Iowa Old Press

Akron Register newspaper
Dated January 11, 1917

MILLNERVILLE:  (Special Correspondence)


W. B. Millner and son, R. H. Millner, were Westfield visitors.

An effort is being made to again secure preaching at Bethel church.

Miss Juliette Allard returned to her school work at Jefferson this week.

John Taylor is helping Fred Briggs this week.

Miss Winifred Fry returned to her work in Cedar Falls last week.

A number cut ice on the Broken Kettle last week, but the thaw held up the
work for awhile.

A few of the young people enjoyed the skating on the Broken Kettle last
week.

Little Evonne Allard was quite ill a few days last week.

Mr. and Mrs. George Mayhew and children visited relatives in Sioux City last
week.

R. A. James drove his bunch of sheep into Sioux City the first of the week.

Mrs. Valentine Trometer and children visited her parents a few days last
week.

Homer Powers marketed his fat cattle last week.  Don Lawrence helped him
drive.

Old friends from this neighborhood attend the Flannery funerals in Sioux
City.

Mr. and Mrs. John Lawrence have returned home.

We are informed that Russell Sanford, a former Millnerville boy, has
enlisted in the U.S. Navy.

Misses Eva and Iva Clark and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark visited at Emil
Jensen's last week.

Royer Lias was a LeMars visitor last Thursday.

Mrs. H.J. Coppock, of LeMars, is staying with her daughter, Mrs. Tom Hummel.

Andy Trometer did corn shelling in the neighborhood last week.

Ubald Millette brought out another bunch of cattle to feed.

J. B. Hathaway was a passenger to Sioux City Wednesday morning.

W. B. Millner had dental work done in Sioux City last week.

Charlie Green vaccinated a bunch of calves for Joe Hathaway one day last
week.

Philip Trudeau marketed hogs in Jefferson last week.

WESTFIELD WRITE-UPS:  (Special Correspondence)

Miss Frances Mills spent several days visiting friends in Akron.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Waterbury and children returned Friday afternoon from a
couple of days visit in Akron.

Kathryn and Helen Martin were passengers to Sioux City Thursday evening,
returning Saturday evening.

Mrs. D. F. Connolly and Miss Marie O'Shea were city shoppers Tuesday and
Wednesday.

Students who were home for the holidays are all back at their work in the
various schools and colleges.

School began Monday, with Miss Helma Johnson as teacher.

Robert and Ethel Kerr took up their school work at Akron again Monday, after
a couple of weeks' vacation.

Grandpa and Grandma Gardner and Mrs. Harvey Welch visited at the Wilson
Heasley home Tuesday.

ADAVILLE ITEMS:  (Special Correspondence)

Chas. Kanago's sale, Monday, January 15.

Revival meetings at the U. B. church every evening.  Come out and hear Dr.
Holbrook.

Mrs. Chas. Fletcher visited her daughter, Mrs. Ed. Hilliker, in Chatsworth,
a couple of days.

School re-opened Monday, after two weeks' vacation.

The marriage of Miss Alma Gaston, formerly of this place, to Mr. John
Sanford will take place in Sioux City next Monday, January 15.

Miss Mary Brown returned to Knoxville, Iowa, where she is teaching, after
spending the holiday vacation at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Brown.

Relatives here have received word of the marriage at Emporia, Kansas, of
Miss Laura Poyzer to Mr. James Collins.  Miss Poyzer lived here until she
moved with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Poyzer, to Kansas.  The
newly-wedded couple will live at Lexington, Missouri.



HINTON GAZETTE
JANUARY 11, 1917

EAST PERRY NOTES

Mrs. William Loraditch and daughter Annie visited at the F. M. Rollins
home Thursday.

A large number from here attended the Louis Bohmer auction Thursday.

Carl Anderson is busy hauling his farm machinery to his recently
purchased farm.

Miss Edna, Minnie and John Swisher returned Monday from a two weeks
visit with relatives at Danville, Ill.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Klingabiel visited with relatives in the city Sunday.
Mrs. Klingabiel remained for a few days to be with her mother who has
been quite sick.

Miss Annie Loraditch is staying at the F. M. Rollins home during Ruby's
absence.

Miss Marie Schmock returned to her school work in the city Monday after
a two weeks vacation.

Albert Swanson and Maynard Warden started to school in district No. 6
Monday making an enrollment of 12 scholars.

A few friends and neighbors surprised Mr. and Mrs. John Jebsen at their
home Friday evening.

JAMES NEWS
Mr. Harry Benson of Parkston S. D. was entertained in the Charles
Bennett home.

Graves Brothers of Leeds are baling several tons of hay for Vern
Bennett.

Clausie Junck and Leonard Ludwig have departed for a visit with friends
and relatives at Ogden and Walnut, Iowa.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cheller of Pierson, Iowa, departed for their home
Friday after a brief visit in the John Hardensen Jr. home.

Tom Jiabesters of Sioux City was a guest in the O. J. Pence home.

Frank Schindler and sister, Rosie, were entertained in the home of
Victor Bolinger.

Albert Porsch and George Hoffman shipped a carload of hogs to Sioux
City.

Miss Anna Woolworth is spending the week in the home of her cousin, Mrs.
Emil Jauer.

Mr. and Mrs. Jauer are wearing a large smile over the arrival of a new
baby boy who arrived Jan 6.

John Hardensen Sr. and family, Ludwig Dahlman and family, George
Diedeker and family were Sunday dinner guests in the Will Hardensen
home.

LAMB-FINNEGAN
Mr. Charley Lamb and Miss Finnegan were married at Onawa in December.
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Lamb who was born and reared in
Monona county.
The bride is a daughter of Mrs. C. Hansen and has lived here all her
life.
Those attending on the joyous occasion were Miss Margaret Finnegan,
sister of the bride, and Mr. Clarence Lamb, brother of the groom.

EXIT BUFFALO BILL
Col. Bill Cody, the famous western scout has fought his last battle and
lost. He is dead. Col. Cody won his title as "Buffalo Bill" when a mere
boy by supplying food to laborers who built one of the transcontinental
railroads. To fill his contract he slew and delivered 2400 buffaloes.
The colonel's father was slain in a battle with the "secesh" he having
espoused the union cause in the days when Kansas was bloody with
factional strife, before John Brown's soul went "marching on" and Jeff
Davis had not yet been hanged on a sour apple tree. Col. Cody helped
make American history.  He was a product of his day which called out
such as he to meet the needs of the star of empire on its westward
course. Col. Cody was brave in death as in life.



LeMars Sentinel newspaper
Dated Jan. 16, 1917

C.D. Druger is making arrangements to operate a skating rink at Athletic
park.

J. L. Kelleher, residing near LeMars, has been granted a patent on a
hayrack.

Residents of Liberty township voted Saturday on the question of establishing
a consolidated school in that township. The proposition carried by 17
votes.

Allen McMullen has rented the Jewell building on Main street and will engage
in the automobile business.

Prof. H.A. Benfer of Western Union College was married in Bangor, Pa., Dec.
28, to Miss Mabel Hoffman of that city.

Weather has been fair, and temperatures a little below normal the past week.

C. C. Barr, the new proprietor of the Brunswick Hotel, is making
arrangements to improve the property. He will put in a new front.

A new business house was launched in LeMars, Jan. 1, when Charles Hamm and
Carl Petry engaged in the implement business under the firm name of
Hamm-Petry Implement company. They have rented the building on Eagle street
south of the Gannon Feed Yards.



Akron Register newspaper
Dated January 25, 1917


ANSWERS LAST CALL
E. J. Searls

With the dawn of last Friday morning, the saddening news went out to the
community that one of Akron's most highly-respected pioneer citizens and
business man, E. J. Searls, had answered the last "call"-both in a
figurative and literal sense, as for the past thirty-five years in the
capacity of depot agent for the C. M. & St. P. Railway company here, he had
been answering the call of the wire, receiving and transmitting thousands
and thousands of messages-messages that have touched upon all the phases of
this community, business and pleasure; birth, sickness and death; joy and
sorrow.  During the past three or four years Mr. Searls had not been in the
best of health, due to heart and kindred troubles, and at times was
compelled to be absent himself for short intervals from his work at the
depot, but each time he would get the upper hand of his ailment and return
to his post of duty.  Since last February, however, he had been compelled to
transfer the heavier duties at the station to others, but was there every
day he was able, looking after certain details of his duties as agent.
During the second week of last December he suffered a severe attack of heart
trouble and from that time until the end he was confined to his home.  Under
the constant care and ministrations of his devoted wife, he appeared to be
considerably improved for at least a week preceding his demise, and even the
day before he was up and about the house, seemed stronger and was in
unusually cheerful mood.  But at about five o'clock Friday morning he was
seized with an unusually severe sinking spell, suffering greatly, and
despite all that could be done for his relief, passed away at ten minutes to
six o'clock.  Such a serious outcome of his illness had not been looked upon
as immediate, so the suddenness of his taking away came as a grievous shock
to his family and host of friends.

[the microfilmed newspaper had a fold in it so the next few paragraphs
cannot be read sufficiently to transcribe accurately..I will start the
transcription again in mid-thought. It appears that the newspaper printed an
autobiography that Mr. Searls had written at one time.]

..commenced to learn telegraphy of this same agent, but Mr. Dwight had six
months the start of me.  When he was proficient on the wire, J. P. Farley,
of Dubuque, Iowa, gave him Marcus station, and I came with him as a
companion and to finish learning the telegraphy business, which I did in the
winter of 1871.  In the spring of 1872, the Illinois Central put me on as a
relief agent between Fort Dodge and Sioux City.  After working in that
capacity the fall and winter of 1872, I was called to Sioux City in the
Commerical office as operator, and from there was sent to Springfield,
Dakota Territory, to open an office there on the old government telegraph
line that from Sioux City to Fort Sully, going from Sioux City to Yankton on
a stage (before they old Dakota Southern railroad was built.)  I took a
horse and rode from Yankton to Springfield, opening the first telegraph
office in that town.  After staying at Springfield a few months, I was
requested to go to Fort Thompson, Dakota Territory, and put in an office
there, which I did, taking the steamer "Western" at Springfield.  I was
seven days going from Springfield to Fort Thompson on this boat, a distance
of 160 miles by land.  In the fall of 1873, I was requested to come down the
Missouri river to White Swan, opposite Fort Randall, and take charge of that
office.  As there was quite an amount of government wire work to do at White
Swan, stayed at that place the winter of 1873 and spring of 1874, when I had
a call to go to Vermillion, D.T., as operator and assistant to George Kella,
agent at that place.  As the Dakota Central railroad had been completed to
Yankton, I remained at Vermillion until the fall of 1875, where on September
19, 1875, I was married to Miss Mary L. Douglass.  Was given Gayville
station by Supt. J. S. Meekling, of the Dakota Central, and stayed at
Gayville the fall and winter of 1875.  Was offered a clerkship in the
Greenwood (Yankton Indiana Agency) Trader's Store by Major T. S. Clarkson at
$125 per month, which I accepted, and took my young wife and moved there by
wagon in the spring of 1876-as wagon or steamboat was the only means of
conveyance at that time in that part of the country.  After staying at
Greenwood for a time, I was transferred to White Swan store, opposite Fort
Randall, where a part of the 22nd Regular U.S. Infantry was located, Col.
Otis in command.  Col. Otis was afterward promoted to General and was made
governor of the Philippine Islands.  I was at White Swan when General Custer
and his command were on that fatal ride to the Little Big Horn battlefield,
and had the General with me in my office many times, dictating his long
government messages to Washington and Chicago.  After leaving the Indian
country in 1879, I found myself and little family, which then consisted of
my wife and two sons, R.O. Searls (now traveling ticket and passenger agent
of the Milwaukee's Iowa and Dakota division, with headquarters at Mason
City, Ia.) and Harvey Searls (now in the lumber, coal and grain business at
Westside, Ia.), I ...[several lines missing from the top of next column]

..Gayville, S.D., to assist my father-in-law, G. L. Douglass, in operating
his grist mill, and was at Centerville during the memorable winter of
1880-81.  In the spring of 1881 I was hauling flour from our grist mill to
Parker, D.T., and happened around the depot there to listen to the click of
the telegraph instrument again, and there became acquainted with the agent
who wanted a man to relieve him.  Taking my team home, I went back to Parker
and relieved the agent for one week.  When the week was up, I had a call
from the train dispatcher's office at Mason City, Ia., to come there, as
they wanted me in the office.  I started from Parker and got as far as
Canton, where I received a message from Supt. G.W. Sanborn (as he was
superintendent of this division then, also) to go to Sioux Falls and assist
James Burrell, the agent.  I went there the fore part of May, 1881, and
stayed until November 19, 1881, when I was given the station at
Portlandville (now Akron), Iowa, where I have seen the town grow from a few
old buildings (you could count them on your fingers) to the now beautiful
town of 1400 or more population.  Since I have been at Akron, I have had
five different superintendents over me:  1st, G.W. Sanborn; 2nd, John
Jackson; 3rd, Mr. Minturn (to fill vacancy); 4th, W. J. Underwood; 5th, L.
B. Beardsley, our present superintendent.  I have also been express agent
for: 1st, American Express Co.; 2nd, Adams Express Co.; 3rd, United States
Express Co.; 4th, Wells Fargo Express Co.  It is with sadness when I think
of the old associates in the railroad business that have passed away.  Some
of the superintendents and old conductors and other employees have crossed
the River, and we wonder when the last call will come to us, which can not
be far distant; but thank God we are able to be on duty at our appointed
hour and do our portion of those duties.  And will say, I never put in two
days with more pleasure than when I attended the Veteran's Association of
the old employees at Milwaukee in August, meeting many old friends and
forming many new ones."

Mr. Searls is survived by his wife and seven children-Burton, of Mason City,
Iowa; Harvey, of Westside, Iowa; George of Harrisburg, S.D.; Mrs. Ethel
McKibben, of DeSmet, S.D.; Mrs. Jessie Goodwin, of Sioux City, Iowa; Miss
Nell Searls, of Rapid City, S.D.; and Dwight Searls at home.  There are
three brothers and two sisters living-Daniel J., of Akron, Iowa, now at San
Jose, Cal.; William, now in Florida; Stephen, and Phoebe Celia and Ella, all
of Pecatonica, Ill.  His parents and a brother, Ambrose, have passed beyond.

His thirty-five years as agent for the C.M. & St. P. railroad at Akron made
Mr. Searls the oldest employee of the company in point of continuous service
on the company's Sioux City and Dakota division-in fact, there are few men
in the service of the company who have such a record to their credit.  Until
the past few years Mr. Searl's vacations from his post of duty were few and
far between and his fidelity to the responsibilities of his position was
indeed unusual and frequently remarked upon.  At all times he labored for
the best interests of his employers-the railroad, telegraph and express
companies doing business through the local station.  His relations with the
depot patrons and general public were always of the obliging and
accommodating kind, and it was a widespread axiom among the commercial
traveling men that at no place did they find a more genial and courteous
depot agent that Ed. Searls, of Akron.  From the head of the division, down
through the rank and file of railroad employees to the embryo brakeman he
won and held their highest esteem by his good fellowship, his sympathy with
their every-day problems and vexations peculiar to the profession, as well
as his ready willingness to assist in every way possible to make the
machinery of railroading move expeditiously and smoothly.  He took great
pride in maintaining the efficiency of the station work and his monthly
reports went forward on time and were models of neatness and accuracy.  From
a very small beginning, the business of Akron station while under his charge
grew to a volume said to surpass any other on the S.C. & D. division between
Sioux City and Sioux Falls.  Personally, Mrs. Searl's intimate acquaintance
was one well worth cultivating.  If there was anything of gruffness about
him, it was altogether exterior, for he had a heart as tender as a woman's,
a generosity and sympathy that practically knew no bounds when approached in
sincerity and truth.  By nature both genial and jovial, Mr. Searls was never
happier than when in the midst of a circle of friends recounting anecdotes
of pioneer days and his experiences among the Indians in Dakota Territory in
the early 70's-and he could tell some mighty interesting tales of those
stirring days, too, as his adventures among the redskins were not always of
the pleasurable sort; however, he gained the good-will of most of them on
the agency, learned to speak the Sioux language fluently, held the
friendship of some of the noted chieftains and possessed gifts from some of
them and many Indian relics, which he prized very highly.  While maintaining
with dignity his position as the head of a large family, he was a kind and
considerate husband and an affectionate and indulgent father.  His family
was ever his chief consideration and within its circle he delighted in
spending the most of the spare moments of his busy life.  True, he had the
faults and frailties common to human kind, but his virtues so far outweighed
these that they could scarcely be discerned in the great balance of life.
Four-square in all dealing with his fellow man, there was nothing he
detested more than deceit and falsification, which he always met with
unsparing criticism.  He lived a clean, upright, useful life, was intensely
loyal to his country and his home community and these have been made better
and brighter by his many years of faithful service.  There is not another
man in the entire community whose departure would be more generally
regretted, for Mr. Searls was widely known, and his presence will be keenly
missed.

Mr. Searls was a Mason of many years standing.  He held membership in both
the blue lodge and chapter.  He was a madecca Mason in Dakota in an early
day and was a charter member of Freedom Lodge, No. 434, A.F. & A.M. of
Akron.

Funeral services were held in Akron Sunday forenoon, January 21.  After a
brief service at the home, a large assemblage of Masonic brethren escorted
the remains and the family to the Baptist church, where an impressive
memorial service was conducted.  Rev. F.E. Volck paid an eloquent tribute to
the character and life-work of the departed.  Songs were beautifully
rendered by a quartet, Ed. Spears, Mrs. H. G. Clark, Miss Elizabeth Meredith
and L.A. Douglass, with Mrs. Jesse Mowers at the pipe-organ.  The casket was
entirely covered with beautiful floral pieces, among which was one from the
Order of Railway Telegraphers, of which Mr. Searls was a member. Considering
the blizzard prevailing, the large attendance at the funeral was a
remarkable testimonial of the respect in which the deceased was held, and
had weather conditions been anything like normal edifice would not have been
half enough to hold the assemblage. Ever touching tribute was the fact that
nearly forty Masons, acting as escort to the remains, marched from the
church to Riverside cemetery through the storm and snow. 

[Note: There are several more paragraphs explaining the graveside service
performed by the Masons. And there is a final large paragraph that conveys
those that attended the funeral from a distance despite the weather. The
copy was not legible enough to transcribe.]

Funeral Sermon by Rev. F. E. Volck

[Note: Next there are four columns of printed matter which is the sermon
preached at Mr. Searls service. Unfortunately, most of it is not legible
enough to transcribe correctly. The old newspaper must have had a fold in it
as it was being microfilmed. I will transcribe a couple of the paragraphs
that I can read well enough to type.]

"The days of our years are three score years and ten, and if by reason of
strength they be four score years, yet is their strength labor and sorrow,
for it is soon cut off, and we fly away."  Psalm 90:10

"To teach us to number our days, ____ we may apply our hearts unto wisdom."
Psalm 90:12

I hold in my hand the Railroad Magazine, in which a brief life sketch of Mr.
Searls is printed, along with that of other veterans in the service of the
Milwaukee railway..

Thus, a long, useful life has passed-a life inured to experience that
commingled both hardships and triumphs; anxieties and raptures-a pioneer of
early frontier life-an honored citizen, scarcely yet come to forced
retirement as from infirmities due to advancing years.  Mr. Searls was still
a young man.

The great western pioneer scout, Col. Cody, when a few days since he lay
dying in Denver, asked his physician and friend, Dr. East, what the chances
might be for recovery.  The doctor hesitated a moment, then said solemnly,
"Colonel, there comes a time when the medical profession must yield its
charge to The Higher Power.  Your life is now as the sands of the hour
glass.  It is gradually but surely slipping away."  How inevitable!

"If you have a friend worth loving, Love him-Yes, let him know that you love
him-ere life's evening Tinge his brow with sunset glow.

Why should words ne'er be said of a friend-till he is dead?"

Mr. Searls will not, perhaps be memorialized as one of America's
celebrities, but he is enshrined within the hearts of his friends-engraven
on the tablets of their memory.

In the death of Mr. Searls, Akron is again called upon to resign itself to
the inevitable.  This passing closes once more the gateway and drops the
curtain between us and another pioneer, "gone to join the innumerable
caravan."  Its sadness is intensified in the suddenness of the summons.
Everyone expectant, doubtful, yet hoping against hope that he might yet be
spared to health.  Nor knowing how, nor when, nor where, the fortitude of
clinging hopes must suddenly be crushed.  Everybody seemed for a little
while to be off-guard.  His own faithful companion, than whom a truer,
nobler, more willing woman, wife and worker is scarcely to be found, almost
thought to let the kitchen fire die that night, so well for the evening he
had seemed-yet bethought to keep in readiness for an emergency call.  Yes,
and that summons came, and it was to be for him the last, and the last great
struggle before his life went out.  His latest spoken request of her he
loved and who in turn loved him was granted:  "Oh, don't leave me! Oh, stay
by me!" And she answered, "Yes, I will never leave you."  This was
characteristic of her splendid fidelity and solicitude so beautifully
exemplified in the long weeks of her vigil and watchcare during his broken
health.  And so his last words were heard and answered.

If Mr. Searls himself suspected that the end was near, he had certainly
evinced, that evening before, no signs of apprehension. When last I visited
him, but twelve hours before he died, he met me at the door with more than
his usual cheer, he grasped my hand, he received my hat, he carried my
rubbers to the comfortable register, conversed heartily, handed me his life
sketch to read.  Sad, indeed, that this was also to be the obituary I should
have to read so soon above his casket.  He talked of his experience years
ago in the wilds of the frontier, before there was an Akron.  He recalled
his nearly forty years of service under one company in the same old office,
year by year at his desk and books and the click of electric keys-a
remarkable business career is this.  And when he said "Good-night" and
closed the door, Ah! Little I dreamed that this "Good-night" was farewell
and I should never hear his voice again on earth.

Men, "what is your life?" "Say not ye shall go tomorrow into such a city and
remain a year."  What is this span of your sojourning on this earth?  "It is
but a vapor that appears for a little while and vanishes away."

He was a man, who, by reason of some advantage gained by connection with a
railway system, was enabled to make almost any trip he liked-a privilege any
man might crave-and more fully of late, especially, did he avail himself of
this recreation and profit, though his keen sense of duty to the great
corporation employing him seemed always first, for which he denied himself
many pleasures of outing.

He had in his collection of souvenirs some very wonderful curios gathered
from far and near.  He took special delight in God's great landscape, and it
might be that in the depth of his soul there were times when, under the blue
heavens, beside the mountain crags, or in the depths of their jeweled
caverns, or out beside the ceaseless, restless sea, he touched the heart of
the Master Artist-the Divine Maker of heaven and earth.  I do not know.  Mr.
Searls was not a man (though of the most affable and cordial disposition) to
invited discussion about the Bible and the church.  He did not seem to
desire that one should talk much upon this subject, though health permitting
he was sometimes seen in the house of worship.  But one time when we were
alone, I asked him about his soul, and of his thought concerning that
Eternal hope we all desire, and I asked him if he did trust in our Savior
and the truth and inspiration of His book.  His simple answer was, "Oh, yes,
I do-and far more than I am given credit for."  These are his exact words,
and they are all I have.  And with that, while I said a little more, he
lapsed into silence, which very prudence seemed to forbid I should disturb,
and after a solemn silence of some moments, I left him that he might rest
and meditate while the western sun in its setting streamed into his window.

CARD OF THANKS

To the neighbors and friends, for their many acts of kindness and sympathy,
during the illness and after the death of our beloved husband and father, we
desire to express our most sincere thanks and appreciation.-Mrs. E. J.
Searls and Children.

[Transcriber Note: This date of death was 19 Jan 1917.]



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