The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 28, 1962, Image 2

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    Prairieland Talk
"O'Neill's Many Hotels"
By ROM AIN E SAUNDERS, 411) South 51st St., Lincoln 6, Nebr.
It was a great day some 50 years ago when
the Golden Hotel ripened for business. A fine modem
building on the comer where from early times Pat
Hagerty's trading post had stood. The late T. V.
Golden was the promoter and
builder of the hotel that bears
his name. I see today on mem
ory’s tablet Mr. Golden down,
in the underground where his
new building was going up feel
ing the graveled sand if it would
:lo for mixing the concrete. Mr.
and Mrs. Wes Evans who had
for some years operated Hotel
Evans were the first to operate
the new hotel. They server! p_
meals as well as putting you
to bed at night. Now no meals SMialeM
at the Golden but a good bed to crawl into. Begin
ning with the Valley House operated by the O’Don
nells many years ago I count eight hotels before
the Golden got going. Two of these are here today,
one on South Fourth street that has been at it 70
years or more, and the Western, formerly Hotel
Evans. And traveling the highways today you can
hole up at night at a roadside sleeping place.
• * *
An English Prince and his sweetheart are com
ing to the United States on a visit. Our Governor
has invited the British Lord and Lady to set foot
upon green robed Prairieland. Should the English
Lord and Lady do so may I suggest that Rancher
Tom Baker down by Amelia, he a native of old
England, invite his two distinguished countrymen
to the Baker ranch home where they may see one
from their home land making a go of it in the
purebred cattle business here in Prairieland’s great
cattle region of southwest Holt county.
* * *
Another Father’s Day has come and gone. With
the greetings that came again to the dads through
out the land were many cherished memories of
days now gone. Father — there would be no son,
no daughter were it not for the fathers out across
Prairieland. Are you one of them? Well, behave
yourself and may you survive to another f ather s
Day.
* * *
Atkinson Hay Days — have they been again
for another season? Years have come and gone since
Prairieland Talker was a viewer of the Hay Day
sports, an entertainment worth going miles to see.
No doubt Postmaster Miller, Banker Adams, Editor
Kelly and the others have kept the eye of all in
the country about on Atkinson’s fun making another
summer time.
School bells silent for the summer. Vacation
time — Jim and Joe and Mary and Ann are not
off to school in the morning but maybe off to the
day’s work to make a little money. What may my
charming young friend Trudy out there in the de
lightful Eagle creek country be up to this summer
vacation time -helping about the home, then mounts
her pony and lopes across the land, and maybe as
this is written the young lady is down at the creek
catching a mess of fish. My lovely granddaughter
here in Lincoln has a job for the summer that will
make her money to rig her up for another school
year. And what is teacher doing, just resting up?
• * •
The building still stands at Fourth and Douglas
street, the town's first pile of brick where Dave
Darr and Dave Adams cashed our checks until
they were out of money. The basement of that
building where Doc Mathews started his second
newspaper, the Free Press, after retiring from the
Frontier; that upper room in that Holt County Bank
building where Judge Kinkaid lived and slept and
UUWil 111 LI It A * Vt A n-o.1 V >-V v,v
King completed his apprenticeship as a printer;
and that little room with a side entrance that was
Dr. Gilligan’s first hangout in O’Neill. And those
outside steps at the bank door where on calm
summer evenings Clint Lowrie and I sat to watch
the passing ladies and gents. On my next visit to
O’Neill I will knock off the comer of a brick on
that old building and pocket that bit of brick to
cherish for the rest of my days in memory of days
now long gone.
* * *
They call it a rodeo, two or three days once a
year guys on horses trained to do the bucking
bronco act. Years ago we had the real thing when
herds of wild horses were in that corral back of
Ward’s barn. Jake Hershiser, Bob Ingersol, Ike
Smith, Hay McClure, Pete Saunders each astride
a wild and bucking nag along the business streets
and one at times head for the glass front of a
business place and Kate Mann jumped and ran
to escape the flying glass as bronc and his rider
plunged into the glass front. Rodeo, a tame affair
today.
* * *
So our Capital City has become a great educa
tional center. I met him some time ago, a citizen
of distant eastern Canada in Lincoln a student at
our State University. Others I meet on rare occas
ions who come from other states or distant lands
to go to college in our Capital City.
* * *
It is reported that 99,000 citizens of Lincoln
turned out on a recent Sunday to get a handful
of that polio dope that was being distributed.
Editorial
When It Rains It Pours
The Enterprise, Blair
Every newspaper editor knows what can happen
by twisting words, mispelling and re-writing. Like
punctures, which always seem to come in three’s,
the explanation of one mistake frequently paves
the way for another.
In North Carolina recently, a small daily ran
an ad regarding a sewing machine. Here it is and
this is how it turned out:
Monday: "FOR SALE: R. D. Smith has one
sewing machine for sale. Phone 958.
Call after 7 p.m. and ask for Mrs.
Kelly who lives with him cheap.”
Tuesday: "We regret having erred in R. D.
Smith’s ad yesterday. It should have
read: FOR SALE: R. D. Smith has one
sewing machine for sale. Cheap. Phone
958 and ask for Mrs. Kelly who lives
with him after 7 p.m.”
Wednesday : "R. D. Smith has informed us that he
has received several annoying tele
phone calls because of an error we
made in his classified ad yesterday.
His ad stands corrected: FOR SALE:
R. D. Smith has one sewing machine
for sale. Cheap. Phone 958 after 7 p.m.
and ask for Mrs. Kelly who loves with
him.”
Thursday: “NOTICE: I, R. D. Smith, have no
sewing machine for sale. I smashed it.
Don’t call 958, the phone has been taken
out. I have not been carrying on with
Mrs. Kelly. Until yesterday, she was
And then there was the want-ad which read like this:
• FOR SALE: The ladies of the First Presbyterian
Church have discarded clothing of all kinds. They
may be seen in the Church basement any day after
six o’clock.”
The Farm Bill
Well, the farm bill expired at the hands of both
Repuplicans and Democrats. It may have been an
honest attempt to help agriculture but certain parts
of it were obnoxious to the American farmer, who
feels unfettered dignity in his association with the
soil and his obligation to the people who need food.
There are some who remember a poem in the
fifth reader of long ago, written by Edward Mark
ham. It was called "The Man With a Hoe". That
man was probably the farmer of his day and a
more horrendous creature it would be hard to im
agine. Here are ust a few of the lumps that Mark
ham delat that tiller of the soil in 1859:
"Bowed with the weight of centuries he leant
Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground
What made him dead to rapture and despair
A thing that grieves not and never hopes
Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox.
Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow?
Whose breath blew out the light within this brain?”
Poor old farmer! But also poor, foolish bureau
crat who still cherishes this picture of him for he
will surely run into trouble in framing a bill to fit
the farmer of this day and age who is neither
“stolid" nor “stunned” and who refuses the polit
ical breath that would “blow out the light within
his brain”.
Today’s farmer is a highly skilled, intelligent
technician and in the most important industry in
the world — a world in fact where a great per
centage of the people are always hungry and disease
ridden.
We can think of no more inspiring thing than for
these men to be turned loose to feed the world.
If a farm bill could be offered with a promise to
distribute food to the people of the world who are
so in need of it instead of money which the people
never see, it would pass by world consent and with
God's blessing.
BJR
VIRGINIA, MINN., MESABI DAILY NEWS:
"Everybody — including the wild liberals — know
that giving away the nation's patrimony, paying out
more than is warranted by productivity and all of
the devices which provide government handouts
must sooner or later be halted, or catastrophe will
engulf America. It is only because the many have
been thrifty and saving that it can go on at all.”
BETHEL, ME., CITIZEN: "Tax experts reveal
that if Uncle Sam seized all individual income over
$25,000 a year, it would run the government not
quite 3 days. If he confiscated all income over
$10,000 a year, it would carry the government only
18 V2 days. Lincoln said that God must have loved
the poor people, he made so many of them. By
the same token, you can't run the government on
the rich, there are so few of them.
PALMER. ALAS., THE FRONTIERSMAN: "It
is not a nleasant snhiect to talk about continual
erosion of the dollar, and to think that the great
country we live in, abundant in raw materials and
natural resources . • . would find itself in the
monetary mess that looms on the horizon. How long
will the American public be fooled?”
PRENTISS, MISS., HEADLIGHT: “We see
where a Muskogee County, Oklahoma, judge has
decided to retire because of welfare abuses. Judge
J. F. Beavers, ‘sick and tired of welfare abuses 1
have seen reflected in my court’ was especially
critical of aid-to-dependent-children cases in which
he said mothers of illegitimate children are ‘re
warded for their promiscuity.’ Said Judge Beavers,
‘these mothers were not interested in anything bu1
getting on the relief roll . . . once someone gets or
the relief roll, he or she never gets off. My phil
osophy of life doesn’t go along with this “give-away”
trend of the times, so I felt it was time for me tc
leave public life.’
"Wouldn't it be a big help in this day of social
ism and give-away if more people shared Judge
Beavers’ views?”
Froni r
BILL RICHARDSON. Publisher
BRUCE J. REHBERG, Editor
Terms o< Subscription: In Nebraska, 52-50 pei
year; elsewhere in the United States, 53 per year
rate abroad provided upon request. All subscrip
tions payable in advance.
Entered at the postoffice in O’Neill, Holt coun
ty, Nebraska, as second-class mail matter undei
the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. This news
paper is a member of the Nebraska Press Asso
nation, National Editorial Association and the Audil
Jureau of Circulations
NATIONAl EDITORIAL
^£-1 1a#c6t'^
Frontiers
Ago
50 YEARS AGO
Pat O’Donnell came in from the
ranch Sunday to assist in the
Nebr. State bank while the cash
ier, James F. O’Donnell, is watch
ing the big show in Baltimore. .
A number of auto drivers seem
to think that the boulevard on
East Douglas street was built
for auto speeding and they use
it as a speedway every evening.
. .Charles R. Pettijohn and Miss
Agnes T. Bently were married
in the home of the bride’s mo
ther Wednesday evening. They
will make their home in the resi
dence occupied by Mrs. Froe
lich on the corner of Fifth and
Everett streets. . .Sheriff Grady
and wife were in Atkinson last
Tuesday in attendance at the
wedding of the sheriff’s brother,
Thomas Grady. . .Dab and Will
iam Kelly, sons of Mr. and Mrs.
John J. Kelly, returned from
Omaha last week where they had
been attending Creighton College.
25 YEARS AGO
The kourtn ol July celebra
tion will be held Sunday at
the O Neill Country club. . .
About 75 of the members of the
O'Neill Country club had a chick
en dinner leed at tne club last
Tuesday night. With indications
of the highway coming up iourth
street many ousmess concerns
are planning on increasing their
business establishment by putting
them on South Fourth. A bunch ol
O’Neill lishermen are getting
their tackle in readiness and ex
pect to leave the tirst ol the
week lor their annual two weeks
iishing trip to the lakes of north
ern Minnesota.
10 YEARS AGO
The Frontier gets a new dress
enlarging xrom seven to eighi
columns anu lengthening u
depth. . .Miss Eileen Stanton be
came the bride of Rex Stow ell u
nuptial rites June 18, in St. Pat
rick’s church here. . .O’Neil
orive-in meatre 10 rc-ujicu ouuc
26. . .All-star baseball game, Car
ney Park, June 29. Worth vs.
South. . .Dr. and Mrs. H.
D. Gilder sleeve moved into then
residence in north O’Neill. They
purchased the home form Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Johnson. . .O’
Neill midgets wallop Lynch crew,
34-0. . .O’Neill was host to Buick
automobile dealers irom points
west as far as Valentine, north
as far as Winner, S. D. and east
as far as Norfolk and Madison.
5 YEARS AGO
Mrs. L. A. Becker heads Altai
Society. .Mr. and Mrs. G. Watson
returned from a trip west. . .
“Womanless Wedding” rocked a
full house Friday evening the
American Legion auditorium.' . .
The cast included 45 males. The
comedy proved a great success.
. .Marriage licenses were issued
to Edward John Boyle and Bea
trice Ann Mahony, both of O’Neill,
June 22. . .47 gals participate in
first women’s golf tourney. Mrs.
Baker and Mrs. Kersenbrock, win
ner and runnerup in golf meet. .
Future subscriber, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Grutsch of O’Neill, twin
daughters, born June 25.
The Long Ago
At Chambers
50 YEARS AGO
R. J. Starr and family, Frank
Dyke and family and Ernest
Hanna and family all ate straw
berries with Grandma Bell Sun
day. . .The ball game on the
Amelia diamond last Saturday be
tween Chambers and Amelia was
well attended, the score being 8
to 7 in favor of Chambers. . . .
Chauncey Porter made a trip
to O’Neill Tuesday, bringing out
a load of cement and posts. . .
Grand Celebration! In the shade
of Wry’s Grove, July 4. Parade,
games, sports, races. Dance in
the Band Hall, Fireworks in the
evening. . .Mrs. Kutcher and Mrs.
Clarence White made a trip to
O’Neill Tuesday.
25 YEARS AGO
Elmer and Ernest Farrier and
sons tried their luck with the fish
lines down at the Ericson lake
last Friday. . .A tennis court is
being prespared and arranged at
the school house grounds this
week, sponsored by the school as
sisted by the Commercial Club. .
Sixteen of Chambers charming
young ladies enjoyed a hike and
picnic Tuesday evening. . .George
Thompson has taken over the
management of the picture show
and announces there will be only
one show a night. . .Frank Wilson
of Ewing has been employed as
baker at the bakery, assuming
his duties Monday evening.
I l
Complete Dairy
and Hog Feed
Creep Feed
TOMPKINS LIVESTOCK
HEADQUARTERS
Clarence (Bod) Hansen, Mgr.
Inman, Nebraska
Phone 325 or 11-W
1
Meek News
■» _ j
Most of us would like to remind
the weather man that he could
turn off the rain faucet for a ,
while in this community. Heavy
rains have again been in evidence
the past week. Some hail also ac
companied the rains. Regardless
of whether we like it or not I
believe we will agree it makes for
better living conditions that the
dirty '30's.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwayne Anson
and family visited at the Leland
Anson home at Spencer Friday
evening.
Mrs. Ed Hood, Mrs. Harold
Fox and Marlene, Mrs. Melvin
Armfield and Danny, visited Mon
day afternoon at the Lloyd Gal
lagher home near O’Neill.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Johring
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Johring and family, Henry Stor
john and Mrs. Martha Johring
were Sunday dinner guests at the
Donald Johring home at Clear
water. The occasion was in hon
or of Mrs. Melvin Johring’s birth
day.
Mrs. Rose Bowers, O'Neill,
helped with the house work at her
daughters, Mrs. Marian Woid
neck this past week. Mrs. Woid
neck like several of the other
farm ladies of the community
has been helping the husband
with the haying when weather
conditions permitted.
Larry Dobrovolony and Mike
Miller were over night guests of
Gary Devall Saturday.
Several in the community en
joyed boating and skiing at Ft. j
Randall Dam Sunday. If the rain
continues to fall no doubt more "
of us will be boating close to
home.
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy McMillan
o n/1 c nn Prulnov cnpnt Qnrvlav
evening at the Hiram Johnson
home.
Delbert Rouse transacted busi
ness at the Norfolk Sales Pavi
lion Thursday. Howard Rouse was
a business visitor in Norfolk Fri
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Robertson
and Mrs. Bob Weise and child
ren, Kansas City, were Tuesday
lunch guests of Mrs. Christine
Johnson, O’Neill.
Paddock Community women
held their regular monthly meet
ing at the home of Mrs. Martha
Johring Friday afternoon. Band
ages were made for shipment to
foreign missions. Next meeting to
be with Mrs. Paul Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lindberg
spent the weekend with their
daughters, Mrs. Roy Worth and
husband of Carter Lake, la. They
took their grandchildren, Rozann,
Rozella and Randy Worth, who
are spending the summers vaca
tion with them, to Omaha to get
their polio vaccination.
Sunday supper guests at the
Harold Fox home were Shirley
Armfield, Burke, S. D. and Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Armfield and
son, Danny.
Mrs. Merlyn Anderson, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Walters and daugh
ter, Norma and Mrs. Christine
Johnson motored to Omaha to see
the Gene Libby’s and the Libby
baby, who is hospitalized there.
We are glad to hear there is
some improvement in the baby’s
condition. Mrs. Johnson and Nor
ma will remain with Mrs. Libby
a few days. Gene has to return
to military camp in Colorado.
Mrs. Sam Robertson and Mrs.
Bob Weise and daughters visited
in the Axel Borg home Sunday
afternoon.
The Cactus Ranchette Pro
ject club met at the home of
Mrs. George Nelson Tuesday with
eight members present. The
sewing lesson on zippers and
i
collars was given by Dorothy De
rail. The lesson on fabrics and
natenal was given by Darlene
iipke. Wilma Anson won the
loor prise The next meeting will
>e at tbe borne of Rose Roberts.
Diane and Kathrine Devall al
ended Bible school this past
seek at the Christian church 10
y Neill.
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Ander
son were Thursday visitors in tbe
Zarl Krogh home
Mrs. Frances Metier, Hastings
and Ardyce Olson and their ne
phew, Douglas Olson, Minden,
were Tuesday afternoon and sup
per guests at the Fred Lmdberg
Pome.
Mrs. Christoffersen and child
ren, O'Neill, spent Thursday at
the Delbert Ruuse home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fox and
daughter and Mrs. Ed Hood were
Wednesday evening visitors at
the Roy Devall home, Spencer.
Mrs. Hood also called at the Earl
Storjohann home that evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roberts and
sons were Sunday dinner guests
at the home of Mrs. Robert’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Bald
win, Inman. Their son, Wynn, re
mained for a few days visit with
his grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. George Nelson
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Dwayne Anson and family spent
Sunday visiting in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nelson and
family, Wakefield.
Thursday afternoon visitors at
the Martha Johring home were
Mrs. Harold Fox and daughter
and Mrs. Ed Hood.
\tkmson News
Mrs. Fred Roth and son, Don
ald, left last Saturday morning
to spend a week visiting Mrs.
Roth’s son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bauer, Alli
ance. They planned to visit her
son and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Roth in Valentine, enroute
to Alliance.
Ward Sykes and Nelson Walk
>er, Lincoln, were in Atkinson
last Friday to visit and renew
old acquaintances with their
friends, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith.
They also enjoyed some fishing
at Swan Lake. While in Atkinson
they called on Mrs. Celia Gar
wood. The Lincolnites came to
O’Neill to attend the rodeo and
sandwiched in a bit of reminisc
ing with friends in Atkinson be
tween shows.
The Rev. Charles Gates came
from Sioux City last Saturday to
conduct the funeral services at
the Methodist church for Mrs. R.
H. Chace. The Rev. Gates was
recently transferred to South
Sioux City.
Mrs. Mabel Robertson, Cham
bers, and Mrs. Olive Skrdla and
Mrs. Ella Mack, Atkinson, went
to Ainsworth last Friday where
they judged the Ainsworth Gar
den club's annual flower show.
The ladies reported a very beau
tiful show, the theme of the show
was carried out with a huge
color wheel made with tinted
fresh shasta daisies sealed in
plastic bags which was displayed
as the focal point of the setting.
There were many very interest
ing and unusual displays in con
servation as well as other sec
tions. The show was held in the
Ainsworth auditorium.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith left
Monday for Midland, S. D. to
spend a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. William Wefso
entertained their Card club
friends at a surprise birthday
party for two of the members,
Mrs. Claude Johnson and Mrs.
Erma Colfack. High scores were
won by Pat Medcalf and Mrs.
Johnson and low, Claude John
son and Mrs. Colfack.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Brainard,
Ben Franklin
GLASSWARE
Soft aqua color in Libby’s famous Ripple de
sign. Heavy sham bottom. Choose 6-oz. juice,
12-oz. hi-ball or 16-oz. cooler sizes, 4* n>7
Reg. 19c each.0 far «rf*
PATTON'S O'Neill, Nebr.
formerly of this area, have mov
'd back to Stuart and plan to
make their home there.
Bonnie LrMunyan came Friday
rvemng to spend the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert LeMunyan. She returned •
Sunday to Omaha where she is
attending business acouul
Mr. and Mrs Sewell Johnson
and Mr. and Mrs. Leon Beckwith
returned last Friday from a three
week trip which took them
through the northwestern states
find ivans of Canada.
Mr. and Mrs. John Nelsen and
family, Derby. Cblo., spent a
few days in Atkinson this week
visiting in the home of Mr. ami
Mrs. Clyde Nilaon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chace
and family left Sunday afternoon
for their home in Lincoln after
attending the funeral of his moth
er. Mrs. R. E. Chace. Saturday.
Mr. ami Mrs. Eli McConnell
and Mrs. Walter Puckett went to
Omaha last Saturday where they
spent Saturday night with rela
tives. Sunday they drove to Mis
souri Valley, la., where they at
tended the funeral of Charley
Hansen. Mrs. Hansen is a cousin
of Mrs. Puckett and Mr. McCon
nell.
Mr. ami Mrs. Leo Brill and
Cindy came Friday and stayed
over night in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Kirkland. They
were enroute to Scottabluff to
spend their vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Dunn.
Omaha, sjient the weekend in At
kinson with her mother. Mrs.
John Mohr and other relatives.
They returned to Omaha Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wood and
Beverly came from Casper. Wyo.
and spent a few days visiting in
the home of Mr. und Mrs. Guy
Parsons and Mr. and Mrs. Irven j,
Pai-snns Mrs. Wish! is a niece Of I
Guy and Irven Parsons.
Mrs. Fae Nelson and family,
Blair, sipent a few days last week
in Atkinson visiting in Ihe home
of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Nilson and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Roberts and
family.
Mrs. C. G. Shellhase, O'Neill,
was a guest last Thursday in the
homes of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
McDowell and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Richardson.
Mr. and Mrs. Denton Colfack
and Wanda, Butte, visited in the
Wefso home Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Osborn and
family spent Sunday in Wisncr
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
T. J. Osborn. Other guests in the
Osborn home were Dick’s broth
er, Mr. and Mrs. Hale Osborn,
Tucson, Ariz.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Johnson
were Monday dinner guests of
Mrs. Carl Schenzel, O’Neill.
Lorraine Hewett arrived Sun- J
day from Chicago to visit her |
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. DayU |
Hewett, O’Neill.
|
Dorsey News
By Mrs. Harold Osborn
—
Mrs. Marvin Drobny was re
leased from Sacred Heart hos
pital Thursday, she is convalesc
ing at home.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Millard and
daughters left Sunday evening for
their home after spending Sat
urday and Sunday at the Osborn
home and attending the Akimni
dance in Lynch Saturday night.
Supt. and Mrs. Vernon Oleson
and Neil drove to Geddes, S. D.
Sunday to visit with the Charley
Mrs. Howard Graham and Mar
Oh*M>n family
lyn, Mrs. T. J. Graham, were 0
Nrill shippers Thursday.
Ruth Osborn spent the weekend
at her parent* bunte, tt»e Han»kl
Osborn* fcrxl attended the Alumni
banquet.
Jerry Rosenkrans atlendi'd Bi
ble Camp last week arriving home
Friday evening.
Mr and Mrs Gordon Barts and
Evelyn were Thursday visitors in
Lynch.
Mr. and Mrs. Leman Huber
were Sunday evening callers at
the Harold Osborn home.
Sadie Derxkson received word
Saturday evening that her sister.
Olive and husband und Wally
Jean had arrived home safely
from attending the World's Fair.
Mr and Mrs. Donald Greene
ami family, New Orleans. La.,
and Mr and Mrs Arthur QfWene
were Tuesday evening visitors at
tlx* Harold Osfcxwn home
Mr and Mrs. Lyle Wells ami
family and Mrs. Howard Slack
were O'Neill shoppers Monday.
Duane and Billy Kuzxika re
turned home after spending the
week with their grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Kozicka.
Sgt. and Mrs Vernon Oieeon
and son arrived at the Harold
Osborn home Friday afternoon.
Sadie Derick son made a trip to
Omaha last week to have her
eyes checked
Mrs R. L. Hughes spent a few
days this week at the Holland
Hughes home in Norfolk.
Mr. ami Mrs. J. B. Millard and
daughters arrived Frxiay night to
spend the weekend with the Os
borns and visit witli the Olesons
from Waynesville.
In Person
Htar of the IIONAN/.A Show
Michael Landon
"LITTLE JOE"
plus
Hank Snow
iukI hln
Rainbow Ranch Boys
I 2 shows — 2 :S0 and H:80 p.m.
7 Amateur Hants
BOXING
T'enturlii); Norfolk and Omaha
Golden (.loves ( liamplons
(hie show — 7:00 p.m.
$12(10 I IICI.AAOlvhs IHSPI.AY
Admission $1.00
Children under 12 Free
(t randst a nd Prices
Afternoon 50c
Evening 75c
Reserved seats $1.50
On sale at Goodwin l>rui? Co.
in Neligh
NELIGH
JULY 4
ON SALE!
BIGGEST stock in North-Central Nebraska . . .
all types . . . priced reasonably!
• WHISTLING FOUNTAINS
• SPARKLERS
• FLORAL SHELIX
• PIN WHEELS
• TRIANGLE W'HEEJX
• FLYING METEORS
• PENNY NOVELTIES
• SMOKING CAP STICKS
• REPEATER STAR SHELLS
• LAWN FOUNTAINS
• BOTTLE FLYERS
• SKY ROCKETS
• HELICOPTERS
• SKYROCKETS
• CAP GUNS — CAP BALLS
• PARACHUTE JUMPERS
Open Tuesday Evening, July 3,
and Wednesday Morning, July 4,
Until Noon
SCOVIE’S
WESTON AUTO STORE... O’Neill
A. P. Jaeakowiak