The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 28, 1954, Image 1

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"Voice of The Frontier44 % * ^sTN ^ ^
A^FRONTIER rs.
9:45 A.M. — 780 k.c. *
North-Central Nebraska’s BIG Newspaper
Volume 73.—Number 39. O’Neill, Nebr., Thursday, January 28, 1954. Seven Cents
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3
Mi. and Mrs. J. Victor Johnson ... he was surprised on his
8Dth birthday anniversary.—The Frontier Photo.
-<2
T A A
Guy Parsons Hurt
in Auto Accident
STUART — Guy Parsons was
hurt about 9:30 o’clock Monday
evening when the eastbound car
he was driving struck an Elk
horn river bridge on U. S. high
way 20 about four miles west of
Stuart. Sgt. R. R. Shorney of
the Nebraska safety patrol said
Mr. Parsons was driving alone.
Tne car left the highway, crashed
into the bridge railing and stop
ped as it struck the bridge abut
ment.
At the Atkinson Memorial hos
pital, attendants said Mr. Parsons
was suffering from a broken
cneekbone, cuts, bruises, shocK
and loss of blood. He was not
hurt as badly as originally be
lieved.
Parsons is believed to have fal
len through the floorboards of
the car, then dcwn the steep em
bankment to the frozen river
bed. He lay unconscious until
a passing motorist from Newport
■reached the scene.
Stuart firemen in a meeting at
th'e time rushed to the scene.
. Mrs. Robert Riley
Dies at Atkinson
.
• Rites to Be Held
Friday
ATKINSON—Mrs. Robert Ri
ley, 64, died unexpectedly Tues
• day, January 26, at her home in
Atkinson. She had been hospital- j
ized recently and had been re
leasd from the hospital two days
before her death.
Her brother, Earl D. Hallock,
was near her at the home of her
death, having arrived in Atkin
son Saturday to visit his sister.
Survivors include: Widower;
sons — Melvin of Columbus and
Charles of Scottsbluff; daughters
—Mrs. Harvey (Olive) Wahl of
Atkinson and Mrs. Rena Smith of
Atkinson: 14 grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren; broth
ers — Earl Dewey Hallock of
Lander, Wyo.; H. H. Hallock and
Orange O. Hallock, both of Dead
wood, S.D.
Mrs. Riley was bom June 2,
1885, at Stuart, a daughter of the
late George and Emma Lou Hal
lock. She was married at Butte
July 5, 1907.
Funeral services will be con
ducted at 2 p.m., Friady at the
Methodist church in Atkinson.
The Royal Neighbors of America
lodge will conduct brief services
at the cemetery. Mrs. Riley was
chapter recorder for 17 years.
Rev. E. G. Hughes will officiate
and burial will be in Wood Lawr.
cemetery.
* -
Angus Show, Sale
Next on Calendar
Next sale on The Frontier’s
auction calendar is the eighth
annual event sponsored by the
Holt County Aberdeen - Angus
Breeders’ association to be held
at the O’Neill Livestock Market
next Tuesday, February 2.
There will be a banquet in the
American Legion auditorium on
roe eve of the show and sale.
Joe Watson, Cuming county agri
cultural agent, will be featured,
ltcturing on his recent tour of
Europe. A live beef cutting dem
cnstration will be presented.
Chet Randolph, radio station
V/NAX farm director, will be
mastei-of-ceremonies.
• The show will start at 10 a.m.,
with D. J. Cole of Merriman as
toe judge. The sale of 33 bulls
and 17 females will get under
way at 1 p.m. Charles Corkle will
be' auctioneer.
Angus consignors are Arthur
and Audrey Benash, Blaine Gar
’ wood, Arthur J. Hibbs, Fora L.
Knight, Freeman L. Knight, Glen
Lorenz E. L. Miner, Roiland
Miller, Harry Ressel, E. J. Revell,
, ,aers & Hibbs, Siders & Benash,
Siders & Bartos, Clyde Van Ev
ery and Arthur Walter.
Harry E. Ressel is sale mana
ger E. L. Miner, secretary-treas
urer. A group of 4-H and FFA
youths will be honor guests at
the February 1 banquet.
Meanwhile, three registered
Hereford sales have been booked
several weeks later.
Ralph and Harlan Moore will
offer their 160-acre Elkhom val
ltv bottomland farm and person
al property at public auction on
Tuesdav, February 9. The oale
will be held on the premises lo
cated two miles ^ °ne
mile west of Inman. The Tho-m
Bowker Auction ^ervice oi O*
Neill is in charge. (See advertise
ment on page 9.)
to Cruise in Caribbean—
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Gatz plan
to leave from Omaha on Febru
E>y 8 for a 10-day cruise in the
Caribbean. They will fly from
Omaha to Puerto Rico in one
day via Chicago, 111., and Miami,
Fla.
« « ^
J. Victor Johnson
Feted by Relatives
Ex-Celia Rancher at
80th Milestone
J. Victor Johnson, who spent
must of his life on a farm north
of Atkinson, Sunday was sur
prised by a host of relatives and
friends— the occasion bei ig his
30th birthday anniversary.
Mr. Johnson was borh at Eke
by, Sweden. He came to America
at the age of nine with his par
ents, three brothers and three
sisters. The family homes'eided
in Holt county in 1882. He was
the youngest child in the family
of Swedish immigrants.
Mr. Johnson married the for
mer Alma Johnson^also a native
of Sweden, and they ranched for
many years 17 miles northeast of
Atkinson in the Celia communi
ty on the place now occupied by
Earl Schlotfeld.
Between 1919 and 1923 he
was a member of the Holt
county board of supervisors
and over the years has held
township and school district
offices.
Mr. Johnson considers himself
a “dyed-in-the-wool” republican,
and for many years visiting gov
ernors, senators and congressmen
have sought out J. Victor John
son, or vice versa, to shake hands.
His wife died in 1946. Later, he
married Mrs. Christine Walters.
The couple lives in a comfortable
little home on West Fremont
street.
Mr. Johnson is the fattier o»
four sons and one daughter—El
mer of Oakland, Paul of Luon
Lake, Wash., Albert of Lyons.
Stanley of Celia and Mrs. Alpha
McKathnie of Wayne.
Two of his sons, Paul, and fam
ily, and Elmer, and family of
Oakland, were unable to be pres
ent at Sunday’s gathering.
Thirty - four relatives were
present* including Mr. and. Mrs.’
Albert Johnson and family of Ly
ons; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley John
son of Atkinson; Alpha and El
len McKathnie of Wayne; Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Robertson and
son, Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Hen
ry Walters and daughters, Ar
tine and Norma Jean, Mr. and
Mrs. George Nelson, Larry and
Helen Sue, Mr. and Mrs. De
wayne Anson and daughter,
Sharon Kay, Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Johring, Freddie and Sharline.
and Richard Nelson and Frances
Reimer, and Mrs. Johnson’s
mother, Mattie Johnson, who is
93-years-old, and Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny Claussen.
Evening callers were Rev.
and Mrs. Wayne Hall. Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Spindler. Mr. Arno.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Anderson
and Charles Jones, all friends.
(A tape - recorded interview
with Mr. Johnson was broadcast
on the Monday, January 25,
“Voice of The Frontier” program,
WJAG, 780 k.c., 9:45 a.m.)
Mrs. Johnson’s wife, assisted by
relatives, prepared the birthday
dinner which featured roast
geese and chicken and five
cakes.
Mr. Johnson counts nine grand
children and two great-grandchil
dren plus a host of other relatives
by virtue of his second marriage.
Well-Known Holt
Boyd Man Dies
Pinks rman Funeral at
Lynch Friday
LYNCH—John Pinkerman, 50,
well-known Holt-Boyd county
resident, died Tuesday evening
' at his home in Lynch. He had
suffered a long illness.
The' late Mr. Pinkerman was
i born at O’Neill. At an early age
> he moved to the Scottville con.
munity where he resided until
1949, when he and his wife, Nora,
moved into Lynch.
Survivors include: Widow; son
Virgil of Redbird; daughters —
i Mrs. Edwin (Doris) Tuch of Nio
brara and Mrs. Claude (Zed)
Pickering; three brothers and
four sisters. Members of the im
mediate family were near him
when he died.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, four brothers and
two sisters.
The body is at the Coulthard
funeral home at Lynch.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Friday, January 29, at 1
o’clock at Ihe home in Lynch,
and at 2 o’clock at the Dorsey
Presbyterian church. Rev. Joseph
' Walstead, church pastor will of
ficate. Burial will be in the Scott
ville cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Emmet
Slaight, Ray Wilson, Leon Mel
lor, George Calkins, Albert Car
son, Thomas Hiscocks.
Meat Packing Firm Chooses O’Neill
Holt Man
Dies at 97;
Rites Here
D. N. Murphy, Retired
Farmer, Resident of
Nebraska Since ’80
Dennis Nicholas Murphy, 97
year-old retired farmer residing
north of Emmet, died at 5:30 a m ,
Saturday morning, January 23, at
the family home which is 14
miles northwest of O’Neill.
The late Mr. Murphy was born
August 20, 1856, at Ottawa, 111
His parents were the late James
and Ellen Regan Murphy, who
were natives of Ireland.
He came to Nebraska in 1830.
residing for three years in the
Kearney vicinity, in 1883 he
came to Holt county and home
steaded here, proving up in
1888.
On April 11, 1893, at O’Neill,
he married the former Eiu-n
Dixon, who died in 1933.
They became the parents ol 11
children.
Survivors include: Daughters—
Mrs. G. E. Miles of O’Neill, Mrs.
A1 Fntton of O’Neill, Mrs. Marie
McDonald of O’Neill, Mrs. Mike
Troshvnski of O’Neill and Mrs.
Ernest Wedige of Emmet; sons—
James Murphy of O’Neill, Wil
liam Murphy of Opportunity.
John of O'Neill, Francis of O’
Neill and Clarence of north of
Emmet. There are 20 grandchil
dren and 20 great-grandchildren.
One daughter, Helen, died in
193 Y.
Funeral services were con
ducted at 9 a.m., Monday, Janu
ary 25, from St. Patrick’s Cath
olic churcii with Biglin’s in
cnarge of arrangements. Burial
was in Calvary cemetery. Pall
bearers were grandsons—Robert
Miles, Arien Miles, Jack McDon
ald, Thomas McDonald, Gerald
F. Murpny, Calvin Murphy, Bil
lie Murpny and Donald Murphy.
Durre Bums Hand
in Stove Explosion
CHAMBERS — Lloyd Durre,
who resides 22 miles south of O’
Neill and four miles east, suffer
ed bums on his left forearm and
hand about 10:30 p.m., Monday
when an explosion occurred in
the well house at the piace own
ed by Durre’s father, Ernest
Durre.
The young farmer had gone to
the newly-built well house to fill
a kerosene stove. A small kero
sene lamp was burning a few
feet way. The resultant explosion
caused the well house to burn
down. Heip was summoned and
neighbors fathered. They were
succesful in containing the blaze
and preventing the house 50 feet
away and other nearby bui'dings
catching afire.
Durre received medical treat
ment in O’Neill.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Snell of Page
visited their daughter and son-in
law. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Waller,
and familv. Mr. Snejl returned
home that evening and Mrs.
Snell remained until Monday.
414 Sheep.
By a Staff Writer
There lives alone in a wheel
chair in a West O’Neill home one
of O’Neill’s two surviving Span
ish American war veterans.
C. L. Harding, better-known as
“Chaney Tuesday quietly cele
brated ms.81st birthday anniver
sax y There was no fuss. A few
neighbors dropped in, including
Mrs. James Donlin, who lives
nearby and daily stops in to be
a bit of assistance.
Mr. Harding was born in Wood
bury county, Iowa, January 26,
1873, before the towns of Moville
and Kinglsey even existed. He
came with his parents, the late
James E. and Mary Harding, to
Holt county in the spring of
1880.
“Father took a homestead in
the Saratoga community, about
22 miles north of O’Neill. Mother
cried when father picked the
place. She didn't like it. He had
ideas about irrigation and raising
wonderful crops. Things didn’t
turn out too well. There were
some very dry years and the
place was mostly sand,” Mr.
Harding recalls.
Charley was about 16 when
the famous blizzard of January
12, 1888. hit — and the storm
“about broke" the family.
[ “We lost 365 head of sheep ana
49 cattle and didn’t have enough
money to get out of the country.
We had to stick. In the spring,
while dad was in town one day,
our house burned down. My
mother fainted and one of my
sisters drug mother out of the
burning house. That fixed us.
“I went back to Iowa for a few
months and my father left the
nomestead and tree claim to
move into O’NeilL He began car
rying mail from O’Neill to Pad
dock—a roundtrip of 39 miles.
“We were paid $350 per year
to haul the mail and a fellow by
the name of Rich bedded us down
and fed our team at Paddock for
50 cents per night,” Mr. Harding
rccoiicctw.
Young Charley went West for
a tim£, returned to O’Neill and
joined up with the army to help
put down the Spaniards in the
Spanish-American war.
“I was with the Third Nebras
ka infantry regiment. It was a
good outfit — the fellows were
rugged and tough. We were in
Cuba seven or eight months. I
spent some time in a garrison
located about 17 miles from Ha
vanna.”
Henry Grady is the only
other Spanish-American war
veteran now residing at O'Neill,
and Mr. Grady is spending the
winter in Oregon.
Without benefit of apprentice
ship or training, Mr. Harding ac
cumulated a set of paint brushes
and ladders and established him
self in the paint contracting bus
iness. He worked at his trade in
O’Neill and at Spokane, Wash.,
for a total of 40 years. During
many of those years he resided
here with his mother at 305 W.
Fremont, where he continues to
live. His father died here while
Mr. Harding was living at Spo
kane.
For a time Mr. Harding was
deputy Holt county sherifx, serv
ing under the late Sheriff Char
les Hall. Mr. Harding was active
in militia work and with the
John Gokie, siellar St. Joe guard, receives the Holt county
prep basketball tourney trophy from D. E. Nelson of O'Neill,
tournament director. The Atkinson parochial team defeated Stu
art. O'Neill high and Page in that order to become 1954 Holt cage
| champions.—The Frontier Photo.
CattleLostin’88 Storm
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
I
C. L. ( Charley ) Karding ... Spanish-American warriors
were lough.—The Frontier Photo.
, . .
nomeguards while units existed
here. He has been a member of
the Odd Fellows lodge for many
years.
His wife, the former Anna San
ford Davis, died in 1946. Mr.
Harding has one brother, B. A.
/“Bert”), living in Los Angelas,
Calif.; a stepdaughter, Elsie Uhl.
and a niece, Mrs. Alice Bridges.
Mrs. Donlin is a “shirt-tailJ
relative, Mr. Harding explains,
and Miss Zittella Kestenhoitz,
who calls frequently and takes
special interest in “Uncle Char
ley,” is a “sort of a relative in a
roundabout way.”
Mr. Harding suffers from a cir
culatory ailment in the leg and
has spent considerable time in
the Veterans hospital.
(A tape - recorded interview
with Mr. Harding was broadcast
j on the Wednesday “Voice of The
I Frontier” program, WJAG, 730
1 kc., 9:45 a.m.)
12 Autos Slated for
This Year’s Show
Plans for the 1954 O’Neill auto show, under the sponsorship |
of The Frontier in cooperation with leading automobile dealers
in the area, are moving forward.
Bill Bowker, show manager, declares this year’s edition—the
second annual—will be “bigger and better.” Twelve leading make
automobiles will be exhibited at the American Legion auditorium |
during the two-day affair—Thursday and Friday, February' 4 and 5. .
They are;
BUTCK—A. Marcellus Buick of O’Neill.
CADILLAC—Lew White Motor Co., of O’Neill.
CHEVROLET—Lew White Motor Co., of O’Neill.
DE SOTO—Shierk Motor Co., of O’Neill.
FORD—Lohaus Motor Co., of O’Neill.
LINCOLN—Carlin Motor Co., of Sioux City.
MERCURY—Contois Motor Co., of Neligh.
OLDSMOBILE—Lew White Motor Co., of O’Neill.
PLYMOUTH—Shierk Motor Co., of O’Neill.
PONTIAC—William Krotter Co., of O’Neill and Spencer.
In addition, spaces on the show floor have been reserved for
CHRYSLER and NASH.
There will be many free gifts distributed among the show vis
itors and a 40-minute entertainment show is scheduled to start
at 4:05 p.m., on Thursday—opening day. The program will be broad
cast by the “Voice of The Frontier” through radio station WJAG
(Norfolk, 780 k.c.)
Free coffee will be served. Show hours are 1 to 9:30 p.m., both
days.
Officers of the Kauzor Co.,
Inc., independent Chicago, 111.,
meat packing firm, Saturday vot
ed to locate a branch plant at O'
Neill in an expansion program
which is getting underway.
Exact site of the new plant to
be constructed here has not yet
been determined.
A fortnight ago, G. A. Kauzor
and one of his partners visited
O’Neill and toured a half-dozen
possible plant locations.'
They told members of the
Chamber of Commerce new in
dustries committee, headed by
James W. Rooney, they were “fa
vorably impressed with O’Neill.”
Word of the decision to lo
cate at O'Neill was forwarded
to the committee by William J.
Froelish, Chicago attorney who
maintains his home here. Mr.
Froelich had held several con
ferences with Mr. KauzoT dur
ing the negotiations.
“Barring a hitch in working
out details, involving acquiring
of real estate and lease - rental
agreements with an investment
house, we expect the plans 10
move right ahead,” Mr. Rooney
said.
The company will start O’Neill
operations on a small scale but
will plan their installation here
to make it easy to expand. Ini
iailly around 300 head of cattle
will be slaughtered per week.
Later, if economic conditions
permit, they may handle as
many as 1,&00 to .1,500 head per
week. About 12 to 15 men will be
employed at the beginning.
The Kauzor firm plans to
slaughter only beef at the outset.
No estimates have been given
on the approximate cost of the
piant, yards and equipment.
City Engineer James Thorbum
of Norfolk was busy this week
surveying several possible sites.
Sewage, water supply and track
age are factors wmch will help
determine the plant location.
Kauzor’s architects and engineers
will take over after surveyed
plats have been submitted to the
j Chicago firm.>_.^ ......
Coffee Price Okay—
While If Lasts—
The Council Oak store adver
tisement on page 3 of this issue
quotes Chase & Sanborn drip or
regular grind coffee at 89-cents
per pound; instant coffee, 87
cents for a four-ounce jar. Darrel
Slaymaker, store manager, early
Wednesday received a telegram
declaring an expected shipment
of this coffee would not be re
ceived this week.
Unfortunately, the page on
which the Council Oak appears
had already been printed when
the notification was received and
it was impossible to remove cof
fee from the ad.
Says Mr. Slaymaker: “We have
on hand a limited supply of this
coffee and it will be sold, while
the supply lasts, at the 89- and
87-cent figures, as advertised.’’
William Anderson's Honored
on 51st Anniversary—
The five daughters and their
families of Mr. and Mrs. William
Anderson staged a surprise din
ner for them at their home Sun
day honoring their 51st wedding
anniversary.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Peters of O’Neill,
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Hitchcock
of Atkinson, Mr. and Mrs. Har
old Williamson and family of
Stuart, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Timm and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Orville McKim and family and
Mrs. Billie Marcellus, all of O’
Neill.
Parley Set
for Board,
Road Group
10-Day Stay Granted;
Closed Session Set
for Friday, Feb. 5
A 10-day stay in the manda
mus action brought against the
Holt county board of supervisors
went on file Tuesday.
The Holt County Rural Road
improvement association, headed
by Frank J. Brady of Atkinson,
a fortnight ago filed an action
in Holt county district court re
quiring the county board to show
cause why the supervisor dis
tricts should not be redistricted
The plaintiffs demanded an an
swer by February 1.
The new answer date is Feb
ruary 10. However, a closed door
conference has been scheduled
for Friday, February 5, to be
held at the courthouse. Officials
of the road group and their at
torney, Elven Butterfield of Ne
ligh, and the supervisors with
their attorney, William W. Grif
fin, will wrestle with the prob
lem.
The mandamus action is bas
ed on an ancient Nebraska law
which provides for redistrict -
ing of the counties following
each federal census. The re
vamped districts, the law says,
are to be determined by vote*
cast in the last preceding gen
eral election.
The law was born during thi
era of settlement of the state and
was designed to balance repre
sentation on the county board
according to population changes
However, during .the 193Q’s and.
early ’40’s population in the °
county decreased.
Based on latest vote figures.
O’Neill and Grattan township to
gether can boast almost two su- ,
pervisors, while the northern
townships in the county all put
together could account for little
more than one supervisor.
How the problem will be re
solved at the closed session is
now a matter of popular specu- #
lation.
Damaged Car Is
Abandoned by Soldier
A car registered to Cpl. L.
Dillon of Kentucky was aban
doned about 5:30 a.m., Tuesday
after the westbound machine
had left the highway, overturned
and ended up on the south side
of the road. State Highway Pa- .
trolman Robert Gude of O’Neill
was summoned by a motorist,
but Gude said he found no trace
of the occupant or occupants.
A check of ambulance firms
and hospitals in the area failed
to locate Corporal Dillon. Per
sons living near the scene of the
acident, IV2 miles east of the
state weighing station at the
i unction of U.S. highways 20 and
275, told Gude they knew noth
ing about the accident.
Visit Verdigre—
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bartos and
Karen visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Bartos and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Bartos, jr., in Verdigre Sunday
Helen Steinberg, 87,
Expires at Orchard
PAGE— Mrs. Helen Steinberg,
87, died about 6 p.m., Saturday,
January 23, at her home south
east of Page, in the Orchard lo
cality, after a lingering illness.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 2 o’clock Tuesday after
noon from the United Brethern
church at Orchard.
The late Mrs. Steinberg came
to the Orchard vicinity in 1909
from Dodge. Since 1919, she has
resided on a place four miles
west and two miles north of
Orchard.
Mr. Steinberg died several
years ago and Mrs. Steinberg
continued to keep house for
her son, John, until about a
year ago when her daughter,
Mrs. Marie Clemans, came to
help with the work.
Survivors iriclude: Daughters—
Mrs. Clyde Sponhower of Den
ver, Colo.; Mrs. Henry Wegner
of Scribner, and Mrs. Marie
Clemans of Creighton; sons —
Herbert of Page, Floyd of Or
chard, and John at home.
The temperature dropped to
16 below zero last Thursday.
Sirens, Bells to Signal Start of March
O'Neill mothers will join moth
erhood throughout the nation >n !
a march on polio tonight ,(Thurs
day), starting at 7 o’clock. Fire !
sirens and church bells will
roundoff simultaneously, signal
ing the start of the door-to-door
appeal for funds with which to
combat the dread disease of po
lio.
The city has been divided into
districts and the mothers have
been organized into teams. A
porch light turned on or a light
in tne window will be the signal
to the marchers to stop for contri
butions.
Similar marches are scheduled
in Ewing, Emmet, Stuart and
Chambers.
Late this afternoon a mobile
loudspeaker will move ihrougn
the streets of O'Neill as a re
minder of the march to begin
several hours later.
Chairman of the march in O’
Neill is Mrs. Frank Clements.
Captains are Mesdames Roy J.
Shelhamer, Robert Allendorfer,
George Head and Melvin Marcel
lus.
Lieutenants are Mesdames Ed
Wilson, Dale Fetrow, Floyd Her
i shiser, Archie Bright, J. Ed Han
1 cock, Loretta Hynes, Mark Muff,
Frank Eppenbach, Carroll W.
Stewart, Leo Tomjack, John Har
bottle, A. W. Carroll, Robert
Lowery, Laurence F. Urban and
A. Neil Dawes.
Block wardens will be the Miss
es Mary Ann Stratmeyer, Rose
Ann Schaffer, Sharon Hancock;
Mesdames Erroll Held, Dale Per
ry, Duane Pihlbrick, Freeman
unght, Archie Bowen, John Ha
velkd, Esther C. Harris, Ed Wil
son, Robert E. Moore, Dwight C.
Worcester, Dean Streeter, Floyd
Hershiser, J. D. Osenbaugh, Har
ry Sullivan, Frank Sullivan, Ly
nus Howard, Albert Sipes, Wil
liam D. Mattern, Dariel Beck
with, Don Petersen, Virgil L.
Laursen, Harold Strong, Gene
Porter, Ralph Beckwith, Jerome
Spittler, John J. Harrington,
Charles Richter, Laurence
Haynes, Anthony J. O’Donnell,
William H. Bowker, H. L. Lind
berg, Herman Janzing, Orville
Peterson, Stuart Hartigan, John
DeWitt, Clifford Harding, William
W. McIntosh, J. Robert Berigan,
Lloyd Liedtke, C. R. Hill, Dale I
Curran, W. W. Waller, George
Hammond, Preston Jones, Elwin
Rubeck, Neil F. Clark, George
Janousek, William White, Lional
L. Siefken, Laurence F. Urban,
D. D. DeBolt, Marvin Miller, Wil
liam W. Griffin, James Corkle,
Leona Shoemaker, Harold Don
ohoe, Virgil Tomlinson, Alan Van
Vleck, Oliver Ross, Woody Grim,
Lewis Coker, Durven W. Kipple
and Tony Asimus.
Meanwhile, a polio benefit
talent show is scheduled for
Friday night, January 29, in the
public school auditorium, start -
ing with a band concert at 7:30
and followed by the main
show at 8. Mrs. John C. Wat
son is in charge of arrange
ments
There will be a polio benefit
bottle drive in O’Neill on Satur
day, January 30. Whistles will
blow to remind residents to place
empty bottles on their doorsteps.
Boy Scouts and seventh and
eighth grad boys will pick up the
bottles.
The miscellaneous auction con
ducted Saturday in downtown
O’Neill netted $169.50 for the po
lio fund, and freewill offerings
taken at the Holt county basket
ball tournament amounted to $75.
C. R. (“Bob”) Hill is chairman
of the drive in behalf of the Holt
county chapter, National Founda-.
tion for Infantile Paralysis. Mrs.
Robert Kurtz is O’Neill chairman
Harry E. Ressel and L. D. Put
nam are conducting a sale of po
(Continued on page 4)