The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 10, 1953, Page 2, Image 2

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    Prairi eland Talk . . .
Bland Had Discipline, Anyway
By ROMAINE SAUNDERS, Retired. Former Frontier Editor
LINCOLN—I went to school this morning. A
long march down the corridors of time since I sat
at a school desk in a room presided over by John
Bland, a sallow-faced, hook-nosed preceptor with
eagle eyes who had discipline to his credit, if
nothing else.
Today marked the beginning of school life for
Prainelar-d Talker’s 5-year-old grandson, so I
accompan-ed him for in trod uc
tion into present day modes of
directing the childish ideas how
to shoot, starting in what is
known as kindergarten. The
’ teachers were there to take
charge of the small fry and place j
them at tables where they spend
»v a half day on the first lap of
long school years ahead.
And young America in large
numbers marched down the hall
ways this morning in a brick
structure indeed a far cry from Remain*
the sod seboolhouse of pioneer Saunders
days. I talked with teachers and they take the re
spon5.bh.ty placed upon them seriously. With a
bit of the vision of a prophet as she looked at me,
one teacher has come to the conclusion that life’s
greatest lessons are learned in the school of ex
perience, not in schoolrooms.
* • • •
Seated on a bench at the twilight hour that
precedes the restful calm of night when the heat
of that first day of the “mild September" had been
hung on the hook of time’s highway, I was an
early one at an open air meeting where we would
hear the “Voice of Youth." And those youth we
were to discover have something that transcends
the frivolity and pleasures of the times.
A lady sat down beside me. She had come to
the open to escape the while from the confinement
and heat of apartment life. We fell to talking.
She was experiencing the thrill of having receiv
ed that day a “big check"—not one of these old
age assistance handouts, but a check for her share
of last year’s corn crop her renter had handed her
that morning. She owns the land a few miles out
from Lincoln where her parents settled in 1866
after the close of the war between the states,
where she and five others of the family were
bom. And with emphasis that carries conviction
this native daughter of prairieland said she
would abide in Nebraska, her life-long home, un
til the end of the journey. Her parents settled in a
wide-open country as all pioneers did. There they
made a home, bringing from time to time what
supplies they could afford by mule team and wag
on from Nebraska City. And this daughter of pio
reeds cherishes the heritage left her.
But listen! A young woman on the platform
is speaking.’ We are brought back with a jolt to
1953!
• * •
Take courage. If you are a has-been there is
stillhope. There will gather in Omaha October 1
[ for a three-day “panel discussion" a group known
as Freedom congress. It is the first annual ses
| sion. Among the array of notables to be there and
participate in the council and address the gather
ing will be Col Charles A. Lindberg, he of the
silent tongue and aviation fame. Since the tragedy
of the kidnaping and slaying of their child little
has been heard of the Lindbergs. The appearance
how of the great aviator in public is of special
interest arid the themes to be discussed as suggest
ed by the title of the organization were never
more pertinent. Former President Hoover will be
one of the speakers. And look who’s coming—that
lady firebrand from Stonington, Conn., who has
defied federal authorities and gotten away with it.
Not since Florence Zink had that “grass
widow” on exhibition at the state fair has this
community been so well represented at the state s
biggest show as comes up this year when the O’
Neill Saddle club enters the arena. My state fair
pians provide for a day to cast a critical eye on
the horsemanship of this generation of O'Neill
riders and see how it compares with that of the
cowpunchers of an earlier generation like Hay
McClure. Tkn Bunnell and many others. We were
ail bronco busters in those days and Jim Harring
ton has a game leg to show for it. Ambrose Biglin
is from the Wyoming ranges m recert years and
he may have given club members tips on how to
neck-rein a norse and place the rider’s foot up to
boot heel in the stirrup. There have been the sort
of riders that you see at a dude ranch at the fair
which would make any guy who had ridden the
cattle trails inort with disgust
• * •
Having survived for 75 years of prairie fires,
lightning bolts and gunfire of the cowboys, the
state fire marshal comes along and condemns
that building as a ’•fire hazard” to the present day
town of Ord. . . _Ve not American farmers capable
of supplying 'he country with the products of the
land without this federal setup known as PM A?
While the ax is being wielded in the interests of
economy by the letting out of thousands of office
and departmental workers, the PMA and other
alphabetic programs may well be eliminated from
federal concern. . , The building on upper Fourth
street that The Frontier ventures a guess as to
its years of usefulness and now being torn from
its moorings was built in the late 1880 s by Jake
Pfund and served as his grocery store. Jake came
from the same town in Wisconsin the founder of
The Frontier came from, but some 10 years later.
• • •
With eight column* of the Sunday paper
taken up with "house* for sale" the capital city
may experience either an exodus or a consider
able turnover in population.
• • •
Jim McFarland, an O’Neill expert with hunt
ing dogs a half-century ago, had a $5,000 setter
under his care at one time, brought here from
Pennsylvania to be trained for the hunt. There
were many native birds on the prairie in those
days, a lure to the young fellows with shotguns.
Game wardens were introduced into the scene
about that time. Two of them hung out in O’Neill.
One day they caught the four Sullivan boys, John
P., Patrick, Peter and Jerry, red-handed with 18
prairie chickens taken out of season. The boys
were taken to county court, tried before a jury
composed of P. J. McManus, J. P. Gallagher,
James F. O'Donnell, J. H. Peeler, James Connelly
and Grant Hatfield, founa guilty and fined $80.
* * *
It is reported from the communist prison zone
of Korea that 320 American soldier-prisoners
have fallen victims to the red propaganda and de
cline to come back to their native land, this hor
rible “capitalistic” country of free enterprise.
Anyway, they will not be among us as spies for
their crafty seducers. Or is it that these 320 are
staying to mingle with the crimson dyed to do
some spying for Uncle Sam?
* * *
This last day of August, 100 at 10 a.m., holds
a slight promise of better things than the winds
that have been bringing the breath of the celestial .
furnace for a week. Clouds float across the hea
vens. Those inventive Muscovites may yet come
up with the solution of the problem of storing
summer heat for winter use now that they have
solved the H bomb riddle.
Editorial . . .
Turbulence Project Ends
At 12:30 p.iru, on Tuesday, September 8, the '
Great Plains Turbulence Field Project came to a
close.
The research, however, has only begun be
cause the scientists are taking with them back
to their laboratories voluminous data that has
been recorded here since the minute study of
wind and air got underway around August 1.
Perhaps several years will elapse before the
full import of data gathered here will become
apparent. There will be exhaustive study of the
material by skilled experts, abstracts will be com
pared, correlations drawn. Finally, scholarly pa
pers and summaries will be written and analyzed
' and only then will the true value of the O’Neill
experience become known.
Some two hundred scientists, researchers,
technicians and air force personnel have been
headquartering in O’Neill for the greater part of
the summer and there is a certain nostalgia in
saying goodbye. These people have come from
most of the 48 states and several foreign coun
• tries.
Th1" ir scholarly and technical backgrounds
have proved intersting to most O’Neill residents.
They have been a grand bunch. And we’ll ven
ture there nasn’t been a single incident in which
there has not been near-perfect harmony between
the t moorary residents and the citizens of this
community. It can be said these visitors, who be
came an active part of our community, will be
missed.
For most of them, however, it means a joy
ous reunion with their families and the univer
sity people will return to their campuses and
prepare for the routine with which they are so •
familiar.
In Massachusetts, South Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, California and Wisconsin there are
broken homes. Around those isolated firesides
across the country there will be no earthly re
unions with wind test loved ones. In those six
homes there is bereavement because six persons
were killed in a helicopter crash near here July
30.
It might be comforting for the survivors to
know that the O’Neill test already has been ac
* claimed a success, and we are reasonably sure
that one day the findings here will have an effect
on the lives of most of us, militarily and econom
ically.
Police Action or War?
The United States has engaged in more than
150 punitive or police actions which have not
been declared wars. Was the three-year fighting
in Korea one of them?
This is more than a rhetorical or historical
question, and it may be decided by the United
States supreme court.
Depending on a final decision will be widows,
orphans and parents of casualties who had life
insurance policies that did not provide for full
payment if death occurred in military service in
wartime.
Since contrary decisions have been given in
the Pennsylvania supreme court and the United
States district court in Southern California, the
United State supreme court may have to decide.
The commerce clearing house, national reporting
authority on tax and business law, says the Penn
sylvania case has been appealed to the highest
court by an insurance company after a mother’s
claim for double indemnity had been upheld.
At issue are legalistic problems that involve
these facts: Congress did not make an official
declaation of war in Korea; congress did sanc
tion the fighting through appropriations; the
conflict was among the longest and bloodiest of
those in which the United States engaged, and,
though called a “police action” at first, it was
commonly referred to as a war as it continued.
Whatever the final court decision, we hope
it may have been “World War III” without our
fully realizing it and that there won’t be another.
—
General Wainright
Not to many men comes so grim and heart
breaking a duty as that which descended upon
Gen. Jonathan M. Wainright on beleaguered Ba
taan. And not to many are given such appropriate
compensations during their lifetime.
To accept as he did, on that black March 11,
1942, without question or twinge of resentment,
the bleak mission of commanding a hopeless—
albeit not futile—last stand with certain surren
der and imprisonment at the end of it, and to
carry out that mission unflinchingly, bespeaks a
man both brave and at peace with himself.
And for General Wainright to survive both
siege and prison camp, to participate in accept
ing the surrender of Japan on the deck of the
Missouri, to receive personally the capitulation
of the Philippines from the very officer to whom
he himself nad surrendered on Corregidor, and
to have the nation’s highest award, the con
gressional medal of honor, bestowed upon him at
the hands of the president of the United States,
writes an epic of poetic justice that will not
soon be forotten.
The landslide victory of West Germany’s
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer is the most en
couraging news in many months from the Euro
pan continent. The West Germans defied Soviet
threats, threw' communists out of the lower
house of parliament and generally slapped a nazi
comeback. Jolly good work, we say.
Was that Hebrew propnet looking down the
centuries and getting a view of 1953 airplanes
when he wrote in 700 B.C.: Who are these that
fly as a cloud, and as the doves to their win
dows?
CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher
Editorial & Business Offices: 122 South Fourth St.
Address correspondence: Box 330, O’Neill, NeLr
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
newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press
Association, 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; rates abroad, provided on request. All sub
scriptions are paid-in-advance.
Audited (ABC) Circulation—2^00 (Mar. 31, 1953).
When You and I were Young .. .
Ex-Russian Officer
Here for Lecture
Sheriff Hall Sports
New Buggy
SO Years Ago
The examination of candidates
for appointment to West Point
milita-y academy held at Kear- ’
ney last week resulted in the
appointment of Owen Mededith
of O’Neill as principal and Merle
Kline, also of O’Neill, as alter
nate - . . Fred Groffens, 14-year
old boy, met with a distressing
accident while raking hay. He
was driving a more or less frac
tious team of horses and they
ran away wtih him. He was
thrown from the seat and caught
in the rake and dragged for quite
a distance. The boy was severly
cut and tom . . . The Masonic
fraternity of this city has secured
the services of Capt. S. Alberti,
an ex-officer in the Russian army,
to give his famous lecture,
■Through Russia and Siberia as
an Officer in Exile” . . . M. F.
Cronin has resigned as “managing
editor” of a threshing crew and
has gone to Stuart to assist on
the Ledger temporarily . . . J. P.
Gallagher is considering the ad
visability of erecting a residence
just north of J. H. Meredith’s
home in the western part of
town ... Sheriff Hall has a spark
ling new buggy with red wheels,
and his spotted ponies betray a
conscious pride of something new'
behind them . . . Father Isadore,
better known in O’Neill as Rich
ard Dwyer, arrived in this city
from the East on a visit. He has I
been missionary to South Amer- j
ica for a number of years - - -
The Alliance Herald is boasting ;
of 10-foot com stalks in Box
Butte county. That’s probably j
pretty big for Box Butte. Come J
up to Holt and we’ll show you
some 14-footers.
20 Years Ago
Albert C. Carson of Walnut
and Miss Emma K. Ur win of
Creighton were united in mar
riage by Rev. H. D. Johnson at
the Presbyterian manse last Sat
urday ... A crowd estimated at
800 attended the Holt county
fair on opening day in this
city . . . John Miskimmons has
been appointed appraiser for the
Omaha Federal Land Bank and
has been working in Dixon coun
ty for the past week. The great
demand for loans has compelled
the bank to add several new ap
praisers to their pay roll in order
to handle the increased business.
It is said that real estate business
is picking up a little - . . John j
Kersenbrock. Frank Pruss, Joe
Cuddy and Jack Honeycutt went
down to Bartlett last evening and
took in the night baseball game
played there . . . Labor day, out- ■
side of banks and other public
buildings being closed, the day
was no different from any
other . . . George Bressler traded
his stock of goods to Charles
Hartford of Page for a 160-acre
farm in Knox county ... Holt
relatives received word of the
death of Mrs. James McWhorter
at her home at Foster . . . Norb
Uhl purchased the Clarence Sim
merman residence in the south
eastern part of the city and ex
pects to make his home there.
10 Years Ago
Holt county’s quota in the third
war loan drive is a large figure <
when viewed by the individual
but when distributed among
16,CK;0 people it is not at all im
possible to attain. The quota for
the drive opening today is
$866,400 . . . Lt. Nadine Coyne
of the medical department of the
United Sta e army, has arrived
to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Coyne. . . A successful one
day golf tournament was held at
the Country club. The tourna
ment was won by A. P. Jazkow
iak, who defeated George Light
ner of St. Edward . . . Mrs. Sarah
Hull celebrated her 88th birthday
anniversary . . . Football practice !
started at St. Mary’s academy. :
Coach Arbuthnot is back this
year. Father Brick will assist
with Joe Biglin as student man
ager . . . Cattle buyers are look
ing over herds out this way with
an eye to get some good found
ation stock to build from. Few if
any buyers are looking for feed
ers .. . Attorney John Wear and
a party of friends from Omaha
was in the city. John is the own
er of a ranch in Wheeler county
and he put in a few days looking
nfter his interests there ... At
11:30 a.m.. September 8, 1943, it
was announced by Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower that all the armed
forces in Itlav have surrendered
unconditionally to the Allies . . . |
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Karr have pur
chased a residence in Spencer 1
and expect to move shortly. They
recently sold their ranch near
Midway to Orville Miller . . .
One Year Ago
A try for oil in the bowels of
Stop Taking
Harsh Drugs for
Constipation
Avoid Intestinal Upset! Get Relief This
Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way!
For constipation, never take harsh drugs.
They cause brutal cramps and griping,
disrupt normal bowel action, make re
peated doses seem needed.
Get sure but gentle relief when you
are temporarily constipated. Take Dr.
Caldwell's Senna Laxative contained in
Syrup Pepsin. No salts, no harsh drugs.
Dr. Caldwell's contains an extract of
Senna, one of the finest natural vegetable
laxatives known to medicine.
I^r- Caldwell s Senna Laxative tastes
g9°<L gives gentle, comfortable, satis
tnng relief for every member of the
family. Helps you get “on schedule"
without repeated doses. Even relieves
often*bringsUrnC** ^ constiP‘tio“
Buy Dr. Cxldwdi’s 30* size today.
Money back if not satisfied. Mail bottle
to Box 280, New York 18, N. Y.
Holt's county's rolling farm coun
try has gone the way of similar
elf arts erf other years. No soap.
Lloyd J. Twi'oell and associates,
who bold oil leases over an ex
tensive area in the Page and Or
chard communities, made an
earnest effort, but the try was
abortive at the Neil Asher
farm . . . Lightning struck at the
Clifford Wells place Wednesday,
September 3, while they we. e
at the Spencer fair. ’Hie bolt
splintered several boards and
shingles and broke the window. ..
O'Neill and Atkinson firemen
battled a grass fire on the D. C. j
Schaffer property, three miles
southwest of here, for three hours
Seventeen haystacks were des
troyed and the fire swept across
about 100 acres of grassland . . .
A 23-year-old Omaha nurse and
her mother, both known at O’
Neill, died as the result of two
highway accidents. Miss Loretta
Berkentrotter of Denver. Colo.,
was fatally injured on highway
30 west of Fremont with the car
in which she was riding went
out of control and collided wth
a truck. Meanwhile, her mother.
Mrs. G. F. Berkentrotter. of Den
ver, was rushing to her daughter’s
bedside. West of Keamev, her
son- Richard, was blinded by the
early morning sun and crashed
into the rear of a stalled truck.
Mrs. Berkentrotter died instantly.
O'NEILL LOCALS
Mr. and Mrs. George Peter
son and children and Francis
Clark of Grand Island spent the
weekend visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Donohoe
and daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Nissen and
children returned to their home
in Ogallala on Monday. Mrs. Nis
sen and the children had spent
a week visiting her parents. Mr
and Mrs. Matt Hynes, and at
tending the funeral of her cou
sin, Austin Hynes and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fuhrer, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Murphy and Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Curran spent
Monday in Pickstown, S.D., and
at the Ft. Randall dam.
Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Hynes of
Portland, Ore., left last Thurs
day for Chicago, HI., where they
are spending a week visiting at
the home of their daughter, Mrs.
George Mymer. They will return
for a longer visit here.
Bill Hynes and son, Mrs. Floyd
Rhinhardt and Mrs. Frank
Skradski, all of Omaha, attended
the funeral of Sgt. Austin Hynes
and children Tuesday, Septem
ber 1.
Phone us your news — 51.
I
Ewing Bride-Elect
Shower Recipient
EWING—Miss Dorothy Black,
a September bnde - elect, was
honored by her friends and rel
atives at a miscellaneous show
er Monday evening, August 31, j
at Sanders cafe. Fifty friends and
relatives gathered.
Household hints were given by
each to Miss Black followed by
a list of “probable”’ duties to be
found by the housewife of 1968.
This and other games provided
entertainment in charge of Miss
Bemadine Sanders and Miss
Marilyn Weyhrich.
The bride-elect was invited "lo
the long serving counter of the
cafe, which was filled with gift
packages. The honored guest dis
covered in each an article which
will help furnish her new home.
Miss Florence Van Ostrand had
charge of the gift book.
Ice cream, cake, coffee and
iced tea were served as refresh
ments.
The committee in charge of the
entire shower were classmates
of Miss Black in the senior class
of 1954 of the Ewing school. They
are Bemadine Sanders, Marilyn
Weyhrich, Judy Jefferies, San
dra Dierks, Jeanne Welke and
Florence Van Ostrand.
Other Ewing News
Merle Lee and his sister, Mrs
Harold Brown, both from Om
aha, visited Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
Daggett of Lake Andes, S.D.,
from Tuesday, September I, to
Thursday. They were also guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Hawk and sons of Ewmg.
Mr. and Mrs. George Nickolite,
accompanied by Mrs. Joe Tom
jack, Mrs. Siloski and Mrs. Uz
endoski, spent Sunday in Fuller
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Sanders and
daughter, Bemadine, Mr. and
Mrs. Sylvester Bahms and son,
Jerome, spent Sunday at Picks
town, S-D. A picnic dinner was
enjoyed.
Julie and Carolyn Craig, who
have been guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Walker and
family, returned to their home
in Norfolk on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Loebe of
Stanton were overnight guests
on Monday, August 31, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Benja
min Larsen. Mr. Larsen, who has
been on a business trip to Wood,
S.D., returned home the same
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zeims
went to Norfolk on Sunday
where they attended a minion
of the Zeirris family held at the
Ta-ha-zouka park.
Mr. and Mrs Leonard Soren
sen spent a few days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs Robley
Sisson, sr., and family, returning
to their home' in Omaha on Fri
day.
Rev. and Mrs. Walter Kemp
and family left Tuesday. Sep
tember 1, for Dead wood, SD,
S.D.. where Reverend Kemp will
have charge of a church.
P. B. Cooper of Winner, S.D.,
came to Ewing Tuesday, Sep
tember 1, to get Mrs. Cooper
and daughters, who had been
guests at the Pruden home since
Saturday, August 29. Mrs. J L.
Pruden spent last week at Win
ner visiting at the Cooper home.
Mrs. Cooper and Mrs. Pruden
are sisters.
Miss Anna Van Zandt and her
sister, Mrs. Florence Butler,
spent Tuesday, September 1, at
the country home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Tomjack.
Sunday, September 6, is the
date set by the United Presby
terian church for the enrollment
and organization of its youth
club. Regular meeting will begin
on Wednesday, September 16,
for a period of It) weeks.
Boy Scout troop 181 met last
Thursday evening at the Scout
headquarters. Sixteen members
were present. The main business
of the session was to organize
for the fall months. Wood work
ing project was discussed. Much
interest was shown in the dis
cussion.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mc
Carty and grandson. Dean, of
Douglas, Wyo., were guests of
Mrs. Josie Versaw and grand
daughter, Sandra Tellaner, un
til Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Marquardt
of Tekamah were recent guests
o
at the home of his parents Mr.
and Mr*. A. H. Marquardt
The Masses Sal.y Anr. Christen
and Altha Lou Miller began ■
their teaching duties at district
35, a two-teacher school on Tues
day, September 1. Miss Chr.s
ton will instruct the four upper
grades while Miss M.-.er will
have charge of the four lower
grades. Miss Miller taugnt last
year in the Ewing public school.
Christon was a second-year
student at Sterling college. Ster
ling, Kans., last year
Change Made in
rail Concert— .
In place of the two piano team
there will be a concert. pianist
and violinist, who will assist
Mary lee Myers, soloist, m a con
cert here in October.‘to be spon
sored by the Methodist men for
the benefit of the church t -
mg fund.
Mr. and Mrs Bud Schhe.ger
and family of Columbus ‘spent
the labor day weekend visiting
Mrs. Schneider's parents. Mr.
and Mrs Mike Langan.
ROYAL THEATER
Thurs. Sept. 10
SALLY AND SAINT ANNE
Starring Ann Blyth. Ec.~.ur.:
Gwenn, with John Mclntire,
Palmer Lee. Hugh O’Brien,
Kathleen Hughes
Family night SI; adult 50c•
children 12c; tax incL
Fri-Sal Sept. 11-12
Big Double Bill
YOU FOR ME
Peter Lawford, Jane Greer.
Gig Young.
— also —
THE MARSHALS DAUGHTER
Starring Laune (I like the
• open spaces) Anders and Hoot
Gibson with Ken Murray.
Adult 50c; children 12c; tax incl.
Matinee Sal 2:30. Children un
der 12 free when accompanied
by parenl
Sun.-Mon.-Tue*. Sept. 13-14-15
Ann Sheridan and SterLng
Hayden in
TAKE ME TO TOWN
Color by technicolor, with
Philip Reed, Lee Patrick, Lee
Aaker. The rip-roaring saga of
a timbertowm gal . . . the fun
she had and the men she fooled:
Adult 50c; children 12c; tax incl.
Matinee Sun. 2:30. Children un
der 12 free when accompanied
by parents.
--—-1
Dr. Edw. J. Norwood. O.D.
Optometrist,
from Crawford, Nebraska,
will be in O'Neill on
SEPTEMBER 14
9 AM. to 5 PM.
At the Hotel Golden
Glasses Properly Fitted
Eyes Scientifically
Examined
_
'WH |mhmb| wmpr
.
Wbstinghouse
, »
a^mousnced
the arrival of another set of Twins ... a new
LAUNDROMAT Automatic Washer and a new
Electric CLOTHES DRYER!
They’re identically styled . . . with many work,
time, and money-saving features . . . yet
at neic loic prices!
The Laundromat is completely automatic,
full-sized, with convenient large loading door
on slanting front, plus Agi-Tumble washing action!
The Electric Clothes Dryer is also full-sized, com
pletely automatic and features faster drying by
direct air flow system . . . plus ease of loading
and unloading.
The same high quality that has made
Westinghouse world famous is built
into every part to assure lasting
satisfaction and performance.
These new prices are the lowest
in Westinghouse history! See
these low priced bargains in
Better Electric Living today!
See your nearest Consumers Public Power
District office today for full details on the
"Twins for Twins" offerl j 4
rmurmmimntwmnmHfinir,ti'i,,‘f<»ii,Mnmn"ininiiinrnn ii.iuiniiuii'U'iimi'mm»MunmniuoMmmn»i»:i»inm
" HHTO/
See the NEW, LOW-PRICED
Westinghouse LAUNDRY TWINS now on Display at