The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 01, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

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    Prairieland Talk . . .
Nebraskan Becomes Moslem
By ROMAINE SAUNDERS, Retired, Former Editor The Frontier
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rie’and, now in Turkey, will become a Moslem as
a condition imposed by a dark-haired maiden if
she becomes his bride. Youth or maid will join
most anything at the dictation of Cupid. Maybe a
few sincerely, more hypocritically.
This Nebraska lad, unlike the Persian youth
in Sir Thomas Moore’s story of “Lallah Rookh,”
does not seem to care what he
joins if he can have the Turkish
beauty he wants. The Persian
youth had scaled a dizzy height
in pursuit of “that tyrant Arab,”
only to find a trembling dove in
the person of an Arab maid.
Emotions' of the ages stirred. But
no; she was not a Persian maid
* and away he plunged i» loyalty
to the faith of his fathers.
Are there no more maidens
fair on prairieland that our
boys go to distant lands to find Romaine
a life’s companion! Do the hun- Saunders
dreds of millions in the Moslem world also have
an appeal? Shall I join a setup because there are
lots of them?
But listen—talking to a few followers there
was One who said, “Enter ye in at the straight
gate, for wide is the gate and broad is the way
that leads to destruction, and many there be that
go in thereat. Because straight is the gate and
narrow is the way that leadeth unto life and few
there be that find it.” Mohammedans, Brahmans,
Buddhists comprise 65 percent of the world’s peo
ples. And here goes a Nebraska guy to join them
to get a bride when he could have one from a
choice selectiorf of prairieland beauties.
Maybe he wants more than one.
*
Instruction, slogans, stated periods, drive
carefully and other preachments are having lit
tle or no effect to reduce traffic tragedies. Ten
dead on the highway down by Waterbury at one
blow, six at another destiny of death and five at
the third crackup and one at other points where
death waited that day. Human hands, human
eyes, human senses being what they are, the
traffic tragedies multiply.
* * *
Mrs. Graham left in tears. Thus the story ends
of the visit of a young wife to her husband behind
prison bars. It was her first visit since he was jail
ed to that Denver, Colo., man charged with plac
ing the explosives that blew up an airplane and
took the lives of 44 aboard the plane, including
the mother of the accused. Yes, tears came to the
heart burdened wife. Not only she, but sorrowing
souls whose near relatives were on that airplane,
and so the tragic wreckage leaves other horror
haunted lives. Who planted the explosives, John
Gilbert Graham or some other agent from a syna
gogue of Satan? Graham said he did, then said he
didn’t. Conjectures had lead a trail to a powerful
group of which Graham was the agent. This is un
thinkable, although in the days of Harry Orchard
and the Western Federation of Miners, similar
crimes were frequent, one such resulting in the
death of a. train load of strike breakers, another
killing a former governor of Idaho. The responsible
parties for those crimes of a half-century ago
were caught and prosecuted, some spending their
days in prison, others deported. Graham, or who
ever is guilty, should be made to suffer.
* * »
South Dakota has just 95 square miles area
more than Nebraska, our state having 77,520
square miles and South Dakota 77,615 square
miles. Kansas has 82,158 square miles within its
boundaries. The Pacific ocean spreads across 71
million square miles, the Atlantic 34 million, the
Indian ocean 28 million.
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prophesying tempest and snow just ahead. The
sun glows golden in the blue canopy above that we
call the sky and under which we strut, live out our
days and die. Lift not imploring hands to that
ethereal blue. It, like you and I, is helpless, too.
Lift supplicating hands and look farther beyond
the hands of Orion down the avenue of light
emanating from the throne of the Infinite. And
here we helpless pieces of the game we play upon
the checkerboard of days and nights (to borrow a
line from an Arabian poet) are then lifted from our
blundering ways. The hand that writes on the
scroll of time neither pauses nor backward goes
and the record it traces neither tears nor regrets
erase, but there are smiles in place of tears as
nothing is seen that record to disgrace.
* * *
A 19-year-old miss, Nancy Isrig, is a fresh
man at the state university starting on a career
to become an engineer. Maybe the inspiration
arises from the work of her dad, who is an en
gineer in the state highway department.
* * *
A lady of mature years and crowned in snow
white glory has been treading the streets of the
community for 17 years going from door-to-door
taking orders for the products of a manufacturing
concern that turns out toothpaste, shaving dope,
bedroom cosmetics and many dainties for dolling
you up. Her sales have amounted to $32,000 and
she keeps going from household - to - household
where not alone the commercial instinct is put to
work but that fundamental human impulse, “Did
you hear the latest?” is bandied back and forth.
The old gal had employed her husband as delivery
boy and collection agent but he died in harness
and now she manages the business single handed
and promotes the interest of the ladies’ discussion
club.
% * * *
Lunar property contracts on the market. The
man in the moon will have to move over. . . A CIO
contract with a Connecticut concern provides that
women employees are to be given two days a year
to get hair waves. . . Lincoln’s west O street mil
lion-dollar overpass is to be dedicated with appro
priate ceremonies today (Thursday). . . 16,700 beef
cattle were sold at the Sandhills Cattle association
sales and shows held at O’Neill, Burwell, Bassett,
Valentine, Gordon and Alliance. . . In the interests
of “economy,” busybodies have come out with a
changed typewriter keyboard. . . The highways
are no respecters of persons; Rev. John Troyer,
pastor of the Mennonite church at Beaver Crossing
was a highway victim near Seward.
* * *
Six Russians fell before the firing squad at
Moscow the other day. The decree had gone forth
that the six native Muscovites must be shot for
“conspiring” to overthrow the government of the
reds and go “capitalistic.” The reds among us in
Yankeeland preach the overthrow of our national
and state governments that guarantee to all a way
of life as each individual chooses to make it and
replace that way of life with one ordered by a
group of dictators. None of these promoters of de
struction have faced a firing squad and continue
to enjoy the blessings of freedom among us while
devising sinister schemes to destroy that freedom.
* * *
Ray C. Johnson, serving his ninth term as state
auditor, will be a candidate again and probably
will be reelected, having entered his name last
week to appear on the primary ballot for the re
publican nomination. The duties of some state and
county offices are such that the longer an official
serves, the more efficient the service rendered.
County judge, district judge, superintendent of
schools, state auditor, railway commissioners are
among those and maybe the term of office should
be lengthened.
Editorial . . . .
Bridges Usually Bear Up
Grace Noel Crowell once wrote a memorable
poem about a bridge.
It concerned the weary, fearful, traveler who
viewed with horror the prospect of trying to cross
a deep, treacherous chasm that yawned below.
The only way to cross was by a rickety, flimsy,
makeshift bridge. The concluding line of the poem
was the reassuring thought that “strangely enough
all the bridges I have crossed today have borne
me up,” or words to that effect.
So many of us are crossing so many of our
bridges long before we reach them that our daily
existence has become a torment instead of a joy,
an ordeal instead of a glorious adventure, torture
instead of satisfaction.
There is more than one woman and more than
one man in our community who never saw an
apple blossom or a tree last spring, never saw a
flower, never heard a robin singing to its mate
after a summer’s shower, never once saw the riot
ous gold and scarlet of the countryside this autumn.
It was not because they were physically deaf,
dumb or blind. It was because they were so men
tally imprisoned in a dark pit of despair and wor
ry about the bridges they thought they faced that
never once did they see or hear .the beautiful
world about them.
Palace Guard
“Washington observers are — it is generally
agreed — a thick-skinned lot, accustomed to the
sordid realities of national politics concealed by
the headlines and high-sounding comments of ed
itorial writers. Nevertheless, even the most hard
ened watcher of the Washington scene displays
some disgust with the efforts of the palace guard
' to get President Eisenhower to run again.”
Thus begins an article in a recent issue of the
upcoming Washington newsletter, Human Events.
“In the past 20 years, the quadrennial exer
tions of these camarillas who surround (and us
ually shape the course of) presidents are a fa
miliar phenomenon. No one who has once caught
‘Potomac fever’ likes to relinquish power and the
members of the palace guard (1953-’55) are no dif
ferent than their predecessors. On October 1, right
after the president’s stroke, Human Events warn
ed that this would be one of the big factors in the
interregnum government. Not only power, but fear
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these busy times, find it difficult to get another—
prompt these denizens of the white house to work
frantically to ensure continuance of they key posi
tions. It is a genuine fear; few in the capital doubt
that if, for instance, Nixon would take over the
reins of power, he would clean house in the white
house. The prevailing suspicion of what the guard
is plotting was well expressed in a broadcast on
November 8 by NBC commentator Earl Godwin.
“’Hie indelicacy, not to mention cruelty, of
these efforts to get a sick president to continue to
bear the burdens of his high place has caused even
some very cynical observers here to lift eyebrows.
“One ‘caper’—details of which have begun to
leak out—is described as follows: The white house
crowd worked on various private friends and so
cial companions of the president, to persuade them
to write letters to the president (when he was in
Denver) strongly expressing the' hope that the ill
executive would run again. Some of these friends
of Ike have yielded and, it is said, their letters
suggested that only the president can maintain the
present high level of business prosperity and can
save the ‘spirit of Geneva.’
“The president’s reaction to such communi
cations is not known,” the article concludes.
Worthy Trying
Arthur J. Riedesel, publisher of the Ashland
Gazette, comments upon a recent movement to
bring new industries to Ashland, calling attention
to the fate of small communities which waited too
long to diversify their source of income. He wiites
as follows:
“A lot of communities of our size or there
abouts scramble madly to diversify the sources of
their income, but too late. Sloth and lethargy in
many cases have resulted in a town dying as a
trading and community center. When the collapse
of the town becomes clear, committees are organ
ized to do something about it. Usually they can
not.”
No doubt hundreds of persons will throng the
streets tonight (Thursday) for the annual yuletide
window unveiling. Coming up next week are bo
gus dollar days under the auspices of the Cham
ber of Commerce.
___
Every time the government gets into the
business of trying to distribute the milk of human
kindness, the milk turns sour. There is no substi
tute for individual responsibility.
Sometimes the Thanksgiving turkey lasts
longer than normally would be expected.
CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher
Editorial & Business Offices: 122 South Fourth St.
Address correspondence: Box 330, O’Neill, Nebr.
Established in 1880 — Published Each Thursday
_____ «
Entered at the postoffice in O’Neill, Holt coun
ty, Nebraska, as second-class mail matter under
the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. This news
paper is a member of the Nebraska Press Associa
tion, National Editorial Association and the Audit
Bureau of Circulations.
Terms of Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per
year; elsewhere in the United States, $3 per year;
rates abroad provided on request. All subscriptions
are paid-in-advance.
Audited (ABC) Circulation—2,463 (Mar. 31, 1955)
When You and I Were Young . . .
Irish Martyrs
Honored in Omaha
Jury Acquits Sunday
Ball Team
50 Years Ago
A jury of 12 men, good and
true, acquitted the Fremont ball
team, which was charged with
violating the statute by playing
baseball on Sunday. . . Will Da
vis, a former O’Neill typograph
ical artist, is spending the week
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.
L. Davis. . . The entertainment
given by the ladies of the Episco
pal church was a successfu af
fair. . . Mrs. L. G. Gillespie is
visiting in Tilden. . . Ben F. Con
ant of McHenry N.D., and Maud
Waring of Middlebranch were
married. . . The United Irish so
cieties of Omaha and South Om
aha joined in a memorial dem
onstration in commemoration of
the martyrs, Manchester, Al
len, Larkin and O’Brien. Speaker
of the evening was E. H. Whelan
of O’Neill. . . A dance was given
at the McKathnie home.
20 Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Gillespie
returned home from Lincoln,
where he had been the past five
weeks attending the special ses
sion of the legislatue. . . The
ladies of the city are soliciting
funds and new and used toys to
enable the children of the less
fortunate to have a nice Christ
mas. . . C. B. Yamell, local man- '
ager of the Golden Rule store,
was m an automobile accident
south of Atkinson while returning
home from a state managers’
meeting at Holdrege. . . Consid
erable excitement was created in
the southeastern part of the coun
ty when it was reported that a
little boy was lost in the sand
hills. Crowds of fanners were out
looking for'the lad. He was found
asleep in a sand blowout.
The little boy is the three-year
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Miller, who live on the Garver
place southwest of Ewing. . .
Mrs. Josephine Peshek, 70, died
in the local hospital following an
operation for the removal of a
foot.
10 Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Van Vleck
of Woodbine, Wash., arrived here
and will make their home in O’
Neill. . . Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mc
Kenna and son of Lincoln came
to spend Thanksgiving here. . .
After more than half a century,
R. E. Chittick of Stuart has sold
his drug store and retired from
an active life that involved not
only his personal business prob
lems but a great interest in the
public affairs of the community.
. . . Margaret Thornton and Clay
Johnson were married. . . The
girls’ interest group met at the
Reverend Kattner residence in
Page. . . Biglin Brothers were
notified of the death of Margaret
Gibbons at her home in Butte,
Mont. . . Twenty-two ladies rep
resenting nine project or women’s
clubs, met at the assembly room
of the courthouse.
One Year Ago
The high school pep club at
Inman sponsored a penny carni
val. . . Col. Evar Peterson, assist
ant administrative officer for the
Nebraska national guard, confer
red with a Chamber of Commerce
group here. Possibility of estab
lishing an armored tank guard
company was discussed. . . No one
was hurt when an O’Neill-bound
bus from Valentine overturned on
slippery U.S. highway 20 east of
Stuart. . . Mrs. Clayton Johnson
of Orchard left for St. Louis,
Wash., to join her husband, who
is stationed there. . . Mrs. Nora
Henderson of Page observed her
83d birthday anniversary.
Real Estate Transfers
WD—F. J. Gilg to Wendell J.
Nelson or wf 8/30/55 $400-Lot 1
Gilg & Swenson’s subdivision-O’
Neill.
WD—Frank LeMunyan to Ro
bert E. LeMunyan & wf 11/21/55
$9,000-E% 5-28-15.
r——
Morris Pongratz
Heads Club—
The Grattan Flats 4-H club
held a meeting Friday, November
18, at the home of Richard Ernst.
Members received their achieve
ment day ribbons and Holt coun
ty fair money. The club received
15 blue ribbons, 10 red and 11
white ribbons, and $33.80 in
award money.
Officers were elected: Morris
Pongratz, president; Barbara
Way man, vice-president; Richard
Ernst, secretary; V e 1 d a Ernst,
treasurer; Connie Brockman,
news reporter.
Projects for next year include
birds, entomology, sewing, health,
tractor, garden, calf and “Let’s
Help Mom and Dad.” Next meet
ing will be in January.—By Bar
bara Wayman, news reporter.
Chambers News
Thanksgiving day guests in the
Alvin Tangeman home were Mr.
and Mrs. Jerald McClenahan and
two sons of Omaha, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Tangeman and son of
Scottsbluff, Mr. and Mrs. Arlin
Tangeman and two sons of Lodge
Pole and James Tangeman of
Lincoln.
Thanksgiving day dinner guests
in the H. C. Walter home were
Marilyn Walter of Sioux City,
Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert Hoge and
family, John Walter, sr., and Mrs.
Al Dierking.
Mrs. Sarah Adams of Chambers,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Christianson
and family of Ewing and Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Adams of Atkinson
spent Thanksgiving in the Robert
Turner home at Grand Island.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stevens,
accompanied by Mrs. William
Turner, drove to Grand Island on
Friday. The Stevenses went on to
Polk to get her mother, Mrs.
Rowena Larson, and returned to
Chambers. Mrs. Turner remained
in Grand Island visiting her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Turner, and family.
On Sunday, Mr. Turner and son
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Thomson, the baby
and daughter, Susan, drove to
Grand Island and brought Mrs.
Turner home.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Penner
of Lincoln spent Thanksgiving
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and Mrs. Joe Daas. Mr. Penner
attends the state university.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McClen
ahan and two sons of Omaha
spent the weekend with his par
Clenahan, and Jack and her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Mc
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Tange
man, and Kay.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Young
and two sons spent Thanksgiving
with their son and daughter-i^i
law, Mr. and Mrs. Francis YouAg,
and family at Kearney.
Mrs. Hugo Sprecher of Ogden,
la., was a weekend guest in the
Duane Summerer home.
Mrs. Joe Daas taught the Val
ley Center school Monday as Mrs.
K. N. Adams, the teacher, was ill.
Thanksgiving day guests in the
E. R. Carpenter home were Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Medcalf, Bobby
and Kathy of Sioux City, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Stevens, Cherilyn and
Terry and Mrs. Herbert Stevens
of Atkinson and M. E. Carpenter
of Chambers.
Thanksgiving day guests in the
Wayne Smith home were Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Ruben Peltzer, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith, Mr. and Mrs. A.
A. Walter and Mrs. James Platt
of Chambers, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Shonka of Burwell.
Mrs. C. E. Tibbets had as her
guests for Thanksgiving dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Osborne of
Wisner, Mr. and Mrs. Hale Os
borne and Sharon of Winner,
S.D., Mrs. Genevieve Bell of Ne
ligh, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Os
borne and family of Atkinson and
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Osborne
and family of Chambers.
Guests in the E. H. Medcalf
home on Thnaksgiving day were
Mr. and Ms. Norman Medcalf
and children and M. and Mrs. i
Allen Mller and family of At
kinson, M. and Ms. P. T. Avard
and Patty of St. Paul, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben W. Medcalf and chil
dren of Sioux City and Mrs. Wil
liam Medcalf of Chambers.
Marilyn Walter, student nurse
at- Sioux City, spent Thanksgiv
ing weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Walter, and
boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Gale Hodgkin and
children, Judy Jo and A. J., of
Denver, Colo., were Thanksgiving
weekend guests of his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Hodgkin.
Vivian Harley came from Sew
ard, where she is attending col
lege, to spend the Thanksgiving
holiday with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Harley.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Carpenter
and M. E. Carpenter were in Ne
ligh and Oakdale Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Taylor of
Appleton, Wise., came Tuesday,
November 22, and visited with
his father, Isaac Taylor, his
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Taylor, and fam
ily and brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Green, and
children. All were dinner guests
Thanksgiving day in the Glen
Taylor home.
Mr. and Mrs. William Turner
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Larson of Page to Ainsv/orth last
Thursday where they spent the
day with Mrs. Walt Synder. Mrs.
Synder is Mrs. Larson’s mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harley vis
ited their son-in-law and daugh
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Duke Struebing,
and family at Grand Island Sun
day.
Ronnie and Ellen McKay of
O’Neill spent Monday and Tues
day with their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Harley, while
their parents were in Omaha.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thorin
and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Winter
mote and Norma Rae spent
Thanksgiving with Mrs. Thorin’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Johnson, at Ewing.
Anoka Marine
in Big Exercise—
ANOKA—A major amphibious
exercise involving 25,000 marines,
20,000 navy personnel, 300 air
craft and 125 ships, was complet
ed November 18 off California.
Among those who took part
with the First marine division,
Camp Pendleton, Calif., was Ma
rine Cpl. John M. Anderson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Anderson
of Rt. 1, Anoka, and husband of
the former Miss Arlene R. Seeba
of Guide Rock.
O’Neill News
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Prescott of
Hartington were Saturday callers
at the Marvin Anderson home.
They went on to Johnstown to
visit Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Day
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth O’
Hara and family. They were ac
companied by Mrs. Bertha Pres
cott.
Venetian blinds, prompt deliv
ery, made to measure, metal or
wood all colors. — J. M. McDon
alds. tf
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yusten
were in Wagner, S.D., Saturday
on business and were dinner
guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Nohr and family.
Charles Marston of Dorsey was
a Thanksgiving dinner guest at
the Harden Anspach home.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Anderson
spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Meyers and family
at Atkinson.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yusten
were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd John
son and family and Don Van Bur
ens. The Johnson family were also
supper guests.
Alice’s Beauty Shop
(In Former Apparel Shop
Location) . :
Phone 263 — O’Neal
Round bales are easy to handle and
feed — no broken bales, no loose
hay, no tangled wires or twine. No
matter how many tons you put in
the bam, every bale will come out
whole and firm.
You couldn’t buckle a round bale
even if you tried.- Drop ’em in the
mow from a hay fork if you like.
They just don’t fall apart.
Best of all, round bales are better
feed. Leaves are rolled inside... safe
from shattering and weather. From
We can arrange to show field to feed rack you save all the
you some round bales, leaves — the real feeding punch in
Stop in and see us. quality hay.
a.
ALLIS-CHALMERS <§>
SALES AND SERVICE TT
MARCELLUS LMPLEMENT CO.
_ Phone 5 * West O’Neill
Northeast Corner
of 4th & Douglas
O’NEILL, NEBR.
Phone 167
Syee Kxamined _ Olaaaea nttod
Hour# 4.ft Mon thro
For
Low Cost Premiums
in financially responsible
Insurance Companies making
prompt loss adjustments
See or Write:
L. G. Gillespie
Insurance Agent,
O’Neill, Nebr.
In business for the past 62
years
Or phone residence 218,
315 South First Street, or
114, Gillespie Radio Shop
I take a tip from |
...SANTA I
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Come solve your gift problems in our
slipper department. We have the largest
I selection in town.
I Men’s Slippers_2.95 ai,d up |
| Women’s Slippers __1,98 and up f
| Children’s Slippers-"1.95 an^ up 1
I _ _ k
M ^———-———— tr
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*4
rSBORNE'S!
North-Central Nebraska’s
Finest Shoe Store
S[ ^
The Quick Turnover Deed means
Every day is
Christmas at your
Ford Dealer’s
We’re out for big volume and we’ll play
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Our top-volume sales mean you can make a
big saving on a ’56 Ford. With our quicker
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Here’s your chance to really save on the car
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LOHAUS MOTOR CO.
Phone 33 O’Neill
_“ T,m'” Inter«‘<d ” A-l Truck - Be Sore to See F.„ Ford Deil„