I don't know if it is true but Paul was supposed to have flown his airplane under a high line wire many a time but once he hooked it and flipped the plane. He lived. Another story which I cannot validate is he drove a Ford Bronco (as I remember anyway, it kind of looked like a jeep to me) with an engine that he rebuilt and it was told that he had a high patrolman clock it and he was over 140 miles per hour on Highway 60 down by Pawhuska.
I am not sure all the stories were true but based on the evidence he was guilty of all these pranks. He flew his airplane to hay fields where we cut, bailed and hauled the hay which he contracted. I guess you could say he was an entrepreneur. As I recall we could stack about 600 bales on a semi trailer which he would take to anywhere they would pay. The hay was typically alfalfa but we bailed and hauled a lot of prairie hay and some hay-grazer (kind of like johnson grass but a lot better). It seemed that about every young man at one time or another worked in the hay fields around Grainola, Shidler, Fairfax, Pawhuska (home of the pioneer woman, Ree Drummond), plus Copan and Bartlesville. I should throw in Little Chief since they are making a movie focused on the murders in Little Chief and the remainder of Osage County. The movie is based on the book "Killers of the Flower Moon". You gotta read the book, it is a killer (get it? ha, ha). In fact now that I bring that up we hauled hay for E.C. Mullendore, who was murdered up around Copan by what they think was the mob. There is a book about it and I believe the title is: "The Mullendore Murder Case".
Paul is mentioned in the book along with some of the other Grainola folks as he flew E.C. to Ponca City where E.C. transacted some business supposedly with the mob.
Paul is also the person who gave me my first airplane ride from the Mullendore Ranch near Copan to Shidler so I could get back to the start of football practice. Paul teased me about getting sick in his airplane for weeks telling me I had to carry a bucket in case I tossed up some chunks. Do I need to explain? NOT! He tried everything he could to make me sick and luckily I did not.
Paul was just one of those great guys in my life and I am thankful I got to know him.
So what do you learn in the Osage?
- Life is like a box of chocolates, you just don't know what you are gonna get
- In everything give thanks and learn something
- You will never regret if you keep your mind on what matters most, like Jesus and family
Thanks for listening,
gary
golson21@hotmail.com