The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 28, 1951, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2.—Thun., June 28. 1951.
Editorial It Business Offices: 122 South Fourth Street
O'NEILL. NEBB.
CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher
Established in 1880—Published Each Thursday
Entered the postoffice at O’Neill, Holt county, Nebraska, as sec
ond-class mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
This newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press Association,
National Editorial Association and the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Terms oi Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per year; elsewhere
In the United States, $3 per year; abroad, rates provided on request.
All subscriptions are strictly paid-in-advance.
New Coach Bosses
Stuart Midgets
STUART— Ted Schiessler be
gan his work here as coach Fri
day, with the midget baseball
team.
Mr. Schiessler comes from Ains
worth and was graduated from
Midland college in Fremont this
spring with majors in physical
education and education, and a
minor in social studies.
He has been hired to coach the
Legion baseball team this sum
mer and the school board has an
nounced he will coach the Bron
cos this fall.
Mr. and Mrs. Schiessler moved
to Stuart last week.
Other Stuart Newt
Mrs. Joe Schmaderer, sr., ac
companied Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Hoffman to Norfolk on Sunday,
June 24, where they will visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Schmad
erer and daughter. Mrs. Joe
Schmaderer will also visit at
West Point.
Neighbors in the Sand Creek
community gathered at the school
on Friday night, June 22, for a
welcome party in honor of the Si
mon Timmerman family, who
moved onto the Josephine Tim
merman farm this spring.
Frank Porter and Russell
Birch, of Lebanon, Mo„ visited in
the Berlin Mitchell home Sunday,
June 17. Mr. Porter is a nephew
of Mrs. Mitchell.
Vincent Family
Visits Here—
Capt. and Mrs. J. F. Vincent
and family, formerly of Ft.
Dodge, la., arrived Friday for a
short visit with Captain Vincent’s
mother, Mrs. Amelia Vincent.
Monday evening they left for
Chicago, 111., and after a shoit
stay there, Captain Vincent ex
pects to be stationed at Norfolk,
Va.
During their brief visit here,
the Vincents were Sunday lunch
eon guests of Mrs. Mabel Gatz
and Sunday dinner guests ol Mr.
and Mrs. William Gatz. Mr. and
Mrs. C. J. Gatz were hosts at a
dinner party given in honor of
the Vincents Monday evening.
Kaisers Help Celebrate
Wedding Anniversary—
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kaiser
and family and Margery Norman
were among the 67 friends and
relatives who gathered at the
home of Mrs. Kaiser's brother,
Henry Kliment, and family, near
Wuusa, on Sunday, June 24, their
10th wedding anniversary.
Everyone brought well-filled
baskets and the afternoon was
spent socially.
Others attending were:
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kliment,
sr., and son, Ivan, Mr and Mrs.
James Oobias and family and Mr.
and Mrs. Louis F. Kliment and
family, all of Atkinson; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Soucek and fami
ly and Norbert Dobias and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Sokal and fam
ily, ali of Verdigre; Me and Mrs.
Leon Thompson and Dougi", Mr.
and Mrs. John Bratetic and fam
ily, and Miss Evelyn Vavak, all
of Bloomfield; Mr. and Mrs Rein
hold Weise and family and Har
riet Hansen and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Bratetic and daughter, all
of Wausa; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Fowlkes, jr„ and family of New
man Grove; Mr. and Mrs. Otto
SokaJ and family, of Madison;
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Pospisil
and Mr, and Mrs. Louis Busteed
and daughter, all of Lindsay; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul S< hroeter and
daughter, of Madison.
The honored couple received
many gifts.
Venetian blinds, prompt deliv
ery, made to measure, metal or
wood, all colors,—J. M. McDon
ald Co„ 0‘Neill. lit!
Famous Continental
SILVERWARE FREE!
Yew'U treasure It for years to eome
... .a set of beautiful Continental
Silverware. Get as many pieces as yew
weed, rive piece starter set consists
Of teaspoon, tablespoon, dinner knife,
fork, and salad fork. The beauty ef
this fine aliverplate.. .made by oae
Wf America's famous sllversmllha ..
Is sure to please. Guaranteed for serv«
lea
Ask your Sioux Brand Feed Dealer
for more details.
SIOUX BRAND
Poultry
Feed
Your Sioux Brand Dealer will be glad
»• ehow you how to make real profit*
with your poultry this season. Right
bow ho ha* a folder of helpful poultry
hints.. FREE., .It outline* a progress
that will moan more poultry profit!
*r yon.
TRI-STATE
HATCHERY
Phone 90 — O'Neill
O’NEILL
TRANSFER
John Turner, Prop.
★
Daily Trips
Omaha to O’Neill
O’Neill to Omaha
§
Irregular Tripe
O'Neill to All
Nebraska Points
Telephones:
O'NELI^UIJ
OMAHA—A. T. 0560
★
Your Patronage
Appreciated
NEBRASKA’S BIGGEST
Fourth of July
CELEBRATION
RIVERSIDE PARK, NEIGH, NEBR.
★ Three - Star Motorcycle Race Meet
★ Gigantic Firework* Display
BIG MIDWAY — DANCING
SPEND THE 4TH IN NELIGH
t
Prairieland Talk—
Prairies of Nebraska Not Breeding Grounds
for Rebels Who Would Crucify Country
By ROMAINE SAUNDERS
LINCOLN — At midnight the
summer of 1951 was ushered in
on prairieland with the old famil
iar drip, drip, drip.
At daybreak this morning Ju
piter Pluvius was still shedding
Romaine
Saunders
tears upon the
water - soaked
earth. The sum
mer starts the
season’s march
on web feet
and the gloom
thickens a
round the coin
farmer as he
sees another
inch of water
added to the
lister rows, and
his grain fields
hope 1 e s s 1 y
stuck in swamp lands. The bins
and cribs long holding in storage
the products of other seasons
have been waiting for such a time
as this.
Now comes the day to open
them up. But the grain farmer
will be left out of the picture. He
already has had his. Maybe some
of them now will get a few more
gray hairs wondering how they
will make the payments on the
balance still due on the aggrega
tion of motorized implements of
agriculture.
While we are waterlogged,
tongues are hanging out for a
drop of water down in New Mex
ico and Arizona.
* * m
The treasury department says
it costs $10 to process a federal
income tax refund check, so sums
under $1 will be ignored. . . The
country has 320 miles of railway
tunnels. . . The Bible, whole or
in part, had been printed and cir
culated in 1,034 languages at the
close of 1950, according to the
American Bible society. . . The
first Tuesday in April next will
be Nebraska’s primary election
day, which will be the first day
of April, 1952. April fool’s day
may be highly appropriate for
holding an election. . . That lady
from up some where in New Eng
land, who holds down a seat in
congress and writes for publica
tion, has a solution for the “man
power shortage” in filling army
quotas. She thinks the “most real
istic source of manpower is wom
anpower.” Now just what does
the fair lady mean by that? . ,
The Monitor, first iron-clad, lies
120 feet under water off Cape
Hatteras, N. C.. and Herr Hitler’s
$4,000,000 floating palace goes to
a scrap heap in New Jersey.
9 $ •
Complaint arises that the
Mac Arthur senate committee is
costing the country thousands
of dollars. Those senators have
to do something to earn their
salaries.
Another fathers’ day tributes
have gone into the record of de
voted sons and daughters. Father
may wonder what he has ever
done to entitle him to special at
tention once each year. If within
the scope of his ability he has
done all that he could for sons
and daughters, not alone in daily
toil that the needs of family life
are taken care of but also that
the fireside had become a place
of refuge where the principles of
righ living and honored commun
ity life were daily inculcated and
children came to maturity, them
selves experiencing the joy of
parenthood, those principles ab
sorbed into their young lives
through the instruction of father
and mother must forever remain
cherished memories to guide
through life. Dad may not have
been a whiz as a businessman but
sons and daughters may rever
him for having been a success as
a husband and father.
• • m
_ V* *ri^e i* not much given
to talking. Why is the function
ary at the banka' grated stall
known as a teller? One of them
fold me today he should be
known as a taker — taking in
all he could get of our filthy
lucre. 7
• • »
»:y°.Un,l Tomen interested in the
girls state organization have
been in town. Their deliberations
disclose the girls have a group of
national and state government
problems to which statesmen
may well lend an attentive ear.
*nd gives older heads a tip on the
attitude of the rising generation
on public affairs. The girls are
for more and better highways,
consolidated school districts in
the interests of improvement in
the public schools, increase in
teachers 'pay checks, tlood con
trol, irrigation, outlaw gambling
of whatever pretext. Taxation
was touched upon by favoring
the "ability” theory and rejecting
the sales tax. The vote on none
of these proposals and several
others was by no means unani
mous. That Nebraska girls, from
Omaha to North Platte, show a
lively interest in the affairs of
government demonstrates that
young womanhood stands for the
preservation of our American
heritage against the inroads of
destructive isms.
The FBI has a few of them un
der lock and key with this nota
tion—name, age, New York City,
bom in Russia. Our great city on
the Atlantic seashore has become
a hangout for about every despic
able thing under the sun, flour
ishing side-by-side with the good
and great. Bom in Russia. Send
them to Joey, The kremlin al
ways has room for a few more.
The FBI is not out in prairieland
on their hunt for red rebels who
would crucify their country. The
orairies of Nebraska do not breed
that sort of gentry. Oh yes, we
do our share of growling, but
that’s mostly at one another, not
institutions. And then when it
comes to a showdown on a mea
sure of public welfare we are
pretty soldidly for it. And then,
L°°’u “ arr°f?ance shows itself in
high places, if incompetence is
wrecking things, we are hot on
the trail to “turn the rascals out.” I
* • •
By the close of the first week i
in June the weather in southeast
Nebraska, in fact much of the
corn growing area of the state,
had assumed the serious aspect.
Too much rain is even more de
structive than not enough. Ex
cessive rains over much of the
territory put a stop to farm op
erations just when a letup in
downpour had enabled farmers
to get at com planting and an
other period of heavy rains set
in. An all-time record for amount
of rainfall has been scored up
for the Nebraska com belt.
• m m
How does a long-suffering wife
put up with a guy for 50 years7
We offer a tribute to their loyal
ty, and maybe the old man has
put up with some things. Any
way, in this day of so many brok
en homes it is a high pleasure to
look upon the snow white heads
of those whose devotion and loy
alty reflects the melody of the
wedding bells after the passing
of half a century. And may I es
pecially congratulate Charley and
Kitty Stout?
• • •
The Fourth of July shooting
and cracking has begun early.
Wonder if young America knows
what it is all about. An adopted
son from a Scandinavian country
told me of the thrill he got out
of his first Fourth celebration.
When asked what the day stood
for he said it was observed for
the freeing of the Negro slaves.
• • •
Are we making sissies of our
boys? A lady, maybe with the BA
degree is teaching school boys to
swim. If a woman had undertak
en a thing like that when the Old
Timer was a kid she probably
would have been shoved in and
given a ducking in the swimming
hole.
• • a
Cattle on the sandhill ranges go
into the summer about ready for
the butcher block. Slick, no bones
punching the hide and* another 2
months browsing i n verdant
grass lands and lollying in the
sun chewing the cud should a
bout put on the finishing touches.
Try Frontier want advs. for
quick results!
MRS. ROBERT COOVER . . .
Miss Marcilene Schroeder,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Her
man Schroeder, of Ewing, on
Sunday, June 17, became the
bride of Robert Coover, son or
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Coover, of
Neligh. It was an 8 p.m. double
ring nuptial rite in the Ewing
Methodist church. — O’Neill
Photo Co.
Heavy Entries for
Madison Race Meet
Nine days of racing are sche
duled for the 1951 meeting at
Fairgrounds park at Madison.
The dates are July 5 through
July 14-Sunday, July 8, excepted.
The extension by one day this
year is in response to wide spread
requests by racing fans from
many sections of the state.
Racing officials and heads
of the various departments are
making plans to handle the lar
gest attendance in the history
of racing at Madison.
There will be an abundance
of good horses on the grounds
when the meeting opens Thurs
day, July 5. E. J. Moyer, racing
committee manager, announces
enrollment far in excess of any
previous year.
Racing Secretary Ralph Stu
bbs, of Aurora 111., on the job in
his office at the grounds since
June 1, reports practically every
stall already taken. He is busy
now screening the long list of
late applications, many of whom
will be forced to stable else
where.
Crews of workmen are now
winding up jobs that will place
the plant in excellent condition.
Many worthwhile improvements
harve been made this year, most
important of which is the ere
ction of a canopy on the south
and west of the grand stand. This
will give badly needed protec
tion from sun and rain to both
visitors and workers.
MONEY TO LOAN
ON
AUTOMOBILES
TRUCKS
TRACTORS
EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
Central Finance
Corp.
C. E. Jones. Manager
O'Neill t Nebraska
I _
FIREWORKS
For Sale Starting June 28
Hundreds of Day and Night Items—
Sparklers — Fountains — Wheels—Cones
Flower Pots — Chasers — Helicopters
Flying Saucers
Everything for a beautiful fireworks
display!
RAWS OIL CO.
—Inman—
——
AUCTION SALE I
OF
L L. FEYERHERM
. IMPROVEMENTS .
on Farm V4 mile South of Royal, Nebr.,
on the East side of the road, on
SATURDAY, JUNE 30 •
1:30 ON PREMISES
IMPROVEMENTS
Improvements consist of: 7-room lVi-story Dwelling,
50x20; Barn with a metal roof, 32x26; Poultry House with
floor. 10x12; and Wash House. 10x12.
These buildings are to be moved from the place.
TERMS: CASH
SALE CONDUCTED BY
THORIN & REYNOLDSON
AUCTION SERVICE
COOL MESH
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This lightweight straw is durably fashion
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MEN’S COOL
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MEN’S COOL RAYON
TROPICAL SLACKS
LIGHTWEIGHT COMFORT!
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Good-looking slacks . . . handsomely styl
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Neat conservative patterns in brown, grey
and blue. Separate waistband, plain
smooth fitting front. Buy now at Penney s
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t