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Saturday nights in early Hannaford were very special.
Chores done, the farm families, mostly of Scandinavian descent, cranked
up their Model T's and rushed into town ostensibly for weekend shopping.
While the kids thrilled to Charles Chaplin or William S. Hart at the
Groven Hall movies, parents picked up the needed groceries.
This done, the promenading began, up and down the streets; not for
exercise, mind you, but just because it was the thing to do. A typical Saturday night in the early 1920s, would
find dozens of people casually strolling from the Hannaford Mercantile, past
Crane-Johnson Lumber Co., Cotton's Restaurant, Otteson's Drug Store, Asher
Anderson's Implement Shop, Aarestad Brothers & Troseth Hardware, Stafne's
Pool Hall, and down as far as Sinclair's Furniture Store and return.
At Jackson's Store they would make a right turn and amble by the Olaf
Johnson Hardware, Nordeng & Alm Meat Market, Barber Shop, Pool Hall, and the
Nordeng & Alm Hotel. Every few yards the strolling would be interrupted as
neighbor met neighbor. Even though
they had visited by party line phone earlier that day or shared haying or
harvest work during the last couple of days, they always greeted each other
warmly and excitedly. Long parted
friends meeting unexpectedly could extend no more genuinely sincere a greeting
then two close neighbors coming face to face in Hannaford, always with
enthusiasm: "Nei! Nei! Er du i bjen i kveld?" meaning "No! No!
Are you in town tonight?" It might move someone these days to wonder if every
someone being so greeted might have responded in the same sense and manner of
speaking: "Nei! Nei! Jeg er ikke i bjen i kveld. Er du?" meaning "No! No! I am not in town tonight.
Are you?" Source: Hannaford
Area History North Dakota Centennial 1889 - 1989 Page 257 |