Construction on the new water tower for the city of Moundridge has officially started!!
Check the city’s facebook page for pictures.
Construction on the new water tower for the city of Moundridge has officially started!!
Check the city’s facebook page for pictures.
Clarence Malone, Kansas representative of the USO, has mailed a comprehensive report of USO activities to all members of the organization.
Lyon county is one of the 37 counties which launched its drive and went over the top early. Some of the counties are getting their drives under way now. Each county which has made a concerted effort has reached their quota. For everyone wants the men in the armed forces to have a good time when on leave. USO stands ready to furnish clean entertainment and recreation.
More than 500 elevators cooperated with the state committee in accepting donations of wheat – “a bushel or so for the USO.” Reports from these elevators are now beginning to come in. In some counties where elevators could not furnish storage facilities and wheat was stored on farms or in unused buildings, the county USO committee sent out trucks. Each truck came in loaded with wheat for the USO. Again and again one hears the comment, “this is the least we can do.”
Do the boys like USO? Ask any neighbor boy home on leave or a khaki clad stranger whom you meet. If he has been around the country at all he will tell you about the USO club in Louisville, in New Orleans or Long Beach. Men can go to these clubs for a quiet time of reading and writing letters or for a gala evening of dancing and games. It is the place to go if you want to meet good looking girls. Each USO club has a hospitality committee which sees that men in service are invited out to dinner. In short the USO endeavors to provide a home-away-from-home for men on leave.
USO started from scratch a little more than a year ago. Now there is a county organization in one hundred of the counties in Kansas. There are 842 operations in the United States, and forty-one operations overseas. Each week new operations are being set up. Already clubs are functioning in Junction City, Manhattan and Leavenworth. Approvals have been granted by the National committee for Topeka, Salina, Gardner and Coffeyville. As other camps are made ready USO operations may be expected.
Boys from all corners of the United States and from the United Nations will be sent to various camps in Kansas for air training. Kansas is an agricultural state and farm families can make a definite and unique contribution to the USO effort, if they cooperate by inviting trainees into their homes for week-end leaves.
Some day the peace will come – the peace for which we are now striving. It will be more likely to be a just and durable peace if the people from the corners of the earth know one another. It is only a little thing to entertain a stranger in khaki for Sunday dinner. Yet one bit of hospitality multiplied many times could mean the friendship or hostility of nations. The stories that come back to us of the warm hospitality our boys are receiving in Australia should be an example to us.
Let us show the stranger within our borders what farm hospitality means. If and when we get an air base at Emporia this will be one contribution you and I can make.
I’ve thought long and hard about the announcement I’m about to make and with my wife standing at my side the right time has come before some unscrupulous journalist finds out about my BIG secret and broadcasts it to the world. Even in this more open, permissive and forgiving society it is still with great trepidation that I’m coming out of the closet to announce that, are you ready for this? I used to raise sheep.
There, I’ve said it. Can you sane good people find it in your hearts to ever forgive me? I know that it’s mandatory for cattlemen to despise sheepherders. They are downright allergic to them. My theory is that cowboys hated sheepmen so much because while the early vaqueros were earning $35 a month, the shepherd got $50. In the mid-1930Õs a cowboy might make $100 a month while the sheepherder got paid $150. That could be why masked gunmen in Wyoming’s Big Horn Basin killed 4,000 of the wooly creatures. And in Colorado, in a procedure known as “rimrockin Äg, cowboys ran 1,000 sheep over a cliff. Dozens of sheepherders were killed for running sheep on the free public range. Can you imagine the gall?
In the Portland Morning Oregonian in 1904 a letter writer claimed that his organization “had slaughtered eight to ten thousand head of sheep during the last shooting season.” And promised to kill more in the next season if the supply of sheep held out. He called his group the Sheep Shooters of Crook County. (By the
way, how would you like to come from Crook County?)
When Charles Russell came to Montana he couldn’t find work so he worked in a sheep camp for two weeks and in the subsequent 3,500 works of art he produced he never once drew a sheep. That’s how highly he regarded them. Cowboys believed that “everything in front of sheep is eaten and everything behind is killed.”
Ranchers said the only thing dumber than sheep were the men who herded them.
So what was I doing running both sheep and cattle together?
I sold out for cold hard cash. I found that by running the two together and not letting them camp in one place my ranges were actually improved. I saw why some people referred to sheep as “mortgage lifters”. Although it did confuse my dog Aussie. She didn’t know if she was a cow dog herding sheep, or a sheep dog chasing cows.
I knew the dangers of being outed or exposed so I hardly ever wore my favorite shirt, a wool Pendleton. And I went in disguise to the county fair sheep show where one of the lambs we bred was named champion. When I was asked to be in the picture I ran. It would have ruined me. There were many close calls. One time I was leaving the Post Office and on top of the stack of my mail was a letter from the USDA begging me to take their wool subsidy. A cowboy friend saw it and I had to bribe him to keep it a secret.
Brandings were always the trickiest of times because I couldn’t invite any sheepy friends and we had to hide the flock.
One rancher saw some suspect droppings and screamed, “You raise sheep?” at the top of his lungs. “No, those are rabbit droppings.” I insisted. “Mighty big rabbits,” he said. When he saw the lambing jails I had to swallow my pride and say, “Those are for dairy calves.” Which was only slightly better than sheep.
The closest I came to being exposed was when there was an actual sheep sighting at my branding. Thinking fast I explained that they were wild sheep that we planted for hunting. But when a rancher went to his truck and retrieved a gun and took aim at my best ram I squirmed and begged, “Oh, they aren’t really worth shooting.”
Now my BIG secret is out and I feel so much better. To think I no longer have to hide the KRS, or coke bottles with big nipples on them. I feel liberated. The only drawback is we’ll have to work our calves on a calf table in the future since no real cattlemen would be caught dead at a sheepherder’s branding.
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Twas the night before Christmas but our deer camp was shaken
Not a hunter was happy cause’ no deer had been taken.
Our deer tags were hung by the chimney with care
In hopes that some big bucks soon would be there.
We hunters all snoozed in our long johns of red
While visions of jerky swirled in our head.
Our snoring echoed like growling inside
And the air carried odors I shouldn’t describe
The moon on the crest of the new fallen snow
Made our junky old house trailer twinkle and glow
When out in the woods there arose such a clatter
I sprang from my bunk and fell down the ladder.
Lucky for me I lit’ on my head
But I horsed-up my back and busted the bed
I limped to the window and what did appear
But a miniature sleigh and eight TROPHY reindeer.
I yelled for the guys to bail out of bed
And they soon filled the windows to stare at the sled.
When they all saw the reindeer a hush filled the room
As their huge antlers gleamed in the light of the moon.
Could this be St Nick and his magic reindeer?
And what in tarnation are they doin’ out here?
Each hunter had scattered to get to his gun;
I had to work fast before the shootin’ begun.
I grabbed my own rifle as I ran toward the sled
And fired several warning shots over their head.
“That should do it” I thought, “That should chase them away”
But it scared them so badly they tipped over the sleigh.
I fell to the ground and covered my head
Certain there’d be shootin’ and the deer would be dead.
But instead all my buddies stood quietly by
And pointed at something bright in the sky.
A star in the east shone so brightly that night
That we all stood there awestruck, solemn and quiet.
St Nick and the “boys” used this chance to vamoose
And streaked through the woods like an on-fire caboose
As for me and the guys, we slunk back inside
And nothing was hurt that night but our pride.
So just as the star on that first Christmas eve
Brought a savior to us for all who believe,
Its brilliance tonight once again lit the way
For St Nick to escape with his reindeer and sleigh.
And I heard him exclaim as they raced out of sight
Rudolph you blockhead, what were you thinking?
Of all the stupid places to land, in a deer hunting camp no less?
You nearly made this the last Christmas for all of us!
Seriously, if you try that again, I’ll personally hang your head in MY workshop
Bright red nose and all!
Merry Christmas from Steve and Joyce at Exploring Kansas Outdoors