Prairieland Talk . . . Prairie Brings Visions of Past By ROMAINE SAUNDERS. Retired. Former Editor The Frontier LINCOLN—With two of my daughters I stood on hallowed ground, each plucking a twig from a tree planted by the hand of my father, that hand long years motionless in death, one of six others under the sod where O’Neill buries its dead. Daughters—Mrs. L M. Rohrer and her hus band of Los Alamos, N.M., and Mrs. H. E. Eno and her husband of Lincoln— ' ~T T* and I bad come to O’Neill to f place a floral tribute to the memory of our dead and stand in silent meditation where their remains now repose. One other was in our group, Mrs. Alma Jobst of Lincoln, a guest and friend, who for the first time had gotten away from the concrete environment to look out across the green robed vista of open prairieland. The six of us loading aboard Romalne a late model car with New Mex- Saunders ico license plates and Mr. Rohrer at the steering wheel, the floral tributes laid as a token of respect in memory of the loved and lost, we rolled east tour miles and one mile north. Seventy-odd years ago Prairieland Talker went through the experience out there that none but a pioneer homestead lad has ever known. Standing out there looking over the vast open prairie came visions of the past. On the east section line lay the homestead of my father, John George Saunders, a Civil War veteran and member of the Grand Army of the Republic. Just across the section line to the west was the homestead of W. D. (“Doc”) Mathews, who founded The Frontier in 1880. Where today are the pioneers? That open country lies today unoccupied as it did a hundred years ago save for grazing herds where buffalo and deer roamed in the long ago. While daughters gathered each a prairie rose, the lad of other years stood in silent awe and looked out across the landscape robed in silken green as memories of joy and pain, of privation and loneli ness, of adventure and tragedy, of youthful tun and budding romance flashed again in visions out of memory’s treasured store. __ tkn Uirfh And a a Ug liters nave Hiving*. ^. way again we rolled into Chambers, where Mrs. Ted Platt graciously showed Mrs. Rohrer and Mrs. Eno through the house that had been their home 40 years ago on our ranch 17 miles further on, while Ted entertained Prairieland Talker. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bly of Swan pre cinct, neighbors when I lived out there, were in Chambers that day and in greeting them it was noted with pleasure that Raymond has survived some 13 years assessing the taxpayers without a scratch. On the highway once more, mile-after-mile was left behind and then another stop and Harold Eno had his first experience opening a gate such as the cow country fences have and we drove in where herds now have taken over. Daughters got out, set foot and walked about on hallowed ground where their childhood had been spent and where treasured memories still linger. Now again we are back in the crowded haunts of men. * • * Since John McBride was elected O’Neill’s first mayor there has been about everything from mar keting lumpjaw beef to coining lead dollars for city officials to deal with and now a sitdown strike of city employees rates as a tame affair. The city council voted that the demands of the “sit down group could not be granted and the strikers were dismissed as city employees. Seven local patriots had been on the pay roll functioning as appointed officials at a few hundred each a month doing what Charley Hall once did as street commissioner, wa ter and light and pump house roustabout and town marshal for $50 a month. Meeting Mayor Schaffer on the street when in O’Neill recently all was calm and serene as we visited, the mayor con demning no one but expressed regrets that the de mands of the discharged group were such that the city was unable to comply with. The mournful call of the mourning dove floats from tree-to-tree when daylight breaks through the gloom of night. As if to arouse sleepy heads the winged creature’s notes float out on the morning air until sunrise, and as the orb of day shines again upon the land the doves cease to serenade, conscious of a duty performed or giving it up as hopeless to route out the sleepers. The capital city is to have a 12-story structure combining the city administration and county courthouse. Another city problem is where to dump garbage. . . Terry Carpenter, the free lance ! in Scotts Bluff county, is a target for a ministerial association whose members are out after the ter rible Terry's scalp for alleged violation of state liquor laws. . . One primary election candidate spent over $2,000 and failed to win a place on the November ballot. . . In the lion country of East Africa over 40 natives have been killed and eaten by lions, and the government calls for a prototype , of Teddy Roosevelt to come in and kill off the maneaters. . . Over 500 cases of measles reported in Lincoln the last week in May. . . A boy on the Iowa side of the Missouri fell in the river, grabbed a floating log and exclaimed, “Glad to see you!" j when rescuers from the Nebraska side rowed out in a boat to bring him to shore. • • • In the death of Bard Hanna another of the pioneers of the Chambers community travels the last mile. In the days of political struggles in Holt county when partisan leaders were pawing the air promoting their party interests, we always de pended on Bard to deliver the republican vote in his precinct. Mr. Hanna's business besides his ac tivity in politics was moving buildings, one engi neering fete recalled being moving a building on Fourth street in O’Neill to Chambers. The building in O’Neill had been occupied by a saloon but was put to use in Chambers where no saloon has ever been in operation as a hardware store. Bard took an interest in collecting bits of relics of historical interest, one such being a sliver from the whistling post near Bassett where Kid Wade was hung a night in February, 1884. * * * Five prairieland patriots down at Omaha stand on their rights as American citizens and will go the limit to demand the right to hold jobs with out joining a labor union. Employed by the Union Pacific railway, the railroad workers’ union has sought bv means of a U.S. supreme Amrt decree to have the men fired or force them to join the union. The attorney for the five men seeks a re hearing before the high court which has held that state right-to-work laws do not apply to rail road. The men say they have nothing against unions but resent having union membership cram med down uieir tnroats. the citizens or Nebraska adopted the right-to-work amendment by an ov erwhelming vote. Shall judicial decree annul the voice of the people? * * * The group that has been active for years promoting plans to revamp our Gregorian cal endar and thus change or bring to an end the I historic weekly cycle has reorganized under a new name, now to be known as the International World Calendar association. Its main office has been moved from New York to Ottawa, Canada, Arthur J. Hills, a Canadian, being the president of the reorganized association, the former pres ident, Miss Elizabeth Achelis, maybe giving it up as hopeless, retiring to put up with the calen dar week as it is. • • * Seated at a bus loading point on 48th street with a friend settling world problems, when a lady from O’Neill came up and greeted me and we had a visit. Mrs. Fred Holsclaw was in the city, bringing Mr. Holsclaw to Lincoln for med ical care. He was in a hospital and she was staying with her daughter, Mrs. Murdy, who makes her home in Lincoln. At the time of our street corner visit her husband was undergoing a medical checkup and might have to remain for a time in the hospital. * * * Topheavy government—national, state and lo cal. Law makers piling up stacks of legal require ments, public officials issuing directives, taxation becoming a burden. Now here comes a group to add to the topheavy load, proposing an amendment to double the membership of our state legislature, pay its members $25 a day and $1,200 expense al lowance. If the group promoting the movement secures the required number of names to its peti tion the amendment will appear on the November ballot. • • • Somewhere in the hills down in Howard county a tusk of a prehistoric beast believed to have been an elephant has been dug from the earth. The specimen is placed with like relics of the past at the state university museum. Editorial . . . Object of Education Hon. Clarence A. Davis, Lincoln lawyer who< has been acting secretary of the interior and cur rently is undersecretary, this week addressed the Nebraska university alumni assembled at Lincoln. His talk appealed to us. Incidentally, Undersecretary Davis and O’ Neill’s Rev. J. LaVeme Jay, Methodist leader, were conferred doctor of divinity degrees by that uni versity on the same platform. Back to the Davis talk: “If there is a purpose to higher education, it is to enable people to live more satisfactorily, more happily and more completely,” he declared. The purpose of education is to give people wisdom, he added. Although many search for this wisdom, few find it. The speaker declared that rapid technilogical advances, the expansion of law and a striving toward universal education have not decreased crime, divorce nor economic strife. Mere accumulation of knowledge is no guar antee of a satisfactory life. The missing element is the instinct of religious worship, according to Da vis. “The church colleges do not face the require ment of being free from religious influences which tax-supported institutions must meet,” he said. Church colleges can clearly establish a curricu lum for Christian education. “This is in marked contrast to many institu tions which have little, if any control of the influ ences to which students are subjected or the phi losophy which they are taught. “To me, the infiltration of alien economic and political philosophy and anti-religious teaching „ nullifies the benefits which mere knowledge may bestow. One of the manifestations of this diffi culty grows out of that vague and undefinable term called ‘academic freedom.’ “My question is, whose freedom? “The freedom of a teacher to study as he pleases, to think as he pleases and to speak as he pleases? Yes. “But his freedom to teach doctrines contrary to the policy of his institution? Contrary to ac cepted community standards? Contrary to and in imical to the government of the United States? No." >-.. . ■' On Roads (From Dakota County Star) Senator Carl Curtis of Nebraska made a wise statement, we believe, when he said he does not want a super interstate highway program which will deemphasize the needs for primary and sec ondary roads in Nebraska vital to our local econ omy. “Our normal business activities and good lo cal communication must be preserved,” said Curtis. “At the same time we must protect the future welfare of thousands of small businesses in Ne braska, so that large national networks cannot pre-empt business opportunities along an inter state highway system." — The very same thinking was behind the move to maintain highway 35 through the small towns in West Dakota county. Senator Curtis is working for the good of Ne braskans if he follows that trend. The Omaha World-Herald says the small high schools are somewhat to blame for the fact that many of the students entering the universities and colleges need refresher courses on the three “R’s”. The need for refresher stuides wasn’t as pronounc ed a few years ago before the do-gooders began eliminating the small high schools. CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher ARTHUR J. NOECKER and ESTHER M. ASHER, Associate Publishers 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—3,530 (Sept SO, 1955) Bride in Lynch Church Rite In a 6 o'clock ceremony performed in the Assumption Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic church at Lynch Saturday. May 26, Miss Geraldine Courtney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Courtney of Lynch, became the bride of Sidney Frahm, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Frahm of Page.—O'Neill Photo Co. When You and I Were Young . . . ‘Lumber Magnates’ O’Neill Visitors Saberson, Gallagher Circulate 50 Years Ago Ray Saberson and R. E. Galla- | gher, the Page lumber magnates, j were circulating among friends; and admirers at the Hub Satur day. . . Miss Dorothy Testman! and Miss Lenora Daly departed for Kearney to attend the state summer normal. . . Marriage li censes were issued to Merlen A. Richards and Jessie F. Brock, both of Atkinson; John Harmon and Hermena Preble, both of Bassett, and Thomas Flannery and Susan G. Crowley, Frank P. Dlu gosh and Theodosia Hytrek, all of Stuart. . . Dave Yantzie cut Mr. Dodge a good big load of wood Monday. . . A tornado near Ewing reduced Ralph Butler’s house to kindling. 20 Y ears Ago Mrs. F. J. Dishner is head of the ladies’ activities for the an nual gold tournament at the Country club. . . During the month of May 63 new cars and trucks wrere registered in the county treasurer’s office. . . A shower was given for Mr. and Mrs. Harold Baker at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Da vid Bellar of Pleasant Dale. . . Mr. and Mrs. Bill Credle and Ju dith and Hugh O’Donnell of Om aha spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. O’Donnell and other relatives. . . Mrs. William Nollkamper, 81, died at her home in Omaha. 10 Years Ago Robert Ott, formerly of the army air force, has accepted a radio operator’s post with Am erican Airlines. . . Mrs. George L. Fink, 44, of Page, W. R. (“Rafe”) Shaw, 64, of Bassett, Anton Sou kup, 87, of Page and Thomas Connolly, 60, all died. . . Miss Constance Biglin and Dale French, Miss Ava Jones and R. V. Crum ly of Page, Miss Betty June Wy ant and Larry Bourne and Miss Teresa Ramold of Emmet and Raymond Schaaf of Stuart were united in marriage. . . Jack Harty submitted to an emergency ap pendectomy in Sioux City. One Year Ago Rev. Glenn Kennicott of Cairo has been assigned to the O’Neill Emmet Methodist churches. . . Miss Isa Brundage, 81, who was reared in northern Holt county, died. . . The Jaycees accepted their charter from Hugh McKen na, national president and a na tive O’Neillite. . . Miss Dorothy Donohoe was graduated from St. Catherine’s school of nursing in Omaha. . . Dale Garwood and Miss Marvalene Cuatt, both of Amelia, were married. . . Carolyn McKenzie celebrated her eighth birthday anniversary. To Lincoln— Mrs. Harden Anspash went to Lincoln last Thursday. Mrs Keith Anspach and boys return ed home with her. Keith Ans pach will arrive today (Thurs day). Mr. and Mrs. Fred Forsch of Butte visited Mr. and Mrs. Har den Anspach Friday evening. Mumps Interfere— Mr. and Mrs. George C. Rob ertson, who had expected their daughter and her children from Caliilornia this week, received news that their little grand daughters had contracted mumps and will not be able to come when they had expected to. Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Worth en tertained for dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wetzler and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lindberg. Weds German Girl in Clearwater Church Rites EWING— Miss Elizabeth Ver hune, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johann Verhune of Essen Ger many, and Donald E. Spahn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ewald Spahn of Ewing, were wed in a quiet twi light ceremony at the Christ Lu theran church of Clearwater, Fri day, June 1, at 7 o’clock. Rever end Martens, pastor of the church, read the wedding vows. Attendants were Doris Ann Spahn, sister of the bridegroom, and Henry Lange, jr., his cousin. The bride wore a simple white afternoon dress with a long fit ted bodice trimmed with rhine stones and a full gathered skirt. She wore a small white hat and a corsage of white roses. Her at tendant was dressed in a pale pink afternoon dress and hat and wore a deep pink carnation cor sage. After the ceremony, around 80 relatives and friends honored the young couple at a reception in the church basement. Many relatives from O’Neill and Norfolk were present. During the reception cablegrams of congratulations and well wishes were received by the bride from her family and friends in her home town in Ger many. The newlyweds became ac quainted while Mr. Spahn was visiting relatives in Essen while on furlough during his 17 months service with the 66th ordnance company in Salzburg, Austria. After his discharge and return home in April, 1955, the young Mrs. Spahn immigrated to Amer ica. She arrived here in April, 1956. After a short honeymoon the bride and bridegroom will reside on the Ewald Spahn farm south of Ewing. Mr. and Mrs. Ewald Spahn and Doris Ann will soon move to a new home being built on the Spahn brothers’ ranch. t Willing Workers Have Club Band— The Willing Workers 4-H club of O’Neill had its fifth meeting Tuesday. May 22, at the court house. Members answered roll call with a Nebraska flower. Mrs. A. Neil Dawes, general club leader, said the club had done good work ;n making $17 at the International Harvester fair. Ilene Nelson, health chairman, gave a tip on health. Mrs. Dawes announced that boys’ and girls' singing would start soon in prepa ration for achievement day. The Willing Workers 4-H band has had two practices and accom plished a great deal. Twelve members are in the band. The Peacocks furnished recrea tion Mrs Dawes served lunch.— By Gary Gillespie, news reporter. i O’Neill News Mr and Mrs. Earl J. Rodman and family met her brother and family, Dr and Mrs. E. J. Bild and children of Wausa, in Page for memorial day. They visited at the Charles Cronk home and with other relatives and friends. William J. Froelich, jr., and his fiancee, Miss Kathleen Seymour, left Tuesday; he to Georgetown university, Washington, DC., for the summer session, and Miss ' Seymour for Grosse Pointe, Mich., her home. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Worcester were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Suing and family of Beresford, S.D., and Mr. and! Mrs. John Janousek and family of Gregory, S.D Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Mathews of Lincoln spent Sunday evening ; at Mr. and Mrs. Dean Streeter’s home enroute to a vacation in various points in South Dakota. Mr. and Mrs Earl Wicker of Seattle, W3sh„ came the first part of the week and visited Mr. and Mrs Roy Karr of Spencer On Friday and Saturday they visited Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Worth. Gordon Watson accompanied his cousin, Dale Watson of Plainvicw, to the Sioux City live stock market as spectators. Memorial day guests of Mrs. M J. Wallace were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Connors and sons of Gree-; ley. j Venetian blinds, prompt deliv ery, made to measure, metal or wood, all colors.—J. M. McDon alds. & Mrs. Virgil Tomlinson and daughters were in Omaha Friday to see her father, Earl Watson of Inman, who is a patient at Clarkson Memorial hospital. He is •getting along fine." J. B. Grady w'ent to Ft. Dodge, la., Saturday to get Mrs. Grady and sons, who had been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Prav, for two weeks. The Sylvester Zakrzewski fam ily attended the wedding Satur day in Butte of their granddaugh ter, Miss Shirley Pod any, and Don Quick at Sts, Peter and Paul Catholic church. Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Dryak and daughters of Verdigrc visited Mrs Ethel Frisch and sons last Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Campbell ex pect to leave for Omaha Friday, June 8 to meet their son, Edward of Green Bay, Wise. He expects to spend about a week here. Money to Loan — on — AUTOMOBILES TRUCKS TRACTORS EQUIPMENT FURNITURE Central Finance Corp. C. E. Jones, Manager O’Neill Nebraska SPRINKLER ‘ FURROW • FLOOD IRRIGATION ...field engineered to your needs See Us For IRRIGATION of Any Kind! • Engineers to figure your needs. • Wells — Pumps • Irrigation pipe of all kinds. • Ames ball coupler pipe. • Continental engines. • Berkley or Fairbanks Morse pumps. Le us figure on your needs. We will save you money on any order. Outlaw ImpL Co. O’Neill, Nebr. Royal Theater —O’NEILL. NEBR. — Thurs. June 7 Family Night George Simenon’s searing novel THE BOTTOM OF THE BOTTLE Color by DeLuxe, Cinemascope. Van Johnson, Ruth Roman, Jo seph Cotten, Jack Carson with Margaret Hayes, Bruce Bennett. Family admitted for 2 adult tick ets: adults 50c; children 12c Fri.-Sat. June 8-9 Big Double Bill The target of a gunman’s vengeance THE SILVER STAR Starring Edgar Buchanan, Ma rie Windsor, Lon Chaney, Earle Lyon, Richard Bartlett, Barton MacLane. — also — Giant spider—deadly accident of science — and every second it grows bigger! TARANTULA Towering over cities! Even dy namite can’t stop it! Thousands flee its terror. Starring John Agar. Mara Corday, Leo G. Carroll, with Nestor Paiva, Ross Elliott. Adults 50c; children 12c; matinee Sat. 2:30. All children under 12 free when accompanied by parent Sun.-Mon.-Tues. June 10-11-12 Twentieth Century-Fox presents the entertainment event the world is waiting for! Roger and Hammerstein’s— CAROUSEL Color by DeLuxe. Beyond any thing you have ever seen in a theater! Starring Gordon MacRae, Shirley Jones with Cameron Mit chell, with Barbara Ruick, Clara mae Turner, Robert Rounseville and Gene Lockhart. You never dreamed an entertainment could be so wonderfully exciting as Carousel—in Cinemascope 55! 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