Prairieland Talk . . . Chagrin in Cowboy Classification By ROMAINE SAUNDERS, Retired, Former Editor Hie Frontier LINCOLN—It need not spoil a good newspa per story. But an expert such as “Hay” McClure would feel somewhat chagrined to be classed with an outlaw like Roscoe Moore and a bar room bum * like “Nigger Jim.” McClure was to the manner bom with a brand ing #on. He should have been written down as a compatriot of such knights of the saddle as Sam Elwood, Tim Bunnel, Mike Callahan and Billy O’ Connors, not to mention John Longhair, Bob Inger soll and Joe McEvony. o Whether it was the name he answered to or his way in taming wild broncs, the Hon. M. P. Kinkaid would have no other than “Longhair” as his horse wrangler. His last came as he had an unusually bad acting brown bronc on the end of a lar iat. The pony stepped into a hole with a hind hoof. In getting out, the pony dislocated the joint above the hoof, began to kick and kept it up until he kicked the hoof off, necessitating the horse. This was a heart breaking experience for “Long hair” and he ieft the country soon. Romaine Tim Bunnel saved a girl Saunders from being gored at Third and Everett streets by roping a critter that had broken away from the herd. Ingersoll, dressed in the latest, boots polished, buckskin gauntlets and flashy red silk scarf about his neck, was a lure for romantic maids and dis appeared from the community with a dark-eyed . beauty. I don’t know what coula offer a more inter esting life than the open range with always the newspaper game to return to. Prairieland Talker has had some of both. * * • Jupiter Pluvious opened the windows of heaven l?st night to let out a downpour that wet the thirsty earth and brought cheer to all save those in a cyclone and hail-swept district in Kan sas and southern Nebraska. Some days earlier a story came out of Albion, in Boone county, that a fund had been raised there to -try out the rain making schemes of today. If Albion was included in last night’s wetting, they may save their cloud seeds for future use. It was in the nineties that O’ Neill fellows tried both the itinerant rain-makers and dynamite with no results. • • * The passage of Senator Nelson’s bill relating to passenger train crews adds another hopeful outlook for north Nebraska citizens thrugh sup port of the railroad on the part of the citizens should not be diminished. The opposition to the measure passed by the legislature by the rail road brotherhood indicates that the union pre ferred no passenger train service to a reduction hr one ol the train crew. < * *. « * * Don’t try to get ahead of everyone on the high way or you might be leading the procession, hori zontally. • * * * There are still many people around who are always trying to borrow money from somebody. It was midwinter 52 years ago. O. F. Biglin, the pioneer who buried the dead and dealt in ma chinery, a gent of rare good sense, was chairman of the county board of supervisors that day in session when among the day’s official duties bonds of the following who had been elected to serve as justice of the peace in their precincts were ap proved: George M. Davies of Deloit, Hugh O’Neill of Saratoga, Frank Graves of Wyoming, R. T. Bal lantyne of Fairview. The bond of S. M. Aldrich, township clerk for Sand Creek, was also approved. ... A man at Kennesaw, who had come to America on the ship that brought Andrew Carnegie, was given that year a yearly allotment of $500 from Mr. Carnegie. Both came from Scotland. . . The Knights of Columbus was organized in O’Neill. . . The report of the committee of supervisors that had made a check of the records of Sheriff C. E. Hall showed that the sheriff had received $1,073.43 in fees the previous year. . . Mrs. A. B. Newell, with the children, left O’Neill to join her husband in Seattle, Wash., where the family was to make its home. . . Miss Constance Harrington gave a house party for a number of her friends. . . Mrs. G. C. Hazelet, a former citizen of the community, came from Omaha for a visit with her sister, Mrs. W. T. Evans, and friends. . . T. J. Griffin came out from cultured Boston, Mass., and opened a tailor shop to properly tog up the young bloods. . . Mrs. Cress was “serving hot meals at all times,” had groceries, candy and holiday gifts at bargain prices. . . George Bowen of Hampton and Miss Myrtle Michael of Page were married by Judge Morgan. * * • Three and one-half billion of federal funds for foreign aid. Loans for veterans made avail able, larger social security benefits for the old fogies. How about the fathers and mothers who have maintained the home and kept industry alive and paid the taxes? * M. * The month of June is the one time of year that holds a lure to travel the highways and prai rie trails of Nebraska. Wheat fields and com row upon-row across the rich black earth mile after mile to the right and to the left, seen along the highways traversing the hills and vales of Lan caster and Seward counties, up-an-down the rug ged ridges of Howard county through which the two Loup rivers wend their way to the Platte, over the picturesque hills of Greeley county. The grasslands to the north extend to the crys tal waters of the Elkhorn and beyond where herds of cattle graze; where is heard the song of meadow larks and the prariie rooster struts at dawn before his harem; where the jackrabbit has its home and the sly coyote trots here and there; where the land scape robed in velvet green greets the beholder and where contented people dwell. There, too, is seen the charm of quiet village life in small towns where the days come and go unhurriedly and neighborly spirit prevails. At O’Neill, Atkinson, Bassett, Ainsworth, the larger activities do not congeal tha milk of human kind nes nor spell an end to friendly ties; the spirit of prairieland, its hospitality and warm-hearted fel lowship encounter no barriers because of diversi ty of views or family traditions. And to know conditions, to get a glimpse of what the summer harvest may be, don’t take the weather reports too seriously, take rather to the open road. To get the true picture leave the federal or state highway and roll down the prairie trails. Editorial . . . Mentally - Retar ded Children xue nouse or representatives appropriations committee has urged a federal program which would attack the problem of mentally - retarded children. Although many citizens do not realize it, the committe reported that there were from three to five million children in the “mentally-retarded” category. The committee further stated that this prob lem—which is one of the most serious health prob lems in the country—has gone almost unnoticed by educational and medical leaders. The committee found further that there were only vague ideas on the causes of mental lagging among children. A report authored by Rep. John Fogarty, Rhode Island democrat, recommended a $750,000 appropriation as a starter to launch a research pro gram in this field. Furthermore, the report called for the office of education to present a broad pro gram to combat this situation in 1956. We would much prefer to see the task under taken by the states, rather than federal. We feel that the expenditure of a consider able sum of money on this effort would be not only a humane but a shrewd financial investment. The nation’s youth constitute its main wealth and when one realizes that from three to five million children are in the mentally-retarded state, the extent of the loss in the productive capacity of the country becomes obvious. In addition, the cost of caring for these men tally-retarded children is added to the loss to the nation of normal productive capacity, and the total loss to the nation is a considerable one. Lesson in Pickups (Guest editorial from Blair Pilot-Tribune) Out at Gordon, Editor Reva R. Evans, who writes one of the most forceful editorial columns In the Nebraska newspaper field, last week ran a c picture in her editorial section. It was a photo of two nice - looking young men. They look like they could be your sons or your neighbor’s boys. Under the picture, Editor o Evans ran the following editorial, which speaks for itself: Harmless appearing lads, aren’t they? Seeing them hitch-hitking along the highway, the average motorist would probably think, “College kids”_ or “Kids on their first leave after basic trying to get home,” and pick them up. But looks are deceiving. These two innocent looking sharpies are James Blood (left) and Wil liam R. Warren (right), who were sentenced re cently to three to 10 years for the robbery of an O’ Neill filling station and the brutal beating of the attendant, whom they left for dead. This was near the end of their trail, however —let’s see where and how it started . . . It began back in Waverly, la., where the boys went AWOL from an air force radar station. By some means they made their way to Waterloo, la., where they hitched a ride with a farmer, Edward ■) B. Heatherton. About five miles out of Waterloo, they knock ed out their benefactor, tied him with cloth from a sack and left him beside the road. Taking his car, they drove back to Waverly, got their clothes and traveled all night, arriving in O’Neill early the next morning. They lay around oc all day, sleeping near the park in their car. (Their? Possession is nine points of the law, it is said.) At 6:30 p.m., they drove to a filling station in the west part of town and while Blood went into the station, Warren filled the car with gas. lood, it seems, felt some compunction to live up to his name. He slugged the station attendant twice with the butt of a gun and then struck the inert man with a sledge handle. After scooping the money from the till and shaking down their un conscious victim for cash these cum laude crime school graduates proceeded west on highway 20. They were stopped at Valentine but their baby faces and fast line got them through the police block but not before a gimlet-eyed service station attendant had seen one kick a gun under the car seat. The word was radioed to Rushville ... the net closed in and the crime spree of the youthful thugs was halted—temporarily, at least. MORAL: You can’t judge a book by its cover or NEVER PICK UP A HITCH HIKER. Water Hassle The Loup River Public Power district seeking to charge farmers for water taken from the river and its tributaries opens avenues of considerable discussion. Who ever granted the hydros free pow er rights in the first place was shortsighted. The objecting farmers and municipalities can run the power people dizzy. For example: How much water do the cows drink? How much water taken from the river by the city of Ord, for example, goes back into the river via the sewer system? Which is more important to the state—a silt-filling hydro plant or the economy of a given area? Invincible The Lincoln Star says a probing reporter found that it takes 106 pages of fine print just to compile an index for all the blank forms the army uses. It suggests to one that the army ought to abandon its forts and sell its guns. There isn’t any force in the world, armed or otherwise, that could seriously penetrate a defense made up of so much red tape. CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher Editorial & Business Offices: 122 South Fourth St. Address correspondence: Box 330, O’Neill, Nebr. Established in 1880 — Published Each Thursday 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, 52.50 per year; elsewhere in the United States, $3 per year; rates abroad provided on request. All subscriptions are paid-in-advance. Audited (ABC) Circulation—2,463 (Mar. 31, 1955) When You and I Were Young . . , ] Handball Flayers Swelter and Sweat Home Talent Concert ‘Best Ever* 50 Years Ago The handball players have had a new and improved court constructed on the site of the old one and will continue to swealter and sweat pounding the boards with the ball. . . Those who at tended the home talent concert pronounced it the best entertain ment of the kind ever given in the city. The concert was liber ally patronized. . . Dr. Donohue, the Omaha osteopath who is spending a couple months in O’ Neill, says the outlook for a good practice in O’Neill is “very flat tering’’. . . L. G. Gilllespie re turned from a trip to Alliance. • . O. F. Biglin, F. J. Dishner, J. A. Donohoe and A. F. Mullen were at Columbus assisting to initiate a council of Knights of Columbus. . . Hank Tomlinson has bought the quarter section east of his home place from Mr. Bennett. 20 Years Ago F. N. Shaner of Ainsworth arrived in the city to start on the new well the city is having dug on the Beha lot on the cor ner of Fourth and Fremont streets. . . The Catholic Daugh ters gave a farewell party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Mul len in honor of Mrs. Joe Mc Namara, who leaves soon for their new home at Valentino. . . Fred H. Swingley, Atkinson’s hustling and energetic banker, was in the city visiting friends and looking after business mat ters. . . Students of St. Mary’s academy held their annual pic nic at Oak View park. . . Judge and Mrs. C. J. Malone and Mr. and Mrs. J. Edmond Hancock and daughter, Barbara Ann, were guests of Mrs. Mary Hancock in Inman. 10 Years Ago Miss Chickie Iler, niece of Mrs. S. Downey of O’Neill, who is majoring in clothing construct ion at the Traphagen school of fashion, had the honor of winning an honorable mention in the group in which she appeared in ‘the school’s annual spring fash ion show. . . M/Sgt. William A. Miller recently was awarded the bronze star for meritorious services in support of combat operations in North Africa and Italy. . . Governor Griswold was in the city a few hours while en route to his old home at Gordon. . . Miss Dorothy Bosn left for Camp Carson, Colo., where she will receive her training as a nurse in the army of the United States. . . Miss Loretta Enright had her purse taken from under her arm while in front of the P. B. Harty residence. She went into the Harty residence and they went out and looked around for the thief, but he was not found. One Year Ago The Herman Janzing auto mobile, stolen from O’Neill May 7, has been located in a used car lot at Fremont. . . A bluegrass festival will be held in Ewing. This event is sponsored each year by the Commercial club. . . Lloyd Dale Van Vleck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van Vleck of Clearwater, received his bachelor of science degree in agriculture at the University of Nebraska with high distinction. ... A huge crowd attended the Sunday performance of O’Neill’s RCA - approved rodeo, which was sponsored by the O’Neill Saddle club. . . The city coun cil, in session informally, re ceived verbal and written petit ions for additional paving in the city. Kindergarten Test Dates Are Tentative The Nebraska school laws pro vide for entrance into kindergar ten as follows: Section 79-444, part (2)—The board in all classes of school districts shall not admit any child into the kindergarten or beginner grade of any school of such school district unless (a) such child has reached the age of five years or will reach such age on or before October 15 of tne current year, or (b) such child has demonstrated through recog nized testing procedures approved by the state board of education that he is capable of carrying the work of these grades. Reference to the statutes was made this week by Miss Alice French, Holt county superintend ent of public instruction. This law provides for a pro gram of examinations by means of which children whose fifth birthday anniversaries fall after October 15 and before January 1, may qualify for entrance into kindergarten. Miss French stated that anyone who planned to have their child tested should contact the office of the county superintendent soon. The testing will probably be done sometime during the first two weeks of August, but the application cards may be ob tained from the county superin tendent now and reservations made for the test. No tests are given to 5-year-old children to determine eligibility for entrance into the first grade, the county superintendent ex plained. Nursing Diploma to Mrs. Chisholm Mrs. Phyllis June Chisholm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Seger of O’Neill, will receive her nursing certificate and diploma at the University of Nebraska col lege of medicine and school of nursing commencement exercises at 3 p.m., Saturday, June 18, at Omaha’s Municipal auditorium music hall. Mrs. Chisholm is a graduate of O’Neill high school and she at tended Nebraska Wesleyan uni versity in Lincoln prior to her matriculation at the school of nursing. Out of Old Nebraska ... Ferry F Helps to d Omaha Emigrants Push on in 1855 By JAMES C. OLSON Supt., State Hist. Society The only comtemporary news paper record of life in Nebraska in June 1855 is a microfilm copy of the Council Bluffs, la., Bugle. From that, though, we are able to glean a good deal about the ac tivties of those restless pioneers who were seeking to build new towns on the western side of the Missouri river. Various town companies, par ticularly Wyoming in Otoe county, advertised regularly in the paper, seeking to urge emigrants to in vest their futures in the new town. A number of ferry com panies advertised regular service between Iowa and Nebraska. The “General Marion”, owned and ] “General Marion”, owned and and Nebraska Ferry Company, was lauded to the sky in each iss ue of the paper. The ferry com pany, however, was more con cerned with building up its new town of Omaha than it was in the ferry business. Indicative of the value of farm land was an ad in the iss ue of June 5, 1855, offering 40 acres improved, iy2 miles from Omaha at a reasonable price. The seller indicated that he would take a “good breaking plow and team with heavy wa gon” in part payment. Emigration across the plains continued during the summer of 1855 as those not wanting to stop in Nebraska continued to push farther west. Most of the emigra tion was destined for Utah, and consisted of Mormons making their way thither to help develop a new Zion in the Salt Lake Val ley. The issue of July 3rd, under the heading, “Late News From the Plains,” carried an extended story of the emigration and af fairs in Utah. “By the arrival of the Salt Lake mail on Sunday evening and of a small company of returning emigrants, with attorney General Holman, on the same day, we have correct news from Utah and the Plains.” “They reported hostility of the Indians appears a false alarm, as none of the companies just come in have been molest ed or met with any difficulty with Indians on the route.” “At Uta^and Laramie all was right and quiet. Met first train of emigrants 20 miles this side of Laramie in good health—getting along well, and although many were traveling, two, three and four wagons in comppany, no difficulty had occured with the Indians. Feed was fine, roads ex cellent, but water rather scarce. But little snow in the mountains. “Wheat in the vallies had suf fered somwhat from the rapacity _>— va * AMERICA'S j tfiyvtr" REFRESHING BEER of grass-hoppers, and little or no rain had fallen.” “General good health prevailed in the vallies. Quite a number of missionaries for Europe and other parts also came through and passed on to their destination. Judge Drummond and lady were met in Kearney. Judge Drum mond goes out to take the place of Judge Shafer, removed. “Attorney General Holman gives the Utahians rather a hard name, and speaks dispariugly of the future prospect there, but up on comparing with our several correspondence, and reports of others who have come in, find a wide difference in views and op inions.” Curtis Endorses Hoover Cutbacks Senator Carl Curtis said Tues day one of the most important ac tivities of the Hoover commission, in studying government reorgan ization, is the commission’s strong desire to remove the federal g >v ernment from competition with private business. Much of this competition ei.ists in activities of the defense de partment. Recently the defeme department announced it is cur tailing such activities as two aluminum sweating operations; seven scrap metal boiling opera tions; logging and sawmill facili ties; seven bakeries; nine laun dries; one chlorine manufacturing plant; 10 automotive repair plants and four cement mixing plants. Curtis said that the defense de partment appropriation bill for next year, however, contains a provision that would let the de partment of defense carry on “work traditionally performed by civilian personnel,” unless con gress permits transfer of such work to private concerns. Curtis is asking Sen. Carl Hayden (D. Ariz.), chairman of the senate appropriations committee, to de fine “work traditionally perform ed” by the defense department. To Massachusetts— Capt. and Mrs. Lloyd F. Haug of Ft. Worth, Tex., departed last Thursday for Omaha to visit with friends before leaving for their new home in Springfield, Mass., where Captain Haug will be sta tioned. The Haugs visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hal va. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Loflin and Jo Lee returned Friday from their vacation. They visited re latives in St. Joseph and Kansas City, Mo., and Glenwood, Colo. —s 15 Grades of Eggs Under New Law Glenn Thacker and Bruce Lauth, poultry extension repre sentatives from the college of ag riculture and Wyatt Cannaday, state department of agriculture, will explain the egg law here. All interested egg producers, process-* ors and retailers should attend this meeting. This meeting will be held in the assembly room of the courthouse on Tuesday, June 21 at 8 p.m. “Nebraska’s reputation as a source of questionable egg qual ity may be altered considerably if egg producers, marketers, and retailers work together to make the new egg law effective,” ac cording to Harry Stokley, assis tant Holt county extension agent. The provisions calling for pro per holding conditions for eggs at the marketing places and for re tailing only eggs of grade B or better should meet with the ap proval of everyone interested in improving egg quality in the state, Stokley added. 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