Prairieland Talk "O'Neillites In Lincoln" Hy ROMA IN E SAUNDERS. 411J South 51st St.. Lincoln 6. Nebr. Two that I know of early day citizens of O'Neill came to the end of life's journey in the city of Lincoln on the highway. Charley Hall a politician and had served as sheriff of Holt County and a little Inter in life lie and his wife and son and daughter came to the city of Lincoln to make their home. Charley got into service in the city police department and when on a race after a runaway prisoner he met with it on the highway. And so was laid away among the dead. Den Hunt was the other. Hack In the 1880s a young lad in O’Neill and got into the brick laying B j _| work. Some sixty years ago he and his wife, who was the lUmskn sister of Dan and Will Cronin, early pioneers, came to Lincoln to make their home. And then came to his end on the street in front of his home on 51st and O Street in Lincoln. His wife and their son are still making their home in this community. * * * I recently had a telephone visit with Lou Nissen, our one time mail carrier from Atkinson to Amelia and back again to Atkinson. He and his wife have been living quietly and happily together these win ter clays here in Lincoln. And has had no word during these long winter clays from his sister and her husband up by Amelia. And he plans a trip up there when the weather is more favorable. * • • Each day at the noon hour we get it. The wea ther story of what's going on in the way of weather at Valentine, Norfolk, Grand Island, Broken Bow and other places, hut never anything from O’Neill, (vimt has liecome of the O'Neill weather man? I have a letter from Mrs Fred Harvey, a former O'Neill girl wl»o now lives in Shawnee Mission. Kansas. She is the former Doris Kurtz, daughter >f Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kurtz. At Martina Cafe and Bakery where she was employed she says that she met lots of people among whom was the man she married. He was in O'Neill with his father Inlying Holt County Blue Grass Seed for a seed company in Kansas City. She writes, "Thank you Mr. Saun ders for the trip back to O’Neill each week,” (not that often now,) "that I make in happy memories— and of the mention of the many familiar names of those who played their part in my memories of happiness since the late twenties.” • • • One of the last notable events at the old skating rink in the west part of town was the funeral of the noted congressman M. P. Kincaid. Many notable events had been held there and now it is no more. There have been funerals and processions to the grave yard to lay away the remains of some of the town’s notables liesides Kincaid, R. R. Dickson, John Mann, M. F. Harrington, Neal Brennan, Fred Gatz, J. J. McCafferty and others. Their bodies now at rest on the hill in the abode of the dead where you and I are now headed for. * * * My son George was born in O'Neill on South First Street over sixty years ago. In 1941 he passed to his rest under an operation in a city in Calif ornia where he had been for a number of years. In 1941 I went out to the mail post, jne forenoon after the mail had arrived from Atkinson and there was the notice of the death of my son George. My wife and I got ready at once and she took off for California to attend the funeral and I went to Lin coln to spend the winter there at the American Printing Company. And now some eighteen years ago my wife breathed her last and her remains lie up here on the hill where I expect to be someday. Editorial Judge Your Paper As a Man (The following editorial was written by famed Editor William Allen White of the Emporia. Kan,. Quxotte iu^'.XB.) . The attitude of a man toward his family paper reflects pretty accurately the man's attitude toward life, wrote a philosophic observer. If the man is critical, persnickety, joyous when he finds a small fault, and sniffy when he sees an honest aspiration that man has a bad heart. He rejoices when others fall because be has kept his legs only by the accident of circumstances. If. on (lie other hand, the man sees the palpable errors of a newspaper with a smile of sympathy, if he views the foibles of its editor with kindly toler ance, if he takes comfort in the honest efforts of the ed ‘or to speak the faith that is in him, that man is living a good clean life and if he falls — as every hu man creature may at any day — a thousand helping hands will stretch out to him, and in his trouble lie will be annointed by the kindness of his friends, which after all is the sweetest balm in this big world. Paper Reflects Some Man A newspaper is like a man — because generally it reflects some man and it should be judged as a man should be judged, largely and on the whole. No man lives a perfect life; no editor prints a per fect paper. If an editor is honest, he is bound to offend someone, the editor is namby-pamby and flabby. The same thing is true of the average man. A newspaper is hound to make mistakes; in getting news it must necessarily take hearsay. But. if. in the long run and in the main, day a Per day and year after year, a paper stands for dt ency, for honest thinking and clean living, if it sjieaks fair for those who are trying to do good, ind condemns sneaks and cheats and low persons, that is a good paper. Every newspaper and every man has to ask for charity from its friends. If a man or a news paper got its desserts, life would he a series of miseries. If AH Truth Were Known Every man takes more from life than he gives; he is in the red at the bank of public kindness, for no one can give to mankind all he takes from civil ization, which is mankind’s gift to him. ♦The same again is true of a newspaper. It is weak and human in errors; it gets much from the ;imes that now are; it gives less to them than they lo to it. The modern newspaper could not have run n other times. So when the reader condemns a newspaper, he should stop and think what would tappen if he too were judged on his merits with all he truth alxnut him known to men. In The Sight Or All Men The faults of the newspaper are plain — after the paper is out. A man’s faults may be hidden. There are deeds done in darkness. But the news paper cannot do them; what it does for good or ill must be done in the sight of all men. So when you find something in this paper or any other that displeases you, gentle reader, hold your temper and your tongue; think what would happen if the editor knew everything you did and said. And if the Lord could forgive Mary of Mag lalen — judging her in a large way, crediting her many virtues and her good deeds against those that were weak, may not erring human men overlook an occasional three-line item that they find in their tamily newspaper? - " -- - ■ —I W. E. (Bill) JONES COMPLETE CLOSING-OUT SALE At Auction FRIDAY. FEB. 22. 1963 12:30 o'clock p.m. I have sold my land and am retiring, so will sell all personal property at auction. Sale will be held on the home place located 4 miles west of Plainview, Nebr., on No. 20 and 3^2 miles north, or 4 miles south of Creighton, Nebr., on No. 13 and 1 mile east. Ml rlcAD ur 1-AiMtT anuuj waiilc 168 Head of Straight 3-year-old Angus Cows—All bred by Jay Cole of Merriman, Nebr. Officially calfhood vaccinated for Bangs. Bred to start calving April 1, to Throener Bros, registered Angus bulls. This is the finest group of cows I have ever owned. Sell any number buyer desires. 4 Registered Angus Herd Bulls—Very Choice. All 3-year-olds, bred by Throener Bros, of West Point, Nebr. 15 Head of Dairy Cattle—6 Holstein 3- and 4-year-old milk cows; 3 head of 2-year old Holstein cows; 1 Guernsey 2-year-old heifer; 1 Brown Swiss cow 7-years-old; 1 Brown Swiss 2-year-old heifer and 3 Swiss heifer calves 5 to 7 months old. All are excellent quality. U HEAD OF BRED SOWS—10 Hampshire gilts bred to McGuire boar for April farrowing. 4 Cross bred sows to farrow last of February. 1 Registered Hampshire boar. McGuire breeding. MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT Case 500, 1958 gas tractor. Case Model 210, 1958 utility type tractor, wide front, power steering, hy draulic lift, 2 manure buckets and snow scoop. IHC 200 tractor with qnick hitch. Mounted cultivator, 2-row lister quick hitch attachment fits 200 tractor. Case 2-row mounted cultivator. 4-section.24-ft IHC harrow. N'o. 120 12-ft. EZ Flow fertilizer drill. 14-ft. IHC hay rake. Large size Case P.O. take off and belt driven manure spreader. Large size New Idea manure spreader. 12-ft. IHC self-propelled windrower. Model No. 59. like new. 12 real good 16-ft- feed bunks. 3 self feeders, 10 and 12-ft. 2 steel hog feeders. 4 automatic cattle oilers. Du AH hay boom. new. Hydraulic hay fork. 16-ft. hay rack mounted on 5-ton rubber tired gear. 140- bushel grain wagon with hoist mounted on 5-ton rub ber tired gear. New Idea gear with flat bed. 7-ft. quick hitch IHC mower. Int. 10-ft. grain drill. Air compressor. 5 steel farrowing crates. Grain-O-Vator Sears No. 60 automatic feed wagon. Mayrath 32-ft. elevator and motor. New Idea S8-fL elevator and motor. DeLaval No. 618 cream separator. •John Deere 4-row planter with 160 rods of wire, fertilizer attachments. 4-row J.D. cultivator. Case 12-ft. hay rake. Surge 3-unit milking machine. Shop tools of all kinds and a little furniture. TERMS ■ CASH — Lunch will be served. This ad will appear but once — Save for reference W. E. BILL" JONES. OWNER Dean Mosher. Creighton, & Ernie Weller, Atkinson, auct. American Natl. Bank, Creighton, clerks Frontiers Ago 50 YEARS AGO John H. Hopkins, O'Neill, stu dent at Creighton and ball idol of the university, will be ap pointed deputy sheriff to succeed Adam Sloup, who has been nam ed deputy state oil inspector. . . Tom Donlan suffered between $400 and $500 damages by fire at his residence in the north part of town last Saturday night. . . .Miss Ruth Evans gave a pi ano recital at Inman last Fri day evening. Those attending anc participating from here were: Miss Evans, Misses Elsie and Martha Mills, Grace Stanley, Marion Thomas, Harold Zimmer man and Edgar Carscallen. . . Whether the groundhog had any thing to do with it or not, our fine climate took a sudden tum ble with the close of January and inside of twenty-four hours, the mercury dropped down the tube about seventy degrees. It got down to ten below and kept hovering around zero for several days. 25 YEARS AGO Daniel J. Cronin and Miss Mary Morrison were united in marriage in this city on Febru ary 13, 1888. Next Sunday the Cronins will celebrate their 50t! wedding anniversary. . .Nexl 9unday the Cronins will cele brate their 50th wedding anni versary. . .Mrs. Ellen Gallaghei died at her home southwest oi Inman last Thursday evening af ter an illness of several months at the age of 83 years. . .Count} Attorney Brennan of Butte, was looking after legal business ir this city last Tuesday. . .Mr. ant Mrs. Melvin Ruzicka returnee Tuesday from a few days visil with relatives and friends al Redfield, S. D. Mr. Ruzicka says incur is quae a nine snow in tnal section of South Dakota. . .Judge Dickson and Reporter McElhaney were over at Butte last Monday where they had a short term ol district court, returning home the same evening. . .O’Neill friends received word Monday of the marriage of Miss Margaret Nolan formerly of this city to E. Scott Pursley at Denver. 10 YEARS AGO Henry Lofflin has succeeded Burl Munsell as manager of Gambles store here, one of the largest company-owned stores ir. Nebraska. . .A petition was being circulated Wednesday and being signed by O’Neill taxpayers and freeholders asking the city coun cil to consider a 40-thousand-dol lar bond issue for swimming pool purposes. . .An estimated three thousand person, exceeding all expections filed through the doors last Thursday and Friday to view O’Neill's first annual auto show. . .A fall on the ice on Sun day, Jan. 26 was blamed for the death of Frank Belmar, sr., 70, retired Chicago and Northwest ern railroad section foreman. . . On February 1, Miss Muriel Niles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Niles of Scottsbluff mar ried Ardell Bright, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Bright, O’Neill. 5 YEARS AGO Army Pvt. Donald F. Wewel, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wewel, Stuart, was killed Sat urday, Feb. 1, when the car in which he was riding left the highway and crashed. . .James (Jim) Tomlinson, son of Richarc Tomlinson, O'Neill, was present ed a trophy for the best sports man of the 21st annual golden gloves held in Norfolk. . .Fernan do Lagos of Argentina, S. A., who is a student at the college of ag riculture at the University of Nebr. was a guest of Lyle Heiss at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Heiss, Page. . . Miss Eleanor Hoehne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. O’ Donnell of O’Neill, was capped at St. Catherine’s school of nurs ing, Sunday in Omaha. . .Annua] pay increases ranging from $1, 000 to $1,300 for major county of ficers was authorized Friday at a meeting of the Holt county sup ervisors. The Long Ago At Chambers 50 YEARS AGO Charles Facquier passed through Chambers Saturday on his way home from O'Neill, the board of supervisors having ad journed until the 11th. . Jack Keller became a reader of the Bugle with this issue, having subscribed Monday. . A good siz ed crowd was present at Fred Fitches sale Tuesday in spite ol the cold weather, and things sold at a good prize. . .The WCTU wiL meet at the home of Mrs. R C. Wry on Thursday. Feb. 13 at 2:3t pm. . .Ben Wood was very sick the first of the week with Lum bago, but is getting along fine at the present writing. . Dr Corbet will be in O’Neill every day be ginning Dec. 1. . .A large crowd was in attendance at the play ‘ Down in Maine’’ given in the Band Hall last Thursday evening and from all reports it was high ly appreciated. 25 YEARS AGO Paul Wesley Hardy and Peggy Blanche Hartman surprised their many friends and relatives in California Jan. 15 by slipping quietly away to the Wilshire Wed ding Chapel in Hollywood where they were married. . .Leo T. Adams was transacting business in Grand Island, last Thursday. He was accompanied by Mrs. Adams and they called on the Wilber Edwards family at Cush ing. . Mrs. Letha Cooke has pur chased the Lynn Hanna residence as Lynn and family plan to leave for Idaho some time in the near future. . .Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Brotherton of Eugene, Ore., are the proud parents of a fine 7% lb. son, born to them on Febru ary 1st. . Mrs Malvina Strom quist and children left Friday for their new location at Wheaton, Mo. We understand that Leon Hertel’s expect to move on the Stromquist place in the near fu ture. Pages Past 50 YEARS AGO Maden Funk loaded a car load of hogs at Stafford Friday for the Omaha market. Raymond Heiss finished husking 130 acres of corn on the Leonard Heiss farm last Friday, the day before it snowed like fury. Some 25 ac res of thrown down corn made 50 bushels to the acre, hard to pick. . .Alva Townsend invites you to hear songs from Cuba over the store radio. . .A. T. Crumly, a lad of twelve, daily manifests in dividual progress in the under standing of dairying and enjoys the privilege of milking cows, separates his own milk and de rives $6 a week there from. . . B. H. French was first prize win ner with ten ears of white corn ; at the Annual State Seed Corn show, also first prize on single ear dent. About 175 attended the annual feed when the Page Farmers Un ion held their annua] meeting. Board re-elected were N. G. Mil ler. Anton Nissen and Dave Bow en. The Young Married couples Sunday School class met in the church basement January 5 tc eat oysters and pie. The raw oy ster eating contest ended in a tie between H. L. DeLancey and L. G. Bernholtz. . Elyda Ken nedy was a 9unday visitor in the Henderson home. . .Buv Wanser. W. I. Gray, J. E. Smith, J. R. Weber and Art McClure hunted south Sunday and bagged 53 rab bits. Mrs. C. A. Townsend drove to Chambers Friday night to in stall officers in the Rebekah lodge. . .Mrs. L. R. Dillard vis ited relatives in Fremont this week. . .John Soukup and family settled in Lodi, Calif. . .Mr. and Mrs. George Hunter celebrated their fourtieth wedding anniver sary with a surprise party. 40 YEARS AGO Harry Clausen was quite ill the first of the week. . .The Misses Wood, Murphy and Trowbridge went to Wayne Monday to attend | the 9tate Normal. . .A. E. Riggs j see us for . . . I - GOOCH'S BEST PRO-PREMA BLOCKS The 40% protein beef-building Mock that can help your atocker feeder cattle turn clean-up roughage into EXTRA pounds of Mveweigbt. O’NEILL GRAIN CO. O'Neill, Nebraska wrote uk to send but Reporter to Lomax, 111. . .News of Mae Dai ley's and Susie Lamb's death from fighting fire started by an oil stove m their room, both well known in Page. . .Clifford Frink, the rustling newsboy, sells the Grit as well. . D. A. Jones owns a three year old, 500 lb. Du roc sow which gave birth to 30 pigs in one litter and aaved 13 of them, a record litter. Mr. and Mrs. John Gray were hosts to the parent-teacher meet ing Friday evening. An elegant luncheon was served after the en tertainment. Professor Doyle, in his speech, made the startling as sertion that cigarette smokmg was becoming fashionable among the idle rich women and warned the association to stand together to stamp out that evil. . .Mrs. Charles Greene left for Burr Oak, Kan., to the bedside of her sick mother, who died before her ar rival. Riverside News By Mrs. Lionel Gunler Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Fry and family, Mrs. Kitty Fry and the Lee Fink family were supper guests Wednesday at the Willie Shrader home. Rev. and Mrs. Paul Andre and family were dinner guests last . Sunday at the Dave Pollock home. Mr. and Mrs. Art Buss hardt and family called in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Ahlers and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Van Horn visited at the Chet Taylor home last Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Hoke and Clayton visited at the Ralph Shra der home Friday evening. The Wayne Shrader children stayed at the Wilbur Bennett home while their mother and Ina Bennett went to Omaha for Wil bur Bennett who had surgery last :■ - Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Waller Miller went to Omaha Friday morning, returning home Saturday, thru children stayed at the Howard Miller home during their ab sence. Mrs. Bert Fink helped at the Melvin Napier home Thursday Mr and Mrs. Howard Miller via tied at the Napier home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Fry. Mrs Kitty Fry and Mr and Mrs. Wil lie Shrader visited Mrs. Otto Ret ke last Tuesday afternoon in the O'Neill hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Z. H Fry, who have been vacationing in Cool idge, Am , left for Ixime Satur day morn mg, to be with his sis ter. Mrs. Otto Retke. who is sick in the Lady of Lourdes hospital in Norfolk. Steve Napier visited at tlx* George Keller home Sunday uf ternoon. The Forum group had a waf fie and sausage supper at Un church annex Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Fry, Mr, and Mrs. Lynn Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs William Lofquist, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Napier, Mr. and Mrs Don Larson and Mr. and Mrs Wendell Switzer were guests Tuesday evening at the Dale Na pier home. Mr and Mrs. Willie Shrader and family aixi the Ralph Shra der family were supper guests i .. Thursday at the Archie Johnston home. Mr. and Mra. Earl Iheiauu ate dinner Thursday at the Walter Woeppel home Mr and Mra Amos SwiUer visited at the Ora Switzer home last Sunday afternoon. Mra. Web Napier received wont that her slater, Mra Maiale Law rence, passed away Thursday *1 ternoon in a hospital at Parson, Kan She had pneumonia and heart trouble. The funeral wm held in the United Presbyterian chui'ch. Ewing, Sunday afternoon at 2 p m Mrs. 1 Miuiy Miller suffered a stroke Thursday morning and was taken to the Tildas bot |>it.il in an ambulance. Mrs. Dal** Napier and Mrs. Metvtn Napier visited her Friday after noon Mr and Mrs Wayne Fry, Mr an*l Mrs. Lynn Fry and Otto Ret ke t*M>k Mrs Otto Retke to the Lady of Lourdes hospital m Nor folk Friday Mrs. Ora SwiUer received word that her cousin Clifford Butler, died suddenly Friday in a doc tor's office in Wyoming Mr and Mrs. Ed Walters and family, <'ha rubers, were suppei guests Wednesday at the John Napier home In honor of Ed Wal ter's birthday anniversary. Terry I*ofquiat was an over night guest Wednesday of hteve Miller Johnson Drug HEADQUARTERS Vi " , for i { Typewriters Adding Machines Office Supplies Staplers Stationery Steno Notebooks Ledgers ledger Fillers Journals Journal Fillers Manila Folders Indexes Card Files File Cabinets SEE IS FOR ALL VOUR OFFICE NEEDS JOHNSON DRUG Rhone I is O’Neill 39-42 A / ' Ml \k Jf*L A Conrad I. Smith District Representative Box 573 O'Neill, Nebraska Sales Leader One of Modem Woodmen's top-ranking agents, District Representative, Conrad I. Smith, O'Neill, has qualified for this organization’s Champion's Club for 1%2 VW congratulate him for this achievement, and recommend him as a capable representative of a leading life Insurance organization. Modern Woodme 11 Of AMHICA • HOMC OfflCf • HOCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS M*S0k w Fvi'yn 11 a i ? i n 42 assorted cut-out val entines with envelopes. Attractively designed in blight colors. Plus special card for teacher. 25 VALENTINES With enve lopes. For boys, girls and teacher. Plan your part}- using attrac tive Valentine design paper tableware. paper cups OQr 9 or. Pkg. of 8 AZW TABLE COVER Oft. Size 54x96 ”. PAPER NAPKINS 13x13Vt” Pkg of 20 Small cone shafted hats with elastic. 5< 10< Party nut baskets, handle. Red, white. 5 „ 29c Heart shaped be*. I Many cover design*. E «. 15c I PATTON'S O'Neill, Nebr. 1