Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1960)
A wonderful development in recent years is the increased interest in Hiawatha-type recreation—floating down beautiful streams, camp ing out, watching beavers, deer and muskrat work and play. Our Indians, too often left idle and bored, are in several cases fitting very well into this program. They guide parties on river trips, show the kids how to fish and handle a canoe, teach them camp lore and a love of the forest. The boys shown here work under a northern Wis consin group led by Tony Wise of Hayward, Wisconsin. South Dakota Indians play an important part in rodeos, cele brations and fairs. Resplendent in full tribal regalia, these origi nal Americans enjoy performing traditional ceremonial dances. For many people nothing beats the fun of fishing, and eating fish fresh out of the water is one of the high spots of any holiday. So get out that rod and reel and get set for action! Maybe not best for being dropped through... You’ve seen it on TV —marbles or elephants (and who knows what next) bounced through costly foil wrap pers. But even an elephant will never forget the really fresh, “just made” taste of sandwiches wrapped in stronger-than-foil Rap-In-Wax. Your foods stay fresher with Rap-In-Wax because it’s double waxed on both sides, then given a hard finish on cold steel rollers. You can safely Rap-In-Wax your leftovers while they’re still warm, seal in all the flavor and natural juices. For more freshness at lower cost, buy double-waxed Rap-In-Wax! ...butdefinitely better for keeping foods fresh!