Red Flag Warning


.RED FLAG WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 1 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO
7 PM CDT THIS EVENING FOR NORTHEAST NEBRASKA...

* AFFECTED AREA...IN NEBRASKA...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 011 KNOX...

FIRE WEATHER ZONE 012 CEDAR...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 015 THURSTON...

FIRE WEATHER ZONE 016 ANTELOPE...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 017 
PIERCE...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 018 WAYNE...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 030 
BOONE...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 031 MADISON...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 032 
STANTON...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 033 CUMING...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 042 
PLATTE...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 043 COLFAX...FIRE WEATHER ZONE 044 
DODGE AND FIRE WEATHER ZONE 050 BUTLER.

* WINDS...NORTHWEST 20 TO 30 MPH WITH GUSTS UP TO 45 MPH.

* RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AS LOW AS 21 PERCENT.

* IMPACTS...CONDITIONS THIS AFTERNOON WILL BE FAVORABLE FOR 
EXTREME FIRE BEHAVIOR WITH A HIGH POTENTIAL FOR OUT OF CONTROL 
BURNS. 

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A RED FLAG WARNING MEANS THAT CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS
ARE EITHER OCCURRING NOW...OR WILL SHORTLY.

Paul Leo Tobin, 94, of Blair NE


Paul Leo Tobin was born to Leo and Anna (Hamilton) Tobin, February 13, 1921, in the old Tekamah Hospital.  He passed away peacefully March 24, 2015 at Carter Place in Blair, NE.

Paul attended Tekamah Public Schools and graduated in 193­9.  He attended Creighton University for one year where he met his future bride, Carol Storkan.  In 1941, he enlisted in the US Navy and served on the USS Steamer Bay as an aviation machinist mate.  After four years of service to his country, he was discharged on November 19, 1945.

On September 12, 1945, Paul and Carol were married at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Gardena, California.  They made their home in Tekamah, NE. where Paul farmed with his father, Leo.

In 1956, Paul and Carol and their four daughters moved to the ranch on Cabin Creek in eastern Montana.  Paul was a true cowboy and was proud of those years he spent on the Montana prairie.

In 1968, Paul and Carol returned to Decatur, NE to farm and later retired.  After Carol’s death, he split his time wintering in Tucson with Kitty and Mary Beth, and the rest of the year with Molly and Mike until entering Carter Place in Blair, NE.  He passed away surrounded by his family.

Paul was preceded in death by his wife, Carol and infants Paul Jr, Patrick, Malachi and Theresa, his parents Leo and Anna Tobin, his sisters Mary (Bob)O’Keefe, Fran (Frank) Smagacz, Marjorie (Mel) Gramke, Etta Jean (Leo) Ruhlman, sisters-in-law Margaret Storkan and Joan Storkan.

Survivors include his four daughters, partners and son-in-law, Sue and Judy, Molly and Mike Williams, Kitty and Mary Beth, and Laurie (Mother Joan Paul) and his spiritual daughters of the School Sisters of Christ the King; his grandchildren Katie Williams, Carrie and KC Braniff, Bill and Jenny Williams, and Nate and Ashley Williams; great-grandchildren John, Maggie, Brady, Ryan and Bridget Braniff, Riley and Claire Williams, and soon-to-be-born daughter of Nate and Ashley.  Also surviving him are many nieces, nephews, and Godchildren.

MASS OF CHRISTIAN BURIAL: Tuesday, March 31, 2015, 10:30 am, at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Tekamah, NE.

VISITATION: Monday, 5 – 7 pm with family receiving friends. VIGIL SERVICE at 7:00 pm all at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Visitation Tuesday will also be held at the church one hour prior to the service.

BURIAL WITH MILITARY HONORS: Tekamah Cemetery, Robert Klase-Rogers VFW Post #7998 and American Legion Rogers-Crum Post #215 and VFW Bataan Post No. 3304 and American Legion LaFrenz Post No. 15.

MEMORIALS: In lieu of flowers, memorials can be directed to the family and will be designated at a later date.

Please feel free to send your condolences to the family.
Each condolence will be printed and given to the family after the service.

pelan@pelanfuneralservices.com

Paul Tobin

Paul Tobin

Marjorie Bonneau, 101, of Fremont Ne Formerly of Craig NE


MARJORIE BONNEAU, 101 years, of Fremont, Nebraska, formerly of Craig, Nebraska, passed away Friday, March 27, 2015 at the Pathfinder Place in Fremont, Nebraska

MEMORIAL SERVICE: Saturday, April 4, 2015, 2:00 pm at the United Methodist Church in Craig.

NO VISITATION

PRIVATE FAMILY BURIAL: Craig Cemetery.

MEMORIALS: United Methodist Church in Craig or Donor’s Choice.

Please feel free to send your condolences to the family.
Each condolence will be printed and given to the family after the service.

pelan@pelanfuneralservices.com

Henry Phillip (Phil) Eriksen, 85, of Omaha NE Formerly of Tekamah and Craig NE


Henry Phillip (Phil) Eriksen was born December 30, 1929 to Henry and Violet (McPherson) Eriksen at Methodist Hospital in Omaha, Nebraska.  He passed away Wednesday, March 25, 2015, at Methodist Hospital in Omaha after a brief illness.

Phil was raised on a farm southwest of Craig, Nebraska and attended Craig Public schools graduating from high school in 1948. After graduation he farmed and was a part time trucker until enlisting in the Army in January 1952.  He served as the records clerk for a training camp until his discharge in December 1953.

On October 1, 1950, Phil was married to Letha Hansen in Oakland, Nebraska. They lived most of their lives on a farm 2 ½ miles south of Craig until health issues forced his retirement from farming in 1995. In early 1996 they moved to Tekamah, Nebraska where Phil served as Burt County’s Veteran Service Officer from the fall of 1992 until the fall of 2012. They moved to Omaha in September 2012 where he resided until his passing.

He enjoyed boating, vacationing with family and spending time with his grandchildren.

Phil was a member of the Craig and Tekamah American Legion, the Tekamah Masonic Lodge, Omaha Scottish Rite, Tangier Shrine and the Tekamah United Methodist Church.

He was preceded in death by his parents, son-in-law Brad Herting, and granddaughter Jessica Herting.

Survivors include his wife, Letha of Omaha; two sons and daughter-in-laws: Mike and LaDonna Eriksen of Omaha, Pat and Marcia Eriksen of Sioux City, IA; daughter: Barbie Herting of Omaha; eight grandchildren: Dan Eriksen of Omaha, Amanda (Chris) McDonnell of Orland Park, IL, Bethany Eriksen of Phoenix, AZ, Leila Eriksen of Sioux City, IA, Russ (Libbi) Herting of Omaha, Brandon, Justin and Jenny Herting of Omaha; two great grandchildren: Campbell and Lila McDonnell of Orland Park, IL; sister: Marge Sommerer of rural Craig; brother and sister-in-law Jim and Phyllis Eriksen of Grand Island.

FUNERAL SERVICE: Monday, March 30, 2015, 10:30 am, at the United Methodist Church, Tekamah, NE. WITH MILITARY HONORS by VFW Bataan Post No. 3304 and American Legion LaFrenz Post No. 15 and American Legion Post No. 127.

VISITATION: Sunday, 5 – 7 pm with family receiving friends at Pelan Funeral Services in Tekamah. Visitation Monday will also be held at the church one hour prior to the service.

BURIAL: Craig Cemetery, at a later date

MEMORIALS: To the family with memorials to be designated at a later date.

Please feel free to send your condolences to the family.
Each condolence will be printed and given to the family after the service.

pelan@pelanfuneralservices.com

H. Phil Eriksen

H. Phil Eriksen

 

Annual Easter Bazaar at Oakland Heights


There were many Easter goodies on hand at the annual Oakland Heights Easter Bazaar. Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Editor and Chief, Kat Country Hub.

There were many Easter goodies on hand at the annual Oakland Heights Easter Bazaar. Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Editor and Chief, Kat Country Hub.

DSC06446

Happenings at Oakland Heights


Oakland Heights News

By Nancy Silvey Activity Director

I hope everyone was able to get outside this past week what nice weather we had. This week we have a spring event going on, on Friday March 27th is our Easter Bazaar from 8:30 am to 1:00 pm lots of baked goods, Easter gifts, and misc. come in and take a look. Next week is Easter week and on Monday March 30th is our monthly resident council meeting at 2:30 pm. the n on Saturday April 4th the annual Lyons Club Easter egg Hunt for 8 and under starting at 2:00 pm.

Church Service for Palm Sunday March 29th at 2:30 pm will be given by the Craig/Alder Grove Church with a luncheon served afterwards. On Thursday April 2nd at 2:30 pm we will have a Maundy church service with Pastor Eldal. And on Friday April 3rd   we will be having a Good Friday Church service at 2:30 pm with Pastor Hoden.

Activities for the week of March30th to April 4th , are as followed, Reading with Marilyn, Manicures, Coffee and Conversation, Sing a Long, Bingo w/WOW, Bible Fellowship, Reading the Local Paper, Let’s Play Ball, Friday Bingo, Saturday morning movie, and Lawrence Walk.

Volunteers signing in last week were; Judy Nelson, Betty Hanna, Bonnie Fleischman, Patty Miller, Mary Donavon, Anne Anderson, Lola Bridgeford, Mary Alice Pearson, Di Ruwe, Kay Swanson, Dani Moseman, and Sly Rouse.

Guest signing in this past week were; June Anderson, Jean Fry, Karen Rosenboom, Laurie, Miranda, and Martin Long.

Activity Memorial Fund

A Memorial was given by Frank Kienow in memory of Jerome Anderson.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oakland Garden Club News


Twelve members of the Oakland Garden Club met in the Rosen room at the Oakland auditorium at 2:00 p.m., on Thursday March 12.

 

Hostesses Tammy Waters and Cathi McMurtry decorated with a shamrock table runner on front desk with green candle with wrapper at base with Irish symbols, green & white butterflies and served a green poke cake cake with green whipped cream.

 

Members gave pledge to the American flag and read the Garden Club Creed from their handbooks. Each member answered roll call by naming a blue flower they had grown. Bachelor button and iris were the most frequently mentioned.

 

Cathi McMurtry read the minutes from the February meeting. Treasurer Audrey Unwin the treasury balance as the same as February but with membership dues not yet deposited.

 

For old business, Audrey Unwin reported that she had provided coffee for this meeting but would buy a decorated canister of ½ caffeine coffee, mark it and put in the kitchen for Garden Club.

 

In new business, Lela Heineman announced a change in the schedule. The April lesson will be moved to September, and the April meeting will feature Ina Glaubius who will give tips and tricks for photographing flowers, birds, and insects, She has won awards for her work at the NE State Fair and will be bringing some of her works for display. The public is invited to attend this activity.

 

Debbie Rosenboom reported on a meeting of representatives of organizations in Oakland planning for the 150 anniversary in 2018 of the founding of Oakland. They are looking for a catchy slogan to promote it and also want each organization to plan how best to prepare for it. The big promotion will be for Memorial Day weekend when many people traditionally return for family and school reunions. The suggestion for the Garden Club was that with advance notice they could have the park beds looking fantastic by the end of May in 2018. Audrey Unwin suggested that that meant planting tulips. Rosenboom reminded members that this was separate from the Swedish festival and did not need to include Swedish flowers. Also, she reminded them to be thinking of possible slogan or slogans.

 

It was reported at the Chamber of Commerce meeting of the expense of insurance for the gator for watering pots on the main avenue. Deb Rosenboom wondered if the Garden Club could use it for watering at the park as the many hoses were heavy to drag to flower beds. We will ask Michael Nissen about insurance cost for that. Audrey Unwin moved and Tammy Waters seconded that we donate $100.00 to the Chamber of Commerce for the pots and their watering on Oakland Avenue. The motion carried.

Audrey Unwin reported that Sean Linder wondered if we could put sprinklers in the park flower beds. Audrey Unwin will ask Linder to check into cost for doing so.

 

Members commented on the bed next to the gazebo originally built by Boy Scouts who tended it for about two years. The entire bed needs torn apart and rebuilt. It might possibly have a layer of RR ties underneath it.

 

Lela Heineman moved and Laverne Osterndorff seconded that we provide a single rose in bud vase at the funerals of Doris Anderson and Laurine Bush, long members of Garden Club. The motion carried.

Audrey Unwin reported that the Burt County Fair may be requiring all entries to the fair be made on Thursday night so that the judges could complete judging Friday morning and the exhibits be open to the public on Friday afternoon.

Laverne Osterndorff and Lela Heineman gave a $10.00 donation for Lorine Bush.

Marie Daubert presented an old clipping mentioning blackberry lily some had asked about. It has now been classified as an iris, but after blooming its fruit and berry look like a blackberry. It dates back not just to George Washington’s estate but also is found in Chinese literature of 25 A.D. A hot new trend is planting succulents. Mix up types and shapes in your planters for attractive gardens.

She read about buying newer plants disease resistant and mildew resistant, and also said that butternut was more resistant to squash bug infestation than other squashes because of their strong stems squash vine borers couldn’t penetrate. A looming threat is the emerald ash borer. Its infestation is nearly impossible to detect until it is too late to save the tree. It is spread by people moving trees and firewood. The beetles can fly about ½ mile. A professional preventative treatment for an average size tree would cost about $100.00.

Members read the Garden Club Benediction, and Audrey Unwin gave the lesson on Swedish flowers. The national flower of Sweden is the Linnea Borealis or Twinflower, a delicate wildflower about 1 inch high, smelling of vanilla, and growing in the forests which cover over half of Sweden. The flower is named after Swedish Carl Linnaeus, the man who 300 years ago developed the taxonomy or system of classifying plants and animals, a taxonomy used today relatively unchanged.

Sweden has big countryside with the landscape wide and open even in cities with fruit, vegetable and nursery stock in the open. Pot plants, cut flowers, and bedding plants and herbs are grown under glass. Sweden historically had 25 provinces that now have no administrative function, but remain historical legacies and the means of cultural identification and used in colloquial speech while administration is reduced to a lower number of counties.

Each province has two flowers or plants representing it. Each was assigned one, but in cases where they did not like the assigned one, they picked another. Eventually, each province gained two representative plants—assigned or chosen. By seeing the English common name, you will recognize most of them as plants or flowers growing here. Listed first is the traditional province name, then the plant. Blekinge: English oak and great mullein. Bohuslan: honeysuckle. Dalarna: Scottish blackbell and spreading bell flower. Dalsland: true forget-me-not. Gotland: English ivy. Gastrikland: lily of the valley. Halland: creeping broom gold. Halsingland: common flax. Harjedalen: pasque flower and Alpine yellow violet. Jamtland: black vanilla orchid. Lappland: white dryad. Medelpad: Norway spruce and globe flower. Norrbotten: Arctic raspberry. Narke: cowslip. Skane: oxeye daisy. Smaland: twinflower. Sodermanland: European white water lily. Uppland: Kings meadow lily. Varmland: chickweed & Arctic starflower. Vasterbotten: lousewort. Vastergotland: shrub heather. Vastmanland: European mistletoe. Angermanland: viola tricolor. Oland: hoary-rock rose. Ostergotland: cornflower or bachelor button.

 

Cathi McMurtry, Secretary

 

 

 

Wesley C. Lueth, 56, of Wakefield NE


Wesley C. Lueth, 56, passed away Wednesday, March 25, 2015 at Providence Medical Center in Wayne, NE. Funeral services will be Saturday, March 28, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. at Salem Lutheran Church in Wakefield, NE; Pastor Barbara Hansen will be officiating.

Wesley Lueth

Wesley Lueth

The visitation will be on Friday, March 27, 2015 from 4:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. at Salem Lutheran Church with a prayer service beginning at 7:00 p.m. Burial will be at the Wakefield, Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be directed to the family for future designation. Arrangements are under the direction of Bressler-Munderloh-Smith Funeral Home in Wakefield, NE.

H. Phil Eriksen, 85, of Omaha NE Formerly of Tekamah NE


H. PHIL ERIKSEN, 85 years, of Omaha, Nebraska, formerly of Tekamah, Nebraska passed away on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 at Methodist Hospital in Omaha.

FUNERAL SERVICE: Monday, March 30, 2015, 10:30 am, at the United Methodist Church, Tekamah, NE. WITH MILITARY HONORS by VFW Bataan Post No. 3304 and American Legion LaFrenz Post No. 15 and American Legion Post No. 127.

VISITATION: Sunday, 5 – 7 pm with family receiving friends at Pelan Funeral Services in Tekamah. Visitation Monday will also be held at the church one hour prior to the service.

BURIAL: Craig Cemetery, at a later date

MEMORIALS: To the family with memorials to be designated at a later date.

Please feel free to send your condolences to the family.
Each condolence will be printed and given to the family after the service.

H. Phil Eriksen

H. Phil Eriksen

pelan@pelanfuneralservices.com

Reminder: Easter Bazaar at Oakland Heights Today


Oakland Heights is having their annual Easter Bazaar today from 8:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Do your Easter shopping at Oakland Heights today!