PUBLISHED WEEKLY "Dedicated to the promotion of the cultural, social and spiritual tife of a great people.**__ Melvin L. Shakespeare Publisher end Editor Business Address 2225 S Street Phone 2-4085 U No Answer Call 5-7500 Ruble W Shakespeare... Advertising and Business Manager Dorothy Green .... ............. «. Office Secretary Mrs. Joe Green ...Circulation Manager Member of the Associated Negra Press and Nebraska Prcas Aaioclatlen ' Entered Vs Secona Class Matter June %. 1947 at teh Post Office at Lincoln. Nebraska under the Act of March 3 1879.__ I rear subscription.$2.50 Single copy.........10c Out-of-State 1 Tear Subscription $2.50—Single Copy lOo__ editorials rtaa views expressed in these columns aecessariir a reflection of the policy are those of the writer and not of The Voice. —Pub Lincoln on the March at Last! There are gratifying moments which made the struggle for full citizenship status worthwhile. One of those moments came last April 14 when a conference was held at the Cornhusker Hotel for the purpose of examining com munity attitudes. It was most satisfying to hear citizen after citizen, some representing organi zations of large membership, get up and tell the conference that! the city needs a council to work1 toward the elimination of preju-1 dices and misunderstandings among groups of different cultural' and racial backgrounds. It was , good to hear white Lincolnites say; that the time is long overdue and ] that we should have had such an organization long ago. j The unanimity of opinion was heart-warming. Saturday will mark the second 1 meeting of the group, now known 'as The Lincoln-Lancaster County Council of Human Relations. Mayor Anderson and Governor Peterson are scheduled to appear on the program. We sincerely hope that Mayor Anderson and members of the City Council will remain long enough to get a realistic view of working and living conditions of Dur minority groups. The work of the council is argely educational. Studies will , be made and iniormauon reiaung I to various problems in human re [ lations will be given to the pub lic. The public will be informed and prepared for the changes which are inevitable in the field of race relations. Those persons who are respon sible for this growing interest in) minority groups, such as the aged/ national and racial minorities, D.P.’s and the handicapped are toj be commended for their intelli gent interest and their deep con cern over the welfare of the city as a whole. Lincoln is on the road to democracy at last. ■■ LOWEST PRICES ON MEN S AND LADIES’ FINE WATCHES Only down— A Week Open An Account Layaway Xmas Gifts Today tell the Editor how much they enjoy this daily world-wide newspaper, with such com ments as: "The Monitor is the most carefully edited news paper in the U. S. . . "Valuable aid in teach ing ..." "News that is complete and fair ..." "The Monitor surely is a reader's necessity ..." Yon, too, will find the Monitor informative, with complete world news . . . and as neces sary as yronr HOME TOWN paper. Use this conpon for a Special Introductory subscription — 3 MONTHS FOR ONLY $3. •—— — — rn The Chriitian Science Monitor One. Norway Si., Boeton IS, Man., V. S. A. Pleaoo tend mo an introductory tub.crip, lion to The Chrialian Science Monitor— 76 ittuea. 1 encloae S3. (n^mo) (addrett) V*/ Jtijr) (*Wte) (state) PB9 Please Ask For UMBERGER’S AMBULANCE 2-8543 Umbergcr’s Mortuary, Inc. AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING WRECKER SERVICE 2-4295 HARVEY'S GARAGE 2119 O St. By Geo. H. Lemon .just 21 CLEANING DAYS until Christmas. Plenty of time to have draperies and other household items cleaned. Peerless dry cleaning will brighten the colors and give them a new look once more. • • • • • and, of course, gar ments respond beautifully to our careful handling. • • • • • call 2-6731 for pick up and delivery service-or cash tnd carry for less. REMEMBER “GRIME NEVER PAYS" CALL 2-6731 Peerless " CLEANERS | 322 So. 11th Geo. H. Lemon Branch Office 2719 No 48th d® NEB h IINIIC. OLSON, Snp*rintt*itMt •VATI IIITOI1CAI tOCIBTV Winter on the plains and in the mountains is something not to be taken lightly, particularly by the traveller, and even with our pow erful automobiles, well-marked and well-patrolled highways, we still read the weather forecasts pretty carefully before taking an extended winter trip. Think what it must have been like in the days before the automobile and the railroad, when the roads across the plains and mountain passes were little more than trails. It is little wonder that the over land emigrants who made their way across the plains and moun tains from the Missouri River to Oregon, California and Utah took pains to start early enough in the spring to reach their destination before the snows of winter set in. Evenso, some of the emigrants miscalculated, and some of the greatest tragedies in the history of the West are the stories of emi grants caught in a snow storm. Perhaps the most famous of all the tragedies of the trail is that which overtook the ill-fated Don ner party in November, 1846. George Donner and James F. Reed, prosperous farmers of San gamon County, Illinois, left Springfield with their families and others (32 emigrants in nine wagons altogether) on April 16, 1846. That year—the "year of de cision”—was a year of heavy emi gration, and in the month it took the Reed-Donner party to reach Independence, the jumping-off place for the West, they encoun tered many other travellers bound for Oregon and California. At Independence, the Spring field emigrants became part of a much larger caravan. It was not a happy party, and before it had reached Scotts Bluff, it had changed leaders a number of times. West of Fort Laramie, there was argument about the route. Reed, Donner and a few others wanted to take a short-cut advertised in Lansford Hastings’ guidebook. Though warned by James Clyman, who knew the mountains as Has-, tings did not, that they should stay on the main trails and avoid cutoffs because they might get caught in snow on the western slope before they arrived, they de termined that they would try the shorter route. Beyond Fort Bridger they left the regular trail and tried to make their way over the much more dif ficult—and at times almost impas sable—trail to the Salt Lake Val ley. Beyond the Great Salt Lake the road was even more difficult, and in November, at Truckee Lake they were caught in a bliz zard. They suffered indescribable hardships during the winter, and only 47 out of 87 survived. BRIGHAM’S ... for cleaning .. 2-3624 2246 O St IDEAL Grocery and Market Lots of Parking 27th and F Streets skyline! ICE CREAM STORES 1433 South St. Phone 3-8118 1417 N St Phone 2-4074 All Producta Manufactured At Main Plant Skyline Farms So. 14th St CLYDE’S DAIRY STORE Hamburger and Cold Lunches Also Groceries ICE CREAM 25c and 27c Pf.t 2230 R St. SMITH Pharmacy 2146 Vine Prescriptions — Drut» Fountain — Sundries Phone 2-1958 Jess Williams Spring Service 2215 O Street Lincoln 8, Nebraska Phone 2-3633 BEAL'S GROCERY Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Meats 2101 R Tel. 2-6933 Bring Your Prescriptions to HAL J. Bowers Terminal Drug Company 947 O Street 2-8585 CbichisL JuAA. Maht WHITES Your FURNITURE HEADQUARTERS /i's 108 Ho. 10th Street Just 27 Steps North of 10th S O Sts.