The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 05, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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

    Prairieland Talk . . .
Lincoln Firm Global in Scope
By ROMATNE SAUNDERS. Retired. Former Editor The Frontier
LINCOLN—Located at 3705 South 48th street
in Lincoln is a world girdling institution that
probably is known very little by Lincoln citizens.
It functions under the name of Christian Record
and serves the sightless.
According to statistics gathered by the Record,
there are 2,202 blind persons in Nebraska and in
the United States a total of
329,000 blind men. women and
children whom this institution
serves by furnishing reading
matter printed in the braille
that is done by workers in the
Lincoln plant.
I have been informed by
one of the supervisory board of
the Christian Record, P. D. Ger
rard, that they are printing an
nually in braille 10,000,000 pages
of reading matter that goes to 54
countries and at present are Romalne
turning out 3,000 copies of their saunder*
Talking Magazine.
Mr. Gerrard is recently home from a world
tour and has a collection of 400 pictures showing
schools for the blind which the Record organiza
tion helps to promote abroad. They reach down
into old Egypt, down along the Nile, up around
the Jordan country in Jerusalem, also among the
Arabs and into ancient India. Hundreds of “talk
ing books” are turned out giving the blind religious
instruction, stories of exploring parties and astro
nomical flights.
* * *
Of those who have conveyed by mail an ex
pression of pleasure as they drank again from
the cup of memory’s mellow wine when reading
Prairieland Talker’s word picture of the green
robed prairie landscape that appeared in this de
partment on June 6, a letter comes from Mr. and
Mrs. Have Segelman of Seattle, Wash. Mrs. Se
gelman has memories of prairieland that linger
with her as treasured visions along the highway
of life. Mr. Segelman says what is needed out
there is less rain and some Nebraska sunshine.
* * •
Homer Campbell out at Seattle, Wash., writes
to me that when he learned of the accident that
took the life of Den Hunt his emotions were
touched. Then he recalled an incident in the long
ago when he set type on John Wertz’ Stuart Ledg
er and Den was in town doing plastering in some
buildings. He and Den were at the hotel dining
table for dinner when a blustering bully stepped
up and threatened to knock Homer’s block off.
Den jumped to his feet, faced that bully with the
challenge, “You’ll have to knock mine off first!”
Homer and Den were members of O’Neill's first
“brass band" and had attended school together in
the town’s first temple of learning, a one-room
frame building at the west proximity of what now
is Douglas street, then but a prairie trail.
• • •
The Cherokee strip of Oklahoma had a Belle
Starr, the Painted dessert of Arizona a Cactus
Kate, Deadwood a Calamity Jane, Omaha a
Fainting Bertha, and Holt county had a Belle
Shields w-ho could get away with a stolen horse
with the best of them.
• * *
Too much success invariably sours one’s
friends.
It was the last hour before the death stroke
for two convicted criminals. The two men joined in
leaving us this message:
"First of all, we do not protest against being
punished. We are found guilty of a serious crime.
In the second place, we wish to say for ourselves
that we did not have a fair chance in life. Coming
from broken homes, we grew up negelected. In
youth we were denied parental care, affection and
guidance. Religious training would have pointed
us in the right direction but we were not taken to
church services.”
Fair chance in life!
Wherein does civilization come short; cultural,
educational and religious groups fail to extend the
helping hand to children and youth that all about
us are the product of broken homes or unwed men
and women? Men who faced the executioner and
could tell it as these two men did should have
been given the chance denied them in childhood
and youth.
A star gazer connected with a southland ed
ucational institution has heard celestial signals
coming from the planet Venus and tells us the
created intelligences of that planet, if there be
such, are now getting in touch with we earth
bound creatures. What the signs, signals or flag
waving may signify the astronomer does not dis
close but says these have definitely occurred. Is
this the forerunner of the drumbeat of eternity
before the reverberations of a wrecked and ruined
world peal forth, or a fanciful creation of an over
wrought soul that will pass aw’ay as have the fly
ing saucers? However, out of the distant blue to
day, sunlight spread across prairieland to touch
near the hundred mark on the weather gauge. As
evening draws on, fleecy clouds float on high
and the weather prophet says thunder storms are
just ahead if not a roaring tornado. Night en
shrouds the city. Then comes the rumble and roar
of a good old Nebraska rain storm. And morning
dawns cool and clean.
* * *
Heroes are not all on battlefields. Seven men
were high on a tower at work when footing gave
way. Five plunged into eternity, two hung by their
bare hands to the tower edge. As soon as a hoist
could be put together down below it was raised
to the men hanging by bare hands. But on that
contraption was room for only one. “You,” said
the hero to the other, “get on and go down! I am
stronger than you.” But before that hoist could be
raised tower high again that strong man’s strength
was spent. He, too, plunged to his death.
* * *
The American Bible society reports that it
is nearing the half billion mark in Scripture dis
tribution. The revered volume continues to head
the list of “best sellers.”
• * •
Gazing sadly at his back yard, the amateur
gardener suspects his grass seed was strictly for
the birds.
• • •
Think for yourself and act upon your judg
ment; what ever results will be what you deserve.
• * *
There are wives who seem to have the worst
memory in the world—they never forget a thing.
Editorial . . .
‘Uniforms of the Day’
Time was, in the armed services, when every
subordinate was expected to salute his superior
whether or not in uniform. Not only that, but the
corporal or the captain was expected to know the
colonel when he saw him. And the interesting
thing, in retrospect, is that they usually could and
did—such was the fewness of the forces in those
days.
This invites a wry speculation as to what
would happen had the old protocol still obtained
and Secretary Wilson’s into-mufti-forthwith order
stood. What subordinates would be recognizing
what superiors among the 10,000 officers at the
Pentagon when they left their offices for the
streets of the nation’s capital?
There is something to Mr. Wilson’s view that
it is not well to have so much obvious rank around
Washington—something, alsoo, to Senator Mans
field’s view that it is well to be visibly reminded
of the fact of the military influence. But there is
nothing to be said for the arbitrary haste of the
order. And Mr. Wilson is well advised to take the
hint from his once-five-star superior and make
dress optional—for the present.
Posing a Problem
(From the Lincoln Star)
The GI bill of rights which for something like
a decade invested $14.5 billion in the war genera
tion will soon expire. Under its aegis approximate
ly eight million veterans received benefits rang
ing from aid in home owning, and readjustment
pay through trade training and higher education.
The nation will never call it a bad investment. Af
ter experience with several wars and varying pro
grams in behalf of those who fought them, the
United States has come upon the most practical,
the most realistic and the most constructive meth
od.
In thus casting its bread upon the waters, the
nation fulfilled the Biblical quotation of it return
I ing many fold. This was principally evidenced in
its educational program. A highly trained man is
today one of the nation’s principal resources and
the program produced thousands who without it
could not have afforded the schooling. They now
will continue throughout their lives making a
contribution of a high order to the national wel
fare.
But as the GI bill expires the nation can give
thought to the ending of one of its important
sources of trained people. It calls for a reapprais
al of our educational program lest an already short
product be further and critically diminished. The
nation is crying for more scientifically and tech
nically trained people. A new source must be de
vised for a good old one is drying up.
CARROLL W. STEWART. Editor and Publisher
ARTHUR J. NOECKER and ESTHER M. ASHER,
Associate Publishers
Entered at the postoffice in O’Neill, Holt coun
ty, 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;
rates abroad provided on request. All subscriptions
are paid in advance.
Audited (ABC) Circulation—2,559 (Mar. 31, 1956)
0 NOW! fein Hm FLORIDA voce- FLORIDA’S GLAMOUROUS . • y |
X Nm you've treated Let couldn't m ./*■ * f
0 * * I
J /
| iderful DAYS-6 romantic NiGHTS \
V Summer Roto* per per* 0
1 A4I QO ton, double occupancy, A
Mi $M' - ^ " °“H
1) ** FREE Swimming in the turquoise woters of the A
V sparkling Gulf of Mexico . . . Golfing on the /]
A . tl— world-famed Bobby Jones course . . . Relaxing 11
U ^ am* * omid polm trees and sweetly scented masses of I /
A t,,ul' 0»i»»*aem •* . flaming tropic flowers . . . Doncing ond romonc- ¥
V Sv.U.«i- tide ooot >t ^ ing — thot’s your Millionaire's vacation ot the I
A o tu^.^'wiw celebrity-filled new Sarosofo Terroce Hotel! Yet all I
I {SJJSJni* eat* *o“r** this fabulous luxury will cost you as LITTLE as 1
A Snan «***•»'•• $24.00! ! So don’t wait another minute for reservo- f]
II e u«w tions! See your local Travel Aqent or write, wire or 11
f 5SS>-"£?*.*r««. £to~: - \
A #ina*»r SKlaat inc*u4.«*e I
\ SARASOTA TERRACE HOTEL ft
j) * F. O. »OX 1720 — SARASOTA. FLORIDA—TIL. RINGLING — 2-J311 M
)
'A> Rot*"
o——
; - I
I I
*
Investigationitis
When You and 1 Were Young . . .
Busy Doctor
Reports 4 Births
Dry Creek Success
for Fishing Party
50 Years Ago
O’Neill’s busy Dr. J. P.
Gilligan reports four births, a
boy each at the homes of Charles
and Anna Peterson, George and
Trusilla Reichert on the 23d,
James W. and Lura E. Van Kirk
and Garrett D. and Mary Janzing,
born the 24th. . . A fishing party
composed of ,T. A. Cowperth
waite, Frank E'roelich, Joe Wise,
William Froelich and wife, A. L.
Cowperthwaite and wife, E. A.
Merriam of Seward and Miss
Etta Morgan of Sioux Falls, S.D.,
went to Dry creek Sunday and
caught a fine string of pickerel.
Miss Morgan proved the cham
pion, catching one that weighed
13 pounds.
20 Years Ago
Jack Arbuthnot came from
Yankton, S.D., to participate in
the golf tournament. . . Dr. G. B.
Ira of Lynch, who is seriously ill,
was taken to Rochester, Minn. . .
John Ryan and son, William, of
Gillette, Wyo., have been visits
ing friends and relatives here. . .
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sire
of Inman, a daughter, Marjorie
Ann. . . Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Peterson and children visited the
Orville Harrison home Sunday.
10 Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Beha
quietly celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary with all
members of their family. . . Miss
Kathleen Flood was soloist at the
band concert Saturday evening. . .
James Bridges and Guy Harris arc
‘ on a hitchhiking tour of the West.
. . . Miss Luetta Lenz and Dar
rold L. Dankert, both of Cham
bers, were married. . . Miss Mar
delle Butts of Chambers became
the bride of Eugene Hoerle of
Ewing.
One Y'ear Ago
Miss Barbara Flannigan, 17,
was crowned queen of the Stuart
rodeo. . . Mr. and Mrs. Scott Con
ner of Ewing, celebrated their
golden wedding anniversary,
which wras January 10, this week
because of weather advantages in
the summer for many far away
relatives. . . A/lc Lois M. Brede
hoft visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Bredehoft, this week.
. . . Francie, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William White, had a wiener
roast to celebrate her 12th birth
day anniversary. . . Gregory Peck
anil companions ate lunch here.
m __eii M_
i-ii ri b m i via* iivui
Demonstrations—
The Up and At It 4-H club met
at the McNulty home on Sunday
evening, June 24. Twenty-one
answered roll call.
The group which went to club
camp told about experiences
there. Judy Sanders gave a report
on club week which she attended.
The members agreed to contrib
ute 10 cents each for the upkeep
of the national 4-H headquarters
at Washington, D.C. Our leader,
Mrs. Opal Hammerlun, gave us a
short report on the last leaders’
meeting.
The club profited from three
demonstrations. Mildred Schmitz
and Diana George gave one on
making muffins, Nick Hammer
lun demonstrated binding the
ends of a rope and Judy Sanders
and Laurine Schmitz gave one on
administering first aid. —By Jo
anne Lansworth, reporter.
Helps Reenact
Iwo Jima—
SPENCER—Howard R. Fried
rich, electronics technician second
class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.
P. O. Friedrich of Spencer,
aboard the destroyer USS Uhl
mann, was among the sailors and
soldiers who reenacted the his
toric assault on Iwo Jima during
the first two weeks of June.
Try The Frontier on your next
printing order!
DR. H. D. GILDERSLEEVE
OPTOMETRIST
Northeast Corner
of 4th & Douglas
O'NEILL, NEBR
Phone 187
Eyes Exaznlned-GlaaBos Fitted
Office Hours: 9-5
Monday thru Sate dray
Ewing News
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Angus and
family of O’Neill were last |
Thursday evening guests at the
home of his mother, Mrs. Eliza- j
beth Angus.
Lloyd Angus went to Omaha
last Thursday on business. He
went to Lincoln to spend the1
night with his son and daughter
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Merle An
inother, Mrs. Elizabeth Angus,
Mrs. Lloyd Angus and his
gus.
were Neligh visitors last Thurs
day afternoon.
Neighbors arrived at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Will Conner at
about 4 o’clock last Thursday af
ternoon to wish Mr. Conner a
happy birthday anniversary.
Lunch was served by the self-in
vited guests. The birthday cake
was baked by Mrs. Ella Ziems.
Other guests present were Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Larsen, Mr. and
Mrs. Deemer Conner and Mrs.
Herman Schroeder.
Mr. and Mrs. Sis Ebbengaard
attended the funeral of her uncle,
Ezra Moor, held Monday after
noon, June 25, at Inman.
Guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Sis Ebbengaard last week
were her brother, Harvey Hop
kins, and daughter, Mrs. Stewart
Engle, both of Omaha, and Mr.
Ebbengaard's nephew and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Metcalf of
Portland, Ore.
Mrs. Mabel Boies left Monday,
June 25, for California where she
plans an extended visit at the
homes of her sons and families.
James Boies took his mother to
Grand Island where she continu
ed on her way by train.
Mrs. Loyd West, jr., and
daughter went to Bonesteel, S.D.,
on Monday, June 25, where they
joined in celebrating her daugh
ter, Sharon’s, ninth birthday an
niversary. A party was held at
the home of Sharon’s grandpar
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Perlen
sein, where she is spending the
summer. Mrs. West and Luella
returned to Ewing Tuesday, June
26.
SP3 Donald Pruden is spending
a 30-day furlough with relatives
in Ewing. He also plans to spend
a few days with his father, T. S.
Pruden, at Casper, Wyo. Special
ist Pruden is stationed at Ft. Bel
voir, Va.
Mrs. Daisy Miller and Carol
Ann were guests of Mrs. John
Wunner last Thursday and Fri
day.
Mrs. Anna Miller, her son and
family from Oakdale were Sun
day, June 24, dinner and after
noon guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. John Miller.
Bob Bartak, stationed at Ft.
Leavenworth, Kans., returned to
his base after spending a few
days with home folks. He was
accompanied by his wife, who
spent the weekend with him
when he returned on Saturday.
Mrs. Bartak came back to Ewing
on Monday.
Mary Karen and Shirley Funk
spent last Thursday at the home
of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Regan, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robley Sisson, sr.,
and family are moving this week
to the property north of the Ew
ing Methodist church.
Recent supper and evening
guests at the home of Mrs. Hazel
Kimes and sons were her broth
er and sister-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles McDonald, of Ne
ligh.
Dean Kimes, who has been vis
iting his sister, Mrs. Joe Kusek,
and family at David City, return
ed home Saturday.
Sunday afternoon and lunch
and Mrs. Otto Hartford of Bone
eon guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Will Conner were Mr.
steel, S.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hartford of
Bonesteel, S.D., visited Sunday
at the home of her brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wilson. Mr Wilson, who has been
ill, is improving and able to get
down town each day.
Arriving in town on Wednes
day, June 27, were Mrs. D. E. O’
Brien and daughters of Chicago,
111. They were accompanied by
Kitty Wanser, who had been their
guest for three weeks. They are
guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Max Wanser and family.
Mr and Mrs. Max Wanser and
family and their guests, Mrs. D.!
E O'Brien and daughters of Chi- j
cago. 111., planned to spend the!
Fourth of July at the home of Dr.
and Mrs. L. H. Suttcliffe, where a
family gathering was to be held |
and a picnic dinner enjoyed.
Mr. and Mrs. John Walker;
and Bob of Norfolk were guests
on Tuesday, June 26. at the home
of Mr and Mrs. Max Wanser. |
The Walker family was enroute
home after a vacation trip to
Denver, Colo. |
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd West and
daughter, Luella, were Sunday
guests at tne home of his parents,
Mr and Mrs. Loyd West. sr„ at
Creighton They also made a trip
to Osmond
Mrs. Lovd West, jr„ and Mrs.
Clifford Hahlbeck made a busi
ness trip to Page Saturday after
noon.
Mrs. Ed Urban and Mrs. Agnes
Bartak were last Thursday after
noon guests at the home of Mrs.
Urban’s daughter, Mrs John
Kaczor, and family.
Recent guests at the home of
Mrs. Agnes Bartak were her
daughter, Mrs. Vance Bennett,
and daughter, Mary Beth, of
Plainview.
Norman Bomer of Oklahoma
City, Okla.. spent a few days vis- ;
iting Ewing friends this week, j
His parents. Reverend and Mrs.!
Bomer, and family are visiting!
relatives at Des Moines, la.
companied by their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Ebben Grafft, ac- ,
Mrs. Wilbur Spangler, and chil
dren, attended a family reunion
of Mrs. Grafft’s family, held at
Fullerton Sunday, June 24. About
70 members were in attendance.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Rockev
spent the June 23 weekend at
Kansas City, where they were
guests of relatives and also at
tended the ball game. Their chil
dren were guests at the home of
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. G. Rockey, during their ab
sence.
Hans Peterson and son, El
wood, made a business trip to
Grand Island Wednesday, June
27.
Mrs. Harriet Welke, who has
spent the past month at Glas
guw, 1VUMU., W UU I iv a .1IJVV4 J, IV
turned home last Thursday. Mr.
and Mrs. R. H. Shain, accompan
ied by Alvin Gibson, went to
Sioux City to meet her.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clyde re
turned home last Thursday from
a vacation trip to Wyoming. They
were guests at the home of his
mother, Mrs. Ella Clyde, and
daughter, Mabel; also a brother,
Albert Clyde, and family at Up
ton. At Moorcroft, they visited
two more brothers, Harry Clyde
and Roy Clyde, and at Osage,
Wyo., they were guests at the
homes of Wilton Clyde and fam
ily, Leonard Clyde and family
and John Clyde, all brothers of
Mr. Clyde.
Misses Helen Rotherham and
Betty Ann Van Vleck of Lincoln
came home Saturday and will
spend a two-weeks’ vacation with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
Rotherham and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Van Vleck.
Myra Lee Rotherham came
home Sunday from Elgin where |
she had spepnt the past week j
with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. j
Arnold Gragert and family.
A dinner guest Monday, June j
25, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Tom jack was her cousin,
Wayne Chestnut of Moscow, Ida.
Miss Catherine Newhouse of
Chambers, enroute to Chicago,
111., where she attends North
western university, was a caller
Tuesday, June 26, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Tomjack and
family.
Dexter Completes
Army’s Nike Course—
AMELIA—Pvt. Donald R. Dex
ter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William
T. Dexter of Amelia, recently
completed eight weeks of ad
vanced individual training on the
army’s nike surface to air guided
missiles at Ft. Bliss, Tex.
Dexter entered the army last
December and received basic
training at Ft. Carson, Colo. He is
a 1952 graduate of Bur well high
Rex W. Wilson,
M.D.
Robert M. Langdon,
M.D.
PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS
128 W. Douglas St.. O’Neill
Phone 138
I Kelly’s Plumbing I
■ — O’NEILL — 9
Located 5 Blocks South of the New Deal Oil Station .£
If you’re in need of any of the following -
9 items you can’t beat these prices! 9
I I—3-Piece Bath Outfit _ $129.95 I
I 1—5-Ft. Recess Tub with Trim 70.00 I
I 2—l/4-h.p. Shallow Well Jet I
■ Pumps on 42-Gal. Tanks _ 89.95 I
■ 1 24-h.p. Motor Built for I
9 Pump Jack Service _ 50.00 9
I I—275-Gal. Fuel Oil Tank I
9 with Stand _ 35.00 8
Matching - Fund
Vogue ‘Alarming’
Matching-fund programs have
put the federal government in
business with state and local sub
divisions at an alarming rate.
Functions traditionally reserved
to the people and to the govern
ing bodies close to homo are rap
idly being usurped by Washing
ton under the guise of federal
local participation, according to
Nebraska’s Fourth district con
gressman, A L. Miller (R).
One section of the Hoover
commission reports lists 25 grant
in-aid programs that have been
authorized by the congress which, I
in 1953. requirt'd $2.7 billion
from the federal treasury, and
which cost the federal govern
ment nearly $38 million to ad
minister. Funds are available for
slum clearance, for low - rent
public housing, highways, air
ports, pubhe health and hospitals,
civil defense, school construction,
and a host of other fields, with
the catch that local sources must
also advance a requisite amount
of money.
As a condition to accepting and
participating in these grants-in
aid, of course, the local govern
ments must agree to certain terms
laid down by bureaus in Wash
ington.
“Many of the programs are ad
ministered by the local officials,
but the rules for playing the
game come from bureaucrats on
the Potomac, and there is no such
thing as local control,” Miller de
clared.
Many of these programs do not
emanate from the people they
seek to aid. Instead, they are con
ceived by bureaucrats who pur
sue a steady course of empire
building at the federal level and
the price tags attached to some
of these shining articles is a loss
of individual and local liberty.
“Many special interest groups
apply a tremendous amount of
pressure for some of these pro
gressive ventures, but before en
K K h. A
dorsrng “do-good” missions, wo
should remember that all federal
money comes from only one
source—the people—and when
the tax dollar goes to Washington
it returns in a shrivelled state,”
Miller explained
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
WO-Orville Thorson 4-5-56
$268- Part of E'jSWh 25-31-12
WD—Idin Louh 4-10-56 5234
Part of EMsNEV* 25-31-12
—
—O'NEILL, NEBR. —
Wrd.-Thurs. July 4-5
Family Nights
THE LEATHER SAINT
Paul Douglas, John Derek.
Jody Lawrence, Cesar Romero.
Co-starring Ernest Truex, Rich
ard Shannon with Ricky Vera
YTista Vision Not since . “Going
My Way" has anything this warm
and wonderful shone on the
screen.
Family admitted for 2 adult tick
ets; adults 50c; children 12o
Fri.-Sat. July 6-7
THE RAWHIDE YEARS
Tony Curtis, Colleen Miller,
Arthur Kennedy, with William
Gargan, Peter Van Eyck, Minor
Watson. Print by Teehmcolor. He
lived with his luck—and gambled
with his life—for the love of the
river lady called “Zoe"!
Adults 50c: children 12c; matinee
Sat. 2:30. All children under 12
free when accompanied by parent
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. July 8-9-10
HILDA CRANE
Print by Technicolor. Cinema
scope Starring Jean Simmons,
Guy Madison, John Pierre Ali
ment. She was just a crazy—mix
ed-up girl learning what life was
all about! “I'd like to live like a
man—and still be a woman!"
Adults 50c; children !2c: matinee
Sun. 2:30. All children under 12
free when accompanied by parent
vCA yCyf A A y y v
NOW
AS MUCH AS $200 FOR YOUR
PRESENT REFRIGERATOR IN
TRADE ON A NEW GAS
SexM ICE-MAKER
PLUS — 30-DAY FREE TRIAL
For a limited time EXTRA liberal refrigerator trade-in af!ow*
iikci are being offered bv your KANSAS-NEBRASKA STORE
Manager . . . and he will be glad to let you try the amazing
Serve! with Ice-Maker in your own home for 30 day* without
obligation ... to you too can discover the utmost in con
venience — the refrigerator that makes and serves ice cube*
automatically!
STOP IN AT THE NEAREST KANSAS NEBRASKA
STORE TODAY
Only GAS 4 gives you a refrigerator different from aD others!
. W • 1 . W • Y k • 1 . W — W* 1 a W - III |
For Dependable GAS Service