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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1952)
Get Stuck in Mud, Spend Night in Car CELIA — Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks and children and Mr. and Mrs. Omer Poynts were sup per guests at the Leonard Chaf fin home Friday night, May 16. Enroute home during the rain they missed the track they should have taken and tjjeir car became stuck so they couldn’t get it out out without a tractor. Mr. and Mrs. Poynts, who had raincoats, walked home three miles through the rain. The oth ers spent the night in the car, making themselves as comfort able as possible with blankets and a robe which they had with them. The next morning Mr. Poynts brought a tractor and pulled the car out and they arrived home okay. \ Kltf Other Celia News Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Allard and Patty and Carol, of Rapid City, S.D., came Tuesday eve ning, May 13, to visit her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Kil murry, also brother, Frank Kil mury, and family and other rel atives and friends. The Allards are former Celia residents and lived where Emil Colfack and family now live. They planned to return home Wednesday morn ing, May 21. DR. H. L. BENNETT VETERINARIAN Phones 316 and 304 — O'NEILL — Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks and children and Mr. and Mrs. Onier Poynts were supper guests at the Joe Hendricks home on Thursday evening, May 15. Mrs. Poynts helped Mrs. Joe Hend ricks Thursday afternoon. Mrs. D. F. Scott attended the Shakespeare club spring party which was held in the Bassett hotel Saturday, May 17. Mr. and Mrs. Omer Poynts spent Sunday, May 18, with her mother, Mrs. J .R. Jarvis. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks and children were supper guests at the home of Mrs Asa Woods Sunday, May 18. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilmurry, Mary Catherine and Patricia, and Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Al lard, Patty and Carol, of Rapid City, S.D., were Sunday. May 18, dinner guests at the P. W. Kilmurry home. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Chris tianson were Monday evening, May 12, visitors at the O. A. Hammerberg home. Alex Forsythe was a Stuart visitor Monday, May 12. Mrs. Clarence Focken and chil dren visited Mr. and Mrs. Con rad Frickel Sunday afternoon, May 11. Ellen McKathnie is visiting her father, Milton McKathnie, and family. Paul and Stanley Johnson and Milton McKathnie are building a slide stacker for the Johnson brothers. Emil Colfack helped Duane Beck Tuesday, May 13. The Mark and Joe Hendricks families attended the quarterly meeting at Wesleyan church on Sunday afternoon, May 18. There was a basket dinner at the church at noon. Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Scott at tended the silver anniversary open-house celebration of Mr. a I and Mrs. Warren Fernau at Butte Sunday afternon, May 18. Mr. Fernau is county commit teeman in Boyd county. On the way home they visited the Del bert Scott family. Lloyd Evans was a Saturday afternoon, May 17, visitor at the Hans Lauridsen home. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hammer berg were Stuart visitors Mon day, May 12. They also visited Mrs. Ora Yarges and Mrs. P. W. Kilmurry at Atkinson. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Colfack and family visited the Clarence Focken family Sunday evening, May 11. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Frickel, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks and children and Mr. and Mrs. Dmer Poynts were Wednesday evening, May 14, visitors at the Connie Frickel home. Mrs. Alpha McKathnie spent ;everal days with her brother, Daul Johnson, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hendricks and family visited the Chet And erson family Sunday afternoon and brought Elaine Anderson home with them. She will help Mrs. Hendricks for a while. Mrs. D. F. Scott attended the school picnic in Deming district Saturday, May 17. Her grand sons, Roger and Rodney Dobias, attend school there. Alex Forsythe, Duane Beck, Lawrence Smith and Frank Kil murry helped O. A. Hammer berg with calves Saturday morn ing, May 17. Vincent Ailard, of Rapid City, S.D., who is visiting the Frank Kilmurry family, was a visitor. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Focken and family went to Yankton, S. D., and brought home trees to plant. They visited the radio sta tion and several points of inter est on the way. Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Johnson, of O’Neill, were Sunday, May 18, dinner guests at the Paul John son home. Sunday, May 18, dinner guests at the Duane Beck home were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mlinar, Mr. and Mrs. George Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mlinar, Mr. and Mrs. Charley Mlinar, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smith and children and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence John son, of Stuart. Quite a few ladies from Hill side chapel, also several from At kinson, attended a missionary meeting at the Lawrence Smith home Wednesday, May 14. There was a basket dinner at noon. Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Naber were Thursday afternoon, May 15, vis itors at the Hans Lauridsen home Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Allard, Patty and Carol, of Rapid City, S.D., visited the Frank Kilmurry family from Friday evening, May 16, to Saturday evening, May 17. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Colfack and family were afternoon and lunch guests at the Russell Hipke home on Sunday, May 18. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Chaffin and family went to Kilgore Sat urday, May 17, to attend the wedding of a friend. They re turned home Sunday evening. Griswold GRO COATED HYBRID SEED CORN Coyne Hdw. — O’NEILL — How to spot an expert An expert makes hard work easier. When it comes to hauling, a GMG truck is your expert — for this very sound reason: GMG —as the world’s largest exclusive manufacturer of com mercial vehicles—concerns itself 100% with the development of new and better ways to transport goods. Each model is the careful answer to specific, tough hauling problems. The new GMG “302” engine is a case in point. In addition to being America’s highest-compression standard gasoline truck engine— it packs more horsepower for its weight than any other on the road! The result is savings in use less “dead weight” by as much as 500 pounds over other engines of equal horsepower. It’s this kind of expert engineer ing that makes us sure of one thing: whatever model you select at our showroom — panel or pickup, stake rack or platform— you'll have an expert on your next job! A. MARCELLOS PHONE 370 O’NEILL I Ynu ’ll do better on a used truck with your GMC danUr ( h The Frontier Woman . , . Crepe Covered Wires Make Ideal Handles for Festive Baskets By BLANCHE SPANN PEASE Trying to think of what to fix this week? Well, here’s a dish you might like to try. Stuffed baked toma toes are good, and they have fairly decent ones on the market now. You’ll need 4 large tomatoes, 4 ounces spaghetti, 4 ounces sliced mushrooms (optional—you can use canned ones, too), 1 cup ground table ready meat, 1 tea spoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, V2 cup shredded American cheese. Cook the spaghetti in boiling salted water for about seven minutes. Drain and rinse. While the spaghetti is cooking, remove the pulp from the tomatoes. Combine pulp, mushrooms, meat, salt, pepper and cheese. Add spaghetti. Fill tomato hollows with spaghetti and meat mix ture. Pour remaining mixture into greased baking dish. Place tomatoes in spaghetti mixture. Bake in moderate oven of 375 F. about 25 minutes. Makes four servings. When you serve a meal, try to have some foods chewy and some soft. This makes for more variety, and don't have every thing one color for a meal, try to keep color schemes in mind when planning meals. If you serve a hot meal, one cold dish will go well with it, and a hot soup for instance, or a scallop ed vegetable will point up a cold one. Combining sweets with sours, blands with sharp tastes is one of the secrets of good cooking. Don’t forget it. And don’t skimp on eye appeal. Take time to ar range things to look well. —tfw— 'Aunt Jemima' Wins Subscription— Dear Mrs. Pease: Everyone is tucked-in for the night so maybe I can write some letters. For occasions when children want to give or use pretty bas kets, fasten wires for handles on oatmeal boxes, then cover the boxes with crepe paper. Here is a recipe, this one es pecially nice for the picnic sea son at hand: DRUM STICKS One pound beef steak, 1 pound pork steak, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, 1 egg, Vi cup flour, 2 tablespoons wa ter, 1 cup fine bread crumbs, 4 tablespoons shortening, 1 tea spoon minced onion, 6 wooden skewers. Cut meat into pieces about 1 by IVz inches. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Arrange pork and beef alternately on the six skewers. Press pieces close to gether and mold into drumstick shape. Roll in flour. Dip into egg diluted with water. Roll in crumbs. Melt shortening in skil let. When hot, add drumsticks and brown on all sides. Add on ion and enough water to cover bottom of skillet, cover and cook slowly until meat is tender. Spring and housecleaning time. I would like to know what some women think of when they clean house. I think of dressing a house, the same as a person. I know women that would stay home if they had to wear green shoes with a blue coat, or hunt all over town for a hat or purse in a certain shade of red to match that flower in their dress, yet they will put blue, green, pink, red and purple in the same room. They would never think of wearing two different prints yet they will often mix them in a rug, wallpaper, and drapes. Then comes your part. You don’t have to live there, but when they’ve put in so much time and money, they expect you to say something. You don’t like to give or get compliments that aren’t sincere. Just what are you sup posed to do? “AUNT JEMIMA” —tfw— OATMEAL RHUBARB CRUMBLE Use 1 pound or 3 cups diced rhubarb, Vi cup sugar, Vt tea spoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon but ter or margarine, Vi cup water. Arrange the rhubarb in a shal | low greased baking pan, sprinkle i with sugar and cinnamon. Dot with butter or margarine. Add water. Spread topping evenly over rhubarb and bake. Serve warm with top milk. Topping: 2/3 cups sifted enriched all-pur pose flour, Vi teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon baking soda, 2/3 cup quick cooking rolled oats, un cooked, 1/3 cup sugar, Vi cup melted shortening. Sift flour, salt and soda together. Mix roll ed oats and sugar gradually with flour mixture. Blend shortening into dry ingredients until a crumbly mixture is formed. Bake for 40 minutes in a preheat ed 350 F. oven. Serves 5. Honors Mother— Mrs. D. D. DeBolt and Mrs. Richard Farrier and daughter, Linda Sue, drove to Newport on Thursday, May 15, and surprised Mrs. DeBolt’s mother, Mrs. So phia Lashmett, on her 67th birth day anniversary. Mrs. DeBolt baked her an angel food birth day cake for the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Bowen and son, John, were callers in Nor folk on Monday. Holt Men Elected to Student Board — James Merriman, of O’Neill, and Monte Taylor, of Page, have been elected to the Creighton uni versity student union board of governors. Merriman was named presi dent. A junior in the school of law, he succeeds Robert Muldoon, of Chadron. Taylor, also of the law college, is a representative on I the board. FATHER DIES CHAMBERS— L. J. Eckdahl, superintendent of the Chambers school, received word early Monday morning that his father had died at his home at Weston. Mr. Eckdahl left immediately. I DR. J. L. SHERBAHN CHIROPRACTOR O'Neill, Nebraska Complete X-Ray Equipment Vi Block So. of Ford Garaga DR. H. D. GILDERSLEEVE, OPTOMETRIST , Permanent Offices in Hagensick Bldg. O’NEILL. NEBR. Phone 167 Eyes Examined . Glasses Fitted Office Hours: 9-5 Mon. thru Sat. MEMORIAL DAY Friday, May 30 ★ Sprays ★ Wreaths ★ Cut Flowers ★ Peonies ★ Cemetery Vases Please Place Orders Now Flowers for All Occasions BURT’S FLORAL & GREENHOUSE PHONE 158W — BASSETT. 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