The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 03, 1952, Page 10, Image 10
Robinson Family Holds Gathering PAGE—Rev. and Mrs Lester Hart and family, of Wood River, came Friday evening to spend thb weekend with relatives at Page. On Sunday a family dinner was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Heiss and family. Others present were Rev. and Mrs. Hart and family, of Wood River; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Andrews, of Nor folk, and Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rob inson and son, Willis, and Mr. and Mrs. Dee Grass, of Page. Mrs Hart, Mrs. Andrews, Mrs. Heiss, Mrs. Grass and Willis Rob inson are the children of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Robinson. Other Page News The Just-a-Mere club met Fri day afternoon with Mrs. Jennie French. A 4 o’clock lunch was served. Mr. and Mrs. Esmond Weber and two daughters, of Denver, Colo., came Wednesday evening, March 26, and spent until Sun day visiting Mrs. Weber’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Nissen, and Mr. Weber’s mother, Mrs. A. O. Weber, and other relatives at Page and O’Neill. Mr. Weber was looking after his farm while here. The Royal Neighbor Kensing ton (met Wednesday afternoon, March 26, with Mrs. Otto Mats chullat with 10 members present. Mrs. George Clasey was a visitor. Mrs. Ray Snell and Mrs. Robert Gray had charge of the entertain- [ ment. A covered disn luncn was served. The next meeting will ue with Mrs. Anton Nissen. Mrs. Eugar Wood and Mrs. Neil Asher will have charge of the entertain ment. Dick Buxton left Sunday for Greenfield, la., where he has em ployment, after spending a week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Buxton. He was accom panied to Fremont by L. B. Tay lor. Maurice Waring returned to Omaha to Creighton university. He was .called home by the death of his grandfather, Roy Waring, of Orchard. Mr. and Mrs. Soren Sorensen, sr., attended the funeral of an old friend, Gerald Fox, at Belden on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Coon and family, of Inman, and Mrs. Har vey Spangler, Betty and Donald, were dinner guests Sunday of Mrs. Myrtle Coon. Mrs. Ida Ryan and daughter, Margaret, of White River, S.D., were Friday night visitors at the Rollie Snell home. Mr and Mrs. M. V. Hall, of Braidwood, HI., came Thursday to look after the estate of Mrs. Hall’s sister, the late Mrs. Anna Coover. Clayton Mesner and daughter, Elta Rea, of O’Neill, and Mr. and Mrs. Soren Sorensen, jr., and Glenda spent Sunday at the home of (Mr. and Mrs. Soren Sorensen, sr. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Nissen and Mr. and Mrs. Neil Asher went to Osmond Sunday afternoon, where | they visited Mrs. Nissen’s and j; Mrs. Asher’s mother, Mrs. Kate Fuelberth. TAX SAME It is important that soil be well nourished for it takes as much work to plan, seed, plant and otherwise handle an acre of small yield as it does an acre yielding well. The tax is the same also. LIVE ON STOOL We live on a three-legged stool: Soil, water and plants. When anything happens to destroy one or more of these, the stool top ples over. A MUSTN"T A straight line Is the shortest distance between two points and a straight furrow on rolling land is the shortest line to soil de struction. TIP ON PLOWING It’s poor business to spend money for time and fertilizer and then lose most of it by plowing and planting up and down hill. Permanent farm prosperity will not be found around the cor ner but around the contour. Agriculture is the foundation upon which our national econo my rests. WE THEATRE* — O'NEILL — Thursday, April 3 James Cagney in this year’s most powerful and different War ner Bros, picture— COME FILL THE CUP With Raymond Massey, James Gleason, Gig Young. Adm. 42c, plus tax 8c. Tot. 50c Children 10c. plus 2c lax. Tot. 12c v - Friday and Saturday April 4-5 Big Double Bill THE LADY FROM TEXAS Color bv Technicolor. Starring Howard Duff, Mona Freeman, Josephine Hull, with Gene Lock hart, Craig Stevens, Jay C. Flip pen. — also — KARTOON KARNIVAL Six Colored Cartoons! Adm.: 42c. plus tax 8c. Total 50c Children 10c, plus 2c tax: tot. 12c Matinee Saturday 2:30 «* " Sunday, Monday and Tuesday April 6-7-8 A song’n star-spangled lift for your heart! STARLIFT Doris Day, Gordon MacRae, Virginia Mayo, Gene Nelson, Ruth Roman and guest stars. Adm. 42c. plus tax 8c, Tot. 50c Children 10c. plus 2c tax. Tot. 12c Matinee Sunday 2:30 Wednesday and Thursday April 9-10 ANNIE OF INDIES Jean Peters, Louis Jourdan, Debra Paget with Herbert Mar shal. Adm.: 42c. plus tax 8c. Tula! 50c Children 10c, plus 2c tax: tot. 12c Chambers Gals Have Impressive Record CHAMBERS— The Chambers high school girls’ volleyball team has just completed a very good season. The girls started playing in terscholastic volleyball last year. The conference is the Sandhill Gateway conference and the girls compete in volleyball and softball. They receive trophies and recognition the same as the boys. n 1950-51 the girls dropped the first two games to Page. After these set backs, they swept through the rest of the season without further defeat and were declared the undefeated Sand hill Gateway conference cham pions. They defeated all five oth er conference schools. In the post-season Page invitational tournament, the girls continued their winning ways through four games, meeting and defeating the host school, Page, in the fi nals to become the tourney champions. This gave them a record of nine victories and two losses for the year. The nine wins were consecutive. The girls began the 1951 - 52 season by winning the Clearwa ter invitational tourney, which was a pre-season affair. The girls played three games in the tour ney, meeting and defeating Page in the finals. The girls then went through the regular season with | out a loss, won over Page twice, Atkinson once, and defeated all I seven conference foes. The team again entered the post-season Page invitational tourney and played three games, defeating Clearwater in the finals for the championship fot< the second year in a row. This ended the season with the gals having 16 straight wins to their credit for the year and a record of 25 victories without a defeat during the last two years. The Chambers girls are now into softball practice for the coming season. They were the undefeated softball champs in the Sandhill Gateway conference in ’51. Prospects for the season are good with the entire team of ’51 returning and 20 girls have reported out for the sport. “Give me liberty or give me death” are not the only words of Patrick Henry that go ringing down the years. He also said, “He is the greatest patriot who stops the most gullies.” To begin with, we had some thing over 50\j million acres of tillable land in the United States. More than half of our farm land has been damaged by erosion. Soil conservation has meant savings to the farmer in seed, fertilizer, labor and power, and increased income. Chambers high champ volleyballers .... Coach Thomas D. Hutton, Lela Mae Hornback, Jeanne Farrier, Neva Jarman, Vivian Harley, Ruth Ann Porter, Kay Eisenhauer, Beverley Platt, Joan Beed, Dorothy Haake, Joan Daas, De loris Harley. Ardith Waller.—O'Neill Photo Co. --■— Contribute to New Alaska Hospital STUART— Twenty-five mem bers of the Women’s society of the Community church and four visitors met at the church base ment Thursday afternoon, March 27, for a regular session. The devotional program was led by Mrs. Fred Zink, Mrs. George Keidel and Mrs. John Newman. In the business meeting it was voted to pay $10 for the overseas sewing assignment of the White Cross in preference to buying material and making up band ages. The “pint of pennies” pro ject was launched to help build a hospital at Palmer, Alaska. A committee was appointed to serve coffee and pie on election day, April 1. The committee for the food sale held Monday, March 15, reported a receipt of $84.30. Following the business meet ing lunch was served by the hostesses, Mrs. Dwaine Lockmon, Mrs. James Ramsey and Mrs. Wesley Cobb. Soil conservation doesn’t cost —it pays. ft 1 1 1 11 1 " USUI Air Blast Separation whirl* kernels free from the straw, last behind the AU-CftOP Harvester cylinder, I “Wide-Flow Feed MEANS A FAST-MOVING HARVEST n harvest ts & bfcezg with —vr***e your own ALL-CROP Harvester You’re ready for each field, as soon as it ripens. You ride out in front* ahead of the dust and dirt. And your own two-plow tractor pro vides the power you need. It’s the easy, low-cost way to harvest every threshable crop. Now is the time to buy equip ment to beat both the weather and the labor shortage. We have AIL CROP Harvesters on hand. See ui now and get the best. AU-CTOf It m AlUt-Cbalaan trod* mark. '«*. MI-S IFT Side Delivery Rake Let us show you this Allis-Chalmers gear shift rake . . . with two forward reel speeds and a reverse for tedding. With this power rake, you can run the reel fast for heavy green material, or when raking straw. A pull of the shift lever slows down the reel for saving easily shattered leaves. And the third position gives a reverse for power tedding of rain-dampened swaths or windrows. Let us demonstrate the power rake with just-right action for every crop and field condition. Tune in ^ Mm Notional f Sunn and Homo I Hour — ivory V Saturday — NBC ^ v . ' o MARGELLUS IMPL CO. O’Neal, Nebr. ■ ■ •• ’n 0 ★ smartest for Spring ★ all wool little coats ★ creamy-soft texture Registered Hereford SALE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 At Butte Livestock Market 15 BULLS 5 FEMALES ★ These bulls range in age from 12 to 16 months. ★ Two coming 3-year-old heifers bred to ralf in Alpril and 3 open heifers. ★ This is a very good group of cattle in good breeding condition and of the most popular blood lines. A .M. ENGELHAUPT, Owner Butte, Nebr. ____j . I CHECKS 1175-17.75 / Dashing, smart, new , . . it’s the brief checked coat in soft wool suede, yours in many versions ... bold checks to tiny patterns, sharp to pastel to neutral colors. Rayon taffeta lined. 10-18. GILUGAN REXALL STORE O'NEILL 1 ■1 ,bi 1 1