Prairieland Talk— What Was Left Undone? By BO MAINE SAl'NDEBS, 4110 South Slot St, Lincoln 8, Ncbr. LINCOLN A 14-year-old Lincoln girl, brought up in a city of churches, colleges, universities and other cultural centers, with her 19-year-oid "boy friend" on a three-day killing spree left a trail of their dead outnumbering life killings of either Ne braska's Wild Bill Hickok, Missouri's Jesse James or New Mexico's Billy the Kid. What have the parents of these two youthful murders done or left undone? What has the community held out to them? What has our human society contributed to inspire youth to a life of lawlessness leading to the worst of all— murder? Maybe it began at the cradle. Had those two youthful murders been taught right in the home, taken to church Rainaine and centers of culture their H*uiHicr* young lives would not today lx* stained with sin. Lincoln’s Wild Man of Borneo, a 19-year-old youth by the name of Charley Starkweather, shot to death nine people in Lancaster county while of ficers elected to maintain the peace and dignity of our fair state sat it out in safety in •‘consulta tion.” The young killer made his get away but ran into guys up in Wyoming who handled shooting irons as well as he. Safely jailed at Douglas, our brave officers went out to bring him here for trial. Why a trial? T(xss a rope over his head and have a hanging Had there been one or two deputies in I .a nc as tor county like the late Eli Hershiser of O’Neill the young outlaw would not have escaped to Wyoming. • • • The 1950 census-takers reeorded sizeable groups of church goers in Yankeeland. They tell us that there were something over 30 million go ing to Roman and Greek Catholic churches with 86 million in the various Protestant groups. How many really paid weely visits and tossed n their two-bits might be a different story. Since the last census was taken, Evangelist Billy Graham has been heard from and the 1960 roundup should dis close another million or two weekly worshippers. Here in the Capital City a clergyman reports run ning onto a smoking party in his church; so may be that’s it—go into a church to sit down and have a smoke, not kneel down to worship . • • • I can not reach a hand to yon distant star nor travel the endless reaches of the vast un known out of the depths of which the distant star glows. But I can walk the paths of earth, extend a hand to a fellow traveler and greet all with a smile, a cheering word and take him to dinner If he needs It. • • • Preparations are now under way for the an nual spring meeting of the Nebraska State Histor ical Society. They meet this year in Fairbury on May 4. It was in February. 1904- E. H. Whalen re ported the arrival of a baby boy at their home . . . | E. P. Hicks was back from a trip to Waterloo, la. . . . P. J. McManus was in Chicago, HI., on his annual visit to the marts of trade. . . D. A Doyle was in the flour and feed business, a 50-pound sack of flour SI . . Doctor Gilligan was called to Ewing to attend a sick man. . . Mrs. Wes Evans was visting in Omaha . . Maylon Price spent a day with relatives in Atkinson. . . R. R Dickson arrived home from a business trip to San Fran cisco, Calif. . . Mrs. Fitzsimmons was in Chicago selecting her spring stock of ladies head gear. . . Mrs. J. H. Meredith entertained a group of lady friends at her home. . . Judge B. S. Gillespie had business in Omaha for a day or two. • • • Out there above earth’s western rim, far be yond the reach of human hand, this calm morn ing hour before the dawn of another day the full moon looks down upon early prairieland risers. For 12 hours the full orb of night has moved with celestial step across the sky soon to sink from our view, and we turn our gaze to the east to greet rising sun, another night gone, another day usher ed in. And so the march of time writes another wrinkle across the record of human history. And now the ambition of man would write upon the record of human history the story of trips to the I moon. The Hand that hung the sun, the moon, the stars out there in the heavens will stay the hand ; of man from reaching other planets. • • • An interesting letter comes from Claude Han cock, son of pioneer Holt county parents and now holed up with his wife in Los Angeles, Calif. Claude is the father of our longtime county treasurer, J. I Ed Hancock, and belongs in O’Neill rather than in distant L. A. He cherishes memories of life as a boy on- the prairies of Holt county and writes, too, of experiences as a banker here, but says they were “broke” upon landing on the West coast many years ago. Now retired, I take it Claude gath ered up some of California’s gold that escaped the clutches of the 49'ers as he and Mrs. Hancock are now taking life easy near where the waters of the vast Pacific wash the shores of our continent. The Hancocks keep informed on prairieland affairs by reading The Frontier and promise to see me the next trip this way. • • • March 16 to 22 is being promoted as library week to encourage Americans to read. Books, mag azines, newspapers and religious publications flood the country, and now a week set apart with the slogan, “Wake Up and Read.” Why not a slogan, Stop and Think!” Libraries are needed, newspa pers are indispensible and friends tell me "Prairie land Talk" is most important. (Har-u-m-p-f!) • • • Nebraska has no such creature as “ground hog”, but if a prairie dog came out of winter hid ing to shake a leg the morning of February 2 he not only made a shadow on the snow but got nipped by a bitter blast fresh from the North Pole. Editorial— Commission Rules for C&NW The Nebraska state railway commission Tues day lowered a boom on the Save-the-Trains asso ciation in regard to the last two remaining passen ger-mail-express trains serving most of North-Ne braska After 3V4 years of conferences and a week-long hearing at Valentine last summer, the commission has granted Chicago & North Western Railway company permission to take off trains 13 and 14 that ply each way daily between Omaha and Chadron. Officials of the Save-the-Trains group had no immediate comment on Tuesday’s announcement. And no comment will be forthcoming until after the commission’s opinion has been studied. But it is generally conceded in S-T-A circles the running semi-legal and legal battle will go to the Nebraska supreme court. S-T-A has held all along that the Omaha Chadron line is profitable on the overall by virtue of 150-c.nr freight trains and that passenger-mail express service should be kept because there is no other adequate substitute service. The Frontier believes the railroad is entitled to substantial tax relief in the state and permission to discontinue certain services on branch lines where patronage has dropped off below the in come. But Omaha-Chadron is a mainline situation and trains 13 and 14 are the last two remaining pas senger-mail-express trains serving a tremendous area. Tlie commission, apparently, is chiefly inter ested in the welfare of the railroads and is no long er functioning in the interests of the people. Soil Scheme Flops Two-hundred fifty-eight Holt county farmers who had entered "bids" for participation in the de partment of agriculture’s soil retirement proposal met with a degree of disappointment with Friday’s announcement the scheme would be abandoned in htree of four "pilot” states. Ag officials in Washington gave as the reason the bidding was generally too high. > The plan to turn tilled soil in Nebraska, Ten nessee and North Dakota back to grass was scut tled. The “pilot” plan, along similar lines, is still under consideration in Maine. The Frontier feels the plan fizzled by its own inherent weaknesses. It is economically absurb to pay bonuses for idled acres while science and spe cialists are working at break-neck speed to in crease agricultural production The land “bid in” first, of course, was the poorer land. The adverse economic effect on small cities and towns in pure agricultural areas would have been I> I •, II jack and Mr. j Deloit News > Mr. and Mrs. - : visited at t h i Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bohn visit- home on Thursd ted the Jim Bartak home in Oma- Robert Miller, ha over the weekend. mess school in C Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Bartak £|£k“deiwRh^ and Mrs Alice Ladge made a trip , ,, Frank to California. Mrs Lodge will visit c^me horn her sons and other relatives in °Cm £rt California for a tune. Work has be! Mr. snd Mrs. R.ox Cn&pm&n telephone systcr celebrated their 11th wedding an- piunity. It will t niversary on Thursday. more to eomplei Guests for supper Thursday the report. It wi evening at the Ewald Spahn stem, home were .Mr and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Tom- and Mr and Mi serious. Holt county, for example, is sparsely pop ulated to begin with, and any additional factors contributing to the depopulation would be bad. We do not condemn those farmers who at tempted to "hid n” or ‘rent” idle land to Uncle Sam. Any number of those who entered bids vol unteered to us they were against the idea in prin ciple, but couldn’t resist. The plan was another form of subsidy and died prematurely of its own weakness. Now the ag experts will lie turning to some better and more sound form of subsidy that will square with the five million who are at present unemployed. Hruska Will Stay Put U. S Sen. Roman Hruska (R-Nebr.) has an nounced his candidacy for reelection and has adopted a position of being against federal aid to education. The junior senator from Nebraska quite fre quently calls a spade a spade and generally is in the conservative corner on most issues. This stripe squares very well with his constituency. Also on the conservative side is the senior senator from Iluskerland, Carl T. Curtis. Mr. Hruska will be the target for professional educators from thither and yon who are hepped up for federal aid to one degree or another. Fed eral aid, of course, would be attended by federal i controls. We admire Mr. Hruska for his stand and we have observed him closely enough to believe he’ll stay put. Too often politicians talk one route and vote the opposite. CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher 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 ot Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per year; elsewhere in the United States, $3 per year; rates abroad provided upon request. All sub scriptions payable in advance. md Mrs Hemy i and family of O'Neill were Sun 1 day dinner geusts at the Johnny Glenn Harpster Bauer home. The dinner honored > Wilbur Napier 'be birthday anniversaries of Mrs. ay. Tom jack and Mrs. Morrow, who attends bus- Mrs. Ilenry Reimer taught the hnaha, and Mary. Bud Bartak school last week. The 1 there, spent the teacher was ill with the flu. lis parents, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bartak Miller and James, and family were Sunday dinner e with some stu- guests at the Keith Bowen home, •eft- Farm Bureau met Tuesday tun on the new evening at the Earl Schrunk I in this com- home. The next meeting will be ike six months or April 10 at Bud Bartaks. e the work was | _-— II be a dial sy- j Go to Spencer Mrs Rosa Bowers and Mr. and Ralph Tomjack Mrs. Marion Woidneck of Midway ■s. Rudy Morrow spent Tuesday in Spencer. When You <& I Were Young . . . Snyder Endorsed for Convention Will Entrain Soon for Chicago 50 Years Ago The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Griffin, living one mile north of town, died Sunday. . . . Miss Clara Shoemaker return ed from Omaha where she had j been for three weeks in a hospital | after an appendectomy. . . The candidacy of O. O. Snyder was en dorsed unanimously by the coun ty committee as a delegate from j the Sixth district to the national | convention in Chicago. . . Marr iages: Anton J. Kramer of Stuart and Gertrude Conrad of Newport: Fred W Rose of Tamora and Jes sie Ellen Hart of Stuart, Benjam in H. Weston of Pierce and Leota Durham of Venus. . . We heard a man complain that his household has been without bread ever since he roller skating rink opened. It happens that baking days are skat ing rink days. . . Mrs. J. Q How ard entertained 20 friends at a dinner. . . Mrs. John Hunt, ac-1 companied by her son, Frank, j went to an Omaha hospital antici pating surgery. She was informed that this was not necessary, hut will remain there a week or two. 20 Years Ago Mr. ana Mrs. uaniei j u™n observed their golden wedding an niversary. They were married February 13. 1888, at St Patrick’s church by Rev. Cassidy. . . Deaths: William Conklin, 82, a county treasurer for 12 years; Mrs. Ellen Gallagher. 83, died at her home southeast of Inman. . . J Mrs. Maggie Gray was down from | Atkinson to visit friends She broke her hip fourteen months ago and is just about ready to discard her crutches. She is 84 years old. . . Mr. and Mrs. John Babl and sons. ' Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pongratz and | son, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beck with and family and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ries were visitors at the j Ed Heeb home. Miss Edna Heeb is "very ill”. . • Vem, the oldest son of the Clarence Wredes, re-! ceived a broken nose at school! while playiny shinny. At first it was thought his eyesight was af fected. 10 Years Ago Edward Panowicz was named manager of the Midwest Furni ture company. A navy veteran of four years, he served two years in the southwest Pacific. . . The remains of Pfc. Bernard E. Bolin of Page were interred in the Page cemetery. Pfc. Bolin's body was the second Holt countyan to be re turned to the United Staes for bur ial under the government’s plan. Only 19 years of age, he was wounded a week after the initial landing at Normandy. He died two days later The first of the coun ty's dead in World War H to be returned to the states was me bodv of T-Sgt. Laddie Cary of In man. . . Atkinson’s incubator baby, the three month premature baby of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Damero of Phoenix, has reached the two pound mark. The tiny infant weigh ed 1 pound and 12 ounces at birth Joseph Mlinar and his wife celebrated their 50th wedding an niversary in Atkinson. ■ Law, Insurance Topics of Meeting LYNCH — The Boyd county home extension club leaders’ training meeting was held at the Lutheran church basement Fri day, January 31, for an all day session, the training lesson on “The Lady and The Law” and “Property & Casualty Insurance” was presented by state extension specialist, Miss Clara Leopold. Leaders present were Mrs. Fred King and Mrs. James Price for the Excello club; Mrs. Frank Weeder and Mrs. Robert Conklin for Highland club; Mrs. Clarence Kolund and Mrs. Elmo Barnes for Rural Progessive club; Mrs. Myron Hodges and Mrs. Harlan Holtz for Sunshine club and for the YWGO club Mrs. Earl Prit chett and Mrs. Ronald Stewart. A pot luck lunch was served at noon. Pre-Lenten DANCE Butte Legion Ballroom Tuesday, Feb. 18 Music By: Eddie Stan and the Style Band Admission—$1.00 .. .■ FREE WEDDING DANCE Butte Legion Ballroom Saturday, Feb. 15 MI’SIC BY: Mullen Family and Their Orchestra Ann Abbenhaus & William Ledemann, Jr. Completes Administration Course Army Pvt. Marvin L. Young, 18, (above*, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Young of O'Neill, is scheduled to complete the basic army administration course February 14 at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. the course includes training in typing, record keeping and Army cler ical procedures. Young is a 1957 graduate of O’Neill high school. U. S. Army Photo. O’Neill News Mr. and Mrs. Rob R. Prouty and son were Sunday guests at the home of Mrs. Harry S. Prouty of Spencer. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Prouty of Yank ton, S.D , and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Prouty and family of Spencer. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Philbrtck ■ GOOD HATS deserve factory rebuilding! Cleaned, blocked, re-styled with new bands, bindings and j leathers with postage paid back to you . . . tor only j $4 Hats of Distinction Made to Order Styled to vour Individual measurements $10 » $100 (Style folder on request) CY LANGDALE CUSTOM HATTER Box 869 Norfolk, Nebr. id family Sunday visited her irents, Mr and Mrs. Ebby Stout Rose. Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. jhn Laska were her parents, t. and Mrs Louis Nowak and js- Bob Hill and family, all of Fullerton. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yusten were Mr. and Mrs Albert Henning of Atklnaon and Mr and Mrs Ivan Cone. 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