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Clark County Press, Neillsville, Wisconsin December 19, 2012, Page 11 Contributed by "The Clark Co. Press" Transcribed by Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon. Index of "Oldies" Articles
Compiled by Dee Zimmerman
Clark County News |
December 1917
County Clerk Ole Anderson is
superintending a job of logging, which Oscar Youker is doing in the courthouse
yard. A number of the shade trees
are being cut out as there is too much shade for a good lawn. The wood will be
used to keep the courthouse warm this winter and help out in the high cost of
heating.
•••••••••
A 100-acre farm, 3 ½ miles north of Neillsville with a
new cement basement barn, silo, fruit bearing trees, good house with cellar,
$500 cash, balance to suit buyer.
Chas. Scholte, Neillsville
Also, For Sale: 12-acre farm, near the city limits of
Neillsville with a two-story brick house, large barn and other out-buildings,
$1,500 cash, balance on first mortgage to suit buyer. Chas. Scholte, Neillsville
•••••••••
When you need livery or auto service, call Dresden
Livery. It isn’t a trading barn, nor rags, rubber or junk barn, but strictly an
auto or team livery.
A livery that has one price for all and that price is right.
It’s a livery that believes in safety first, service always. The livery
that leads; others try to follow. Dresden’s Reliable Livery; Phone, House: Black
193; Barn 37.
•••••••••
In the Christie area Clinton Asplin, Will Joyce, Earl
Holt, Ed Joyce, Roy Sischo, Ernest Kelch and Irvin Young were among the number
to bring home deer this hunting season.
•••••••••
Cash Eide has sold his fine farm in the Town of York to a
Mr. Elmhorst, a gentleman who comes from out-of-state, and has moved to the
farm. All the livestock, machinery and such, passed on to the new owner of the
place and Mr. Eide moved to Maple Works last Monday.
Mr. Eide retires from the strenuousness of farm life,
after a long and successful career, during which he accumulated means amply
sufficient to enable him to spend the balance of his days as he chooses. For
some 30 years he has been a prominent citizen of the Town of York and has
represented it on the county board and in other capacities. Twenty years ago he
took a canvass of the Town of York, and recalls that there were 200 voters, and
states that but about 50 of those are now left. Thirteen years ago he visited
his old home in New York State.
Just why Cash doesn’t move to Neillsville is not yet explained, but possibly he
wants to stay near the old farm.
•••••••••
Sixty-three thousand deer hunters in the state of
Wisconsin; this figure has been given out by the conservation commission as the
total of deer tags sold this fall.
Upwards of 160,000 hunting licenses have been issued;
this year, for the first time, the expedient was tired of requiring deer hunters
to purchase an extra tag in addition to their hunting license; which cost 10
cents. Obviously, only those
intending to hunt deer paid attention to the extra tag.
•••••••••
Knorr & Rausch of Granton have appointed Kearney Davis
salesman in charge of the new Ford warehouse and garage in this city, with Davis
taking charge Monday morning. The trade throughout the county will be supplied
from here and Mr. Davis, who is well known here, and a popular and pushing young
businessman, is a most desirable addition to Neillsville’s business circles.
The solid brick and cement building is very nearly
finished, the open fall weather having greatly favored construction work.
•••••••••
The new garage on Fifth Street is a much better looking
affair than was the old Reddan House that used to occupy that site and it is a
great advance from Jim McCenahn’s white goose to a Ford auto.
•••••••••
Nothing can afford more permanent delight than the gift
of an Eastman Kodak or camera.
Prices range from $2.50 to $25.00 at Sniteman’s.
•••••••••
Monday M. Hoesly’s team ran away and during the incident,
the residents of Fifth Street thought that there was a young cyclone loose among
them. The team ran amuck through
backyards, stopping for nothing.
Emil Glopf had taken refuge in a small out building, which was in the path of
the team and they ran into it, tipping it over, Glopf and all.
When the cyclone had passed, Glopf emerged from the wreckage considerable
mussed up and with the bewildered expression on his face, which indicated that
for a time he had thought that a Zeppelin had bombarded the first line trenches.
•••••••••
Loyal has a new physician in the person of Dr. W. A.
Seaman, formerly of Dalton, Wis. He
has purchased the Dr. Fuchs property.
•••••••••
Hundreds of thousands of American soldiers are now in
France, and the boys at Waco, Texas, will soon go overseas. We who stay at home
should help them all we can by joining the Red Cross.
It is fair proposition in times like these, in a war
crisis, to lay aside party lines and all support the administration as patriotic
Americans. It is also a fair
proposition to call into consultation in a prominent way and make use of tried
and unquestionably capable men of all parties.
•••••••••
Three Chili boys: Herbert McNaul, Roy Breseman and Geo
Allen went to Neillsville last week to take the mail carrier’s examination.
There is a vacancy, as Charlie Lindow has resigned as carrier.
Herbert McNaul is hauling the mail at present.
December 1952
The congregations of Our Savior’s Lutheran Church of
Greenwood and the Emmanuel Lutheran Church of Longwood held a Mission Festival
at the Longwood church Sunday. The Rev. Joseph B. Shefveland of Rochester,
Minn., was speaker in the morning. The speaker at the afternoon service was the
Rev. J. N. Otte, a missionary in Zululand. A potluck dinner was served at noon.
•••••••••
Neillsville’s Radio-Dispatched Taxi Service takes great
pride in reaching its 2nd Anniversary, under the ownership of Bill
Kapfer during which it has given more than 150,000 accident-free miles of
service to Neillsville residents.
•••••••••
Father Peter J. Leketas is coming to Neillsville as the
priest of St. Mary’s parish. He is
expected here Thursday, coming from Cadott.
He will relieve Father Peter Zic, who has been caring for the parish,
pending a permanent appointment.
Father Zic took over when illness forced Father Michael Keinhofer to give up his
work.
•••••••••
The new garage of Pine Valley was formally opened Monday
evening, December 8. It was made a
social occasion, with dancing in the garage itself and card games in the town
hall. Lunch was served.
•••••••••
An empty jail is the unique Christmas present, which
Clarence Gorsegner, district attorney, hopes to give Sheriff and Mrs. Frank
Dobes. With the help of various other jurisdictions and with a good boost from
the people of Clark County, he believes that he can make this present pan out.
In that case Mr. and Mrs. Dobes will be able to celebrate upon a family
basis, and will not be obliged to feed persons who are behind the bars.
The thinning out was on the way early this week.
The jail held five Monday, but was down to one by Tuesday night.
Two prisoners, who had served time here for a beer theft
in the Town of Sherwood, have now been gathered up by the Milwaukee police on
other charges. There were also
three other prisoners serving time for various charges, one who will be gathered
up by the FBI and the other two will have served their time, ready to leave
before Christmas.
Now the kink in all that is whether the rest of the
population will behave and leave the jail pleasantly empty.
Mr. Gorsegner asks the cooperation of everybody to this end.
He really wants to give Sheriff and Mrs. Dobes the empty jail for
Christmas and this can be done if everybody works at it.
It may surprise the people of Clark County to know that
an empty jail is really a boom to the sheriff.
He is paid for feeding prisoners, but he can’t get rich at it, and he and
Mrs. Dobes much prefer that all the people of Clark County eat their Christmas
dinner in the bosom of their families.
•••••••••
Marriage Licenses -
George Andrew Wolf, Thorp, Donnell Marsensic Anisck,
Willard, married at Hatley December 6
Clara Zank, Pine Valley, Rufus Karl, Town of Weston, to
be married at Rice Lake
Catherine Froeba, Loyal, Ronald Grambort, Milwaukee, to
be married at Loyal December 13
•••••••••
The 90th birthday of J. D. Elmendorf of Thorp was
celebrated in Neillsville on December 4.
Fifteen relatives gathered with his granddaughter, Bonnie Patrick, in her
cabin on Division Street.
At the age of 90 Mr. Elmendorf has an active mind, and
recalls many events of the early history of Clark County.
Mr. Elmendorf was born December 4, 1862, in Hebron,
Jefferson County, Wisconsin. He
came up to Unity at the age of 14, and got a job on the dam at Hemlock, which
was then the first dam in the series owned by the Black River Improvement
Company. This dam backed up a large pool of water, which was released for the
drives, carrying the logs with it.
This method of getting the logs down to Onalaska and La Crosse was used until
about the end of the nineteenth century.
In the spring of 1881 Mr. Elmendorf purchased 80 acres of
land in the town of Thorp, half a mile west of the city of Thorp on what was
then the turnpike but what is now Highway 29.
He paid $9 per acre for this land. He built a house on this farm in 1887,
which is still standing. He farmed there for 40 years, until 1927; then rented
the land for 14 years and finally sold it in 1951.
Mr. Elmendorf was in Neillsville on July 4, 1881 when the
first train came over the trestle west of the city.
Mr. Elmendorf drove a team of oxen for Nyron Withee when
steel ties were laid for the railroad in Thorp, and pulled stumps in preparation
for laying the main street of Withee.
Mr. Elmendorf was married in 1887 to Eliza Alger.
She died in 1918. There were six children, of whom four are still living,
as follows: Maude, Mrs. Frank Schultze, Thorp; Harold, Seattle, Wash.; Cletus,
Auburn, Wash.; Bernard, Woodinville, Wash.
He has 13 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
•••••••••
Hills to slide upon, was the most important question
before the city council Tuesday evening.
The city fathers did talk about some other things, like
work on the new water plant, but any kid will tell you that such a matter sinks
into insignificance when compared to a hill to slide on.
The kink in this hill business, it appeared, was the
danger involved in using hills like that of Oak Street on the South side.
The members of the council discussed various hills, which
might be made available with the minimum of danger. Some hills, it was reported,
had been viewed by Mayor Foster and Police Chief Drescher.
The upshot of it was that the whole matter was handed
over temporarily to the park board; with the hope the board would make specific
recommendations.
•••••••••
The banks of Clark County urge you to prepare now for
Planting Trees in 1953 as part of a well-rounded Soil Conservation Program on
Your Farm. Order forms for tree
seedlings will be available at our local banks, along with application forms for
the use of a tree planter.
•••••••••
It was 36 years ago, in the spring of 1916 that a young
man by the name of Ralph Short, of Neillsville, walked into Norman Rausch’s
place of business in Granton to purchase a new automobile.
This was a big day in Ralph’s life, because he picked out a brand new,
shiny black 1916 Model T Ford automobile.
Ralph laid out $500 hard-earned dollars, which marked the
bill of sale “Paid in Full,” and Ralph drove his newest and most-prized
possession home.
Mr. Short tells us that his first long trip with the
Model T took him to Camp Douglas. Thirty-six years ago this could not be exactly
termed a pleasure cruise, as it is today; for the roads were mere sand trails,
hewn through brush. The old Model T took Ralph there-and-back without serious
difficulty. Even at that early date, when Ralph entered into the Ford Family, he
knew that the name of Ford meant reliability and dependability in automobile
transportation.
Mr. Short had chosen Fords ever since. Records at Svetlik
Motor Company show that Mr. Short bought a new Model T in 1922 from the Byse
Garage in Neillsville, a predecessor to Svetlik Motor Co.
He has continued an unbroken string of Ford ownership by buying a new
1935 V-8 Ford, which gave him 14 years’ service.
Then he bought a 1949 Ford Tudor Custom from Svetlik Motor Co.
Ralph again traded in 1950, and now is taking delivery on
the 1953 Ford custom line. He has
given his Fords real tests through his work as a county PMA official, with which
he has been connected for the last 10 years and, at the same time, through 10
years of selling insurance.
Adv. Svetlik Ford Co.
(Short’s Model T
Ford story brings back my childhood memories of a neighbor’s Model T coupe.
It was during the
winter of 1936-37 when we lived in southeastern South Dakota.
It was a record year of over 120 inches of snow in that area, some which
thawed after the early snowfalls.
However most of the snow accumulation stayed, blown by the strong westerly winds
that came across the prairie, piling it into solid snowdrifts along any objects
in its path; roads were impassable.
An area snowplow maintained clearing snow on the federal and state highways,
only.
In late February,
a neighbor who needed some staple food items, and owned a green Model T coupe,
planned to drive to Artesian, seven miles from his farm.
He asked my dad to ride along if he also needed a few provisions and to
bring along a shovel. The Model T
was light in weight, so Frank thought he should be able to drive it over the
drifts without breaking through. They drove cross-country to save mileage, as
the barbed wire fences and posts were buried under the snowdrifts.
They made their way up and down over the drifts, similar to riding on a
roller coaster. Their trip to and
from town went without needing shovels, being able to drive over the packed
snowdrifts, as the wind and freezing temperatures had frozen a solid trail. DZ)
A 1910 view taken from the upper floor of Clark
County’s second court house building, looking west with the Presbyterian Church
on the far left and First National Bank building in the center.
(Photo courtesy of Steve Roberts’
collection)
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