The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 29, 1951, Image 1
. 16 PAGES — 2 SECTIONS ; , *■ North-Nebraska’s Fastest-Growing Newspaper * * • • VOLUME 71.—NUMBER 30. O NEILL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1951. PRICE: 7 CENTS JANUARY DRAFT WILL BE ‘HEAVY’ 29 to Report December 18 for Preinduction Examinations Holt county will furnish a group of inductees to the armed forces on Thursday, December 13. Number of men and names have not yet been announced by the selective service board hers. The group, however, will be made up from among those who had nreinduction physical exam inations in November, including: Robert L. Retke, of Page; Rich ard H. Heiss, of Page; Dewaine H. Williamson, of Orchard; Don Jesse Clark, of Ewing; Joseph J. f Skudlar, of Burwell; Harold Ko pejtka, of Inman; Donley E. Moss, of Stuart; Robert G. Ful ler, of Stuart; Wendell J. Babl, of Emmet; Robert B. Blackmore, of Atkinson; Richard W. Walton, of O’Neill; Otto R. Bartos, of O’ Neill; Eldon and Elvin Dohnal, of O’Neill. Meanwhile, 29 men are being ordered to report for preinduc tion physicals on December 18. From this group will be picked the men to furnish the January draft call, which is expected to be "heavy." Brig.-Gen. Guy N. Heninger, of Lincoln state selective service di rector, said he fears many Ne braska youths are “placing them selves in jeopardy” by not regis \ tering for the draft. This is the result of unwitting action or an “I-think-I-can-get away-with-it” attitude, Hennin ger said. o In either case, the general said, failure to register is a violation of law and makes the delinquents li able to penalty. He said he could make no es timate of the number of delin quents in Nebraska, but he said local boards have standing in structions to turn over the names df suspected delinquents to fed eral authorities for investigation. Henninger reminded Nebras ka youths that they must reg ister for the draft within 5 days G of their 18th birthday. The selective service head also * advised Nebraska college and o 0 high school Svudents “not to be alarmed” if they are first classi fied into class 1-A and retained in the class even though they are full-time students. Under selective service proce dures, Henninger said, after reg istration an 18-year-old student is placed in the 1-A category. When his number is reached, he will be sent for physical examination. But if he is ordered for induction ° and the student requests defer ment on grounds he is a full-time student, his induction is postpon ed until the academic year in col lege is completed or until he graduates from high school or reaches the age of 20 in high school. Ik o John Magirl, 69, ° % Burial Here Monday John Magirl, 69, who was rear ed here in the 1880s and ’90s, o died0 Saturday, November 24, at Dakota City. o He had been visiting the Ed Earley farm, north of O’Neill, earlier in the month, suffered a stroke in mid - November, and spent more than a week at the O’Neill hospital. On Friday he was transferred to a rest home at Dakota City and the following day he died. Funeral services were conduct ed at South Sioux City and burial , o was liiade at 1:30 p.m., on Mon day, November 26. in Calvary 0 cemetery here. The late Mr. Magirl was a son of cthe late Mr. and Mrs. Robert I Magirl. who resided on the west i edge of O’Neill in the early cdays. He was bom at Masonville, la. 0 Mr. Magirl never married. He spent most of his life in Holt and ° Dakota counties. ° 0 Survivors include a brother, Dr. Robert Magirl, of South Sioux City; sisters—Mrs. James Dough o ° erty, of Clearfield, S.D., and Mrs. Nellie Head, of Washington. Writes Song Hit; 0 ° > 0 Gets ‘Voice’ Airing o F. E. Parkins, sales manager for the Consumers Public Power districtoheadquarters here, has o written the words for a sonfe hit o that is catching fire across the , ceountry. It is entitled, “Don’t Turn Your Back on the Lord.” Phonograph records and sheet music are being distributed across the nation this week, a copy oft] which has been received at the j 0 o “Voice 6t The Frontier” studio. Thectune will be aired on the Sat urday, December 1, “Voice” prg gram (WJAG, 780 k.c.), 9:45 a.m. o Parkins, who has about 20 oth er selections in the making as a hobby, \vrote the words which were originally published in the “Song Writers’ Review” magazine in New York. A young New York lady composer, Betty Barford, contacted the O’Neill man and af ter an exchange of mail over a period of 3 months came up with the catchy tune in an almost sa cred vein. The selection has been record ed by Walter Scott and his or chestra with Bob Hart, a black type Irishman, doing the vocal. ^ O Turkeys to Be Loosed Dec. 8 A truckload of turkeys, ducks and chickens will be loosed in O’Neill at 3 p.m., on Saturday, December 8. There will be a free-for-all scramble for the fowl, arranged by O’Neill merchants. The loos ing of the live birds will begin at the west end of Douglas street and the truck will work east ward to the corner of Fifth and Douglas (Lohaus Motor Co.) The birds will fly to the accom paniment of the O’Neill Munic ipal band and those who catch them can claim the bird. The Chamber of Commerce re tail trade committee announced this week that Saturday store hours wil be the same as usual— 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Retail stores will be open Thursday evenings until 9 on December 6, 13 and 20, and until 9 on Friday evening, De cember 21. Committees have been ap pointed for the reception of San ta Claus (with treats for all the kids) on Saturday, December 15. Santa will greet his young wor shippers as usual at the O’Neill public school. The Chamber board of direc tors met Monday to complete year-end activities for the organi zation. ROSE TENBORG, ILL A YEAR, DIES Burial at Atkinson for Lifelong Holt o Resident 0 EMMET—Requiem high mass for Mrs. Rose Tenborg, 67, life long Holt county resident, was held at 10 a.m., Monday, Novem ber 26, at the Church of the Epiphany here wth Rev. A. J. Ur banski, church pastor, officiating. Burial was in Woodlawn ceme tery, Atkinson, near the grave of her husband, the late Clarence E. Tenborg. o Mrs. Tenborg,0 who had been ill more than a year, died early Friday. November 23. at the home of her son, Francis, near Emmef. Palbearers were Eli and How ard McConnell, John Conard, Edward Winkler, Ernest Klop penborg and Dan O’Connell. The late Mrs. Tenborg was born March 4, 1884, near Emmet, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Malloy, who emigrated to Holt county from Wisconsin in 1870. Her grandfather, the elder Thomas Malloy, was Holt coun ty’s first judge. In 1906 Rose Malloy and Clar ence E.0 Tenborg were married. They became the parents of 4 children—a =son, Clarence Keith, having died in infancy. Mrs, Tenborg was active ie community life and was well known in the Emmet, O'Neill and Atkinson localities.. Survivors include: Sons—John Arnold and Francis Xavier Ten borg,0both of Emmet; daughter— Mrs. John (Ilene) Hyland, of .Omaha; 3 grandchildren; brothers —Dr. Joseph Malloy, of Faulkton, S.D.; Thomas Malloy, of Florida; sisters—Mrs. Loretta Cain, of Bal timore, Md., and0 Mrs. Josie Ashe, of Omaha. oMr. Tenborg, who was a farm-c er, died in 1949. Out-of-town relatives attending the funeral for the late Mrs. Ten borg were: Mr. and Mrs. Mike Malloy, of Casper, Wyo.; Bart Malloy, of Pasco, Wyo.; Dr. John Malloy, of Faulkton, S.D.; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hyland and Mrs. Josie Ashe, all of Omaha. 5 JUVENILES WILL GO BEFORE JUDGE Delinquency Charges May Be Pressed Result of Incidents 0 o Five O’Neill boys whose ages range from 10 to 16-years-old are being detained pending a hearing at 10 a.m. today (Thursday) be fore (Judge D. R. Mounts. 3 The court declined to release for publication the names ofothe youths pending the outcome of today’s hearing. One 16-year-old boy and a 15 year-old were picked up by Cher ry county authorities in a stolen automobile. They had Qed O’ Neill in a Kaiser sedan owned ty Lestgr Oetter on Tuesday night, November 20. The car had teen taken from fie^ir the Fetrow re pair shop and was recovered the next morning at Wood Lake. ' ° The boys had abandoned the Oetter car and taken another in which they were captured^ Another0 youth,® 15, already is, ^n parole from the state boys' industrial school at Kearney cAll 5 are being questioned re garding petty thievery and other delinquency matters. Parents of the youths have 3been ordered to appearDin court today witho their sons,v Judge Mounts said. __ co MARRIAGE LICENSE o George ®Romuald Hemenway, of Orchard, and Miss Mildred Thiele, of Clearwater, on Novem ber 21. g °_o o Frontier want ads bring results! Past and present members of the Holt soil conservation district board of supervisors: Seated —E. J. Revell, of Star; F. E. Keyes, of Inman; Clarence Ernst, of O'Neill; Elmer Allyn, of Stu art; R. L. Heiss, of Page; standing—C. R. ("Bob") —The Frontier Photo * Engraving Kill, unit conservationist; L. G. Bernholtz, of Pvje; D. E. Bowen, of Page, and Carl Lambert, of Ewing. One original supervisor, Walter A. Sire, of Butte, was absent when picture was taken. Presenting plaque . . . lefi-io-righi — F. E. promotion manager, Clarence Ernst, Elmer Allyn Keyes, E. T. McLanahan, Omaha World-Herald and R. L. Heiss. 2 ‘Messiah’ Soloists Have Been Named C r, Two soloists already have been named for the Sunday, December 16, afternoon presentation of the “Messiah” by the O’Neill com munity chorus. They are: j° Kathleen Flood Hansen, so prano, and Stanley J. Lambert; tenor. Others will be announced with in the next few days, o according to the chorus director, Charles ^Houser. Mrs. Hansen graduated from St. Mary college, Xavier, Kans., with a bachelor of music degree. She sang with the Kansas City Municipal orchestra in summer concert series under the direction of Dr. N. DeRubertis. She was so loist in "Mid-America Sings” over station KCMO, Kansas Ci ty, Mo., as well as in the St. Ma ry college’s weekly radio show over KCSO, Leavenworth, Kans. Mr. Lambert graduated from the University of Nebraska col lege of agriculture in 1950. He was tenor soloist in the 1949 ag ricultural college production of the “Messiah.” While at the uni versity he sang with the Univer sity chorus, under Mrs. Altimas Tulis, and was a member of the University Singers, under the di crection of Dr. Arthur Westbrook, head of the department of music. The chorus is holding regular rehearsals each Wednesday eve ning at 7:30 o’clock. ° -5—° Thanksgiving Day Guests at Columbus—o Q 5 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beckwith and son, Don, cand Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harley and daughter, of Atkinson, were Thanksgiving guests of tMr. and Mrs. Verne Beckwith and family, of Colum bus. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Keen ey and girls, of Norfolk, were al so^ guests. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beckwith accompanied cthe Har leys from there to Scottsfluff: where they, visited ,over the weekend. w ° O -Q~g_ Accident-Free 0 ° o Holiday Here— J o . The state ^highway patrol re ported an accident-free holiday in the O’Neill region. There was a minor 0 collision, however, FridayGon the old high-' way 3 miles east of Page. A Page car and a Hyannis car figr ured in a minor collision but no one was hurt. Frontier for printing. Stuart Man Denies Charge STUART— Glen Cobb has de nied assaulting Mrs. Ruby Mather, of Norfolk, who has filed a $15,000 damage suit against him in the Holt county district court. Mrs. Mather charges that the defendant on November 14 at Stuart assaulted her, causing her to suffer injuries, and that she is “now disabled from attending to her business as a saleslady and interior decorator . . . and for a long time will be disabled.” ihe plaintiff alleges she was injured about the left arm and neck, and thatoher nerves were severely shocked. Mr. Cobb stated this week that he has never touched Ruby Math er. Mrs. Glen Cobb, in whose presence the alleged incident was said to have occurred, states that every word of the entire charge was false. Mr. and Mrs. Cobb plan to testify to that effebt when the case comes before the district court next spring. Frontier for printing! —The Frontier Engraving HELPS REFUEL AIRCRAFT . . Cpl. Delbert Haselhorst, son of Mr. and Mrs. Casper (“Cap”) Haselhorst, of Lynch, joined the air force February 15? 1950. He took his basic at Sheppard air base, Texas, after which he; went to a technical school there. He graduated Oc tober 15 and wj^s sent to Travis AFB, California, where :he is engaged as'a plane mechanic, refueling and checking planes. The planes require from 3,600 to 3,900 gallons of gas at one filling. Corporal Haselhorst says he “enjoys his work.” - , -O '! O High Scouting Award to Mounts O The Covered Wagon council's highest award, the Silver Beaver, was presented to District Judge D. R. Mounts, of O’Neill, at the November district meeting of the north-central district Boy Scouts of America meeting. Judge Mounts was recognized for h., “faithful aggressive serv ice to boys by the Covered Wagon council.” Mr Mounts was 1 of 6 men recognized this year for service Dr. J. M. Pucelik, of Spencer, a holder of the Silver Beaver award0made the presentation. The qualifications for this award are: At least 10 years as a registered Scouter; continuous and outstanding efforts which in some way definitely reach the lives of boys in the community. In the history of the Coveredo Wagon council only 03 awards of this type have been; received. The Silver Beaver is the highest award a council has to offer its faithful scouters, and has a real meaning to all connected with the Scout program?!. Judge Mounts has been active in Scouting since he was a scoutmaster at Long Pine in 1918. The business covered at the dis trict meeting included^ the final plan for a commissioners flag which will be ready for troop competition by January 1, 1952. , o A report on membership by Les Jonas found the districlP increas ing steadily withP40 ne\^ cubs and couts “rounded up” ’during Oc tober. So far in Novefnber 2 new troops have been added in the district—Jamison, under leader hip of Arnios Petersen, and -Iwing, under the Readership ejf Jerry Tomjack. o An announcement was made by Dick Miller that the council is holding a winter camp on Decem ber 26-29 atoCamp Cedars, for Explorers only. If interested, check with your scoutmaster on details. ° Before the group wa^ismissed for roundtable sessions, the an nouncement was rr^ade that Bas sett is well under way on tfieir 1951 finance campaign, according to Dick Miller, north-central c^s trict field executive. Refreshments were served £ft er the meeting. o O O o ■-Q-° o BOYD GROUP HONORED Boyd ccounty soil conservation district received recognition at a banquet Monday evening, No vember 26, at the American Le gion auditorium in Butte. o O c „ o ” o ° National Honor to O’Neill Youth _ .. -... - Soil Supervisors Feted at Banquet One hundred forty-two persons attended the soil conservation recognition dinner Tuesday night at the American Legion club here For its continuing progress in soil conservation, the Holt soil conservation district received a citation from the Omaha World Herald. The district was presented a bronze plaque by E. T. Mc Lanahan, World Herald promo tion manager. The presentation was made at a banquet in the American Legion hall at O’Neill. W. W. Derrick, of Lincoln, extension* animal hus bandryman at the University of Nebraska, was the principal speaker. His theme was the familiar one —practicing soil conservation and urging emphasis on use of grass. D. D. DeBolt, president of the Chamber of Commerce, was toast master. The award was based on the actvity of the district’s board of supervisors, which include Clar ence F.rnst, of O’Neill, chairman; Elmer C. Allyn, of Stuart, secre tary; R. L. Heiss, of Page, Floyd Keyes, of Inman, and E. J. Revell, of Star. The district has been active in grass seeding, tree planting and harvesting of native grass seed. It owns a considerable amount of equipment to do this work. With its $500 award from the World-Herald in 1948, the district purchased grass seeding equip ment which seeded more than 3,000 acres of grass and legumes the first 2 seasons. The district supervisors also have been active in educational activities throughout the district. They helped organize a 4-H soil conservation club and have spon sored essay contests on conserva ion for schools throughout the county. Invocation was offered by Rev. J. Laverne Jay; O’Neill’s Mayor J. E. Davis issued the welcome; Joseph George, of the O’Neill public school, provided several vocal solos. CCC Head States Corn Sale Policy o •—- .. Frank W. Reed, chairman of the state' production and mameting administration c&mmittee, reports that district conferences are being held this week to explain the sales policy concerning bin-site corn owned by the Commodity Credit corporation. For details regarding this sales policy, farm ers and elevator operators should contact county production and manketing administration offices. Mr. Reed states that brigfly the policy is as follows: (1) To keep the commodity credit corn froiji entering specula tive channels. (2) To retain for Nebraska feeders as much as possible of the commodity credit-owned com in Nebraska, o (3) Encourage the blending of the poor quality 1951 com crop with the good quality CCC corn so as to encourage the purchase of new crop of corn by ware housemen and to stretch the feed units °as far as possible. 0 —Die Frontier EngiQvftng HAYNES TAKES OVER . . . Laurence Haynes (above) Mon 13 day assumed active manage1 meoj; of the Simonson post 93, Anrerican^ Legi,qn,°0club and auditorium here. He succeeds Glea H. Wade. Haynes, a native 'tof Page, resided in O’Neill several years prior to a recent move to Atlantic, la. °° 1 Li ° ° * Edward Boyle Makes 2d Trip to 4-H Congress in Chicago Edward Boyle, of O’Neill, 21, Riverside 4-H club member, ha* won his second trip to the nation al 4-H club congress held in Chi cago, 111. The congress began Sun day in conjunction with the Inter national Livestock exposition, and ends today (Thursday). This year Edward was a state, regional and national winner in the home grounds beautification project. In 1949, when he made hi* first trip to Chicago, he was * state winner in gardening. That year he won a gold watch. The Riverside club has 40 members and 21 of them ar* Boyles from 2 families. Ed ward's club members have a wonderful time together by older members helping younger members with records and ex hibits. The work Edward has done re pairing and painting the house and farm buildings is remarkable in 2 years. He has built a bird house, planted trees and shrubs, built an outdoor fireplace and a boat. He helps play for folk and square dancing for his club, to which everyone always is invit ed. He helped build and operate a concession at the Holt county —The Ftontter EnsTavln* Boyle ... 14 projects in 7 years.—O'Neill0 Photo Co. fair. A record player was pur- 0 chased from club funds. Besides dancing at the commu nity get - togethers, Riverside stages plays, skits, a Christmas program, and takes part in farm activities. The club donated to the Red Cross blood bank, SL Anthony’s hospital and the 4-H club center in Washington, D.C. The first county courthouse— a log cabin—is on the Boyle farm. Each year the club holds a meet ing there. They plan to make it into a museum. Using 4-H club funds, the c’ » gave a banquet for parents and bought ice skates for each mem ber. Edward's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ed Boyle. He is a gradual* of St. Mary's academy. He left O’Neill by train Friday night, accompanied by County Agent A. Neil Dawes. According to Mary France* Vitt, Riverside’s news reporter, Edward in 7 years of club work has completed 14 projects, which include forestry, poultry, fix it, garden, crops, tractor as well as his home grounds beautification for which he has won national recognition. He has served as treasurer for 2 years and this year has served as junior leader and attended a leaders’ training ses sion in Lincoln. High individual honors in Ih* livestock judging contest at the International Live Stock expo sition in Chicago Monday, were 0 held by a Nebraskan, Russell Schelkopf, 20. of Shickiey. Sciielkopf was a member of the 0 (Continued on page 8) O’Neill Soldier Will 0 Be Heard from Japan QoCpl. Maynard Morrow,-, O’Neill soldier in Korea, will be heard in a recorded-broadcast from Tokyo, Japan, on radio station WJAG (Norfolk, 780 k.c.)j at 10:35 a.m, Saturday, December 1. o Morrow, who recently ° was wounded in action, was on fur lough in Tokyo when the record ing was made. His wife is the for mer Virginia Bennett, of Ewing, and they have one child, whom the father has never seen.