The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 28, 1955, Supplement, Page 10, Image 22

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

    FRUIT (Continued)
PLUMS, Six to a Plate
Blue Damson . ®f 'l5.
Pawttamic . JJ ??
.r/.v.v.v:." 2 2
opata 85 35
GRAPES, Best Plate
Black Grapes .‘.I5
White Grapes . 05
PEARS, Five to Plate
Kiefer .« ‘-I?
Bartlett . '«
Peter Piper . 85 ™
PEACHES, Five to Plate
Seedling .I5 ll
Grafted or Budded .oa aa
FLOWERS
MRS. C. V. ROBERTSON, Superintendent
Class P-1 — Cut Flowers
No entries on flowers until 8:00 a.m., Thursday, August 18.
All entries must be in by 11:30 a.m., same day.
The first prize in each class is 65c and second 35c.
Entrants will please bring milk bottles or fruit jars to display
their flowers
Display_5 Stems Unless Otherwise Stated 1st 2nd
1. Asters
a. Mixed .b5
b. Single .65 f
2. Ageratum .. .35
3. Bachelor Button . -bb
4. Calendula .65 , .35
5. Canna .®5 .35
6. Chrysanthemum (3 stems) .65 -35
7. Columbine .65 .35
8. Cosmos — any color .65 .35
9. Cockscomb or Celosia .65 .35
10. Cushion Mum (3 stems) .00 00
11. Dahlia . f *??
a. Giant (1 bloom) .•J0
b. Common or Ball .63 35
c. Pompom .65 33
12. Carnation .33
13. Daisies .33 f
14. Delphinium (1 stalk) .33 ^
15. False Dragonhead . -33
16. Gallardia .33 f
17. Golden Glow .65 •*"
18. Hemerocallis—Day Lily (3 or more blooms).65 .35
19. Hydrangea (3 stems) .35 33
20. Lilies, any type (3 blooms) .35 35
21. Larkspur .35 ,33
22. Marigolds
a. Double .35 33
b. Single .63 33
23. Nasturtiums .35 ,33
24. Pansies . 63 ,33
25. Petunias
a. Single .63 33
b. Double .63 35
c. Ruffled .65 -35
26. Pinks . 65 ,33
27. Phlox
a. Annual .*.63 33
b. Perennial .33 ,33
28. Salvia .33 33
(Continued on page 11)
-y-— — . -VIS.
Y
I i I
to the ’5j> Holt County Fair!
*
• CASE Farm
Machinery
• DeLAVAL
Cream
Separators
• DeLAVAL
_ Milking
Machines
We'll See You
„ th. Fair! • Hardware
_ • MINNESOTA
Paints
Shavlik Hardware
Phone 2131 — Chambers
Rodeo Rules
SADDLE BRONC RIDING
Nation’s top bucking hones
used and ridden only with asso
ciation saddles. Ordinary halter
with but one rein is allowed and
must be held only by hand on
same side of horse’s neck. This
rein is either three or four
strands of grass or cotton rope
braided, and not more than one
inch in diameter. Other hand
must be free at all times. Rider
must begin spurring horse up on
shoulders while leaving chute
and continue to spur throughout
ride. t
Getting bucked off, changing
hands on rein, wrapping the rein
around hand, pulling leather,
blowing stirrup (loosing foot from
stirrup), touching horse or saddle
with free hand or failing to spur
to suit judges disqualifies the
rider.
HAKE BACK BRONC RIDING
Horse is ridden with surcingle
or bareback rigging or with only
a loose rope around it and held
with but one hand. A small rope
or strap is tied around the horse’s
flanks just snug enough to annoy
it and make it buck harder.
Rules are much the same as in
saddle bronc riding.
CALF ROPING
The calf is turned loose and
timing starts when it crosses the
deadline about 10 or 15 feet in
front of the chute as the flag
drops. A small rope or sash cord,
known as the barrier, is fastened
up in front of the roper to the
side of the calf chute and releas
ed with the drop of the flag. If
the roper starts for the calf too
soon and breaks the barrier a 10
second penalty is added to his
time. Each roper Is allowed a
second loop if he misses with his
fiist.
CANADIAN RULES
Canadian rules do not allow
roper to tie rope to saddle but
dally around horn so as to slip
off when roper dismounts. Am
erican rules allow rope to be tied
i— rs
fast to the horn but horse must
be trained well and rope and
reins tied and adjusted in a man
ner to prevent the horse from
dragging the calf. U the calf gets
jerked off its feet it must be al
lowed to get up again and be
thrown by hand. With a short
piece of light rope known as the
‘‘inevitable” little pigging string,
any three feet are tied together
in a manner to suit the judges.
Timing is taken to a tenth of a
second. Pigging string is between
the roper’s teeth.
STEER WRESTLING OR
bulldogging
Contestant and helper or haz
er are mounted, one on each side
of the chute. Timing starts when
steer crosses deadline and con
testant must jump from his horse
to the steer, catching it by the
horns, bringing it to a stop and
twisting it down on its side with
all four feet out from under it.
If steer’s head is twisted one
way and the steer should fall the
other, then it must be let up and
twisted down again. Fastest times
decide the winner.
In Canada this contest is sub
stituted with steer - decorating.
The contestant jumps to the steer -
and slips a red ribbon on a horn.
BULL OR STEER RIDING
A loose rope is put around the
animal like a big noose and held
tight with a one-hand hold. A
bell is fastened to the rope un
der the animal’s belly and a rope
or flank strap used as on bare
back horses. When bulls are used,
spurring is not required contin
ually throughout the ride.
QUICK OPENINGS
An average of 66,591 cans are
opened every minute im the Uni
ted States.
All roads lead to Chambers
during fair week!
■ " " -- *
FARMERS STORE
A Community Store —
Community Conscious
Your Patronage Is Appreciated
Gen’l Mdse. — Foxbilt & Norco
Feeds — Minnesota Paints —
United Haige Seed Corn j
Ames-in-Cross Chickens
Wear-U-Well Shoes
“Hope to see you
at the Fair!”
L. FUSSELMAN
Page, Nebr.
Ewing
livestock
Market
Phones 19 & 7 0
★
LET US try your next con
signment and thus you
can join our growing list of
satisfied customers.
WE APPRECIATE your
business and assure you
absolute satisfaction.
★
MAX and BUV
WANSER
— Managers —
V
# ]
GATEWAY MOTEL - O’NEILL
AAA Approved — Completely Air Conditioned
21 NEW UNITS
U.S. Highways 20 & 275 - Dick Tomlinson, Prop.
West Lumber and Coal Co.
"Buy the BEST from WEST”
Lumber — Coal — Windows — Cement — Lime — Poster
Roofing — Paints — Glass — Wire — Fencing — Stokers
Steel Posts — Builders' Hardware — Plumbing Supplies
Heaters
LP GAS AND APPLIANCES
Page, Nebr. — Phone 7
H J
I See the latest , f
IS-CHALMERS WORKPOWERj
at the Fair J
bJ?^ - '
Now's the time to find out how you can get more work
done . . . and quicker, too. Visit the Allis-Chalmers
exhibit of modern farm equipment in action at the Fair.
★ New Tractors ... a family of tractors with
more^ihan-ever work capacity built in.
it Latest implements made to match modem
tractor speed and power,
it Full line of harvesting equipment both pull
type and self-propelled.
Take your family to the special displays and the educa
tional demonstrations that Allis-Chalmers presents.
Plenty of seats. Cold drinking water. A place to rest in
the big Allis-Chalmers tent when you’re weary. And a
show designed to help you farm better, easier . • . as
lower cost --- — --~
---)
Also Featuring
Kelley Ryan Products—Lincoln Welders
CONOCO PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Shadle Sickle Sharpeners
BURGE FARM SUPPLY, Chambers
Phone 2511
... ■— 11—————
*