Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1952)
PAGE 8. — THE FRONTIER, O'Neill. Nebr., Sept. 18, 1952. Scouts from 9 Towns to Gather Scouts, Cubs and their parents from the communities of Bassett, Stuart, Atkinson, Chambers, Ew ing, Page, Spencer, Butte and O’ Neill will participate in an after noon and evening of games and entertainment at the ONeill city park Sunday, September 21. The highlight of the activity will be a pancake fry, which will take place about 4:30 p.m. After the fry the group will pa rade to the O’Neill Livestock Market, where a fine inspiration al program will be carried out. “Anyone intertseed in joining the group is welcome,” according to Dr. J. M. Pucelik of Spencer, who is head of the district camp ing and activities committee. Riddles Asked in Club Meeting — The Golden Keys club met Fri day, September 12. We told jokes and asked riddles. Elsie Peters of O’Neill was a visitor at school. We have re ceived part of the books we sent for.—Melvin Luben, news report er. / — O'NEILL LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Weaver and Mrs. Weaver’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Lessig of Ainsworth spent from Thursday to Sunday, September 11 to 14, in the Black Hills, S.D. Mr. and Mrs. Dee Willm are expected to arrive Friday eve ning to visit their daughter, Mrs. Martin Walter and family. Mrs. Jerrard Spittler took her mother, Mrs. Thimson, to Omaha Sunday after she had spent a week in the Spittler home. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Weyhrich were visiting in Norfolk on Wed nesday, September 10. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Worth and Mr. and Mrs. Benny Wetzler and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Wetzler and family in Gregory, S.D., on Sunday. Mrs. Ray Wilkinson and Mrs. Lynus Howard went to Midland, S.D., Friday, September 12, to meet their husbands. They will accompany them to Montana. They expect to return Friday. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Weyhrich were Mr. and Mrs. Holland Weyhrich and ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Pat Gallup. ON ACK-ACK BATTERY IN BRITAIN . . . These two O’Neill soldiers, now assigned to battery C of the 60th antiaircraft artillery brigade at Lakenheath, England, have been together since entering the army in January, 1951. Both members of the same gun crew, the men have never been separated, though they served in three states before going to England. Left-to-right are Pfc. Frank E. Burival. son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burival, and Pfc. Maurice C. Parks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Parks.—U.S. Army Photo. Try Frontier want advs. for quick results! PAGE NEWS Mrs. Jerry Asher left for Nor folk last week where she has employment. Monte Taylor and Maurice Waring left early Monday for Omaha where they will attend Creighton university. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Switzer of O’Neill and Mr. and Mrs. Neil Asher were dinner guests Sun day of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Asher. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Max and family spent the weekend at Columbus visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Jorgensen. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Copple came from Randolph and spent Thursday and Friday with Mrs. Copple’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Trowbridge. Friday eve ning, they were charivaried by a group of one hundred. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Farnsworth spent Friday and Saturday at Fre mont where they visited with friends, Misses Freda and Ellen Rasmussen. Mr. and Mrs. George Fink have moved to Grand Island where they will make their home. Je rome Allen trucked their house holdgoods there Friday. The Bid or Bye Bridge club met with Mrs. LaVem Finley on Wednesday afternoon, September 10. Mrs. John Walker of Ewing and Mrs. Carl Max were guests. Score winners were Mrs. Melvin Roach, high, and Mrs. Finley all cut. Lunch was served. Byrdie Ann Parks, Lorna Ste vens and Joyce Clasey came from Lincoln Saturday and visited at their homes here until Sunday evening. Mrs. Carl Max entertained the Contract Bridge club at her home Thursday evening, September 10. Miss Bonnie Bemholtz of De troit, Mich., and Mrs. Gerald Lamason were guests. Mrs. C. E. Walker held high score and Miss Bemholtz the low. Mrs. Max served lunch after the games. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Nissen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Warnke at Meadow Grove. Sunday evening they all visited at the August Suckstorf home in Meadow Grove. The Royal Neighbor Kensing ton met with Mrs. Emma Dorr on Wednesday afternoon, September 10. Ten members were present and one guest, Mrs. Effie Lewton. Mrs. Robert Gray had charge of the entertainment. A covered dish lunch was served. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Silver and son of Holdrege came to Page last week to the home of Mrs. Silver’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Bemholtz. Mr. Silver visited over the weekend and returned to his home. Mrs. Silver and son stayed for a longer visit. They were accompanied here by Mrs. Silver’s sister, Miss Bonnie Bem holtz of Detroit, Mich., who had visited at their home before com ing to the home of her parents in Page. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fussleman, Sonny and Vicki, drove to Bris tow Sunday to the home of Mr. Fussleman’s brother, Warren Fus sleman. From there they ac companied Mr. and Mrs. Warren Fussleman to Pickstown, S.D., where they spent the afternoon and enjoyed a picnic supper. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Williams and Mrs. Rollie Stewart and daughter, Linda, all of Salem, Ore., came Friday and visited until Tuesday with relatives here. Lyle Wil liams and Mrs. Stewart formerly lived here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Williams, before they moved to Oregon. Mrs. Frank Chemeler of Nor folk visited Sunday afternoon with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Townsend, and her aunt, Mrs. Kathryn Price. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Palmer accompanied her here and visited Mrs. Palmer’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Taylor and son, Monte. Mrs. Fred Stevens of Belvidere, 111., Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Cunning ham, E. E. Stevens and Donald Cunningham were dinner guests Sunday of Miss Maude Martin. Mr. and Mr. Ross Taylor of Troy, O., came Friday evening to spend several days visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Chales Sorensen and family, Mrs. Taylor’s mother, Mrs. Eliza beth Cullen, and Mr. Taylor’s brother, L. B. Taylor and family and other relatives and friends'. Tune In! Voice of The Fron tier” . . . Mon., Wed., Sat., 9:45 a.m., 780 kc., WJAG. 12 Truck Scales Will Be Erected Junction of Highways 20-275 a Site Sen. Dwight Burney of Hart mgton has emerged the winner of a running scrap with the state highway department. The tri umph will result in a truck weighing station near O’Neill plus 11 others. Burney was the sponsor of a bill in the 1951 legislature to pro vide 12 more truck scales along the state’s highways. The idea was to curb overloading of what Oov. Val Peterson refers to as the rubber-tired boxcars.” The bill was passed but the scales were not built. Highway department sources say this was because the legislature failed to provide a specific appropriation. Burney retorted that the depart ment is given a lump sum and it’s up to State Engineer Aitken how to spend it. At any rate the scale sites are now definite and the ma chines will be in operation next May, more than two years af ter Burney thought he had the job done. I Two stations now are in opera tion at North Platte and Hol drege. They cost about $30,000 to build, Ress said, but he added that the remaining 10 will not be that expensive. Ress announced the following ■‘definite sites:” Thirteen miles east of O’Neill, at the junction of U.S. 20 and 175. At Culbertson, at the junction of U.S. 6 and 34. .4! Northport, at the junction of U.S. 26N and state 19. Columbus, at the south junc tion- of U.S. 30 and 81. Three miles north of Laurel at the junction of state 15 and U.S 20. North of Fremont, at the junc tion of state 91 and U.S. 77. One and a half miles south of Hebron on state 3 and U.S. 81. About one mile east of Waver ly on U.S. 6. Already under construction, are stations three miles north of Plattsmouth on U.S. 73 and 75 and northeast of Wahoo at the junction of state 109, U.S. 77 and U.S. 30A. Congregational Meeting — DORSEY—Following the reg ular worship service on Sunday, September 21, there will be a congregational meeting at the Dorsey Presbyterian church, ac cording to the pastor, Rev. John L. Waldstad of Niobrara. Frontier for printing! 2-p“, BEDROOM O 3 ★ Mr. and Mrs. Chest ★ Mirror ★ Bed Reg. 149.50 NOW $109.50 All Hard Wood Construction *** | 2-Pc. Limed Oak ★ Mr. and Mrs. Chest ★ Mirror ★ Bed Reg. 139.50 $99.50 4-Pc. Solid Oak ★ Vanity ★ 4-Drawer Chest . ★ Bed ★ Bench Reg. 139.50 I NOW i $99.50 Additional Savings ON ANY BEDROOM SET During This Big Sale! DELUXE MATTRESS Reg. 59.50 Serlaresi ★ 252-Coil Firm Unit ★ 10-Year Guarantee — PLUS — FOSTER PLATO COIL SPRING Reg. 29.50 ★ Platform Top ★ Double-Deck 90-Coil Unit ★ End Float Controls Total Regular Value 89.00 now. .$59.00 ■---1 THESE ARE DELIVERED PRICES We'D Beat jMIDWESTl sl^ m£l furniture & s:ifvY -Pri~ APPLIANCE —MS I PHONE 346-J WEST O’NEILL o MILLER THEATRE — Atkinson, Nebr. — Fri.-Sat. Sept. 19-20 Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Sept. 21-22-23 o WecL-Thurs. Sept. 24-25 SUK SPANGLED RANK LOVIJOY- RICHARD CARUON RUSTY TAMRlYN'ANtlA LOOM _ I INTRODUCING YOUR I H ** {NATIONAL HOMES DEALER-BUILDERS I 8 8 :: | I NORTH NEBRASKA BUILDERS 3 ♦ ♦ £x “ Better Homes for Less” ♦♦ !! ♦♦ xx ♦♦ xx x B tt ♦♦ i | ; Today’s most modem spectacular home tf f. buy — a 3 - bedroom ranch - type house as | 0 low as $8,9995 to $9,995! 1| | WIDE SELECTION OF FLOOR PLANS | ♦♦ OUR FIRST MODEL home to be erected in O’Neill will arrive ;♦ jj today (Thursday) and will be erected immediately on H 8 new residential lots located six blocks north of traffic signal. 8 — 1 1 I HARRY E. RESSEL - FRANCIS filLG 1 ED THORLN B *♦ MONEY TO LOAN ON AUTOMOBILES TRUCKS TRACTORS EQUIPMENT FURNITURE Central Finance Corp. C. E. Jones, Manager O'Neill : Nebraska Westinghousc muiiDRy twins _ out-ffl email! fg***"—***——"tt?1. *?r"i."e «n» — W|JJ|T|Ww^ This time the stork really outdid himself I With these new Westlnghouse "Twins*, you now save up to 10 gallons or more of water on every wash . . . p/us giant savings on soap. You save wear and tear on clothes . . . plus countless hours of drudgery.* i * SIf the new 1953 LAUNDROMAT® with its money saving features New, larger Weigh-to-Save Door I For extra loading space ... while weighing the wash size exactly. Automatic Water Saverl Set it to size of load indicated for right amount of hot water. No wastel O Exclusive WASHaway, RINSEaway Action! Only Laundromat’s In clined Basket washes every piece so uniformly clean. HEAR the new 1953 CLOTHES DRYER "Croon a Tone" when clothes ore dry O Singing Signal Chimes "How Dry I km" when clothes are dried just right and ready to be unloaded. ©Hew 3-Way Dry Dial for clothes dried as you want them. Just set it—the rest is automatic! ©larger leading Shelf for yow convenience, eliminates stooping, bending and heavy lifting. 1 *rS -Blessed Event" D°Y i ^ other, of ii^ST I FREE &T*t W52, We.tVDShoJ» 1 I-aoo^T^fber’. Babj Foo*^ rf 1 Ich «t of ”«'fr. tune!n 1 *"*"■ nrit^SUrte. or H.«»V "PICK THE WINNER" ■ in the ^^rf\.oUr Westingho'19 Westinghouse brings you history 1 winner- „y;_tormation. ^ making debates every week ... ■ . _ner for fU“ 1 PLUS Election Night Returns... OS 1 CBS TV ond Radio. Ask us how to get a set of miniature “twins'*... that go together like salt and pepparl you CAN 81 SURE...IF rrsWfestill^hoUSe See These Marvelous, New “Blessed Event Twins” Now On Display at Your,