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Nicole Push at Jun 16, 2020 12:02 PM

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A CHARMING STORY.
Lincoln Journal; That charming and able writer, Mrs. Elia W. Peattie of Omaha, has a story in the June number of the Cosmopolitian called" Jim Laney's Waterloo." It treats of the experiences of a bride who is taken directly from her [?] home to her husband's mortgaged home in Nebraska. The first year the crops are good, but prices are low and the year is ended with a net loss of several hundred dollars. Her husband becomes so much interested in the theory that the railroads and the money loaners are responsible for the low prices that he becomes a roaring populist, runs for the legislature and has no time to check the mental and spiritual starvation of his wife. The second year the hot winds destroy the corn, her baby dies for want of care while she is slaving around the house and the barnyard and Jim is balked in his political ambitions. the tale closes with a separation, the wife returning to her mother and the husband spending his last dollar for a ticket to Omaha, where in a short time he is registered as a "plain drunk." at the city jail.

The publication of such a dismal tale with the scene laid in Nebraska will cause keen regret among the people who have at heart the welfare of the state. The cleverness of the story and the skill and finish with which it is told only adds to the damage that will be done by its general circulation. It does not describe a typical case by any means, but it will be considered typical where the state is not known, and the tale is just strong enough, just vivid enough to make an impression upon the average mind that cannot be wiped out in years. Mrs. Peattie had a perfect right to prepare and publish the story. Her efforts are produced by legitimate means. Cases like Jim's have been occurring on the frontier ever since the earliest settler began to beat the frontier back from the ocean. It is really a tribute to Mrs. Peattie's strength as a writer to say that the selection of Nebraska as the seat of her tragedy will really injure the state among people who are ready to believe anything that they read about the great west. One can't scold her for writing it, but a good many folks will wish down in the bottom of their hearts that a thing of this kind may never happen again.

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A CHARMING STORY.
Lincoln Journal; That charming and able writer, Mrs. Elia W. Peattie of Omaha, has a story in the June number of the Cosmopolitian called" Jim Laney's Waterloo." It treats of the experiences of a bride who is taken directly from her uncles home to her husband's mortgaged home in Nebraska. The first year the crops are good, but prices are low and the year is ended with a net loss of several hundred dollars. Her husband becomes so much interested in the theory that the railroads and the money loaners are responsible for the low prices that he becomes a roaring populist, runs for the legislature and has no time to check the mental and spiritual starvation of his wife. The second year the hot winds destroy the corn, her baby dies for want of care while she is slaving around the house and the barnyard and Jim is balked in his political ambitions. the tale closes with a separation, the wife returning to her mother and the husband spending his last dollar for a ticket to Omaha, where in a short time he is registered as a "plain drunk." at the city jail.
The publication of such a dismal tale with the scene laid in nebraska will cause keen regret among the people who have at heart the welfare of the state. The cleverness of the story and the skill and finish with which it is told only adds to the damage that will be done by its general circulation. It does not describe a typical case by any means, but it will be considered typical where the state is not known, and the tale is just strong enough, just vivid enough to make an impression upon the average mind that cannot be wiped out in years. Mrs. Peattie had a perfect right to prepare and publish the story. Her efforts are produced by legitimate means. Cases like Jim's have been occurring on the frontier ever since the earliest settler began to beat the frontier back from the ocean. It is really a tribute to Mrs. Peattie's strength as a writer to say that the selection of Nebraska as the seat of her tragedy will really injure the state among people who are ready to believe anything that they read about the great west. One can't scold her for writing it, but a good many folks will wish down in the botton of their hearts that a thing of this kind may never happen again.