The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 27, 1952, SECTION ONE, Image 1
• 4 ' *w . , *• '« ***¥ X Mff r ■ .14 • t. “VOICE TEN OF THE FRONTIER” SECTION ONE . 780 k. c. 9:45 cum. PageS 1 t0 North-Central Nebraska’s BIG Newspaper Volume 72.—Number 30. O’Neill, Nebr., Thursday, Nov. 27, 1952._ Seven Cents. Mrs. Joseph Axtell . . . endured pioneer hardships in Holt county.—The Frontier Photo. 4 ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ Stuart Woman, 101, Came West for Health Mrs. Alvina Wayman Expires in Hospital Mother of 11 Came to Holt in ’09 Mrs. Alvina S. Wayman, 78, widow of the late Henry Way man, died about 5 p. m., last Thursday, November 20, in St. Anthony’s hospital here where she had been a patient. The late Mrs. Wayman had been in fail ing health since last August when she suffered a light stroke. Death was attributed to a heart ailment and climaxed 10 days of serious illness. Funeral services were con ducted at 2 p. m.f Saturday, November 22, from the Metho dist church here with Rev. Wallace B. Smith, church pas tor, officiating. Burial was in Prospect Hill cemetery under direction of Biglin Brothers. The pallbearers were five grandsons — Floyd Hershiser, Francis Hershiser, Ralph Way man, Ivan Wayman and Walter Schrner, and one grandson by marriage, Bennett Heriford. Tne late Alvina Sophia Kloep per was bom in Gage county, Nebraska, April 4, 1874, a daugn ter of Henry and Elizabeth Backy Kloepper. On February 25, 1892, in Gage county she married Hen ry J. Wayman. The Waymans farmed for many years 2 Vz miles west of O'Neill, where Mrs. Wayman made her home until her fatal illness. O They became the parents of six sons and five daughters. Mr. Wayman died six years ago. Survivors include: Sons—Ed ward, Ben, Roy, Harvey and Harry, all of O’Neill; Clarence of Boulder, Colo.; daughters—Mrs. John (Elizabeth) Nickel of O’ Neill; Mrs. Williiam (Alma) Schmohr of Emmet; Mrs. Clyde (Jennie) Hershiser of O’Neill; Miss Linda of O’Neill, and Mrs. Kenneth (Anna) Ellingston of O’Neill; 13 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. 3 Registered Stock Sales on Calendar Three registered livestock sales are listed on The Frontier’s auc tion calendar. In addition two ranch closeouts are booked. Schedule: Wednesday, December 10: George Atkinson & Son, 4 Vz miles west of Chambers, farm closeout sale; 43 head of cattle including 10 registered Here fords; complete line ranch ma chinery; some household goods; Col. Ed Thorin, O’Neill, auction eer; Chambers State Bank, clerk. BYiday, December 12: Niobrara Valley Hereford Breeders asso ciation show and sale, Butte Livestock Market; 35 bulls and six females; W. G. Sire, Butte, secretary - manager. (Catalogs published by The Frontier now available through Mr. Sire.) Saturday, December 13: Will Sitz, Burwell, registered Aber deen-Angus production sale, 49 lots, Atkinson Livestock Market (Catalogs being published by The Frontier.) Wednesday, December 17: Wayne Standage ranch closeout; 2 miles southeast of Amelia: 35 head of cattle, including register ed bull; complete line of ranch machinery, household goods, fram dwelling; Col. Ed Thorin, O’Neill, auctioneer; Chambers State Bank, clerk. Monday, December 22: Fritz Bros, and Kenneth R. Meier, both of Niobrara, annual regis tered Hereford production sale, 52 lots, males and,females, Nor folk Livestock Sales Pavilion. (Catalogs being published by The Frontier.) DIES OF WOUND NELIGH—The accidental dis charge of a gun has cost the life oE. 4-year-old Dennis Joseph Krause, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Krause of Elgin. The acci dent occured Sunday and the boy died Monday in Antelope Me morial hospital, Neligh. Mrs. Richard Kazda and baby were guests from Thursday, No vember 2, until Sunday at the Archie Bright home. ► • - STUART— Mrs. Alice Axtell celebrated her 101st birthday anniversary on Tuesday, Novem ber 25. Her daughter, Miss Pearl Ax tell, conducted open-house in the afternoon in order that her many friends could greet her and ex tend birthday wishes. Miss Alice Butterfield was born in St. Lawrence county, N.Y., and moved to Iowa with her parents in 1866. In 1880 they came to Holt county in covered wagons. Miss Butterfield was married to Joseph Axtell in 1887 and they made their home in the South Side neighborhood on the Niobrara river where they ex perienced drouths, blizzards, prairie fires and all the pioneer hardships. Mrs. Axtell has seen Holt county develop .from a treeless, fenceless prairie to a land of well-improved farms and ranch es with many trees. The ox teams she drove have been replaced by cars and trucks and the candle light has given way to electricity in towns and on farms. Her activities belie the ad vanced age of this woman who was told, back in 1866, that she should go West for her health. She does much of her own housekeep ing. Mrs. Axtell is believed to be the oldest person living in Holt county. Her husband died in 1911 and she and her daughter have lived in Stuart for the past 36 years. First Snow Comes in Blizzard Form The first real snowstorm of the season was borne into north Nebraska and the O’Neill region Tuesday. The weatherman said the storm was caused by a storm center over eastern Oklahoma which was feeding moisture from the Gulf of Mexico into cold air moving in from Canada. Strong winds up to 30 and 35 miles - per - hour caused some remained open. drifting. Highways, however, Trains and busses were run ning behind schedule except for the O'Neill-to-Norfolk bus due out of here Tuesday after noon at 5 o'clock. That bus was held up pending a break in the weather. The mercury hovered around 20 to 25 degrees most of Tuesday, By 8 p.m., it had dropped to 18 and was expected to reach as low as 15 early Wednesday. From two- to three-inches of snow had fallen here until 6 p.m. Precipitation for the past seven days has amounted to .dl of an inch. Consumers Publuic Power re ported disturbances about 7:45 p.m. south and east of here where more snow was falling. Icing may have created feeder line trouble. A 4%-minute pow er interruption occurred shortly afterward. The Deloit community receiv ed over an inch of moisture last week — the first in more than two months. Weather summary based on 24-hour periods ending at 5 p.m. daily follows: Hi Lo Nov. 20_58 19 Nov. 21_21 45 Nov. 22_ 33 23 Nov. 23_36 il Nov. 24_33 17 Nov. 25 _27 18 Hull, Foreman ‘Victory* Royalty A victory ball was held in the i O’Neill public school in the new recreation room Tuesday eve ning, sponsored by the Eagle Cadettes, O’Neill’s pep club. Crowned king of football was Gaylen Hull, Queen Victory was Mary Lou Foreman. The attendants to the king and queen were Marlene Waring and Eddie Davis, seniors; Carol Se ger, and George Kilcoin, juniors; Dwaine Alton and Sharon Han cock, sophomores, and Marilyn Carroll and Russel Borg, fresh men. This is the first dance to be held in the new recreation room. The Frontier for printing! Irrigation Information Meet Held Engineer Burdick Answers Questions in Informal Session A variety of cold statistics in the comparisons between irrigat ed and dry land farming were pointed out to a group of Holt countyans Monday night in a meeting held here. The session, held in the base ment of the courthouse’ annex, was labeled as an informational public meeting. Area Reclamation Engineer Clyde Burdick of Ainsworth aptly fielded a barrage of questions, mostly from persons in the audience who are in support of the move. Burdick’s fingertip answers, as well as comments from officials of the Niobrara Basin Develop ment association, left little doubt in anyone’s mind that: 1. With reasonable support on the part of the basin residents a development of the Niobrara is within grasp. 2. Comparisons between irri gated farming and dryland farm ing in Nebraska weigh heavily in favor of irrigation. Mr. Burdick offered these bur eau statistics based on the 20 year span between 1925-’45: Dry Irr. Yd. Yd. Com, bu. per acre ...18-20 .50 Small grain, bu. per acre _16-20 40 Alfalfa, tons per acre 1-1% 3-8 Potatoes, bu. per acre 200 Sugar beets, tons per acre _ 12-16 Burdick explained, as he has numerous times before, that Holt has approximately 66-thousand acres of class A and B irrigable land, possibly more if “fringe areas” are figured. Weather bur eau figures down through the years show 18 to 20 inches aver - age annual rainfall. Thirty inch es are needed, the speaker de clared. One of the four official hear ings called in the basin by Gov. Val Peterson will be held at O’ Neill. Date is Tuesday, Decem ber 16. If there is enthusiastic sup port from the majority of the residents at these hearings, ir rigation districts will be form ed. The reclamation bureau's reports and recommendations, if all goes smoothly, will go to the next congress for appro priations. Burdick estimates that three and one-half to four years of work will be needed to ready the O’Neill area for irrigated crops— the O’Neill area being the larg est in the basin. He estimates the ratio between benefits and costs at O’Neill will be $1.04 to $1.00. At Lavaca flats, for example, a mucn smaller project requiring only about a year to complete, the estimated ratio is 3.54 to 1.00 At Ainsworth, a three-year proposition, the ra tio is 1.94 to 1.00. Costs on the above figures, Burdick said, are based on prices of construction, materials and la bor in January, 1952, while the benefits are calculated on per acre dollar production between 1939 and 1944. While the ratio in each instance justifies irriga tion, the standards are not cur rent. The 1939-’44 prices were used purposely, Burdick said, to prove the point even with ad verse figures. Harry Thor ley, Ainsworth banker-rancher and director-at large for the basin group, em phasized that irrigation ' would stabilize the feeding problems in this region, pointing out that farmers and ranchers frequently are obliged under certain condi tions to ship in supplemental feed. "After irrigation arrives we'll have all the supplement we need right here in the valley," he declared. "I think ranchers up-and-down the valley should have more enthusiasm than they have—if only for rough age reasons." Verne Lindholm of Ainsworth, president of the association, also was present and spoke. Lind holm recently was elected to succeed E. R. House of Ains worth, veteran Niobrara devel opment enthusiast who has been ill. Lyle P. Dierks of Ewing, James W. Rooney of O’Neifi’ John Dick of O’Neill and Walter Ries of Atkinson are members of the board of directors. — Former Residents of Page 'Strike Oil'— PAGE — Relatives here have received word that on oil well has come into production on the Lloyd Bergstrom property at Clareton, Wyo. It has a daily output of 100 | barrels. Mr. and Mrs. Bergstrom I formerly lived at Wayne. THE FRONTIER IS EARLY This issue of The Frontier went to press 24 hours ahead of schedule in order that most mail patrons would receive their copy before—instead of after—Thanksgiving. Game of Pool Follows Wedding Cpl. Donald Snowardt of O’Neill and his bride, the former Clarabelle Fultz of Norfolk, whiled away a few hours Friday in Matt’s bil liard parlor following their marriage. Corporal Snowardt operated a crane and cat with the ar my engineers in Korea from April, 1951, until last month, laying fuel pipe lines. The bride and bridegroom are shown enjoying refreshments (left) and the bride takes careful aim with her cue (right). Corporal Snowardt said he often long ed for a “good old game of pool back home” while overseas. (Wedding story on page 5.)—The Frontier Photo. Gillespies Planning Open-House __ _JL_ .1 1 . « % Sunday, November 30, will be the golden wadding date for Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd G. Gillespie, well-known O’Neill couple. They will receive their friends at their home between 2 and 5 o’clock and from 7 until 9. The Gilles-, pies reside at 315 South First street, where they have lived for more than 35 years. George Whitney of Ainsworth, who was a member of the wed ding party that November day in 1902, expects to be here for Sunday’s celebration. Both Mr. Gillespie, 77, and his wife, 75, enjoy “good health.” Miss Bertha Fawkes, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Fawkes, and Lloyd G. Gillespie, second son of Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Gillespie, were married by Rev. Amos Fetzer, Methodist pastor, at O’Neill. Mr. Whitney and Mr. Gillespie’s sister, Miss Maude, were attendants. Tne bride was bom at Maro, Macon county, 111., November 2, 1877. She was reared and ed ucated in Illinois, coming to Holt county at the age of 20—in 1897 — with her parents, four brothers and two sisters. Her brothers were Walter, Herbert, Raymond and Bud and her sis ters were Mabel and Florence. The Fawkes family resided for a short time on the farm 4l/2 miles north of O'Neill now owned by Frank BurivaL Fol lowing the drowning of the eldest son. Waller, they abant doned the farm for lack of help. The family moved to Sioux City, later to Portland, Ore., but young Bertha re mained. Mr. Gillespie was bom April 10, 1875, near Canton, S.D., and his parents settled in Holt coun ty when he was 2-years-old. In ! those days Paddock near the Niobrara river was the county seat. His father successively Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd G. Gillespie . . . O'Neill iheir home over half-century.—The Frontier Photo. served as county superintendent, sheriff and surveyor. In 1881 he moved the family to Oak creek locality, about 20 miles north of O’Neill. There the head of the family farmed 160 acres of land and served as postmaster at Sar atoga. In 1885 he was elected Holt county judge. The follow ing year he moved his family to O’Neill, residing in a house which stood where now the post office is located. The elder Mr. Gillespie was born in Ohio: his wife in New York. Lloyd’s brothers were Harry and Frank; his sisters were Maude, Ruth, Sue and Letti. During the first six months of their married life Lloyd and his bride resided with the elder Gillespies. Later they took up housekeeping on the second floor of the Campbell Implement store. During the ensuing few years they lived in several dwellings in the northwest sec tion of town. In 1917 they pur- # chased their present residence from Romaine Saunders. Their eldest child, Eleanor, died in 1928. They have one son, W. Bennett of O’Neill, and one daughter, Mrs. Eldon R. (Mar jory) Wood of Alhambra, Calif. There are three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. The Gillespies are hoping all their living descendants will be with them on Sunday. Mrs. Gillespie’s sister. Mi's. Mabel Davies of Portland, Ore., arrived a fortnight ago to be on hand for the celebration. Mr. Gillespie’s sister, Sue (now Mrs. George Whitney of Ainsworth), also will be here. Expected Wed nesday were Mr. and Mrs. Eld on R. Wood of Alhambra and possibly their daughter, Mrs. Paul Robinson, and husband and daughter. Mr. Robinson is in the navy. They have one child. (Continued on page 5) Truckers Roy Johnson (left) and Bob Davidson ... start meters on way to Arkansas.—Frontier Photo. Frightened Child Dislocates Jaw Bruce Ann McKamy, 2^ year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don McKamy, suffered a dislocated jaw last Thursday afternoon. Bruce Ann was visiting an uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Sherer, on a farm near Orchard when she was fright ened by either the bellow of a cow or a rooster jumping at her, causing her to scream, dis locating her jaw. The exact source of fright is not definite. She could not close her mouth and five hours later was taken to an O’Neill doctor, who had to reset the jaw three times before it would stay in position. It was then taped in place. She is recovering without any other effects. Chamber Maps Holiday Events Window Unveiling Friday Night The Chamber of Commerce has arranged a busy schedule of events for the yule season ahead. The annual citywide unveiling of store windows is scheduled for 8 p.m. on Friday, November 28. This is an annual feature that attracts widespread interest in the business district. Stores, however, will not be open. The committee in charge of arrangements for the unveil ing event includes James W. Rooney, Mrs. Winnie Barger and Mrs. Georgia Rasley. Saturday, December 8, has been designated as the second annual turkey day in O’Neill. Four trucks will move out si multaneously at 4:15 p.m. from the corner of Fourth and Doug las streets. Tickets will be dis tributed to spectators and hold ers of lucky tickets will receive free fowl. A. P. Jaszkowiak is in charge of arrangements. Saturday, December 20, will be the date for Santa’s annual O’Neill visit. He’ll arrive as us ual by plane, ride into the city aboard a fire truck, and distrib ute fruit and candy to young admirers at the O’Neill public school, starting at 2 p.m. John R. Gallagher will help arrange for Santa’s appearance. Chamber President William W. McIntosh said Tuesday thaf O’Neill stores are brimful with yule merchandise, foretelling one of the biggest retail seasons in the history of the city. Retired Blacksmith, Wife Wed 50 Years Noffkes Will Observe Quiet Anniversary EWING—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Noffke, sr., quietly will observe their golden wedding anniversa ry at their home on Sunday, No vember 30. No celebration is planned because Mr. Noffke is “not well.” Mr. and Mrs. Noffke were married in Germany and came to America with their 8-year-old son, Herman, in 1904. They set tled in the Clearwater vicinity. The family engaged in farming for one year, then moved to Clearwater where Mr. Noffke opened a blacksmith shop, a trade he learned in his native Germany. In 1915, Mr. and Mrs. Noffke, sr., and their family moved to Ewing which has been their home since. Mr. Noffke continued in the blacksmith work and in later years was assisted by his son, Frank, jr. This partnership was dissolved in 1946 when the elder Mr. Noffke retired because of ill health. His son, Frank, has con tinued to serve the Ewing com munity in the shop which his fa ther founded. Mr. and Mrs. Noffke have six living children—Herman of Su perior, Carl of Albion, Mrs. Am elia Owens of Norfolk, Frank, jr., of Ewing, Harold of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Margaret Cronin of Pierre S.D. PURCHASES DRUG STORE S. Bertolini, a pharmacist at Cilligan’s Rexall store here since luly, has purchased the McPher ;on pharma-cy at West Point and vill take possession December 1. Mr. and Mrs. Bertolini came to 3’Neill from Omaha where Mr. 3ertolini had graduated in June rom Creighton university school )f pharmacy. Mrs. Bertolini’s ariginal home was at Tecumseh. 3ennett Gilligan said Tuesday he vould name a successor soon. CAR BURNS Firemen were summoned Sat urday evening to extinguish an automobile fire one block east :>f the Burlington depot. A gaso line sediment bowl had broken, releasing gas on the exhaust. s> _ Legal Battle Brews* Game Is Called Off; Machines Shipped O’Neill has just experienced a shortlived relationship (if you can call it that) with parking meters. The mechanized money swal lowers were loaded onto a truck which trundled out of town late Monday. And two law suits on the docket at the courthouse are soon to be withdrawn by mutual agreement or simply die a nat ural death. Feeling in the city was mixed as finis was written on the me ter story—one of those chapters? of modern living that come along once in awhile to break the rou tine in small city civic life. There were those who were a. bit enthusiastic with triumph following five days of sparring and melodrama. Included in this group were sincere people who thought there was no room or need for the machines here. On the other hand, there was a well-meaning handful who died hard when the meter swan song was sounded. They courageously thought meters were a solution to the city's growing parking problem. Here’s a chronology of th‘5 meter story: On January 9, 1951, the city council instructed Mayor J. E. Davis and City Attorney Wil liam W. Griffin to enter into nr* agreement with the Duncan. Parking Meter corporation of Ill inois for “150 meters, more-or less” to be placed into service* within “30 to 60 days” . on the streets of O’Neill The meters were io cost in the neighborhood of $69.50 each. One-half of the take was to go to the city: the other half to Duncan until the meters were paid for. In other words, the city “bought” on a lease rental - purchase arrangement about 10 - thousand dollars worth of meters. A band of citizens, some miff ed by the prospect of meters and others unhappy because the con tract was signed without warn ing and without giving the peo ple a voice, promptly took the matter into court. Sumner Down ey et al petitioned the Holt county district court for a temp orary injunction against the me ter firm. This was granted by District Judge D. R. Mounts. Members of the original coun cil were C. E. Jones, Norbert Uhl, J. L. McCarville, sr., Tony Asimus, L. M. Diehtman and Av W. Carroll. Uhl was an outspoken oppo nent of the meter plan from the outset In April of that same year several board members re tired and new members came on the board. The reorganized board on May 1, 1951, voted 3-2 to “cancel, rescind and annul” the pact with the Duncan firm. Meanwhile, the meters arrived in the city and were placed in, storage by the city. Months passed. owuiuiivA tu* uuviuiai meeting of business and profes sional men at the American Le gion auditorium produced a 33 14 vote against the meters. The verdict was offered as guidance for the council In September, this year, the Downey petition was dismissed by the court. Early last week the Lions club posted a petition with the mayor urging acceptance of the meters. A. E. Bowen was an outspoken, supporter of the meter move ment. The Chamber of Commerce,, meanwhile, remained neutral on the matter. But feelings were mixed. On Wednesday. .November 19. the rattle of a pneumatic drill on Douglas street, punch ing holes in the sidewalks, set up reverberations that were* heard from Chicago to the Rocky mountains. As the holoa went down tempers flared up. A private citizen hailed RIr. Coffee, Duncan engineer and head of the 1 ole - digging and meter-erecting detail, into city police court on charges of de facing sidewalks and creating obstructions. Police Judge H. W. Tomlinson ordered Mr. Coffee and his party to desist. Coffee hurriedly filled the* newly-created holes with sand lest some petite ankle meet with a mishap and a law suit of a d*f lice court here was last Thurs ferent sort rear its head. The po* day at 2 p.m. That evening the city council voted 5-0 to meet the “crisis” in a novel way in the event the city found itself legally bound to ac^ cept the contract made by the former council. Resolutions were adopted to space the meters in every fifth parking stall in 11 blocks instead of in every stall in two blocks, as was orally agreed back in January, 1951. Bright and early Friday morn ing M. Zelen of Lincoln, Duncan salesman who carried out the or iginal liaison, and an attorney,. Harry Grumminger of G r a n‘d Island, buzzed into town in an airplane. In the absence of Judge Mounts they filed a petition with County Judge Louis W. Reimer (Continued on page 5)