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. 3, 1953)
Couple Weds in Church Rite (Picture at right) . • M -ss Ruby Catherine Kloppen- ■ borg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kloppenborg of Emmet, became the bride of Norman E. Wayman. son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wayman of O’Neill, Sat urday, August 29, at 4 p.m. ' The double-ring ceremony took place at the First Methodist . church. O’Neill. Rev. Wallace B. Smith officiated. There were one hundred guests. The altar was decorated with baskets of colored gladioli. Mrs. Harold Seger of O’Neill, organist, played the traditional wedding marches and accompan ied her daughter. Miss Carol Se ger, who sang “I Love You Truly" and “Because.” Given in marriage by her fa ther, the bride wore a gown de signed and made by herself of white slipper satin and nylon lace featuring a portrait neck line and long tapered sleeves. She wore a rhinestone necklace and earring set, a gift from'the bridegroom. Her fingertip fllu sion veil fell from a beaded tiara crown. The bride carried a small white Bible, also a gift from the bridegroom, and a colonial bou quet of white and yellow gladioli. The tradition of something new, borrowed and blue was ob served by the bride. Mrs. George Fierson of Aurora, Colo., sister of the bride, was ma tron-of-honor. She was gowned in pale yellow taffeta, topped by a natchiog jacket and a yellow net stole. Her headdress was of matching yellow taffeta and net, entwined with small flowers. She carried a colonial bouquet of pale green gladioli. The bridegroom was attired in a light brown business suit. Ivan \ Wayman, attired in a blue busi ness suit,.served as his brother’s bestman. The ushers were Don . aid Kloppenborg, brother of the bride, and Clifford Dick, a friend of the couple. The mothers of the bride and bridegroom wore sheer navy blue dresses with white accessories. .Their corsages were pink roses and rose buds tied with a gold ribbon. • A reception tor over one hun dred guests was held immediate ly following the ceremony at the farm h'ome of the bride’s parents. Mrs. Alice Hill and Mrs. Wood row Gaughenbaugh had charge of the reception, with Mrs. Mary Lewis pouring and Miss Norma Lou Foreman and Mrs. Chuck Felver serving. Mrs. Hill had charge of the guest book. The as sistants’ aprons of white perma nent organdy, trimmed in yellow, carrying out the wedding colors, were gifts from the bride. After a wedding trip to the Black Hills and Colorado, the couple will reside in Emmet. The bride graduated in 1949 from O’Neill high school. The bridegroom was recently dis charged from the army after two years of service here and over seas. Guests from out-of-town in cluded: Mrs. Helena Lindemann, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lindemann and family, Mr. and Mrs. John Eihusen and daughter and Mr. aud Mrs. Clarence Iliff of Fair field; Mr. and Mrs. John Smidt and family of Hastings; Mr. and Mrs. George Pierson and family of .Aurpra, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Kloppenborg and daugh ter of Cozad; Mrs. D. A Boldra, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Boldra, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boldra and son of Omaha; Mrs. Harry Rum ley and son of Sidney, la.; Mr and Mrs. Dean Stuckey and son of Grafton. CLUB ENTERED STUART—The Stuart Amer ican Legion club rooms were forcibly entered late Sunday night or early Monday morning, Holt County Sheriff Leo Tom jack reported. About $20 was taken from the music machine and a futile effort was made to crack the safe. British Scientist Visits Test Colony (Continued from page 1) ’Similar Problems'— Who is Deacon? In 1943 — one of the dark World War II years—he won the top British award given by the Royal Academy of Science for the “greatest single contribution to science.” „ , , , Born in Kent. England, and educated at the University of London, for the past six years he has been chief officer of the Aus tralian meteorological physics section of the government at Melbourne. “We have been working on verv similar problems to those that are being so intensively studied in this O’Neill expedi tion,” he told The Frontier. “I most certainly am impressed with what I’ve seen here. It’s a most unique occasion for me to be here and meet with this great gathering of people who are in terested in these turbulence problems—the w’ays of the rest less winds. “Australia has a special inter est in turbulence because turbu lence has a great bearing on the way water is transported from the soil In Australia we have all too little water. The southeastern part of the continent has quite a moderate amount of water, but the greater part is extremely dry. ‘Tve noticed in the short time I’ve been here that as the dr_» weather proceeds the landscape becomes more Australian in char acter,” the foreign scientist ob served. .. , ,, , Doctor Deacon said he d read ' abdut Nebraska’s rugged winters. Sweltering through 98 - degree temperatures here, he said it was difficult to believe the “snow stories’’ he d heard and read about, referring to the 1943- 49 recurring blizzards. • , * • « . Cosmopolitan Hookins— The Johns Hopkins crow’d, counting a native of India, a na • tive of Poland, a native of Ger many, a Japanese-American and three other "simply Americans” on its staff, easily rates honors as the most cosmopolitan unit on the wind test site. Doctor Halstead, who is in charge of th<p mobile lab, says the O’Neill crew rates second place honors at the campus for straying far afield. Another Hop kins unit currently is studying wijjd and ice somewhere on the Arctic circle. The climatology department maintains permanent labora tories at Seabrook. N.J.. and Washington, D.C.. although the universitv proper is at Balti more, Md. "One of the things we’re trying to find out here at O’Neill is that we don’t differ very much from the other schools in what we’re trying to learn. We’d like to make sure that the instruments we use are comparable. “Our own group is interested in agricultural phases of these basic research problems. “We fire a puff of gun powder (apart from the larger-scale pho to theodolite operation) and ob serve in a defined circle what happens to the smoke as the wind blows on it and as the turbulence manages to blow it apart or car ry it smoothly across the field. That way we can actually see what is taking place. “We have tenciometers pro iruding about three feet into the ground that measure the thirst of the soil. Actually, they meas ure the tension with which the soil is pulling at the water. When the soil is very moist the tension is very low; when it dries out, as I it has been doing the past few days, the tension becomes quite great,” Halstead added. The Waymans . . . io live in Emmet.—O'Neill Photo Co. ROCK FALLS NEWS Miss Doris Sterns of Lincoln returned Sunday after a week’s vacation with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Brown at tended the funeral of Mrs. Mary Langdon at Spencer Monday | mo: ning. Guests Sunday at Don Hynes were Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hansen and daughters and Beth Benson. Mrs. Leslie Strong of Omaha came last Thursday to visit Al bert Sterns and other relatives. Mr. Strong came Sunday and, Grady and Donald accompanied their parents to Omaha that after noon. Ronnie is staying with his grandparents a little longer. Eve lyn Sterns accompanied her sis ter and family to Omaha. I JUST ARRIVED!! SEMI TRUCK LOAD «( COLORADO CAHUHIC FRUIT PEACHES Z .1-98 BUSHELS — LOWEST PRICE in Town WhjjdAhij. (Joks. Sp&rial Good fon- Saturday, Sept. 5th, Only “BARGAIN OF THE WEEK" ■** -mrzjwmm car* 3 One - Row 'CORNPICKERS ^ All Makes V '' • • • ALSO . . . No. 24 Two-Row IHC NO. 2-M Two-Row IHC Joha Deere Mounted for A or B Tractor BE SURE AND REGISTER FOR OUR * MYSTERY PRIZES SHELHAMER EQUIPMENT CO. PEARS lug 1.49 I BUSHELS — ARRIVING DAILY PRUNES lug M9 I HALF-BUSHELS ARE HERE NOW! I MAKE THE m OUTLAW YOUR I CANNING FRUIT I HEADQUARTERS f REMEMBER — NOBODY, I BUT NOBODY UNDERSELLS f THE OUTLAW I lax*P?L' v I Last call for Picnics...And have we an exciting group of foods picked^ 5i I for your out-of-doors event! .. . Choice barbecue meats cut to your I | l *■*, ***' h I order, abundant fruits and vegetables for crisp tasty salads, holiday » M I beverages and bakery products -There are all kinds of ready-to-serve W I foods that'll make your labor Oay an effortless family fun-fest. 100% GUARANTEED HAPPY - HOUR COFFEE Lb. Can ~79c * ROCHESTER MILK SCansQ __ _ .—mm—, ^B i £ ( PURE GRANULATED ILICIM7 CATSUP*£,* ) VAN! CAMPS 1 POCK m ( -AND- Z I BEANS”* STOKELY’S FANCY 7WM7P CURTISS I M / > MflKHWAHOWS g 15 \ HEINZ ! TOMATO SOUP 3 for 32c MY - T - FINE ' DESSERT.- 4 ito 29c PILLSBURY mi MIX 3 Pkgs. 89 c BENNETS FRENCH DRESSING Plus 1 Head Lettuce “FREE” ■1 LIQUID LUX SOAP Can...35c Fresh Frozen R.S.P. SUGARED CHERRIES 30-Lb. Tin 5.99 ——.... i I QUART DILL PICKLES v. 0HIW6C JUICE BON TON FLOUR 50 lb. sack I SWIFT’S A.C. W1EHERS 3 lbs. 99c BEEF HEARTS l n* 35* ) l PRODUCE \ ICEBURG \ Lettuce I CUDAHY ALL MEAT MHCEB HAM .. 2 «*. 7» H and G EDGEMERE SLICED NHIDIKi tlm 2 Lbs... 25® Lb.53® I at i SUNKIST LEMONS 2 Ik... MED. SIZE SUNKIST ORANGES 3 Lbs.. — PUREX I BLEACH I 2 Qt Bris. 29c } TREND |( SOAP POWDER 1 Pte 21c | I I The New Outlaws “Finest” I I I GROUND qoc I | I BEEF 70 I 1 -- N p