—Midwest Furn. & Appl.,
West O’Neill. 43c
OR GOOD insurance of all
kinds see R. H. (“Ray”) Shrin
er, phone 106. 39tf
JR SALE: Purebred Spotted
Poland China boars. Vaccinated
both ways. New blood line.
5V4 miles west of Plainview on
[highway 20.—Elmer Bohl. 21tf
|jR SALE: 1940 Ford tudor;
>1949 Mercury fordor sedan.—
Wm. Krotter Co. of O’Neill,
531. 42c
OR SALE: Bob-tailed shepherd
, pups. —Marvin Stauffer, Page.
43p35
|£t R-H.S
Wind 8r Tornado, Truck &
Liability GENERAL II
REAL ESTATE. LOANS, F
Auiomohil* O'Neill —t—
Polled Herefords
40 Bulls - 1 5 Heifers
AT AUCTION: Saturday, March
10, 1951. Sale will be held on
ranch 7 miles west of Geddes,
or 10 miles south of Platte, on
highway 281. Road graveled to
salebarn door, 7 miles north of
Wheeler bridge.
Auctioneers: Hugh E. McGuire,
Holstein, la.; Charles Corkle,
Omaha, Nebr.
Sale Starts at 1:00 P. M.
Write for Catalog:
L. V. Gant & Sons
GEDDES, S. D.
FOR SALE: 32-voit light plant,
gas refrigerators. C h e a p.—
Plainview Farm Equip., Plain
view. 32tf
FOR SALE: Used Rockford ma
hogany Duncan-Phyfe style ta
ble with 4 new chairs, $99.00.—
Midwest Fum. & Appl., West
O’Neill. 43c
GUNS and ammunition.—Coast
to-Coast Stores, O’Neill. 43c
FOR SALE: Ajax seed oats. State
tested. Adapted to light soil.—
Marvin Stauffer, Page, phone
3F2. 43tf
FOR SALE: Brand new Kelvina
tor refrigerators, $199.95 and
up.—Midwest Furn. & Appl.,
West O’Neill, phone 5. 43c
FOR SALE: 80-acre to 320-acre
farms—Nebraska, South Da
kota and Minnesota.—Lester
W. Schmadke, Farmers Na
tional Co., O’Neill, Nebr.
41-43p95
FOR SALE: Six-room modern
house with bath, 2-room apt.
upstairs with shower and stool.
Oil furnace and insulated. Ga
rage and small barn. Located
on 4 acres.—Gene Wolfe or call
238-W, O’Neill. 43tf
See Us for Your
Truck Tire Needs
We have them in stock—
8.25x20 - 9.00x20 - 10.00x20
GAMBLES
— O’NEILL —
FOR SALE: Purebred Spotted
boars and gilts. —Frank Beel
aert, Page. 22tf
FOR SALE: Since I am moving
into an apartment, have the
following for private sale at
my home, 125 Everett st.: bed,
spring, innerspring mattress,
dresser, plastic rug, buffet, 2
pc. living room suite, apt. size
electric range, 7-ft. Frigidaire,
step ladder, garden hose and
tools.—Mrs. E. J. Eby, O’Neill,
phone 437-W. 43c
FOR SALE: Electric water heat
ers, 30- and 52-gal., double ele
ment. We install them.—Wm.
Krotter Co. of O’Neill, phone
531. 42c
FOR SALE: HU-volt, 1,000-watt
alternating light plant, $225.
One 32-volt Delco, $70.—Plain
view Farm Equipment Co. 4tf
FOR SALE: 1948 Pontiac 8 hy
dramatic sedan.—Wm. Krotter
Co. of O’Neill. 42c
WANTED
CUSTOM CORN SHELLING:
New M-M truck mounted shelt
er, 1,580 bu. hour capacity.
Make arrangements for your
shelling with K. C. Hunt, at
Hunts’ Recapping Service,
phone 289, O’Neill. *
WANTED: Work for grader.
Grading, maintaining, land and
lawn terracing, tree and brush
removal. — Harding Construc
tion, O’Neill, Nebr. 42-4p450
FOR PROMPT, efficient mechan
ical ditch digging, 6 inches
wide, 6 feet deep, call or write
Bonge Bros., Plainview, Nebr.,
phone 111 or 21.
WANTED: 30 to 40 head of cows
for calf share. Plenty of pas
ture and hay.—D. L. Moler, O’
Neill. 41-43p95
WANTED: Paper hanging. —
Mrs. Charles Beilin, O’Neill,
phone 338J. 23tf
WANTED TO BUY: Oats, wheat
and corn. — Corkle Hatchery,
O’Neill. 13tf
LOST & FOUND
LOST: Lady’s gold Gruen wrist
watch, going to or from 9 o’
clock mass Feb. 11 at St. Pat
rick’s. Reward.— Inquire The
Frontier. 40tf
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: Furnished apt.,
close-in.—A. E. Bowen, O’Neill.
43c
HRINER P1
Tractor. Personal Property
4SURANCE Livestock
ARM SERVICE. RENTALS
Phone 106 Farm Property
MISCELLANEOUS
—
A WAY TO AVOID costly field
delays is to have your tractor
and other equipment in A-l
shape when spring rolls a
round. Bring them in now for
expert, economical repairs. Ex
perienced mechanics for all
makes.— Marcellus Impl. Co.,
West O’Neill. 43c
WHATEVER YOUR electrical
need, see JACOBSON’S in O'
Neill FIRST! 43tf
GOOD FLOOR SANDER and edg
er for rent. Inquire: Spelts-Ray
Lbr. Co., O’Neill.
WHETHER you wish to buy,
rent, trade or sell, The Fron
tier’s classifieds will do the
trick quickly and economically.
38tf
FOR BRIGGS & STRATTON
service and genuine parts call
at Vic Halva’s Electric Shop,
O’Neill. 41tf
. Long Term
4% Federal Lank Bank
L-O-A-N-S
Pre-Payment Privileges
ELKHORN VALLEY
Nat’l Farm Loan Ass’n.
Lyle P. Dierks, Sec.-Treas.
O’Neill, Nebr.
AU1U UVYH DUO
IF YOU WANT cheaper insurance
let me know. I can finance a
1946 and newer model automo
bile and write your insurance
for you! We need and appreci
ate your business.
GEO. C. ROBERTSON
O’Neill, Nebr.
HALVA’S ELECTRIC SHOP
Generator & Motor Winding
New and Used Motors
for Any Job 25tf
FARM & COMMERCIAL
WIRING
DON’T WIRE until you have our
price. Be safe. Have your wir
ing installed by our skilled
workmen. We have all mater
ials and fixtures for a complete
job. All material and work
guaranteed. Ten years of REA
wiring experience. Drop us a
card for free estimate. For a
neat job see us.
Motor Re-winding and Repairs
CONTACT
Ralph Simpson
LESTER ELECTRIC
O’Neill, Nebr. 29tf
Complete
Auction Sales
Service!
Advertising, auctioneering, clerk
ing ... let us take care of the
details. Call or see
ED THORIN, Chambers
or
KEITH ABART, O’Neill
Insurance of All Kinds
REA FARMSTEAD WIRING
SEE US before you wire. All work
guaranteed.— CHAS. CHAM
BERS, O’Neill, phone 547-J, or
leave word at Gillespie’s. 40tf
HUN T ’ S
PLUMBING & HEATING
Complete Bathroom Fixtures
2d door West Midwest Fum.
Service Phone 399, O’Neill
ATTENTION: Mullen’s Radio
Electric Service does REA and
city electrical wiring. Guaran
teed repair of home radios, au
to radios and electrical appli
ances of all kinds. We are now
located in our new shop 2
blocks west and 1% blocks
south of the state garage, O’
Neill. _Ttf
L. Guthmiller
REPAIR SHOP
Half-block East of
Texaco Station
SPECIALIZING in all kinds of
automobile, truck and tractor
repair. Acetylene welding.
YOU want most dollar return for
your live stock? Then choose as
your market agent the firm that
gets results. — FRANK E.
SCOTT COMMISSION CO.,
STOCK YARDS, SIOUX CITY,
IOWA. 34c.tf.
CARD OF THANKS
I WISH to thank my friends and
relatives for the nice cards,
flowers and gifts sent to me for
my 82d birthday anniversary.
43c MRS. EFFIE N. BRADY
O'NEILL LOCALS
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Grage, Doc
tor and Mrs. Suttcliff, of Rapid
City, S. D., Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Regan and Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Carr were dinner guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Walker, of Ewing, on Saturday, |
February 24.
Venetian h u n d », prompt
delivery, w*** to measure ,
metal or wo-'* a’l colors—J.
M McDon»1'1 lift
Rev. Ralph Gerber spent Mon
day and Tuesday in Grand Island
attending a Christian education
conference.
Mr and ** ,f,avne Fox left
Tuesday. F^hr’ 20. on a two
weeks’ tnp ■ M nnesota and
Wisconsin
Future of Our
American Land
(Continued from page 3)
conditions under a great variety
of treatments, but we carried on
numerous investigations with
respect to control and preven
tion.
Later, we discovered that this
information was strictly new, not
only for the United States but
for the world. Scientists and
others over the world asked for
the information and it was given
them freely from the very start.
Public interest in erosion was
vastly accelerated by this work—
so much so that in 1933 a nation
al program of soil conservation
was started with an allotment of
5 million dolars of relief funds,
under authority of the National
Industrial Recovery act.
In the beginning the principal
job was to find men who had had
any technical experience in soil
conservation work. This was not
easy. There were probably not
more than about 50.men in the
United States w&o really under
stood the meaning of sheet ero
sion. In the intervening years,
some additional men had been
trained. So we naturally turned
to these stations for whatever
help we could get. Then we re
cruited our staff from experienc
ed agriculturalists, who were put
to work under our most experi
enced men. Later, within the
Service, we operated training
schools.
r aimers imeu me w wa
the very beginning. After a few
months of field experience, we
were given additional funds for
the program. And later, still
more funds. We made some mis
takes, to be sure, but our suc
cesses vastly outnumbered them.
Out of this nursery and re
search work, along with our farm
experience in soil and water con
servation, we steadily refined
and improved the program with
every additional bit of informa
tion and every new plant that
proved worth while. Work mov
ed along so rapidly from the re
search stage into the operational
stage that some people became
confused about the real sequence
of events.
There were those who thought
the dust storms, current at that
time, were responsible for start
ing the big soil conservation ef
fort. The dust storms helped, to
be sure, but the program had
been going nearly 8 months when
the first great duster of May 12,
1934, blew across the country
from the heart of the Nation to
blot out the sun over the Capitol
at Washington.
Then the 74th Congress took us
Play ‘Little Women
Staged at lett
DELOIT — Several families
from here attended the senior
girls’ play, “Little Women,” at
Bartlett on Friday evening.
The play, reported “very
good,” was staged by the high
school girls.
uiner ueion news
Mrs. Lambert Bartak, Mrs.
Lodge and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Maben were Norfolk visitors on
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Clow ar
rived home Sunday from Ros
well, N. M. Scotty returned the
first of the week at Bethoud,
Colo., where he has employment.
Mrs. Clow is visiting at the home
of her mother, Minnie Reimer,
of Ewing.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Manson, Mar
vin Fullers and Ronald Burt
spent Sunday at Roy Beeson’s.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Reimer and
daughters visited Mrs. Carl
Christon on Sunday at the J. A.
Larson home in Ewing.
Reverend and Mrs. Graham
and daughter, of Ewing, accom
panied Mr. and Mrs. Adolph
Bartak to the play in Bartlett on
Friday evening..
Mrs. Stanley Huffman and
daughter returned to their home
last week.
Joan Thiele spent last week at
home.
Ronald Burt spent the week
end at the Sidney Anderson
home.
Marlene Reimer, of Lincoln,
spent the weekend at home.
O'NEILL LOCALS
Mrs. Marne Grady, of Rapid
City, S. D., spent the weekend
visiting Mrs. John Rotherham.
Mrs. Grady was enroute to
Grand Island.
The Methodist WSCS will have
a food sale on Saturday, March
24. 43-44c
Mrs Frank Clements return
ed home Sunday, February 25,
after a 10-day visit in Pilger
w t' "T and Mrs. Ed Psotta.
George Janousek, Joe Biglin,
J i on and Mr. and Mrs.
C- _’ i n motored to Colum
bus undiv to bring Mrs. George
J horn * after visiting her
and Mrs. Earl Hije,
fo** »k.
■ Niles and Mrs. Paul
Torfolk Tuesday
in hand, set us up under the first
soil conservation act ever passed
by any great Nation that we
know anything about. This was
the Soil Conservation Act of Ap
ril 27. 1935, Public No. 46, Sev
enty-fourth Congress, which
reads as follows:
"Be it enacted by the Senate
and House of Representatives
of the United States of Amer
ica in Congress assembled.
That it is hereby recognised
that the wastage of soil and
moisture resources on farm,
grazing, and forest lands of the
Nation, resulting from soil ero
sion. is a menace to the nation
al welfare and that it is here
by declared to be the policy of
Congress to provide perman
ently for the control and pre
vention of soil erosion and
thereby to preserve natural re
sources, control floods, prevent
impairment of reservoirs, and
maintain the navigability of ri
vers and harbors, protect pub
lic health ..."
This act established the Soil
Conservation Service as a perma
nent agency in the Department
^of Agriculture.
Since then, through the
drought and depression of the
1930’s and the war and postwar
periods of the 1940’s, the soil
conservation movement and the
program of the Soil Conservation
Service have made steady pro
gress. Over and over again, un
der a wide variety of circum
stances and needs, the usefulness
and value of scientific soil and
water conservation work has
been proved. In dry years, it
neipea conservation farmers store
water in the soil to brnig their
crops through drought to harvest
in good condition. In exception
ally wet periods, it has demon
strated its effectiveness in slow
ing down rapid and wasteful—
sometimes ruinous — runoff of
water that would have contrib
uted to flood peaks. In times of
crop surpluses, it has provided
the farmer with a sound basis
for making desirable changes in
his production, often toward
greater disversification, and with
a reduction in the per acre cost
of production.
In the 1930’s and even into the
early 1940’s, we were obliged to
devote a considerable amount of
time to educational work, prep
aratory to actual conservation
work on the land. This was a
slow but necessary activity, and
it served to hold down the an
nual rate at which conservation
measures were being applied.
It did not mean, however, that
conservation progress was slow.
The education of farmers and
ranchers in the forms and conse
quences of uncontrolled erosion,
as well as in the practical means
available to achieve permanent
conservation, are vital prelimi
naries to actual work on the land.
Without such understanding on
the part of the landowners, con
servation measures would not be
properly applied and certainly
they would not be properly
maintained.
In different words, I am say
ing that the number of farm
plans prepared, the number of
acres terraced, and the number
of farm ponds built are not the
only gauge of conservation prog
ress. Actual work on the land is
only one part of what is neces
sary to bring about and sustain
the conservation of land and wa
water resources. Not the least of
several other essential elements
in successful, lasting conserva
tion is the persistent,, patient
work to help farmers, ranchers,
understand with some clarity
what conservation farming is,
why it is necessary, and what is
required to start it and keep it
going on a sound basis.
All the conservation science
in lhe world will not get one
acre of privately-owned land
in this country protected a
gainst erosion, drained of ex
cess water, or used in accord
ance with its physical capabil
ity unless the landowner wants
it done and knows why he
wants it done.
So in measuring what has been
accomplished todate, the educa
tional work we have done ranks
near the top of the list. And m
fairness to the Soil Conservation
Service and its men who were
largely untrained in this field,
it must be noted that for years
they carried on with little or no
' help, as a general rule.
I I can remember clearly some
venerable individuals who conr
tended, in the face of thousands
of acres of gullies in their states,
that erosion was no problem
within their boundaries. There
were others who would have
nothing to do with the program
because they had not originated
it; still others actually opposed
it either because of reasons men
tioned above or because they de
cided, somehow, that it was a
political program.
There are still a few obstruc
tionists, and I suppose we must
be reconciled to them in soil con
servation as in every other field
of endeavor, but with each pass
ing year the Soil Conservation
ervice program has won more j
and more active supporters. To
day the program is one of the
most popular and most widely
praised of governmental activi
ties. The program has not been a
source of trouble and its backers
can be found in both major pol
itical parties and among conserv
atives and liberals alike.
They did not just happen. We
sacrificed, and I believe wisely,
a more imposing record of ac
complishment on the land, to
bring about a widespread under
standing of the need for conser
vation and its values.
The charge is being made now
adays that although we are doing
a very good job, we are going
too slowly and do not reach
enough farmers each year. This,
of course, raises a question about
the meaning of "slowly.” If we
were willing to reduce the qual
ity of our work, we could un
doubtedly build more terraces,
farm ponds, drainage ditches, and
diversions each year. We could,
by abandoning the fundamental
according to its needs and using
principle of treating each acre
each acre according to its capabil
ities, vastly increase the total
acreage of contouring, stubble
mulching, strip cropping, and
dozens of other conservation
measures. But what value would
this work have? How long would
it last?
Speed in soil conservation
work can only be measured in
relation to quality. I will agree—
and as a matter of fact I have
been saying for years—that we
are not going fast enough. We
most certainly need to move a
head faster; the rate of land dam
age still exceeds, in the aggre
gate, the rate of land protection.
But it would be folly and waste
to increase speed at the expense
of quality.
As a matter of fact, the present
program of the Soil Conservation
I Service is moving ahead faster
I than most people recognize. We
| are now treating in the neighbor
I hood of 2 million acres a year
j and simultaneously we are pro
ceeding with farm conservation
planning on a somewhat compar
able acreage. Work continues on
the national land capability in
ventory and each year, as a re
sult, we know the land facts a
bout an additional 30 million
acres. At the same time there is
continued progress in education
, and research.
The biggest part of the job
still lies ahead. More than
three-fourths of the area in
need of conservation treatment
is stUl untreated. But Our prin
ciples are sound, our quality of
work has been maintained at
high levels, and our support
continues to grow.
If the Service Is allowed to
proceed with the present pro
gram, maintaining the same high
standards, basing the work on
the needs and capabilites, of the
land itself, and utilizing the
strength of democracy and organ
ization inherent in soil conserva-,
tion districts, the United States
in due course will become the
first large nation in the history
of the world to succeed, by its
own efforts, in achieving a per
manently productive agriculture.
I hope for the everlasting good
of the nation nothing will be per
mitted to interrupt or delay this
conservation program of the
United States.
. -
ELKHORN VALLEY
National Farm Loan Association
— O’Neill —
Our Service Is Dedicated
to the
FARMER & RANCHER
in
Holt and Adjoining Counties
To Assist Him in
I
FINANCING HIS OBLIGATIONS
I
on a Basis Geared to the
Normal Production of His Unit
• If you are in need of sound 4 per
cent financing on your ranch or
farm, see or call us immediately.
•
• Hie National Farm Loan Associa
tion has served North - Nebraska
farmers and rancher for 33 years.
• During 1930, $469,900 in long
range low - interest farm and ranch
loans were handled through this
office.
LYLE P. DIERKS, Secretary-Treasurer
Phone 91 O’Neill