The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 04, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    Wood Family Gathers
in Park at Page
PAGE—The Wood reunion was
held at the Page park Sunday
with a basket dinner at noon.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Wood of Tahlequah, Okla.,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Haynes of Den
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Haynes
end daughter of Omaha, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Masden, Philuskia
and Ellard of Worthington, Minn.,
Frank Masden, Avon, S. D., Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wood, Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Wood and Noel, Mrs.
Emma Canaday, Mr. and Mrs.
William Neubauer, Misses Grace
and Nelle Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Wood, Kathy and Cyn
thia and Mary Jo, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Rutherford, Walter, Faye,
Aletha, Jimmie and Trudy; Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Summers, Thel
ma, Joyce and George; Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Neubauer; Mr. and
Mrs. Calvin Harvey, Gene and
Lyle; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Asher, Linda Lee, Lu Rene and
Vonda Kay; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Haynes and Miss Viola.
Mrs. Hester Edminsten, Duran
Rutherford and Paul Neubauer.
All the living children of the
late Charles and Mellisa Wood
aarly settlers of this community,
were present. They are Fred and
Edgar Wood of Page, Louis
Wood of Tahlequah, Okla., Mrs.
Emma Cannaday, Mrs. William
! Neubauer an dMisses Grace and
Nelle Wood of Page and Mrs.
Roy Haynes of Denton.
Other Page New*
Mrs. Mae Lichty of Brunswick
came Saturday afternoon for a
few days visit at the home of
her grandson, Paul Singleton and
family.
Mrs. Nona Bedford visited a
few days last week with Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Pollock of Ewing. Mrs.
Pollock is a niece of Mrs. Bed
ford.
Monte Taylor came from Grand
Island Friday and visited until
Tuesday with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. L. B. Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Brouse of
Lincoln spent the weekend at
the Merwyn French home. Mrs.
Brouse is a sister of Mr. French.
Richard Christian left Mon
day morning for Milford where
he will attend trade school.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wood of
Tahlequah, Okla., came Thurs
day evening for a few days visit
with relatives and to attend the
Wood reunion Sunday.
Mrs. Kate Fuelberth of Os
mond visited from Tuesday un
til Thursday at the home of her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Anton Nissen.
Mr. anci Mrs. Emil Nissen
and son of Plainview spent from
Thursday until Saturday visiting
with relatives and looking after
farm interests.
Mrs. F. L. Huntr of Osage,
Wyo., and granddaughter Pat
Burkett spent Wednesday, Aug.
27, at the J. I. Gray home and vis
ited Mrs. Hunter’s brother-in
law Vernie Hunter. They were
accompanied by Mrs. Hunter’s
sister, Mrs. Nona Rue of Waver
ly, la., who was going to Wyo
ming to make her home.
Mrs. Gailord Albright and
daughter, Mrs. Robert Stevens
and son of O’Neill left Thurs
day to take Miss LaVonne Al
bright to Beatrice where she
will teach the first grade in the
school term. Mrs. Albright and
Mrs. Stevens and son spent from
Thursday until Saturday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. C. G.
Shane at Lincoln.
Mr. and Mrs. George Park and
Mrs. Ed Stewart and Mickie re -
turned home Sunday after a few
days visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Asher and son at Wood
bine, la., and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Asher and two sons at Logan,
la.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ruther
ford of Omaha were dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
r—■ - -a
Gailord Albright. They stepped
at the Homer Rutherford home
for a visit on their way home.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Albright
of Belvidere, 111., came Friday
to spend a few days at the
home of Mr. Albright’s son,
Gailord Albright and wife, Gail
ord Albright returned home
from Danbury, la., to spend the
weekend at home.
Mrs. Fritz Brandt and two
sons of Atkinson spent Saturday
night and Sunday with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Stev
ens. Other Sunday dinner guests
at the Stevens home were Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Stevens of
Leadville, Colo., and Miss Loma
Stevens who came up from
Lincoln to spend the weekend.
Bette and Carroll French
entertained the members of the
Methodist Youth Fellowship at
a scavenger hunt at the French
home on Tuesday night. Around
35 young folks enjoyed the hunt.
Later games were played on the
lawn and lunch was served.
Mesdames Ethel Waring of
Orchard, Anton Nissen, Neal
Asher, Otto Maschullat, Ray
Snell, C. M. Stevens, Hester Ed
misten and Elsie Cork spent
Friday evening with Mrs. Evelyn
Gray and her house guests, Miss
Effie Lawton of Milwaukee,
Wise., and Mrs. Betty Luther of
New York State. A no host lunch
was served of weiner sand
wiches, pie, doughnuts and cof
fee.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Smith and
sons and Mrs. Anna Thompson
returned home Sundav after
spending two weeks at Portland,
Ore., where they had been called
by the illness of Mr. Smith’s
father, Leo Smith. He is home
from the hospital and improv
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Christon
and Catherine returned home
Sundav night from Rockford,
111., where they had visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Chichester.
Mrs. Chichester is the former
Betty Christon.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McIntosh
and two sons and Mrs. Nelle
McIntosh and Ray attended the
McIntosh reunion at Newman
Grove Sunday. Members of the
Wesleyan Methodist church held
a pound party Wednesday eve
ning for Rev. and Mrs. George
Francis.
A. L. Rose and Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Rose and children of St.
Louis, Mo., visited at the Clif
ford Graves and Albert Anson
homes Tuesday and Wednesday.
O’NEILL LOCALS
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Eby and
family spent Wednesday, August
20, in Ainsworth with Mrs. Alma
Eby. The Eby twins, Billy and
Bobby, remained in Ainsworth
with their grandmother until Sat
urday when they returned home
by train.
Jay DeGroff has returned from
South Dakota after being em
ployed there for two months.
Mrs. Georgie Butterfield went
to Meadow Grove recently where
she began teaching in a rural
school near Meadow Grove the
next day.
Mary and Shirley Tuenender
spent two days recently in
Atkinson with Mr. and Mrs. Dor
sey Heiter.
The Misses Patty White and
Jeannie of Gregory, S.D., were
in O’Neill, August 24, Miss Patty
was enroute to California to visit
her sister, Mrs. Paul Lutt, and
family.
Out of Old Nebraska . . .
Campaign in 1890
State’s Most Spirited
Prairies Swept That
Year by Tornado
An election year inevitably
brings forth memories of hot po
litical campaigns of the past, and
in Nebraska such memories
sooner or later focus on the elec
tion of 1890, one of the most
spirited and confused in the his
tory of the state.
Describing it, the late Dr. Ad
dison E. Sheldon wrote: “There
never has been such a political
campaign in Nebraska as the
campaign of 1890 and there never
can be such another. The later
presidential campaigns of 1892
and 1896 were full of fire and en
thusiasm, but none of them ap
proached the sublime energy of
the human tornado which swept
the prairies from August to No
vember, 1890. As one of the
speakers in that campaign said
from the platform in the hearing
of the writer: “We farmers raised
no crops, so we’ll just raise hell.”
The long* endured economic
greivances suffered by the
farmers of the west erupted in
1890 into a series of third par
ties whose vigorous campaign
ing threatened—and frequently
defeated—parlies who had been
entrenched in power since the
Civil war.
In Nebraska the people’s inde
pendent party, organized out of
the Farmers’ Alliance at a con
vention in Lincoln, July 29, 1890
swept across the state to win con
trol of the legislature, elect a
democrat governor, and unseat all
three republican members of the
house of representatives. »
As Doctor Sheldon wrote,
“there never h asbeen such a po
litical compaign in Nebraska.”
Crowds turned out in unprece
dented numbers to listen to In
dependent orators and to sing In
dependent songs, most of which
were set to the tune of well
known gospel hymns. Indeed,
the Independent campaign took
on much the color of a religious
crusade.
At Wymore on September 23,
1,050 farm wagons were counted
in an independent parade, and
1,600 wagons paraded at Has
tings the same day. Parades from
two to 10 miles long were the or
der of the day everywhere.
At Cushman park near Lin
coin, 20,000 people assembled
on September 1. The crowd
was so great that orators spoke
from different platorms so that
all could hear.
Quoting again from Doctor
Sheldon: “It was like one con
tinuous Fourth of July celebra
tion with delegations from differ
ent alliances and princts headed
g
by pioneers driving to some am
ple woodland and spending the
entire day visiting and politics.”
Mr. and Mrs. George Brainard
and family of Grand Island were
weekend guests of Mrs. Brain
ard’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Fox. Other guests on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Fox and children and
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Fox and
family, all of Emmet, Mrs. Joe
Luth of Grand Island and Mrs.
Francis Holtz and Mrs. Fritz
Belzer.
Linda Lee to See
Father for First Time
CELIA—Mrs. James R. Tolbert
and daughter, Linda, were taken
to Grand Island Wednesday, Sep
tember 3, by her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Johnson and son,
board a plane at 1:307234HBWK
Larry, where they boarded a
plane that afternoon for Hono
lulu to join her husband, Cpl.
James R. Tolbert, who has re
cently been transferred to the
naval intelligence office in Hono
lulu. Linda’s daddy has never
seen her. She was Holt county’s
first child born in 1952 and re
ceived many gifts from merchants
in OTNeill. She was bom Jan
uary 4 in the Stuart hospital.
They were to arrive at Honolulu at
7:30 this (Thursday) morning, af
! ter 18 hours of flying time.
Other Celia News
Sunday, Aug. 24, dinner guests
at the Earl Schlotfeld home were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Manning,
Pauline and Stanley of Pender.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Focken
and children were O’Neill and
Stuart business visitors, Saturday,
August 30.
Hans and Jim Lauridsen com
bined alfalfa seed for Ira Lange
Tuesday afternoon, August 26.
Mrs. Hans Lauridsen and sons,
Bobby and LeRoy visited Mrs.
William Coleman Thursday after
noon, August 28.
Herbert Sweet and Rolo Berry
baled hay for Alex Forsythe on
Monday, August 25.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Chaffin
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Hendricks and family and Mr.
and Mrs. Omer Poynts were sup
per guests at the Mark Hendricks
home Friday evening, August 29.
Robert and Leon Hendricks
spent Wednesday night, August
27 at the Omer Poynts home.
Nels Colfack spent Wednes
day morning and was a dinner
guest at the Emil Colfack home,
August 27.
“The Little Farmer” was fish
ing at Jim Lauridsen’s Friday,
August 29.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Beckwith
attended a family reunion of the
Mlinar families honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Quigley and son, Lar
ry, of Omaha at the Edward
Mlinar home Sunday, August 31.
Others present were Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Mlinar, Mr. and Mrs.
George Beckwith, Mr. and Mrs.
—4
m
Joe Mlinar, also Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Johnson, Mrs. Duane
Lockmon and Glen and Gary of
Stuart.
Hans Lauridsen was a Butte
, visitor Friday, August 29.
I Fred Mack of Atkinson and
1 Harry Ressel of O’Neill visited
D. F. Sfcott Tuesday morning.
August 26.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Terrilliger
and her sister, Mary Ann Dister
haupt, were Sunday morning vis
itors at the Marvin Focken home
August 31.
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Braun and
family were Sunday afternoon
visitors at the Marvin Focken
home, August 31.
The Focken families had a
family get-together supper at the
Marvin Focken home Sunday eve
ning, August 31 with the follow
ing in attendance: Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Focken and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Possnecker and
family and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Focken and son.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hendricks,
Mrs. Conrad Frickel, Mrs. Ber
tha Fullerton helped clean the
Wesleyan parsonage and unload
furniture for the new pastor, Rev.
Phipps of Venus.
Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hammer
berg visited Mr. and Mrs. P. W.
Kilmurry in Atkinson Saturday
evening, August 30. Other vis
itors were Mr and Mrs. Frank
Keating.
Mr. and Mrs. Emil Colfack and
family were Wednesday evening,
August 27, visitors at the Clar
ence Focken home.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilmurry
and daughters were Sunday, Au
gust 31 dinner guests at the Au
gust Troshynski home.
Celia Homemakers club met in
the park house in Atkinson for
a “pink and blue” shower for Mrs.
Perry Terwilliger. Miss Helen
Martens gave a very interesting
demonstration on textile painting.
Cake, ice cream and iced tea were
served.
Alex Forsythe was a Friday,
August 29 visitor at the O. A.
Hammerberg home.
Mr. and Mrs. John Schwindt
and Venita were Saturday after
noon visitors at the Hans Lau
ridsen home, August 30.
Dwayne Greenwood spent the
weekend at the Hammerberg
home. Wilmer Warner was also
a^ dinner guest Sunday, August
Clarence and Merlin House
spent Thursday and Friday, Aug
ust 28-29 at the Omer Poynts
home.
Several members of Circil No.
1 attended thes regular monthly
meeting at the home of Mrs. O. A.
Hammerberg Thursday afternoon,
August 28. Mrs. Pelcer and Mrs.
D. F. Scott were visitors.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bausch and
father, Steve Bausch, were Sun
day dinner guests at the Paul
Johnson home August 31.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rouse
and son Marvin and Mrs. Gerald
Risor and children of O’Neill
spent Friday, August 29, at the
Milton McKathnie home.
Albert Johnson and son Jim,
Lyons, Nebr., were Tuesday over
night guests at the Earl Schlot
feld home, August 2 .
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Beck and
Mr. and Mrs. Nenry Dobrovolny
took a picnic lunch and went to
Valentine for the day, Sunday,
August 24.
Robert Collins and Ralph Seger
installed a gas heater for Mr. and
Mrs. O. A. Hammerberg Friday,
August 29.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson
visited the Paul Johnson family
Friday afternoon, August 29.
Mrs. Emma McKathnie re
turned to her home in Atkinson
Saturday night, after a week
spent with her son, Milton Mc
Kathnie and family.
Overnight guests at the Earl
Schlotfeld Friday, August 29,
were Mr. and Mrs. John Schlot
feld and two sons of Fullerton.
Leona Beckwith has been hired
to teach school in district 147 and
will board at the Hans Lauridsen
home. School began Sept. 2.
Chet Anderson was a visitor
at the Hans Lauridsen home
Thursday afternoon,-August 28.
Hans and Jim Lauridsen were
Friday morning visitors at the
Louis Lauridsen home.
O. A. Hammerberg helped haul
baled hay for Alex Forsythe on
Thursday, August 28.
Frontier for printing!
CORRUGATED
ROOFING
28-GAUGE
Painted both sides, IV4” or
2V2” currugations, 68 lbs. per
square -6.90 per square
7- ft. sheets ... $1.05 ea.
8- ft. sheets_$1.20 ea.
10-ft. sheets __ $1.50 ea. ,
12-ft. sheets _ $1.79 ea.
BRICK PATTERN SIDING
28-gauge, painted both sides, !
64 lbs. per square, sheets 28
inches wide, 5-ft. long, 88c ea. <
All brand new, first quality, 1
f.o.b. Kansas City. Mail orders
filled—add Kans. or Mo. Sales
Tax.
Brown - Strauss
CORPORATION I
1546 Guinoiie Ave.
Kansas Ciiy 20, Mo.
O'NEILL LOCALS
Mrs. Elma Kramer and be?
daughter, Mrs. Ina Ericson, both
of Billings, Mont., were Monday
and Tuesday visitors in the H
W. Tomlinson home. They went
from O’Neill to Spencer from
where they will depart for Mon
tana after a three weeks visit
Mrs. Kramer is Mrs. Tomlinson’s
sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ladley of
Gordon and Mrs. Faye Pinker
man of Scottville were dinner
guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. H. W. Tomlinson Tuesday.
MOWER MAGIC
It’« almost aa easy as waving
a wand to mow your lawn
with a precision sharp
ened mower. Bring yours
in and have it machine
sharpened for easy mow
ing.
Hand $2.00 — Power $2.50
Pete’s Saw Shop
Phone 49 lw O’Neill
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
Beauty Salon in city of 20,000 in Texas
grossing $30,000 yearly.
Bowling Alley in Nebraska town of 16,000
doing $24,000 yearly.
Cafe with 2 cabins on highway near the Gulf
in Alabama. $8,500.
Shoe Store in Texas county seat. Nets $6,000
to $8,000. A $12,000 value for $10,000.
Cafe in Missouri doing $95,000 yearly. Seats
72. Beautifully equipped.
Lumber Mill in Texas doing $250,000 yearly.
Sawmill, dry kiln, planer mill, $200,00'* stock.
Flower Shop with Greenhouse doing $17,000
yearly. City in Texas.
Butane gas business in Texas. 350 accounts,
2 delivery trucks, storage tank, office, home.
$20,000.
Grocery and Market in Nebraska town of
12,000 doing $348,000 yearly.
Cafe in Montana county seat doing $22,000
yearly. Priced to sell.
Income property in Alabama. Houses Cafe
and Dance Hall. 25 acres. $20,000.
Wood products plant in Texas. Nets $14,000
yearly. Price $10,000. j
Machine and Welding Shop in Montana.
A money maker. Price $20,000.
Food Store in Texas doing $137,000 yearly. j
$13,000. Terms.
Bar and Cafe on Texas-New Mexico line
doing $260,000 yearly. |
Cabinet Shop in Texas doing $20,000 yearly.
$6,500.
Plumbing and Heating Business in Texas
doing $22,500 yearly. $11,800.
Implement and truck agency in Texas doing
$280,000 yearly.
Cabins, Cafe, Station, Apt. House and
borne in Nebraska all tor $20,000.
Auto-Truck Agency in Nebraska county
seat doing $240,000 yearly.
Details free
KASHFINDER
WICHITA 2, KANSAS
---j
MILLER THEATRE
— Atkinson, Nebr. —
FrL-Sat. Sept. 5-6
Sun.-Mon. Sept. 7-8
I
Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. Sept. 9-10-11
I
I
TWO SHOWS DAILY
2:15 — 8:15
All Seats Reserved
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. ;
I For Sale,Bargain:
Stainless Steel Teeth
Not many people know it, but Uncle Sam buys millions
of dollars' worth of stainless steel teeth. Don't get
upset. They're not the chewing kind. They're the jet
plane kind.
You see, stainless steel teeth are blades that fit inside
the engine walls of jet planes. The blades help to drive *
air into the firing chambers. There are more than 1,000
of these teeth in each engine, and up to a little while
ago each one had to be forged—a slow, fussy, expen
sive method.
The problem was dumped in the lap of G-E special
ists, and they solved it.
The result is that today we roll a continuous strip of
stainless steel, cut the teeth to length, and weld them
to a base. Works fine. The cash saving: 55%. Critical
material saving: 39%.
There's an extra rbason to be happy about this,
since all of us taxpayers have to foot the bills. Millions
of dollars will be saved by the military services in
future blade production. And the how-to-do-it is being
shared through the U.S. Air Force with other jet
engine builders.
roa canyfru/jtcal con^a/eTice in_*
GENERAL ELECTRIC
°
DEMOCRATIC
RALLY ™i BANQUET
At the Lynch Ball Room
Tuesday, September 9th — 7 P.M.
State Candidates on the Program
Banquet Served by the Catholic
Ladies of Lynch
EVERYBODY INVITED
I On Saturday 1
ft ♦*
♦♦ j i
1 September 13th j
I mcintosh jewelry I
♦♦ ♦♦
♦♦ ft
XX §
xx ::
1 Will Again Sponsor The ||
:: xx
♦♦ ft
District Federated Garden Clubs
| Flower Display **
■ ■ DANCE . ■
AT O’NEILL
American Legion Auditorium
Saturday, September 6th
Music by
ACES OF RHYTHM
ORCHESTRA
Adm.: Adults 75c; Students 50c I
Congratulations DONALD
- STRSN&
Donald and “Butch” . . . Grand Champion Hereford Baby Beef I
At the 1 952 Holt County P AIR I
Don has been feeding this steer calf FOXBILT’S famous SUPERCENTRATE
since that day, back in the early Spring of this year, when, he began grooming
“Butch” for this wonderful honor. I
Quality seems to be answer for turning com into beef AT A PROFIT. And,
as far as balancers are concerned, FOXBILT’S SUPERCENTRATE means quality.
More and more of the top-notch, progressive cattle feeders are turning to FOX
BILT’S SUPERCENTRATE because they are finding from comparative feeding
tests that SUPER does the job!
,UlliL “Famed I I
iBsnnisji fo»
tiriinv.Tj Regultg„
Mil*
NORB UHL, O’Neill, Distributor
Merle Hickey Farmers Store Fred Forslund I
O'NEILL PAGE EWING
Hamik Produce Elkh°™ ^zlley John Conard,g
STUART INMAN EMMET