iei-gnleec-gneIStttdvi.it*1aiWW AAV Ai IIV ff ao ||1VUII pCl •mission to say just one word, “Fuj”I The room astir with feathers; the laughing and funl The taffy pulls when girls came in calico and boys in home-made overalls — usually barefoot. Good wholesome fun, when youth forgot the toil and worry of the day; no stewing or fussing of a grand parade1—just a good time.One childhood prank I’ll not forget was tying the snake in the onion patch; but I would like to forget the whipping that followed.Then in 1866 another ship hove into harbor and down came anc£her family of Bohemians, coming from the same little Bohemia near Prague. This time a little girl of some six years was walking proudly beside her parents, an older brother and sister, looking through bright grey eyes into a new country where she would know both laughter and tears. Little Mary Jane Goller went with her parents to Cleveland, Ohio, the next year moving to Madison Lake, Minn., in a covered wagon, drawn by oxen, the only popular mode of travel. Until 1877 they lived here where there was always work; the cutting of grain; the binding by hand in which women and children helped; the herding of cattle and hogs; the fear of the wild hogs in the dense woods where one time little Mary was treed by an angry wild sow for many hours; walking many miles to work in a house for very low wages indeed; walking to church on Sunday: the same hardships suffered in Kansas were suffered in Minnesota.Tlt;1lt;4iII2lTilt;TiFT!PHj1IIn 1877 they came in a wagon train to Ellsworth, Kansas and here the same year she became the young bride of Frank Wransky. They at once moved to Republic county and here in six months the dread epidemic of small pox raged and death claimed him. With the worries of widowhood added to hardships it was hard to carry on, but in a few short months a tiny daughter was born to her. A new life to guard and a new interest in life. Little Josephine grew and thrived into happy, healthy childhood.2-11-Si21022u1 1 ThIn 1880 she met and fell in love with Wesley J. Saip. They were married the same year and to them was born four sons, Ed, Joe, Frank and George and six daughters, Mrs. Emma Lahodny, Mrs. J. W. McChes-ney, Mrs. Sophia Fulton, Mrs. Anna Sturm, Mrs. Frances Longwell and Mrs. Mary Kasparek whose untimely passing in 1930 broke the family circle.22434 1Oi1 lt;22 IHBei