The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 10, 1952, Page 2, Image 2

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    Prairieland Talk . . .
8 Columns Not New to Oldtimers
By ROMAINE SAUNDERS
LINCOLN—Instead of shrinkage that accom- ♦
panies age, The Frontier has expanded to eight
columns to the page. That’s what it was in its in
fancy and the columns were a
pica wider, but at most 4 pages
were printed. That was about
the limit of the capacity of the
one journeyman printer who
did about everything. From
the collection of watermelons,
sweet com, jars of honey and
dollars that found the way into
the “print shop” he pulled
down $12 a week for his knowl
edge of the ’’art preservative,”
and his efforts to keep a few
Romaine score pioneer patriots informed
Saunders Cf the latest shootings or a
hanging out on Turkey creek, along with the edi
tor’s classic blasts at an envious contemporary.
See it now requires a force of several hands
to handle the copy that comes from the weeping
willows of the editorial sanctum.
Of course, O’Neill is a growing center of
trade for an ever-expanding territory and Edi
tor-Publisher Stewart is keeping pace, maybe set
ting the pace for the metropolis of the verdant and
farflung prairieland.
* • * *
What this humble pilgrim knows about it
could be expressed in one word, Nothing. But
somehow we have our suspicions that not all
that passes for worthwhile and construc
tive professional service is of any real worth. Soil
conservation, erosion and “watershed” wisdom.
Here they come with the title of doctor with a
line of talk that draws a following, Today I asked
a son of the soil who went through the days of
the hot winds in the 1890’s and made a success of
farming, what he thought of the “doctors” who
pose as erosion and conservation experts.
Said he didn't like to be critical but it ap
peared to him as a racket and if they came
around a farm of his, proposing "conserva
tion" methods, he would invite them to go
jump into the lake.
The successful operators of farms and ranches
are those who have learned from the experience
of a life-time how to operate profitably and have
little consideration for the things they find enter
taining at conservation gatherings and go back to
their rural domains unimpressed.
Even the title of “Rev.” is being used to work
a racket, and if gifted with a good line of gab
you will gather a following, mostly sisters.
* * *
Automobile license plates Nebraskans are re
quired to buy are lacking in decorative fea
tures to the worry of a lot of prairieland patriots,
who point an envious finger at these plates of tin
attached to cars from neighboring states. Did you
catch the story in a recent national publication?
Of all the thousands of automobiles that roll in
and out of Washington over the bridges spanning
the Potomac only the quiet dignity of a Nebras
ka plate on the rearend of a coupe caught the
attention of the magazine writer who tells the
story. Probably if an emblem is to be attached
to the license plates the fellow riding a cultivator
would propose an ear of corn, another patriot
a shock of grain, another a sugar beet, and if left
to prairieland dwellers out Holt county way they
would want a steer in one comer and a bale of
hay in one comer.
* * *
I asked a fourth grader why we celebrate the
Fourth of July. To shoot off firecrackers, he said.
The same question put to an 80-year-old. His re
ply was, To celebrate a battle. Has a knowl
edge of the simplest facts of American history no
place in the scheme of our national life today? !
,1 ■ , , II t.—. ! I , . . , .... ■ - II. I I ■ . .. -
The night is hot. Not a leaf or twig stirs. !
The afterglow of departed day gives way to en
croaching shadows. Out in the gloaming a lone
katydid rasps his evening tune. The grinding
hum of a power lawn mower, guided by some
householder in the gathering gloom, disturbs the
quiet of the early July evening. The lawn mower
is silent and now off in the distance, beyond
crowded street, beyond the dwellings of city
bound humanity, comes the sound of machines
gathering the ripened grain. Night has closed in.
Machines are silent. A pale moon looks down
upon the hot earth. Street lights cast steady rays
abroad. House lights are out. Sweltering folks in
the nude stand under the bathroom shower and
hope to make a night of it. And then our old re
liable Nebraska wind sweeps out of the north
with a fresh blast from the regions of the Arctic
circle. Good night.
* * *
In Lincoln, state and city officials, the news
paper guys and milling crowds of notables and no
bodies, always ready to give one of the great who
enters the gates a respectful hearing, saw and
heard the notable army man who had visions of
a seat in the white house. Looking down from
the eminence above the steps at the north en
trance of the state house upon the assembled Ne
brakans grouped about the imposing figure of
that notable Nebraskan, William Jennings Bryan,
General Eisenhower addressed us as our guest of
the evening of July 3. There is not much that
a speaker can say under such circumstances other
than the customary platitudes but after the work
of the Chicago convention is over and the fire
works begin no doubt the political spellbinders
will have something interesting.
Revised census figures give the population of
the United States at 156,187,000. . . Young Amer
ica was added to by the birth of 3,900,000 babies
last year, if all were accounted for. . . A Con
necticut chicken hatchery is filing orders for 210,
000 baby chicks contracted for by the Austrian
government. . . The federal government has under’
lease 325,000 miles of wire service, over which 17
billion words pertaining to government business
go annually. . . One railroad operating in Nebras
ka reports 71,£-million-dollars gross income in five
months’ operation, a million increase over a like
period a year ago. . . Don’t go to Canada with the
view of making it your home if you are taking a
new car with you unless you are fixed to pay $872
custom tax and a few other incidentals.
* * *
Miss Nixon of the Nebraka public library com
mission in a recent letter, says that the American
Heritage Foundation, in conjunction with 25
other organizations, including the American Li
brary association, are putting forth efforts this
presidential election year to interest the public in
the responsibility as citizens to register and vote.
The slogan in connection with this movement is
first to Listen, then Read, then Look, followed by
Talk and Argue. And then the last, Think. Let’s
have Think come after Listen, Look, Read. The
heck of it is there is a lot of Talk not seasoned
with thought. These organized movements to
gether with individual activities will no doubt
bear fruit in arousing us to action when the polls
open in November.
* * *
Edward C. Carter, at one time a resident of
Holt county over at the flourmill center of Mid
dle Branch, next to the Knox county line, died
last week at his home in Ashland. Mr. Carter
was the father of Judge Carter of the Nebraska
supreme court.
* * *
Need to punish a kid? Put him to work in
a garden pulling weeds.
Other Editors . . .
Chancellor Views Education
' The Stuart Advocate in search for the de
sired course of study needed for the Stuart pub
lic schools wrote to Chancellor R. G. Gustavson
of the University of Nebraska. His reply was one
all Nebraskans might as well read and we are
happy to reprint it here:
Dear Mr. Yost:
The ideal courses for a ranching and farm
ing community which would benefit all students
as fully as possible, is, as your community is
finding, a rather large order.
A high school education should enable all
students, according to their abilities, to achieve
certain ends.
The first aim is that they should be able to
communicate with and to understand other people
in reading, writing, speaking and listening. In
short, they should be able to handle the English
language with the facility that their abilities per
mit.
The second aim is the development and
maintenance of a mature sense of “getting along”
constructively with others. In family and married
life, with employers and employees, with civic
groups and with other groups. This is the very
heart of young people learning to live well in
both their local groups and in the larger world
community of which we are all a part today.
Closely related, is the aim of citizenship, de
signed to encourage students to think through
the issues he faces as members of a local com
. munity, and a much larger community. Students
should learn the ways of democratic living. A
good way to learn is through participation. They
should learn, too, about the historical background
in which they operate.
The fourth aim is to acquire some interests
in, and achieve according to their abilities in the
world of science. Great achievements of mankind
are recorded in the world of science, broadly
viewed, and in men’s relationships with others.
To understand this world it is necessary to have
some knowledge of the scientific developments
that have helped to make it. •
A fifth aim is the development of interests
in some of the literature, music, art and other
parts of the heritage of young people, and it is
the kind of expression that they should also
learn in order to be well developed persons.
A final aim in the education of young peo
ple is health. During the high school age, students
should learn not only to maintain good habits of
health, but also should learn or improve in some
athletics that they can continue into adult life.
Health is both physical and mental, and high
schools should not neglect either aspect.
These aims are basic to a good education.
With this background students should be well
prepared for entering upon their careers or fur
ther education. All of them should develop,
through this type of education, the desire to con
tinue educating themselves all of their lives.
Beyond this basic core that all students
should have there is the question of further train
ing for those who conclude their school and the
question of preparation for college for those who
' continue their formal education beyond high
school.
In a ranching and farming community boys
and girls should have the opportunity to train in
high school to do farming, ranching or to develop
homes more successfully. Stuart might consider
advanced education, on a community basis, to
help boys and girls to improve their career work
after they have worked on their ranches and
farms for a few years.
Boys and girls who have the possibilities of
going to college, and who will profit from that
experience, should be prepared to do so. Colleges
the country over expect young people who come
to them to be able to do college work. These
young people are handicapped if they have not
had the background that they need. For exam
ple, it is difficult to undertake an engineering
program in college if a young man has not had
the mathematics work in high school. There are
many other examples. These are not obstacles
placed in the way of students. They are simply
steps in a young person’s development, and it is
difficult to make the college step if a young
person has not had a good footing on the previous
step of high school.
With a limited teaching staff in high school,
it may seem impossible to enable young people
to have the courses in English, mathematics, sci
ence, languages and social studies that so often
are necessary for success in college. Yet, with
such facilities as individual correspondence
courses, a young person can be helped to com
pensate for any courses he should have, but that
the high school cannot provide.
For boys and girls in Stuart, the foregoing
implies that help should be given to them in
working out their life plans. I feel that is a par
ticular obligation to help those go on to college
who should go and who will profit from the ex
perience.
The University of Nebraska has facilities
available for help in planning such community
programs as this. We will be glad to help you.
Yours sincerely,
R. G. GUSTAVSON
Frontier
Editorial Be Business Offices: 122 South Fourth Sf.
CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher
Established in 1880—Published Each Thursday
•
Entered at the postoffice in O’Neill, Holt county,
Nebraska, as second-class mail matter under the
Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. This news
paper is a member of the Nebraska Press Associa
tion, National Editorial Association and the Audit
Bureau of Circulations.
Terms of 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.
LETTERS TO EDITOR
Arkansas Experiences
Severe Droulh
Harrison, Ark., Rt. 1
„ . , July 2, 1952
Dear Friends:
Enclosed is our payment for an
other year’s subscription to your
paper. Each week we race for
the the first chairand devour the
home town news while the wash
ing—or whatever the chore is at
hand—waits. We never appre
ciated the paper as much as we
have since we’re away.
It’s been the driest period ever
recorded at the weather bureau.
In the month of June there was
not enough rain fell to settle the
dust. All told it has been 40 days
without any moisture.
Hay is selling for $1 per bale
out of the field. Pastures are
burning up so bad that many are
having to sell milk cows and all,
due to the lack of grass or water!
We are on a low land place and
still have some pasture but have
no hay yet.
If it would rain we could still
plant cane or some such crop and
fall garden. Lots of folks plant
potatoes in July and then dig
them just before it freezes in No
vember or December.
Wish we were up there for
some of that good fishing we read
about.
The Ozarks are supposed to be
a wonderful fishing territory but
they have all managed to evade
Joe’s and Scott’s lines.
Yours truly,
MRS. JOE WADSWORTH
Everybody Talks About
Roads
Dear Editor:
Everybody talks about the
roads and highways. What sug
gestions do The Frontier readers
have to offer?
Highway engineers so far in
Nebraska have not come up with
the ideal plan in road building.
Traveling the highways today by
bus or automobile or even by
train you find you must hang on
to the seat or be bounced out.
Those of an earlier generation
found it necessary to hang onto
the saddlehom or dashboard as
they waded through mud or swam
the streams. Maybe those patriots
of a vanished generation who
hauled hay into O’Neill five
bales high on a wide tired wagon
with a four-horse hitch would
feel they were in the city of
gold-paved streets if they could
have had what this generation
rolls over in all directions.
The ideal may never be at
tained. The blacktop rides the
smoothest, but is not enduring.
Concrete answers the demand
for permanency but the way
these highways are built in
block construction there is con
stant jolting caused by the joints
between each concrete section.
It is claimed that is necessary
because of frost. Perhaps the
nearest approach to the ideal is
the Pennsylvania turnpike ex
tending from Philadelphia in the
east to Pittsburgh in the west.
Our highway builders might get
some help by investigating the
methods employed in building
the turnpike.
As one suggestion in the mat
ter of highways, you might stay
closer to home. But if you have
the urge to go places board a
bus and you will enjoy a profi
cient shaking up, a pleasant
smile from an accommodating
gent at the steering wheel, and
be kept awake by a matron with
a wagging tongue and a rasping
voice that like a scythe doth
mow you. Or if you prefer being
lulled to sleep by rocking in a
chair car try the train.
Have you a remedy for better
ing roads and highways?
(NAME WITHHELD)
REAL ESTATE
TRANSFERS
WD—Stanley L Sohka & w to
Stanley L Sojka 7-5-52 $1- W%
SEV4- EMiSWtt 10-25-10
WD— Charles Ames to E W
Brady & wf 7-3-52 $7800- Lot 2
Blk I- Neelys 2nd Add- Atk
QCD — Katherine Verzal to
Robert & Mary Fullerton 7-2-52
$100- Part of SEy4 32-30-14
WD — Emmet McCaffrey to
James F Regal & wf 6-30-52 $1,
600- Lots 1-2-3-4 Blk 18- Haze
let’s Add- O’Neill
WD—Edwin L Sibert Jr et al
to Ludwig V Tagel & wf 5-17-52
$7800- nwv4- wy>NEy4 15-25-10
WD—J T Fletcher to Olive M
Fletcher Scott 5-1-48 $1- SEy4
Sec 20-28-9 Subject to life estate
of Blanch Fletcher
WD—John Miskimmins to W
W Freeman 4-4-52 $2000- WJ/2 of
east part of Lot 8 in the NWy4
33-30-14
WD—Edwin L Sibert Jr et al
to Stanley L Sojka & wf 5-17-52
$5600- wy>SEy4- Ey2swy4 10
25-10
QCD—Anna Grace Parshall to
Dell J Parshall 6-27-52 $20- Non
No. 7A- Atkinson
Sheryl Jo Harley
Feted on Anniversary—
Mrs. Ralph Beckwith was
hostess at a birthday anniversa
ry party Tuesday, July 1, in hon
or of her granddaughter, Sheryl
Jo Harley, who was 3-years-old
After playing in the park the
children returned to Mrs. Beck
with’s home where Sheryl op
ened her gifts. Mrs. Palmer Skul
borstad baked the angel food
birthday cake, which was decor
ated with a cowgirl design.
Guests were Dennis Wells,
Sharon and Peggy Lyman, Bruce
°kon, Gary, Mark and Dale
Skulborstad, Joan and Andv
Riffey, Sandra Coenen, Danny
Karen Mike and Gloria Gilstrap
and Stevie Harley. P
Mothers included Sheryl’s
mother, Mrs. Art Harley, Mrs.
Joel Lyman, Mrs. Fred Wells
Mrs. Palmer Skulborstad, Mrs’
Wes Riffey and Mrs. John Gil
Strap.
Tune in the ‘Voice of Th«
Frontier”, Mon., Wed., Sat.
JOHN R. GALLAGHER
Attorney - at - Law
First National Bank Bldg.
O'Neill : Phone 11
State Capitol News . . .
Strange Circumstances Leave Nebraska
Without Chief Exec During GOP Parley
By MELVIN PAUL
,Statehouse Correspondent
LINCOLN—This was a quiet
week at the capitol. The long
Fourth of July weekend, coupled
with the republican national
convention in Chicago, 111.,
slowed down the statehouse pace
to a walk.
As a matter of fact, the GOP
convention posed quite a prob
lem so far as the governorship
of the state is concerned.
Gov. Val Peterson is attending
the Chicago conclave to cheer on
his favorite for the presidential
nomination, Gen. Dwight Eisen
hower. Ordinarily, his absence
would mean that Lt. Governor
Charles Warner would act as gov
ernor. But Warner is a delegate
to the convention.
The state constitution pro
vides that the speaker of the
legislature is next in line but
Nebraska legislature has no
speaker since Ed Hoyt of Mc
Cook resigned to accept a post
with the state agriculture de
partment.
The chairman of the legisla
ture’s judiciary committee would
be next in the succession line,
but since Sen. John P. Knight of
Auburn resigned several months
ago, that committee has no chair
man.
That’s as far as the constitution
goes in outlining the chain of suc
cessors.
Actually, nobody here was ex
pecting any trouble.
* * *
Water—
Nebraska is currently involved
in a contest over water rights
which may make dull reading
but is of prime concern to irri
gators in the rich North Platte
valley.
Representatives of Colorado,
Nebraska and Wyoming met at
Denver, Colo., last week to seek
a solution to the thorny problem
which has been presented by the
demands of Colorado that the 1945
U. S. supreme court decree which
set up the present water alloca
tion basis be reopened.
Tentative agreement was
reached on a proposal made by
Nebraska that Colorado could ir
rigate 10,000 more acres than at
present and could store 3,000
more acre feet a year.
But Wyoming reportedly balked
at the proposals concerning the
yet-to-be-built Glendo project.
At week’s end, nothing definite
has been settled but officials
here at Lincoln are frankly wor
ried the whole thing will erupt in
to a major legal action which
won’t end short of the supreme
court. And if the whole matter is
thrashed out again, they fear Ne
braska’s position will be nowhere
near so favorable as it is now.
* * *
How Many? —
State Auditor Ray C. Johnson
last week submitted to the Da
kota county board of commission
ers a report that the county’s
school fund was poorer by some
$3,200 because the county judge
had suspended, remitted or al
lowed to go unpaid that much in
fines.
The fines ranging up to $200
were for several offenses ranging
from simple intoxication to petit
larceny and drunken driving.
In his own defense, Dakota
County Judge Joseph E. Marsh
said, “Enforcement of many of our
sentences would cause undue
hardship on some of the defend
ants and their families and in
crease the cost of operating the
county jail. .
Dep. Att.-Gen. William Gleeson
took a pretty dim view of this and
said, “People who cannot afford
to pay fines violate the law at
their own peril and no judge has
any business violating the law in
order to give such persons ‘a
break’ from the confinement
which the statute directs.”
Lawyers at the capitol were
wondering how many other coun
ty judges are suspending fines.
They'll have their answers in
Johnson’s county audits.
* * *
Bogged —
The Nebraska editors’ highway
improvement committee, com
posed of one editor and four oth
er men, had little progress to re
port this week.
After a much-publicized start
following a meeting in Kearney
two weeks ago, the committee
came up with little when it met
in Grand Island the following
Sunday. About the best thing
Chairman Cliff Sandahl could say
is the meeting was “harmonious.”
Originally, the idea was for the
editors to meet to see if they
could produce evidence which
would convince Governor Peter
son he should call a special ses
sion of the legislature to deal with
the problem. Instead, the idea
now is a sort of Panmunjon truce
talk business and nobody has
mentioned a special session late
ly
o___j_i.i_:__ _.2.
UlUUiU UVIiV.--UtO Ult VlliUg gut
out of his control but he thinks
it might have been a happy kind
of misfortune because maybe the
people who have been feudin’
ov,er roads will somehow kiss and
make up and Nebraska will again
have good highways.
* * *
Fair —
Quite likely you aren’t giving
much thought to the 1952 Nebras
ka state fair, still almost two
months away, but amiable Ed
Schultz, the fair board secretary,
and his staff are thinking about
little else.
“I never saw things start so
early,” Schultz said. He’s already
received requests for tickets and
entry blanks. Display space, he
said, is all but gone.
I know it sounds corny every
year to say that the next fair will
be bigger and better than ever,”
he grinned, “but that’s the truth.”
Up to now, nobody can argue
that point with hard-working Ed
Schulz.
* * *
Guests —
Next week, this reporter will
be vacationing and during my ab
sence, two good friends have gra
ciously agreed to write guest col
umns. They are Walter R. Raecke,
democrat, and Bob Crosby, re
publican, the friendly rivals for
governor in the fall election.
Mr. Crosby’s piece will appear
here next week and Mr. Raecke’s
the following week. Each of them
will have a message of interest to
Nebraskans of both parties.
O’NEILL LOCALS
Mr. and Mrs. John Kemp of
San Francisco, Calif., arrived Fri
day to spend the weekend with
Mrs. Kemp’s mother, Mrs. Nellie
Beha, and other relatives. Mr.
Kemp, a Hollander who is train
ed as a mechanical engineer is
working with Bethlehem Steel
corporation at Frisco.
Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Durr went
to Nebraska City last Thursday
and returned Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Janousek
went to Columbus on Thursday,
July 3 and visited at the home of
Mrs. Janousek’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. O. Hile, Friday, July 4.
They returned home Friday eve
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Beha
and family of Sioux Falls, S.D.,
arrived last Thusday to spend the
Fourth of July weekend with
relatives. Mr. Beha is on the
Veterans hospital staff at Sioux
Falls and attends Augustana col
lege on a part-time basis.
Mike Sullivan, a Phoenix, Ariz.,
insurance company president and
a former O’Neill resident, spent
Saturday, Sunday and Monday,
June 26, 29 and 30, visiting in O’
iNeill. He was enroute to Chi
o
cago, 111., to Phoenix, having at
tended an insurance meeting in
Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Sulli
van returned Monday, June 30,
from Excelsior Springs, M a.,
where they had been staying for
10 days.
Mrs. Lod Janousek returned
from North Flatte Monday, June
30, after spending three days with,
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Beckwith. The
Beckwiths will move to Wallace
as soon as they can find living
quarters. Mr. Beckwith has been
employed by the International
Harvester company in Wallace
since Tuesday, Juy 1.
Miss Audrey Hunt and two
friends, Miss Cura Sailors and
Miss Helen Head of Omaha are
guests in the K. C. Hunt and Earl
R. Hunt homes.
Mrs. E. W. Devereux and Mrs.
J. A. Tubeson of Omaha came on
Thursday, July 3, and were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl R. Hunt. Mrs. Devereux isi
Mrs. Hunt’s mother, Mrs. Tubeson
is her grandmother. They re
turned to Omaha Monday.
DR. FISHER. DENTIST.
o
Charter No. 5770 Reserve District No. 10
Report of the Condition of the
O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK
I O |
of O’Neill, Nebraska, at the close of business on
JUNE 30, 1952
Published in response to call made by Comptroller of the
Currency, under Section 5211, U. S. Revised Statutes
ASSETS
Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve
balance, and cash items in process of collection $ 779,218.63
United States Government obligations, direct and
guaranteed_ 1,865,011.84
Obligations of States and political subdivisions_ 53,251,70
Corporate stocks (including $3,000.00 stock of Fed
eral Reserve Bank)-;- 3,000.00
Loans and discounts (including $89.07 overdrafts) _ 488,354.26
Bank premises owned $3,000.00 _ 3,000.00
Total Assets_$ 3,192,336.43
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships and
corporations_$ 2,667,503.77
Deposits of United States Government (including
postal savings)_ 22,124.03
Deposits of States and political subdivisions- 125,382.96
Deposits of banks_ 141,423.96
Total Deposits_$2,956,434.72
Total Liabilities_$ 2.956,434.72
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Capital Stock:
Common stock, total par $50,000.00 _$ 50,000.00
Surplus- 50,000.00
Undivided profits_ 135,901.71
Total Capital Accounts_ 235,901.71
Total Liabilities and Capital Accounts_$ 3,192,336.43
MEMORANDA
Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities for
other purposes_$ 340,000.00
State of Nebraska, County of Holt, ss:
I, J. B. Grady, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
J. B. GRADY, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 5th day of July, 1952.
L. G. GILLESPIE, Notary Public.
(SEAL) _ My commission expires July 20, 1957
Correct — ATTEST: F. N. Cronin, E. F. Quinn, Julius D. Cronin,
Directors.
Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(This bank carries no indebtedness of officers or stockholders)
■
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pleated plastic that you can wash.
New Driving Ease—key starting . . . sure
start, follow-through starter . .. softer ,
pedal action . . . easier steering. Overdrive
optional at extra cost.
Doubly Useful—rear seats removable . ;. big
cargo space . . . super-strong tail-gate with
full-width hinge.
Asimus Motor Co.
PHONE 373 (Tony Asimus) WEST O’NEILL