Prairieland Talk Of Bums and Six-Shooters By ROMAUS'E SAUNDERS, 4110 South 5l«t St.. Lincoln 6, Nebr. Guy Green sat at the type case piling type in his stick as each fell in line so gracefully and slick, there at the Item print shop across the alley from Biglins. Up stepped a bum, sized Guy up for an easy mark. Then the tale of woe. Guy reached into his pants pocket and fished out his last coin of the realm, a 50-cent piece, handed it to the fellow, saw him cross the street, enter a saloon and heard that four-hit piece of his slammed down on the bar. No more bums got a lift from Guy. ... A sporty gent with a wife and children at home on a street in O'Neill addressed a note to a young un married lady inviting her to an evening buggy ride with him. That young lady told her parents Dad told his daughter to invite her admirer to her home. He was met there by dad with a six-shooter in hand, told to kneel before the daughter in that home and beg her forgiveness He did and got out to seek other realms of illicit desires. • • • April 12-18 has lieen set apart as National Library Week Our State Library Commission has named a committee to promote interest and active partici pation in library activities throughout the state dur ing that week in April. Not only city and community libraries have been contacted for this occasion, but also school and college libraries. Books tell the story of human life. Our Library Commission has more than a million volumes available to the public. WWW No blundering mistakes in the grand, Eternal plan; so the time rolls on to work it all out for the final good of man. • • * Ranchers and crop growers of the state are ad monished by the agricultural college workers to be on the job this year to deal with a swarm of incoming grasshop pers. . . . Living costs down a bit we are told. Will note just how much when paying for the dinner today. . . . The Capital City washed by a 3-inch rain in the closing week of March. . . . An elderly patriot stops those he meets on the street to preach a sales tax appeal, thinking it would reduce property tax. But „ _ . when told it's just another tax, he moves on. ... A Lincoln Saundcrw woman with a good Irish name has been chosen the state's mother of the year. Mrs. Margaret McLafferty is her name, though she started life as Miss Keifer. * * • He rode to town with another prairie homesteader to attend to a few personal matters; to go to the post office for his mail, if any. No RFD those days. After leaving the post office, he stepped out with a thrill he had received his quarterly pension check for J12, four dollars a month pension for those vet erans of the war in 1860. Somewhere in the whirl of things in the frontier town of O’Neill, he became separated from the homesteader he had come to town with, so he must walk the five miles back to his prairieland abode. Go empty handed- no. With a 50 pound sack of flour on his shoulder he walked in that evening to the amazement of the family. That pioneer of the prairie was my G.A.R. worthy sire .From such as he, you prairieland-car-drivers of to day have your heritage. • • * The morning is gloomy and sunless, but I hear the birds sing. Life may be gloomy and sunless, but the determined soul sees light ahead. * * • He stood for two hours before the crowd that filled the spacious auditorium telling his story, a story that took his listeners to about everywhere on this terrestial globe north and south American countries, European and Asiatic lands, Africa and Arabia, the Middle East and ancient Egypt. He hud seen the genius homo of earth, talked with kings, the heads of governments of earth, and surprised us by saying that 75 percent of the earth's population do not smoke or drink liquor, hate Christians because they have conceived of the idea that the adherents to that religious faith are all booze guzzlers. He said he was well treated everywhere, even in Com munist Russia and found in Moscow a group of six hundred Muscovites who belonged to the same church he did here in the U S A. While in that Russian capital he contacted by phone his home town of Washington, D.C., got his wife on the phone and she asked, where are you? I'm in Moscow, he re plied Well, wife ordered, you come home. He caught an airplane for home, but did not tell us what his reception was by the lady of the house. * * * The few now in the O’Neill community who knew her as a charming member of the younger group of days now gone were grieved to learn of the death of Mamie Cullen in a New Jersey city where she had made her home since leaving O'Neill twenty years or more ago. Miss Cullen was a niece of the late Father Casidy and was a fine young woman whom all admired. I saw Miss Cullen ten years go when she came from the east to spend a little time amid the scenes of other days and found the picture quite changed. Later we exchanged greet ings by letter now and then, the last word I had from her being that she was failing in health. Now cares and pleasures of life are over for Mamie. I was seated in the spacious unicam assembly room in time to hear Senator Frank Nelson in an able and interesting address before the legislative IKKly where onlookers tear to shreds a proposed measure involving school redistricting. Senator Frank spoke forcefully and to the point setting forth what it meant to the people in his community in Holt county and to those of his entire district. Dur ing my recent visit at the Statehouse I also had the pleasure of shaking hands with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wallers and their daughter who were in Lincoln and went to the legislative assembly room to have a visit with their Holt county neighbor, Senator Nelson, and hear the senator when he had the floor. The senator drove to Omaha the 26th and was joined there by Mrs. Nelson to proceed home for over Easter. Editorial Let's Be Careful If the grass would have been just a little dryer, if the wind had blown a little stronger, if there Hadn’t been so many helpful men nearby, the several prairie fires that raged in Holt and surrounding counties Monday could have been very serious. Although no one knows for sure what started them the fact that they all started at about the same time is confusing one thing is certain: We can’t l>e too careful about smoking. Smoking is blamed for one third of all forest and prairie fires and although these might not have been started that way, we should take a long, hard look at our own habits. One of the most disasterous is the habit of throwing lighted cigarettes out of a moving car window. It has been mentioned as dangerous so much we get tired of listening to it, hut a few stal wart ranch hands and firemen were pretty tired last Monday. A few of them took the shirts off their backs to beat out the flames and for some time it w'as “nip and tuck". In addition to the young grass just getting a start, other damage can result from such a blaze. If there is no grass to hold the soil in this part of the country, it could turn into a desert. Although it would lie difficult to determine the number of wildlife lost, a few burning feathers here and there attest to the fact that we must be doubly careful now. Library Week All that man has ever done his good deeds, his needs, his loves, his disappointments, his failures, his successes is written It is National Library Week, a week set aside to aid and help libraries and a time for libraries to promote themselves. We are fortunate to have a fine library for its size here in O'Neill. You might drop in and lcok around. The reading is free, the experience is priceless. So Much Chemistry From The Stuart Advocate Kissing is just so much chemistry. It has to do with a man s craving for salt. The caveman found out that salt helped keep him cool in the summer time. He found, too, that he could get salt by licking his neighbor’s cheek. Also that it was more inter esting if the neighbor was of the opposite sex. Then everybody forgot about the salt. • • * He who lacks the will to work won't need a will to probate. * • • Most girls know what kind of man they want to marry the trouble is there aren't enough rich men to go around. w ^ ^ Spring has arrived, and the warm weather and burning of winter-sodden leaves attest to same, but we won't be convinced until we see one of the fail young damsels in Stuart attired in shorts. That is the official token as far as we are concerned. * * * Burning a candle at both ends makes it twice as hard to keep the wife in the dark. * * * The P-TA has arranged another fine array of talent for their annual Home Talent Show. At least, they say it is talent- and only you can lie the judge of that after you actend the big shindig. Friday, April 10th at the auditorium. I'm told that the men in the Hat Store bit have borrowed their Missus' Easter bonnets, and will display them as they actu ally look. The women add their bit by doing a comical satire take-off on present school problems. * * * Count among careful drivers, the man who is showing his wife how to operate the new car. * * * Bouquet of the week goes to Mahlon Shearer ami Mrs. Wm. Wewel, retiring members of the Board of Education of School District No. 44. They have just completed three-year tenures of hard work, uncomplainingly in one of the most thankless jobs in the community. "Well done ‘Dug’ and Lulu”. • * * When a woman is too tired for words, she's asleep. One Newspaper's Policy From the Nellgh News With all our talk about charity and helping our fellow man, few of us hurt ourselves by generosity. We have been cussed and discussed concerning our policy in reporting police news. We may be wrong but it could be the other way. t The majority of us some time or another have done things that broke the law. In many cases, the offense has only been minor but in some it has been more serious. As for the minor infractions, we do not feel anyone will condemn an individual. How ever, on the more serious charges, we have a policy to write the story and delete the names when those committing the offense are under 18. Our reason ing for this is that possibly the individual concerned will have learned his lesson and will never again frequent the courtroom. If the individual does, however, get involved for the second time, his name will be used. As for the printing of news, we cannot print any thing unless it is a matter of record. Five newspaper reporters were idling away a few hours in a bar after the final edition had gone to bed. The talk got around to each man’s major vices and each agreed to confess his own peculiar addiction. "Mine's whiskey,” said the first. “Mine’s telling tall tales,” admitted the second. “Mine's gambling,” said the third. Mine’s playing long shot horses,” the fourth ad mitted. "Mine's gossip,” yelled the fifth, "and I can’t wait to get out of here!” ^S^FronI® JAMES CHAMPION, Co-Publisher JERRY PETSCHE, Editor 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 newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press Association, Nation al Editorial Association and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Term* of Subscription: In Nebraska, 52.50 per year; elsewhere in the United States, 53 per year; rates abroad provided upon request. All subscriptions payable in advance. NATIONAL EDITORIAL I Frontiers Ago THE FRONTIER WAS YOENG On April 4, 1899. a half dozen families with teams stopped in the city. They came from the east and were on their way to Boyd County. . . . Miss Flora Lowrie went to Norfolk to represent the O’Neill schools at the oratorical contest. Her sister. Miss Anna, ac companied her. . . . Personal grievances led Mike Fallon and George Gaughenbaugh into a flur ry of fists. They encountered down town and battled a few rounds, when separated by the bystanders. . . . Mrs. Thadeus O'Malley, age 84, died April 5, 1899 at her home. . . . The city election returns gave John Harmon, a free silver demo crat, the mayorality seat. . . Rapha King was out with gun and dog and bagged a sand hill crane. . , . Miss Nora Holland arrived in the city and is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hol land, who reside west of town. THE CENTERY TERNS The annual election of the board of directors of the O’Neill Country Club was held at the courthouse in O’Neill on April 7, 1930. The following were elected directors for the ensuing year: James F. O’Donnell, Roy Griffin, P. B. Harty, Dr. L. A Burgess, Francis N. Cronin, Frank Biglin and Ira H. Moss. . . . The Northwestern Bell Telephone Company held open house at their new building. . . . Mrs. A. Welton, who resided on the corner of Fifth and Adams streets, was given a surprise birthday party in celebration of her eighty-first birthday. . . C. E. Stout was elected mayor in the city election held April 1, 1930. . . . It took a visit from the state health department to convince the town of Orchard, it should be closed during an apparent epidemic of scarlet fever. . . . Deaths: Neil Brennan, April 7, at a Council Bluffs, la., hospital: Eddie Frank lin Bradley, April 7, at his home near Inman; Reta Winkler, April 9, one-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Casper Winkler, of near Emmet; Edmond Wilson Thorp, April 7. ITiuni wr t The Knights of Columbus held a celebration April 12, 1953 to mark their 50th jubilee. . . . Miss Car olyn Watson of Inman was pre sented in recital by Mrs. Charles B. Houser in St. Mary’s auditor ium. . . . Ralph N. Leidy, who pi oneered bulk and bottle gas dis tribution and gas appliance sales here, sold the bulk business to Eric Dankert of Dankert's Service, Chambers, and the bottle gas bus iness to Dale Fetrow, O'Neill. . . . Clyde McCoy and his celebrated “Sugar Blues’’ orchestra were in O’Neill, April 14, at the American Legion ballroom. . . . “Air Force to Conduct Vital Wind Tests Here’’ were headlines in this week’s is sue of The Frontier. . . . The Nor folk Junior college band and chor us members presented a program April 8 in the O’Neill high school auditorium. . . . Deaths: Mrs. James E. Van Every, 71. April 2 in St. Anthony’s hospital in O’Neill; Lee Scriven, 44, former resident of the Chambers community, April 7, 1953. Page 4-H News Saturday, April 4, the Nifty Need lers 4-H club held their regular meeting at the Page Legion Hall. The girls who are taking Skirt and Blouse cut out their skirts. The Work and play girls laid out their patterns. The girls in Let’s Cook made cocoa. Beginning Bak y ■» ing brought combread and discus sed the qualities of combread. Homemaking girls learned to set. the table and how to make center I pieces. All of the girls judged co lor combinations for skirts and blouses. Linda Thompson furnished the games. Mrs Hansen led the group in singing Lunch was served I by Mrs. L. Cm inly and Mrs. ; Obrien. News reporter. Peggy O brien Dear Editor: I am sorry the people of O'Neill are faced with the issue of saloons at all. Let mo give you a few facts about alcohol Two cocktails re duce your vision at night as much I as wearing dark sunglasses. O’ Neill has had more than her share of car smash-ups. There are about ; 440,000 alcohol outlets in our na I tion and about 306,000 churches These liquor outlets turn out around 250,000 new chronic ah»> holies every 12 months. Let's have fewer saloons and m more in O'Neill. Sincerely Ia»e Well* Lynch, Ncbr Please phone us your news! 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