The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 05, 1956, Page 9, Image 9

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    Sisters Reunite
First Time in Over
Half- Century
PAGE—An Ames family reun
ion was held at the home of Mr.!
md Mrs. Robert Harvey at Page
Sunday, June 24.
All of the nine brothers and
sisters were present except three. I
Absent were Hugh of Chicago,
Hi., and Marvin and Ernest, both
if Eugene, Ore.
Those in attendance were Mr.
md Mrs Jay Ames of Neligh;,
Mr. and Mrs. Will Green of Ft. I
I^aramie, Wyo.; Mrs. Orinda
Hengston of Eugene, Ore.; Mr. I
md Mrs. Roily Scott of Ottumwa,
la., Mr. and Mrs Fred Misters of
Lies Moines, la.; Mr. and Mrs. I
Dan Stauffer of Elm Creek; Mr.
md Mrs. Darrell Ames of Bruns
wick; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Har
vey and Mr and Mrs, Calvin
Harvey and sons, all of Page;
Dale Ames and family of Norfolk;
Mr and Mrs Leonard Wright
and family of Sioux City and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stauffer of
Hastings.
Afternoon callers were Mr. and
Mrs. Will Edward? of Orchard,
Mr and Mrs. L. G Bernholtz,
Donald Snyder and Duran Ruth
erford
Hugh Ames called and the sis
ters and one brother, Jay, talked
with him
This is the first time the five
sisters had been together in 50
years.
Other Page News
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Stevens and
Mrs. Emma Canaday accompan
ied Mr. and Mrs. William Neu
bauer of Ocheyedan, Ia„ Satur
day, June 23, where Mrs. Cana
da* visited while the others went
to the home of the Stevens’
daughter, Mrs. John Emerson,
and family at Charles City, la.,
for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Olson of
Oakland were Sunday, June 24,
guests in the home of their son
in-law and daughter. Mr. and
Mrs. Merwyn French, jr.
Wayne Henderson of Orchard
recently installed an electric
pump at the Elmer Trowbridge
farm.
A. T. Crumly, R. V. Crumly,
Lyndley Crumly, Emmitt Thomp
son, Art Grass and Jesse Kelly
md their families picnicked in
the Page park Sunday noon, June
24, in honor of Mrs. Percy Grass
>f Drain, Ore., Mrs. Alton Grass
if Roseburg, Ore., and Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Grass of Omaha,
who have been visiting here.
Miss Marie Heiss, who is li
brarian at the Kearney college
during the summer session, spent
the June 23-24 weekend with
Mrs. Lou Heiss.
Msr. Edgar Stauffer will lead
a series of lessons on “Christian
Responsibility in a Revolutionary
World’’ during the next four
WSCS meetings, beginning the
tot meeting in July.
WARNING!
get rid of
don’t make
the mistakes
of others
A re—« snrrey of pot—del
fire hazards in homes in one nf
Nebraska's larger cities, disclosed
that the most common and seri
ous hazard was recessive nsa o/
extension cords, or cords in poor
condition! This surrey was made,
on a roluntary basis, by the fire
department in this particular city,
fa addition, the turner revealed
nearly S00 coses of over-/us»ug on
house circuits!
Don’t make the mistakes these
home owners did! Eliminate these
luuurdf front your home thd> right
way! For your Safety, Conren
ienee and Economy, plan today to
hare an experienced electrical
contractor mode— iae the el—
tried system in roar home to gire
yon safe, dependable electric serr
ice with adequate capacity to srrrc
yonr present and future needs!
remember—
A modern. Adequate Wiring
System can be installed in your
home without fuss or muss! No
doubt you can qualify for a low
coat home improvement loan re
quiring no down-payment and
providing for easy monthly terms
to suit your budget. Consult yonr
own electrical contractor and your
local bank, or financing firm, to
day I
GET READY NOW TO—
UVE IETTH7
IVJH.W fkctrictffy j
TMs W
asMshstf as a wMh sarrtsa
ay
Amelia News
Mrs L<t> Gilman, Mrs Clyde
Doolittle. Mrs. Marvin Doolittle,
and Mrs. Ralph Adair went to
Burwell Tuesday, June 19, to
attend a freezer-locker demon
stration.
Mrs. May Sageser. Mrs. Vern
Sageser, Mrs Van Robertson and
Mrs. Ralph Rees attended a
workshop of the Federated Gar
den club of district 6 on Mon
day, June 18. The workshop was
sponsored by the Stuart club and
was held in the Community
church at Stuart.
Mrs. Vern Sageser, Mrs. Link;
Sageser, Mrs. Alice Prewitt, Mrs.
George Fullerton and Mrs
Clyde Widman attended the sil
ver tea sponsored by the WSCS
of the Atkinson Methodist
church. Rev. and Mrs. Ernest
Green, who are missionaries in
the Belgian Congo, Africa, and
are home on furlough, showed
pictures taken in the Congo.
Mrs. Stella Sparks and Lonnie
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs Rusty Adair. In
the afternoon they visited Mrs.
Adair’s sister, Mrs. Leonard Du
satko, and family, who live near
Emmet.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Doolittle
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Adair and
Jerry went to South Sioux City
Thursday to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Gartner. Mrs. Gartner is
the former Delores Doolittle.
They returned home Friday.
Dale Fullerton returned home
Saturday from attending 4 - H
club camp at Halsey.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Backhaus
and Caroline were supper guests
Wednesday evening, June 20, at
the Charles Fox home near Mid
way. The supper was in honor of
Caroline’s 18th birthday anni
versary.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnston
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Widman.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Waldo and
family of Libby, Mont., visited
recently at the home of his broth
er, B. W. Waldo, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bur
dick and son and Mrs. Burdick’s
mother, Mrs. Russel, of Yuba
City, Calif., visited recently at
the B. W. Waldo home.
Miss Lewellyn Freelend of
Carthage, Mo., was calling on
friends in Amelia recently. She
visited Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Bar
nett, and also visited at the Paul
Fisher, Lindsey and Glenn White
homes.
Douglas Chapman and sons,
Jim and Douglas, jr., of Mo
bridge, S.D., visited a few days
with Mr. Chapman’s mother, Mrs.
George Withers.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Adams of Lin
coln spent from Friday, June 22,
until Sunday, June 24, with his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. S. C. Barnett.
CHURCH NOTES
CENTER UNION (O’Neill)
Rev. C. P. Turner, pastor
Sunday, July 8: Sunday-school,
10 am.; preaching service at 11
a.m.; young peoples’ meeting in
the evening at 8 o’clock; preach
ing service following the young
people’s meeting.
Prayer meeting and Bible
study will be in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. John Dick Wednesday
evening at 8 o’clock.
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN
(Atkinson)
Rev. E. G. Smith, pastor
Sunday, July 8: Divine ser
vices, 9 a.m.; Sunday - school,
10:15 a.m.
Lutheran hour, 4 pm., WJAG.
Monday, July 9: Men’s meeting,
8 p.m.
Return from Montana,
Wyoming Trip—■
ATKINSON — Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Shaw and Linda return
ed Monday from a trip through
Yellowstone national park and
Marion Mont. At Marion, they
visited Mr. and Mrs. Asa Sher
mer and family. Asa has a
“beautiful place” they report.
The Shermers moved to Mon
tana last December.
On the way home they stop
ped at Cowley, Wyo., to visit
Harold’s cousin, Ralph Shaw, his
wife and family.
Ann Saunto Joins
4-H Club—
The Willing Workers 4-H club
met at the A. Neil Dawes home
on Thursday, June 21. In the
business meeting, touring the
White Horse ranch was discussed,
and Ann Saunto was voted into
the club. After the business ses
sion lunch was served by the
Bradys and Reeds.—By Dianne
Gillespie, news reporter.
promotion
VENUS — SP3 Ray O. Brook
houser was promoted to special
ist third class on Friday, June
22. Ray is stationed in Korea with
the 538th engineer company. He
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Brookhouser of Venus.
. xr7 . - -
Driver of Car Unhurt
A car-truck collision early Wednesday, June
27, sent the driver of the truck, Darias Raasch,
67, Norfolk farmer, to a hospital for treatment
for minor injuries, but the driver of the car,
James D. Luft, 21, O’Neill junior high school
teacher, was unhurt. He crawled from the wreck
age through a windshield. The accident occurred
1 ^ miles west of Norfolk on U S. highway 275.—
Photo courtesy Norfolk Daily News.
Atkinson Scouts
Camp in Dakota
ATKINSON— The scoutmaster.
Bob Mlinar, and the following
Scouts spent a week at Camp Ce
dars, near Gavin’s Point, S.D.:
Charles Sweet, Donnie and Dan
nie Cleary, Robert Henning, Dan
nie Lee, Tommy Allen, Marion
Mlinar and Hugh James.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleary and
children visited them at camp
last Thursday.
Other Atkinson News
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Cleary and
family spent Sunday at the Ray
Mlinar home in Greeley. The
Mlinars’ five daughters, ranging
in age from 10 to 4 years, who
have been visiting relatives here,
returned home with the Cleary
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Smith and
family of Stuart were Wednes
day evening, June 27, visitors at
the O. A. Hammerberg home.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dvorak
and family, who have been out
near Kimball the past three
weeks, returned home last Thurs
day evening.
Word was received by relatives
last week that Mrs. A. F. Mlinar
of Columbus had suffered a light
stroke and was convalescing at
her home. She and her husband,
former Atkinson residents, vis
ited here two weeks ago.
Francis Cleary left Friday by
auto on a trip to Colorado. He
expected to visit in Boulder,
Denver and Grand Junction. He
planned to be gone a week,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo McGrane and
daughter of Omaha arrived
Sunday to visit Atkinson rela
tives.
Corn ‘Knee- High by Fourth’
“ . . . Knee-high by the 4th of July” . . . except when know
how coaxes it up to waist high. And this corn on the Charles Rudat
farm southwest of Columbus appears to be hurrying to get ready
for the 1956 national mechanical corn picking contest to be held
here October 11-12. Larry Owen (left), manager of the Columbus
Chamber of Commerce, Fred Rosacker and Orville Oberg, con
test cochairmen, are up to their waists in contest corn.
REAL. ESTATE TRANSFERS
WD—Charles W Richter Jr to
John D Pruss & wf 6-20-56 $6,
000- 90 ft x 170 ft in SW corner
Blk 6- McCafferty’s Annex- O’
Neill
WD—Fed Land Bk to State of
Nebr 5-1-56 $1- 2.40 acres in
Eastern part of SEVi Sec 24-31-12
WD—Louis O Marshall to Ar
thur Hrbek & wf 6-25-56 $25,
000- Wy. 28- WMsEM. 28- &
NWy4 33-32-9
WD—Henry Burival to Albert
E Trowbridge & wf 5-18-56 $8,
000- NWy4 21- Twp 29- Range 9
(Includes Irrigation well &
Pump)
QCD—Harry E Ressel to Ed
ward J Donohoe & wf 6-27-56
$1- Part of SEV4SWV4 19-29-11
WD — Fred Tasler, et al„ to
Tillie Cearns 6-29-56 $12,000,
NEV4 31-29-15
WD—Clare Coulthard to Elsie
E Coulthard 6-19-56 $1- Lots 33
34-35 & 36- Gilg & Swenson’s
Subdivision- O’Neill
DEEDS TO STATE OF NE
BRASKA—
WD—Joseph T Donohoe 3-6-56
$581.50- Part of E^EMs 24-30-12
QCD—Clarence V Donohoe 3
1-56- 1- Part of EVfeEVfe 24-30-12
WD—Alfred T Drayton 4-6-56
$3736.50- Part of KVtEVz 13-30
12 and Part of EM.SEV4 12-30-12
and Part of WVfeWMs 18-30-11
and Part of WMiSWV4 & part of
W part of S%NWy< 7-30-11
Coming to the Royal
— O’NEILL —
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
July 8, 9. 10
So many
kisses* ••
So little love!
20th Century-Foot presents
Hilda
Crane
CINemaScop£* w""®10*
X" iun .. toy . iean nnu
Simmons • Madison * Aumont
■m JUOHM Evam • tvarn vardcn . mm * HERBERT B. SWOPE. Jr.,
«mu» Iv Ok law mt MawMrbf
Adults—50c. Children—12c
Matinee Sunday — 2:SR P.M.
All children under 12 FREE when accompanied by parent.
The Frontier Woman . . .
Cook Spuds with Jackets On
This is the time of year when
the homemaker needs to save all
the time and labor that she can.
Here are some ideas to help you
out.
If you make a gelatin salad,
double the recipe if your familv
is large enough Serve it the first
day for two meals, then serve
something else the next day for a
salad, but on the third day. go
back and serve portions of the
first salad. Thus you will have
saved time and work
Cook a whole kettle of potatoes
with the jackets on. Rice enough
for the first meal (the jackets
will stay in the ricer). After
lunch, peel the skins from the
potatoes and use enough of them
to make a potato salad for sup
|x?r. Or use part of them for hash
browns. Next day, try dicing
some of them and covering with
a cheese sauce and brown in the
oven until thoroughly heated
through. Hash browns can be
served again, or they can be used
as part of the ingredients of a
casserole dish with other veg
etables added. You will thus have
saved extra time, extra dish
washing and a lot more extra la
bor than if you had stopped to
fix potatoes fresh for each meal.
I Suitable refrigeration is neces
j sary, of course.
Most gardens aren’t furnishing
new potatoes yet so serve maca
roni, spaghetti, or rice in place
of potatoes. Cook more than
enough macaroni. Serve half of
it for lunch and save the other
half for salad the next day. You
can add slivers of cooked meat.
celery, perhaps canned salmon
flakes Blend the salad together
hard boiled eggs, onion, pickle,
with salad dressing and be sure
to make it far enough ahead to
give the flavors a chance to de
velop and mingle.
Consult your freezer book.
There are meats that can be
cooked and half of them frozen
for later use. This is also true of
any soup that doesn’t contain
potatoes. 1 always cook enough
bean soup for two or three meals,
then freeze part of it.
Half a cake can be frozen if
your family is too small to use it
all. A good deal of baking can be
done in one day and the most of
it frozen. Use your head and
your freezer to save you a lot of
work. Make several eggs into
noodles instead of just one and
dry the remainder of the noodles.
Be sure they are perfectly dry
before storing them in glass fruit
jars.
— tfw —
‘Awaiting Stork’
Wins Subscription—
Dear Mrs. Pease:
Recently, several ladits had a
pink-and-blue shower for me.
They had some very clever games
and ideas that I thought I’d pass
on to your readers. It seems every
paper you read there is a stork
shower and no doubt the host
esses would like some new
games.
On the invitations, they asked
the guests to wrap their gifts in
a yard of white outing Banner
and to pin the flannel with safety
pins. So this will mean more
diapers for the bundle of joy.
After the guests have arrived,
give each one a spring clip
clothespin. This they clip onto
their clothing and they are to
watch the other guests to see that
they don't cross their legs. If
they do. they can collect their
clothespin The one who has col
lected most clothespins by the
end of an allotted time is the
v inner and is given a small prize.
For games, list all the song ti
tles with "baby” in them. For ex
ample, "Baby Face" and "Baby,
It's Cold Outside" Another game
is to take the given name of the
prospective father and mother
and see how many given names
can be made by using the letters
in their names.
It seems as though all showers
have scrambled wi>rds and this
one was no exception. The scram
bled words and the answers
were: Alosphit, hospital; tleytae,
layette; rodwep, powder; amroluf,
formula; hemrot, mother; codort.
doctor; pradie, diaper; mmokn,
kimono; toieob, bootie; tsenabsi.
bassinet.
This was all the games, but one
guest had a cute little rattle pin
ned on her package to add a little
color.
I heard over the radio yester
day that the given names, John
and Mary, have stepped down
from the top 10 names and the
most popular names of today are
Robert and Linda.
Good luck to all the future par
ents and babies.
"AWAITING THE STORK"
The Frontier for printing!
John R. Gallagher
Attorney-at-Law
First Nat’l Bank Bldg
O’NEILL -:- PHONE 11
We Give TOP VALUE Stamps
We Are Now Completely Air-Conditioned
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PATTON’S
BEN FRANKLIN STORE
O’NEILL. NEBR.
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HASIIERS . Priced up from $179.00
UKVERS . Priced up from $1S9.00
Up to 3 Ye jits to Pay — Payments Arranged Monthly or Semi-Annually
DANKERT’S SERVICE
O’Neill—Phone 410 Chambers—Phone 2101