The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 01, 1955, Page 12, Image 12

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HANSEN—Mr. and Mrs. Har
old Hansen of Spencer, a son,
Charles LeRoy, weighing 9 pounds
7% ounces, born Thursday, Aug
ust 25, at St. Anthony’s hospital,
O’Neill.
WALTON—Mr. and Mrs. Wil
lard Walton of O’Neill, a daugh
ter, Connie Lou, weighing 7
pounds 10% ounces, born Sun
day, August 28, at St. Anthony’s
hospital, O’Neill.
KLOPPENBORG—Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Kloppenborg of O’Neill, a
son, weighing 7 pounds 6y4 ounc
es,, bom Tuesday, August 30, at
St. Anthony’s hospital, O’Neill.
STINEBACK — Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Stineback of St. Ed
ward, a daughter, weighing 8
pounds 15% ounces, bom Tues
day, August 30, at St. Anthony’s
hospital, O’Neill.
ODENBAUGH— Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Odenbaugh of Sidney,
Mont., a son, Dwight Albert,
weighing 5 pounds 12 ounces,
born Sunday, August 21, at Sid
ney. Mrs. Odenbaugh is the for
mer Laura Wetzler.
SCHWAGER — Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Sch wager of Ewing, a
daughter, Victoria Susan, weigh
ing 7 pounds 14 ounces, born
Tuesday, August 23, at the Tilden
hospital.
riUKiNiK—Mr. and Mrs. Utto
Hornik of Milwaukee, Wise., a
daughter, Judy Maurine, born
Saturday, August 6. The Horniks
now have a boy and girl. Mrs.
Hornik is the former Shidley
Krupicka, a former teacher of the
Lonesome, Prairie school district
54, which was destroyed in the
1942 tornado. She was the teacher
at that time.
CAMPBELL — Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Campbell of Stuart, a daugh
ter, Denise Agnes, weighing 7
pounds 1 ounce, born Saturday,
August 27, at. Atkinson Memorial
hospital.
MURPHY—Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Murphy of Stuart, a son, Daniel
Lee, weighing 6 pounds 5 ounces,
born Sunday, August 28, at Atkin
son Memorial hospital.
KAUP — Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Kaup of Stuart, a daughter, Don
na Janet, weighing 6 pounds 15
ounces, born Monday, August 29,
at Atkinson Memorial hospital.
JOHNSON—Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Johnson of Verdel, a son, weigh
ing 7 pounds 4 ounces, born Wed
nesday, August 24, at Sacred
Heart hospital, Lynch.
STEINBACH — Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Steinbach of Verdel, a
daughter, weighing 8 pounds 10
ounces, born Saturday, August 27,
at Sacred Heart hospital, Lynch.
FOX—A/2c Robert Fox of Sev
eran, Md., a son, Timothy Jay,
weighing 7 pounds 2 ounces, born
Monday, August 29, at Severan.
Mrs. Fox is the former Katheryn
Seger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilford Seger of Stuart. Mr. Fox
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Fox of O’Neill.
HYNES—Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hy
nes of Englewood, Colo., a son,
Daniel Lee, weighing 7 pounds
3 Vi ounces, born Wednesday,
August 17 at Englewood. Mr.
Hynes is the son of Mrs. Loretta
Hynes of O’Neill. The couple
has one daughter. Susan.
VENTEICHER—Mr. and Mrs.
Sylvester Venteicher of Norfolk,
formerly of Clearwater, a son,
born Friday, August 26, in Our
Lady of Lourdes hospital, Nor
folk.. Mrs. Venteicher is the for
mer Margaret Sauser, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sauser
of O’Neill.
GEARY—Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Geary of Inman, a daughter,
Mary Etta, weighing 7 pounds,
born Wednesday, August 24, at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Maden
Funk at Inman.
FIX—Mr. and Mrs. Gale Fix of
Scottsbluff, a son, Danny Dee,
born Monday, August 22. The
the parental grandparents are
Mr. a ad Mrs. Elmer Fix and the
maternal grandmother is Mrs.
Alice Prewitt, all of Amelia. The
Fix’s have four other children.
‘Critically 111’—
PAGE—Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Scott arrived Sunday at the Allen
Haynes home. They were en
route from their home at Ft. Ri
ley, Kans., to Atkinson where
they attended a Johnson family
reunion. They left Tuesday for
Robertson, la., where they will
visit Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Scott. Mr. Scott is “critically
ill.”
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Alan H. Walters, 22, of O’Neill
and Constance Pereboom, 18, of
O’Neill, August 31.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
William C. Plautz, 24, of Den
ton and Joyce Ann Clasey, 20, of
Lincoln, August 27.
Jerome Bruno Roth, 28, of El
gin and Bernice Cleta Koenig, 23,
of Ewing, August 27.
Cecil Dale Wilson, 23, of North
Platte and Shirley Ann Nobes, 18,
of Atkinson, August 30.
Hospital Notes
ST ANTHONY’S (O’Neill)
Admissions: August 24— Baby
Boy Sanders, O’Neill; Hugh Mc
Manus, O’Neill; Mrs. George Mott,
O’Neill; Mrs. Ed Eggen, Page;
Willard Van Buren, Spencer; Rita
Boyle, O’Neill. 25—Mrs. Harold
Hansen and Baby Boy Hansen
Spencer; Mrs. Leo Schoenle, Ex
celsior, Minn.; Simon Bosn, O’
Neill; Jerry Nelson, Inman; Mrs.
Owen Parks, Page. 26—Dr. Er
nest Cofield, Rushville, Ind.; Mrs.
Ernest Cofield, Rushville, Ind.;
Ann Asimus, O’Neill; Mrs. John
Wenner, Atkinson; Steven Day,
Chambers. 27—Mrs. Ross Ridge
way, O’Neill; Hugh McManus, O’
Neill. 28—Mrs. Barton Walton and
Baby Girl Walton, O’Neill. 29 —
Frank Smith, O’Neill. 30— Mrs.
Raymond Stineback and Baby Girl
Stineback, St. Edward; Mrs. Er
nest Kloppenborg and Baby Boy
Kloppenborg, O’Neill; Boyd O’
Bryan, Colome, S.D. 31—Mrs. Ed
ward Flood, O’Neill.
Dismissals: August 24— Loren
Doty, Dakota City. 26—Mrs. Harry
Lansworth, O’Neill; Hugh Mc
Manus, O’Neill; Rita Boyle, O’
Neill. 27—Mrs. Teresa Rooney, O’
Neill; Mrs. Duane Sanders and
son, O’Neill; Danny Slaymaker,
O’Neill; Bill Kinney, Burwell;
Mrs. Owen Parks, Page; Steven
Day, Chambers; Douglas Shaw,
O’Neill. 28—Mrs. Ernest Cofield,
Rushville, Ind.; Ann Asimus, O’
Neill; Hugh McManus, O’Neill. 29
—Jerry Nelson, Inman; Mrs. Dar
yl Walling and daughter, Ewing;
Dr. Ernest Cofield, Rushville, Ind.;
Mrs. Oscar Hansen, Emmet; Mrs.
Henry Winkler, Atkinson. 31 —
Donald Adams, Harvard.
Hospitalized: Mrs. Lois Adams,
Chambers; Mrs. S. C. Barnett,
Amelia; Mrs. Minnie Bay, O’Neill;
Simon Bosn, O’Neill; Mrs. Ed Eg
gen, Page; Mrs. Harold Hansen,
Spencer; M. B. Higgins, O’Neill;
Mrs. Ernest Kloppenborg, O’Neill;
Walter McNichols, O’Neill; Mrs.
George Mott, O’Neill; Boyd O’Bry
an, Colome, S.D.; Mrs. Ross
Ridgeway, O’Neill; Walter
Schmohr, O’Neill; Mrs. Leo
Schoenle, Excelsior, Minn.; Frank
Smith, O’Neill; Mary Lou Sobot
ka, Inman; Mrs. Raymond Stine
back, St. Edward; Willard Van
Buren, Spencer; Mrs. John Wen
ner, Atkinson; Mrs. Barton Wal
ton, O’Neill; Mrs. Edward Flood,
O’Neill.
Social Security Chief
Staffs Booth at Fair
By MRS. N. D. ICKES, SR.
The Frontier's Feature Writer
CHAMBERS—There was a
stranger occupying a booth at the
recent Holt county fair—a stran
ger who wanted to be friendly
with everybody.
The man was Emmett H. Dun
away, manager of the Omaha
district of social security, who
explained the purpose, regula
tions and benefits of the social
security program, providing an
old age and survivors insurance
trust fund, to all who were inter
ested. Main purpose of the social
security booth was to educate
farmers and ranchers, whose sta
tus in the social security field
has been changed.
Beginning January, 1955, a self
employed farmer or a farm em
ployee has social security cover
age under the new law. The
first requirement is to obtain a
social security card and number.
(a) If you are a farm employ
ee, you are covered by the law
if your employer paid you $100
or more cash wages in the year.
The number of days work does
not factor, only the amount of
money paid to him counts. The
tax is two percent for both em
ployee and employer on the em
ployee’s wages up to $4200 in the
year.
(b) It you are a farm employ
er, you must have paid at least
$100 cash wages to an employee
during the year. If you are an
employer, you must keep the fol
lowing records for such em
ployee to whom you pay at least
$100 cash in the year for agricul
tural labor.
(1) The name and the social
security account number of the
employee.
(2) Cash wage payments to
the employee.
/nv rm. _ _1 • n _
VO/ auc atuvuuo) li auj, uc
ducted as employee tax.
The employer deducts the em
ployee’s part of the tax when he
pays the wages to the employee.
If the employer pays taxable
cash wages totaling less than $2,
500 before October 1 of the year,
this is the only tax return he
will file to report and pay the
social security taxes for the year
on his farm employees.
If he pays taxable cash wages
totaling more than $2,500 before
October 1, he must also file one
or more returns on form 943A.
If you farm land which you
lease or rent or work as a
share-cropper^ you are con
sidered as self-employed for
social security purposes. A
share cropper is considered to
be the same as a renter.
If you farm land under the a
bove conditions you are termed
a farm operator and it does not
matter if you farm the land your
self, with or without hired help
or whether you live on the farm
or whether you turn over the
operation of the farm to one or
more employees and live in town!
Rentals from rental or lessee
arrangements are excluded from
earnings that count for social
security purposes. Only your
earnings as an individual farm
operator would count for social
security.
The conditions to be met by a
self employed farmer are these:
[ (1) Obtain a social security ac
| count number.
(2) Make a return on form
1040 (U.S. individual income tax
return).
(3) Attach to the return the
schedule for reporting your self
employment income from farm
ing and any other source.
(4) Send the return and sch
edule to the district director of
internal revenue with payment
of any tax due. The rate of self
employment is three percent.
The amount of self-employ
ment you owe is not affected by
the number of income-tax ex
emptions you may have. Self
employment tax may be due
even though you would not owe
income if you had 4 exemptions.
Should your net earnings from
self employment be $400 you
would owe $12 self-employment
tax.)
If you should also work as an
employee and you receive wages
which are subject to employer
and employee social security tax
es, your wages will also count for
social security purposes. Should
you receive $2,000 wages for fac
tory work In addition to your
farm income the maximum ac
count of your farm Income sub
j e c t to self-employment tax
would be $2,200 ($4,200 minus
$2,000).
The method of computing your
self-employment earnings is ar
rived at by subtracting wages
paid to hired workers, seed and
fertilizer from your gross earn
ings for the year from farming.
The optional method is as fol
lows.
(1) If your income for a year
from self-employment is from
$800 to $1800 you may report
one-half of the gross income in
stead of figuring the actual net
earnings. (Thus, if your gross
earnings from farming are $800
you may report $400 regardless
of the amount of your net earn
ings.)
V*-/ xi juui 51 uaa iiiv-wnic xux
the year from farm employment
is more than $1,800 and your act
ual net earnings are less than
$900, you may report $900 in
stead of reporting the actual net
earnings.
The optional method is used
only in computing self-employ
ment tax and applies only to
farm income.
Legal partnerships may be form*
ed between a husband and wife
or a father and son if desired but
the amount of net earnings
necessary to apply for the maxi
mum benefits, would be raised
to $8400. In that case the maxi
mum payment, monthly, would
be $108.50 each, or $217.00 to
gether, after age 65.
As a wife, she is entitled to a
monthly payment of $54.30, while
her husband received $108.50 or
$162.80 together per month on
the basis of net earnings of $4200
reported, after age 65.
Net earnings of $400 or more
for the year are required for the
minimum payment of $48 per
month after age 65.
At age 72, benefits become
straight annuities and may be
drawn without retirement and
are not restricted.
The Omaha district covers 18
counties of northeast Nebraska
emu acvcu ui auum. w coi iu w ex.
Should you have any questions
concerning social security, you
are invited to address the social
security administration at Omaha,
for further information, Mr.
Dunaway told us he also visited
the Antelope county fair at Ne
ligh. The visits, he explained,
were “experimental”.
“Quite a few people would
drop by the booth and pickup
literature,” Mr. Dunaway ex
plained, “and no few of them
eyed us skeptically.”
“It was a test of interest and
an opportunity to talk social sec
urity with a lot of people and be
helpful to them,” the district
director continued, “ and the re
sults will be analyzed to deter
mine if the visits to the fairs will
become an annual affair.”
Club Makes Plans
for Celebration^—
PAGE—Mrs. Alton Braddock
was hostess to 11 members of the
Improvement club Monday eve- :
ning. Plans were made for free
day. Committees were appointed
and the club will serve pie and
ice cream and be responsible for :
a fish pond for the children—a
nickel per catch.
The Amercian Legion auxiliary .
will serve sandwiches and coffee.
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Phone 51 — O’Neill
Sick & Injured
O’NEILL — Mrs. Roy Lanman
was on the “critical” list last
week at the University hospital,
Omaha. However, this week she
is “improved”. Her son, Army
Pvt. Don Lanman, was flown from
Alaska to be near her, arriving
Sunday. . . Danny Slaymaker was
released Saturday from St. An
thony’s hospital. He submitted to
an emergency appendectomy
Tuesday night, August 23. . .
Harden Anspach and son, Keith,
returned Wednesday, August
25, from Rochester, Minn. . . Mrs.
Leonard Davis took her mother,
Mrs. William Morgan, to Omaha’
Thursday. Mrs. Morgan was ad
mitted to Clarkston Memorial
hospital for medical treatment. . .
Mrs. A. E. Derickson has been ill
this week. . . Rudolph Wetzler is
hospitalized at Yankton, S.D. He
suffered a stroke Tuesday, Aug
ust 23. 'He is in “serious” condi
tion.
PAGE—Word has been received
here that Rev. Ottis Brownfield of
Cozad, a former pastor here, suf
fered a slight stroke recently. Mrs.
Brownfield is slowly recovering
from a severe attack of the influ
enza. . . Mrs. Owen Parks enter
ed St. Anthony’s hospital last
Thursday for minor surgery for
removal of a cyst. She was re
leased Saturday. . . Karen Kay
Kelly was the victim of an attack
of summer influenza last Thurs
day. . . Noel Wood is convalescing
at the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Wood, at Lincoln
after an appendectomy performed
Sunday, August 21, at Bryan Me
morial hospital, Lincoln.
ROCK FALLS—Mr. and Mrs.
John Schultz and daughter, Trudy,
visited at the home of John’s cou
sins, Dr. and Mrs. Dale Kirkgard,
and family in Iowa City, la., Mon
day and Tuesday, August 22 and
23, while consulting a child spe
cialist for little Trudy. Enroute
home they spent Wednesday night,
August 24, and part of last Thurs
day in Omaha visiting John’s sis
ters, Mrs. Owen Hiatt and Mrs.
Bernard Spry, and families and
brother, Nels. Misses Shirley and
Betty Schultz, who had been vis
iting there, returned to O’Neill
with them.
VENUS—Kenneth Caskey be
came ill Sunday night and was
rushed to the Creighton hospj+al
where an appendectomy was per
formed early Monday morning.
Reports from the hospital were
that he was getting along “just
tine.” . . . Dale Dorr is still at
the Veterans hospital at Lincoln.
Mrs. Dorr and daughters are stay
ing with his parents, the Herman
Dorrs. . Mrs. Mable Davis received
word of the serious illness of her
father, Fred Aden of Colome, S.D.
She went to Colome Monday.
CELIA — Mrs. D. E. Scott
daughters, Dorothy and Mrs.
Gene Livingston, went to Picks
town Wednesday, Aug. 24, to visit
the Scotts’ son, Delbert of Butte,
who is in the Pickstown hospital
recovering from an injury re
ceived Monday when a form at
Ft. Randall dam, where he works,
fell on him. No bones were brok
en but the ligaments and nerves
were injured.
AMELIA — Mrs. Bertha Sam
mons came home from St. Vin
cent’s hospital in Sioux City on
Saturday, August 20. Her son,
Forest, built a porch on their
house last week so Mrs. Sammons
could be in the sunshine. . . Mrs.
S. C. Barnett, who submitted to
major surgery at St. Anthony’s
hospital in O’Neill, is recuperat
ing nicely.
INMAN—Jerry Nelsen, oldest
son of Superintendent and Mrs.
Nelsen, who underwent an appen
dectomy at St. Anthony’s hospi
tal in O’Neill last week, was able
to return home on Monday.
EWING — Mrs. Cora Canaday
has entered University hospital,
Omaha, for surgery on one eye.
. . . Mrs. Mabel Boies went to
Omaha Monday for a physical
checkup.
CHAMBERS—Earl David went
to Lincoln last Thursday for a
medical checkup. He was accom
panied by Mrs. Verle David, who
visited her grandmother, Mrs.
Neff, at the hospital.
REDBIRD—Mr. and Mrs. Har
old Halstead and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Parks of Page took Mrs.
Leonard Halstead to Omaha Sun
day where she will remain for a
checkup.
DELOIT — Henry Mock fell
while putting up hay and broke
his hip. He had tools in his
pocket which caused the break to
be more serious, it was thought.
CHAMBERS—Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Tibbetts drove to Neligh
Monday evening to visit C. J.
Barnum at the Antelope hospital.
Omahans Visit—
PAGE—Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
King and his mother, Mrs. King of
Omaha, were Saturday and Sun
day guests in the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Zell
ers. Sunday guests of the Zellers
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Heiss
and sons of Page and George and
Grace Zellers of Chambers to
visit with the Omaha guests, Nel
ta and Elona King, who have
spent a couple of months with
their grandparents, returned to
Omaha with them Sunday eve
ning.
Deed—State of Nebr to Char
ley W Peterson 7-25-55 $5440
All Sec 16-27-14
Too Late to Gassify
WANTED: Waitress. — M & M
Cafe, O’Neill. 18c
iVANTED: Custom ensilage cut
ting.—Joe Grutsch, O’Neill.
18p35
rOR SALE: Model 94 Winchester
rifle, .30-.30 cal.—Ben Vidrick
sen, O’Neill. 18c
NOTICE
Cleanup and election of officers
for the Paddock Union ceme
tery will be Saturday, Sept
ember 3, 2 p.m.—Frank Nel
son, treasurer. 18p35
Rockets, Chambers
in Playoff Series
The O’Neill Rockets and Cham
bers Towners, who share top
honors in the North-Central Ne
braska day-and-night baseball
circuit, will stage a three-game
playoff series (tonight) Thursday
in Carney park here. The game
will start at 8 o’clock.
The second game in the series
will be staged at the Holt county
fairgrounds at Chambers on Sun
day, September 4, starting at
2:30 p.m.
If a third and decisive game is
needed, it will be played next
week in Carney park under the
lights on a date to be announced.
Chambers and O’Neill have
clashed twice this season. O’Neill
won the first encounter, 8-6, and
Chambers won the second, 17-1.
Defeat Verdigre
The Rockets defeated the Ver
digre team in a game played un
der the lights at Carney park
Thursday evening, 5-2.
Danny Helmer, winning pit
cher, hurled the first seven inn
ings, .striking out eight and giving
up eight hits. Roland Everetts,
relief hurler, gave up one hit and
struck out two.
The Rockets collected 10 hits
from Vejoda and Boelter, Ver
digre battery.
Boxscore:
R H E
O’Neill ....000 002 030—5 10 1
Verdigre .. 100 000 100—2 2 2
Miss Kathryn Judge
Shower Honoree—
MiSs Kathryn Judge was hon
ored in a pre-nupital shower
Tuesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Myron Bloomer at Ran
dolph. Mrs. Maude Blotz, Mrs.
Marvin Weber and Mrs. Caroline
Beltz were hostesses. About 30
guests attended. Many gifts were
presented to Miss Judge.
She is bethrothed to Robert
Petsche of O’Neill, formerly of
Randolph.
Miss Miner Competes in
Wahoo, Bartlett Rodeos—
Miss Sharon Miner attended
the rodeo at Wahoo August 25
26-27 where she placed second
in the barrel race
She attended the Bartlett rod
eo August 27-28. She was dis
qualified on Saturday but placed
first on Sunday.
Dorr to Teach in
Michigan College
(Photo at left)
PAGE—Duane Dorr, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Dorr, who has
taught English in the Chetek
Wise., public school system the
past two years, has accepted a
position as insturctor in English
composition at Flint college
Flint, Mich. B7
Previous to teaching at Chetek
Mr. Dorr taught at Cameron’
Wise., and at Neligh. . ’ •
Mr. Dorr recevied his bachelor
of arts degree from Wayne State
Teachers’ college and lus master's
degree in English from the grad
uate school at the University of
Wisconsin.
Mr. Dorr left on Tuesday for
Flint and Mrs. Dorr, Carolyn and
David will remain with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Merwyn
French, sr., until housing ac
comodations can be found.
Dorr . . . enroute to Flint,
Mich.
_\
JUSTICE COURT
Forrest DeVault. no trip permit,
$10 and costs, August 8, Kirk.
Dorr ... to Fllut.
Mr. and Mrs. George Mellor,
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Lanman and
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Grenier went
to Omaha Saturday to visit their
mother, Mrs. Roy Lanman, who is
hospitalized.
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