The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 15, 1954, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Towners in Strong
Finish, Win 8-3
O’Neill No Match for
Atkinson
The Atkinson Towners proved
to be too much for the O’Neill
Rockets Sunday, July 7, when
thev thoroughly drubbed the
Rockets, 8-3, in a game played
here in Carney park.
O’Neill scored once in the sec
ond inning and twice in the
third. Atkinson took the lead in
the third when four of the Town
ers men scurried across the plate.
Two more runs were tallied in
both the seventh and eighth inn
ings by the victors.
Everette, the winning pitcher
' gave up five hits, and his team
mates were charged with five
errors. . ... _
Carson. O’Neill’s losing pitcher,
hurled for eight innings, giving
up six hits and strikmg out six
Atkinson batters. There were
five errors chalked up against
O’Neill.
Boxscore:
O’NEILL (3) ah r h
Nesbitt, ss -Inn
Morrow, lb -” X
Carson, p -—-X i n
Gorgen. 3b-X o 9
Appleby, 2b-3 2 l
Graham, cf --- , 0
Adamson, rf-\ J 0
Holz, If 4 0 0
Connot, -10 0
Godel. 2b-J 2 X
Beringer, cf-f " .
Morrow, If,
Totals_3l~ 3 ~ 5
ATKINSON (8) ab4 rfl J
Retzlaff, 3b-* ® 2
Retzlaff, c -4 0 1
Miller, 2b —--2 1 0
Mancuso, ss-4 2 0
Forestal. If ---— R 0 1
Evertt, p -- 4 0 0
Thayer, rf - 9 1 0
Small, lb - a i
Ellenwood, cf -’
Totals 6
Gregory Wins. 5-3
Five errors hurt the O Neill
Rockets’ cause Tuesday mgh
v hen the Gregory, S.D., Town
* Miller.' starting pitcher for,
Gregor.-, set down eight via the
strikeout route. He was reliev
ed after five innings by Voss,
who got credit for the win al
though whiffing only one.
Darrel Graham chucked for O -
Neill registered five strikeouts.
'Graham, Gregory, third sack
er, homered in the sixth with
one man aboard. The Dakotaas
scored twice again in the sev
enth and buckled the Rockets.
Boxscore;
O’NEILL (3) ab r h
Graham, p --- t X n
M. Morrow, lb -- 4 0 0
Beringer, cf
Gorgep, 3b-“ 7 f
Appleby. 2b --! X X
R. Morrow, If-- X X
Connot c -XXX
Amen, rf-X X n
Dye, rf_0 _ _
Totals_33 3 7
GREG. (5> ab r h
Kolbe, 3b ...4 1 1
Harder, 2b __4 11
Young, c _ 4 11
Stevicks, cf-4 0 0
Graham, lb-4 2 4
Miller, 3b, p...4 0 0
McKenzie, ss ...4 0 2
Olson, If_4 0 0
Sattler, rf _ 2 0 0
Voss, p_10 1
Totals ___ 35 5 10
123 456 789
O Neill ... _000 201 000—3
Gregory _010 002 200—5
Deadline Today for
Deer Hunt Permits
Applications for Nebraska big
game hunting permits are com
ing in slowly at the Nebraska
game commission office in Lin
coln, according to Game Warden
Fred Salak of O’Neill. He report
ed until Wednesday only “about
16 percent of the 4,000 available
permits had been requested.”
Mr. Salak said he had applica
tion blanks available, but point
ed out the deadline for filing is
today (Thursday). All applica
tions must bear a postmark not
later than July 15 to participate
m the lottery.
A drawing may not be neces
sary if more applications are not
received. Until early this week
only 715 applications had been
made for the 4,000 deer and 500
antelope permits.
Salak’s phone number is 553-J.
He resides at 419 North Fourth
street.
Bassett Church
to Get Pastor—
BASSETT—Sunday will be a
special day at St. Peter’s Luther
an church here. The church—in
fact, Rock county—will get its
first resident Lutheran pastor
then.
Dr. E. G Fritzschel, president
of the central district of the Am
erican Lutheran church, will in
stall Rev. Loren H. Kniep in his
first parish. Rev. and Mrs. Kniep
and their 10-month-old daugh
ter will be welcomed to the
church at a dinner following the
special 11 a.m. service.
Rev. E. W. Danitschek, pastor
of St. John’s Lutheran church at
Atkinson, who has served the
congregations at Bassett and At
kinson, will assume full-time du
ty at St. John’s.
Atkinson Girl to
Wed August 22—
ATKINSON—The engagement
of Miss Glavds Mae Weller and
Elvon Hamiliton has been an
nounced by Miss Weller’s mo
ther, Mrs. Wallace J. Wellar of
Atkinson.
The bridegroom-elect is the son
of Mr and Mrs. Lincoln U. Ham
ilton of Stuart.
An August 22 wedding is plan
ned at the Methodist church
here.
Bassett Pitcher
Loses Two-Hitter—
BASSETT—Bassett will enter
tain the O’Neill Rockets in a
league game next Sunday night.
Last Sunday night the Bassett
team was defeated at Stuart, 3-1,
although Larry Fisher held
Stuart to two hits and struck
out 12. Krysal of Stuart was
touched for four hits.
Ask for FREE Sample j
Get four-way relief from acid
indigestion . . . take—
B1SMAREX POWDER or TABLETS
Elkays AEROSOL .... Moth-Proofer
Kills moth eggs in clothes, carpets, upholstery, closets,
drawers. Won't stain.
4-0z....1.59
Cara Nome Natural Curl Permanent
With a "Neutralock" neutralizer. For normal, bleached and
dyed, gray and children's hair, loo!
First Aid.Special!
Rexall Plastic Quickbands, Reg. 39c
— and —
Rexall Skin Antiseptic, Reg. 33c
Both for Only .59c
TO GET those granaries in shape, use DDT Emulsion, Methoxy
chlor or DDT Powder for spraying the bins before putting in
the grain.
FOR TREATMENT of grain in the bins, use Planlery Fumi
gant. It assures a complete kill on weevils. Very handy to
use.
FOR CONTROL of grasshoppers when they arrive, use Chlor
dane Dust or Emulsion.
To Hold Down Infections in Wounds
CAUSED BY FLY INFESTATION
Use Globe’s Fly Repellent Salve
REMEMBER, we carry a complete line of insecticides and
animal health products.
WATCH for the coming announcement telling about the easy
and fast way to kill flies.
GILLIGAN'S REXALL DRUG
Phone 87 — O’Neill
Late Summer Wedding
Mrs. Erma Redd of O’Neill announces the engagement of
her daughter, Miss Margaret (above), tc Robert L. Nietfeld, son
of Ferdinand Nietfeld of St. Libory. The couple is planning a late
summer wedding.—O’Neill Photo Co.
/
'Adherence to Ethics'
Forces Departure—
“It is excellent operation and
scrupulous adherence to ethics
and proper nursing procedures
that are playing the major role
in the decision of the Sisters of
St. Casimir to retire from the
hospital field at Osmond,” the
Republican’s editor, Eugene W.
Liewer, declared.
In other words, the nuns’ fine
nursing talent is being wasted.
The nuns will be released for
duty elsewhere.
Exact date for the change has
not been set. Since the sisters
took over the hospital nearly
nine years ago the average occu
pancy has been only 38 percent.
Editor Liewer admitted “it
will be a blow to the community.”
ASSEMBLY OF GOD (O'Neill)
Rev. Wayne A. Hall, pastor
Today (Thursday) the Wom
en’s Missionary council will meet
at the church at 10 a.m. They
will have a covered dish lunch.
Saturday night street services
at 8:30 o’clock.
Sunday, July 18: Sunday
school at 10 a.m.; worship at 11
a.m.; children’s story time at
7:30 p.m.; evangelistic service at
8 p.m.
Wednesday at 8 p.m., Bible
study and prayer service.
MUSKETS SCARCE
During the American RevoLu- j
tion muskets were so scarce that
Benjamin Franklin advised the
use of bows and arrows and
New York militiamen were told
to arm themselves with shovels,
pickaxes and scythes.
TO EUROPE
Maj. Madeline Ullom, ANC,
reports to Camp Kilmer, N.J.,
Friday, July 30. From there she
will sail for Europe for a three
year tour of duty.
ONE OF FIVE AIDED
Red Cross, during the last fis
cal year, aided on an average of
one person every five minutes
among those suffering disaster
injury or loss.
You can give carrot sticks a
new flavor by letting them stand
overnight in liquid drained from
your dill pickle jar.
It the man who is always in
debt will keep a record of his ex
pesnses he may find it is sense he
lacks—not dollars.
A man has reached the pinnacle
of success when flattery gives
him a headache instead of a
swelled head.
Rhode Island has a land area
of 1,058 square miles and 156
square miles of inland water.
Honesty is about the only thing
that can’t be produced cheaper
by machinery.
Most people refuse to be con
tent with their lot in life until
it’s a lot more.
r- n'Y. ~
READY MIX
CONCRETE
' and
Sand & Gravel
DELIVERED ANYWHERE
PHONE 153
— O'NEILL —
— |
Stop Taking
Harsh Drugs for
Constipation
Avoid Intestinal Upset! Get Relief This
Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way!
For constipation, never take harsh drugs.
TTiey cause brutal cramps and griping,
disrupt normal bowel action, make re
peated doses seem needed.
When you are temporarily consti
pated, get sure but gentle relief—without
salts, without harsh drugs. Take Dr.
Caldwell's Senna Laxative contained in
Syrup Pepsin. The extract of Senna in
Dr. Caldwell's is one of the finest natural
laxatives known to medicine.
Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative tastes
good, gives gentle, comfortable, satis
fying relief of temporary constipation
for every member of the family. Helps
you get “on schedule” without re- \
peated doses. Even relieves stomach
sourness that constipation often brings.
Buy Dr. Caldwell's. Money back if
not satisfied. Mail bottle to Box 280.
New York 18, N. Y.
Miller Slightly Better
After Accident—
C LEAR W AjTER—The condi
tion of Gary Miller, 18, Clearwa
ter high school graduate and
Norfolk Juhior college student
last year, who was critically in
jured in an automobile accident
near Ponca Sunday afternoon,
was reported slightly improved
Tuesday morning. He is in the
Lutheran hospital at Sioux City.
Young Miller, son of Ted Mil
ler of Newcastle, was the driver
of the car in which Miss Janice
Calvert was killed, and Miss
Janet Calvert also seriously in
jured. Miller suffered head in
juries, including jaw fractures
and the loss of many teeth. The
Calvert sisters were twins.
The Miller car, owned by Ted
Miller, rolled several times when
it went out of control on a grav
eled road near Ponca.
Gary Miller was reared by his
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Reuben Rundquist of Clearwater,
and lived here a number of years.
Water Good
Spider Control—
The kind of weather we are
having now is very favorable to
the development of red spider
mites on evergreen, other orna
mentals, and vegetable plants.
Where water is available under
good pressure, a thorough wash
ing down with a hose oftbn will
give fairlv good control if re
peated every few days.
Better control can be secured
with the use of dusting sulphur
on all types of affected plants.
This treatment is especially re
commended for vegetables which
may be injured by forceful ap
plication of water.
~ “JJ
Worry kills more peoplp than
work because many people look
for worry and worry away at
that.
The man who always says
what he likes is sure to hear a
lot of things he dislikes.
Mother, Who Killed
Small Son, 1$ 111
CENTER—Mrs. Joe Janak, 26
year-old Verdigre farm wife, was
committed to the Norfolk state
hospital as mentally incomptent
Monday after a hearing before
the Knox county board of mental
health in connection with the
drowning of the youngest of her
five children.
Knox County Attorney Mer
ritt C. Warren said 8-month-old
Dennis Janak was drowned in a
wash tub at the family home Sat
urday and Mrs. Janak then at
tempted to take her own life.
He quoted Mrs. Janak’s hus
band as saying when he came in
from the fields at noon he found
her in the bam “trying to choke
herself” with a rope.
She was taken to Creighton
where she was treated for shock
and bruises on the neck, later
transferred to Norfolk. She was
unconscious *when Mr. Janak
reached her.
Mr. Warren said Mrs. Janak had
been ill for some time.
Funeral services for the boy
were held at 10 a.m. Tuesday in
Verdigre. The other Janak child
ren range from 3 to 9 years of
age. _
Miller Predicts
Travelers in CIA
All eyes in Washingon, and the
rest of the nation as well, will be
watching, with much interest,
the study to be made of the cen
tral intelligence agency by the
Hoover commission, Nebraska’s
Fourth Dictrict Congressman A.
L. Miller said this week.
Too often, these “hush hush”
agencies of government use their
power of classification to cover
up information which would be
detrimental to the agency. They
pervert their power under a veil
| of secrecy and grow-and-grow,
assuming more-and-more auth
| ority, until they outgrow their
usefulness.
“I am afraid the Hoover report
along with investigations by
Senator McCarthy’s and Senator
Jenner’s committees will uncover
some communists, fellow travel
lers, and ultra-left-wing new
dealers in this sensitive agency.
I am wondering how many in
this ‘cloak and dagger’ outfit
would plant the dagger in Uncle
Sam’s back. For my part, the
sooner they are cleaned out, the
better for us all.
“Whenever I read or partake
in an investigation, I am remind
ed of a quotation inscribed on the
state capitol at Lincoln, “The
Salvation of the State Is in the
Watchfulness of its citizens.” We
must be ever mindful of this,”
Miller concluded.
A woman tries to reform her
husband during the first year of
married life—after that she tries
to keep him from getting worse.
Learn to live with your temper
—you can’t possibly get rid of it
by losing it.
To some people a critic is a
person who doesn’t know a good
thing when he sees it.
A law with its teeth out prob
ably would work, if the law did
n’t have its hand out.
State Needs Industry
Expansion to Keep
Pace in Mi d west
Nebraska industry will need a
three-'billion-dollar industry
expansion in the next 21 years
to keep pace with population
growth and the increased labor
force, it has been estimated by the
National Association of Manu
facturers.
'in a research study of the future
prospects of the Amercian econ
omy, the NAM said that it is gen
erally agreed that the population
| °f the U. S. will reach at least
200 million persons by 1975,
which is an incraese of 40 million
over the present population.
“It (Nebraska keeps pace with
the population growth of the na
tion the state’s labor force will
increase from the present 523,
500 to 775, 500 by 1975. The in
crease means that within 21 years
252,000 new jobs must be provid
| ed for the state’s new workers," ;
the NAM reported.
“At a cost of $12,000, which is
1 the investment needed by indus
try to create a single job today,1
$3,024,000,000 ine new investment
capital will have to be found to
provide jobs for Nebraska’s new
workers,” the manufacturers
, association said.
Cadet LaFrenz Now
at Ft. Sill—
ORCHARD—Cadet Sgt. Robert
L. LaFrenz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter La Frenz of Orchard, is
one of 431 first classman (seniors)
from the U. S. military academy
now attending the artillery school
at Ft. Sill, Okla.
He and his fellow West Point
ers arrived at the school after j
visiting Wright-Pat terson air1
base, O., and Ft. Knox, Ky. Next
they will visit Ft. Bliss, Tex., and
Ft. Benning Ga., completing the
combined arms trip planned to
acquaint them with the various
functions of the army and air
force.
A 1950 graduate of Orchard
high school, LaFrenz attended
Wayne State college before being
appointed to the academy by Re
presentative Karl Steifan
(deceased).
FRUIT COUNTRY
Although California fanners
cultivate only slightly more than
two percent of U.S. cropland they
grow a third of all U.S. fruits
and nearly a quarter of all U.S.
vegetables.
A critic is a person who sits
back and watches so he can tell
how he would do it if he knew
how.
ATTENTION Parents!
• All children using the wading pool
at the O’Neill Swimming Pool must
be accompanied by their parent or a re- ,
sponsible person. i
• Children not supervised will not be
allowed in the pool. Unless the above
regulations are followed a charge will
be made for the use of the wading pool
and a lifeguard put in charge.
O'NEILL PARK BOARD
The following O’Neill firms and
individuals have sponsored
CHILDREN’S GUEST TICKETS
To the Third Annual
r Shrine Circus
To be held in Norfolk, Nebr., on
SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY
July 24, 25, 26
SpeUs-Ray Lbr. Co. Lew While Motor Co.
Kansas-Nebraska Natural M&M Cafe 8c Bakery
Gas Co. Golden Hotel
Dr. George Richard Cook Petersen's Clothing
O'Neill National Bank Coasl-lo-Coast
Elkhom Flower Shop McDonald's
McIntosh Jewelry Fred Appleby
T. M. Harrington Shelhamer Foods
O'Neill Cleaners Shelhamer Equip.
Rubeck Standard Station Hugh Benson
McCarvilles C. E Jones
C. E. A. Johnson „ _
„ , , New Outlaw Store
Gale Dierberger
Apparel Shop O'Neill Auto Supply .
Coyne Hardware Mr. and Mrs. Bernard |
Mr. Paul Shierk has a few children’s tickets available for the I
asking, at the Shierk Motor Co. Sunday afternoon bus trans- I
portation is available but reservations must be made in ad- Q
vance by contacting Mr. Shierk.
Save Money-Save Space
r;
c (
c
c
»' c
. ,,, r, ..... .. amm ..... ..... t£
TAKES ONLY 6 SQ. FT.
OF FLOOR SPACE!
Family Size - Reduced $50
• SAVE MONEY, SAVE SPACE with this new Hotpoint
Upright Food Freezer! You get all the advantages of
home freezing plus new space-saving design. And you
»o 9®'' ®y*f^ ^ know your foods are safe, because it’s a Hotpoint.
groc*1^ Come in and see it today!
N O W * Contact freezer shelves • Removable 5-position
M mm0F\ shelf • Two removable roller baskets • Easy-opening
| Positive-Seal door • Adjustable temperature control
I 75 Per Week * Acid-resistant porcelain on steel interior
_ignedFjtou!
'54 SUPERSTORE REFRIGEATOR
■H fanls i ®w
T
.,$&*■ Sr
' P
111™
c
• A wonderful improvement in
truly automotic refrigeration! r.
Automatically "follows" the
weather to give you constant,
even cold at all times.
Better Storage for °
, Better-Tasting Foods!
• Constant cold throughout fr?sh
1 Cjfclefe lin food section assures better keeping for all foods—and
Ai •dr • * hetter-tasting foods, too. This big super-eight (8.7 cu.
Easy Terms ft.) includes 3 shelves in the door, provides you with
the convenience of almost 14 sq. ft. of shelf space.
• 38-lb. across-the-top • New door shelf for eggs
frozen food storage _ _ ,
"Defrosting is FAST, ^ ^ .... . ... •Swinging Leftover
, „ . • New Lift-A-Cube ice R_c. •» _,
tool Even ice cream travs Basket with 3 covered
stays firmly frozen all ... jors
th* ,,mel . drawers * B,g Ta,*-B<>«*® Zone
• Strong aluminum shelves • 5-Year Protection Plan
Special Seasonal Terms on Famous HOTPOINT Appliances
for farmers, ranchers and others . . . terms
tailored to suit your seasonal income
□ SBORNE’C "2 so™irs'
Phone 415 .
„ o