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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1950)
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tharnish and Kathleen will be Thanksgiving guests at the home of her father, Charles Cole. Keith Anspach, of Central Ci ty, visited his parents, the Hard en Anspachs, Sunday. Guests Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Gallagher and family were Mrs. Wayne Kibby and Mrs. Joe Katzer, of Butte. Edward Campbell is spending the Thanksgiving recess with his Jprents, the Edward Campbells. oseph Devine, his cousin, is his houseguest. Both are students at Creighton university in Omaha. Miss Patricia Brennan, a stu dent at St. Mary’s college, Xav ier, Kans., will spend Thanksgiv ing with her mother, Mrs. F. M. Brennan and her aunt, Miss Ber nadette Brennan. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clements, accompanied by Mrs. John Wells, returned Sunday from Lincoln after having visited there. Mr. and Mrs. Clements .visited their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and , Mrs. James Adams, and Mrs. j Wells visited her son. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Harden Anspach went to Sioux City Monday, No vember 13. Thanksgiving day guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beilin and family are Mr. and j Mrs. Dick Henry and family, of ! Rock Rapids, la. John Neyer, of Oregon, came to see his nephew, Marvin Ander- , son, and family Saturday. Mrs. John R. Gallagher and Mike and Kathy and Mrs. Wil liam Griffin went to Norfolk last Thursday. Miss 'Nancy Froelich is spend ing Thanksgiving with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Froelich, and family. Miss Nancy is a student at Duchesne college in Omaha. .Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Stone and infant daughter, Carol Sue, ex pect to go to Oklahoma for i Thanksgiving with their respec tive parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Stone, of Ada, and Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Garner, of Stillwater. Mr. and Mrs. Cletus V. Sulli van went to Columbus Friday. Arthur Dexter spent from Wed nesday, November 15, to Satur day, in Columbus on business. He has accepted a position with the Forney Welder Manufacturing company. He will have Antelope county as his territorj. Mr. adn Mrs. Harden Anspach attended a reunion of her family in Mitchell, S. D., Sunday, No vember 12. Their daughter, Miss Wauneta, accompanied the Noel Longs to the ice follies in Oma ha the same weekend. Lawrence Dexter ^>ent the weekend at Chambers at the Dar old Couch home. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dexter, and Jerry went down Sunday to get him. His brother, Harold, spent the weekend at the Everett Min er home as guest of Rusell Min er. Miss Barbara Birmingham, a student at Duchesne college in Omaha, is spending the Thanks giving recess with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Birmingham. Little Sue Ann Gonderinger, ; daughter of the Norman Gonder- I ingers, went to Atkinson last Thursday to visit her grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gond eringer. She returned Friday. Mrs. Esther C. Harris went to1 Omaha to see her new grand daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Neyer and family, of Atkinson, called at the Marvin Anderson home Satur day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Roth child, of Atkinson, were last Thursday dinner guests at the Arthur Dexter home. Monday, Mrs. Dexter and boys visited the Rothchilds. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Van Ev ery, of Grand Island, are expect ed to arrive Wednesday, Novem ber 22, to spend Thanksgiving with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Van Every. Miss Vicki Zakrzewski, of Lin coln, is expected to spend Thanks-giving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Zakrzew slci* Palmer Sanders visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Sanders from Friday, November 17, until Sunday. Mr. and JVIrs. C. E. Cronin and family, of Grand Island, will spend Thanksgiving with rela tives here. Don McKamy, Larry Bourne, Don Willson and Paul Bourne spent Sunday, November 19, in Spalding visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Seaman. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Brion and daughters and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wade, of Lincoln, will spend Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Wallace and Bob Wallace, of Omaha, ar rived Wednesday, November 22, t o spend Thanksgiving with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. : Wallace. . , Mrs. Bernard Spry expects to , leave Friday for Kansas City, Kans., to join her husband, who is in college. Mr. and Mrs. James Cavanaugh and family were Sunday dinner | guests at the home of her parents, j Mr and Mrs. Harry McKay. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Asimus i were in Omaha Wednesday, No- , vember 15. _ Herman Neyer, of Atkinson, called on the Marvin Anderson family Sunday morning and brought his children in to bun day-school. ( PUBLIC SALE I will sell the following prop erty at public auction on the farm, halfway between Oak land and West Point (6 Vi miles from each town) on highway No. 9, on Wed., Nov. 29, ’50 Beginning at 11:30 a. m. The Oakland VFW Auxiliary will serv,e lunch 168 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK 48 Head of High Grade Holstein Dairy Cattle This herd will make a 400 pound butterfat average this year. My herd bull is from the Henry Stubbe herd at Central City. His dam has a 102-lb. per day milk record. * ! Milk Stock 7 first-calf heifers, milking now. 1 cow, milking now. 1 10-gal. cow, fresh in Decem ber. 1 nine-gal. cow, fresh in December. 12 two-year-old heifers, coming fresh starting in January. Young Cattle o yeaning open neiters, 4 10-mo. old open heifers. 16 Holstein calves, heifers and steers. All of these cattle are TB and Bang’s tested, and have been vaccinated for malig nant adema, blackleg, mas titis, pinkeye. ■ 49 Head Choice Feeder Cattle These are Shorthorn and white face yearlings, and a few mixed steers. Weighing . from 600 to 750 pounds. 80- Head of Hogs -80 38 spring pigs and 42 fall pigs. Vaccinated for cholera. Tractors, Machinery, Etc. F-20 McCormick - Deering j tractor; Oliver 2-row corn- j Dicker; 12-A John Deere com bine; John Deere 9-ft. grain drill; No. 4-D John Deere chisel point plow, 2 bottom, 16-in.; No. 238 McCormick Deering cultivator; McCor mick-Deering 15-ft. disc, new; Winpower 4-row rotary hoe, new; Brillion land roller, 12 ft.; Kohler 4-row corn roller; John Deere 4-section harrow; John Deere 2-section harrow; k Dempster lister with rotary ' mold board and duckfoot at tachment; 2 McCormick Deering fertilizer attach ments; machinery trailer, 2 wheel. NOTE— All this equipment is A-l machinery, most of it practically new. Miscellaneous Equipment Poultry & Turkey Equipment Terms — Cash Avery Jaspersen Slack & Nelson and Smith, Auct.; Quatin Lambley and Asa McMullin, Clerks. V. THANKSGIVING DANCE Butte Legion Ballroom Thurs., Nov. 23 MUSIC BY BUSSEY’S SWING TIME BAND LEE WILLIAMS Stepping Tone Music Masquerade Ball Tues., Nov. 28 2 — Door Prises — 2 Adm.: $1 Masked; S1.S0 Unmasked Decorating With Christmas Cards fpHE habit of taking a hasty glance at Christm&s cards to note the sender and then tossing them aside is not a very satisfying one for either you or the friends who gra ciously remember you with greetings. This year, why not put your cards on display to preserve their warmth of feeling throughout the holidays, and to lend a bright Yuletide appearance to your home. There are numbers of tricks for using Christmas cards in your decorative scheme. Try draping an arch or door way in greenery, bedecking it with colorful cards as they arrive. If your window curtains are a solid color, they’ll serve as-an attractive background for cards that have been at tached to ribbons and hung from the curtain rods. A few sprays of greenery, tied with wide red ribbons, should be placed at the top of the window to give a finished look to your exhibit. Homemakers are'given assistance in finding interesting ways to display their holiday greetings by the manufac turers of the Christmas cards themselves, some of whose offerings this year can double as ornaments. These include the cardboard variety, which fold flat for mailing, and a plastic kind, which may be removed from1 the card to add a sprightly sparkle wherever it’s needed.^ An archway, adorned with greens and holiday cards, contributes to a festive atmosphere and offers a Christmasy welcome to enter ing guests. STUART NEWS Mrs. B. C. Engler is in Lincoln helping to care for and getting acquainted with her new grand daughter Deborah Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Engler. Miss Bernelda Engler has gone to Omaha where she is employed by the Stanard Chemical com pany. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wefso went i to Omaha to attend the weding of Miss lone Schaffer. Miss Schaffer became the bride of Andrew T. Johnson at St. John's Catholic church in Omaha on Saturday, I November 18. C. R. Myers and son, Don, also Dwight Moody, of Ainsworth, were in Omaha last week attend ing a John Deere convention. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Fromm, of Ottumwa, la., and B. H. Coffman, of Kansas City, Mo., who have been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Coffman, left for their homes on Friday, November 17. Mrs. Fromm and B. H. Coffman are sister and brother of R. A. Coff man. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zink will spend Thanksgiving day at a fam ily reunion in Des Moines, la. They will be guests of Miss Lena Huff, a sister of Mrs. Zink. They , will also visit Mrs. Ruby Jones, of Madrid, la., another sister of Mrs. Zink. C. R Myers has taken over the John Deere agency from the Norm Galleher Lu mber company. Mr. Myer has been in the repair busi ness for several years. The Norm Galleher Lumber company will continue in the lumber and "hard ware business. Ralph Mlinar has been named manager of the American Legion club. Mr. Mlinar will take the place of Frank Wewel, who has resigned. John Newman was nam ed adjustant of the Legion to re place Don Engler. Engler will move his family to McCook the first of December where he will be employed in a clothing store. Frontier for printing! No Sale Thanksgiving - Note New Hours • Our sale last Thursday. November 16. w%s not the largest but it was one of the best sales of the fall season. The run con sisted mostly of yearling steers and heifers and the demand was strong all the way through the sale. George Peterson sold 100 head of good yearling steers—57 head weighing 710 pounds, at $30.60; 33 head weighing 617. at $30.10. and 10 head weighing 636, at $31.30. Other yearling1 steers sold in the same range with the good yearling heifers bringing from $26.00 to $29.00. The light calves brought up from $36.25. fat cows $20.00 to $22.50, bulls up to $24.00. • We had a good run of hogs, mostly good butchers that brought $17.50 to $17.60. The feeder pig run was light and not quite as high as the previous week. • From now on we will start selling hogs at 12:30 P. M. instead of 10:30 A. M. There will be no sale today (Thanksgiving), so we want to take this means of wishing everyone a joyful Thanks giving. Our next sale THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 30 O’NEILL LIVESTOCK MARKET (Fo*merly Fredrickson Livestock Comm. Co.) LEIGH & VERNE REYNOLDSON, Managers Phone 2 O’Neill I p ■ THE '51 FORD STEPS AHEAD ... FOR THE YEARS AH E AD! WITH 43 NEW "LOOK AHEAD" FEATURES See H Friday at your Ford Dealer’s — the ’51 Ford! It's the newest Ford! It’s the finest Ford! And it gK . /ou 43 new “Look Ahead’’ features— engineered and built into the car not just for this year and next, but for the years ahead! “Test Drive” the ’61 Ford! You’ll like the quiet “jet-away’ performance of either the 100-h.p. Ford V-8 or the 95-h.p. Six . . . the ease of sure Centramatic Steering . . . and the extra safety ol new, Double-Seal King-Size Brakes. And the ’61 Ford offers three advanced transmissions—the Conventional Drive, the Overdrive,* and Fordo matic Drive, * the newest, finest and most \ " Y flexible of all automatic transmission*, ' *Optional at extra cvet. NEW AUTOMATIC RIDE CONTROL a new and unique springing system which automatically adjusts spring reaction to road con ditions. Advanced "Hydra-Coil" Front Springs and new Variable-Rate Rear Spring Suspension team with new "Viscous Control" Shock Absorbers to give you an easy ride — a level ride. Stroboscopic illustration above indicates how car stays level when going is roughest. Here are a few of the 43 new "Look Ahead’’ features in the ’51 FORD ~ \ New "Safety Glow" Control Panel.. . The new de sign places all controls literally at the driver’s finger tips. New “Chanalited" Instrument Cluster is easily visible at night without being distracting. New ‘‘Clow-Cup’’ Controls are individually illuminated ... a Ford exclusive! 4 New "Luxury Lounge” Interior ,.. with new long-wearing Ford craft upholstery fabrics, new harmonizing appointments, smart new colors, new “Colorblend" Carpeting—the ’61 Ford’s new “Luxury Lounge” Interiors are “decorator designed” for the years ahead. Interior colors and new Fordcraft Fabrics are “Color-Keyed” to outside body colors! New Automatic Posture Control . . . moves front seat forward automatically at release of lever, raises it for shorter drivers. Push seat back, it lowers automati cally for taller drivers. Automatic Mlloago Makor . . . saves gas automatically. New Waterproof Ignition System, in cluding snug synthetic rubber spark plug boots, prevents engine being shorted out by moisture. Com in md J i •' 1 (fou car? (?ai/ more, but t/ou cant but/ better r.ojL. LOHAUS MOTOR CO. PHONE 16_O’NEILL