The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 31, 1955, SECTION 1, Page 4, Image 4

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    McKay Says GOP
‘True Liberalisin’
:
. -
Republicans Gather
for Founder’s Day
Mrs. Guy Cole of O’Neill re
turned Tuesday from Omaha
where she attended republican
founder’s day activities. Mrs. Cole
is Holt county repQblican chair
man. She was accompanied by
her husband.
Republicans from all over the
state heard Interior Secretary
Douglas McKay say the national
GOP administration is practicing
“true liberalism.’’
The Nebraska, congressional
delegation members spoke at a
luncheon. McKay was a ban
quet speaker.
Sen. Roman Hruska said. “The
r eal vice of Yalta was that three
men sat down around a table and
decided who would get this coun
try, who would get that harbor
end what islands would go to
Joe.” He said he would vote
against the Clay administration
sponsored road plan, then added
“as much as we might oppose any
one or two or three or four of the
president’s plans, taken as a
package his program is par excel
lence.”
Sen. Carl T. Curtis. “About 10
percent of tne next year’s nation
al budget will go for interest on
the national debt." He said $6,400,
000,000 had been earmarked for
interest and only $2,300,000,000
goes for general administrative
costs of government.
Rep. A. L. Miller: “I have
heard complaints that President
Eisenhower is ‘being a little new
dealish,’ ” and he added, “much
of his program dealing with na
tional health will be watered
down.” Miller declared there is
room in the GOP for both con
servatives and liberals.
Former Lynch Couple
Married 55 Years—
LYNCH—Mr. and Mrs. Duran
Ferguson of Lebanon, Ore., ob
served their 55th wedding anni
versary on Saturday, March 5.
The couple was married on March
5, 1900, in Elkador. Ia.
They moved to Lebanon 18
.years ago from Lynch.
A family gathering was held at
the couple’s home on Sunday,
March 6.
Ulysses S. Adams
SPENCER — Funeral services
were held Thursday, March 17,
in Altadena, Calif., for Ulysses S.
Adams, 89, of Glendale, Calif.
Mr. Adams had previously lived
in the Spencer community, and
had been employed in the bank
thre. Survivors include: Widow,
three daughters and two sons.
6 Superiors to
Bassett Students
ATKINSON—Rock county high
school (Bassett) speech students
won six superior ratings and an
excellent in class A of the district
speech and one act play contest
held in Atkinson Friday.
Atkinson high school students
won five superior and two excel
lent ratings in class B.
Valentine’s play, “Grenachika,”
and Atkinson St. Joseph’s one-act
drama, “The Pink Dress,” rated
superior in the one-act play divi
sion.
The following individual con
testants won superior ratings:
Interpretive oratory — A r t h a
Pacha, Atkinson; Mary Hager
man, Ainsworth; Beth Galloway,
Bassett.
Humorous—Jim Hansen, At
kinson; Judy Bussinger, Bassett.
Original oratory—DeMarus
Wefso; Atkinson; Don Logerwell,
Valentine.
Poetry reading—Betty Coxbill,
Atkinson; Jeanne Overman, Bas
sett.
Dramatic—Karen Garwood.,
Atkinson; Mildred Fling, Ains
worth; Karen Estes, Bassett.
Extemporaneous speaking—Ja
son McClurg, Bassett; Jeanne
Thurber, BurwelL
Radio newscasting—John Mack, j
Atkinson St. Joseph; Don Fox,
Bassett.
50-Year Member of
Lodge Is Honored
ORCHARD—Mrs. T. A. Dray
ton was honored for 50 years’
membership in Rebekah lodge
here last Thursday evening. The
lodge observed its 50th anniver- j
sary. Mrs. Drayton’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Davidson, were
charter members of the lodge. A
cake, decorated in honor of Mrs.!
Drayton, centered the serving
table.
Mrs. Raymond Stevens and
Mrs. Rudy Cedarburg presented!
a musical program. Introduced'
were Miss Janneil Cedarburg, a
reading; Misses Carole Van Os
rand and Sonia Stevens, vocal
duet, accompanied by Miss Dixie
Stevens; Arlce and Willis Waring,
Larry and Richard Williamsen,
musical selections.
Serving refreshments were
Mesdames Ralph Shrader, Ken
neth Eyer and Flora Young.
80 Boyd Youths
Study Government
BUTTE—The annual Cornhusk
er boys’ and girls’ county govern
ment day was observed at the
courthouse in Butte on Wednes
day, March 25.
Approximately 60 students from
the Naper, Bristow, Lynch, Butte
and Spencer high schools took
j part in the all-day program.
’me affair is sponsored jointly
by school officials, county offi
cials, and the various American
Legion posts of the county, and
is designed to acquaint the stu
dents with the various duties of
the county officials.
Committee Votes
to Merge Districts—
BUTTE—-A nine-man school
reorganization committee recently
voted in favor of merging three
school districts—23, 51 and 54—
located in the western part of the
county.
The board had held a previous
hearing on March 12, with many
persons testifying both for and
against the proposal. The plan
will now be forwarded to the
state committee for its recom
mendations, after which a special
electfon is to be held.
Frontier for printing!
I SEEDS
• . . Fresh Stock . . .
m
Bulk and Packaged
• Garden Seeds
• Colorado Onion Sets
• Holt County Bluegrass Seed
THIS IS high-test, good quality seed—
a natural for this area.
• Fertilizers
Feed your lawn with Scott’s Turf Builder.
Spreader available with fertilizer
and seed
Coyne Hardware
Phone 21
---------------J
Gets Separation
GM2 Merlyn Anderson
(above), son of Mr. and Mrs.
Merrill Anderson of Redbird,
received his discharge from the
navy at San Francisco, Calif.,
on Tuesday, March 8, and has
returned to make his home on
a farm northeast of O’Neill. He
served four years in the navy,
three years of which were
spent on the destroyer USS
Cook in foreign waters near
Korea, Japan and Indo-China.
His wife, the former Florence
Walters, spent some time with
her husband on the West coast
but since November she has
been staying v-ith her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walters of
O’Neill.
Baring Agreements
An Old Tradition
Sen. Roman Hruska (R-Nebr.)
and Sen. Minority Leader William
Knowland (R-Calif.) agree that
publication of the Yalta docu
ments followed an Amercian tra
dition almost a century old.
The senators discussed state de
partment release of the Yalta
conference record in a Washing
ton, D.C. interview.
Under the American system
of frequent elections, Know'
land said, if political repercus
sions were to be avoided, such
documents never could be re
leased.
The Californian said the nation
has continually published all its
official papers, for a long time
within a year or two after the
event occurred. After World War
II, the process lagged as much as
18 years.
Hruska commented that wheth
er the documents were released
or suppressed, there still would be
political implications. Knowland
pointed out that the release of
the records was not impulsive,
but was discussed and announced
two years ago. In 1953, congress
appropriated funds to continue
publishing documents, he said,
and appropriation committees held
full hearings and made a report
on the subject.
Publication of the Yalta doc
uments, he said, is “not for acri
mony or opening old wounds,
but to prevent repeating old
mistakes.”
The minority leader said, “I
doubt if the big world powers
nave a moral right to divide ter
ritory and peoples.” And he em
phasized that Poland and China
were allies, not enemy countries,
in World War II.
Hruska added that the reaction
of foreign governments should be
considered in publication of such
documents. “But,” he concluded,
“we must also keep in mind 160
million Americans who do not
want similar meetings in the fu
ture to repeat old mistakes.”
‘Sweet 75 Contest
Is Launched—
A nationwide search to find
the “most photogenic and charm
ing woman” now 75 years of age
has been launched by the Photo
graphers’ Association of America
in conjuncture with its diamond
jubilee year celebration.
All women who were born in
1880, the year the Photographers’
Association 6f America was
founded, are eligible to join the
“Sweet 75 Contest.” All a woman
has to do to enter the country
wide contest is to have a photo
graph taken at the studio of a
member of the association. She
must be in good health, able to
travel and prepared to establish
proof of her age.
O’Neill Photo Co., of O’Neill is
participating in the national
“Sweet 75 Contest” as a member
of the PAA.
Regional Deaths
Ernie Miller
LYNCH—Funeral services were
held in Culver City, Calif., for
Ernie Miller, former Lynch resi
dent. Mr. Miller died Saturday,
j March 12. He had formerly been
the postmaster in Lynch and the
I editor of the Lynch paper while
he lived here.
Charles Ferguson
NELIGH — Funeral services
were conducted Saturday, March
19, for Charles Ferguson, 82, in
Omaha. Survivors include: One
son and three sisters. Burial was
at the Forest Lawn cemetery in
Omaha.
Nature does not give anything.
It lends. It will continue to lend
as long as the loan is returned.
When nothing is paid back, noth
ing is lent. Nature keeps a con
stant balance between its income
and loans. When the loans are not
repaid, the borrower, man, and not
the lender, nature, is eliminated.
Anyone who ignores the balance
of nature does so at his own peril.
Nature will maintain its balance
by overthrowing him. — Ayers
Brinser and Ward Shepard, in
“Our Use of the Land.”
SCOTTSBLUFF—The board of
education voted raises ranging
from $40 to $300 annually to the
teachers.
Drd Chanticleers
Win Burwell Meet
.
O’Neill Finishes in 8th
Position
The Ord Chanticleers ground
out 42 points Wednesday after
noon in the Wrangler relays at
Burwell. The total output was
enough to win the 18-team carni
val. Fourteen teams scored.
O'Neill high Eagles, participat
ing in the first track and field
competition of the season, finish
ed in eighth position. Veteran per
former Eddie Gatz was Coach
Marv Miller’s best bet.
The St. Mary’s academy Card
inals, fielding a track team for the
first time in years, emerged with
one point. The Cards scored on
the two-mile relay.
The Burwell Longhorns finished
second with 38% points; Ains
worth Bulldogs, third, 37; Loup
City, 31; Bassett, 29%; Atkinson,
22; Broken Bow 15; O’Neill, 12:
Sumner, 11%; Callaway 11;
Springview, 10, and Sargent, 9%.
Revenue Committee
Robinson Sponsor
The Nebraska unicameral leg
islature’s revenue committee
agreed Tuesday to sponsor two
proposed Ft. Robinson bills in the
legislature.
One of the measures would ap
propriate $94,000 to the state
game commission for development
of tourist accommodations at the
historic northwest Nebraska spot.
The other would give the State
Historical society $36,600 for es
tablishment of a branch museum
at Ft. Robinson.
Actual introduction of the bills
at this stage in the session re
quires at least 22 votes, under the
rules of the legislature.
Sen. Monroe Bixler of Harrison
asked the committee, of which he
is chairman, to support his re
quest to introduce the measures.
The revenue committee agreed
to sponsor the bills just 24 hours
after a similar request to the ag
riculture committee had been
turned down.
General Alarm
Thwarts Blaze
PAGE — A general telephone
alarm about 4:30 o’clock Sunday
afternoon brought a quick influx
of fire-fighters to the farm oc
cupied by Mr. and Mrs. Matt Mc
Cabe, located two mills northeast
of Page. A bucket brigade and
water conveyed in five-gallon
cans extinguished the hay fire
which was started by the exhaust
of a tractor.
Mr. McCabe was scooping hay
when the tractor backfired. He
didn’t notice the fire that had
started until after considerable
headway had been made in a brisk
wind.
In short order after the alarm
was sounded, neighbors gathered.
Mr. McCabe’s father, M. P. Mc
Cabe of Boyden, la., was visiting
at the place and helped save the
nearby cultivator. A barn was
only lot) leet irom tne naystacK
that was destroyed.
The fire occasionally flared up
and it was 7:30 p.m. before the
crowd dispersed.
Power Line
Resolution Tabled—
The state central committee of
the Nebraska republican party de
cided to take no action on a reso- :
lution calling for construction of
a power line to Grand Island. ::
The resolution called for con- :
struction by the federal govern- ■
ment of a power line from the Ft. ■
Randall, S.D., dam to Grand Is- |
land. The Nebraska legislature has J
already passed a resolution on the g
subject. g
Former Gov. Robert Crosby g
suggested the resolution and Jo- g
seph Thye of Kearney read it. g
But Herb White, Omaha attor- j
ney, protested the “sudden’’ sug- j
gestion, contending the committee j
members should have been given J
prior notice. i
By an 18-8 vote the committee
approved White’s motion to table j j
the resolution. <
__ 1 *
Becomes Principal
of High School—
ATKINSON—Raymond E. Col
lins, son of George Collins of At
kinson, has recently been appoint
ed principal of Torrance high
school at Torrance, Calif.
Collins had previously served
as principal of the Kearney sen
ior high school at Kearney and
the York junior high school. He
received his bachelor’s and mas
ter’s degrees'at the University of
Nebraska. j
Victims of the common cold j
can infect others 24 hours before j
their own noses start running.
O’Neill Air Service
. . . for ... I
• Flight Instruction
• Crop Spraying
• Charter Flights
• Aircraft Repair
ASK YOUR COUNTY AGENT
ABOUT SPRAYING
George Nachtman,
Mgr.
O’NEILL AIRPORT
Morgan Ward
Accounting & Auditing
Income Tax Service
Hotel Golden Annex
O’Neill, Nebr. — Phone 414
Don’t let the new Social Se
curity regulations interfere
with your haying or farming
■ operations. Let me keep your
; records and file your returns.
Atkinson Soldier^
to Study Russ—
ATKINSON— M/Sgt. Kenneth j
E. Frohardt, son of Mr. and Mrs. ■:
George H Frohardt of Atkinson, |
is now stationed at Presidio of
Monterey, Calif., where he has
just started a 46-weeks’ study of
the Russian language at one of the
army’s largest language schools.
Sergeant Frohardt was recently
transferred from Ft. Ord. His
present address: M/Sgt. Kenneth
E. Frohardt, RA37034852, 5th pi.,
Co. B., ALS, Presidio of Monte
rey, Calif.
RUSKIN QUOTE
"God has lent us the earth for
our life. It is a great entail. It
belongs as much to those who
are to come after us as to us, and
we have no right in anything we
do or neglect, to involve them in
any unnecessary penalties, or to
deprive them of the benefit
which was in our power to be
queath.”—Ruskin.
Will H. Spindler
Announces New Book
ATKINSON—Will H. Spindler
of the U.S. Indian service has an
nounced the completion of his new
book, "Tragedy Strikes at Wound
ed Knee.” Published by the Jour
nal Publishing Co. of Gordon,
this book contains 17 of the au
thor’s best true and authentic
feature stories. “Tragedy Strikes
at Wounded Knee” is Spindler’s
fifth book. Of these books, only
“Badlands Trails” is still on sale
by the author.
Mr. and Mrs. Spindler have over
25 y ears as teacher and house
keeper in Indian day schools on
the Pine Ridge Indian reservation
of South Dakota. Of these years,
20 were spent at the Medicine Bow
day school, Potato Creek; one at
the Manderson day school, and
they are now in their fifth year at
the Wounded Knee day school.
Will is’a brother of Floyd Spind
ler of Atkinson.
MOST VALUABLE
The most valuable resource of
this nation is the soil; gold is more
spectacular; iron has in two gen
erations made men richer; copper
has opened up greater possibilities
of advancing techniques. But, it is
the soil which produces the last
ing and essential wealth of the
nation.—Brinser and Shepard, in
“Our Use of the Land.”
Move to Star—
STAR— Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Engler have moved from south of
Atkinson to the Robert Miller
farm near Star where he has ob
tained employment.
Monuments of lasting beauty
made by skilled craftsmen of
the J. F. Bloom Co. . . monu
ments from the factory to the
.onsumer. — Emmet Crabb. O'
NeilL phone 139-J. 37H
In London, mail-carrying driv
erless trains are run through a
six-mile tunnel every live min
utes, controlled entirely by push
buttons.
Optometrists estimate that four
out of 10 Americans are handi
capped on their jobs by inade
quate vision.
i.
Prison Guards Are
Released Unharmed
LINCOLN—A 65-hour prisoner
revolt at Nebraska’s state peni
tentiary ended early Wednesday
when eight rebel convicts released
three unharmed hostages and
Jien surrendered themselves.
Since Sunday forenoon, the
convicts and hostages, including
two captured guards, had been
barricaded inside the square,
tnree story maximum security
building or prison “jail” on the
penitentiary grounds.
Surrender on terms laid down
by Gov. Victor E. Anderson came
after personal interviews during
the night with four of the rebels.
At 5:15 A.M. the two guards
and an inmate who had been a
prisoner of the prisoners walked
out of the building’s lone exit into
the glare of flood lights that have
bathed it for three nights. Thir
teen minutes later the subdued
convicts began trooping out, one
at a time.
ALL got hot meals-their first
since Sunday breakfast.
The guards, Eugene Swanson,
34, and Warren B. Miller, 43, told
newsmen they were well treated
by the insurgents, who were arm
ed with knives and pipes.
A meager supply of bread and
sugar was shared with scrupulous
fairness among captors and cap
tives alike, they said.
Atkinson Towners
Flan Campaign—
ATKINSON—Plans for the At
kinson town team’s 1955 baseball
season were discussed last week
in Atkinson by a group of busi
nessmen and players at a meet
ing held at the Atkinson Live
stock Market.
Treasurer Joseph Kokes report
ed that the club had paid its way
last year, and still had a sizeable
amount left for operating ex
penses this season. The group felt
that the team would not have to
be subsadized by contributions
from business places this year.
—
WEATHER SUMMARY:
Hi Lo Prec.
March 24 .26 11 .2
March 25 .25 1 T
March 26 .25 5 T
March 27 .39 2
March 28 .58 21
March 29 .72 31
March 30 .73 25
• _
Enroute to Ak—
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Hitchcock
left Hot Springs, Ark., Monday
with their six horses for Ak-Sar
Ben field in Omaha. Mrs. Hitch
cock is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Anderson of O’Neill.
Wednesday, March 23, over
night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rus
sell Yusten were Mr. and Mrs.
Julius Snoozy of Watertown, S.D.
They are an uncle and aunt of
Mr. Yusten.
DR. DONALD E. DAVID
OPTOMETRIST
Eyes Examined
Glasses Fitted
Phone 2101, Spencer, Nebr.
Legislature Holds
Pheasants Bill—
The legislature’s agriculture
committee Monday held a bill to
place a special $1 hunting fee on
pheasants after a bill to move the
bill to the floor fell short by two
votes.
The bill would require persons
over 16 years of age to purchase
a stamp to hunt, take or kill
pheasants.
J. Robert Mullin of Ralston,
representing the Missouri Valley
Hunting club, favored the bill. He
said if it passed, hunters would be
contributing $350,000 each year
to the game commission for rais
ing and releasing pheasants.
He said the pheasant popula
tion “has reached an all-time low
in Nebraska and something should
be done about it.”
The bill was introduced by Sen
William Moulton of Omaha.
Sen. Frank Nelson of O’Neill is
chairman of the agriculture com
mittee.
Scotts Bluff Hires
Special Road Engineer—
GERING — Scotts Bluff county
commissioners have contracted
with Special Engineer Y. Grupe
of Scottsbluff to pave two projects
in the county.
The action was taken to meet
engineering bottlenecks in coun
ty road work. State Sen. Amos
Morrison warned the county that
unless it starts using the nearly
$800,000 in its road fund from gas
taxes that the state highway de
partment might ask for the mon
ey at some future date.
EWING NEWS
Leonard Miller, who is in ser
vice and has been in camp near
Sacramento, Calif., is home on
leave.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood of Lin
gle, Wyo., Miss Vina Wood and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tomjack
were guests of Florence Butler
and Anna Vaij Zandt for dinner
last Thursday evening at the cafe
in Clearwater.
j Why wait! j
l YOU CAN HAVE l
\ LENNOX \
: ALL SEASON *
• Air Conditioning NOW :
: Jas. Da idson \
• & Suns
Phone 264 — O’Neill •
JIM BO—the most sensational Invention to toe
history ol fishing—the artificialqnmnow that swims
No more live bait to buy. This is the lure sensation
ot the 20th century
IT SWIMS—no springs, uses no fuel; it swims as
long as you leave it in the water Swims by unique
process of balance and gravity Fish any desired
depth—in lake, stream, gulf, bay Any fish that will
stnke a minnow will strike JIM BO. This is no gad
get Looks and swims like a live minnow.
This is the lure ol all lures—beautiful silvei leaf
plastic Buy one lor your triends also Satisfaction
guaranteed. Send J1.00 only, for each lure Send
check or cash We pay postage Sold by mail onlyr
J SR TACKLE CO. P.O. Boa 741. Largo. Fla.
" 111111 '
.. - ' -
When it comes to
BANKING
. 0 ^
Theres no substitute for
SERVICE
In meeting the banking requirements of our neighbors
through the years we have sought to give an extra
measure of service to every visitor or customer on
every occasion. That is still—and will always be—our
aim. We welcome the opportunity to serve your bank
ing needs.
O’Neill National Bank
— Member FDIC —
-.—i ' ’■ •.
d
’ '■ •• " ■ o 8
On* of Nebraska's Richest Marketing Areas
' * .v ■ H
■m - 1
served by North Nebraska's
fastest-growing newspaper *
O’Neill is North-Central
Nebraska’s largest city (pop.
3,050). It is situated at
the gateway to the sandhills
and is the biggest re
tail, wholesale, communica
tions, hay, bluegrass and
farm produce center in all
North Nebraska; also
one of the ranking' cattle and
hog markets in the state.
The FRONTIER’S
circulation has been grow
ing by leaps and
bounds, because of its well
edited news and edi
torial policies and because,
in a single year, it has
published more pictures than
many other papers in
the area combined!
Your message in The
FRONTIER will enter ranch,
farm and city homes
where folks enjoy far-above
average purchasing pow
er . . . where your story is
welcomed and wanted.
* Biggest ABC circulation in nine
counties. Details, marketing in
formational and promotional as
sistance gladly furnished.
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The Frontiers ABC Record:
1st Qtr 1948 - 804 1st Qtr. 1949 _1.141
*
u; iir tL5l> _ 1,634 1st Qtr. 1953 _
I
1st Qtr. 1954*_3^335
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