state hist soc Lf * * -• v *» f*P3^ 4 W — . * • 4*1* • XXX Ten Pages ♦ THE WEATHER Partly cloudy today, high near i_ tl;. |«sue 22 degree*. Uiw last night near m 1 m* '**u® 5 above. "The Voice of the Beef Empire" Volume 79-Number 39 O'Neill, Holt County, Nebraska, Thursday, January 21, 1960 Seven Cents Landholders, Businessmen Invited To Irrigation Meeting Tuesday Members of the O'Neill Irriga tion committee, together with n group from Atkinson and a small number of interested ranchers, met in O'Neill Monday night to hear Gordon Wendler and Gib Johnson. Bureau men from Ainsworth, tell more about the proposed irrigation project. Larry Donnegan. representative j of the Portland Cement company, and Y.il Kuska, a retired Hurling ton railroad representative who is! well-informed on irrigation prob lems, could not attend because of the weekend snowstorm. Those two men were scheduled to Ik1 the mam speak-rs. According to Hale Wilson, com mittee chairman, a general meet ing will be held Tuesday, -Ian. 26, at the assembly room of the courthouse here In O’Neill. W'll aon said that all land owners, business men and anyone Inter ested are Invited to attend this publie meeting. Donnegan and Kuska will lie at this meeting as well as Wendler, Johnson and Ed Sevcik, a soils e>qw»rt stationed at Ainsworth. Wendler and Johnson, at Mon day's meeting, repeated the basic information which they presented to the O'Neill Chamber of Com merce at an earlier meeting held in December. Thnv turned the meeting into a question and answer |>oriod fol lowing their presentation and a | number of interesting questions concerning the project were raised. The following is a presentation of some of the questions asked the men. An answer follows each question. How much tarn! can each far mer own? The maximum number I of irrigable acres allowed each farmer is 160. Any one rancher can own ns many other dry land acres as he might wish to own. The de velopment period is from five to ten years after the water is de livered to the land and landowners will have this ten year period to sell their land. A farmer and his wife may have a joint tenancy and hold 320 acres of irrigable; land. A farmer with five boys could own as much as 1,120 acresi of irrigable land. l>o ranchers have a right to lease the hind? Yes, hut the limit on the number of acres owned is stilt 160 acres. There is some agi tation in congress to increase this amount of land each farmer can own. Does the number of acres allow , ed aply the same to all three olass es of land? Yes. Ranchers who hold class I, II. or III land are Itound by the limit. In some cases, however, the repayment schedule is based on the class of land irrigat ed. Does a rancher have to use the water whether he wants it or not? A rancher does not have to use the water but he must pay for it fan a land holder with a well irrigated farm join with the gravity Irrigated land holders? t Farms that are already irrigated are not r.on«iriered in tile DlODOSed pro jeet.) Landholders with present ir rigation facilities can petition the irrigaion district board for admit tance to the district What Is the cost of land leveling for gravity irrigation'.’ The estimat ed cost for land in this area is $45 per acre Land in the project does not have to he improved for at least 10 years after the water reaches the land and in some cases the cost of leveling may be supplemen ted by the government under soil conservation practice payments. March of Dimes Concert at Page The annual Page winter hand concert will be held Monday at the Page school auditorium. The Concert, under the direction of Leonard Sawyer, is held to rai«c funds for the March "i Dimes. Mother's March Tonight at 6:30; Porch Lights On O'Neill mothers will conduct their annual "Mother's March" to night (Thursday) in O’Neill as a part of the polio fund drive. Mrs. M. B. Marcellus is a city chair man and Mi's. Verne Keynoldson is co-chairman of the event. The march will l»egin at 6:30 p.nv, kicked off by the blowing of the fire whistle. Residents are re quested to turn on their porch lights at this time. Personal ques tionnaires will also be given to donors with questions relating to the crippling diseases to be used for research by the [iolio founda tion. Mrs. Marcellus announced that in the coffee day that was held Monday, over $25 was collected in proceeds for the polio fund. Plans are now tieing made for a bene fit at the O'Neill public school on January 31 given by grade school band and music students with Mrs. \V. 1> Melina's dance class par ticipating. Watch next week’s Frontier for more details on the benefit. There are presently four O'Neill women soliciting O'Neill busi nesses for polio fund donations. They are Mrs. Earl Hunt, Mrs. John Stuifbergen. Mrs. Bill Mc Intosh and Mrs. H. L. Lindberg. Chambers Youth Wins Chadron Scholarship Arland Charles Tangeman of Chambers has l>een chosen as a recipient of a tuition scholarship at Chadron State Teachers college sponsored by the Nebraska Con gress of Parents and Teachers. The scholarships are awarded on the basis of financial need, char acter, aptitude for teaching and academic record. The Nebraska PTA Congress this year awarded 44 scholarships to students at the University of Nebraska. University of Omaha, and the four teachers colleges at Chadron, Kearney, Peru and Wayne. High Honor to Brother of Nun Army Col. (Chaplain! John K Connelly, brother of Sister M. Claire of St. Mary's Academy, re cently received two outstanding honors. As comand chaplain of the U.S. Army’s Southern area command in Europe, headquartered at Mun ich. Father Connelly has been ap pointed by the Catholic church's Joseph Cardinal Wendel as the of ficial American representative and i coordinator of church. U.S. forces I and American guests at the Inter national Eucharistic Congress to be held this summer in Munich, and he has been chosen "chap lain of the year" (I960! by the U.S. Army Reserve Officers As I sociation. He will lx? honored by the reser ve association at a banquet to be bold February 5 at Washington D.C. f Father Connelly entered mili tar service in 1935. He has re ceived the following military hon ors: Purple heart, legion of mer it. bron/e star with four oak leal clusters, and he is holder of the soldier's medal t h e army’s highest peacetime award. Father Connelly and Sistei Claire considered Sacremento, Cal if., their last family home. Sister Claire, a registered nurse is sacristan at St. Mary’s. Maude Hebner Services At Bristow Today at 2:00 BRISTOW Funeral services for ! Maude Emma Hebner, 79, will be i held at 2 p.m. Thursday (today i ! at the Jones Funeral chapel in ! Spencer with Rev. Harold Jansen officiating. Interment will lie in the Bristow cemetery. Mrs. Hebner was born December ' 21, 18X0 in Spokane, Wash. She died at her home in Bristow on Tuesday Jan. 19 Mrs. Hebner has resided in this community for over fifty years. Pallbearers will lie Ivan Hiatt, Maurice Korb, John laghtfoot, Mar vin Fusselman and Con Thorell. Surviving is a daughter, Miss Salina Hebner, who lived with her mother, and a sister, Mrs. Jennie, Brokofsky of Lodi, Calif Edward Ferris Died In Omaha Last Tuesday b unci al serv ices for Edward William Ferris, who died January 12 in University hospital in Om aha, were conducted at 10 Sat urday morning from the Wesleyan Methodist church here in O’Neill. Rev. I>on Olmstead conducted the services. Pallbearers were George Kilcoin, Paul Ciosson. LoulS Rel-| mer, Frank Grenier, Ray Osborne j and Pete Weber. Edward Ferris was horn the son of Anna and the late Peter Ferris at Neligh on October 22, 1905. He moved with his parents to Emmet when he was 14. He married Mary Ann Clark of Page on October 29, 1929 tit Ne ligh. To this union seven children were Ikiiti lour daughters and three sons. Mr. Ferris had been an invalid for the past ten years due to an electrical accident suffered in 1950. On December 31 his condition be came such that he was taken tr St. Anthony’s hospital and on Jan uary 7 he was transferred to Om aha. Survivors include his wife, three sons Ralph L. and Virgil D. of O’Neill and George of Nebraska City; three daughters Katheryn (Julia Lee I of O'Neill, Mrs. Ed ward (Evelyn) Drown ot Honolu lu, Hawaii, and Mrs. George (Mar jorie Ann) Ridenour of Lincoln, and one step-daughter, Ida House, of Norfolk. His mother, Anna Ferris, of In man also survives as do five grand children, seven brothers and one sister. The brothers and sisters are Arthur of Manville, Wyo., Wal ter and Gerald of Atkinson, Frank. Robert, sr., and Joseph of Inman, Fred of Clarion. Ia., and Mrs. Ro bert (Elsie) Davidson of Yuma, rv.iif Proceeding him in death were his father, two brothers, one sis ter and a daughter, Neva June. Thomas Is Held In Holt Jail; Trial Not Set William Thomas, former local | radio station employee charged 5 with issuing a "No Account” check, is being held in Holt county jail until a trial date can be set. Bail | bond has been set at $500. Thomas was dismissed from St. Anthony's hospital last Thursday morning following hospitalization for injuries received in an auto mobile accident on January 6 near Chambers. District Judge Lyle Jackson. Neligh, will probably hear the case. Jim Jankiewiez, linotype operator at The Frontier, helps install The Frontier's new sign hung Tuesday at the new location just north of The Golden Hotel. Evidently the work was too much for Jim as he ended up Wednesday in the hospital and was operated on for appendicitis Wednesday afternoon_The Frontier photo and engraving r-\ This frontal view of the snowplow, which headed a stranded two-engined Burlington freight train, testifies to the depth of the snow near McLean. The O’Neill bound freight was liberated Wednes day afternoon after two days in a snowbank. The snow measured from 15- to .’o ft. in depth. Snow in foreground had been removed by bulldozers. Photo was taken a short time before the breakthrough which resulh-d after two additional engim-s came front behind to the rescue.—The Frontier photo and engraving It's anybody’s ball as Fred Croak, 30, Page center, and Dale Adams, 5, Chambers center go up for the ball to open the final period of play Tuesday night in the Holt county basketball tourna ment. Page won the game, 60-41.—The Frontier photo and engraving . I Jazz Pianist To Appear Sunday Red Camp, famous jazz pianist, will appear in a jazz concert Sun day at 8 p.m. in the high school auditorium as the second of the O'Neill Community Concert Assoc iation series. Camp had played with such greats as Jack Teagarden, Paul Whiteman, Pee Wee Russell and Bob Crosby even before his educa tion was completed. He received his B. A. from the University of Texas and a Master’s degree from Columbia University where he stu died under Dr. Harold Morris, em inent american composer. Following study with Julliard School of Music, he headed the ! Laredo Junior college's music de- 1 partment in his hometown of Lar edo, Tex. He now has his own stu , dio in Corpus Christi. His wife j holds a master’s degree from the ! American Conservatory in Chica i go. Mr Camp divides his program J into two parts, one labeled “Jazzj Now and Then,” and the other! i“Jazz Here and Now.” He is known for his sensitive interpre 1 tations and his technical perfec i tion. The New York Times reviewedj | his performance as unique, fre-1 ! quently impressive and always en- j I tertaining. He has been referred j to as "the most articulate jazz j ! pianist alive" bv the United Press, i O'Neillites To Attend Fund Raising Dinner Mrs. Guy Cole announced yes terday that a group from O’Neil] is planning to attend the Sena tor Barry Goldwater fund raising dinner to he held in Omaha Tues day, Jan. 26. Mrs. Cole stated that some tic kets are still available for inter ested parties or for anyone who might be in Omaha on Tuesday. NAMED TO COMMITTEE Julius D. Cronin, O'Neill attor ney, has been appointed to the judiciary committee of the Ne braska State Bar Association. He will serve until the annual meet ing this year. i Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Reynoldson and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Laursen returned Tuesday from Denver. Holt County Tourney Scores Ewing .62 Atkinson .60 St. Joseph .69 Stuart .38 Page .50 Chambers .41 St. Mary's .39 O'Neill .34 Ewing .44 Inman .36 Heinie Conard Held On Stabbing Charge J. (Heinie) Conard is being held in the Holt county jail this week following the stabbing with a jack-knife of his cousin, Pat Con ard, late Friday at a local tav ern. The two had been playing cards earlier. The wounded man is in St. An thony's hospital. Exploratory sur gery following the incident disclos ed the knife did not penetrate deepi enough to cause abdominal dam age, authorities said. Charges against 'Heinie'’ were filed by Police Chief Chris Mc Ginn. In preliminary hearings Monday morning in Holt county court, the defendant pleaded guilty to the assault and was bound over to district court. The defendant is being held in lieu of five hun dred dollars’ bond. Also being held is James C. Hay es of Atkinson on charges of writing a check with no account. Hayes, held on four hundred dol las’ l>ond, wTote the check Decem ber 7 for $10 and negotiated the check at the IGA store in Stuart. The check was drawn on the Tri County Bank of Stuart. At the time, officers said, Hayes had no account in that bank. He also ad mitted guilt Monday in county court and was bound over to dis trict court. John Luben. telephone company manager at Crawford was trans ferred this week to Chadron. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. William Luben. Weather Halts Train In Snow Near Osmond; One Killed In Rescue Try Bus Service Halted As Snow Area Digs Out Only bus service in operation i Monday during the height of the j weatherman's week of unpleasant ness was the United Motors run from Valentine-to-O’Neill and re turn. Normally the bus continues , from O’Neill-to-Grand Island and return, but that segment of the run was halted. The Winner tS. D.t-O’Neill-Nor folk bus made the eastlxiund trip ! to Norfolk Monday morning, but annulled the return that day. I There was no Sioux City-O'Neill | Sioux City bus service Monday All bus service got back to near I normal on Tuesday. Trains on the mainline Chicago and Northwestern freight-line-only railroad continued to operate un phased by ol’ man winter's antics. A Burlington freight train was ma rooned more than two days. tSoe story elsewhere in this issue). U.s. Hignway was ciuseu part-time Sunday and most of Mon i day because of a truck-auto snarl ! in hills east of Norfolk. Late Mon i day afternoon snowplow s and 1 wrecker^ cleared the highway to one-way traffic in numerous pla ces. U.S. Highway 20 t>etween here i | and Sioux City was kept open but j ! reduced to one-way traffic in many i places, particularity between Orch ard and the junction of U. S. High i way 20-81 west of Randolph. U.S. Highway 281 was closed for a short period Monday both north and south of Grand Island, and then opened for one-way trallic U.S. Highway 20 west of O'Neill and U.S. Highway 281 north of here never closed. State Highway Department crews here worked around-the-clock to keep highway traffic flowing. By far the heaviest snowfall fell east of here. The Burwell-Ord areas received up to 14 inches of snow last week and Sunday and Mon day received more snow. Many cancellations of engage ments were necessitated because of the condition of county roads. Many rural schools cancelled class es last Thursday and Friday find also Monday. Courthouse To Close Saturdays—Begin Feb. 1 lilt* null KAJUlliy U/UI uunint , »■**' Assistance office and the County Attorney's office will all be closed on Saturday's beginning February 1, it was announced this week. The closing of these offices re sults from legislative action in 1955 and 1959 holding that court houses and courts and offices could be closed on Saturday, Sun day and other legal holidays, in cluding Monday’s following a Sun day holiday. After February 1, the courthouse offices will be open from 8 to 12 am., and 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Superintendent of Schools said her office will be open dur- j ing the school term from 10 to 12 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturdays to accomodate rural school teach ers. Mrs. J. L. Sherbahn was hostess last Wednesday to Wednesday Af ternoon Bridge. A westbound Burlington freight | rain, enroute to O Neill, was 111v ■rated about 3 o'clock Wednesday ifternoon after ha\ ing l>ecn ma xjoned more than two days in a .. 400-11 long snow bank one mile vest of McLean about midway letwecn Osmond ami Randolph. Before the 15-car doubte-hcadei reight, with elaborate snowplow | ittached up front, was freed one >f the rescuers had lost his life. Dead is Dorrance 1*. Gibson, 33, m employee of the Theisen Bros, -untracting firm. He had taken i huge D-g crawler-type tractor loser to the train to help move snow. While working alongside the freight cars, the machine over turned and killed him instantly \cting Pierce County Coroner Ku jene Curtis of Plainview, who had difficulty reaching the scene, said Jibson was crushed to death. Gibson was dispatched to the scene of the marooned train at noon Tuesday after another Theisen crawler became mired while trying to liberate the help less train. The accident took place about l o'clock Tuesday afternoon. An MI It I flttVVIt-r U <1.8 IIIXUVU It' ' A tricate Gibson’s txxly. Gibson, whose original home was at Humphrey, had resided at Pen der prior to moving to Osmond for the winter as a shop mechanic for Theisens. He was married and the fattier of two children. Funer al services will be conducted at lJ a m. Saturday at the Catholic church in Humphrey. Rosary will tie recited at 8 o’clock tonight i (Thursday) at the funeral chapel in Osmond. Gibson was dispatched to the scene of the marooned train after another crawler got mired down while trying to liberate the strand ed train. Sorrowing workers carried the broken body through the deep snow most of the distance to Mc Lean. Gibson and Iiis family lived In a house trailer at Osmond. In summer lie worked outdoors with The I sen constriietion equip ment- He was eonsldered an ex perlneced operator. The train, number 95, departed from Ferry Junction (South Sioux City I early Monday and was due in O'Neill at 2 p.m. Pushing the heavy adjustable type plow, the two diesels battled their way to Randolph, falling several hours be hind schedule. It was 3:30 p.m before the train left Randolph and a few minutes later ran afoul the big drift. The train was three tin. mot’ fhtvillirh 1lu> long east-west cut before it stalled in snow 15 ft. deep. The cut is at mile post 61. Snow was so deep the telegraph pole crossbars barely protruded. Because of the continued snow and drifting no effort was made to free the train on Monday. The crew was comfortable ir. the "way car" and they trudged into Mc Lean and to nearby farm homes to obtain supplies. Two additional engines pushing another plow were dispatched from Ferry early Wednesday and reach ed the scene alxjut 2 p.m. The beleagured train was pulled back onto a McLean side track. After several successive jabs into the mountain of snow, the cut was cleared by 4:30 p.m. The relief crew brought the train on to O'Neill after battling more giant drifts in the Royal and Orch mi localities. CYmductnr H. San leau, Engineer Harry Hutterfield uui other memheni of 95's crew returned to Ferry with the relief train to prepare to tiring another scheduled train into O'Neill today [Thursday). Irani H'i diesel engines sat idling throughout the enforced Inactivity, iuid Itiel supplies nui low. The 2,s-tlay-overdue train reach 'd O'Neill at 9:45 p m Wednesday. It was train 95, equipped with two steam engines and “V'-type tnowpiow, that became marooned five miles east of O’Neill during Ihe recurring blizzards of 1948-’49. That train was abandoned at (hat time and lay inert and almost ol> srured by snow for five weeks lie fore aid came. Part of the difficul ty 10 years ago came about when one of the locomotives became partially derailed. Mail Service Curtailed By Bad Weather Mail service was seriously dis rupted at O'Neill and other (mints east and west of here because of the week's adverse weather. I Tit it mid -afternoon Tuesday only two truck loads of Die priu eipal mail (from the Omaha ter mliial) had reached here since Iasi Thursday. Friday's load was annulled be cause of a combination of mechan ical and weather difficulties. Fri day's load did not reach O’Neill until 11 a.m. Saturday, and Satur day's mail was a half-day late. Monday’s mail did not arrive un til 5 p.m. Tuesday virtually .15 hours late. Tuesday's mail also ar rived at 5 p.m. more than it hours late and much too late for city and rural distribution. Boxscore for O'Neill arrival of the principal Omaha terminal mail load since December 1 shows: —Two days of complete annul ment. —Two days of late afternoon ar rival (amounting hi aiiiiullmnnt. —Four days of delay up to it hall' day. —Almost iloih heliinil schedule arrival*. The principal load is due here at 5:30 a m., and seldom arrives on time. Originally the schedule provided for 5:15 a.m. arrival but because the truck constantly was late the schedule was revised to provide more time. During the period the truck jack knifed once, became I logged in an icy-hill traffic jam east of Nor folk on one occasion, and had mechanical trouble on another. An Omaha contractor is respon sible for the run. Meanwhile, Holt county motor ists and various supply trucks man aged to make the O’Neill-Omaha O’Neill run even though mail was not getting through. Ix-sser star routes continued to operate, but the bulk of the in liound mail is the early morning arrival. The O'Neill postoffice “works" mail for points west of here, where the successive delays created worse inconvenience. Oorrance P. Gibson, 33, of Osmond was kil led when the crawler-type tractor-do*er he was operating overturned and crashed him. He was working midway back on the train on the steep snow cut about one mile west of McLean. At the scetif* of the accident are Norris Pfanstiel, Mcl>ean farmer (left), and Hay Timmerman of Osmond. Crawler Is a 0-8 Caterpillar owned by Thelsen Itros Contractor* of Osmond.—The Frontier photo and engraving