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Highway 56 east of Greeley,. ., Calif., and she was em-daughters, Jill SuzAnne, 3,Carrie Lee age 2.s. IIurlbert is a relatively~llembtr of the <strong>Ord</strong> JChavingjoined the organilessthat1 two gears ago.She is a member of the Ever-Clubs. Active in the work of her. . . .


(Page 6) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday, September 3, 1970Comstock Comments, Mrs. Erikson Hurt Needn't aIn One-Car AccidentBy Wilma NagorskiRoxanne Erikson, who was injuredMonday ni ht in a one-caraccident driven %y her mother,Mrs. Evelyn Erikson, was dismissedfrom the Valley CountyHospital Wednesday afternoon.Roxanne is staying with her uncleand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. CalvinTre tow and family while hermotier was transferred to theNary Lanning-Ilospital in Has-'tings.--Mr. apd Mrs. John NagorskiSr. and Johnny of Grand Islandwere Saturday overnight guestsof Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nagorskiand sons. They came to attendthe wedding of Charlene Paiderand Jerry Johnson of Broken Bowat the United Methodist Churcllin Broken Bow, Sunday afternoon.Mr. and Mrs. John Koncel wereWednesday afternoon and supperguests of Mr. and Mrs. CharlesPaider.Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs.Dick Bossen of Arcadia broughta birthday cake and were supperguests of his sister, Mr. and Mrs.Calvin Trevto\v and family. Mrs.Ruth ~vrd'lk was also a supperguest. The occasion was honoringMrs. Treptow on her birthday.Mr. and Mrs. Bob Coffman andsons of Laffette, La. and Mrs.Keith Burson, Kevin and Kimberlyand Mr. and Mrs. JaillesProskocil Sr. and' Donnie weresupper guests of Mr. and Mrs.Harold Burson at <strong>Ord</strong>. Mrs. KeithBurson and childrel~ left earlyMonday morning to return lo herhome at Lafayette, La. afterspending the sun~nler here.Mr. and Mrs. Charles Paider,Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nagorski andsons and Mr. and Mrs. LunlirBruha and 'famil .of Klyria a?tended the weldlng of thelrdaughter,- sister and aunt, MissCharlene Pader and Jerry Johnson,son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl~ohnson of Callaway at the UnitedMethodist Church in Broke11Bow .Sunday afternoon.Frrday afternoon guests ofMrs. Charles Yaider were Mrs.Marie Anderson and Mrs. Be 11Sheppard.Ciilit Dye returned home nIo11-day, where he will remain a fewdays before goin to Ralston tohis son and cfaughter-in-laa s.Blr. and Mrs. Keith U?e. Hiswife plans on being dlsnlissedfroill the Methodist Hospital inOmaha Tuesday. She will alsostay at the Keith Dyes at Hal-stob recovering slowiy.Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stefka returnedhonie Saturday after Mr.Stefka had surgery on his backthe past week in Lincoln. GuestsSunday of the Stefka's were Mr.and Mrs. Leroy Peterson andfamily of Truinbull and Mr. andMrs. Ton1 Waldn~ann. Mr. Stefka'smother, Mrs. Francis Stefka,who was caring for the graadchildrensince a neck ago Thursday,while their parents were inLincoln returned to her homeMonday after noon.Friday evening after the birdalshower honoring Miss, CharlenePaider at the Colnli~unlty Hall inComstock the follo~ving acrelunch guests in the Charles Paid-er, J-~oik--~hey-.wrr-e Mr. and. .Mrs. Louis Pesek Sr., Mr. andMrs. Edward Paider, all of <strong>Ord</strong>,Mr. and Mrs. Albin Bruha andfamily of Burwell, Mrs. LumirBruha and family of Elyria andMi. and Mrs. Louis Nagorski andsons.Mr. and Mrs., John Wells atfendedthe neddlng and receptioncf Miss Charlene Yaider andJerry Johnson in Broken BowSunday afternoon.Charlene Paider was a Mondayto Wednesday guest of Mr. andMrs. Charles Paider and also aFriday over-night guest afterher bridal shon er.Saturday Mr. and Mrs. JanlesProskocil Jr. left for their homein Columbia, Mo, after spendinga few weeks kisiting relatikes and .friends here. The Proskoclls intendto attend the state fair inMissouri before Mrs. Proskocilhas to be at work Monday as astenographer and secretary andMr. Proskocil starts attendingclasses the first week in September.Friday ekening Mr. and MTS.Jim Proskocil Jr. of ColumbiaMo., Mr. and Mrs. Jim ~roskociiSr. and Donnie and Mrs. KeithBurson were guests of Mr. andMrs. Gerald John of <strong>Ord</strong>. Theyenjoyed seeing more of the slidepictures.Saturday evening visitors andlunch guests of Mr. and Mrs.Charles Paider were Mr. andMrs. Louis Nagorski and sons,Mr. and Mrs. John Nagorski andJohnny and Mrs. Lumir Bruhaand Bethene.Sunday dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs. Calyin Treptow andfamily were MISS Shlrley John of<strong>Ord</strong> and RovAnn Erikson and Mr.and Mrs. Leonard Almqulst ofGrand Island. Miss John and MissErikson nere also supper guests.Mr. and Mrs. James ProskocilSr. and D6nnie, Mrs. Keith Burson,Kevin and Kimberly of <strong>Ord</strong>,Mr. and Mrs. Gcrald John of <strong>Ord</strong>and Mr. and Mrs. Jim ProskociiJr. of Columbia, Mo. enjobed aThursday ekening cook-out suppcrat the hoiile of Mr. and Mrs. ArtJohn. They also viened JamesYroskocil Jr.'s slides on forestryand Art John's slides 011 their tripto Arizona.Mr. and Mrs. Jim Proskocil Jr.of Columbia, Mo. and his mother,Mrs. Jinl Yroskocil Sr. and Donniewere Wednesday ekeningauests of her parents, Mr. andIrs. Jde Kamarad.Sunday dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs. Ronald Hit1 and fainllywere Glenn Dockhorn and BrianDonse. After noon guests wereMr. and Mrs. Rabmond DowseBrenda, Bradley and Brandt andGayle Lenstrom.Sunday Mr. and Mrs. EdwardKriss, Marion Tvrdik, Emil andEldon Trojan all drohe to Ericsontogelher where they all haddinner and later enjoyed an af-ernooii of fishing at LakeEricson.Mr. and Mrs. Norinan Krissand son droke to North LoupMonday where they enjobed thefirst day at the Fop Corn Dais.MIS. Edward Mora\ec attendedthe bridal shoner Friday ekeningat the Colllstock Coilinlunity !la11hllss Charlene Yaider.H$R%Ihooorin$ r ay etening Mr. and Mrs.K amarad, Richard, Monica,Cindy and Angela droke todrd, where they attend.cd "TryOur Best" 4-11 Club ~icnic at the<strong>Ord</strong> park. Monica is one of themembers.U'ednesday el ening supperguests of Mr. and Mrs. EdwardKrlss were Mr. and Mrs. WendellIlovie and John, Mrs. MarionThrdik, Donuie and Lonnie, MissKathy Gogan of Arcadia, MissJackie Colsor of Sargent andElnil and Eldon Trojan of Co111-stock.. Mr.- and Mrst .Jams ProskocilJr. and Mrs. Kelth Burson wereTuesday el cning supper guestsfor barbecue steaks at their parentshome, nlr. and Mrs. JailiesProskocil Sr. After supper theyall droke to Sargcnt and en-jojed the ehening playing bingoat the Community IIall.Mr. and Mrs. Eldoll 1Iulinskyand fal~~ily attended the weddingand receptioil of nliss CharlenePaidtr and Jerry Johnsoli at theUnitcd Methodist Chuich in Uro---tiastings-Pearson Mortuary, Or'd,Nebraska.24-6bftf cLivestock AuctionSaturday, September 5thCattle market steady.Small calves & calves on dry feed $40.00 to $100.00 per hcad; Clloicehereford & angus steers under 350 Ibs. $40.00 to $41.00- heifets samewei hf & grade $35.00 to $37.00; a"gus dairy cross heife;s1308 Ib?, $31.00;wf Retfers 450 ~bs. $33.15; wf hptfers 550 Ibs. $30.00; angus da~ry crosshe~fers 505 Ibs $28.60. angus da~ry cross steers 440 Ibs. $28.10; herefordholsteincross'steers'586 Ibs. $27.10; blk wf dairy cross sfeers 105 IbS.$28.40. mixed steers 460 lbs. $30.80; red & roan steers 410 Ibs. $29.50;anqu;dairy cross heifers 5SS Ibs. $28.00; charolais heifers 565 Ibs. $31.10;wetgh-up cows $18.00 to $20.00.For this week:20 small calves35 mixed steers BE heifers 150 to 200 lbs.. 15 choice durham steers 650 to 700 lbs., home raised15 choice wf steers 850 to 900 lhs., home raised10 choice wf .heifers 700 to 750 lbs , home raisedSeveral mllk cows75.head or more mixed cattle by sale timeH O G S215 Ib. butcher hogs sold to a fop of $20.70 240 Ibs. $20.66, 243 IbS.$20 60 252 Ibs 820 40 246 Ibs $20 65 213 Ibs $2d3~ bulk of good butchers'fl025to $2 70 itght sows $i9.i5 295 lbs. $19.60 285 Ibs. $19.30, 410Ibs. $17.00, 405 ibs: $1730, 535 ~bs. $1~.50, sows ove'r 600 Ibs. 14.00 to$14.60; small pigs $10.15 to $12.50 per head 48 Ibs. $15.25 per \cad, 59Ibs $1875 per head 16 Ibs. $22.50 per hcad, 70 Ibs. $20.25 per head, 80to '100 I'bs. $21.50 to $23.75 per head; blood sows cheaper; wciglt-up boars$8.50 to $11.50.Many rea1,good lots of feedin$ pigs in last meek ,for thesale. Sekeral bunches already consigned for the sale thls ueek.If you need feeding pigs and ale unable to attend the sale, callus, one of our bonded bubers will buy then1 for bou, but, wewould much rather hale you come in and buy the stock your.self, if possible.We can use mote butcher hogs to fill orders. Be sureto bring your butcher hogs in early Sutu~day motni1i.j.Sale time 10:OO A.M.For late listings tune KNLV Radio <strong>Ord</strong> ~huis. & Sat mornings7 to 8Sale Bate --\Monday Sept. 21st the machinery and antique sale ofMrs. Edna Roe at her farrn south of <strong>Ord</strong>.For more information or trucks. contact,<strong>Ord</strong> Livestoclc Marlret726481 1, offlo 728-5102, C. B. cum mi^i-] ~riceedin~r of the <strong>Ord</strong> 1 city ~ounci~SCI-100~ BOARD PROCEEDINGSI CHOICE TO FANCY SANDHILL CATTLE I Available for 24'-271-30' bins with storage capacities ofSaturday, September 512:00 Noon Sale TimeAnother top offering of choice and fancy yearli~lgheifers, steers, many fall calves and heavy steers. Cattle all5,500 to 13,500 bu. Convenient, fast, low-cost, top-quality Idrying Lets you harvest early, harvest more bushels Nostirring or circulating devices r,e,eded.Conle in.Checkallthefeatures of Stormor's new EZEE-DRY.DarrelI NoIIdirect from our local ranches. Qrd, Edcbr. Ph: 728-5154 I1 225 Choice to fancy hereford steers, 600-650 Ibs. Stuart Cattle I I625-700 Ibs. Kramer Ranch.1%115 Choice hereford, anqus and hereford angus cross steers, I700-725 I bs. Wilcox. -175 Choice to fancy hereford steers and heifers, 650 Ibs. EltonWalker.550 Ibs. McNallv Bros.65 Extra choice heieford steers, 700 Ibs. Dean Nelson.65 Extra choice hereford sfeers, 800.900 Ibs. One Brand.62 Extra choice hereford steers, 850-900 Ibs. Steve Smith Est.60 Extra choice hereford and hereford angus cross heifers,1 Sargenl Liverlack commirrion CO., inc. 'I 135 Extra choice herefold steers and heifers, 675 750 ibs, DolColeman.1 100 Extra choice herefold and angus heifers 575-625 lbs. I I Cattle safe H o ~OBerle.I80 Extra choice hereford steers and heifers, 550-575 Ibs.Chambers.65 Extra choice hereford angus cross steers and heifers, 525-575-600 Ibs. Murphy. ' -50 Extra choice hereford steers, 700 Ibs. Ray Duda.\ 50 Extra choice hereford heifers, 650 Ibs. Anzel Ranch. -50 Extra choice hereford heifers, 550 Ibs. Dunning.30 Choice angus and herefgrd cross Steers and heifers, 500-550 Ibs. Mike Haggerty.30 Choice ansus cross steers and heifers, 600-650 Ibs. ChasKcezer.30 Chqice angus steers and heifers, 600-625 Ibs. Gene Carr.25 Extra choice hereford steers and heifers, 550.575 Ibs. Shav-lik200 Weigh-up cows, heiferettes, Pulls and additional consigtr-& Specialsheep saleThurs,, Sepl. 3 Fri., Sepf. 4Cattle market for last Thursday was very active on allclasses, canner and cutter cows 18.50.20.50; commercial andutility cows 20.00-21.25; bulls 25.00-26.40Hog Sale Friday August 28th, we had 1150 hogs on salewith an extreme top of 20.80, this top going to Robert Meyer,Scotia for 233# Butchers, LeVern Pflaster, Anseimo 231#20.70; Ron Jensen, Burwell 226# 20.65; Vance Jeffres, Burwell205# 20.65; Sand Hill Implement, Bassett 200# 20.65; JoeMattox, Broken Bow 211# 20.65; Al Mowdry, <strong>Ord</strong> 244f 20.60;Delbert Pearson, Burwel 223# 20.60; Vince Huliosky, Burwell222# 20.60; Julius Weverka, Sargent 216# 20.60; Roy Fillinger,Scotia 225# 20.60; Bulk of the No. 1-3 butchers 200-240# 20.25-20.80; 240 260# 19.75-20.50; 170-190 # 18.50-19.00; sows 400#down 17.50.18.50; 400-600# 16.00-17.50; heavy sows 15.66 16.00;boars 11.50-12.00; feeder pigs 25-40# 12.75-14.50 per hd. 40 80#14.50.19.00 per hd. bred, gilts 75.00-85.00 per hd.Kernels & HusksDryland Corn CropBe Total LossBv John Schade-- Although- - -- - - --grain yieldsfrom much ofthe dryland cornacreage in the----. d low, thertnndine7, '4L.A L. " ---A"stopped growthis surpnsin lyvaluable On a fee$. dry-weight basis, drought-damagecorn may. be as high in enermvalue as normal corn silage.And its protein co~tent will usuallybe higher.For corn that has not put onears, the younger the plant attime of growth stoppage thehigher the energy and proteinvalue. Thjs refers to the crop ona dry basis.At the University of NebraskaMead ~ield Laboratory, largeamounts of drought-damage cornwere. - harvested for silage betweenJuly 15 and July 25. Thiscorn was near the tassel sta eland about 50 percent of t % eleaves were brown.This immature drought-damagesilage contained from 11.3 to 12.7per cent protein on the dry basis.This is about 50 percent higherthan that of normal silage. Themoisture content too was considerablyhigher, 77-79 percent asconipared to 65 percent for normalsilage.Since the crop had no grain onit. 100 pounds of ground corn perton was added. The corn waslused to insure good preservation.The corn was simply put Ontop of the load on the self-loadingwagon. Reasonably good distributionand mixing was obtainedthrough unloading and blowingWhile into the filling silo. a bunker, cornwas added on top of the dumpedloads of forage before pushingup on the pile. This proceduretoo gave reasonably good mixingof grain wlth forage.Even though nitrate content ofthe forage was quite high at harvestingtime, it is expected to bereduced considerably during ensilingand there should be noproblem at feedlng tlme.The practices listed above canbe used as a guide in preservingdrought damage forage in thisarea.For more information 011 storingand preserving droughtdamageforage contact the CountyExtension Office.~rs; Noll's ~aiher , .Dies hfter IllnessPete Petersen of Wood Riverdied Sunday eveniqg, Aug. 30,after a lengthy illness. He was66 years old.A retired farmer, Petersen andhis family resided in the Springdaledistrict near <strong>Ord</strong> a numberof years ago.Immediate survivors includehis wife Josephine of Wood River;one daughter, Mrs. LeRoy(Uuena) No11 of <strong>Ord</strong> and one sonGary of Detroit, Mich.1Beef Cattle Crumbles AS-700Reduces incidence of shipping feverIImproves rate of gainImproves feed efficiencyA valuable product for starting feedlot, cattle.'FARMERS ELEVATORI Qrd 728-3254 North Loup 496-4125 1Sand hills CattleI Friday, Sept. 4th at Burwell IThis hot and very dry weather is hurting the pastures andour consignments will be large again this Friday.Some of the early listings include:120 good Holstein steers; wt. 800 to'85O Ibs.110 extra choice Hereford heifers, wt. 600 to 650 Ibs.108 choice Hereford steers & heifers, 550 to 650 Ibs.110 choic Angus & An~us cross heifers, wt. 700 Ibs.75 choice Black Angus heifers, 500 to 550 Ibs. strictly green.75 choice Hereford steers & heifers, 600 to 700 Ibs.60 choice Herefcrd heifers, wt. 575 to 625 Ibs.60 choice Angus & Angus cross steers & heifers, 500 to 650 Ibs.65 choice Hereford fall calves & yearlings.60 choice Hereford steers & heifers, 550 to 650 Ibs.50 choice & fancy Hereford steers, wt. 800 Ibs.45 choice Angus cross heifers, wt. 650 Ibs.40 choice Black Angus fall calves, 500 to 550 Ibs.37 choice Angus & Angus cross heifers, wt. 600 Ibs.33,good Holstein steers, wt. 700 Ibs. strictly green,30 choice Angus cross steers & heifers, 600 Ibs.25 choice Hereford steers, 600 to 800 Ibs.25 extra choice Hereford fall calves, 500 Ibs.15 choice Hereford steers & heifers, 600 to 700 Ibs.40 fancy Hereford springer & heifers, corni~lg with 1st calfsome will have calves by sale time. These are the kind ,thatyou will like.b200 head or more weigh uo cows, some heiferettes and bo'ognabulls.This cows Friday and old will bulls. be a good time to send in your weigh-upWe sold over 4,000 cattle at our Special Sale last Fridaywitli an exceptionally large attendance and a very active mark-The following are some of the weights & prices:Steers:139 Mrfrd strs 565 Ibs, @ ... 38.2053 4ngs strs has ~bs, .... .. 38.2016 Angus str; 440 Ibs. @ ....... 37.5055 Angus strs' 575 Ibs. @ 36.5044 Angus strs' 565 Ibs. & 3 .SO19 Hrfrd strs,' 535 Ibs. @ . ... 31j.7012 An us cr strs, 540 Ibs. @ . 36.4080 Hrfrd strs, 950 Ibs. @ ....... 29.2018 Hlfrd strs, 500 Ibf. @25 Angus strs, 480 Ibs. @13 Hrfrd strs 425 IbS25 Angus stri, 5dg32 Anaus sfrs. 55 lb< IbS %12 Hrfrd strs 480 Ibs. @12 An us sf,;, 515 Ibs. @40 Hrftd rlrs, 950 Ibs. @menis of calves and yearlings. I I Heifers: IWeigh-up cows have been selling on a very active market witlipleniy of packcr buyels hete at 12:OO noon when the auetiot\starts on the weigh.ups. Most cows sold fro111 $19.00 to $22.00per I~u~id~ed, last Saturday.Consign~r~etrts at our auttien last Saturday was excepti91tallylarge, also a big attendance of out of sate .buyerr. Priceswete steady on all green and light weight cattle but lower oncattle with flesh.All of our sales are well advertised back east in the cornbeltfeeder area, with the same advertising for every Saturdaysale. If you have cattle you are thinking of consigning, pleasecall the office daytime or one of the Managers evenings, sothey can be included in all the advrtising. .Erieron Liverlock Cen~~nirrion CO., hie.John Battuaisk Alfred James Duane PelstarI I,*h eSpceial Sheep S ~ Friday, C Sepf, 4thItnutediately followil~g buvcrs to the take hog your sale. offerings. Five packer and orderSpecial Open ons sign in ant Dairy SaleTfiurs., Seyf. 10, 7:30 P.M. at Sale BarnI28 head fatrcy liolsttin heifers. Just fresh or heac'y springers.2 Guetniey heifers, bred.1 Ayrshirc cow (fres1.r).2 I{olafcin cows and 2 yearling heifers (open).2 Holstein calves 6 weeks old (on dry feed).SargenfLiverlock Co~ll~iiifriot~ CO., Ine.Walt (Butch) Btunke~r Jr., Sargent, kbr. . Ph. SOB-s27-37~5Nebr. Ph. 308-527-3795Ofiite: 308-527.3711I Office phone -Ericson 653-2305 I I Walt Brutrken Sr., bstge~~t,1 346-3815 Burwell 653-2115 Ericson 653-2676 Eiicron , Oilcd t{ighway, Sargent, Nebr. - Lighted Airport\I (I I45 Nrfrd17 Htftd17 Hrf~d55 Angus17 Angus22 Angus17 Hrfrd64 Angus26 Htirdhfrs 540 Ibs.hfrs: 475 Ibs.hfrs; 525 Ibs.hfrt 525 Ibs.hfrs' 490 Ibs.hfrs: 52s Ibs.htrs' 615 Ibs.crais, 545 !bhfrs, 535 !bs.Sepcial Fall Cali 6 Feeder Auction, Friday Sept, 11th.Special Consign~~lent Auction, Friday Sept. 18th.Special Carlot Feeder Auction, Friday Sept. 25th.35th Annual Calf Feeder Sale, Friday Oct. 2ndPlease ;all 346-5135 if you have cattle that you wish toconsign to any of these big Special Sales. All consignments areappreciated.Burwell Livestock Market, Inc. I"One of the Sandhlllj LargCst Cattle AuetWCATTLE 9ALES EVERY FRIDAY AT BURWELL


North Loup ' Notes .!. 1 SintekYouth Receives $1,200 in CBy pena Sintek ' They are really quite interestjn Grrgg of Cedar Rapids, Ia, vis-Charles Sintok, son of yr. and along with our tropical fish an$ ited from Monday till Wednenms.Bennie Sintek, recelvcd ad one turtle. day at the Gordon Albr-echt$1, 00 Health Professions Grant I know there-were a lot of home.an d $100 Scholarship froin the people here today from out of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Sintek ar-Upiversity of Nebraska .last state who came for our Popcorn rived home Friday 'afternoon afweek.Cha les will be a juniqr Days celebration, and I promise ter almost three weeks* vacationin the colfege of Phalmacy this to report more of these folks in Kansas, Oklahoma" afid Texas.)ear, next week. s ,Visitors at the Cora Hamer, .i ,, ,. - home to see Clara Meyei andBirthday for SuePersonalsMrs. Meyer Supday afternoon' Mr. and Mrs. Dean Lundstedt, Mr. apd Mrs. Steve ~or~ensen were Mr. and Mrs. Jess MeyerSandy Peqton, Debbie McDonald, and family went to Broken Bqw and family and Hattye Sautter.asd Dolores Vore and Sue had a Sunday jo a Sterner - ~alliwill Mr. and Mrs. Art Montgomerypi~nic at. the. Chalk IIills Fri- fainilv ~iciiic. , . of Milwaukee. Wis., and Mrs.day eyening in honor of Sue's ~rs. bblores Vore took D&~rei - Iiannah $heldon and Debbie had16th birthday. .Lee to the York exit of Inter- dinner Sunday with Mrs. Nthstate 80 Sunday morning where Sample and girls and Mr. andshe met Dave Corning and went Mrs. Nick Clemeqt and family.oil to Lincoln with him, !. . :: Mrs. Montgomery is the formerMr. and. ms. Lyle Slntek and Jean Clement Sheldon. They al-Stele, and -Carol- Gmeke pad SO called on Mr. and Mrs. Sonny, -%. Grandson tor Thomases'Mr, and Mrs. James Rose ofMitchell are the proud parentsof a son, -James Robert, bornAug. 28. The little fellow weighed5 pounds, 13 ounces. Mr. andMqs, James Rose of Mitchell arepaternal graddparents, and Mr.an$ Mrs. Carroll Thomas ofNorth Loup are maternal grandparents..~r6m DenaA large cro~d was in attendanceat the horse show Mondayevening, though it was a hot,dry day again.One of the nicest carnivalsNorth Loup has ever had was onhand. Our little nine-month-oldhad a ride on the merry-go-roundand . really enjoyed it, eventhough Mom thought - he was toolitil;IAnd now of all things our seahorses, which came in the maila:week ago, are having babies.We sent for four sea horses andone pregnant male. So far wehave four babies, and thereshould be more by morning.Barry went to Cozad Sunday to Sheldon and family. , 'help Mrs. Kenda!l Gunlicks (the Mrs. Grace Jensen speqt theformer Ellen Sintek) celepate weekend at Palmer visiting Mr. .her birthday.7 and Mrs. Martin Christensed and -A grou of friends gathered at , Mrs. Laura Christensen.the ChalR Mines Friday evenin Sunday dinner guests of Gracefor a picnic in honor of Mr. and Jensen were Curtis Hughes ofMrs. William ,Smith, Janis and , Arcadia and Mrs. Emma Bridge.Nicholas of .Rochester, N. Y. , Mr. and Mrs. Harland Severhose'attending were Mr. and ance arrived her Thursday fromMrs. Lyle Rasmussen and family, phoe?ix, Ari!. TK~Y will be visit-Mr. and Mrs. Don Wa)ler +&Jam- .,lng his two si~ters, Mrs. Eva Hasily,Mr. and Mrs, B~ll Sims and kins and Mrs. Lloyd Vanliorn,'David. Mr. and Mrs. Art Otto and . and other relatives.Barbara, Mr. and Mrs. .Bennie Mr. and Mrs. Bud HoeppnerSintek and boys, Pearl Bartz and froq Jonesboro, Ark., came Sat-Hattye Sautter and Mr. and Mrs. urday to visit with the H. J.Stanley Barr and family.Hoeppners and Mrs. Em er YMr. and Mrs. Bill Mayne, Cyn- ~homsen for Popcorn Days.thia and Bruce Bredthauer, Mr. Steven Mallery entered theand Mrs. Ross Williams. Mr. and Valley Coullty Hospital Aug. 26Mrs. ~ennie Sintek, ark, Mike to have a tonsillectomy performandKeith, and Cliff Scott had ed by Dr. Murray Markley. Mrs.brunch to ether Sunday at the , Mallery's mother and sister camehome of I&. and Mrs. lrvin Wor- Tueqday from North Platte torell.help at the home. They returnedMr. and Mrs. Gary Glass and to North Platte Sugday .by bus.tye Sautter Friday afternoon. Fu q ear a1 services for Mr.Mr. and Mrs. Ed hoem maker '? Bloomquist were held at 10 a.m.have moved into the house at Wednesday at the United Metho-North ~ U which P .they bought dist Church of Bartjett %ith Rev.from the Ben Slnteks some time * J. Roy West and Mrs. Gertrudeago. . 1 X d{ West officiating. Mrs. Bonnie 01-l son and Mrs.- Alice Sctiwebke, sang "In the Garden" and "The1 Old Rugged Cross," accompaniedat the organ by Mrs. FlorenceLichtenberg.Dick Bittner, Bob ~rosby, MickKeber, Joe Knott, Orville Millerand Leland Nichols were pallbearers.Honorary bearers wereMatt Bloom, Jim Bridger, SamBruger, Elmer Buhlman, F a y eChapman, Dick Cro by, F 1 o y dEx-<strong>Ord</strong> ResidentDies at QNeillServices were held Saturday atan O'Neill funeral home for Clarence~ack'son Dye who died Aug.27 at O'Neill. Graveside servicesfollowed at 2 p.m. at the 0 r dCity Cemetery.Mr, Dye 94, was the father: ofRoj Dye 6f <strong>Ord</strong>. Other immedlatePsurvivors include two sons,Floyd of Lamar, Mo., and Vernonof North Platte.Born Oct. 11, 1875, in MariettaOhio, Mr. Dye was the son' oiThomas and Jerusha ForrestDye. He came to Valley Countyin 1884 and in 1889 was marriedto Emma Peterson. To this uniouthree sons were born. She diedin 1923. In 1925 he was united inmarria e to Bertha J'amisbp whopreceeied him in deailh in 1964.Local ''co~~I~'; sonRecpives PhD'IDon tevens, son of Mr. andMrs, Ra ph Stekens of <strong>Ord</strong>, receiveda Dosfordegr,ee in 2eology. If rom Phi'os0pby the Vp\-versity of Alaski! on"Aun. 12. 1Dr. Stevens will be employedby Cit Service Mincral Corp. ofNpw Joyk City. He and his wifewill be livin in Anchorage, Alaska,where tpe company's Alaskaoffice is located.A 1957 graduate of <strong>Ord</strong> HighSchool, Dr. Stevens also holds aBachelor of Science degree inchemistry. ,Probart Land SellsTo Sarqent BiddersThe" Roy Probart ~aiid auction'.held Aug. 22 at the Sargent LegionIIall was largely attended.The irrigated quarter .sold t~ EG. Br ss for $395 per acre, andthe st- acre tract of pasture soldto Paul Hart for $100 per acre.Both buyers are from Sar ent.The sale was conducted%y theCharles Radil Realty Co.Hasfing$~aarson Mortuar <strong>Ord</strong>,Nebraska.2J:6bftf cI *Crosby, Lafever ~acier, Jim FoxJr., Joe Gaul, Melvin Justus,i Cqrl Hinkle, -John Kaiser, Joe! Keber, Ray hchtenberg, ArnoldL Menuey, Ted Molczk, Ma j or, Mont omery, Carl Nichols, John~ichJs, Warren Olson, GeorgeKohan, Everett Woeppel, LenoWolf, and Walter Zimmerman.1 Inteinienf was in the Spaldingf Celiletery with. Hastings-Pearson; Mortuary in charge.Born Apr. 9, 1900, Mr. Bloomguistwas the son of Oliver andMarie purri Bloomquist. His ear.1 life was lived in Greeley but!&r the past 35 years he badbeen a farin resident of WheelCr, IL . "felved on the c urch board. Heivas also a mem k er of the FarmBureau and had served on theschool redistricting cgmmittee.Survivors are his wfie, the formerkIildred Crosby, whom hemarried Nov. 2, 1937, aJ GrandIsland and two daughters, Karell~foomquist of ,Omaha andMrs. Darlene Gartner af Lincoln.Three sisters - Mrs John Rei-ter of Spalding,. M,rs: ~d Smithof Petosky, Mich., qd Mrs.James Marlage of Rapid City.Mich. - also-survive. .--. .I@, Bloo~nquist was prtdebeasedby his parents, two sisters,two brotherg, and an infantdaughter.A Letter From '.' , T. $ .< ---~Qbekahs HelMember: of the <strong>Ord</strong> RebekahLodge served dinner Monday torelatives of Mrs. Dora LieMaster.The dinne~ was' held at the UnitedMethodist Church of 0rd"priorto the 2 p.m. funeral service.Home1 .i\ . .<strong>Ord</strong> <strong>Township</strong> <strong>Library</strong> 2 72 j.City Box SectionQrd, Nebre 68862Section Two+stab. April 1882. brd, Nebr., Thurr., Sept. 3, 1970. ~61. 89, No. 26. 2 sects.State Planners Hope To MakeGraveled . Highways Thing of Past\ \- .'! ,t 8:. . By kelvin PallStatehouse Correspoddenf. .The Nebraska Press Assn,LINCOLN -,The State RoadsDepartment has leveled ts sightson oge of ,rural ~ebrgha's b~ggestgripes - the graveIed statehi way. . .Ithe cohstrictio. planned for -the next six years - aj: annodncedthis week - is CQJ&~&-schedule, there will be only 6742miles of state highway left withouta hard surface by 1976.Goipg Inlo this year, therewere more than 900 mile$ of roadin the state system with only agravel cover.During the fiscal yeac whichends next June 30, rojects topave 231.3 miles o? present1graveled road are scheduledYThe department says it plans tospend $17.8 million on those projects.During the following five ye rs- with no annual target dates 2 orindikidual projects - pavin is tobe laid on 523.6 more mifes ofgraveled highway.Furthermore, engineering andright-of-way purchasing is scheduledon 43 1 miles. This willcost an additional $305,000.State Engineer Marvin Nuernbergersaid the department isdoing its best to convert fromgravel to dustless surface throughoutthe state hi hway system asswiftly as possibgeAnother of Nuernberger's targetsis the state hiqhway whichreceived only a thln layer ofasphalt under a previous policyoi staged construction. The oldidea was to put a dustless qurface- even if it wahn't trickenough to last long - on as manymiles as possible to provide atleast so-me help.Nuernberger said this policyhas forced the posting of manyrural roads each bpring td limitthe amount of weight trycki couldhaul. Alxe-snapplng chuckholesalso are commo,n on these roads.The state englneer sa s the newpolicy is to build cad road tospecifications qll at oqce. " .During the six ,yea.< .... -.. A -. , . .. - I 'I - .;&.s r C&"*F~ i.,DIT:-**i -- 8.I


(Page 2)QUTZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., ~hurida~, September 3, 1970IiI Serving the Loup Valley 88 ~&rs II, .ti". .LVLPe'y ~drembent otgcial 0 boardp dling pubhc mon ys sho& publistat regular infervals .-an Occountingshowing where and howeach dollar is spent. The <strong>Ord</strong> Quizhplds this ib be a fundamental prin.c~plp of Democrat~c Government..


j . .1 ..When You and 1"10YearsAdoy? in <strong>Ord</strong> tr, of begin yairfi6@ dqtles ar- as1 , ,'riveas&t-mt manager of the Lee- .. . . .. r; .* -* .'I *', , .$ .., , 2 . f,.'C '. * . ,. . .~. *'"."? * . ,~* f , " ? .;Idihild ~riives. % I _ * ( .& ' I . .For Mr. and Mrs. $1' wadas.."7Arcadia. Anna M3lya.6f ' *0rd ~pe'nt Severalda s this past ~eek bisiting in1 hd soes bde, the Ernest Afalyf? ?eggy uly.KoKpr igfur?ed ,home"~rlddy01, c.rmnlAn after working in hncoln-,AVisit ~ e w kiece'to &I$. and Mrs. Andy Kusek.It was announced that 52 cars20 Years Ago and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. McBethjoycelyn were in Hastings as guests of ' Personalsdaugrter .pf the A. H. Jqnes CO,, $t (hp firstMq and Mrs. W1lson* en'1st- central Nebkaska bhoy'ng of Ply- dro~eMrs.toKnuteLitchfield.PetersonSundayandafter-Joeed in the Women's Air Force.George Munn and Ralph Nor- lor 194'. noon where they visited with Mr.ma$ announced t their law .. \ . and Mrs. Art Wotten. They areprpnershi wbirflad een op-B" 40' Yeir's go: friends of Mis. Peterson' whoiller ed un$h the name t Munn M a b e l Misko, kifidfiigitrten had not for more thanan. $ Norman, was being dissol\ed teacner in the <strong>Ord</strong> schools, sus- 40 years.by ,mutual agreelqent. tajned a broken leg when Mr. and Mrs. hrome PlorianPatricia McCarty of ams stock dipped and fell oi+n the ;lairsbe ame the bride of William Ru- at the James ML ord home.ricks of Burrell and Marrian Fir? caused b$ $ exploding and 'lo Rrian tndtf--~ ~ ~ &($t~uph$pg~~~d ~ ~ ~ n ~ :Arnlstrqng exchanged weddin gasolrne stove gutted the Johnvoyswith Laurence lleqnings 05 son .8rothers restaurant and ton- Mr. and Mrs. fack Rashaw ofAlperia in a 4oublg-ring cere- fectionery on the s 6th side of <strong>Ord</strong> Mere Sunday evening \.isitors~WY. the square, resu~tiJ in damage in the ~ester,~iier home.Elnora Tasker began t)er estimat.e,d at mo.rg fhan $3,000. Mrs. B'rankie Baldwin, WillJtie as superintendent at f?; Plans were being made for and Perrl Baldwin of <strong>Ord</strong> at-0i-i Coinniunily Hospital, relier dedication of the newest and one tended the valley TOPS picnic atMIS. R. J. Lynn who had of the most inodern rural school the <strong>Ord</strong> Cily Park Sunday afterkfdthe post temporarily. buildings in Vallgy - C o u n t y. noon.The <strong>Ord</strong> Plugs won their base- C4ailed Ta lor stat6 superipfell- qr. and Mrs. Jim Meese took4aU game against Buraell by a dent of scrioofs,' was to delner their grandson Jilnmy Meesesc6j.e of 9 to 2. Richardson pitch- the dedicatory ad d r e s s. .The back to Millard Sunday aftered for the local team. building was to sene District 4 Jimln~ had spent ae. Past tuogugo Malottke, well known near Arcadia. months visiting in the Meesefarmer, died at th'e St. Francis Brace School opened with an home. While in Millard they werellospital in Grand Island. enrollment of 17 pupils. Keo Au- S-unday dinuer guests of Mr. andble was the teacher there. Mrs. Don SChaaf.30 Years Ago A baby boy was born t2 Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Marshall ofA "Wilkie for yresident" pic- and Mrs. Joe Danczek. <strong>Ord</strong> were Sunday afternoon vissicat Bussell Park was attended --- itors in the Marvin Gydesenhome.by a large croud.$though AU~US! was not nor- <strong>Ord</strong> Club feels Need Mr. and Mrs. John Miller ofrn ly a11 outstanding month forOrJ were Sunday evening visitorsmdrriages, records in Judge John For S~mmer Vacafi0n in the Knute Peterson home.Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Collins at-Members of the 0rd Suburban- , Lended the. Odd Fellows Picnic atites - each one busy with varied the.*Qrd Clty Park Sunday aftersummertinleactivities - chose fo nogn.DANCEdeclare August a month of va- ~ich$rd and Howard Jensen Jr.cation frolii exteqsion work ' of Calro came Thursday afterIn June the members met at thei! sister Annette who had beenthe home of Mrs. Art Larson for vjsitlng her hunt Lydia Zikmund' an interesting nieeting wkn. Mrs. for the past ten days. 4-Joe Hutar presented the lesso~l Mr. and Mrs. Ed Novak were"liomes for the Aged and JXandi- Friday evening visitors of Mr.Dennis Gibbon's capp~d.~ and M~S. ~lojd peter- and M~S. ,,nest ~isan.son instructed the group on how Mr. and Mrs. Joe Petska nereto inake a neck scarf. Mrs. Peter- Satur$a and Sunday visitqrs ofComboson also displayed several ?;ti-, pq .?"(MIS. gobelt Bensp4 pndcles from Arizon'A deinonstra ing an11 y o urtls. They Also visited_ I . tole painting. ' a . Mr. and- Mrs. Danny Mjles and'During the second week in Jul baby girl while there.Sept* !membqrs gathered again wid Mr. and Mrs. Ed IXansen ueleMrs. pon Petska for a brunch Sunday dinner and afternoon vm-I9:00 P.M. to 1:00 A.M. andmonthsocialtheytline.metLaterwiththeMrs.sameJoeitorsMr.ofandMr.Mrs.and Mrs.WayneWaqnePierceKing.ofRutar to make articles for the Qrd were Sunday ecening ~isitorsOM) ELKS CLUB Valley County Fair Booth for re- in the Wabne Gregory home.~rd,' Nebr.\I tarded children. The proceeds Rifr, and Mrs. Iloward Fausfrom the sale of these akticles . And fanllly attended a picllic andwent to the Special Service reunion of the Loy family Sun-- School. day in the park in Broken Bow..\G d VdueVmilla kftMIhk; holn am,Cream Pies 2i2 ". 4 XE $1 Fish Sticks ET19s Vegetables ?:;:;$2z 39~ Sliced Cheese m:;:;.% 39~4 iz Cg 1 N0veItje@~~~~~~;~~,"~i,2~i~Gmd Vdoe fa 3 . , d-- -t * ' 'IGA-Perfec, 110 01.'Cottage cheese fat ..55~kdf99"~;49~ Cheddar Cheesd :%: '$; 6 5 ~a29~STARTW a t NediiRipe biives %!s ,2 ,:; 2 7 9 Kleenex ~ k. t?2e i locPquloqb'a10Ct. coneysFiddle addle %:. 3 p~2 $1 IGA Buns G&% . t 29~KA.lndiuidual,Cvrt~ss 1 Lb.~arshmailows UewIar Pr.. 21 c '~reakfast Rolls$zkP PC 45~Stuffed Olives 2;@k z 35~Snack Crackers ~ ~ 8 8 9 ~* fad-Furl PKkFabric Softener $9~ Preserves Itrewber* *E 45~Faqlly SCQ'~3 02.I Toilet Tissue 4 ROHS 3% ~estea Jar - nls 9 9 C ( F o l ~ ~ ~ & l & ~ ~ w ~ @ ~ ~ ~ w ~ ~-, PII~Y: ,WK! I:SAVE t%-- I'Prie wie !~&.43~ 1oorcwp* kr II is 58< . Coupm Good tbru Sept 5 Only of IGA~nmmlnllmlmmmlul~=-1~NUIRITION AND YOUR l~lnl TUE FOUR BA,& FOODSDo You Needscratch Pads?We Have Them P2-14 02.Del MonfeCalsu pSweet ~ 4 t hCherry Pie MixJiffy 30 Gal.Trash . . CanIIIIIS~ZE WITHTHlS COUPONLimit 3 Couponspurchasedper bottleonly at Carson's IGAExpires Sept. 7Lfdheut Covvon 49c' '. ... . ,[ (WITH-THIS-hm1T a CaUrnN Pa 80sCOVPON)P~RCltASD {Rede?mable only at Carson's I.G.A.Expires Sept. 7. W~thout Coupon 49c.IButfernuf InsfanfI Carol 1 Old Home I' Onion Puffs Mini .2 On.lesJar2 for 25"


---C~fepf ield Quotes---School Enrollment Stands at 10By Evelyn ~onscheskiSchool began here Monday withan eqrollment of 10 pupils. DarwidE wafds will remain at homesevkra 'I weeks becadse of hisburd, which has him id a wheelchdir. Mrs. Nettie E'er ley of <strong>Ord</strong>is the teacher and wifl reside atthe Frank Moralec home. Mrs.Waltef Kyhn is the cook, andGeorge Totlow picks up the children.At present there are onlyfouk riding the bus. One more willride the bus in January.Iformer Resident DiesAlta l lint Vick, a native of6il) French<strong>Ord</strong>, debrbskbPh. ,7185900flr8 !I# Cajualty ConpaqYom ffrcsi Bloominpton, lllinoll~r 2lntolrICotesfield, passed away Aug:24 at Des Moines, Ia.Mrs. Vick was born here on 0ct.-25, 1899. She attended school atCotesfield and moved wish he^“parents, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamFlint, to Kearney ,in 1 16.she wris nlarrled P Q GeorgeVicE on Oct. 20, 1920. The mowed lo Des Mornes 1? 19581kiss Vick is ~urvlved by he;husband and a sister, Mrs. ElsieLeake of Kearriey. Ray Parkerof Cotesfield is a cousin. He andhis wife attended her funPral in'Kearney Iriday.Combining ~nd; ' "Mrs. Phil Jensen went by planeto Dakota to help bring the tombinesand trucks home. Her busbaudhas beed working In theDakotas. . c- :vBrother DiesCarroll Madsen, brother of Mrs.Erving Hanzel, died last week ofa heart attack. Fu~ei-a1 gerv'ceswere held in St. ~aul sunday.Mr. Madsen was 53.--


<strong>Ord</strong> Serviceman singled Out-To Meet Vice-president Agnew iStaff Sgt. Kenneth L. Scofieldof <strong>Ord</strong> was one of a select groupof servicemen chosen to personallygreet Vice.President S p i r oAgneW diiring the latter's recelltvisit to South yietnain.Sergeant Scof~eld 1s a muchdecoratedveteran of eight yearswith the Marine' Corps. He ispresently assi ned as a riflemanwith the 1st &farille Division, statiol~edat DaNailg. South Vietnam.A 1962 graduate of <strong>Ord</strong> Hi 11school. Scofield was the 01%ha11 from his unit pickedmeet the Vive-President. In aletter to his wife Kim, who isliving here whlle her husband isin Vietnam, he said that he waspersonally selected for the honorby a "General Widdecke."After General Widdecke calledSergeant Scofield's unit commander,he was hustled off toSaigon where the qeeting tookplt~e.The whole thing came as acomplete surprise to me. Helooks just ?;ke he does in thenewspapers, the sergeant wrotehis wife.This is Sergeant S~ofield's secondtour of duty in Vietnam.During his earlier assignmentthere, he was gravely woundedby an enemy rifleman. A bulletentered his chest, and infectionset in when he was forccd to liein the mud and heat for sometime:After he was finally rescued,he was taken to a hos'pital atOkinawa where he spent 10months convalescing. During thattime he met and married hisuife, a native of Okinawa, andthey now have a 4-year-old son,Junior. She and the child arestaying with the Sergeant's parents,Mr. and Mrs. Earl Scofieldat their farin home north of 0rdwhile he completes his latestVietnam assignment.After leaving Okinawa, SereeantScofield received six moreSSgt. L. Scofield Gonths of medical treatment inThe general's choice California before returning tonormal duty.Elks Float Takes Top PrizeAt Popcorn Days CelebrationA float sponsored by the Elksand Dods of Lodge No. 2371 at<strong>Ord</strong> was named t?e best ot morethan 50 entr~es In last week'sPopcorn Days parade.The grand pEize float was entitled"IIelping American Youth,"add shomed some of the ways inwhich the Elks, organizallon iscarrying out this theme in reallife. Among the projects featuredwere the free crippled children'sclinics co-sponsored byElks clubs throughout the state,schoIarships donated by theElks, the teenage social gatheringshosted by the Elks.Other winners all from theNorth Loup-Scotia area, were asfolloas:Club Division-(1) 11 a r m o n yClub,. "Rin Out For Americathe Beautiful"- (2) FortnightlyClub, "Happy Jack's ,Peak."Churches-(1) Unltcd Methogist,"Frecdoi~~ of Worship"; (2)Seventh Day Baptist, "This IsYour Land."Organizations -(1)AmericanLegion, "Land of the Free"; (2)Lion Club, no theme name.; Schools-(1) North Loup-ScotiaGrade School, "Land of Plenty,"QNo second place awarded.)Youth-(1) North Loup-ScotiaFFA and FHA, "This Is Our Land;qo S~mething About It"; (2) ModestHomemakers 4-11 Club, "MissAmerica."Business places-(i) B 1 e v i 11 sPopcorn Co., theine unknown;(2) Cox Brothers Plumbing, "NoMore Wash-Day Blues."In another of the PopcornDais activities, Mrs. Art Otto ofNorth Loup was the big winnerin the celebration's annual drawing.She received a $500 SavingsRond.Other winners were:$100-Walt H u e b n e r, NorthLOUD: Lonirie Wilson. Elba.vell, North Loup;gent; James Robertson, N or t hLou . Mrs. Charles Leach, Burwe1t)'EmmaDavis, Denver, Colo.;Max Trosper, Wolbach; Ray Hurlbert,<strong>Ord</strong>; Joy Van Horn, NorthLoup.$%-Dennis Kasmussen, Scotia;Grace Schnase, Cairo; R a 1 p hSpilinek, Elba; A nes Spencer,Central Clty; ax! Rasmussen,North, Loup.Bes~des the many yisitors fromthroughout Nebraska as well asother states who attended PopcornDays this year, a numberof prominent political candidatesput in appearances. They includedJ. J. Exon, Democratic candidatefor governor; Frank Marsh,present secretary of state aqdRepublican nominee for lieutenantgovernor; Don Search, Democraticcandidate for House ofRepresentatives from the 3rdCongressional District; and JohnKissack, Democratic nominee forstate treasurer.Best in State~o;izons 'ust keep expanding for the Meloday Moms, a group of 0 rd housewives who get together several times weekly to sing "iust forthe fun 01 it." The Mays. so called because they have 24 children between them, have rung at numerous events locally during the past year.But they achieved the~r greatest success yet over the weekend when th,ey were named first-place winners in Division I of the KOLN-KGINtalent hunt at the Nebraska State Fair. The women received $5 in prize mone plus an invitation to sing with the "Six Fat Dutchmen"during their show Monday from the fair grounds, They're a I'so scheduled &r three more television a pearances, with the datesto be announced later. Comprising the sext'et are, left to righf, CharIene Schauer, Sharon Fuss, Dee Meese, ~efoise Bresley, Phyllis Rasmussenand Lois Zlomke. Kay Green, in the foreground, organized the group and accompanies them.IArcadia Fallrn 0 nce AgainBy Margaret ZentzLike those that preceded it, Arcadia'slGth annual Fall E'esti~alhas been acclairued a bigsucccss.The Arcadia Actors presentedtheir program at the high schoolauditorium on Saturday eveningto start the actibities. "Stop inat the ,Village Inn" - wheretheir was music on the menu -was the name of their presentation.They played to a full housethat evening and again Mondayevening.Sunday's acti\ ities began at1:30 p.m. with penny showers forthe small-fry, followeci bv races.Follo\\ing are the foot;acesults:re-Girls up to 8 years of age -(1) Debbie Smith; (2) CindyLeininger; (3) Sancy Trotter,Kearney.Girls 9 to 12 - (1) DonnaSlaab; (2) Vicki Anderson; (3)Kally Leach and Penny Staab.O~er 12 - (1) I! cky Sahlie;(2) Judy JIorris, Or$) (3)' KarenMorris, <strong>Ord</strong>.Boys up to 5 - (1) HandySlansk!; (2) Tim IIolcomb; (3)Tony Wilson.3oys 5-8 - (I) Allen Sinitl?,Anslcy; (2) Doug Cox; (3) JohnDworak, <strong>Ord</strong>.Boys 9.12 (1) Dennis Kramer;(2) Mikc 11111; (3) Dan Bray, Val-ley.13 and oler - (1) Larry Keuhl;(2) Tim Hurlburt; (3) Gary Slanskyand Tim Koush, Uur~\ell.Other race results uere as fol-iou s:Girls sack race - (1) DonnaStaab; (2) Carla Leu aildou ski;(3) Penny Staab.Boys sack r.ace - (1) GaryYarsh; (2) Mike B111; (3) Kelvinoth, <strong>Ord</strong>.Chicken scramble, Girls to 12- Winners: Carla Lewdndo~ski,Lisa Leach, Donna Staab, MaralieI,ewandowski, Kally Leach,Sue Dewolf, Cindy Scable, Con-nie Moore.Girls' three-legged race - (1)Vicki Anderson and Mary JoSmith. (2) Karen Worms andJudy horis; (3) Kathy and TressaMoody.Boys three-legged race - (1)Allen Gross and Dacid Peterson;(2) Dick O*ens and Kay Urban;(3) Jerry Marsh and Kelvin Foth.Pig scrainble, Girls to &-Winners:Debbie Smith and KarenBruha; Girls 9 and oLer - JeanHunt, Becky Sahlie, Janis Eichel-berger.Boys to 8 - Wakne Slingsby,Kevin Sestak, and David Lectandowski;9 and oker - DwainOmens, Mlke H111, Koger Pqterson.and Tim llurlburt.- Piaav-back race, boys to 13 - for a dance.CEstab. ~~ril, 1882 <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebraska, Thursday. Sept. 10, 1970 Vol. 89, No. 27 ' In 2 Sections,Publisheq Weekly at 305 S. 16th St., <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebraska 68862 Subscription ~ater - $6.50 In Nebraska, $7.50 Elsewhere Second Class Postage Paid at <strong>Ord</strong>, NebraskaGirl Singers*, Livestock Showmanz.Lead Counlty Youths at State FairiLocal 4-H youngsters fared wellincompetition during ' the past -few days at t e Nebraska StatefFair as they cked u 12 purpleribbons, a skowmansgp crown,and numerous blue, red and whlteribboqs. , .Some old veterans at 4-H competition- the Bonnie Bellesslnging group and Duane KO.varik - made the biggest lm.pressions.The Bonnie Belles, under theleadership of Mrs. John Wojtasek,were selected to receive thetop purple ribbon in their divisionof the state Son6 contest.Members of the winnlng groupare Jackie Belgram, DianeFranssen, Rita Wojtasek, LindaFinley, Rhonda Rogers, MarlaNorman. and Pat Beran.Hospital StayCrimps Style' y )o?h* '~chadeOOPS! No re ular column thisley County youngsters were for snoued in with. ~ilat's because aeek! I'm in %e hospital!items rqnging from clothing to she got a purple for her blizzard These thin s happen suddeqlysafety aids.kit.but sure mate a person realizeSue Bisho of <strong>Ord</strong> and Donna The final Valley County pur le the value of his many friends.Staab of Xrcadia upheld the went to Cherjl Chalupa for Ker All the good wishes, messages,County's honor in the State Fair 4-11 poster work.and cards mean so much., Green Thumb Tipf2t.ydd$p"1", ~lf,b~~S~~t~h,,$:All four deuronstrations from Xow IS the ttme to be preparaOutfit and Don. the county receibed blue ribbons. ing for that spring color we allna a skirt and blouse.Jail Uredthauer, Sherry Vodeh- enjoy so much. Tulips, daffodils,nal, and Kathy Waldinann gaveRita Wo~tasek wasn't far bc-hyacinths and other spring bulbs,demonstrations on clothing, Dalehind in thls coin~etition as sheshould be planted early in theWojtasek on health, and Danette'recei~ed a blue plus for her Spe-fall. The bulbs need tiine to de-Nolte on baby sitting,cial-occasion dress.velop root gromth before theAnd ~udging by results in the Other State Fair entries and ground freezes.cooking contests. there must be ribbon !?lacings were:--quite a few young ladies in the I> u a n e ~ ~ ~ d i Crossbred i k , Building Dedicationcounty uh0 still believe the way steer, blue; John Nelson, Here. The public has been inkited toto a young man's.heart is through ford steer, red; Tim Todsell, share in a time of joy and thankshisstomach. r ~ r .valley C0~llty Crossbred heifer, red.giving Sunday afternoon as thelasses also shone in the cooking new building for the EvanqelicalcomuetltlonDuane ~ ~ ~ pullet, ~ blue. ~ i k ,-~6rine i~oevet received a pur- P a 1 Wo~tasek, birdfeeder,Free Church of <strong>Ord</strong> is dedicatedduri~g a formal 3 o'clock service.Rev. Herb Kyrk of llrnneapolis,Minn, will be the featuredluncheon dessert -speaker., a uinea~ule =- .. book, red; Sharon Swanek, fish-An o en house reception willfollow- tie approximate hour-longdedication serv ice.This was the third performanceof the Bonnie Belles at the State ple ribbon for her three-jar as- blue; Dale WoJtasek, bird house,Fair. They previously had won a sortment of canned food, and blue; SteLe Palserl fishing book,blue ribbon and a purple one. Carolln Staab got one for her blue; JoAllne Miska, wild!lfeMrs. Svl Furtak has been theirHigh Low Pr. accompanist on each. occasion. upside dowl; cake. ing lures, red.Sept. 3 90 57 Young Kovarik cllmaxed a Sharon Swanek also appears Terri Krieuald, rope halter,Sept. 4 85 55 .07 brilliant 4-11 career by taking the welt on her way to being a good red; David Staab, enton~ology,Sept. 5 87 65 .03 Brown Swiss showmanship homemaker. since she receiied red: Nancv Peterson. forestrvSept. 6 99 68 .02 award with,, his 2-year-old dairySept. 7 83 54 COW, "Jade.Sept. 8 88 53 He also brou ht home threeSept. 9 54 .13 purple ribbons kom the p~ultr, Precipitation to date for 1969 contests. One was for a cockeratwas 15.64 ~nches. This year's recordingsindicate a total of 14.74inches.one for a young drake, and onefor a young duck.Other purples received by Val-Best Girls' Small Groupd purple ribbon for her curtains.- Diane Fauss, on the otherhand, would be nice to havearound if a docto weren't available.*She ,rece,iie$ a purple forher first-aid kit.And if a storill comes, NancyWelniak is the right gal to beembers of tlie State Fair champion Bonnie Belles singing group are, left lo right Jackie Belgramtiant Frrnrren, Rita Woita.sek, Linda Finley, Rhonda Rogers, Marla Norman, and Pet Beran. Mrs. sr(qurtak was thr~r accpmpan~st. 1book, blue: Dianl;e-~&ss, forestrybook, red.Connie King, skirt and blouse,blue; Carla Van Nordhelm, skirtand blouse, red; Susan Drake,skirt and blouse, red; Rita Wojtasekai~d Theresa Iwanski, playoutfits, blue; Cheryl Chalupa,play outfit, red; Vicki Bredthauer,lounging and sleeping, blue;Jean IIyde and Danette Nolte,play outfits, red; Janet Zulkoskiand Jean Foth, school clothes,blue; Pat Peterson, s c h o o 1clothes, red; Jan Bredthai~er,special occasion, blue; WillaBald~vin and , Phbllis Babcock,special occasll?n, red; CecileWsIdmann, suit, blue; PhyllisBobcock, suit, 'red: Rita Wojtasek,coat, white; Pat Peterson,plan your oun, white.Karyl Me)ers, three-jar assortment(canned food), .blue; HichardLVelniak, three jars ve etables, red; Jean Welniak, ttrefjars Legetables, white; CarolynBro\$n, peanut butter cookies,red; Laurie Campbell, coffeecake, blue; Danny Yokorney,muffins, blue; Crystal Jenscn,breakfast quickbread, red; CharlencBendykowski and EileenFoth, luncheon dessert, red; Ki1-la Baldkin, yeast bread, blue;Patsy Ilopkins and Karyl ?ileyers,venst bread, red; Kathy Waldharm,exploring foods and nutrltion,nhite.I'intla Lange and Nancy Petersou,luncheon set, r&d; XancyLVelniak and Carol Decker, hotdish mat, red; Kathy Waldmann,picture, white; Cecile Waldmann,pillo~v, red; Pat Peterson andPam Ifruby, curtains, whlte;Kathleen Lukesli, toy for toddler,blue.Boys Song Group, Kings ofClober, blue.Roxanne Rogers, picture display,blue; Pat Feterson, picturestory, red Rita .Wojtasek, healthioster due; Sharon Swanek.kaltd uoster. red: Stece Palser.4-II7wo;k poster, red. -Betti Nelbon, dairy, threeblues; Betti Nelson, junior dairyherd, blue; John Nelson, dairy,two blues; Tom Nelson, dairy,blue.Randy John greets.Mother Earth at ~ali Festival rodeo.(1) Dwaiir Drake and Bob Dworak;(2) Steve IIolcomb; (3) MarkIii11 and Jeff Crist.Pitgy-bank race, men and highsc ool boys - (1) Tin1 IIurlburtand Ronnie +i.andowski; (2)Dick Owens and Delbert John;(3) Fred Le~vandocvski and GarySiansky.Piggy-back girls - (1) DianneMurray and Merelie Sell; (2)Carla Lewandowskl and Kathy\Iroody; (3) Tie bet~ecn LisaLeach and Penny Staab, andBecky Sahlic and Sally Marco.Egg Throw - girls wit,~ners,Debra Smith, Galccn Slingsby.Boys, Allan Gross, Mark Peterson,Jay Trotter and David Yeterso11.These races \Yere follo~


--AFloydA series of mishaps during thesummer nlonths certainly keptthe Sperling name on the "active"list both on the hos italroster and that at Dr. Markfey's. office.It seeins to hale began nhenMrs. Kodney (Delgies) Sperlingand mother-in-law, Mrs. R a 1 p h(Ivy) Sperling each underuentsurgery. Th~s evidently sparkeda chain of bad luck as from thenon the younger Sperl~~lgs tookturns with one ailment or another.First, Penny had a chippedelbow bone from a fall; Randon1needed stitches for his badlymashed finger that he injuredin a tractor-wagon accident;Rob was rdshed to the doctor forstitches to close a gash on hisforehead after fairing againstthe corner of a television get;and while riding his sister's bicycle,year-old Reed caught h~stiny foot betueen the fenderand wheel of the bike badlvscraping the instep.Continuing to mention the listof mishaps we must include thatof the Sperlings' hired man,Kurt Taylor of Salt Lake City,Utah who crushed the musclesin his leg in a tractor - wagonaccident and Delores' brtoher,Rudy IIulinsky, also of Salt L$keCity, who accidently shot himselfin the leg. This necessitatcdsurge1 y and a hospital stay. ThenIvy took her turn again re-enteringthe hospital as a medics1patient.Nest, this one or that onewere busy putting cars out ofcomlrlission: Delores and daughterPenny were passengers inBarb Wright's auto lvhich. strucka decr and Rudy llulinsky--dxiving the Sperl~ng auto-hit, and killed a calf on the highway.Rudy also upet thp Farmhand at the Sperling lace duringthis string 01 cragRes. Luckilyno personal ip'uries resultedin any of the thrbe scollisi~n~Now that the su~qner'vacat~onhas ended, we hope the schedulewithin the Sperling house-\ hold resumes a normal pare. Itseems as though their sulumerwas more hcctlc than the avbage!--0-Evidently having read my' 'pleafor a recipe on how to prepareonlon rlngs, Mrs. Warxeq Anthoneyof \Volb+ch sent this oneto me.French Fried 0;ion dings3/11 C. flour1/1 1. salt?h c. milk2 T melted ~hortenjng1 egg *3 large onionsCooking fat to depth at leastone. inch in skillet.Sift flour and salt together.Add milk, melted sQorfillow roses. .Mrs. Jerry Waller of Kearney,sister-in-law' of the bride, wasmatron of honor. Other br.idesmaidswere bfrs. Dennis Gaiblerof Lincbln, cousin of .the bride?;Mrs. 'Mlke Buss of bncoln, sisterof the groom; and Linda Kuszak,a friend of the bride. Theywele attired altelnately in. greenand yellow floor-len th princessstyledpatin ensembfes. Each pfthe Qresses had low necklinestrimmed with white earl beads.Each of the attensant? woregreen and yellow bows in theirhair and each carried a longgreen stem of yellow roses.Tatia Gaibler, dau hter of Mr.and Mrs. Dennis ~aibfer, was alsoattired in a floor-length dress ofyellaw satin. She acted as flowergirl and carried a basket of yellowand white carnations.Best man was Gus Tro~nbacksof Wncoln. Groomsmen were JimGergens and Bruce Barber, bothfriecds of the groom from Lincdn,and Gary Roberts, brotherof the groom, also of Lincoln.Mrs. Bill Shonerd of LincoIn,'a cousin of the bride, furnishedwedding music on the organ. NicholeKeller of Scotia, friend ofthe bride, sang "1'11 Never WalkAlone" and "I Believe."Ushers were Jerry Waller ofKearney, brother of the bride,and Mike Buss of Lincoln, brother-in-lawaf the groom. B i l l yRoberts, son of Mr. and Mrs.George Roberts of Lincoln, wasring bearer.A reception imnlediately followingthe ceremony took placein the church parlor with Mrs.Mark in Greenland of Arcadia. incharge of. cutting and selilngMrs. Don Fiala and family of anniversary celebration, of Mr.Ainsnorth wele weekend guests and Mrs. John Edwsrds at Northof her mother, Mrs. Pete Duda Loup.arig othcr relatives at <strong>Ord</strong>. --Elmer Lukesh and Jim s cntthe wedding cake. Mrs. JohnBurns of Grand Island pouredJoe Hajda of Comstak rva; a the meekend in Lincoin wRere punch, and Mrs. Hannah SheldonTuesday ,isitor of his sister, Mrs. they attended the State Fair. Jill1 poured coffee. All are aunts ofEmma Blasin.was also a guest at the ~~edding the bride., 'Sunday evening of his collegeWeekend house guests of Mr?. rooln~nate Jim Doly, Jr , of North Mrs. llulda Smith of Arcadia,Carl Sorcnsen uere Mr, and Mrs. Platte and Melissa Palmer at Kin- grandmother of the bride, wasGordon Sorensen and Paul and coln.an hpnored guest.Mr. and Mrs. P. .C. Dlllplan, all . .While in the Capital City El- Debbie Sheldon, cousin of the, of Denker, Colo., and a nlece, mer a ~ Jim d were house guests bride, took care of the guestMrs. Lloqd Christensen of Mar- 6f Hex Jewett, Jr. ,book. Unwrapping and displayingshalltown, Ia. The relati\es werethe gifts were tho other cousinshere especially to attend the 50th Support Your Local Merchants of the bride, Christi Greenland ofWEGlVEBEXEL BEXEL VHP BEXEL BEXEl MPMCANDY-LIKE (VERY tIIGH POTENCY) (MAINTENANCETABLETS FOR !&\!FA&- RIJS MINCRALSICHILDRENDellclous Chewablefruit fiavirsin mult~.colors.~~;,~T~$,$~$'senior c~t~zens.v,tam,n The very and ber! Itonic IR capsulesfor adults."ltmm rn11'eral and ~nsuranceI,zAiC;$rs250 Tablets LBO Capsules 180 Capsules 225 Ca sulesReg. $7 49 Reg f 12 98 Reg $9 59 Reg $ge8.Now '/a rice Now '12 price Now I/a pritc Now % priceTHESE AMAZING VITAMINVALUES !RE' ,Phone 728-3271Liqda . . . a new brideArcadia and Jill Burns of GrandIsland. Kay Burns of Grand Islandand Joni Goodrich of NorthLoup assisted with the gifts.Assisting In the kitchen wereMrs. Don Vogeler, Mrs. Ben Kuszak,and Rita Juszak + of LoupCity., Tbe bride is .a graduate ofKorth Loup-Scotta High Schoolgnd the Be.n School of Beautyin Lincoln. She is now e.mplo edat in $the17s Capital Beauty Cit and The Wig sayonemployed by ~oterts &i!~u:tion in Lincoln,The couple will reside-$' 172JN. 24th in Lincoln. fqllopind ashort honeymoon tr~p to Colorhdp.7--<strong>Ord</strong> Brmna/ Vews .!\ .Mr. and Mrs. Jason hthropand Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Troyerleft Wednesday morning for Elgin,Ill., where they will.saend.se\eral days with the GordonParker family. Mrs. Parker is theformer Mary Beth Troyer:'If . -MI-. and Mrs. Walt sower's' ofLjncoln were weekend ,houseguests of the Floyd Peters&s:,,--Mr. and Mrs. J petelisenwere guests of Mr. and hills. JoeD*or ak in Burnell, Thursday fora fish supper. The fish ser~edwexe those caught by the Dworaksduring a recent outing at.\Yh~te Kiver, S. D., r'$\Mr. and Mrs. James Rejda. ofBur\\ell were Tuesday vrsitors ofMrs. Elnlila Masin. ' 1 .RUMMAGE SALE: 1617 0 St.Thur. & Frl. 10:OO A.M.' "27-2bfrc.,,.Ov er-the-weekend ~.Qus~, ku stsof Snator and Mrs. Rudolf, keswereIrma Kokes ~a~yef, anddaughter Karne of. Us Yegas,Nev., and Rich Kpkes


.... Lyle &enz he'll miss Broqco opener. :.Merncl DogsQUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Neb, Thursday, Septzl~ihzr 10. 1970 (Page/Newlyweds ReturaIAre FestestMr, and Mrs. Allen Dunband JoAnne, Linda Dunbar a1Jan Cook Relnington family of Lincoln plus the tra\.ellt EugerAt FestivalFifty-eight sleek gre) ho,undsand coyote dogs staged quite 8show for early visitors to Arcadis'sFall Festival as they cornpetedin 13 races Sunday.A Merna resident Fay Bigbee,had the fastest pack as his dogsran away with championships infour races - including the firstthree. Llo d Martin 4 CentralCity was tie next best sho~man,exhibiting three winners.Dale Sell upheld local pride ashis coyote dogs raced to victoryin two races. Chad Mlller of <strong>Ord</strong>also helped bring honor to YalleyCounty as one of his cojotedogs won in the eighth race.Complete results:Reqistered GreyhoundsRace #1(1st) Ray Bi bee Merna (2) LloydMartm, centrag cib; (3) Cordon An.derson, Ansel Q&vbte OMSace $2-Ray Bi$e yerna; (U LjleDief nbaugh ~ltchfleld; ($1 Brucek owfer, ~r~bdia.Rea~stered Gre houndsRace #J(1) Ray Bi bee, Mernv (2) MartinMye s, ~entrfl Clt~, (3) ido on Durqea~nsefmo.Co ote QogsI 4ace #4(1) pale Sell Arcadias (2) EldonDupes, Anselmo; (31 dhad MtllerUrdRegistered GreyhoundsRace a5(1) Lloyd artin Ce tral C~ty ('21Ru Blgbee. Zernil: (3) %ordon .\rider.son, Apselmodo ote ~ogsh e #6(1) Dale Sell Arcadla (2) Jlm Barker, ArCadi?. (3) Carol '~lller, <strong>Ord</strong>~eg~siered Gre houndsRace #{(1) Harry \+em en Sumner (2)Llo~d Martm, ~enfral'C~ty; (3)'Gordon Anders~n, AnselmoCo ote Q 9sace #(1) had Mier. 8rd prryWem en, Sumner; (3) AI~X hot oskiArc&*Registered GreyhoundsRace #9(1) Wo (d Martln, Central City; (2)Gordon inderson, Anselmo, (3) HarrySaest, GatesCoyote Do sRace a18(1) Marbin Fiehler, Centtal Clty;(2) Albert &eborz, Lltchlield, (3)Cbad Miller, <strong>Ord</strong>Reg~stered GreyhoundsRace R11(1) Martin Meser Central Cit (2)Ray Blgbee, ~erna: (3) Llo~d dirtlnCentral City.Cavote Pu sRace #I?(1) Llo~d Mart~n Central Clt . (2)Dale Sell, ~rcag~a: (3) Glen 8;rgu.sap, Berp~nU$mtersd ~iayh~und PupsWheeler Central kopei High 'I 'i;" . :. ."Calf Rider Bested . .I(Cont. from pa e 4) starter, is back or pi '$eniorpp his attack more. H% will, tbat seaspo and undou a tedl . will qeu,d there's any way to 6pen up claim his center spot ager he reanattack that averaged more covers from a shoulder $&parathan460 yards per game. tion. Coach Majors thinks . qt,Anyhow, he% goin to tr . and w~ll be ,rather ~uic ly,,~s re'siqtead of using a Rllbacf !his expecting knz to ke a~ailableseason he's going to have a wlng- for, Wheeler's Sepf. 18 gameback. That was the one spot still agalnst Elgin. .-up for grabs Tuesday.'until he-does returg, QoviieuerThe leading candidates are center is in the capable bhds oi&ke Childers, 155-pound sopho- 160-pound junior Dan Bern(. 'He'llmore who started in the line last he the tarter Friday -night.seqson, and Stan Foster, 145- On defense most of the playi~gpQund sopholilore who saw little time will be allotted fo thoseplaying time last year.boys. The only newcomer isfi~ross the hne .the Broncos Steve Harkins, l6O;pounq junior&gals look solid,. qith Jerry At- who'll moce in at right ad. asekyson- a 150-pound sophomore where, the regulars wll,l$e Hinze-c tewing with Patric'k at the at left end, Green at S4ddleeqds.guard, Olson and Schmeits atThe guards will be Dwaine linebacker, Atkinson and -FqsterGreen and Bryan Hinze, bo t at cornerback, and Patrick athighly regarded seniors. Green, safety.a 175-pounder, was tabbed for Coach Majors calls Childers hisstardom until he broke an ankle top utility man, and if the ibphointhe secol~d gaine last year. more doesn't win the sfartingAfter that Hinze came on to be- wingback job he'll be tQ$ club'scome the team's top lineman.lie's a 160-pounder.Lyle Lenz, another returningP.M.,'Safurday 2:3& I(oracing Sunday or hbnday.$peci?l bus USleaVes Whai/1:30 A, M, ~uer.Fri, Sat 1 E QO A.M. Go!!!!!Iihrough43% Wider*100%'. Shnger *167% MoreMileage *first substitute. Also due t~ seea lot of playing ti% is Rick Renner,130-pound seuok iYh6 has"good potential" a Iine~andespite hl small size. .Coph dajors. whonu be startinhi$ fourth year af ihe Broncohefin, also is e~thusiastir abouta 'fine grorip of. freshmen whohave 1310th PQ entiql and good sue..Among those especlgd to playsome thi season arg.,Gary Draht~ ~tdie Greep, Nor~w't'Hoctd,~Rrii Martink? Zsott McCain,ahd peqnl~. Srn~th. -- - ,1 -IC-.;y -' H ~me ~~ain' ''I -Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A, Larsenrglurned recently from MackinacIsland where they had attepdedthe Star Club conveotion of NewYork Life Ins. Co. This year'sconvention, which ended Sgpt. 2,was held at the Grand .Hotel.Norkh Americ n' farmers d&vole niore acreale to corn thanany other crop, according to NewHolland, the farm eq ipmeqt divisionof Sperry an!.~AII comparisons based on our popular Long di~erD & G ServiceIYour Radial Tire DealerNorth Highway #11Phwe 728-3333 IRace #1311) Ray Bigbee Merna (2) GordonAnderson, ~nselko, (2) ar or don Anderson,Anselmo; (3) Harry Wempen,SumnerHorseshoe TitleSlays in Mason CityThe horseshoe itching championshipof North Lup's PopcornDays celebration has gone toMaspn City for the sgondstralght year,In this year's tauraament ~e-.land Fecht succeeded RolandJensen as overall champion.Both are from Mason City.The tournament director, RussellHill of North Loup, joinedthe pitchers himself ,this year androceeded to come in second be-Rnd Fecht. They competed intbe top class.Clarence Marsh of Avley wonin Class B, with Ken Cvllins elf<strong>Ord</strong> finishing second. Other wipnerswere:Class C - (1) Bill Earnest Jr.,Riberdale; (21 Tie between EldonFoth, <strong>Ord</strong>, and Jerry Holmes,Ssotia.Class D - (1) Jerry Rainforth,North hup; (2) Nels Jorgensen,North Loup,Class E - (1) Dennls Rasmussen,Scotia; (2) Larry Winer,North Loup.Off The SquareFriends VisitMr. and Mrs. Carl Y o u n gdroie to the Grand Island airporta weekend ago to meet Mrs.&ucille Surbsr of Mi~tleapolis,Mlnn. Mrs. Surber was a houseguest of the Youn s during theP~pcorn Days celebgration as washer brother, Donald Paddock ofBellflower, C a 1 if. $ah aregraduates of North Loup and enjoye d reminiscing with oldschoolmates and friends.Other guests at the Youoghome were Mr. and Mrs. GeneT ump and family of Oshkosh.~ i Trumps e also visited theirsgn Everett and family ih <strong>Ord</strong>apd ,among a large group whog;;?i;dA,:;get0p'rat the Qrd-Workjng in KearneyRamona Luoma, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Isaac Luoma of<strong>Ord</strong>, has been hired by the UnitedStates Department of A ricultre. She began work ~ues%ay intte Kearney office of the FarmersHome Administration.Two other workers in theKearney office, Don Brick andGale Beuder were formerly employ~dby the FHA in <strong>Ord</strong>.Miss Luoma had been employedin the welfare and treasurer'soffices at the Valley CountyCourthou~e s i n c e graduatingfrom <strong>Ord</strong> High School last spring.Her new job with the FarmersHome Administration is a CivilService positio~.I 'IDANCEI Paul Kothe II Combo I/ Saturday II 9:00 P.M. t~ 1;OQ A.M. I<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.I- . . . Aa - . Mark Pcterr~n taker a header at Arradiq'r junipr rodeo, . . -Mrs. Cochran Gains W e Post ..4 +cd ~wenty-threethe T esddy nlenlbe~s mfeiing attend- of Re-JKkaf ~odlge X9) beid at <strong>Ord</strong> TheSeveral political-minded citi- urday, with Mis. . Cochran and char er kyas undra ed f,or Josezensof this communitv uere in Mrs. Banlsey sesbing as botini: pbm VaUery, pasj)yr.ebident ofThisWeek'sChuckleOne of our falorite storles isabout a couple uho Mere celebtatiug the~r golden hedilmx an.nl\ersars So~ne say it Mas theHiirr~ Bresle) hut we habe noproot An) hof o~, thdt the couple's dolnestictraiiquilit~ had been the talk of<strong>Ord</strong> and someone uas inquiringas to the seclct of their lang,haups mar 1 lage'Well, ~t dates back to our hon.ejmoon ' explained the xlfeYVe iisited the *Gland Canion,nd took a trip do\+n to the button1 of the canjon by pa& n~ule' We hadn t goile too far ~heprn! husband's mule stumbled. Hetook the mule b~ the ears, shookhim \igo~ouslj, and said, 'That'sonce '' U'e ploceedcd a little fa~the.uhen the mule sfuil~bled ag in.Once Inore rn, husband took kmb\ the eais, shook 111111 e\e? niore~igoi o,usl\, and sad, That'stn ~ ce\Ye hadn t gone half a miletrhen ti'e mule stutrbled a thlldtime Xi\ husband promptlq retno~ed a reioller frvlli his packet "I and started shot him. to protest o~ertreatinent of the mule when %:g~abbed me by the ears, shookme vigoiously, and said, 'Thdt'sonce'"I . - - . . -Now Opento Omaha's Eppley Field, Sund.afternoon, to meet Mr. and hi1Nicolas Aquino who arriked froConceycion, Nick and his Ppaguay. bride M;tlena wibe students for the fall term .Kearriey State College.\Mrs. George Polinoskis $&teMrs. Elsie Little af Omahabeen for se~eral days with a* tladies mother, Mrs. Nettie Gydtsen of Omaha, and t e PoIinokii there some too, $undry tbPolinoskis NeJe at family gatterin lo Scot@ to celebrate th92nfbirthday of the mother. Mr;Gqdesen,. Jlvnday a oiqce of Mr.Polinoskrs and daughter of MrrLlttIe, Mr. and Yrs. hllke Urkklch of Omaha came by plauto spend the dgy with relatibeat <strong>Ord</strong> and vicinity. To tap oft thcday Monda ebening bQ. Urkcich took ids. Poiino3ki and he*grandd4ughter, Salley Cetak an(Bob first Peter plane SO^ rile ~ eMrs.<strong>Ord</strong> r P~lioosk for tbeilsajs from the air Pdrkciew look:(like a elaver leaf or crQSs ig thtlarrangements of the buildingsSeems the elderly and dlsab~ecilof Park\iex are e~ther fljinflhigh or low. A few weeks ago one,resident won a motor cycle torush over the low plapes -the skys are used to uew the%:- where. next? Of course* a number of aur folks 4a\e ridden aplaqe but npt oker their homehere,attendance last ueekehd at the delegates,the Rebekah Asse~i ly of Ne-State Republican conkention in Fol.lowing the convention the braska; then .drayet again inVALLEY ELECTRICLincoln.delegation caucused by legisla- inelnoty of Dora LeJ'Iaster, 8Mrs. Irma'Leggett and Mr. and tile districts to elect Slate Cen- member of the Chapter whoMrs. Glen Coch~an, all of <strong>Ord</strong>, tral Comrl?ittee inen and women. died Aug. 29and Mrs. W. J. Ramsey of Ar- Represent~ng the 41st District Topics of business included' <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.cadia represented Valley County for the coining bjennium &ill be inakin plans to sej\e the banatthe Friday evening banquet Bill Keeshan of Albion and 31:s. quet for .the odd re~loils Dis-First Door East of Don's Auto Supplywhen Senator Robert Dole oftrict n~eetirig schedule^ for Sept.Kansas was the featured speaker. ~ochran of <strong>Ord</strong>. They su/rceed Dr. I$ ip <strong>Ord</strong>~e~end on us for all ypur industrial, residential andM.rs. Dean Breslev ioined the 0. W. Miller and Mrs. Bresley, Refreshments and a socialcommercial wiring.group for special "meetings sit- both of <strong>Ord</strong>. hour followed the meeting. 1-. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. -1L'Carson's\arke~. IYII


-..-Everetl Webb 6iesAl <strong>Ord</strong> ~ispital;<strong>Ord</strong> <strong>Township</strong> <strong>Library</strong> 2 p 7 - 7.- ofa City Box Sectiofi dsujZ~~ &';+<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr. 68862 ,x 0v7T1013.~~3Services at ArcadiaFuneral services were held. Tuesday at the Arcadia Unit d' Methodist Church for ~veritEmit Webb, 69 who died Saturdayat the valley County Hospital:Rev. fobeit llopkins officiatedat t e 2 p,m. service.Joy Lutt, organat, played %!:yond the Suhset." .Pallbearers were D e l be r tDrake, Louis Drake, Leland Evans,Keith Luedtke, Ben Mason,and Don Murray, Interment wasat the Arcadia Cemetery wlthHastineq - Pearson Mortuary of<strong>Ord</strong> in-charge.Mr. Webb was the son of Williamand Martha Taylor Webb.Born Oct. 20, 1900, he was ~4 life-Ion resident 'of .Arcadia asd, Vafiey County, havlng warked asa mechanic until his retirement.In May of 1926 he and GraceJuna were united in marriage.TO 'this union two sons and onedaughter iriere born.Survivors are his children, Mrs.+ L.: E. (Donna) Scott of South-field, Mich., Gerald Webb ofGastonville, Pa., and Max Webbof Cannon~burg, Pa.; one brother;James Webb of Grand Island;and four sisters, Mrs. Elmer @el-I'e) Brown of Laramie, Wyo., Mrs..&a1 Harrison of Kansas City, Mo.L Mrs., Russell (Mona) Jones o/Florida. and Mrs. Ray (kferle)~pl~omb. of Arcadia. -, .Mr. qebb was preceded in.'", death 'by his parents afid one. infant si3er. - . ,, . Joe Dobrovskv . . , ready for land, reg, or snow. .~ocal ~utdoorsman Buy& ..draft.Unusual ~k~hibiousThe first snows of winter are The vehicle weighs 480 poulldsstill some distance away, but and wjll carry that big a load,when they come Joe Dobrovsky according to literature from thewill be readv lor them. conlpany in Raymond, Miss.,Dobrovsky recently purchased which manufactures it. Dobrova1970 model AmplGcat. That's sky bought his craft @OW a dealanamphibious vehicle which can er in Denver, Cola., at the standtraverseon either land or water. pd price of $1.595 PIUS tax and. ' A bachelor welder. Dobrovsky freight.has specific plans for his unusual A 20-horsepower motor, madecraft. He's going to use it for by the


Norih ' Loup- NotesBy Dena SintekMr. and Mrs. Dell Barberwere guests of honor Saturdayevening at the Vet's Club in <strong>Ord</strong>to celebrate their 55th annhers'ary.Those attending were Mr.and Mrs. R. 0. Moulton of GrandRapids, Mi+., Mr. and Mrs.Gary Courtler and Timmy ofLansing, hlich., Joe Barber ofTrenton, New Jersey, Mr. andMrs. Clair Barber and family ofGrand Island and Mr. and Mrs.Sheldon VanHorn. Following dinnerall returned to the SheldonVan Horn home where a threetieredwedding cake and punchwas serked. Mrs. Moulton madeand decorated the cake. Mrs.Courtier and Miss Sandra Barberhad charge of the serving.The Barbeis received a call frointhew other son Darrell Barberand family of New Jersey. Twoother grandsons, Sgt. Charles 0.Moulton with the Army securityagency in Arlington, Vq. andBradley Barber of Grand Islandwere unable to be present. Theoccasion was also in honor ofMiss Sandra Barber, who hadgraduated from Evans1 le, Ind.,receiving her B.A. deBfee andbeing on the Dean's honor list.Juvenile Parade WinnersGrand prize to the Kenneth Inmanchildren who were dressedin authentic native Indian garb.First prize in miscellaneous divisionwent to Mark and MikeSintek dressed as a squaw andher papoose.' Second prize to Tom Sawyerand IIuck Finn - Ronda and RandyDwinell..Third prize was to BrendaAbel - "The. First Litterbug."In the bike division KarenLundstedt as Clara Barton wonfirst. In the wagons - lst, Dar-lavogeler as Calamity Jane;2nd, Stacy a ~ ,Darien d Cox asCharles Lindbergh and AmeliaEarharl; 3rd to. Gale Clementand Toni Shoemaker as Capt.'I aI'John Smith and Pochontas.Pet division - lst, Terry Bonsall.2nd, Diane Lundstedt. IChuck Biskeborn and CliffCraft won first in the tractordivision with their portrayal ofEdison. Mrs. Waqne Sheldon wasin charge of the parade led bythe North Loup-Scotia Band under the direction of Mrs. Jacquel~neCook.The children of Fred and GertrudeLundstedt honored theirparents 40th wedding anniversaryon Sunday with a fainily dinnerat the United Methodist Churchin North Loup. A bo quet of goldenrodand cattails wfs a duplicateof the wedding decorations 40Sears ago. Tammy Lewis an'dDiane Lundstedt, granddaughtersof the couple were at theguest book and Susie Lewis andKaren Lundstedt and Mrs. DeanRasmussen helped at the gifttable. There was also a tablecenterpiece of red gladiola andwhite pom poins. A three tieredcake was Served by Mrs. PaulBangert. , Mrs. Vic ~6ok pouredcoffee and Mrs. ~bhn Ross pouredpunch. Out of town questswere Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bangertand Mr. and Mrs. WalterLundstedt of Guide Rock, Mr. .August Larson and Wayne, theGlenn Larson family and Mrs.Jqhn Ross of Belleville, Kdn,Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundstedtand son of Ft. Collins, Colo., Mr.and Mrs. Dean Rasmussen andfamily pf Cotesfield, Mrs. MaryLu Lewis and family of LincolnRev. aod Mrs. Leonard Clark oiScotia, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arnoldand Mrs. Cecilia Kula anddaughter of Fullerton, Mr. andMrs. E. H. Goff of Loup City andMiss Nichole Keller of Scotia.Mr. and Mrs. Orville Portis,Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Klinglerand Steve of Auburn', Mrs. EdnaColeman and Mr. and Mrs. HillisColeman had supper together at. Due to ade & health Mrs. Bessie Cruikshank has moved to1610 Yew Ave., Olympia, Washington to live with her daughter& will sell her house & furniture at Public Auction at theHouse located 2 blocks south pf the Nptural, G,as ,PvmpingStat,~on on Highway, #70 ir) East Arcadia ,Ngbr., on,,I Monday',, , Eve.,' Sept. 14 /and6:15 P.M. Sharp6 Roob Allx Modern Bungalow HouseLEGAL BESCRIPTI N ts , 7, 39" 39., 49,. First ,&d$ .tof)~$$d~a Nebr. &I all 34eri pne. story ,y*qd Irqrne y~that cbed 'garage' s@rvice$ by al! cltd ubllties full bath,: Nat~~raral gas heat, surrounded by large yard wlth shade 6 ,fruit trees, and all in eqtra good, cl~an,pondition. t , .TERMS '-cP25Lib of bid selling price kve o?.Auction 'sale withimn~ediaje pave sipn, bqlans~ bq1an.q~ dye. in 39, days w'th title,)F; $411-1Vg4 be' all bpenpri~r,f+e,s ibr insdeclionwil! bCe 81idr\alk1969 biiortsxq to -'@I&"$&I. eieiungHoyqe$411 be' bpen ibr insdeclion 81 r\alkbiior toe\h&" ebeiung' 2'" sale: &'or mork mole information' 'Codtact Led Leb Wolf dAuttian~e$,dAuctionee$; ,B.rokeq. ., . , I '.t!s':: :* .rt 3 J A 8 v.,,, ,,, . q,,...........Friqiqg~e wjth a,cross top' ~ i k h ~ cabinet n utilit ca'bifreez'er.'net' &' fuli line' of iitchen6as Kitchen3dange.utensils, silverware & appli-Dinetfe Set, /: , ances. * ,I +Extra. nice, round, oak' table, Floor & table lamps.6 chaiis, & buffett with End & corner tables.mirror, all fo sell seba'rate. 9 x 12 & throw rugs.'Cherrywood corner table. 02, 4 piece bedroom sets.Plymouth Striking Clqck. Electric


- 4-(E " (Page 4) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thurrady, Septenibet 10, 1970 - ? . Cily shent the weekend in Arcadiavisiting relatives a n dfriends.4j Arcadia 'Ac+iviflesVisitors in the home of Mr. andMrs.end :;:vNull ":rfn! ver the weekts bMrs.' Walter.. and Douglas and Vicki Sue4Prickett and Shannon Null all ofCheyenne, Wyo, also id-, and*, 4 Moodys Celebrate 45th We AnniversaryThe 45th wedding annil ersarylpf, vr. and Mrs. Nerie Moody-\'as obser\ed Sunday with a fainilydiquer at the hoine of theirq?,n7s. Robert clavghter-i11-2a\y, Moody, and Mr. family.and,#~esent were Mrs. Werle Noody'spother, Mrs. Verna. Whit~lan;r . and Mrs. Flvlp Mo~dy\{ayne, Katliy and Karla; ~ r :a'nd 41rs. Robert bqoody, Ronnieand Teresa: Mr. and Mrs. Jerry*hloody and daugl~ler Jesel!~y;Ur. and Mrs. Lpnnie Maxson qndAmy Jo: and Mr.' an4 Mrs.Galph Porter, a11 of Ascadia. "Out-of-town uests on handwere &Mi. 3 ~ %r$ d Glen Roseberryand aaughter of Pa illion;%Mr. and Mrs. Flqld ~yaft andMacis, Loup City; DurwoodAnsley; Mr. and Mrs.omell Bray and family, Valley;Yr. and Mrs. Gerald Russel, Mr.and Mrs. Roy Ham~nd, Mr. andWrs. Dick Russel, and Mr. ~ n dWls. Richard Janzen, Aurora;. Mrs. Wilmer Sensf, Iiampton;r. and Mrs. Larry Ryssel and ..3"gmily, Nebraska City; arid Mr.and Mrs. Keith Russell, Lincoln.Qies at ScoftsbluffEli Joseph Snider, who livedfor sever~v yeaix in the Arcadiacommunity, died Sept. 1 in a'eottshluff hospital. Death cametwo dajs after h ~s 70th birthday.ceicgq his pa&lyT eQufatjon. ,'Iq 1917 he moced to Arcadia,wd,oq Noy.~19, 1919, he marriedIda wqrgaret White at Scotts-4uf9. T~BY libcd there until 2955whe'n they "moved to Hillsboro,N.D; In 1962 they nlovqd back toArcacIia where, they hced untll1169. when Mrs. Snider passedaway.Mr. Snider was a member ofKobert W. Furnas Lodge No 265,AF&ABI.vyryivors Lnclqde ane sop, JimSnlder ~f Blverton, Wyo.; threedaughters, Mrs. Jim (Sue) Carl;son 40 Mrs. Larry (Pat) Becker,both o f eattsbluff; qn$ Mrs. qot(Gwen7 Barlett gf Ogalla\a. oAlebrother, Arden Snider af dcottsblqff;three sisters, Mrs. 'l' r o y(Reba) Thompson of Nipoma,Calif., and Mrs. Art (Thelma)Hollingsworth Znd Mrs. I~epePaulback, both of Los qngeles,Calif. .Funeral services were held at2 p.m. E'riday in the Qenson-SolliffeFuneral Homg with R e v.Lasd Bliss and the Kobert W.Furnas Lodge No. 265, AF&Abl,officiating. Burial was at Scottsbluff.Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Holmes andqob and Mr. and Mrs. KennethDorsey attended the funeral fromArcadia.Rev. and Mrs. J. B. TweLerreturned home Aug. 31 after a10-day vacation spent in Denver,Colo., qnq at Deer Valley Raqchnew Buena Vista where theywere guests of their dgughtcr,Mrs, Dakid Hasselblad, and family.,"A ?raft I Enjoy" was the lessongiven. by Mrs. Carol Lutzwhan the . Arcadis Garden Clpbmet Wednesday at the home ofMrs. Frieda Marvel. M r s.Q~wey Bonsall was ,co-hostess.Ten members. were present.Plans were Xlscu'ssi5d for thefloat for the Fall Festival.Mr. and .@s. Gary Babcockand girls of Lincoln spent theweekend with Mr. a d Mrs. 'Chestei. @abcock. They as? visitedMr.' and Mrs. Arthur Plerson.Mr. and Mrs. JV. K, Nagel wentto Fremont Thursday to vlsitMrs. Gertrude Nagel; -They returnedhome Tuesday.Visitors over the weekend atthe Pat Shultz home were Pat'ssisters, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Priceof Ogallala, lla each 3n.d &nEd and fgiefi . ? 4 of C~uqcilBluffs, Mr. an! $5. John RushSr. of Sargent (she i~ Pqt'smother) another sister, hfr. andMrs. Bob P$rlfisonr sons of, Ansley. ''Weekend guests of M;. aqdMrs. Torn Thomsed mere Mr. andNrs. Jim S~repkle an$ . son ofWinner, S. D., Anda Sprenkle ofOngha, JJr, and Mrs. HowardSiahlecker and daughter, Gregory,S. D., and Mr. and -Mrs.fiaymon,j Farmner, qlair.LandonMr*.ofJohu&incolnWhitespentand,\be',Lulueeke ~ in d MI*. ~hiie's' &om $ereMr. qqd Mrs. .Walter whte ofGrant were, thelr wee,kend guesls.Mr. and Mrs. Everet White joinedthem f6'r dinner on Sunday.: Mr.' and Mrs. Dale Zentz andQuane of Grand Island and Deb- 'Collins, Colo., were Sunday supper guests of, the Bollis.Mr: .sod Mrs, Ernest smith ofGibb~'~ we+ weekend guests ofhis niother and 'slster Nina Sinjthand Lo13 Spencer.Thp Hp,~nqmakers ~xleiGs!onClub. met Tuesday afte(nod& at ,the home of Mrs. Arthur Piec-Son. The le~sgn yas on giffereri!receipts for gelatlne. Officers orthe coming ear were elkc f 6dwith the folliwifig results. MrsClaude Zenlz was re-electedpresident. Mrs. Chester Uabgo*,vice president and ,Mrs. ArthurP~erson, secretary and treayrer.i 11 Walerlown Monumenl Works, Inc. II1- 11 Eb,"?: 118-5404.. IMr. and Mrs. Claude ~entzspent Tuesday evening with Mr.and Mrs. Claus Franzen.Mr. and Mrs. Keith Luedtkeand Hichard ~eturried home froma two week vacation spent inGreat FaUs, Mont, visiting withtheir son and wife, Sgt. and Mrs.Kobert Luedtke. They saw nlatlypoints of interest and all wentcamping in the Watertow GlacierInternational Peace Park in Canada.The UTpmen's Societ of Ch istjanService of.t,he I,JniTcd aetbodistChu ch nlet Yriday aiternp.0~at the ckurch w~fh '40 membersp~esent. Th@ lesspo ''FaqilyC!uster" ,wag lead. by Mrs. O~inKlngstqn, assigked by Mrs. Kelthpookstra and , Mrs. Dqrrel . Mc-'Ki~ve. A c ~~ered disfi lunch wasseryedl @t the .close of the meet-'pg. . 'Vr. oqd Mra, CRarJes Weddeland Mrs. RB Luk were Sundayinser guq& 4f 9;. and Mrs.8. f hnstA. bnor1n.g CharlesWe&el Egr his bjrtlday which ig ,Thursdu.Mi. and Mrs. Harold Weddel 0.f"LeGpgtorl spent Sunday ni ht andYonday with Mr. ant Mrs..Charles Weddel.Keit Drake of Grand Islandspent t 73 e,wcekend with hl$ ~ 0ther,Mrs. Thelma Drake arid Mrs.Hachel Platt hd. #erman, Mr.:and Mrs. ' ~ertei-t Fowley andNorma Joy FQ ler sdent Sunday'at the Drake xonle. . (Mrs. Lottie qaller, Mr. and Mrs.Da bert Baller ansl Karl of Ansley,an d Nellie o2e of Uroken B.owspent Satur$y evening at thePaul Ze tz 'hoine ia <strong>Ord</strong>.% :guest of Iqr. and64. %heer"$rinst*ong was hersister, Helen' Williams of Cqzqd.Mr. anc! Nqs. John Welty ofFort Colllns, .CoJo. spent fro.111Satyrday uqtil Wednesday ig Ar-cadla. They were house guestso Greta Coons.Mr: aod Mrs. L.oa Widd$q. OXDapvllle, qrk: have beeq viaiti~gtheir rqlatlyek* the Qprqqysh ,the~asf wee&: :.I < 3 -Weekend visitors at the howe01 Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sell sverLab02 Day weekend were ReltonJohnson of Wilcox, Mr. qnd Mrs.Ralph Georg6 of North Platteavd. Mr. and ,#rs. Larry Sell andfamily of Sc~ttsbluff.Mr: and Mrs. Howard Gouldand Bxenda Cum~ngs of GrandIQand were deekend guests ofMr. and Mrs. Donald Gould.Dick' \VllsonP of Lexington wasan .overnight guest in the Cghia~oufcl ho~e Saturday plght.Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hall of <strong>Ord</strong>were Monday visitors at . thcWalter AnderSos haqe Mr. andMrs. Jim Anderson and 'baby ofQmaha were weekend guests of*Jim's grand arents, Nr. andMrs, Walter f4ndersonMr. and Mu. Roger 'Sh~ld andYqnny LqvaaS from Grand MaraiqMlnn, visited qt the Phili Minneborne Friday evening. T%ey are, friends of" Philip's from his Minptesotadays, 3.nd were on tb ir .way home from Denver, Cqfp:,John Minne of, Lincoln s$ent.th ,.weekend visiting hls brotherPh'lla.nA &rs. ROY BY&. . * .and sisters, Vqte, MinpeMr. and Yrs. ~lmk'r ~eitshu-Sen 04 M4sslon, Tex, spent fro 1Tqesdaj qntil Thursday sith 4,and Mrs. W, A. Leininger apdBill. Mr. and. Mrs. Bob Wilson-qnd fqmily of Lexington and hfr..grid Mrs. Wallace Coyrtney ofSioux City, Ia. were visitors inthe Leinihger home during tQeLabor Day weekend. Mr. agdMrs. John Welty of Fort Colli!~s,Colo. were gptyrd9y ecenipggysts id the Leioii~ger home. ': Vr. ~qd. M S. W. 4. Leininger.were happy fo reeelye a phopecall fr~mtheir daughter ail8 sqnin-lawthe Doug Zik unds fro111the phi~ppines, ~ut$ay. T h d Yare fine and !@d, a rG.cent rain of24 inches, having already receiyqd.70ieches nqt \ong before. T$\sbeing the r;t ny season there.Clarence Bodi of Burrell spentSunday w~th Mr. and Mrs. Ho\yardBolli.Mrs. W. J. Ramsey atten


.Patkuiew Villcidji Pfuins"Keep TenaBy Berenice CornellF r i d a y afternoon a granddaughterof Tena Swanson, Mr.and Mrs. Kenneth Schubel ofWyoming, spent a~hile withTena. Mrs. Schubel is a daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nelson andwere visiting her folks. Sundaye\ening Mr. and Mrs. MerrillSwanson of Mead catne andspent until Monday evening withliis mother. Monday afternoonMr: and Mrs. Laqrence Bringsof Ceptral C~ty visited Tepa andher other conlpany.'" ' hell, illustrated hb topic by astory of a dream that brought, 3.9N edhaln M~ndaj aftqrnoon.bae Dackhorn reqt Sundaymorning with My. and Mrs. Rus-sell Dockborn aqd P~irin to theWescott Church, neqrrf~omstock.The remainder of tbe day wasspent with Iiussells' other son,Glenn. They a11 attended the eyeningchurch seryice, after wlilchMrs. Dea~ er's birthday was ' obserledwith birthday cake anda fellowship time.tout the difference of a11 un-Christianand a Christiap, by showingthe thoughtfulness and I~ye aC ristian has for 0th rs apd thes.e f centeredness of 18. enChris-Ildtl.An oversight by the writer lastweek, nal ing the children qfMae Doc8 x orn y h were ~ at thcfamily picnic in Grand IslandAvg. 30; was the owitting sf theEldon Kokes family Q( Elyria.Sorry.A Stanley coffee was held inthe recreation room Saturday afternoqnhosted by Lillign Daydtwith, Wyn~na Marshalf as dealer.4 swe grwp of 18 were guests.Arlene Palder of Omaha calledSaturday on Berenice Corn41 .Arlene wag hwe with her pa -!Mr, and Mrs. Emanuel Petskaand Susan spent Saturday visiti~ g their sQn and brother, Rog-~d family in Narth Platte.tunday they dro!e t Curtlst~ spend the day with %r. andMrs. Hobert Be~son and familyand xr. and Mrs. Dqn Miles andbaby daughter.Mrs. Psn Fiala and family ofAinsworth were Saturday afternoonand supper guests of Mr.asd Mrs. Jim Vuda and children.Mr. and Mrs, Dave Stevens andf wily were evening' visitors intie Dud, home.Mrs. Amelia Philbrick of Mophose,Colo., Mrs. Julia Philpsick,and Warren Philbrick were din-dents, Mr. and MI.^, Jerry Ralewich.Brother Jerry Paider recentlywas released from the service ner guests Sunday of Mr. ahdLucy McCyne. and Tille Mas- and a family reunion was held NFS. Laverne Tatlow. Mrs. Arneseyatfended the fuperjl of Mrs. Suqday '.in tbe Uitjewich hame. lig Philbrick remame$ at tbe Tat-Dora LeMaster'on Aug. I 1 at the Arlene is a friend and teaching low country hoine to spend thiscon>panion of Geralqn Corriell week. Saturday evening, Mr. andLynda Porter and Mildred United Methodist Church.Mrs. Dale Philbrick were visitorsAnderson called op Mrs. DessieMrs. Ivan Anderson and Zelda at Omaha.of tbe Tatlows. ,,-A-and Mrk Marialn bq t~ok Mrs. F o s s ie Clark, Elsie,I I Berenice Monday evening. Cornell They to ~qr&$ll visitedbup Rathbun, 61ary Cetak, JuanitaRev, a d Mrs. Gary Gonner&nMrs. Stella Kerr. Berende stayedChristian, and Fva Roberts~nand l3eeIy of Clear Lakes, la,until Thursday with Stella andhad Sunday breakfast at the ElksI Dr. G. 1. Tucker' 1 r111h ----.here guests of his uncle, JohnMarguerite West had Sunday Gonpernian, over the neekend.ChiropractorIwent Tuesday-and Wednesday toNprth Goup's 69th Popcorn Days dinner with the Eric Eriksonqelebrat~on. Se~eral others frpm family. Sunday afternoon Mr. Mrs. W111 Penas and daughter,Broken BowParkview attended the Popc~rn and Mrs. Charles Ellersick and hfrs. Wencil Bruha of Grand Islanwere among those who at-Office Hours celebration at sometime diring Mr. and Mrs. Fdward Foraly ofthe three days:Cqwstock visited with Marguerite ten 9 ed the golden wedding anni-WednesdayThe Sept. 3 church service was in her home.\ersary Sunday aftelnoon honor-9:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. conducted by Rev. Ken&tb Bun- Russell Dockborn had su per ing Mr. a ~ Mrs. d Louis Penas.nell of the First United Pres y- with his mother, Mae ~ockgorn -- t420 South 10th Avenue terian Church. Mrs. Carol kl- Friday.Tbe Bru a childre11 of Scotiq-Isoti was the pianist. s he topic The ~yrifer, and others at Yargaret, ]anice. Chuck and Ca-Lexington Ph. 324-5527 Mr. Bunnell used "Cbristign Parkview, I'm sure, enjoyed the rol-stayed with their grandpar.Phone 872-2051Helpfulness"; Scripture - I Cor- amateur program gi~en on T.V. ents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Pends,inthians, Chaptes 13. Mr. Bun- Sunday afternoon from the Ne- during the weekend rr\.hjle their4 - . - -11 )I)r r 1braska Stat: Faly,, apd the, "yelqdywpm s" singers winnipg,flrst place. We are proud of themGoing to College this ~afi?and hope to get them to cometo Parkview &ometime. Theywere also heard on Se~t. 1 atNorth Lou Popcorn 6ays.Let the <strong>Ord</strong> Quiz know about it, so that your names maybe included in back-to-col!ege new:! stories. Simp1 fillout the form below and bring or moil it to the Or4 &ir.News Desk, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.- -,,.', , '* f'Where Located ......,.......................Mr. and Krs. Art Rux took inquite a lot of the Popcorn Daysat North Lpup.Emma Zabloudil had her son,Dennis, hoine with her from Sat/urday until Monday when he re-turned t~ Hastin i,Mr. and Mrs. teorge Zabloudilof Ericson visited Sunday eveningat Emma Zabloudil's.Mr, and Mrs. Jerry Watsoncalled Saturday evening atJuanita Christian's. Juanita hada telephone call froni her sister,Mrs. Alice Pale of Coalingo, Calif.Sunday.Mary Jorgensen spent the daySunday in he'r daughter, Norma!* ".?, . Knapp's home. Norma's son and........-..... : i .......- wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ptacnlk111Date of.Dspkture $opnie, , p@ and Janet Zul-, .I i. , *Year in School .........:.........................i........y~.~! ?-.,;:+,,,rrf-Ti+., ..'. . +qi;.: a.: 4 ..\ " .\, , ":.....................~ajoi,>bhj~t~'~&died,N ! , ,', , {I,, ,. ,:.......,,A, I ; , -f.T......... ........,;I1 8: ;. . .a:v\,,,, ,, c I . , , , ',: T , , , ,r " f -,( 8'Gxtri)-~l~rlc~lai,~ctivi~ies, ,. -1 !. I I ./*; 0 1 r > 1, ! * 64,I 8 'I , ( t '- , ' ,I , .=r',-'- .-.---f,',*.: . : - :.I "6 ;, sftoIIamptonbe with.were there for Marybbsv+$er[r\th Miry .?bigensen1 ,* . ajvh le"~n By. Ttle girls plajed,:....the Or '11lgf1 S~hodl'bBnd at'! fLbkr4rcgc& Falt Fest,iVa\. Two, A , : < I \., I,., 2. \' Lo! p&, ,


~i~'Vflllg? MewITwo Families welcome New Grandchildreneran's Ke. Elma Club.' Roelling at the Vet- Mrs. Lillie Smith of Lo s QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday, September 10, 1970 .(Page 7)


(Page 8) QblZ, Drd, Ncbr., Tlwraday, Scytc~llbcr 10, 1970,? /-'ek1.3 01 i (I CMr. and I&,.J: A. f;cnd Bndchlldre~l Patsy and Terry arribedMonday of last ueek fronl Hamil.ton, Mont, to \isit the Leonard, Manchesters and to attend thePO corn Dajs celebration. TheyICR last Wednesday afterno02for Colorado Springs, Colo , to. sec a son who attends the Air-Force Academy there. Mrs. Lind-the for~ner Lucllle Elsele-grey u'p in the North Loup colimunlty.Holiday FunMr. and Mrs. John Gregory,Patty Markoski and Frances Markoskienjoyed last weekend andthe Labor Day \,hoIiday in Lincolnas guests of Mr. 'and Mrs.Toll? Brick~ler and Jeanette.They C..:r also attended the St a t e~eaj Edale transfers* DEEDS :Charlie S. Kriewald & Lena toEdward Vodehnal, Lot 3, Blk. 45Original townsite of <strong>Ord</strong>, Stamps$28 Carolene 05, $25,500. F. Cabey & BarthleyJ, to Evelyn Leach or Polly Annpalby, N4i of Lots 11, 12 & 13,Arcadia,In Stamps Blk. $1.10, 2 Original $700.r dl1 ,. Meeting at YoungsBack Mr. In and <strong>Ord</strong> Mrs. Irv Timrncrn~all Mr. and Mrs. Carl Young werehosts to ~nembers of the Koyalare now libing in the SwanekKensinglolland Mrs. Ben Club Greenland,guests, Sunday Mr.house in nest <strong>Ord</strong>. Tirnmerlnall(Specialist 6) was released fro111 elenlng at their home. Cardsthe Army at Fort Benning, Ga, uere played t three tables withon Aug. 19 after serkine, four prizes oing 90 Warner Yergin,years--two >ears of that time in Mr. and Mrs. Jens Nielsen, andVietnam. Whlle in the serbiceMrs. Elmer Ver in. Mrs. YoungTimlnerlnan receiied three PurandMrs. ~drarf Penas were se-,ple Heart medals and the Bronzelected to sene on the courtesyCross awarded for action be~ondcommittee.Ithe call of duty. The son of Mr.and Mrs. Robert Timmerman of IIrural <strong>Ord</strong>, Irv is married to the/former Linda Fisher of Buruell./Dr. D. L. HeerenLBed;gtz b r lie 3u/ure.RAll kidds of Sprinkler repairsCotvpIete Line ofIrrigationPumps1 ord , 728-5983Chiropractor 'Grand Island, Nebr.81 1 West 4th St.Scheideler Contracting Phorn 384-218) ,I*PRODUCTION" IS OUR - FIRST NAME' IPCA Loans forMany Purposes:* Feed, fuel endfertilirer~lvesfockEqulprneni wmachineryBuilding andeupplleeTo rellnanw*wPCA Loans ,toIFinance Livestock 'You get more than just a livestockloan when you do business "withPCAl You also-get,helpful adviceand counsel in planning your operation.PCA's are owned by the peoplewho use their services, so PCALoans are planned for stockmen. 1 ~ -terested? Stop In, let',s talk about it-4I ~iducti&-q&dit Arr'n. ._)<strong>Ord</strong> Field Office, 8ernard Sfaab. Field Manager, <strong>Ord</strong> . s C ,IUWF FACTORYAUTHORIZEDsaving M:F Quick-Attach. -and obtionalIFront-Beater.'On-the-go control oi cylinderspeed, concave setting, variablespeed ground drive.. . unloads on-thego.Big 37" x 22" cylinder ... 6672 sa.in. separating area and 4005 sq, jncleaning area. 0 tional hydrostat~ctransmission and 811-comfort cab.SAVEEVENMORE WITHBONUS.TRADE-IN, >I TRADE IN AND SAVE ON THESE BONUS BUYS!IIMF 510 COMBINETop of the line, top value for your money.Many exclusive MF features.MF 300 COMBINEBest buy in medium-size pull.type, IncludesMF Quick.Attach features. 'I1967 410 Massey Ferguson 45 John Deere4 1966 410 Massey Fetgusotl 92 Massey Harrjs1965 410 Massey Fe~gusocl . 1968 Gebl Chopper101 IHC Co~nbi~ie with 2 row and60 Massev Harris pickupAll have co111 headsWaivcr of l~lfe~est unlilMarch 1 1971IBoiIesen Seed Co.1 <strong>Ord</strong>. Nebr. , Phone 728-3283 1


, .. . .:,. b'IIn 2 Sectionst when the increasesranged u~ to 22. mills.year had as much trouble gettingunlrackcd as some of th. #did., The willning ballot wa. ill by Chuck Fryzek, anded 18 correct se\ection25 games. That'q a relattotal to will with.COMPARATIVE LEVIESSchool Starts At 8:50, The <strong>Ord</strong> schools b 0 . $f 3,800 $10,500 $12,300 $12,400 5 $68,300 1,415 81.3 ' 'Miscellaneous Subdivisions.... , $13,200 ..............0 556 29.0 13u'well Rural FireDistrict #S .08 .74paid convcntio~~ for Valley County Soil WaterConservation Dis-. tnct ..................-. -10 .08hed, hospitalization, Educational Sf rvice Unit#lo, ........................ - .89


(Pfge 2) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday; September 17, 1970 Varied Events SlatedBY Mo+kodis+ WcrrroenSelenteen rnelnbels of theSenice \Vomen s of Society the CniiedBarbara Rahm Marries Delysle ~ursc!Ch~lstldn In church ceremony a! Pinedale. Wyfof ~ ~ C ~ ~ L O ~ ~ ~ ~Church (ten rnc~~~bvrs froin C~cle No~v at home jsihe Mira Val- muis and iaij iea\es,I and 7 frotn Cilcle 11) dttended ley conlinuqlty are DeLysle Bur- Jerry Wlelliken of Da recent meeting of the group. son and his bride, the forll1t.r ohto, mas best man; ar IMrs. Duns Eckhdrdt led the Batb~rd Bahm of Pinedale, LVbo. wllsofi of Olndhd a& Jimregular business ineellng held In , The couple exclkdrged n~arri of Denver, Colo , weretht. church hsernenf. She Prf- age toiis Sept. 5 at $f. Andiews- men. Deiiey Boulsb) ansealed tendtibe plans for a ruin- in-the Pines, Pin dde, \like.. One Herbert, both of Plnedalemage sale rb6dufcd 'n inid Otto- hu~died reIatii8s and friends the guests.ber aiid announced lbvt the Ofd ~ilnpssed t h 2 ~ pp. double ring ro'ulloiving a receptitW.S.C.S. has been invlled to be ceremony ~pleln~lzed by Rev. Qookies Inn, the newlywsguests Oct. 1 at of 2 the p.m. Sale111 W.S.C.S. on the Calvin solorst, ~lliot.' John . IIansen was 0~1 tbqir wedding trip. ~~~lf : .?'ling the bride Gate a whit!Mrs. Vivian Rombal shqacd Parerits of the couple are Mr. suit with a corsage oflinen calendars, carry-all bags, and Mrs. Geor e Kahm of Pine- roses. , + Iand ironing board cokels to be dale, Vyo.. anf Mr. and Mrs. Alsol4as a possible project of theMrs. Bu;sonfred Burson of <strong>Ord</strong>. ' graduate of Pinedale Highorgani4ation. Rev. C1areller The biide was giben in glarri- and Denier Terhllical (CalWbel1the afternoo;l~neeting wlth a prayer. age by her father. For her eed- . TLle groom; an Qrd Ifigh----- ding she wore a falllily heirloom ate, is's recnE gr3duate- an 1890 creation of lace styled ver Au$omotlve lDlesel CO?with long pointed sleeces, a high -, I,Oa//3~~0au/?/QU.,~ie~klineand fiue net itit4 inset, low ruffled a poialed accents front At l,udir?gtops'aL. ate-leigth train. Her veil was a and Mrs. L e 0 n a d. LU,-J,-and back waibtiine, and a moder- Dinner gueits SepE g ,nal and Gary wentSaturday morning, where theyfine silk art piece. She calried Bere ~ f Ludingto~*~sbjoined by >c~~o\Y 'vodehllalroses cowplimented by and family, the Frank Do3lerxes and 3 shvaer pf autumnand Betty AlcCamley in attend-Grand Island, and a Eisterante at the Nebraskd-Wake Forrainbowribbon.C. Evans of Portlaud, Oreest football. game. Later they Jeannie Stasio, dressed in Eva& remained for asupper guests of M~. and orange '~hadlon over faffeta, and visit.IMrs. Richard Prien. Gary re- Br~dley $laab* <strong>Ord</strong>3 0, Sunday the Lu$ilnlaided in Lincoln fo begin ~ 1 ~ sed - as flouer girl and ring bearer. acain had guests for dinnes .&Ton$iy as a junior at ti12 Lillette Staab of <strong>Ord</strong>? wearillg this time two other sistcUnl~erslty of Nebraska. green shadloa. o\er taffeta, ias Mrs. tydington and theiri the train carrier. ... bands. They were' Mr. and~ < Vodehl~al r ~ reluyned holllc Connie Quinlwan of Pinedale, ' Archie Pepper ofThul;sd~y after worlung during WYO., was matron of honor. Lydid S.9.. and Mr. and Mrs."e$;the $unllner lllol~ths fighting for- hIcAlister and Linda McAlister, Wltt of Burke S.D. Mrs.est fires in Idaho. Ile accolnpdni: also of P!nedale, \+.ere brides- returned home with them.ed qichald E'lo~ers of N o r t h nlc\idc;, Their dresses in shades of' 1 ~: and ~ 3 Bill . ~ l ~ ~Plakte and Dick Jal:dd of <strong>Ord</strong>, belge9* >ellow, and green shadlon Dixie were additional d i rwho ,had gpent seberal daqs vis- o\.er while crepe were of an A- guests of the' Ludingtons.iting him. During thcir .\isit the line, empire-waist desi n with uoyd Owens of Lexingtonthred enjojed a fishing trip to long sl~eies and open g0.t. Mrs. Paul Owells of ArqrdiaWate ton, Canada.fThe attendants carried spider afternoon callers.l1Nick and Malena ... on their weddine dayPoshNupiiai ReceptionHonors Nick Aquino and BrideNewlyweds Mr. and Mrs. NicholasAquino greeted friends,Sundayat a reception glven by Mr.and Mrs. Allen Dunbar.For the occasion Mrs. Aquino,the former Maria Magdalena Triguis,wore her wedding dress -g mini press-full length coat en-They will be at honle in Kearneywhere both are college students.Local Trio Will Play'semble of white rekersed bridal Af Polka Gathering 'satin. A large white picture hatcompleted her attire.Coral and white were the colorsused in decorations at theElks Club.The wedding cake, frostedwhite and accented with coralroses and green leaves, was cutand seried by Mrs. Eugene Cookof Lincoln. Linda Dunbar of Tlldenpoured coffee, and Lee&lor& of Chicago, Ill., s e r v e dbungh. Me. Clayton Kooiker ofCherokee,- Ia , registered theguests. JoAnne Duqbar and JaoFemidgton cared for the gifts.Nick and MaIena were nlarriedAug. 22 in Conception, Paraguay.LIWe wish to express oursincere thanks for the prayers,love and kindness shownus during our bereavement;for the flowers, memorials,cards, food and to all thathelped in any way God blessYOU all.The Anton Nelson FamilyIWhat might be termed a Nebraska-stylerock festival will beheld this aeekend iq Omaha. Butinstead of acid and ills, those inattendance will be &opping suchthings as kolaches and dillpickles; and instead of rock music,there'll be polka tunes.The event is the 1970 NebraskaPolka Days, and among the 51bands scheduled,to a pear is t 2:Jolly Czech Trio of <strong>Ord</strong>. T elocal band, as well as 50 other


(Page 4) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday, September 17, 1970-4


-< 9f : and overnight. Saturday Mr, and111s. R~san mere dinner guestsn I of friends, Mr. and Mrs. Noble~and.,f.ic& facts + ' Blakeinan Other guests presentue~e A dreq Penas and 31r andMlra Valley Memo .I 3 ' Ihlls Fenton and iamly ofYoung People Resume


. .Ihalf, then spent th,e rest of thenight oii the sideline. Even so,he still was <strong>Ord</strong>'s leading ballcarrier- with 37 yards On 12 totes.In the line Ed Kouralski, atransfer frorl~ Loup City, w a Scredited with a fine perfornlancedespite a shoulder injury. Whenstarling center Dean Vancuracpuldn't .cope with the Gothenburgnliddle guard, Kou~alskiwas called on. He rallied theclub to its only offensive touch-'down and 'turned in a sparklinggame on defense, includinga*moyg his credits the blocking ofGothenburg's first two exlrapointattempts. . !While Vancura's b oc,ki~gdisappointihg, his dcicnsive a:;was not,,' Called pn l.0 hanclle alineback~l~g asslgnmcnt ~hcnWells was hurt, he responded inexcellent fashionCoach Squier ,said his only disappointmentulth the <strong>Ord</strong> de-A Slight Handicap., ' 4 ILeon Brechbill could be excused for not catchin this 'pass during, Friday night's football game won by ~othenturg, 25-14.TUESDAY NIGHT MENMONDAY NIGHT MENTeam W L GI3 Team W L - GB -.-<strong>Ord</strong> Hot\ l,I K Of C :..- 7 1Furtak's Cctak Conslruction TV 2 . 21 1 - Cetak's Elyria Farm Market Supply .- 5 - 3. 3 2-1 's3Joh~lson MotorsK of C ...........North LOUP Insur. .. 0 0 1 Coca-Cola ................ 3 ' 5 :N. L. Valiey Hank . 1 3 2 Duane's, Barber Shop 6 5State Bank of Scotia 1 3 2 Frank's Standard 2 . ' 6 . 5 .1Iigll Team Series - Cetak Con- Hi h Team Series - Els;ia Fa~mst~uction 2,930; Johl~son Moto~s Su 4y, 2,982; Kni his of Colun~bus.2,919; 0:d Boel, 2,812. z,9& Cetak's ~a~fet, 2,830. %lflcll Team dame - Ce!ak Con- &gh Team G me ~blia Farmstluclion 1,102; Nollh Loup Iny- Supply 1046- Zni bf Colu~nbu$ance. 1068. Jehtlsnrl RIoto~s 906 1025: kni'eht; of 8olurnbus. . 1.023. .High '~i~dibidual Series - :U Cetak, -1i1&b ~ndiridual Serles - Dick582; Ron Goodscll, 549; George IIruca, Goodse:l, 610; Nee1 Adams, 552; Bob, 535. Sevenker. 520.1I1gl1 Indlxtdual Gamc - Gear-e H~gh Indi\ dual Gamc - Dlck Good.H~uza, 252, A1 Cetak, 233, Ken Clem sell, 234, Nee1 Adams, 234, Ru lvlfcnt, 213 Kokcs, 201.kept the middle cffecti~cly clogged.But thc Swedes resorted toskvceps of the tuo ends and inadebig yardage there. '"They were ri~nning an optionplay," Coach Squier explained,"and we \+ercn't playing it Likewe should. \Ye made some ad-On their fourth-down play, the over Mullen. justnients in the second quarter,Bulldogs a peared to be st0 ped Like the Osceola contest, North 2nd they didn't gain much withshort of tie necessary yardage, hup-Scotia hill have to travel it after that."but North Loup-Scotla was pen- for this game too. It will be play- But the Swedes did gain lateralized for tackli.ng by the face ed. tomorrow night (Friday) at ctith screen passes, and failuremdsk. That gave Osceola a first Merna. to recognize thein as they dedownat the Wildcat six. In three veloped was what the Chautlays the Bulldogs could get only North Loup-Scotia ...... 0 0 0 0- 0to the three, but on fourth downOsceola . . o 6 6 0-12coach was cbncerned about.'TWO EXACTAS DAILY!Gothenbvrg ................ 6 6 013-25. -'Dietz 12 run (kick blocked).. . G Williams 2 rud (kick blockcdr.0 - Brechb~ll 9 pass from Markley.' are generally the best infsrn~ed rnen in +ownabout financial rnahoi-s. TheyGive10 through September26 at Fimt RushingMadiron Downs, Madison,THE YARDSTICK young, a quarterback on of- ari Centz, who had been hopingArc Clwv fcllse and halfback on. -defense, to lead his veteran squad to an-Downs 102 s LO; p~~~~~~ a pair of IIUS~LCS passes other outstanding recoid.63 14 qut of the air in the third quar- Bentz' job isn't ex~ected to getfishing Passes Cornp-A Yarday t 7-21 3-8 ter and returned them for touch- any easier this \VCC~ as his clubOwn Passes Intercepted .. 3-. I dwns In the process he turned r&ec6.0neof the real powers onpenalties - 8-65 9-65 tt)e game around, and the Husk- 1 s 1970 schedule - Clarks. he'Nebraska, Post fime 3 Fumbles Lost ..P.M., Saturday 2;30, NoPunts - 5-34.0. 6-35.0 ies were neLer able to reverse game will bc played Friday iligllt,acing Sunday or Monday.It was Dave You~~'s throw"'" it.$h":Iy yu$!dn:$dlgpfg;rSpOi,": q‘$?;f$pciIea defense it;ConferenceSpecial bus leaves Omahaworried about before thew Frl- 6-0, Boments later his see o n dday night game with Callaway. last \veek a 20-12 lri-.swipe made the score 12-6, and ull,ph over silver creek, ~~~eIt30 A.M. Tu~?$. through But the contest was Overit mounted to 20-6 in the fourthit was that had quarter when Steve *restel tal- total sChultz, offellse rho ++d lncludlng 1!5 yards an of, 80-that the Arcadia Huskie! terce tioa, Arcadia ?as leading, ~ ~ l d ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ d ,F., Sat. lld0A.M. GO!!!!! proven disastrous for them. lied on an 18-yard run. yard punt return, led the BlueAlthough never able to rnou~lt ~olllbers., a sustained offense, Arcadia wasriding a good defense toward an Arcadia .....-............ 6 0 0 0- 6Nebraska',thanks'Football' ,r. 1 .Callaway ...................flrst-gallle victory r.:.: 0 0 12 8-20Adisaster struck. ~h~ lIuskies had- Ericson 1 run (run failed].gotten or1 the scoreboard early- (,~l,s~~'~$il~,,interic~tion'return(conver.held a to G,o, their margin defense-and through had the sion , failed).best offensive thrusts Young and c - Brestel 18 run (Brestel run).,his teaill~llates could muster. But --they found no way to cope withthe Bear quarterback's defensive Junior High' Grid*r$shockers.A recovered fumble at the'cal; TO Open Albionlaway 25yard line set up Arca- Coach Larry Goodellouoh willFilms Every Monday Night dia's Quarterback first - quarter Jon Ericsoll touchdo\vn. scored take his Jullior footballteam to Albioll this afteritfroin one yard out.The score relllained at 6.0 unno011 (Thursday) for the club'stil Young made the first hisseaion opener. Gaine tiille is 6Prese-nted by One of the Nebraskait 35 P.lll., ~ interccptiol~s and returnedyards lo tie the coullt at 6.6. The first four games for thecoaching Sh;ff Thelj, when Arcadia looked like Chicks will be, 0'11 the road thl, 6 it might be moving to break the year. They'll meet Grand ~slandtie, the Bear defensl\-e ace pluck- Northwest 011 Sept. 29, &lrW'el!0ilY~8:!5 . . P.M. % .., . , . cd off his secoild aerial and re- Oct. 6, and St. Paul on 051. \3. ,turned it 70 yards. Their only home games will e.'i ,.Oct. 20 against Broken Bow andORD VETERAN§ CLUB BASEMENT :Brestel's fourth-quarter touch- Oct. 27 against Celltral City. ,do\f,n then sealed the verdict. - . . ,Callaci~ay's victory was a distinct. surprise, since the Bears The nighthawk's diet con&ils;:.Season Pass.finished the 1963 campaign with of insects, including everythinga 3-4-1 record compared to Ar- froin the largest moths and dra.*' . . -~dvlt$ , $11.00~' Children $5.50cadia's 7-2. It also spoiled the gonflies to the tiniest gnats and* '. . . . ,'& . debut of new Huskie-coach Rich- niosquitoes.-.' +Salutes The h0f ball,. ,%;fromadvlee toFfolks every day. Wheq you necdI this kind of assistance; you don't have to goLtown, to get the' right information. We' ,at the ~i;;t National $ank arc hereto hclpyou in all matters concerning


!II , Committee IJFeels Lincoln Best 'Site For State Fairgrounds<strong>Ord</strong> <strong>Township</strong> <strong>Library</strong> 2 72 7City Box,Section .<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr. 68862Duster's a five-passenger car: ltseats five.more power than other small cars' smalle~And we built Duster to b$America's "small-enough-, ' , 'You have over 50but-big-enough" car. '.to choose from when you;And it still is.Small car lovers of America, your day' hasRoom. More of it .fficient farm and. . . ., < , ,., - '< . . ,I. , . . . . . , . . ., . ,,.,. . .'I. .' 8. - . - ..- . . . ..-^ , . . _ _ . .-. . . -..t6m*k-9,


(Page,2) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thur'sday, September 17, 1970 ,: : ,. :>:.~~rnitkin~ ~iiterent .. . * T< '.1 ' . Serving fhe'ioup Valley 88 Years 1Association - Founded I886Every government official or boardhandling public mqneys should publishat regular ~ntervals an accountingshqwing where and howeach dollar IS spent. The <strong>Ord</strong> Quizholds this to be a fundamental principleQf Pemocrat~c Government.forBEST USE ' Please Phone News Items to 728-3262OF PHOTOGRAPHYforBEST SPORTSFEATURE COLUMNiKerry &Carol Leggett - PublishersGerald Green -- EditorLynn Griffith - AdvertisingManagerMIMIthNORASKAASSOCIATIONAre We Out of Line?IPrinted on Page 1 in this issue of the Q& are statistics showiogadniinistrative salaries and enroll~lients for schools in the Central10 Conference.The chart shows the salaries of superintendents, assistantsuperintendents, high scliool principals, assist7nt principals, juniorhigh principals, and elementary principals. It also shows thetolal nuniber of administrators at each school, the total amountof money spent for adnlinistrative salaries, the enrollment duringthe 1969-70 school year, and the number of teachers emplo~edduring that term.What the chart does not show is the average amount of n&ne)rspent per child for adnlinistration at each of the schools. Thosefigures are as follows (the figures are not exactly accurpte due tothe fact that 1970-71 enrollment figures were not available and1969-70 figures had to be used): David City, $77.25; <strong>Ord</strong>, $65.51;,Central City, $58.31; Albion, $58.0$; St. Paul, $54.00; Crete,$51.15; Aurora, $48.82; Seward, $18.25; Schuyler, $45.17; andYork, $43.87.Normally, one would expect this figure to increase as enrollnlentOf the school decreases. This is due to the fact that a schoolmust have a superintendent (and a principal) regardless of whetherits enroll~ilent is 500 or 800. And one superintendent servi~lg800 children is obviously a better b~rgain than one serving 500unless there is a drastic difference in salaries.This reasoning is ekident in the figures shown above. DavidCity, fo~ifistance, is thi: snlallest school in the Central 10 Confere~ce and has the hi hest per-pupil administrative costs. York,on t k- e other hand, is t f~ e largest school and has the snlallest perpupilcosts although the salaries of individual administrato~s arehigher in most instances than those at other schools,But there are sonle noticeable variations frofil this expected ,pattern. One involves Scbuyler, which has thsyiftp !owe!) elfroll- ,ment but the second cheapest per-pupil administratwe costs. Eitherthe schools in that comnlunity are not being administeredvery well or else the pcoyle are getting a real bargain.Another variation from the nor111 is <strong>Ord</strong>. This school system& the fourth snlallest i~ size; yet it has a per-pupil cost secondonly to David City's.Further exanlinatioll of the table on Page 1 reveals the probablecauses for this.First, the superintendent's salary here compares favorablywith the ay of superintende~~ts' at the larg~f schools, where severalhun ct' red more students are e~lrolled and the responsibilitiesare greaty. But more importantly, <strong>Ord</strong> is the only school anlollgthe five sn~aller ones to have four adnliilistrators rather than three.What this all boils down to is that the local populace seemsto be paling a higher price for adnli~listration of its schools thanthe people of other communities, and a higher price than onewould expect after comparison with othrtes brushed a mallbox,if you &ere to compare TV him-was founded abou!Ogek?%plunged qff the road, and hit awatching with reading. There's of the 13th Centut-g! Who said, tree head-ona difference, I be\ie\e, in allow- "lIislo1y repeats ~tself?"A free cooking school sho\+ingin your mind to be "uaed" by To get back to reading may methods of gas cooklng andT$ and "using" your mind read- be a partial ansuer to our mod- paration of food was to be ;:ledJ-'I gmained active in the business untilhis death in 1936. Otto Rettennlalerwas the current owner.Mr, and Mrs. John Ilaskell anriouncedthe marriage of theirdaughter Maxine to Hal Pierce.The marriage had occurred one>ear earlier - on Sept. 16, 1939.Miss Haskell had been studyingto be a registered nurse at thetime of her marriage and wouldnot hale been ajlowed to ~0111:plete her education had schoolofficials learned of the weddingwhen it took place.Manager M. Bieinond of the<strong>Ord</strong> Theater set a real recordmllen he booked MGM's grea:feature picture, "Boom Town.The picture, uhich starred ClarkGable, Spencer Tracy, ClaudetteColbert and IIedy Lamarr, hadopened on Broadway just a fewdays before and had not yet beeqshown in most of the larger citiesin the cquntry.It was announced that beginningOct. 16 all male citizensbetween the ages of 21 and 35uould ha\e to ap ear at localregistration places till to be deslgnated)and register for compulsorymilltary training. Thiswas a requirelnent the nation'qfirst peace-tinledraft bill, signedthree dajs earlier b PresidentFranklin Rooseielt afier its passageby Congress.40 Years Agoing.ern problems. As authoi. Ken- at the <strong>Ord</strong> Theater. Bob 13am- hfr. and Mrs. H. P. IlansenAt the outset of this colullln neth-Clark stales> at bolh the be: brick \[,as to be the featured Uni- celebrated their 40th wedd~ng an-I had intended to tell you a little ginning alld,eqd. $f .bs 'book: "bersal gas range cpoking spe- niiersary with the help of theirabout the latest book I have 1s the lack of conf~dence, nlor 4 cialist.chlldren uho all came home tocompleted. Few of you will e\er than anjthillg else, that k~lls 6 William Goff, commander ofenjoy a large family dinner toreadit, and ollly a few pIobably civllisation. We can destroy our.gether.<strong>Ord</strong> Post 7029, was elected seniorknow +lt is .a book. An ETV se- selkes by c~nicislll and disillu-The funeral of W. H. Carsonlice-Commander of District 12,ries is being devoted to the sion, just as effectively as bywas held in the Methodist Churchbook's origin-and is to be car- bombs.".V?te@ns of Foreign Wars, at a at <strong>Ord</strong> uith Rev. J. A. Moorman1rled as an 1l.week serfes some- Where do you gain self-co~,dutrlct conLention held in Grand in charge.time this fall. Joslyn Memorial fidence? "Gout thtself." i- Islapd.Wllbert Caliin, formerly of Nel- Glen Jamieson, 15-year-old son,, *>son, joined the staff of the local of Mr, and Mrs. Homer JamiesonsEA office as offlce manager and of rural Arcadia, was the onlyB ccountarlt. He replaced L. E. Valley County boy to take hisllick, who was called to the wares to the Nebraska State FairNaval Reserte. The local REAin Lincoln. His exhibit was aoffice staff also included Robert beautiful calf - a cross betweenMoody, paqroll and material the Hereford and Durham strainsclerk; Mary Ann Roe, cashier- - whlch had uon a first at theand Betty Crby, posting clerk.Valley County Fair.Sj1 Papiernik uds in charge of Clara Sternecker was assistingrights-of-uay, and William 1101-in the office of M. D. Bell, superland\$as the manager.intendent of the <strong>Ord</strong> Schooldire ,they,,< Tied., . .'. , ~ogether! -, ,, INow about this won~e~~'s liberation movement, what about it?Just how sound is this trend?, IHow ma~iy woruen wish to be hberated? 1'111 not sure thatIall of them do.There are women $ho8love to retire into the background,to please their man, to cook, and who can enjoy every minute ofit ... woruen who can raise a brood of'children and feel they'vebcen entirely blessed. Would it depend on just h ~ well adjustedyou were, Womap? , 'I knuw the education of little girlslis de6cieiit. l'ue loni kcognizedthat it isn't fair to bear down 011 practical things for littleboys, yet to perniit the girls to sew and weep aild cudgle baby'dolls uhile you, Man, never teach her.to, read .a statement fromthe bank, nor to interpret an insurarice policy, nor to read a lease,nor talk atbout taxes. Save that for nian talk. Oh yeah? ..S o yod want her ty b,itu@id? f don't kn w. All at once Sheis widowed or divorced, and she's thro~vn on 1 er own.' Such factorsthen must be understood by "The Little Won~an." (That's aA .dumb title! )1'111 for giving wonlet, an equal edycatip?. With e4ual,opportunitiesto work, to earn, to study, to a~hieve. .I. 1f she does her work equally well, pay her equally and treather as well when it corned 'p~omotidn time. If that's what . sheIry31;rts. 5 ,i IDut if she wants, let her retire tranquilly to a leasant cottagein the backwatprs of lif? and let her husband 'f o the familypggressing. Let him 40 Q U ~ a11d fight - while she merely fi htsthe washi~lg, the bread dou h, the sick bab , the unhousebrocl 1t enup, the weeds in the gar en, or the mar eting. (Marketing-a{uge problelll for -the. illoJsr~l bo_r?s~wife. It's pretty tough to tell, jlpw niany ounces-of cereal are ifi.thisiriGigl6 of a boxcoiiiparedto aaotber box of strangely different height.) - ,DO you think this $illy skirt-length .argument may be tiedto thi~ sill liberation~f6rlh~o111e11 battle which is going so radicallynv.grboar d at the mqment?:- 1 woqder. Let's watch, -- -


~Grth Loup Notes IbBurn Victimv -Army Ho!\, , Released on Leave FrcI ' d >)mBy Dena Sintekbusiness meeting aAd then intro- dnd Mrs. Gerald DeNo~cr andduced Mrs. "Hoeppner who had son of Kealncy, Mr, and Mrs.-Larry V. Mulligan of Columbus the lesson L lfly Years In Re- Leonard Tolen and falnlly andwas released on a 30-day conLa- view." She had se~eral clippings Mr. and Jfrs Jim DeNoqer andlescent lea~e from the Fitzsim- saked oker the years, and a num- family enjoked a farn~ly get-tomonsHospital in Denker Sept. 8. ber of pictures taken on differ- gether at the L J. DeNoyer hoineHe wa8 one of fike Nebraska ent occasions. She touched on all recently.National Guardsmen burned Aug. the club books through the 50 Mrs. Carl Walkup was hostess3 while at two weeks summer )ears' and talked of special occa- to a birthday part at her homecamp at Ft. Carson, Colo, when sions. They had had 136 mem- for Mrs. Hazel Ingraham andthe increments on 41 mortar bers belonging to the club at Mrs. Dell Barber's birthdabs. Mrs.rounds ignited. One guardsman, one time or another and hake Sheldon Van Horn and Mrs..Jerry Allen of Grand Island, died had lots of demonstrations giver1 George Maxson were guests.of burns. Mulllgan was the last by outsiders and our own mem- Progressl~.e Extension C 1 u bto be released from the hospital, bers, guest day once a gear, met Thursday with Nrs. Vic Kinghaving burns on 40 percent of Christmas parties where we en- with nine members present. Newhis body. He will returu to Den- tertained our husbands, break- offlcers elected are: pies, Mrs.ver Oct. 10 for a checkup. fasts and laitn parties.Emil Zadina; Vice Pres, Mrs.Mrs. Hoeppner had made a list Lyle Sintek; Sec, Mrs. GeraldThe Nqrth Loup Fortnightly of all the former club members. Fisher; Treas, Mrs. Vic King.Woman's Club met at the home They hake had outside guest Mr. and Mrs. Duane Psota wereof Mrs. Wllliam Schudel in <strong>Ord</strong> speakers and some very good Satu~day o~ernight guests of Mr.on Wednesday, Sept. 9, with 17 book rebieccs. Mrs. Bud Knapp slid Mrs. Vlc King. The Psota'smembers and 4 guests: Mrs. Rob- assisted 31rs. Schudel in serving were Sunday dinner guests ofert Knapp, <strong>Ord</strong>; Mrs, John a love1 lunch, after which Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Psota.Cleary, California; Mrs. A g n e s ~chudef favored us with several Mrs. Walt Orent of <strong>Ord</strong> was,aManchester and hlrs. Hillis Cole- organ selections, and also accom- recel?t lunch guest of Mrs. Alk111man, North Loup.panied Mrs. Iloeppner who sang. Kron.The outgolng president, Mrs. They all felt llke their club Mr. and Mrs. Irvin WorrellJim Scott, presided and introduc- got off to a good start for the went to Grand Island T u e s d a yed Mrs. Ign Pokraka, who instalf- coming year. They now hake 23 night to meet his sister, Mrs.ed the new officers. Corsages regular members, two inactike, Lottie Barrett of Elgin, 111. Mrs.were presented to the new offi- and one honorary.Barrett visited the Worrells andcers and also the three charterMrs. Alice Copeland until Satur.members, Mis, Harold Hoeppner, Mr. and Mrs.' Durnood DeNoy- day when Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bar-Mrs. Ruth Hudson, and Mrs. John er and sons of Grand Island, MS. rett and Dee of Algoaquin, 111,Cleary.and Mrs. Bud DeNoyer and fam- came to et her and Mrs. EthelThe new president, Mrs. Har- ily of Fremont, Mrs. Kay Grim Eyerly w%o had been an overoldWilliaqs, presided at a short and family of Grand Island, Mr. night guest of Mrs. Edna Coleman-- -.- -- - - Mr. and Mrs. Gary Worrell of1 Grand Island spent Sunday withhis folks, Mr. and Mrs. ~rvin Wor-1 .XGOO~I~' ~Ili I ~~$;o::~I *All comparisons based on our popular Long Miier IID &* G ServiceYo.ur Radial Tire DealerNorth Highway #I1<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr. Phone 728 3333-Ig;i ,c:;:;;+~sg;es;:ter, Leona Babcock and friendsfrom Wednesday till 6unday.Mr. and Mrs. Jim DeNoyer ofSunnyvale, Calif, returned totheir home Sept. 7th after spending? week with their parents,Mr. 'and Mrs.'L. J. DeNoyer andMr. and Mrs. John Edwards. TheDeNoyers' four ' children, Becky,Cindy, Hobbie and Gary, wenthome with their parents afterspending two ueeks here withrelatives.Charles Sintek left ea~ly Wednesdayinornkng for L i n c o 111where he hill be a junior inthe College of Pharmacy at theUnikersity of KebraskaMrs. Cecll Sekerance and herson, Terry Keown, returned toNorth Loup Saturday eteningfrom Lincoln where Terry hadsurgery performed on his kneethe middle of the week. IIe isgetting about on crutches now.Mar~s Cox went to Lincoln Fridaywhere she wlll start her -freshman bear at the Unikersity.She is the daughter of Mr. andhfrs. George Cox.Mr, and Mrs. Merlin Hin~e ofColumbus, Ohio, visited a wcekwith Yr. and Mrs. Charles Kas.son of <strong>Ord</strong> and Mr. and Mrs.John Edwards of North Loup.The ladies are sisters. The 13in~esalso vislted a brother, JohnMeese, at <strong>Ord</strong>. Mrs. Kasson andMrs. Hinze callcd on an aunt,Mrs. Katherine Waldmann in <strong>Ord</strong>also.Mr. and Mrs. Mcrli~~ 1Iin~e ofColumbus, Ohio left Monday forthem home aiter attending aliinze falluly celebration at Albionand the 50th annikersary ofMr. and Mrs. John Edwards inNorth Loup.The North Loup Citizens forImpro~ement Conlmittee wishesto inform all clubs and others~nvolkcd to ha~e thelr reportsand pictures handed in by Thursday,Sept. 17th. These may behanded to Mrs. Cecil Se~erance,ilks. Verlin Hansen or Mrs. ClydeKeown., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kassoncalled at the John Edwards homeSundiy afternood on their wayto the Bert Me~crs home at Scotia.,Mrs. Willialn Boeker (Cleora)and son Charles of Bay City, Tex.,left Thursday. They came theueck before lo be hele for theEdwaids' 50th anni\ersary.Mr. and Mrs. John Edwartlsuere at Lake Ericson Saturdaywhere thcy called on Mr. andMrs. Don Everso11 of Grand Is-larid and Mr. and Mrs. IrvingU'estcott of <strong>Ord</strong>, at the lake:Mrs. Mina Sorenson of <strong>Ord</strong> visitedMr. and Mrs. John EdwardsThursday afternoon. 'Mrs. Bennie Sintek took ~eithSintek to Lincoln Thursday wherehe will begin his sophomore yearat the Unicersity. Hatteye sautterand Pearl Bartz went a16ng forI' -the ride.Mrs. Pearl, Mulligan went toAlliance Sunday with Mr. andMrs. Harold Keep of Scotia. Shevisited her sister, Mr. and Mrs.T. P. Weed and others. .Mary-Maytha Circle of the UnitedMethodist Church met Wed-nesday afternooh. Seven membersans~ered roll call with aBible verse containing the wordforgive or forgivenes< A coQper.atice lesson on Women of theBible was enjoqed by all. HelCnMunson sen ed refreshments- atthe closc of the meeting.Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rasmussenwent to St. Paul Saturday nightto see the twin sons b~rn toLyle's cousin and wife, Mr. andMrs. Kenneth Rasmussen at theSt. Paul hospital last week. Thelittle bobs hake been named Terryand Larry and will join a two-year-old sister when they gohome.Word from Verlin pansen's father,Henry Hansen of Wild Rose,N.D, is that he has returnedhome frdm the hostital there,where he had been slnce Sufferinga heart attack before PopcornDabs.Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stine andfamlly of Grand Island wereweekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.Eldon Sintek.Mrs. Joe Morris and Mr. andMrs. Bob Morris of New Jerseywere last Sunday visitors of Mr.and Mrs. Bennie Sintek and family.Xrs. Morris is an aunt ofMrs. Slntek Whlle here the Morris'swere house guests of herbrother, Mr. and Mrs. Llojd Wilsonof <strong>Ord</strong>.Second Lieut. Roger Psota of\Vllliams AFB in Arizona washoine for hls brother RlchardPsota's wedding last weekend.Mrs. Lillie Psota of Omaha wasa guest of'Mr, and Mrs. Ed Psota' last Saturday. Arlene Wirth ofOmaha w8s a weekend guest.Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hall 01Valentine visited Mrs. W i n n i eBartz Monda mornlng. The Hallsare old neiggbors of Winnie andher late husband, Fred Bartz.Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre ofFulbrook, Calif, and Mrs. Leona, Babcock were Monday afternoon~isitors of Mrs. Winnie Bartz.Mr. and Mrs. Marion Medberyand n4r. and Mrs. Gary Medbervand daughter spent Sunday atExeter visiting the Wilber Med-berys. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Mulligan,Mr. and Mrs. Emil Zadina andMr. and Mrs. Wayne Cook attendedthe football game m LlncoInSaturday.Mr. and Mrs. Vic King wereWednesday e v e n i p g supperguests of Mr. and Mrs. DuanePsota in Grand Island. Later inthe evenin they visited Mrs. EdStillman w 5 o is recovering from 'surgery in the St. Francis Hospital.Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Psota andIdr, and Mrs. Duane Psota wereSunday evening supper guests ofMr. and Mrs. Vic Klng.Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Kron enjoyedhearin their graridson, DavidWolf, pfay the drums, withthe centlv "Loup at <strong>Ord</strong>. Valley Wranglers" . re-kQ-: and M~S. Don Waller andMr. and Mrs. Harry Waller hadsupper together at the Elba clubWednesday to celebrate Harry'sbirthday.Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rasmussenand family and Mr, and hlrs.Ralph Layher and Dawn wereFriday evening visitors of Mr.and Mrs. Jimmie Hrebec andand EmilOlga and Axel Keldsen of Elba,Mrs. Jens Norp of Hot Springs,S.p , and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rasmussenand family were Sundayguests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ras-Ipussen and'Carl Jr.Xlr, and .Mrs. John Benson ofLincoln vislted with Mr. and Mrs.Duane Psota at the Vic King@me ' Mr. Saturday and Mrs. night. Harry Wallernew A --QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday, September 17, 1970 (Page.19 -were guests ~hursday of Mr. and evcninf Mrs. oc supper ~rcilekand family.The North Loup Business Wom- Charles Lundstedt was hostess., chairman. Mrs. Leonard Clarken's C.lub met at the North @up Two new n~cmbers were uelcom- vice chairmao, Mrs. Don Waller,Cafe party room. Mrs. Howard ed into the circle, Mrs. Dean secretary, Mrs. Derwin, White,Anderson and Mrs. Alice Schu- Lundstedt and Mrs. Dermin treasurer. The next meetlng willdel were hostesses: New officers Wlute Election of officers was be at the home' of Mrs. Derwil~elected for the coming year are! held. Mrs. Stanley Barr wtll be 1% hite Oct. 7.Pres., Mrs. Sheldon Vaa Horn;Vice Pres., Mrs. Harold Williams;Sec'y-Treas , Mrs. Frank Schudel,and Courtesy Chmn., Mrs. AllenSims. Cards were *played followingthe business meetin . Prizewinners were Mrs. O'pa B Beebe,Mrs. Hillis CoIman and Mrs, CecilKnapp. Mrs. Bennis Sintek\ Honest ValuesIwas a guest. *"Mr, and Mrs. Dale Mulliganspent Sunday in Columbus withSeptember 77 - i8 - 79Mr. and Mrs. Larry Mulllgan.IMr. and Mrs. Ed. Psota and FI oren , Can De5-.y Flesh _ BOXRandy were Sunday dinner guestsof Mrs. Barbara Usasz at Eric- Lemonade .. Ison.10c Slriwberrieg 29cIMrs. Ron Shoemaker and Mrs.Qt. CanCharles Lundstedt accompaniedMrs. Jean Moudry, Mrs. LoisZlomke and Dana and Mrs. Re- ~k;rher.. .Pa~kay29c Margarine .-. I '29;becca Zlomke of Or0 to GrandIsland to attend the NebraskaGolden Valley 2 Lb. BOX~ing Size Boldcross counties Girl Scouts boardmeeting held at Camp Cosmopolitan.99c Cheese. .... 69c,Mrs. Ron Shoemaker obtainedWITH THIS COUPON I New Crop LP.a new troop number for the JuniorScouts. These will be girlsin the 4th and 5th grades atNorth Loup Scotia. The number Firs ii 3i;11.1 1.%'a224 was given to her. NumberGal.204 is the Junior Scouts led byMrs. Pete Foxworthy Of Scotiaand are 6th grade girls. Mrs.Charles Lundstedt will be thenew Brownie leader of b.oopnumber 214. Mrs. John Hamerwill assist her and Mrs. NickClement will be committee chairman.Any mother who has a girlin the, 2nd or 3rd grade andwould like to have them in scoutingare asked to attend a meetingon Sept. 21 at 2:30 pm. atthe Community Bldg. in NorthLoup.Ruth Circle of the United MethodistChurch met Wednesday+??!njng at the church. Mrs.I FAIR PRICES - IloCandy Bars . ,39cJack & JlllSweel Rolls. .35c1 Choc. Candy 6 9 ~Dairy Fair . . . 69cCampbell's2 FgrTomalo Soup 2Sc-- I New Crop . p- tb.IA Few Canning '1Peaches LeftYams.. .... .ISC1 hrd ....... 1% I Slew Meal ...7kI PIIIW Lb. I Boneless Lb.I a ayE '... + . ......' &I..;.... North boupI S&H GREEN STAMPS WITH EVERY PURCHASE 1carspare resayIThe 1971Fords. ,-FIRE AND GARBAGE REGULATIONSII Residential District:IIFires may be set ONLY between the hours of 10:OO A.M.and extinqqished by 6:00 P.M., ONLY in containers so built asnot to permit the escape of burning paper or other sub-stances.I ~usiness district:I 'IGarbage:Fires may be' set ONLY between the hours of 8:09 A.M.and extinguished by 4:00 P.M., ONLY in incinerators, approved, 'in writing by the FlRE CHIEF.iS NOT TO BE BURNED AT ANY TIME WITHIN THECITY LIMITS, For disposal, it is to be wrapped in payer andplaced in a garbage contarner for removal to the city dump.IDue tb the numerous complaints rccoivcd on gurbugo bullling a~ldfires, this will be,stiictly enforced.. ,Any person convicted of violating t$ie law sllull be fined in crlly sumnot excodding $1 00.00.FORDLSee all Ford's better ideas for'71 at your Ford Dealer's now!Ford Punt, Pass & Kick Competition. Boys, 8-13, register at your nearest participating Ford Dealer through Seplernb326-'L ~ MOTOR E CO., INC.


I~harles Weddel's 83rd Birthday 1sPpue to th9 d~ th o$ qy uskand, Fdqar, I will sell the folloying qersonal proper!^at the vm Jpcq\qd . Si[


Cams+ack Comments Receipts. <strong>Ord</strong>, NebraskaCourse ti b IBalance in bankR~c,e'Yts d u I ~ nl monthfj$$~,.@G0,SSO 92D~sbulsemenfsLess u aftfnts pa~d 60,075 leQalqnce pni'hand " 254 i4: y '' Hehpectfull~ subnptted' b .Joan Collier, ~~easure;Mo\ed b Mason, secol?d by Vodeh.nal that all bllls as follows be paidVoting )es Ka11e Vodehnal, Kama.rad, bf~\on and ~aulsea'guests of BlLLY PO13 SEPTE!YIBER, 1Atkles 011 Companq SupI-, i The Anchtor B~ble 'Co. (DO;-shank and also of Mr. Ritz's par-:ents, Mr. and Mrs. II,arry Kitzis Arcadia.tfrs. Francis Stefka and Rudywele Sunday afteruo~nyr, and Mrs. Frank Stefka andfamily.0rd school boardr , September 8, 1970Pursuanf to notice published, in t!>eAndersjii Ivin V., Ser. ..... .~nareeset;, Frank, Reimb. . .Beranek Uru Store. Sup. ....Black Q ~ecter. SUP. .........Calsvan Treas. of h:usic central' Co. Ten SUD. Cun-~ference, Due$ .-~. . . 100 0iodsf to CGaat Stores Suy. ... 3.6!Comstock VilIade of,' Ser. - 33.00~om+tock' Neu s: Sup. ...... 57.73Dahlln, Albe~t, Sup.Davis Publications Inc Sup. 17:;;lhn,'s Auto & IvIacLine hop, .,. .*Science Reasreh ~{(o,c!af$Inc., Sup. ,...;-.. ,.,Servall S~C. Towel& Linen :.:_.:2.' *' I , ,.Frc 'SeFt: i8 7:6b p.m,'tp 1:PO a.g.Sat.. Sepf.>I.,, * 19 L 12:OO noon to 1:00 a.m.4 -* :!Suna. S,ehf. 20 9:OO a.m. to 1:PO a.m. I


-(Pa* 6) '? QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Tburgdiiy, September '17, 1970 ' tl 91 ..t.. ' , *', I tWIN $100 - get all 25 games and the Tiebieaker correct,SECOND GAMECarl SuminskiAtI1 3 ............................................ 1s ................................. 16I! :I. 4Also indicate your predicted score of the tiebreaker game in the space -; 5 ................ -------.--? if-. ....................... ' 30&0w yie provided. Then write your name and address in the space at the bottom of 1 .I 6 ....---'.-..-.....--............ 18 ....................... 1 ..I,.-.AHoldregethe entry blank and bring it in to $e QUIZ office by Friduy at 5;00 p.m. I L I. ........................ .T....... 19- ............ Iin, but will not be accepted after the deadline.II8 .............................--:--_ 20 . . .... . I\iOnly one entry per may be made each week. If more thanI 9 .......-;I-- ......... 21 ..--- ...........................B .II8 LIin your family wishes to enter, you Fay write their guesses on separate 1 10 .............. - .; .... 22 ... .-. ............ 1- sheet of paper.I.......................... -..-..... I ......( . : 11 23 -:. -------I.*----III-sbuld or more ersons guess the, some number of winner (he one I?-........... -.-............ 24 .....-,--IIPIthe winner. Otherwise, the score of that game will not be considere Decision I fi Iof the judges will be final. e isTie ~reaker: , Nebraska southern Cal. 'CL nit ticLcr5 L/(You have 2 days to enter this conte;;t.) Entries may be brought in or mailed; 7AndersonMolo'r Corn, Iflc. predicting nearest to t E e actual score of the tiebreaker game will e judged ;25, - - -- - - .- - -- 2 -- - - Iphone 728-3941 : :'<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.'used Cars, Trucks-t,:. A . . 2. Alliance vs ld .complefe music storeYour American Parts Jobber, .Auio-Truc k-True torParts HeadquartersIncomplete PassPenalty DeclinedWhere You Gcll MoreFor Your Grocer1 DollarBenda CleanersSee US For YOUFDry Cleaning NeedsMember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation"We linve Gro,trlUy lielpirly Others Grow"t *. 10. Central City vs Schuylev 11. Chadron vs Valentine 13. Crete vs PlattsniouthKoupal & BarstowLumber Co.Serying This Area Over 74 YearsCOLONY PAINTSABITIBI WOOD PANELINGREMODELING SERVICEBall Ready-For.Piay Phone 728-585114. Fairbury vs SyracuseClippingIProleelive savings &Loan AssocialionPh, 728-3891i'<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr,- ~ i ~ ' ~ Advantages o k nsmall Town Atmosphere15. Fremont vs Grand IslandASack Lumber Co.I .Building SuppliesGlass - PaintCOMPLETE PLANNING SERVICEHouse DOC^^;:Ready-Mix Concrete\Phone 728-529116. Fullerton vs Ravenna/ADelayOf GameIllegalMotton*t. c. . ,Your Fine Food Center17. Holdrege vs <strong>Ord</strong>-4Quality - Women's- WearFirst National Bank '<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.Complete Banking ServiceINCLUDING SMALL LOANSA Full Service Bank~lrnbcrFederal Deposit Insurance Corp.22. hiilfdrd vs Ralston,~ReturnIIllegaleForward PassOpen BowlingSat. & Sun. -- 1 - 12 p.m.Daily - 1 - 6 p.m.ORD BOWL .19. Lincoln vs ScottsbluffComplete Trucking?- Locul - Long Distcuice I- -- --d'"NO MORETIME OUTS".'with a Bidova! "JO'HN JEWELRYSTdr-i-Start The Clock. 7,No More Time-outs20. Lou0 City vs St. Paul--- -EIyria ~ertilizer& PropaneICall 728-5021 . Time OutBill Wadas, Owner- Phone 728-3207 or 728-5129First Down23. Nebraska City vs Auburn 24. North Loup-Scotia vo Anselmo-Metna'I +. c*X( r'All of Your' EARTH MOVING21. McCook vs YorkThe KrckerEckhardt Auto & ~ractor PartsYourNABA JobberI- TPUC~*A U ~ ~'iraitor~muh ~nq'ine ~ar+s- Bhane . 728-5881 Illegal Use of Handsr35. Ncbraska vs Soufliet~~ Cal.


and other public pur osc~ for the bevera1years enurneraEd in said petitionand the exhibits thereto attachedand by preference made apart thereof, and for a finding thatsaid liens are Cirbt liens on said prem.ises and further praying that unLessthe'same are paid by you or some of.--, Court vou. a - f&reclosin


.-1 Charge and counter-chargewere levelled over the weekendas several of Nebraska's m o s t$rominent politicians gathered in<strong>Ord</strong> for a pair of special campaignbanquets.' Area Denlocrats met 'Fridaynight at St. Mar s Auditoriumfor their "Meet tXe Candidptes"dinner, with the Republicanstaking over the same stage thenext night for an "HonorHruska" affair. fis. GeorgeDaqrak organizer of the Demoraticfunction, reported an attendanceof just over 175 persons.Her Republican counter- 'part, Joe Krumel, said 348 attendedhis party's ban yet.Among the ~emocraytc dignatarieson hand were former governorFrank Morrison, now acandidate for the United StatesSenate: gubernatorial candidateJ. J. Exon; Don Searcy, candidatefor the U.S. House of Representativesfrom the 3rd CongressionalDistrict; and JohnKissack, who's running for theoffice of state treasurer.Republican luminaries comingto town were Senator RomanHruska, who holds the office Mor-Denies Morrison'sseasonal labor and in-family crease in prices," the senatorrison is seeking; CdngressmanDave Martin, who is opposed inhis reelection bid by Searcy;secretary of state Frank Marsh,who is vacating the office he hasheld for 18 years to run forlieutenant governor; state attorneygeneral Clarence Meyerwho is u~ for reelection; andDuane Gay, the COP nominee forstate railway commissioner fro~fithis district.Principal interest centered onthe head-to-head duel betweenthe two senatorial candidates -especially a charge by Morrisonthat the Nixon Administration isc6nsidering a plan to removefour out of five farmers from theAmerican farni."I hope the Republicans willtalk about the Council of EconomicDevelopment report tomorrownight," Morrison said in raisingthe issue.This report, he said, "wouldresult in removing some four outof five farmers from the Ameri-can farm," and is "uader cqnsiderationby the present admlnistration."E x o n supported Morrison'sclaim a few minutes later whenSearcy SaysYes to Dams.I -Clakiiing to have been quoted out of context following anearlier appearance in <strong>Ord</strong>, Democratic congressional candidateDon Searcy said Friday night that he is in favor of the North LoupDivision recIaniation project and that he would'be willing to workfor it if elected.During a July speaking engagement before the <strong>Ord</strong> ~hambkrof Commerce, Searcy used theterm "big dam foolishness" waited so long from 1960 to 1964with refergnce to some reclaniatiollprojects. Then, threeweeks later after he put out anews relea e cautioning localresidents no! to get too excitedabout the North Loup project,that tern1 as used in an <strong>Ord</strong> Quized~torlal.Referring to that, Searcy toldhis fellow Democrats Friday:"It's interesting how sometimesyou can take one thing out ofcontext, supposedly refer to somethingas big dam foolishness, anda nuniber of people immediatelydraw the analogy, the comparison,that you are thereforeagainst the ty e of reclamationproject and tge type of waterproject that I'm sure many ofyou in this rooin have been worklngfor the ,last several yearsinfact, many of you since 1954when our irrigation district wasformed:"I came 'up here to tell youthat fpr 13 years I've beenfreachlng to the Bureau of Recamation,and I in no way wantBnyone to go from thi? roomihinking that I am not rn favor+'c,f, the de\elopnient of the Twinhups, or \he Horth Loyp Division,or whatever you want to, Call it, irrigation project. BecauseI am, and certainly I wouldbe wiJling to+work for ~t.?'Then, striking out at his Re-' publi-ian opponelit for the 3rdDistr~ct con ressionaJ seat, Searstatedtfat local backers oftie project were in the sa111eplace they were in 1959. 1"You had another hearingthat'sall you had, no more,"Searcy said wlth referepce to thecongressional field hearing heldin <strong>Ord</strong> last July. He called thathearing '3trictly a front to attemptto acquire a few morevotes in this area."Searcy's o poilent , and theman who felped set up thathearing, Re . Dave Martin -spoke ~aturxay night at the Republicandinner honorillg SenatorRoman 1Iruska. He did notreply directly to Searcy's chargesbut spoke briefly of the NorthLoup project, sta,ling:"The subcoinlnittee that cameto <strong>Ord</strong> was impressed. I thinkwe're going to get favorable actionon your project in the nextcongress.' There is not time tohold hearings this session andget the bill approking it throughboth the lIouse of Representativesand the Senate. But I doexpect action early in the nextCongress."Searcy, howeker, claimed thatMartin would not be successful' in getting the project approvedunless a "new approach" is used.He said only 16 percent of theproject costs can be repaidthrough irri ation fees, and eventhat would %ate to be on a 50-year contract instead of a 40-yearone "which i.s the only type thatkas been wrltten in the past bythe Bur~au of Reclamation.""Where do you write off therest of this project?" he asked,and then added, "You're goingto hace to hake some agreementsup here with the Missouri Valley,because the rest of your projectis going to have to be writtenoff by the sale of electricity inthese areas."And I challenge Mr. Martinto get any agreement with thepeople of Missouri Valley to helpyou in that way. I dop't think hccan do it-I don't th~nk he fullyunderstands the project."Searcy was kery critical ofMartin's action during the past10 years, stating that the projecthad actually regressed from itsstatus of 1959 before the Kearneylegislator took office. Thechallenger claimed that most ofthe studi s on the project were~ebelopef in 1959 while a Demo-:rat represented the 3rd District.Xe added that Martin was basicallyop osed to reclamation, andthat "w&n he finally got aroundto approving some reclanlationprojects that might be instrumentalie getting votes he decidedthat the top priority shouldgo to Mid-States in the CentralPlatte Valley.""He worked on that and workeron that and didn't get anywhere,"charged Searcy, "becausehe couldn't get aloq . And so hedecided inaybe we f better tryanother project; macbe we couldget that through. You ste bethat ~onpress~passed a law whichsays you re olng to have to reauthorizead projects that havebeen %approved previously. Soyou were left out, completelyleft out, an? finally in .the ear1970 he decided maybe 1t'q aiptt~me we had another hearing.Searcy was also critical of hisopponent's reqord on water andollution, saying it "is not muchg etter than on development ofwater resources."He claimed that tests had beenrun on the North Loup River inthe early 1960s to see d the claysandcomposition of the river bedwould have enough Absorptioncapacity to permit the dumpingof radio-active wastes into it."During the 1960 camuaiqnand after he was elected dldDave Martin ever say anythingto you and did he ever object,d~d he ever say anything to anvonein Congress -or anywhereabout the dumping and experimentationof radio-active wastesin your river?" asked the KearneyState College Illstructor.Searcy claimed that Congresshas voted this yehr on five pol-!ubon control acts and that Slartinvoted no on one and was absintfor the othej fouf,' -"I feel that iq the 1970s heare going to be making investmentsin pollution and pollutioncontrol comparable to what wehate made in the NASA prograinin the 1960s," the Democrat concluded.Durjng'the Republican banquetMartin stuck prilnarily to nationaltopics, blasting the DemocraticCongress for "dragging its feeton some of the most importantprogosals the President has sentUP.1Ie cited spkcifically court reformand crime control, draft reform,revenue sharing, welfarereform, environmental cleanup,postal reform, consumer protection,tax reform, housing, transportation,labor, health and education,drug control, and gobernmentreorganization."These and all administratiotiplans and proposals have beenaimed at restoring peace at homeand abroad, building a soundeconomy, safety in our streets,and the greatest individual freedoms,"Martin said."Yet the Congress has beenslow to act, passing only a handfulof ,,the administration's proposals.The inculnbent lawmaker alsotook a.slap at the "unprecedented"spending rate of the Democratic- controlled Congress andsupported President Nixon'$ policieswith regard to Vietnam."Under President Johnson wehad six years of escalatioq," hestated. "Under President Nixonwe hake had de-escalation."he charged that "the figuresFrank gabe you about taklng fourout of five farmers off the farmare being reached in the innercounc~ls of the present administrationin Washington "IIruska res onded to the chargethe next nigft, calllng it whollyunfounded.He said the Council on EconomicDe\eloyn~cnt was a pricateorgani~atlon and that the reporthlorrison referred to had beellissued in 1962."They madc a report thatabout 80 percent of the agrici~lturalproduction was being doneby 25 percent of the farmers,"he said. As for a planned canlpaignto moce farmers out, thesenator said ' there is nothlng toit."Hruska added that he had talkedto Secretary of AgricultureClifford IIardin after heiring ofMorrison's charge and :he secretaryhad confirmed that nosuch plans were under consideratioq.He quoted IIardin as saqing:"Given a quantity of land thata man and his wife can run with0ASC Delegates Choose Lech Again;Communily Committeemen ~nnouneedEverett Lech, Valley countyresident who farms near Elyriawas reelected Tuesday to theCounty Agricultu~al Stabilization'a n d Conservation Committeeby delegates to the County convention.The delegates selected RobertTimmerman as chairman andnamed Lech vice-chairman of thethree-inember committee. ArthurJohn is the third member andGerald Krikac and Stanley Barrwere named first and secohd alternatecommitteemen.The Counf ASC Co~nmittee isrpsponsible for local admlnistratlonof gocernnlent farm programssuch as acreage allotmentsand bases, $ price-suppiirt'for eligible crops, conservationcost-sharing on agricultural landsand the wool incent~ve program.The com~nittee appointmentswere made by delegates who arenewly elected ASC communitycoinn~itteemen. Community committeesassist the county committeein farm progralq administrationand help keep fatmers informedof. program probisions.C o u n t y committeemen areelected by the corninunity coinmitteemento sene three-yearsta gered terms, so that ordinan&oue vacrey occur6 eachhelp, and wlth modern equlp- stated, adding that farmers arethe family farm is the most effi- getting the same prices for theircient ard ecoilomical we can pos- produce today that they weresibly devise.,"getting 10 years ago. But theyIn levelling his or i g i 1 a 1 are now paying much more forcharge, Morrison had said he be- their o\ln costs of production, he1ievt.d renlocing 80 percen! of the said. ,farmers would trigger one of "Where does inflation c'o m ethe greatest econonlic crises in from?" liruska asked. "J$omhistory of this nation." IIe said Nixon since Jan. 20, 1969?"urban centers \vould not be able Then he answered his ownto absorb the people reiiloved [Luestioas.from the farm. "No," he said. "The largestHeplying to his o ponent's cause of ~nflatlon is heaky govcharge.Iiruska said tiat from erriinciit spending and deficrts.1960 to 19138 - while Delnocrats In 1968 Presidel?t ,Lyndon Johncontrolledthe Presidency and son s cnt $25 billlon more thanboth houses of Congress - there the gvtrnlnent topk in. -was a decline of 1 million farms. "1Iow was this pald?" he asked,From 1960 to 1970, he said, there again answering the questionwas a drop in farm popu!ati~il himself. "Uncle Sam borrowcdfrom 15 lnlllion to 10 million. money by issuing bonds, and for"lf there's any explanation for solne of it he paid as much asthat;, I don't ha\-:' to gibe it to 8 7!8 percent interest.he stated. That -responsiru3, "Whcn Uncle Sam borrows, heility belongs to the other guy." reduces the amount of moneyHowever, he said he had an available for lending to privateidea inflation was a major rea- investors. If the demand forson for the reduction, and he nq- . lnoney is equal to the supply, inturallyblalned that on the Demo- . terest rates renlain fairly reason-crals too.; sblc. But when the supply is"Inflation is a constarit in- : short and-the denland is large,{ *we have high interest rates."IIruska charged that there had' been a total of $60 billion in deficitsunder the Kennedy and Johnsonadministrations,"No wonder they couldn't findmoney to loan," he exclaimed.The senator continued by sayingthat President Nixon has attemptedto eliminate deficitspendlng since he took office butthat the Democratic conlr~lledCongress refuses to cooperate."We hahe a Con-gress whichinsists on appropr~aling moremoney than Uncle Sam can raisein taxes," the former DouglasC o u n t y con~missioner stated."Nixon has said I£ you want tospend more than my budget,okay, but raise taxes to cover itand thcn go home and try to getreelected."Referring to a statement madeearlier by Congresslnan Martinthat defense spending ha; beenreduced by $11 billion thls yearunder Nigon, Hruska commented:"They 'ithe Democratic Congress)hahe eaten that up andthey want more."-Accusation---In his speech the night beforehlorrison had made a strongpitch for a restoration of "qepresentatlkegobernment." He promised,if elected, to mo\e threesenatorigl offices and secretariesout of Washington and place themin Nebraska where h~s constituentscould make their opinionsknown more easily.'"M; opponent isn't a badman, he stated, "but he hascompletls. lost tquch with real.~ty and llfe in th~ state. Go askyour Republican friends howmany times he's been in <strong>Ord</strong>,and in Buruell, and all over here,and sat down with you and discussedand listened, and got thefeel oi great people, and what ~thasn't contributed to this country."Morrison said that lack of senioritywould be no drawback ifhe were elected to the Senate."At least half the effectihe U.S.senators in Washington today areeither freshmen or sophomores,"he stated.The former gocernoP said ithas crat been was 36 elected years & ince !he a Senate Derno-Maxine, who accompanied herhusband here and was celebratingher birthda was attendingGreeley High Sclbol the last tlmea Democrat was elected to theSenate from Nebraska."The state of Nebraska hassaid to America and the world,"he began in his concluding statement,"that even though wemay hake a man in our midst ofthe character and abllity to helplead this nation through a .crisis,that even though we hale In qurmidst the potential leadership tohelp usher in a new plateau ofhuman experience, we In Nebraskawill deny him the right of acoice in the majority party ofthis nation to wrlte the h~story ofour time - because he wears aDelnocratic label."And the Democratic partythat brought us bank guarantees,that brought us reclamation,that brought us rura! electrificatlon,that under Pres~dent Ro~sekeltgave this nation a new visionof its greatness . . . under nocircumstance will Re allow anybodywho is a part of that heritageto help write the h~story ofour time."froill Nebraska. Iie sald his bifeVowsTax Hike)vernor has "used and abused,Inferring that the piesent gc€stab. April, 1882 <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebraska, Thursday, $opt. .. 24, 1970 Vol. 89, No. 29 In 2 Sections chcated and lied to" the citizen( ; of Nebr'iska, Denlocralic yub--- # erridtorial candidate J. J. Exon promised Friday night to hold--Published Weekly at 305 S. 16th St., <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebraska 68862 Subscription ' ~ate~ - $6.50 In Nebraska, $7.50 Elsewhere Second Class Postage P 'aid at --<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebraskd the state sales tdx to 2Y2 perc ,ent and the income tax at 13percent d he is elected."I'm no scrooge - 1 haven't said we're gonila c U ~ anything,"Exoil told a crowd of 175 atFriday night's Democratic gath- ing all the way from a 47 percentering in <strong>Ord</strong>. "But I have said to a 130 percent increase," Esonwe're going to hold the line - stated. "The budgets of thoseIyear. Con~inittee alternates areelected for one-year terrns.Members of the nemly electedcommunity con~mittees are liatedbelow. The first indikidualnamed is the colnlnittee chairman,the second is the \icechairman,the third is the regularmember, the fourth is the f~rstalternate, and the fifth is thesecond alternate.Arradia-YaleOttis Cartaide Delivan KingstollMerle Mesers, W'lllard liall. and IIO~!Stailley Hullnsk). 'Geran~um-MichiganGerald Krlkac R~chard LukeshVernon ~otrzeba,' Thomas ivaldrnann.Dennis PtacnlkIndependent.North Loup 'Stanley Barr, Jerrold Fisher, Ben.nie Sintek, Paul Waltmad, L~le Rasmussen.Liberty-VintonElwin Johnson Jose h Bonne Leon.ard Moudry, ~ d ~ajina, e ~arCel hIc,Kinner.<strong>Ord</strong>Uarold Garn~ck, Jamcs VodehnalEdmund Zulkoskl, Duan'e ~rechblll:Orie HurlbertNqble-S ringdaleHerbelt Goff. read Nelson, Da~idStebens, Fldnk kIaly, Robert DeanPete~~on.f BI Informer,Demscra)is WheelsPhoto by Walt SpithKissack, Exon, Morrison, Searcy1Republican BrassMcyer, Martin, Hruska, Marsh, Gaythnt the m~xi~num is a 2%pelcent sa!es tax and a 13pelcent income tax in Nebraska "Exon - speaking on his 27thueddlng anniLersary with hisulfe Pat among those in attendance- attacked the incumbentgohernor for hls spending policiesthat hale resulted in an alleged133 percent increase in generalfund appropriations during thepast four years.When Norbert Tielnann tookoffice in 1966, Exon said, the totalgeneral fund appropriationwas 3163 million. Now it is $383nilllion.Attelupting to turn one of thego\ernor's recent statementsaround, Eron claimed Tiemanilhad said that ' the farlneis of thisstate hahe a ri ht to be unhappybecause tgey hakc beenused and abuaed, cheated andl~ed to by Delnocratic administrationsfor >ears."'He thcn read fro111 an O?'l,ahaWorld-Hetald article of Jan. 4.1966, stating: which - - quoted Tieinaii?l as.,n_"The,re are suff~cient revepuesnow being raised to operate goverlunentwithout any increase intaxation if .they are properlyhandled."At that time the appropriationwas $163. lnillion, I+on $aid, Afterexplaln~ng that it is now $383million, he added, "I ask SOU\rho has been used and abusedand uho has becn cheated andlled to uhen )ou look at statisticsltke that7 'Exon pressed his attack bycharglng that there are now 3,630more persons emploged by slatego~e~ nment than uhen Tlemanntook office, and that the salariesof state emplogecs hake risen 47percent during the past four>esls 1Ie saip his statistics hadbeen substantlatcd bb the state'sKepubllcan treasuierThe Delnocratic nominee addedthat a report froln the UnltedStates Department pf Labor andthe Bureau of the Census 'shonsthere hake bcen 25,000 new jobscreated In [Nebraska during thepast 10 bears. lIo\\e\er, 17,500 -or 70 percent - hake bcen instate gohernment or some subdl\lsion thereof."I sublnit that this ,Is notprogress, rather, it is strangulation,"Exon state .l1e also criiicize ! the new bud-gets of state a encies uluch hacebcen subniilteg for considerationby the goLernor and the StateLegislatuie u hen it conr enes inJayary.Under this gocernor who hasset no limit for increases of ex-penditures we hake departmentafter departmrient coining in ask-which ha~e currently been subm~ttedare averagin about 56percent, and I had tae tax commissionerof the State of Nebraskafigure out for me what thetax uould hace to be to cokerthem Ile said at least 4% percenton the sales and 20 percenton the income."Wlth an assist from treasurercandidate John Klssack, theDelnocratic hopeful also accusedTiemann of timing a possible taxcut so as to ':attempt to sabe hispol~tlcal skin.Exon said Tiemann charged thegubernatorial candidates in lastMay's primary election with"telling the blg lie" when theclailued there was too mucimoney plled up in Lincoln and atax cut should be offered."Yet two weeks ago \+hen Johr)K~ssack and I got acti~e againand pointed out that there are$30 mlll~on stacked up do w nIhere, the gobernor sa~d, 'Well,maybe . . . niajbe we can $0something "'lfe's going on this to do after it 30 all.' da~sbefore the election In a? attemptto sa\e his olitical skin."Xlssack ago jolned in the attackon the gokernor, yho wasnot present to defend himself thenext night when the Hevub1lca:lsconvend for their ;'H o n o rIIruska" dinner. Nor did any ofhis GOP running mates who werepresent - including lieutenantgo~c~nor candidate Frank Marsh- reply to the charges.Kihsack's big gripe was aboutan alleged 50 percent error inpredicting state tax re~enue duringthe first six months of 1970.The Gering businessmal~ claimedthe go\ernor and the people underhim "cons ired against thecitizens of ~efraska by raisinthe lnconle tau rate last Jan. ffrom 9 to 13 percent unnecessarils."By the Tiemann Administration'soh11 admission, said Kissack,the state as, of July 1 hadcollected $21 mllllon more thanhad been predicted for the firstsix months of 1970. Thls is a 50percent error in predicting taxrelenue, he claimed."There is absolutely no excusefor anbbody mispredicting re-Fenue by 50 percent," Kissackcontinucd. "Our state incolne taxis based upon the federal tax,qnd we hhre sonte 40 years offederal incolne tax collections inthe state to kase our reheuuepredictions onIIe sald this n~iscalculationwas either "an enormous, unforgi\eable.error" by the ,peoplewho supplied the stahstlcs onwhich the Board of Equalizationrelied nhen it set the 'tax rates,or else ~t was done purposely.*Cub Scouts70 Talk About Will SellA recent undercover agent forthe Federal Bureau of Investigation- uhpse specialty was theComlnunist Party and revolutionaryyo u t 11 groups - willspeak Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the<strong>Ord</strong> Elks Club. IIis appearancehere is sponsorc,d by the SupportYour Local Police Comn:ittee ofthe Loup Valley chapter of theJohn Birch Society.The speaker is Ger.ry Kirk, ayoung Negro froin Chicago. In1966 he was asked by the FBI torkport on revolutionary activitiesat the Unicersity of Chicago,and at the federal agency's suggestionjoined the Students for aDemocratic Society, the W.E.B.DuBois Clubs, and finally t h ~Colnnlunist Party itself.After intensive ,trainin by theCommunists, he became a liaisonman for the party among variousrevolutionary groups. He is reported'(to have operated amongthe peace" groups, :student~adicals and black militants.Kirk recently testified of hisexperiences before the InternalSecurity Cominitlee of the U.S.House of Kepresentati~es. Nowhe is taking his storv to the peopleof the United States,Safety FlaresNext ueck Cub Scout Pack 194\\ill be out in force selling autosafet flares to area 1notorists.-~utmaster, g o Wolf, said hispack 1s sponsoring the project 111the interest of publi; safety andas a fund-raising program.In stressing the need for allmotorists to carry safely flares,\i'olf said ~t appears within thanext bear, the U.S. Department ofTransportation will require safetyflares in all new automobiles.It was the same departmentuhich required auto manufacturersto install seat belts in allnew autoinobiies.lie also pointed to the fact thatauto safety flares are recommendedby the National .SafetyCouncll and used by h~ghway -patrols."Th/s illustrates the need forthem In all automobiles, new andold. Safety flares save lives,"Wolf said.The local cub scouts will beselling the flaies froin door todoor. If you &e not contacted,get in touch with any <strong>Ord</strong> cubscout It is hoped ebery ValleyCounty ~epicle will be equippeduith flares."Highcbay safety has long beena concern of ekersone," the cubinasterstated,


(caze 2) ~2),<strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr, Thursday, September 24, -+- 1998 / f(erdelS & ~~~k~Higher Pducalion' Call Answered47 -~bsaIon Services Held . ,Atgent Back,By Many Valley Counly Scholars<strong>Ord</strong> Catholic ChurchBy Carol LeggettMany more young people ofawn Work headed .- - -. -.- -. for colle~~ camuuses -~~~ ~Final Rites at North LoupFor Rasmus H. Petersori, 79.. The evening event kicked offwith a banquet served by. theHebekahs. Sixty-1wo.members and' uests attedded. After dlnner the, '.' 6dge convened with Grand Mas-Rasmus B. Peterson, 79, of Wash., and Mrs. Vista lhgrahain ter jxarold White of kxington*North Loup, died Sept. 20 at his of Cotesfield. $LEO five grandchil- Upputy Grand. Master Jes' Dohhome.dren and 1 reat-grandchile XOY~~"Y of Atkinson, RlcbrdFuneral ieivices were held at dren. He was pre$eceased by hjs He"derrOn. Gra? ' Represerlt?-2:3b p.m. Wednesday in the North parents and three sisters. i'l'e* of Kearnty, on Rumery*Loup United Method~st Church&rand Warden, o#~ort,h: Pjatt?with Rev. Leonard Clark offi-. 5~1th Wh~te, grapd gha la111 ofciating. Mrs. Irma Keown was bulinsky Baby BOY Lexington grand conductor and Grylord As Grand Qqn. bob.the organist accompanied Buried on Wednesday officers, There were LqdgeMrs. Genevieve Hoeppner yhomemsang"Going Down the Valley"Graveside services were held bets from Sargent; five fipp'puqand"Beautiful Garden of Pray-Wednesday at the <strong>Ord</strong> Bohemian well; t.\2.'p frpm EIWOQP. 9 e frqer."Cemetery for Larh Allen. Hulin- Holly and 59 frpm 6 r t insky, infant son of Mr. ind Mrs.Pallbearers were Albert Siegle,tendance. Re orts weie given bStanley Hulinsky of Burwell. TheVictor Cook* C h e st e Setlik,lodge oflhetdJstriet a ~ ad: dchild was born Sept. 21 at .theCharles Goodrich, Derrel In- Valley County Hospltal and ll~eddressesGrand. ~~dge'were presente(t'officers,by all thegrani and Bill Vodehnal. Burial only two houys.was in Hillside Cemetery at North Pastor LOUIS Trebus of the Bethupwith the Hislings-Pearson any Lutheran Church of fJrd Eon- session, seven me&erS ~eeeispdMortugrx in charge.the Past Grand arld Grand Lodgethe Rrn. Service with J)e rees. These included Eldon. Mr. Petersen was born Mar. the Ifastings-Pearson Mortuary in of Elyria, Brickner,6, 1891, the son of Peter and charge. 'Christine Petersen. He was mar-William 'Flock, Geor e KrAjnikSurvirorl with 6e parents r e Frank Drudik, ~d rfPaider andbrother Timothy, one sister Ernest Wlgefit algf '<strong>Ord</strong>. ~ldonear Jrinet, r$aternal grandparhts Mr. ~jch is District Deputy'$ Granithe an$ grs. Chester Kirby of .Or$ Master for this district f r theand paternal grandparents Mr. ensuing %ear and Clarencb) P.er.Mrs. Mike Hulinsky oi Bur- son presently 'lefier qs NldjeGrgnd for the ,<strong>Ord</strong> lodge,, , ,- ---er readily from adverse conditions,it is adkisable to reseedthe lnfected area now. If theseareas are not reseeded, weedswill likely be a problem nextsummer. 1Reseeding can best be accomplished by deep-rilking the areaand scattering seed Also, reseededareas should be watered regularly,and a light application offertilizer w o u Id improve thechances tor a desirable stand.The most desirable time for re-seeding is ~unning short, so do itnow.Report Hog CholeraSuspects Immediately,Swine growers have been warnedthat failure to report suspectedCases of hog cholera couldjeopafdize the success of thgstatewide campaign to wipe outthe disease,Pro dcers are urged to watchiPnini9 4 s closely, particularly new-Others enrolled at the Unilerlypurchased animals, and to coasilyof Nebraska, Lincoln, are the,tact their veterinarian at thevery first sign of sickness.Horticultural Open House'The annpal horticulturaf ope?house at the North Platte ExperlmentStati,on ig scheduled forSun$? , Sept. 27,~ls~for attendipg this evenfwill havb an opporlunlty 10 seethe man$ varieties of qerennlakflgwers and boody . ornamentalsgrgwn at the station for researchpurposes.Plofs will ,bi o en'for observa-Gon between the %ours of 1 and 6m r , .BU;~ ~bhth.4 AheadFor <strong>Ord</strong> JC-Ettes .<strong>Ord</strong> JC-Eites concentrated on abusy schedule of activities, Se t.8, when the group gathered in &eElk's Club meeting room. Amonthe members were Presiden FDelores Sich and S!ephanie Hurlbert,both of the <strong>Ord</strong> chapter,iho have been selected as candidatesfor the. OutstandingXoung women of Neb>aska. award. .... , .,#. The cha ter voted to purchasejive ~hr~sfmas gifts for fosterchildren In the state - an annualState Mrs. Jaycee project. Workis progressing on the Wig promotiop.,Tickets 'are available fromany JC-Ette. The ChristmesStyle Show and Ca~d Party hasPeen set for. Dee. 1." . Members are'again making toys,for tots' and are in need of dis-As a cos~lusfOn ' c ~'~Y~~$I ., c.l a1Ie is survived by his wife; onebrothei, Chris of Buffalo, Wyo ; Mrs. l!erman Mi 11 e r, Mrs. Mrs. Roland Wilma) Johns6hand three daughters, Mrs. Ruby Charles R~ce and Mrs. Joe C rnlk of .JV~lma's Beauty Shop, was iqGreen- bf North Loup, Mrs. called, Monday afternoon, a! the Lincoln. Sunday and Monday, tOGladrs Portis of Anacortis. K. W. Harkness home. attend the Wicksttom Show. 3of Jlr, and Mrs. Chester Babcock,Sr. of Arcadia attends LeTourthiscominunity ha~e pdcked neau clllege at Longiieul, Tex BYtheir backto-school gear and attend~ng classes through bothstimmer and winter semestersthroughout -the- GhZry. a Vernon hopes to earn his degreeSeveral more have indicated in three years time. Now a junior,Kearney Stale as the college of he is majoring in l~lechanicaltheir choice.Technology. Vernon also works asRichard Lucdtke is a sopho- Assistant Director of the Longmorestudying Business Adrninis- riecv Ambulance Service nhich istration. Richard is the son of Mr. o crated by LeTourneau Colle eand Mrs. Keith Luedtke of 11rc3- 8r the city. Meanyhile his wife.dia,.,June, is einployed in the AdmiskickiSmith, daughter of Mr. sions Office of the college. VerandMrs. Darrell Smith of <strong>Ord</strong>, non a Vietnain vet,eran, is a 19G2is a freshman this year. Vlcki graduate of Arcadia High Schoolplans to major in speech therapy. and Nebraska Vocational Techni-Sharyl Jones was also among cal School.those who began classes Sept. 14 Tom Gailey is a second yearas a freshman. Ifer brother Dar: senior at Texas 4 & hi UniverrrlJones. also will attend Kear- -sitv. Colleae Station. Tex., major-ney state this fall. He returnedrecently from a tour of duty withthe Arrned Forces - the last)ear being spent in Vietnalnyhere he recei\ed two BronzeStars and the Purple Iieart. Parentsof the two are Mr. and Mrs.Norris Jones of <strong>Ord</strong>.following:Loren Vancura, as a freshma?,is attending the College of Agnculture.Lqren is the Son of Mr. \and Mrs. Fdain Vancura of Or&,Leah Brickner, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. B. T. Brickner of <strong>Ord</strong>,Is a juniol' majoring in ComputerScience, Swimming is' an extracurricularactitity.Dick Janda is a sophomore'thisyear. Ile is majoring in Journal-Ism (broadcasflng). Dick is theson of Mrs. Florence Janda of<strong>Ord</strong>.Bill Naeve, son of the DonaldNaeves', is also a sophomore. Ifeis majo~ing in Business Administratibn.Koge, Cahill, son of .Mrs. RoseCahtll, is affiliated w~th AlphaGapl~a pigma fraternity.. He attendsthe College of Agricultureas a sopholnore and has been offereda second year's honor ag- 'riculture course, Roger is als~studring Math, Chemistry andGerman. Extra - curriculars includeUnilersity 4-II Club and anhonor paternity. Roger won aRqge t s scholasshiy, haking hada, 4.61 plus grade alerage last,year,Dennis kadil is a freshtl~an withplans fo major in Business Administralion.IIe has pledged SigmaChi. Dennis is the son of Mr.,and Mrs. Charles Had11 of Comstock.Tom Wagner is studqin pre-Med. A junior this term, 'fom isthg son of Mr. and Mrs. MarkWagner of Scotia,Another pre-bled student isDan. Chichester, son of the Lynn~hicheste1.s'. Dan is a freshmanapd a member of Alpha Tau Ome-ga Steve fraternity. Hanks is a senior major-ing s in IIorticulture. 1Ie is presi-dent of Alpha Gamma Sigma fra--1ernity. Stele's parents are Mr.grid Mrs. John Hanks of Burwell.:fittending Creighton unikersitit, haha ha is Karen ~odyfieliQqu hter: of Mr. and Mrs. -VlcBocf,f.. ; I ' ..11. 1 , 4 , 4 ' . :. r. . .5 , . a - t ':::;fi ' , . ' I ' ! 4 [: ,,, :: ~'...:,Extra:C'ufriculst'. . . ..: ‘."; Actyv~{les ;7.~; ... ......5~;.!.:.~;.2-~!.~.2.:_._.:.~1.: .... :.-. 1.. .I


Artists of the collllllunity hadan opportuhily to meet and visitwith Willialll Weekes, Sunday,when he was host at an ope,,house art .show at his home'.is.!Just rerne~nber - for ,any size car - or any size loan - our Bunkis 'youk friend. Stop in soon - Youi application will receivo burimmediate attention.Jiffy ' Frosling and.....Ground Beef..- -- . .-Size 36 fo 440 Wool C; wool bler~ds' e MU/,~ wiih vesfs-0 $5.00 puts one on Loy-Away,1,


-.* .., -,Ed ~rowneil shows bff thee-legs'ed Coyote.i \+ L\. Lame Coy ole, '* lullering ~uck Rare PairT.h~ee;legged co 'otes and' one- be a cyo$s. The .one wing-ldenti- Antelope will be the big game! winad ducks ma& for' solne tall fied it as being a blue-wing. on this week's agenda for thoseI hunting tales last +eek around* Liberski cleaned the bird and marksmen lucky enough to hateValley. County. * brought it back tp tbe Inn, and 9 .permit for the western Sand, The ' trip"edal. c 0 y 0 t e was' tbe iellops then decided that it Hills. The nine-day season wlllbrought down near ,Ofd by Ed was either bors witbout a wing We'n there and in the PanhandleBrownell of G.ral!d I~;land. fie's Or lost it-$arjy to ~redat~rs. Saturday.the fathe-r of this c~ifi~nunlty's L ./$Stevie Hornickel and Stacie Riceaccoinpaniec) their mqthers.-.Mr. and Mrs Jason Lothro~\+ere in Palmer, ~undciy-for th'eweddipg ' of Coralene Hall andStephen Dagger. In the evening$e Lothibps joined relatiies at$ylrs SS-pei- -Club in St. PaulMeeling PlannedAt Horace ChurchRev. R. P. Bronleeme, evangelistand Bible teacher, will presenta series of meetings at the&lorace kIission Church frot? Se,pt30 through October 4, beg~nnlngeach evening at 8 o'clock exceptSaturday. Pastor and Mrs. Bronleeuehave tracelled for many )'ears inevangelistic work throughout theUnited States.Mrs. Bronleewe will accompanyher husband and lend the inspirationof gospel music, presentedon the marimba, solo\o\, orsan,and plano Mr. Bronlee~re pra~sthe musical saw.Florisfs ConveneMr. and Mrs. Adolph Sevenkerof The Florette in <strong>Ord</strong> drote toOmaha a weekend ago for tflethree day annual fall conk entionof the Nebraska ~lorists Societyof which they are members. Thetheme ~f this year's show, heldat the Holida Inn, was "Expo'70". ~eaturedY on t.he prog~amwere file outstanding designerswho resented the latest in present& designing.On Hunday two emplo,ers ofThe F1orette - Karen Van-Winkle and Glayda Scofield -drove to Omaha to attend thenoon luncheon and the "Expo'70" design school. The Sekenkersreturned to <strong>Ord</strong> Mondaynight after making purchasesfrom the wholesale houses.hlr. and Mrs. Richard Prien ofLincoln were in <strong>Ord</strong> Friday nightand Saturda) - the houseguestsof Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Sekenker.--Birthday Reunion .Mr, and Mrs. J. Thomas Sevenkerof Lincoln dro\e to <strong>Ord</strong> Saturdaynight to be ueekend visitorsof hls parents Mr. and Mrs.Adolph Sevenker. They werepined for dinner Sunday noonY Mr, and Mrs. Robert Se\enker,Christy and Cairie ahenAdolph's birthday wds celebrated.This was the first time infive years that his sons were uithAdolph for his birthday obbervance.A Happy PfrihdayThe birthdav of Ed li::,rr~ermanwas celebrates Sunday when hisfamily brought well-filled basketsof food to his home. Thoseattending the dinner were Mr.and Mrs. Joe Knapp and Alan,Mr. and Mrs. Adam Zebert, Donand Donna, Mr. and Mrs. DickPetersor~, Bob and Carol, Mr. andMrs. Marlin Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.Robert Timmerinan, Dan andMary Ann, Mr. and Mrs. IrvingTunmerman, Mr. and Mrs. DougMarkley and Doug and Mr. and?I.lr.s. Rlchard Knap , Kevin andCurtis. Later in tRe day VerlTlmmerrnan of Ogden, Utah telephonedbirthday greetings to hisfather.Home From ~ietnakDon Reis, having serled inVietnam, has comvlel,ed his hitchIn the Army and arri~~ed in <strong>Ord</strong>,Thursddy Ile \+as called here bthe serious illners of. his gradmother, Mrs. Dessie Needham.Also in <strong>Ord</strong> at this time is SuePreston of Rosalie. She is a houseguest of hlr. and Mrb..Uoyd NeedIlaIn.QU?i, . Otd, %. ,ReBr.;North Loup-Scotia Enrollmenl Is 384;Class officers Named for Grades 7-12Enrollment in the North Loup-Scotia schools is 384 this semester.Of that number 188 are studentsin the grade school at NorthLoup, whlle 196 attend the highschool at Scotia.The 11th rade 1s the lar estthis year witt 38 students, w&lethe 2nd and 4th grades tie forsmallest with 21 each. The entirerundown: klndergarteri, 24; 1strade 28; 2nd, 21; 3rd, 34; 4th,51; 5ih, 29, 6th, 31; 7th 27; 8th,36; 91h, 30; lothA .34; kith, 38;and 12th, 31. I "" .&I 1.Cheerleaders were announcedthis week for tbe North. LopScotia Junior High team. l'hey'yibe Jarnle Ilansen gnd Debbi Sheldon,7th grade; Kris Beck andVicki Rasmussen, 8th; and DawnSoper and Barbra Werner, 9th.Also announced during the pastfhm~day, Septe'rnkf 24, 1970ans sen, secretary; andJamieDebbi Sheldon, Studeut Councilre ith-~helley resentatib e. Bo,lmes. president;Datld Vogelec, vice - president;Charles Shoemaker, treasurer;Don Morrow, secretary; andCrystal Jensen, Student Councilrepresentative.. 9th-Sack Larkin, president;Tim Einspahr, vice-president; AlanGoodrich, treasurer; D e n n yTuma secretq~y; and Dev Iian-$en, tiue. &dent Council representa-10th-Richard shoemaker, resgent; Lyle Meyer, vice-presi$enl;e n s e l Rasmussen, treasurer;8(Page 3)'dent; Phyllis Babcock, vice-president;Jerry Hanson, secretary;Allen DeNoyer, treasurer; 3 o nReeves, Student Council re resentati~e;Alan Fuss, Studen P Counciltepresentative; Jane S h o e-maker, Student Council representati~e.Tempera ures during the wee!nere recor a ed by Horace Travisas follows:High LQW Pr,Sept. 17 73 49 .02Sept. 18 84$ept. 19 62 8Sept. 2057Sept 21 8 51Sept. 22 66 60icky eyes, Pedersen, Student Council secretary, represen- Mark Sept. 23 45table.Precipitation to date for I11th-Becky Bresley, president; was 16.98 inches comparedMary Johnson, vice - president; 15.91 inches t$is year.week were class off1 ers in the Christy Benben, treasurer; Lanajunior hi h and r c h o a l Ilamer, Secretary; Barbara Bredgrades.~gey Bre as follows: thauer, Student Council represeo- Mrs. Fred JV'ilkjarns had guests-Iat her home Wednesday mornlng.7th-Daniel Anderson, prest- tative; Marilyn Cook, Student The coffee hour was in obqerv.dent; Davld Vance, vice-prcsi- Councl representative.ance of Mrs. Johnny IIyde's birthdent;Kim Wells, treasurer, 12t h-Bruce Bergman, presi- day.Hastings-Pearson Mortuary, <strong>Ord</strong>,Nebraska.14-6bftfcJ. MARVIN F+&E~;~s, MAX MANKIN - Attorneys at LawNOTICE OF PRQPOSED POL€ LIE14 LOCATIONPublic notice is hereby give6 Of the followin pioposed location of a ole line with a voltage ca6atity of-34,506 volts over andacross a proximately +he North 55 feet of the hlort\eatt Quarter 0 f Sectton <strong>Township</strong> 17 North, Ranpt 14, West ol the 6th PM., inValley [ounty, Nebraska, and the other proberty shown 06 said map.New Officers Named .......Mrs. Helen Iiorn was electedProposed Relocation of 34,500 Volt ~ransrniss.ibn Li"e Loup Valleys Rural Public Power District Valley County, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr.'presidefit of the Jolly 1Iomemak.This notice is given specifically to Gerhardt ~alottke who has undivided one-fifth interest in the Northeast Quarter of saiders Sept. 17, at a meeting Section 1 and all other person having or claiming an interest in said p'roperty, as provided in Section 70.301 R.R.S., as amended. Saidaith 51rs Jake W.alahoslu district shall consider all obiections which may be filed, at said district's office at Qrd, Nebratka, on or before October 26, 1970, toElected serle Mrs. as said location. Thereafter said district shall attempt to negotiate with Gerhardt Malottke to acqurre an easement across his interest in'ice president was Geneiie~e said real estate and, in the event bona fide negotiations ate unsu cessful, said diqtriet shall have the right to condemn a right of wayRadke, Olga Clemny is the1 over rod upon the undivided 0ne.fifth interest describrdabqYe &r the purpoK sp$dfie$


(Page 6) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., ThurSdZy, September 24,19704,r THE YARDSTICK spectacular, but they played well wide stuff and went for what we ball bounced off Shcffield's chest,iPirirst bowns -- O[; Holds enough to maintain good fleld could get in the middle," he coin- landing just inside the boundsRushing yardage -- 121 13 position. And a quarterback mentcd. marker, and Koualskl pouncedPabaing Yardage .- 71 44 sneak with one second to go bq- "And we've got to gike Mark- on it to stop the threat.9-15 7 -~;~~sp~,"~p$-~rcePtedfore halftime made the magni- ley credit for cal!~ng those plays " Holdrege was neber out of itsWant RevengeFymbles ~~~t . -- -- 1 1 ficent defens~ve play all worth- The junior quarterback had one end of the field after that.Penalties 7-65 918 while. that'^ because it gave the of his best passing nights elcr The game was a distinct Sur-Punts - - - 7-27.7 743.9 Chants the only touchdown of the too, espec~ally on a percentage prlse for most obser\ers, since' profiting frpm their rnista$e? ?me, and made the difference basis He h ~t 9 of 15 for 71 yards. lloldrege had beaten Class A Mcofa week earller, the <strong>Ord</strong> Chantl- etween victory and a scoreless for Farmer 36 yards caught and also three latched of the111 on Cook the precious week, 9-6,Home ConcJeers rebounded last week to tie. nhlle <strong>Ord</strong> was losing to Gothen-<strong>Ord</strong> hopes to get in line thls <strong>Ord</strong> hopes to habe back a pairpost their finest defensive gamePaul Markle who C o a c h to a air of Holdrege thro~~s burg, 23-14. The latter team prov- week bchitld those teains getting of. cripples that it dldn't secnf toseveral years and Squier said pf~yed his finest from &s defensiie safety spot ed it may be stronger than anygameever, carried it in.. After But it was one he didn't .catch one had suspected, howe~er, ase\en for all the shellackings Ai- mlss last neck against lioldrege.Holdrege, 6-0. bion handed o.ut last )ear. Theq're Dai~d John and Larry~h~ chant defense - which driving to the Holdrege five-yard that may hate been his bl gest it won last week froll~ Grand IShadplayed well in the opening line-with 14 seconds to go, the and m02t important effort of the land team Centfa1 had in turn Catholic. opened 15-8. the hat sea-The Chanticleers mere beaten Wells, who normally nould formlast season, 510, by the Cardinals half the starting backfield.galne against Gothenburg - was Chants used their last time-out. night.superb at ~ ~ l d ~t ~ allowed ~ < ~ During . it Markley called two That came during the 0 r d son with a two-touchdona victoryas Coach Martin Peterson kept . While they both sat out withhis startels in the game almost ankle in'uries' against Holdrege,the Dusters only first dew plays - both quarterback sneaks. touchdoM.'n drike, wqen t h e o\er Broken Bow. t~ll the final gun But now most their replacements were 1119st i~*-and a total of 57 offen&. After he got only halfway to Chants had a first down at the <strong>Ord</strong>'s triumph was eicn moreOn the ground the losers could the goal line on the first one; he liold~ege 22. Markley threw forof those boqs are gone. And ressi\c, Jim Naebe, fllling in~emarhdble because two starlingnet but 13 yards for the evening, and his mates jumped up quickly Farmer, but a Iioldrege defender backs were missing as a result their successors are having to for John, was <strong>Ord</strong>'s leading ball.~~~~~,l F~~~~~. ~ ~ lbuby and lined up for another play as cut in front of him and had the of injuries. Besides John, fullbackdeal with the wrath of all those carrier as he akeraged almost 9f fclubs that uere blistered last yards a tote, and Fuss plajed a. ~d ~ ~ ~ . . ~ ~~b l peter- ~ k the i final moments ticked off. best shot at the ball. Farmer Lar~y Wells was also on theson . . . earl suminski . . . D~~ Only one second showed as he lunged iri with both hands, how- sidelines.)ear.steady, dependable game. He al-There's evidenck that <strong>Ord</strong> isn't so was alert, once pouncing on aTimnlerlnan . . D~~~ Vancura tumbled intp the end zone behind ever, and he and the 1Ioldrege Wells was replaced on offense- in fact, the entire de,ensive good blocking from the mlddle man wrestled out of bounds with by sopho~nore Doug Fuss and atthe ofily team reil~c~nbcrlng 1969, teammate's fumble that mightof the line. the officials ruling that neither his defensice linebacker spot bysin& a pair of Class C schools- other~ise hale been scooped upunit was oulstanding.Holdrege had possessioll of the The drive had begun at the <strong>Ord</strong> had possession. On the next glay Vancura. Both boys turned inIIartihgton Cedar Catholic and by a hald-rushing ljoldrege de-Utica Centennial-defeated the fender.ball in ord territory only twice %-yard line with less than 2% Naece made his 17-yard jaunt to pleasing pejformances.all night. ~ ~ occasions t h were minutes to go in the half. A 25- the five. Fuss had 17 ards on six car- Cardiilals in their first two out- Speaking of' Naece 'and Fuss,yard pass from Markley to Isad Fagucr not pre\enled the ries and piclied up a couple oflngs.Coach Squier said after 1 a stthe secondsere (he r e s ~ a ~ ~ & , ~ Farmer % e ~ rovided h the spark that interception. the touchdo\rn of first downs. lie also blocked sellIt's almost enough to,make dew meek's contest that. "they'll becourse would not hake been pos- and made a key tackle on an <strong>Ord</strong>coach Jghn Tolczon mish he sere our s t a r t e r s untll somebodyThe f/rqt time a roughing-the- set it OB. - back in O'Neill, where he had an beats them out."kickcr on a fourth- Another big play was B i7-yard sible. punt.down punt ga\.e the ~~~t~~~ a burst up the middle by Jim Except for the one touchdown, , On that play the two deep reoutstandingrecord as the boss lIe added Tuesday that he didfirstdown at.the ord 43, and the Naeve, which carried frog the neither team posed a serious ceivers for 1101drege pulled a reofanother bunch of Cardinals at n't think John an? Wells wouldsecond time was a tackling-by- fboldrege 22 ta the 5 and set scoring threat. <strong>Ord</strong> had the best lerse, and Sheffield wound upSt. Mary's High Schqol. Torc~on be used at all unless they werechances, getting to the IIo!drege going down the left sideline. Fussstepped itito Peterson's shoes tbis . able to go full s ecd since whatthe-facemask that gave th$fivtpdh"o' 2dZYdn offense 21 and 34-yard lines early in the was the last defender betweengear, so in a Gay he's suffering is expected to Ee .the .toughestthe& a first down at the 41.But both times Peterson rpse only because Dave John was in- game, and to the 24 following the hiin and an open field, and thesome of the receage intended for gaine of the season awaits thejured, was easily fhe to ball bad snapback of the fourth- sopho~nore made a sure tackle.his pi.edecessor. . ; Chants the follo>%ing week at Au-While he doesn't mind having rora.i$JO t ~ ~ l t ~ ~ carrier. ~ t Thp ~ 155-pound ~ ~ senLr ~ got ~ qyarler ~ h punt ~ atteppt. ~ ? r ~ ~ ' The lioldrege punting game his boqs reme~nber 1969, <strong>Ord</strong> - The \no habe been workin outfourth down at the <strong>Ord</strong> 34, need. m4st of his 66 yards on quick Over-eagerness on the part of was much too good for Leon Coach Chuck Squier is cautioning ,this week, Squier said, thou& not ,ing only one yard for a first. Openers the midd1e* voldrege quarterback Shield Brechbill to break any returns thel~ against oier-confidence. let at full speed.peterson made sure they didn't Guards Hruby and Peterson. helped Kowalski ~ a k what e may for old like he almost did onget it, though, as his muscled plus tackles stan exthelm and hake been the game-t~rning play. seberal occasions ' against ~0thteaillwill kcat gou if you <strong>Ord</strong> has also bee11 stre~gthenright,arn~seemed to shoot across were The Dusters opened the 'second enburg. But he too contributed tohaie 2 let down:l he warned. ed by the returll of Dick Karre,Thdn he added, About all Me s~ph~lnore cellter aho injuredthe line of scrlmmagb as fast as with. Yeolnan blocking on that hdf by driving from their own 33 the Chant cict0r.y with 34 yaldsto the &I there Shield on 13 rushing trles and 28 yardsknow about tbPlll tqis year is that Some neck inuscles before schoolthe was snapped and grab pa'%leze$a?unning it to both turned i@ the second longest four pass refeptions. M~~~ ofthey're loung, they the 1- opened while the Chants kere:2$i t ~ ~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ h-side: with just about equal sue- Igoldrege run of the game - a those yards made ~ with ~ ~ l d~ - ~f~rmation, and they haben't still parking in sweat clothes.ground for a three-yird loss as ce@, Coach Squier stated. '


Wheeler Gel i IReadies forYPt eir vic ory. Besides holding El.n to 12 points the Wheeler degnseaccounted for one or itsown team's. touchdowns whenGene Schmelts picked up an Eaglefumble and rambled 31 yardswith it.That score and the conversionwhich followed gabe Wheeler a\16-point lead late in the thirdquarter after Elgin had pulledup to a 15 G deficit. Other Broncodefensive gems Included twoblocked unts and three recoveredfumtles.B o b b 1 e s also plagued thebheeler offense, as Bronco backsfumbled seven times* knd 1 o s tfour of them. Schmeits committedfour of the miscues and ScottPatrick three.But the two veterans mo'rethan made u for their mistakes.Besides the 4inble recoyery thathe converted Into six polnts, Schmeltsran for 177 vards and Dasscdfor 79 more. -itral Wins Over Elgin:How Parl, FulureFoes Fared<strong>Ord</strong> (1-1)Touah Battle at OrchardOsceola (2-0) defeated Stromsburg,20-0.Anselmo-Merna ( 1-1) lost toXorti? Loup-Scotia 33-0.Spalding Academy (10) vs.Greeley, no report.Burwell (1-1) lost to Glbbon,27-6.Columbus Lakeview (0-2) lostto Columbus Scotus. 32-13.Ansley (0-1) vs. Arnold, no reperf.Wolbach (2-0) deteated SilverCreek, 36 0.Sargent 0-2) l6st to O'HeillSt Mark's, $5-0O'Neill St. ~ary's (2-0) defeatedSargent, 350.Arcadia (0-1 -1 1Callaway (1-1) lost tb bitchfield,0 0.Clargs (1-0-1, tied AlcAdia. 18-rie Games(eep Pickersn Humble modFour ties Friday hight keptGothenburg (2-0) defeatedthe )?erceutag&s low tor the sec-Grand Island Central Catholic.ond straight ,week in' the I.ITHE YARDSTICK(591izers, two of four Wheeler starters Schmeit~ boosted his club's\ El9 who missed most of the Peters- margin to 22-6 and made harm- 15-6.football sklection contest.Mrst ownsburg game, were back in action less a five-yard sc~fin~ run by Holdrege (1-1) lost to <strong>Ord</strong>, 6-0.Although a report st111 hadn'tRushin YardageAlbiod (0-2) lost to Utica Cenbeenreceived hlonday on therapin$ Yardyeand showlng to fo in against ljergstrom in the four1 quarter.Passes Cornp-A tElgin Each of tKcm \ad 10 tennial, 22-12.~assett O'Neill game, Alan Van-UII-, with the Ea le defense kejin~ssisted tackles, with Hinze he1 Aurora (1-0) defeated Grandcura had a big enough lead toon Patrick, ot a ex Broncos fpun 8IOwti Passes ~ntercepiedFumbles Lostyen'alties --- lng out on four others and chllg' ample op ortunlly to contribute Island Northpest, 28-0.warrant the $5 given weekly toPunts Central City (1.1) lost t4 the conteit winner. Vancura had.-.ers on two.to their e?ub's attack. Rick Rsn-Schuyler, 22-6.16 of 25 games guessed correct-Proving it can win with defense Schmeits got the Bronco off ner, for Instance, was theJeadingSt. Paul (2-0) defeated Loup Iy. If O'Nejl won its tilt, he thusif it has to, Wheeler Central to a good start when he kurrt pass receiver as he clalmed aCity, 21.13.flnished wlth 17 out. of 25.top led Elg~n by a 22-12 score 54 yards In the opening quarter, pair and made them good for 48Broken Bow (0-1-1) tied Lex. Besides the four ties, Vancurahigay night.Patrick'sD n conversion run made. it yards.ington, 14-14.m'ssed pi-im.qr11y gn games in- PFC Monfe E. HansenWV.+I 'rhe Lictory was Wheeler'sLexington (1-0-1) tied Broken\%\\ ing Cwtral 10 , Cpnference ' $ ..-..-. g 0 6 6-1In Communidationssecond of the young season and The Broncos scored again id $fzlei c.ntial 6 8 ,+ABOW. 14-14.schools. ve chose <strong>Ord</strong>'s foe ofsent the Broncos into this week's the second period as Greed \~c- Schmelts 54 run tpatr~ikGrand Island Northwest (1-1) this week 1- if bicin - to win, .Private First Classa ?~!on


+ Iye1/Regents(pa& 8) QUE, <strong>Ord</strong>, Ncbr., TBursday, ~e~teruher 24, - .-. 1970 -Miru Valley ' Memo~ie'ce's Wedding PartBy Bertha ClementJWr. and Mrs.. Ervin Sohrweidlqft home in their camper Sept. 9and headed to the northwestwhere they attended the wed- ,sell Hackel attended aa all dayLay Witness Coaching Conferencedbg of her niece, Lori Gausman at the United Methodist Churchand Kenneth Olson at Pilgrilll in St. Paul Saturday.Lutheran Church in Spokane, Henry Lange and Cy Shaugh-Wash. on Sept. 12. Lori, 1s th~. nessy of St. Paul boqrded a planedaughter of Carl and Jul~a Fuss for Washington, D. C. Sunday af-Gausman.. While there they also ternoon, going there In the Invisitedwith another niece Mrs. terests of the Twin Loups project.Gerald Wolsborll and son John of Mrs. Lange look them to thoSan Francisco and niece Miss Grand Island airport and thenNancy Gausman, who is an air- visited her daughter, Mrs. Laliliestewardess. The Carl Gaus- Vera Elliott and ch~ldren. Themans also have a son who men Ian to return Wednesday,teaches in Chicago. Other Ne- ~utR Circle of St. John's Luthbraskansat the wedding werethe bride's ~ grandparents, Mr.ind Mrs. .A!vin Gausman of Ravqnna.Fishlng at Lake PendQreille near Sandpoint, Idahowas a highlight of fhe Sohr.weld's trip. They enjoyed' thescenery enroute and came homethrough Custei and Ilot Springsin South Dakota and the BlackHills. They arrived home Thursdayevening. -Mr. and Mrs. John Courtneyare newcomers, who moved herefdom Lexington early in September.Mr. and Mrs. George Rybinmoved to <strong>Ord</strong> and the Courtneysare now living on that farm. Mrs.Cpurtney is the sister of JoeKrcilek, who with his family livesnear the Courtneys.Election of officers brought noehanges when Mutual BenefitExtension Club met with Mrs.Clare Clement Thursday evfning.Re-elected were Mrs. Will Foth,president; Mrs. Lores Hornickel,vice' president and Mrs. IsaacLuoma, secretary - treasurer.Seventeen members mere present.Mrs. Edwin Lenz led in singing"Song of Peace." Mrs. AlbertAlbert Peterson cautioned aboutdriving carefully near schoolsand read a hu~norous article"Memo to Farm Dogs." Mrs.Henry Lange was leader of thelesson uThe Volunteer in theNursing Home." Mrs. HarryFoth will be hostess at the Oct.14 meeting.Attending the State Soil andWater Conservation Conveiltionbanquet at Grand Island Mondayr$ight of last week were Mr. andMrs. Stan Johnson,. Donna andTracy, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lar2 ..son and Mr. and '. Mrs. Russellliackel.Mrs. Harry Foth and Mrs. Kus-eran Church met with Mrs. EugeneBredthauer last Tuesday.Mrs. Bud Kokeg was leader ofthe lesson "For the Sake of the~ofld," Others present wereMrs. Lyle Foth, Mrs. Cleo11 Ilansen,Mrs. Iienry Lange, Mrs. DonNekuda and Mrs. Paul Waltinan.Mrs. Edgar Roe and Mrs. IrvingKing were co-hostesses whenCircle I of the <strong>Ord</strong> United Methiodist Church met with Mrs. LouieZabloudil Wednesday afternoon.Circle I alsg served lunch at theRoe sale Monday.Shelly Jean Braildt of GrandIsland was a houseguest of Yr.and Mrs. Irving King fro111 Fridayto, Sunday. She is a grandniece of Mrs. King. She was aSaturday supper and overnightguest of Connie a~cl Sharon King,Clara King entert8i~ed at anafternoon luncheon Friday honoringher sister, Mrs. Grace Roger.Others,, present were Maggie, King, Mrs. Irving King, Mrs.Willard llarkness, Mrs. HaroldKing, Mrs. Marvin Rjce, Mrs. 'Kent Hornickel and Stevie, Mrs.Dan Spilinek and Dianne, M;s.Mike R~ce and Mrs. Ron R~ceand Stacy.Mr. and Mrs. Irving King andClara King took their sister Mrs.Grace Royer to Grand Islandduring the night for her to .board her train for Laneaster,Calif. at 5:30 Sunday porning.Shortly before that time a freight' train mas derailed c+using a delaytill allnost noon phile a newtrack was built. ,i++. and Mrs. Leo Nroczek andJan~ce visited the Lavern Mroczekfamily at hup Citv Suudayafternoon. The Eon Arnoldfamily of <strong>Ord</strong> uere Sudday eve-.Last Sunday of the MonthSUNDA,Y, SEPT.>b 1.yL:'r, r : 2, :' *, >Consign Your Horse's Early .IHorse Sale - 1:OO 0'clockBilly B. Day or Franeis Thomas~ h 3i3 .~ h 6-8 .*LOUP CI'IY COMMISSION (0.Bus. Ph. 313Livestock AuctionlSaturday, Sept. 26thCattle held steady. Dentatid for light cattle si~otig, Sniall calves andcalves on dry feed sellill from $4060 to 100.00 per head. He~efotd 6.angus sfcers under 300 I& $38.00 t'o $12 08. Hetefotd & Angus he~fers$32.09 to $36.00. Ctossb~cd 'steers 350 lb; and lighler $31 00 to $35.00'wf steels 550 to 625 Ibs $31 00 fo $33 00- black wf hclfers 67s Ibs. $25.90:Holstcin steers & bblls' 435 ' lbf. $27.00. ' Weigh-up COWS $17.00 fo $20.75;m~lk cows steady.Iof Sohrweid Vacation Itirof University of Nebraska,Sixth District: Kobert R.Kocfoot; Wabne E. parber.. , . Dlrector Loup l3asln ReclamationDistrict, Subdivision Two:Arnold Krogh; John 0, A. Nelson.Director Louw Basin Reclamati00DisfrJct, ~Gbdivision ~hree:A Ste\.e Smith.Directors Loup Valleys Rural; -"-,--ning visitors of the :J&I Mro- Merle Staab and Mrs. Earl IIar- at Don's in Kearncy Thur~day . Public Power &strict:- Fay B.czeks.ris all of Seattle called on the dnd plan to bisit their son Joe Carpenter; Leo R. Klein; Down-Mr. , and Mrs. tloSd Gewcke Alfred Bursons and guests Sun- and fanlily i&Nash\ille. Our Ken, ing Rounds.attended a meeting In Hastings day ekcning.Charlene and Cindy and Toin Director Middle Loup ~ bwer &Monday of last ueek, then droke Shirley Peterson, who attends caine out too. \Ve bisited and had Irrigation District. Subdivisionto Chico, Tex. to get their horses. school in Lincoln, spellt the week- blrthday cake and ice cream. ~hr:e: Allan ,E. Masters.Theirone , mare left there had eqd with her folks, the Bryan This tinle for Theresa uho wasTheir one mare left there had Petersons. She met thein at the 17 Satu~clay. Our grandson Chuckbrought holne three Thursday. football game in Holdrege Fri- (Russell's boj) a~ll be 14 thisFriday Mr. Geueke went to day.ueek but ue'll sk~p the cake asWyolning for feeders and return- Mr. and M&. Ray YetCrson, he likes in West Virginia.ed home Saturday.Mr. and Mrs. George Bell and I saw one of the nicest trios atThe birthday of ilrs. Ernest Mr. and Mrs. George Clement at- the receplion of DeLysle andLange was celebrated at the tellded the ~ecfptlon for North Barbara Burson Sunda). Theyhollle of her daughter and son- Lgup-SCotia teachers at the School pere Bradley, Linette and Jeanin-law,Mr. and Mrs. L. in Scotia Monday ekening. ine, the thlce youngsters ofLoseke and family at Columbus , Mrs. Herbert Bredthauer of - Rollie and Gloria Staab.Sunday. Present besides the Arcadia visited the Henry Langes At the farm sale of QU nei h-honoree were her husband Ern- and her father Will?aln Ii0ltZ at bor, Edna Rqe Monday f ha% aest Lange, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon the Lan e home Fr1da.y.good t~slt wlth Mary Ann RoeLange and family, Mrs. Ed Huff- . Mrs. baurlne Koellln was a Petska. I don't see her often. A- 'man, ~ r and . Mrs. Dave Lange Sunday dinner guest of &a. Anna SO visited with Effie Chatfieldand family, Mrs. Rose Fuss of Visek.found out she ,has retired fro111Scotia ,and Mr. and Don Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Petersoil, teaching and libes in Orcl. IierUden Bnd daughters opfhniata. Nancy and Keith visited her children and ours are about theA family dinner, colnplete with folks, Mrq and Mrs. Will F~th same ages and we used t~ comholnemadeice creamJ at the Sunday evening-pare.--Ahome of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tim-Slnith called on Mr.merman Sunday, honored the and Mrs. Elmer B~edthauer76th birthday of Mr. Timmer- Thursday eveni~lg.man. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Kent ornic nickel,Adan1 Zebert, Donna and ~onald, Kathy and Stevie were SundayMr. hfid Mr< -Joe Knapp and dinner guests of her folks, Mr.publican; William Tunla - Demo-Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Mirv+ Wil- \ .and Mrs. Willard Barkness, Gary . GENERAL ELECTION NOTICE crat.rson, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Timmef- and Paul.. Notice is hereby given, that on V a 1 l e y . County 'Supervisor,,man, Jan and .Mary Ann, fi, . .Mrs. Sophie $'L~SS visited'~r: ?uesday, the 3rd day of Nokem- Thlrd Distr~ct: Duand Carson -and Mrs. .Dick Peterspn and fam-. and Mrs. Fca* Fuss and falnll~ per, 1970 at the following pollingiIy, Mr. and yrs. Irv~ng Tlmmer- , Sunday afternoon. Frank was Ireplacesin valley County:valley County ~upe'rvisor, Fifthman, ' Mr. and M s. Richard -leased Doln the hospital Satur- Eureka -. Elyria: Elyria Par- District: Hay ,H. Knapp - Re- IKnapp and' sons -an$ Mr. and ' day where he had been 'since ish Hall.publican. IMrs. ~oug Markley apd baby. Thursday following an accident Nople - Springdale: school 'Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Yahnke of with his motorbike .~istrlct $6.Aub'urn and Mr. and Mrs. Victor ' Mrs. Elsie Bremer, George:. Arcadia '- Yale: Arcadia LegionClub.Medals of O'Neill uerk Sunday Bremer and their houseguests,,)dinner and afternoon guests of , Mrs. Emlllett liardilig of Port-'Liberty - Geraniunl - Michigan.National 1Iall.Mr. and Mrs. George Bell. Mrs. land, Ore. and Mr. and Mrs. .'Yahnke, the former Margaret David Davies of Boulder uere Vinton - Enterprise: SchoolPetty and Mrs. Medals, the form- Friday dinner guest$ of Mr. and Distri~t %23.er Marjorie Petty, are cousins Mrs. Carl Young.Davis Creek - Independent -of Mr. Bell..Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Urwiller, horth Ipup: North Loup Corn- ,,Tuesday, Sept. 15! the Rollie Larry and Lori of Havenna were munity Building. L<strong>Ord</strong> <strong>Township</strong>: Courthouse. 'Staab falnlly entertained at sup- Sunday dinner u e s t of herper honoring the birthday of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fotll.<strong>Ord</strong> City 1st Ward: City IIall.DeLysle Burson. Other guests Mr. and Mrs. William Bremer <strong>Ord</strong> City 2nd Ward: <strong>Ord</strong> HighRere DeLysle Burson, Jim Bat. visited Mr. and Mrs.. Everett School.taia .of Denber and Mr. and Mrs. HO$nlckel Sunday eveplng. .<strong>Ord</strong> Cily 3rd Ward: BohemianAlfred Burson.'hpma and Eda,?obberstein of Hall.an, election will be held for:Mr. and Mrs. Stan Johnson, Grand Island were Friday' ebe-Donna and Tracy attended the 'ning and overnight guests of Mr., United States Senator: Roli~AnL. IIruska - Republican; Frankwedding of Janet Lknstrom of and Mrs. Elmer J3redthauer.Colnstock and RonaJd Regehr'of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert SchlvartzB. Morrison - Democrat.Governor: Norbert T. TielnannKansas at the Baptist Church in, ~ ~ o ~ $ f $ ~ Saturdfy o ~ . ~ after- r ~ - Republican; J. J. Eson ---<strong>Ord</strong> Saturday afternoon.Mr. and Mrs.' George Rahm of J~ n Ryschon HM2, 'home onDemocrat; Albert C. Walsh -pinedale, wyo. arrived last Tues- lec7b c! , had suPPer,with his Broth- American.Lieutepant Gobernor: Frankday and were house guests of Mr, er* R>scbon and family Marshand Mrs. Alfred Burson till Thlli"d",;- Republican; Ronald E.dinner of Redgall - Democrat.Tuesday. They are Jhe parelits :and fis, Francis RySchon be- Seclelary of State: ~llen\ J.of Mrs. DeLysle Burson.Mrs.' Hilda ~oggs of Casper, - sides their son John were Mr, Becrmann - Republican; Stan-Wyo., who had spent the sum- and Wrs. Gordon Foth and famleyA. Mdtzke, Jr. - Democrat.mer in Kansas, arri\ed at the ily, Mr. and Mrs. Gust Foth, Jr. . Auditor of Public Accounts:Ray A. C. Johnson - Republicail;home of her brother Isaac &uoma , and Paul and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fred Sorensen - Dcmotr;t.and family Thursday, Sunday R~sch011, Mike alld Randy.and.Mr. and Mrs. Dale Miller and State Treasurer: Wa~ne H.'OggS Kearney. visited Hanlolla Luoma and Fs'ln: fallllly of Grand pJand \iSiiCd Syanson Republican;, John \V.Mr. and Mrs. Archie Mason sull. Issack - Democrat.Attorney General: ClarellceMr. and Mrs. Eugene Bredthaucrand family' vislted her sis- da&re2i:g.Mrs.Me~er Republican; Stanley D.ter a~ld family, the Bob Mettin- and family of Elba spent Sun- Cohen - Democrat,brinks' at Grand Island Sunday day afternoon with Mr. Railway Commissioner, Third.,gistrici: 4uane Gay '- Republiafternoon.The silver wedding ?Gr :dv$:;lrchie and can; William . J. S~hilcidc~ -.a!.n.i\ersary of Mr. and Mrs. Met- .t~nbrisk was oqscrvpd. I>. gild Mrs,. JohnDemocrat;. L. E. Adalils - BYMI. and Mrs. Stanley 'gYed~$a~ dinner guests of Mr. Yf?tition; Leonard S. Schaefer -rs. Hubert Ha eg.IBercvynIz:b S$$3$:d $z!tpf $a& Foth spent sa$day eke-mother, Mrs. Edgar Roe. They ning at the Cordon E'oths whilesta~ed till after Mrs. Roe's faj-1~1 his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gustsale Monday.Foth 3r. attended the RepublicallMrs. Edwin end attended a' bauquet in * . <strong>Ord</strong>.W.S.C.S. iExecutibe Board meet* ---ing at Trinity Methodist Church , ' ~abbles by Berthain Grand ,Island Wednesday. Our $0" Don ,and grandson Ed-Mr. and Mrs. liarold King visit- die drobe up f~olll Kearney Sunedher grapdparents, Mr. a n d day afternoo~l' all? sh.ortly after-Mri. Sanl Kurt11 at Fullertou last wards Ted and ~ulh Babcock -Wedaesday. This was the 62nd , the Parellts of Phillis - and our-\% edging an1li\ersary of &, granddaughter Theresa dj ox e in.Mrs. Kurth. Ted and uth, forinerly of-NorthLinda Pohorny and 'Mrs. ~ ~ Loup 1 - anfl no, of Santa An?,bert calkin attel!&d the \.\iick. are lllaklng a leisurely tripstroln Show at Lincoln Sunliav, a- arribcdMrs. Llold Geueke entertain--. l5y Yelitiou. I r IHaIm, Heplcsentati\e in Congress,Third District: Dake hlartil~ -qeliublicdn; Uopald Searcy -Dc41ocraf.Meiilbers of State. Board ofEducation, Sebenth District: l)cborahB. Sheyhcrd;D~rector Thin Loups ReclamationDistrict, Subdi\ision Three:John Potr~eba.Board of Educatiollal ServiceUnlt Melnbels at Large: SeniceUnlt #lo: Stan F. Koy; WarrenS. Lamb; John Gardner, Jr.;Leonard Skov; Rae Jean Treptow;Arthur W. Dllsa\er.Valley County Clerk: ThelmaM. Dulitz - Republican.Valley County Treasurer: SharonL Foth - Republican.Valley County Sheriff: ClarenceE. Fox - Republican.Valley County. Attorney: JohnR. Sullivan - Democrat; 3. MarkinWeems - By Petition,Valley County Surkeyor: Emanuelfetska - Den1ocl;at.Valley County .Assepsor: ~lrankMottl - Republican.Part Time Superiqtendent ofSchools.Valley County Supe' visor, FirstDistrict: Kenneth ~oflins - Re-Valley Counfy Supervisor, SeventhDistrict: Kenneth L. Llorsey- Democrat,Members County Weed ControlAuthority: Keith 11. Luedtke;Louell Jones; William J. Flock;Raymond Christensen.Supervisors Valley County Sol1& Water Conservation District,Subdi\isions 3: Charles B. Zangger;Dale D. Mulligan; Subdivision4: Donald Murray; Carl B.Nelson.Judge of the District Court,Twentieth District: Williain F.Manasil.Judge of the Nebraska Workmen'sCon~pensation Court: Be11Novicoff.<strong>Township</strong> Officers.15 Proposkd ConstitutionalAmendlnents for voter approvalor rejection (Ballot title and textto be published in October)which election w~ll be open ateight am, and will continue openuntil eight p.m. of the same day.Dated this 21st day of September,1970. Thelima M. DulitzValley County ClexkVillage of ArcadiaArcadia, NebraskaThe V~liage Boa~d met In RegularSessiol?, September 10 1970. Meinbersp~esellt u ele: ~dl'~ahlie, Chalpman. J~rn Trotter Francis Shulttand b e ~ ~ Dalby. a r kobert Sestak adsent. Notlce of the meeti~lg was postedat least 3 days prior, to day ofmeetmg. Kecord of meet~ng of August3 was lead and app~obed Thefollowing claims were prescntecl.Arcadia Service Insecticide -S467.18Kans.-Neb, ~atuial Gas, U.til, ,. 18.19Nebr. Central Tel., Util. .--- 29.69Uept of Revenue Sales Tax - 21 18viola Smith, ~ u et d Work .- 100:00Lloyd ~enstermacter, Salary - 108.00Jim Hagood Salary 20.00Ku h ~vans: Salary . !. :.: 500.00~io?a Smith, Salary 100.00Arcadia Agency, Insurance 156.19Ray Bennett Labor 99.00Quiz Gra hi6 Arts, Legal Pub, 7.84Lad ~e?cK Removal of trees . 60.00Smith ~o&truction Co., StreetPrep Work & Oiling 9932.12Richard Luedlke. Street Work 30.75Reed Brown, Street Work 9.75Steve Giies, Street IVork ... 42.00Albin Pierson, Street Work -- 21.75Rugh Evans Tractor llire .~ 39.00Mrs. Con ~bultz, Cleaning 6.90Arcadla Guide Ad ................... 9.00Middle Hoe Hire Loup &rig. Dist., Back 90.00Arcadia State Bank, Photocopies. . . . 2.30Staab \$'elding, Ser. &' Sup. - 35.1qArcadia Hardu,are, Ser. k Sup. 7.1 ,>Trotter Lbr. Su . & Labor - 120.76Arcadia cool; 0if Gas k biesel (3.48Trotter Skelly, Gas & Dlesel .. 27.07Moved by Dalby, seconded byShuitz and carried that all cla~ms beallowed. Moved by Trotter secondedby Dalby and carried th'at RobertBower, and Richard John be placedon the Fire Dept. Roster. Moved byShultz seconded by Trotter, and car-ried that the r--.-t:n* adjourn.Viola M. Smith. clerk'Quiz Want AdsTOO' Late To ClassifyFOR SALE: Pure-bred hampshireboars. Jerry M. Fisher 496-4646- 29-4t~-HELP WANTEED: Maid service,mornings qnly. Apply In person.Parkklew Motel, <strong>Ord</strong>. $, Arnold, Nebraska 69120II SPECIAL SALE IHepubhcan. 1 Arnold Liveslock Sales Co., lqc. I, Don Wadell, Mgr.A~~~~~ fr0ll> Veterans HospitalGrand Island, NebraskaKn-vler.. , .t I tam#II+ .. ,.-.-n, NebraskaSpecial- Mqliday. Sept. 28th I,-....=7~w,1 1500-1700 Cattle (~ 4 ~ 'Sale Time 10:30 A.M., crtcattle . Sale \ Time 1:00 P.M.,cstEARLY LISTIWGS, INCLUDE .700 Choice Steers, 650 to 725 lbs., 400 of these are IIereIords -390 Black and Crossbred and Charoliais, These are allright of the pasture. Patjon Ranch.75 Whiteface Yearling Steers, 7510 td 750 lbs. Deterding Ranch75 Choice Whiteface Stecrs, 67q to 700 Ibs Dobbins Ranch90 Fanc Hereford He~fers, guarallteed open, 550 to 575 lbs.L. ~lristensen Ranch ,40 Fancy Angus Yearling Steers and Heifers, 550 to 575 Ibs.aD. Christensen Ranch s'" I :. 'These are light weight and green.40 Fancv Angus Ye?ling Steers and Heifers, 550 to 575 lbs.87 Fancy Hereford Heifers, guaranteed open, 675 to 700 Ibs.Watklns and Son Ranch50 Crossbred Steers and Heifers, 600 lbs. Ray Barker13 Whiteface Steers and Heifers, 670 lks. M. Downill& &' Son4 Charalais Stecr and lIeifer Calkes, 375 lo $00 lbs. Secla158 to 250 Yearlings Bnd Cows in small lots. I *These are all local Sandh~ll Cattle direct froln the ranhesthe day of sale.80 .PigsI- workt'd - 40 to 55 lbs. Srnets and. HaidlySellipg 300 to 400 Uutcher Hogs each wcck wlth four packer Ibuyers on hand.1 50 Fancy Blk. Wf Steei-s 675 to 700 ibs. I, , C. , Krarncr .''Amoldliveslock Sales Co., lnc.' . ' 1 :, \ j - phone: 848-2244 - ' 'I .t: ,I . " - *~hcdfprd Phone 645-2414 Arn6ld Phone 848-29554,000 Choice & Fancy 'Carlot Feeder AuctionFriday Sepk 25th at Burwelled her bridge .,- Club Sunday eke- c %Choice and Faricy Sandhill Cettle Many carload and larger lots of outstanding Stndhillhing.The Bible ~iudy group inetwith Mr. and Mrs. Gust Foth, Jr.Wednesday ekening. Llo~d Necdhamuias the leader.Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yrien ofLincoln and Mr. and Mrs. AdolphSebcnktr spent Friday e~eningwith Mrs. Edgar Roe. .Monday supper guests of Mr,and Mrs. Joe Pohorny and fam-11y ucre Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeKahlil of Plnedale, \Vjo., Jill1Battaia of Dcn~cr, Mr. and Mrs.DcLysle Burson, Mr. and blrs.Alfred Uurson and Mr. and 3frs.Rollie Staab and children,Mr. and Ills. Heubctl Staab of'ITHEIMIG~~Y MIDGETWANT ADS WORKarid gue~ts, Mr, and Rbs.I Sargenl Liveslock Commission Co., lnc. II ISpecial Stocker , - Regularand Feeder Sale . Hog SaleI Thurs., Sepl. 24' Fri., Sepl. 25 1f( - For this week I Early Consignments:120 crossbred ~rl. str. 725-775 lbs. Fending20 small baby calves30 mixed steers & heifels, on dry feed25 wf & brockleface stecrs & heiers 300 to 400 lbs., green22 blatk & black wf steers & heifers 375 to 425 Ibs., green15 mixed he'ers 60.0 to 700 lbs.15 wf steed 800 lbs , green, long haul, home raised20 crossbred steers & heifers 500 lbs.Several milk cons, 20 weigh-up cows90 sheep sell this Saturday entire flock of one mu~i.including43 Ewes, aid 47 iecdincr lambs, fresh froin theI counlry.. *f H O G SII7Butcher hogs sold fo a fop of $2085 oil 218 -lb weiglrls 244 Ibs.$20.70; bulk of good butchels weighing '210 to 235 lb;. $20 30 'to $20.85;250 Ibs. $19.85; 264 Ihs. $19.05; sows active selling to $18.50, 325 Ibs. to400 Ibs $1680 to $17.85 400 to 500 Ibs. $16.10 to $16.75 over 500 Ibs.$14.60 tb $15.70 wejgh-upl,boars $13.70 to $14.35; small pigsl$lO.OO to $12.00per head fancy p~gs wetgh~n 47 Ibs $17 25 per head 71 Ib. pigs $18 00per head 101 Ib shoats $25?0 per head: heavy shoits 125 to 150 lbs.$17.25 fo '$18.00 der cwt., brdod sows $50.b0 to $90.04 per head.Another good run of feeding siiouts ulid pigs for thesale this week, already severul bunches consigned, also IIpiggy gilts.We urge you to bring your market hogs in early Saturdaymorning.For late listings tune KNLV Radio (3rd Thurs. & Sat.mornings 9 to 8.For mere infgrmation or trucks ~o~rtact, 'I <strong>Ord</strong> Livestock Market I45 choice wf sir. and hfr. 600-650 lbs.50 choice wf brl. str. 600 lbs.60 blk and mix str. and hfr, calf. 350-400 lbs.30 crossbred stf. and hfr. cal~es 500 lbs.14 blk str. 623 lbs.10 .wf str. and hfr. 600 lbs.I", Thursday's cattle 'market steady fo sfro~lgcr on yearlingIstcers and heifers. Cows fully steady, bulls steady, canner andcutter cows 18.50-20.50; utilitie and eolnincrcial 20.50-21 50;bulls 25.00-26.25; 600 Ib. >earling steers 34.15, yearling heifers550-650 Ibs 29.00-30.50; Bujer demand very actire on allclasses,1 'fridav Se~t. 18th we had 1400 hoas on sale with an 1Iextreme top ~f 21.25; This top of 21 25 g&~g-to cl&n GochlanI<strong>Ord</strong> for 244# butchels. Vance Jeffres Buruell 233# 21 10; GeoJanicek Buruell 230# 21.05; Richard Vogeler Scotia 247#21.00; Gerald Vbgejer 254# 21.00; Joe IIorhey Sargent 217#21.00: Ernle Vodehnal <strong>Ord</strong> 205# 20.95 Leonard Moudrv <strong>Ord</strong>237# 2095: Joe hfattox Broken Bow 244# 20 -- 95. . ~, ~ulk-of -- fhs ----h'o.' .I-3 b'utchers, 200-240820.5621.00: 240.260# 20.25-20.75;260-280# 20.00-20.25; sows 400# down 17.00-18.00; some around300# 18.75; 400-550# 16.00-17.90; 550-600# 15.25-16.00; smallfeeder pigs 25-35# 12.50-14.00 per hd. 35-60# 14.00.17.00 perhd. GO-80# 17.00-20.00; boars 13.50-14.00 bred, sows 52.50-85.00S~lurdmy, September 26th12:OO Noon Sale TimeAncther large offering of outstanding feeder cattle includinvmany carload lots of yearling steels, heifers, fall calves,stock cows and cows with calves at side.173 Fancy herefold steers and heifers, 700 lbs. Jim Tailor175 Choice to fancy hereford stccrs, 675 lbs. Barney Petersoll150 Chnlce to fancy hercfold and hcreford angus cross steers,723 Ljbs. Sanl Loeske150 Cholce to fancy hcreford and hereford angus cross stecrs,650-700 lbs. Leonasd and Duane IIinkle135 Eutra choice hcreford stecrs and heifers, 625-675 lbs. Rayson135 Extra'choice hcrcford heifers, 650 lbs. Russel Bald100 Extra choice hereford heifers, 650 700 lbs \Vilbur Scott100 Extra choice hercford steers and heifers1 550 625 lbs. ArtSorensen60 Extra choice hereford steers, 650.700 lbs. Horner lianch60 Choice hercford heifers. 500 525 lbs. One Brand70 Extra cfloice hereford heifers, G23 Ibs. Don Gardner70 Choice angus stecrs and !ieifers, 650-700 lbs. Fletchcr65 Choice to fancy hereford fall calbes, 450550 lbs. ClarencePriceExtra choice fall calves, 500 lbs. John ColenlanFancy hcreford s!etrs and heifers, 650 lbs. Neville & SonChoice hereford steers, 750 lbs. ChamberChoice hcreford and hereford anGus cross steers, 700-7'35lbs. Eddie I


(Page 2) QUIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., ThurSday, September 24, 1970I -Serving fke Loup Valley 88 Years ' IAssoclatior~ - Founded 1886Toda I saw the first few leaves rustling along the pavemenand it ma d e me sad. All at once I drove up one street and dowbEvery government official or boar&another, sav~ring tlle beautiful greens I - of the la~ns and the treesandling public moneys should pub-1lish at regulai intervals an ac-poe 111.\count~ng showrng where nd how$v,om$how I don't like to see the last of supimey, aiid th~each do!lar is spent. he brd Qyizholds th~s to be a fun amental pr~n-)ear we've had so many flowers, all kinds, 811 colors, and ;rJciple of Democratic! Government.I #. 9over Old. Ifor 7 % 7BEST USEPleasefell to appriciating' the trees we have, <strong>Ord</strong> has handsoni~Phone NewsI-Items to 718-3261OF PHOTOGRAPHY , I3 1tree$. .But seeing thos'e city trucks d;appii,h off our big dld elmKerry &Carol Leggett publishersis the <strong>Ord</strong> scene noy. We have lost such humbers 'of fine trees tthose little bitty beetles called Dutch. Thoygh this loss was preGerald Green -- Editordic~ed, it is difficult to accept nevertheless.'Lynn Griffith ---- Advertising$ think NebrasLans have a special thing about trees.ManagerOur, sireanis and canlolls are ?turfed with trees, out riviqdges are not barren but scallo~ed in the soft greens'of bvshean$ trees. : 3 :forBEST FEATURE STORYBEST SPORTSFEATYRE COLUMNWhich WayWill tlk Flop Next?- IState Groups Offer Opposite ViewsOn Constitutional Amendment No. 10( (Editor's Nofe: On this fall's erty from taxatiqn. g r o u p s requiring no personalgeneral election ballot there In 1966 Nebraska voters ap- Property to make a living arewill be 15 proposbls to change probed a constltutlonal amend- not taxed. Possession of "tools"the Nebraska State Constitution. ment uhich prohibited the state of production is not directly re-One of the most controversial is fro111 levying adproperty tax for lated to ability to pay.Amendment 10, which would al- state purposes, and the 1967 Leg- ~conomy-The personal proplowthe Stat9 L2gislature to ex- islature as forced to enact a se- erty tax is riot an econolnical tax, (ppt all perrofial property from ries of hls which has brconle to administer. Preparation of detaxatipn.To give our readers an ljopularly referred to as the tailed assesslnent schedules,What changing times these are! ,Now Democratic congressioilal candidate Don Searcy sayshe is in favor of the North Loup Divisio~~ reclamation. project, thatit was "extrentely feasible," and that it was "one of high priorit "He claillis to have been quoted out of colltext by the diddiiz concer~ling his earlier statement about "big dam foolishness."We won't get into a hassle about that, but 011 a 'couple ofother points thercis no question.. IIFirst, after Searcy presented a slide briefing at the <strong>Ord</strong> Chaiilberof Coninlerce nleeting on July 2, he was asked about hisfeelings concerning the North Loup project. He appeared to haveno knowledge whatsoever of the project, and in fact stated thathe had not read "the entire proposal." \, opp6rtunity to evaluati the ar- "1967 Tax Package." The malor plogment of qualified assistantgyments on each side of this is- enactment was, a sales al?d use assessors to assess individuals,I Secoad three weeks after he appeared at that meeting andsye, the Quiz is reprinting two tax coupled with all ind~ridusl and difficulties with enforcelllentone week after the congressioilsl field hearing on the project washeld here in <strong>Ord</strong> (which he did not attend), Searcy distributed anews release that was at the least very pessiniistic and at the mostdownright critical of the Narth Loup project.In view of his new allegiance to the project, it's worth takinganother look at that nens release. So here it is, prillted in full sothat there'll be no,quotil~g out of context. You decide whetherMr. Searcy would be as willilig to support the North Louy proj~ctas he now clainls lie would."Dear Mr. Leggett:"Recently I held an hour-long press ,conference id GrandIsland. At that time I niade sonie corg~lients concerning the QorthLoup and O'Neill reclamation projects. I would like fo share thcs6yiews with you and your readers. *I"I $0 feel that the public should be made aware of Some ofthe possible pitfalls i11 the corlstruction of these projects. We certainlydo not want to get our expectations too high. It is for thisreason that 1 an1 addressing this letter to you And your readers."We fully realize that additional irri ation would be bene-ficial to Nebrask~. We now have over 3,60 ,000 acres of irrigatedland, the third greatest acreage in the United States, but:"(1) over one-half of all the new drainage projects in theUnited States are iiow being developtd in surface irrigated areas.No drainage provisions have bee11 provided in the projects fornorth central Nebraska and this could present unsolvable .?roblemswithin two decades after co~npletion. Within the 3rd Districtgwe alread have one area that is suffering fro111 acute drainageproblems rouglit about by the import of water. Any correspondencewith farmers north of the Holdrege area will verif theprobleii~s that exist in the Tri-County area. The water tab r e, i11some areas, has gone up ad much as 100 feet. Some provisions fordrainage should be provided in these reclamation projects."(2) The orikiual proposals for these projects were submittedmore than a decade ago. Little has been done since thesefirst surveys. With tlie promise of these potential projects, manypople may want to develop irrigation and reclanlati011 districts,financed by a local n~ill levy. The proposed Mid-State ReclamationDistrict has been in existence over 10 years aiid not onespade of dirt has been turned. Over $100,000 of local tax moneyhas been spent each year to niaintain a district in hopes of gettinga project. In addition, some $200,000 of federal monies have'been dumped into this yet-to-be-started project."(3) Many of these new rojt'cts require the conseilt of amajority of the farmers within t e area. Some exaii~in~tion shouldbe niade of this before finalization of a project. I seriously doubta majority of the farniers in tlie Mid-State area look favorablyupon the Mid-State project."(4) At this time in the development and furldin of variousprojects, the people must be extremely realistic. Wit a the cut-ting of the budget on-farm programs-the reduction of acreage,it is questioriable whether additional funds should be spent forincreasirlg jields of surplus crops. This is one of the major reasonswhy Mid-State has not yet been fundfd."(5) As was pinted obt in !he hearings, additioi~al considerationshould be given to the wilderness pdtential of the Niobrqraand Calanius Kivers."(6) I conipliment the people of your area apd various stateand federal agencies for reviewing the possibility of the developmentof such projects. I realize the State Soil and Water ConservationConlnlission has bee11 doing a creditable job in forniulatioi~of a state water plan, I know many of the people withill that organizationand respect their ability."I'ni sorry that I was unable to attend the bblic hearings,but previous conimitments in the western part of ebraska madeit in~pssible."I, along with many other ople id central Nebraska, havebeen most disappointed that s r me development has not comeabout in this Mid-State area. This letter has bee11 addressed tothe people of north central Nebraska to alert the111 to the factthaf iiiucl~ of what has ken discussed this last week probablycould not be develojxd at this time and may not be feasible fora decade or more.Sincerely,/s/ DonDon Searcy"-\8KJust W~nderingEnrollment in the kindergarten class at North Loup-ScotiaElenientary School this year is 24 students. The Head Start Schoolfor econoiiiically and culturally deprived childre11 just below kindergartena e has an enrollment of 18. - 'F;Does t i$ mean that roughly 75 percent of the children whowill start school at North Loup-Scotia next year will be cuIturalIyand ecoiioniically deprived?Or is it anothet exaniple of the way tax dollars are wastedthrough the, sponsoring Office of Ec~noiliic Opportunity and itslocal subsidlnry, the Ce~itral Nebraska Community Action Program,Inc.?. .-, tically iinposslble.Impact and Incidence-S o m eoccupational groups such as agriculturebear the direct impactof the persondl property tax andhale no iffay of shifting the taxburden; whereas, within the limitsof comyet~tive pricing, someYesterday's door stpod slightly businesses and industries canajar. The light creeping throughpass the tax psid on inventoriesnearly blinded hini - if he look-on to consiumers.ed directly at it. Yet it m,as diffi- Econo14c Growth-The personcultnot to look. . - . a1 property tax discourages eco-He had walked ip that !ight, ~ l that l he'd sought eluded nomic gro\!th, because it placesonly to stumble over inaninlate hi, k different sealnents of our econa.+.objkcts blocking his path. bv$ diminished \then he look- ' Omy at a -disadvantage. NineHe had felt the pain. He had ed it In the,eye, I states no longer tax personalchanged course many times with Meaning lingered in the shad- Pro erty at all. Many others arethe realization that unrespon~i~e- ows and dissipated with light in the process of revising theirness hurt only him, Only truth's nakedness aroused Personal Pro erty tax for moreGuided by only, one obsession, contempt. And even contempt equity. In tpe immediate areahe then walked in darkness. could not break the shackles re- Colorado, North Dakota, and ~ inlObsessed? Obsessed with lo& straining what life had existed. , nesota ha\e already eliminatedand searching for meaning! Return? Ne~erl all personal property from taxa-A wax museum of: yesterday-But he would continue to walk / tion or ark in the process of dofilledwith familiar faces, E2.onward-in new rooms--search- ing so. How'can Nebraska agripressionlessfaces!ing new worlds-always seeking. culture, industry, and business, 8 Yesterday's light hould never compete favorably with those ofTern estuous V 0 i C e echoed diminish. Nor did tomorrow's other states which do ot ref~olt?&? walls. But nowhere an lighi seFm any brighter The il- wire personal property tker?qwwer! A chamber of the va,ue lulninatlon of today @as suffi- In a sound, grouing economy,., , a ~ the d familiar. Yester aY., cient, leaving no shadows of dis- everybody benefits. PropositionHe stared longingly at the sllasioh and creating no bewilder- 10, if approved, will correct a se--light-knowing he'd never re- ment. Sufficient unto this day rious tax inequity and contributeturn . . . and knowing, too, he'dt -was the-light thereof.lo general improvement of theneber forget. Today he walked alone. Nebraska growth and economy.-.The Scott Renor)Fate of nL. '10 Years AgoThe bnrollrnent of St. Mary'sSchool was 134 pupils - 69 girlsand 65 boys - in grades oneihrough. eight.Francis Zabloudil moved hisstudio from above Kinglein'sDrug Store to the Troyer buildingnext door to the Coast-to-CoastStore.Officers were elected to heridciasses froln the seventh gradeon up at ~ r High d School. Presidentselected for each class wereas fol ows: twelfth grade, BobStowel \; e 1 e v e n t h, CarolineCovey; tenth .fFeith Burson;ninth, Dale )ha; eighth, DanVanZandt; seventh, JoAnna Calkin20 Years AgoGeorge Lint, a patrol foremanfor Roads the died Nebraska unex Departmentectedl at the ofage ol 51 years. Ire liveB in <strong>Ord</strong>.Albert Green, a linotype o eratorfor the Quiz in 1920 and, P 921,returned to <strong>Ord</strong> for a bisit.Mrs. Isabel Huff, well known in<strong>Ord</strong> community, died att 1 e <strong>Ord</strong> Cooperatibe Hosp~tal afterIt a was long announced illness. that the <strong>Ord</strong>Catholic Church Fest~val wouldbe held Oct. 1 at the Bohemi,anHall. Price of a fried chicken dinnerwas to be $1.A large group of relative: andfriends were dinner guests in theHazel Guggenmos hoine to honorMr. and Mrs. Bernard Guggenmos.The newl>weds had recentlyreturned from a honegmoon tripto Canada.30 Years AgoTWO <strong>Ord</strong> boys became EagleScouts, the highest rank in scouting.The were Warren Allen andHarry Mabis dcc~eth ~chudel was crownedqueen of Popcorn Days.Two <strong>Ord</strong> citizens of half a centurybefore, Professor and Mrs.Harold Foght, returned here fora visit. Professor Foght was amember of <strong>Ord</strong>'s first graduatingclass in 1890, and Mfs. Foght -forme~ly Alice Xobbins - grad-uated with the class of 1895. Therofessor was best known herelor his book, "The Trail of thehup," but he had also writtena nunlber of educational works.It was announced that a newfirm to be known as WesternAuto Associate Store would beopened in <strong>Ord</strong> by C. E. Husmisellof PaImer.40 Years AgoJimmy Moore, age 3, was badlybitten by a hog while at the homeof his grandparents, the A. J.Nybergs. Mr. Nyberg waS repairingthe hog pen, and the lad waswatching him. Without warqingthe hog attacked the child, bitinghim severely in th8 abdomen.Captured Servicemen Takes Back SeatIAnd it is ;o pleasant to realize that in a few )ears pur crosrState'hiehwajs ar? going to bs garjanded with yourig trees.probably the reason I I*ve,trees so much is tl~at Alliqnce haso few. True, thrre are lenty of trees there now, but they ha\11 hand-planted, ha11 B -watered aiid so they seem more valt%!e. Origi2ally the yestern rairies had few trees, and what fetrees ibe plonesrs could fitif they needed to make thsir homcs$,cure against the strong wi~lds roaring do\m *from the foothilof tile Rockies.3 bsually Mitinesota trees qre highly colored, $so bright thtfidy hurt the eyes. Tilere's the yellpw of aspen, the pfrinke'anred of, maples, the richer reds of oak trees, set agaiqst green evegreelis and the intense blue lakes, Oilly Nature co~ld flinyaried an assort~?le~it of cplors at one another .. . and ma & e '* - -~0~11~ out great.gur* maples here are flaniing yeflow Some falls, nqt allthem. Our red sumac is sunlptuous., Dear old pison ivy is a luc~ous red. So is wobdbine. Our chrysanthemunis fire up yello.The last of ou'r zinnias and mayigolds, the Iast of the purply phlothe* lasi gtads, the Iast cannas brighten Valley county now, enj(then1 . . ,Any night now OW Jack Fmsj $1 dg us dirt and bro~every growing thing,,He'll knock off the leave$ And break off tltwigs', p,runing our trees.Tlus summe< has been 'particularly &ugh on new pl'antiqLong days of sun, not enough rain, too niuch wind have dried cand discourage new bdby shrubs an4 youlig trees, no niatter hcmuch water was ured on via hose. Only growth ~ith long deroots coyld absor k this sumnler's punishment,Uut autunlll has its delights. The products of our gardecan't be forgotten. Hyge purple eggplants such as Ross Allr;qises, vellous tomato$s in nearly ever garden, the squash, tzUcsidi, tbe reen peppers, the cucunt ers for pickles. AnciBtthe fruits of all, let's not forget the plums, the peaches, the 11,tariars, tile apples, the grdps. And the n~t'lo~s Mre grolv so \?in . tllis vqllc i, canteloup, hunejdew, musl\melon, y8ternieltWe are ortunate people, who live in this garden spot. Appciafe, Enjoy.IGeranium , , Joe-1rplaEverybody Does Indeed Like lo Talk 1But Not Necessarily lo Say ~omelhingQEAR MISTER EDITOR. ''I'The felIers were sittln'g araund'generally relaxing Saturday nightwhen Ed Noyak up and allowedit was a funny thing to him thatwe could all-rip and snort addhave our say amongst ourselves,but we'd all be seared stiff to saya word in front of strangers.J~hn Kokes contradicted Edright off, as he always does, andsa~d there is nothing strangeabout that - it's just human na-ture.The fellers generally agreedwith John, and I did too. I havea lot of fun writing you this pieceevery week, Mister Editor, andI can usually put down what I'mthinking, But to be honest, I havetrouble speaking up at our meetingsu~lless I'm s oked to directand asked sonletRing.Ed went on to say he was of amind that deep down ever bodylikes to hear himself and I'liha\eto agree with that. If not actuallyhearing himself talk, at least etting the idea thpt somebody 8s;is' paying attentioh to him.What got Ed on the issue wasthis report he had seen where aSeveral 0rd fishermen reportedgood catches of wall-eyed pikefrom the Loup River. However,warm weather made duck huntingmuch slower.Rev. W. H. Wright of Teculnsehas assigned to the pastorate of'x t e <strong>Ord</strong> Methqdist Church at thedenomination's annual conferencein Gncoln. Rev. 3. A. Moorman,who was the current pastor, wasassigned to Pawnee CitMrs. lreile Tully die8' at herhome in Lincoln.The job department of theQuiz was busy printing large billsfor Alyce Johnson, who was start-Ing a big sale as part of her plansto close out and quit business,1policema-n yas . caught delivera sermon in a New York (church at 3 o'clock in the mcing.The office; had climbed in 1window looking fer prowlers.hadn't found* any, but whensaw the pulpit up there, in hof all them empty pews it justthe best of him.The policeman had a lotstuff he wanted tochest, so he proceede8% gik~peech. He said later he di/know the pulpit was wiredIsound and turned on, andhis speech went out ober 11speakers in the church yardwoke up the whole neighborhl!After they got him stopped,woke-up folks said he was splin pretty good, but that he,ca fi ing fer support of Pres~cR~chard Nixon In a strong Dccralic ward and that wasn't nl,losing sleep over.IEd allowed that eversbod ,one time or another wants toup on the stun1 and tellworld \\hat-for. dobody wanttell it like it is, as the .ounqe want it to be.iActually, Mister Editor, Iof a mind that it aln't posthese days to tell it like I'cause they constantly changcname of it. Fer instance, 1'say, but we want to te i 1 it ISing Sing Prison now is OssiCorrection Fac~lity, and-the Yen there is a superinten1Poor folks are "disadvantajand welfare is "social sen ~You remember the timehigh-ranking Greek was visthis country and said he likceat drink and talk, so onecalfed him a glutton drunkgossip. That was telllng ~t 111was.Yours truly,Geranium Joeto Withdrawal' PlansBy Paul Scott Fornzosa, by the Chinese the island Nationalists. now held's risk to free their lobed odes. with other governments. the decision couldn't be changed.WASHING- ,f Secretary of State Vi~lliamOn Borman's return, Rogers "Borman hill be addressing$TON - Astro-Representatives of the t w o* - Rogers and Henry Kissinger, theand Kissinget then propoSed that Congress as the special reprenavtFrank Borsidesare now in Stockholm work-" President's'thief Foreign Policy1 the Astronaut make a report to a sentatibe of the President," statman'sprisoner; adbiser, uanted none of, thls. In 4 Joint Session of Congress on his ed McCormacking on the final text of the anof-warreport to mokin to s ikq the women's ef- ! findings and other Administration "We realize that," remarked noui~ceinent and plans for Canajoint sessionforts, ?hey tgok thq position that efforts to free the rjsoners. one of the women as they $!led ada to push Peking membershipof Congresssuch an appeal lpight set? off a I 7he Con ressionaf 1 e a d e r s out of the Speaker's office, but in the U.N. next month.wasn't ezactl chain _reactlonh that would upset agreed to tie proposal. Speaker j wonder who is going to repre- The formal eslablishinent ofwhat the tam({the President's withdrawal time- John McCormack (1). Mass 1, sent the prisoners?"relations between the two coun-''sies of Amerrcans Missing and table for Vietnam.. then Called in the representatlbestries could havC a dramatic im-Prisoners of War in Southegst Their argument was that the of the American Families of Pri- Peking In UN?r t on the annual debate in theAsla &id* spent the past th;ree disellgagemenf of AmericanA world-wide c amp a i g n is N General Assen~bly on ChinesernaAths lobbvlng for. . . troops has 3 "higher priority"about to, be launched to bring re~resentatioii.The courageous little ~ $ 3 of t?an : the* qescuing of Anerican The wonlen nere caught com- Colnmun~stNations. Chlna into the United~onien, whose persisten pres- flgbtifig inen captured ln the Viet- plstely by surprise by the ~ o -Man countries which votedLsure on Congressional leaders rlaln waposal to let Borman speak. W 11e Leader in the dribe will be the\;ith tie U.S. to keep Red Chinabrought about th unprecedented work& closelr with Senator the women said they were happy Canadian gobernment of Premierout may now be influenced tomeeJlng this weet, ha$ hoped for Mike Mansfield (D. * Mbnt a ho about the decision to hold a Joint Trudeau, whose strange ties withSack Peking. One U.S. Intellii%kfar more. wants all US, troops out ok Viet- Session, they again appealed to leaders gf the Peking governgeilceestinlatb suggeqts that theTheir plan wgi for a returned nam by the end of 1W1, Rogers the Speaker to Igt an ex-prisoner ment have troubled U.S. Intellibhiftcauld be sufficiant to denyprisoner of war to mount the and Kissinger con! inced the other . spf'ak.gence officials for years.the Chinese Nationalist GoFern-~ ~ rostrum n in the Senate-House ~ leaders ~ that if there ~ Only ~ an ex-prisoner ~ knowsment a seat in the U.N, this year.i Under' ~ Trudeau's ~ personal sup- ~ ~House and make a dramatic ap- n*st'.be a Joint Session the Ad- what these men are goi n g enision, negotiations between Preparing The Waypeal -for emergency lfilnistration should control the throiigh 'and the n&ed for our Canada and Communist China Premier Chou ~n-f+i's trip tomeasures by :I???S. t free the Speaker and !$ fpgjent of his goberqent tp move swiftly to for the establishment of diplo- Asia and ,Europe later thls year450 Americans known 'i o be pri- :Qessage. ' 3 _, Ifre t eN," one ,of the nome11 matic relations between the two is now belng vlewed here as partsoners In North V~etnam. - Picking. Borman : - to1 cf t k e Speaker. "We hale no ~ountries have been , completed of Peking's campaign for mem-Discouraged by the continued :. Dyring the n gotiations 'with idea yhat Mr. Bornian will say and a formal announceqent is bership in the U.N. ,withdrawal of American forces . Con ressioqal lefders, it wgs de- ar prOap!pa$e."expected shortly.The Organization of Africanfrom Vietnam without obtajning cide$ at the White House that hlcC.orinack, who had fought U.S. Intelligence officials say Unity recently went On record asty prfsoners' freedsm, the so@- Astronaut Borman, a special as- hard to conkince the other leaders the t\~o sides are in agreement calling for Peking's membership.e were counting on the drainatlc sistant at the State Department, that there should be a Joint Ses- on a list of substantive issues, The World peace Congress at itsplea to bring ressure on Presi- should make a world-uide trip tb siOrl to drdinati~e the prisoner includin the Peking obern- recent meeting In East Germanydept Nixon to fake the necessary discuss the fate of: the prisoner3 issue, Said that he was s6rry but melit's cqainl to sokerelpn E: y over also Iaunchcd a campaign to helpI' .. -.communist China.In, recent years, 'Pekingestablished diplomatic rel:~ith a number of Westernpeal1 countries, principall)trade and commercial purlBut the agreement wlth Csis considered to be the mosnificqnt since it is with aally of the US.Two years ago the Candelegation proposed to thlGeneral Assembly that abe made of the Chinese reptation ed to question. get majority The progosa suppolPresent U.S. policy is tpose UN t~einbershlp for PIljouever, Secretary ofRogers reportedly is pushi)a new revlew of that policsInside ChinaPeking is now making prtions for the 21st annivers'October 1 of the 1949 Comltakeober in mainlandThese preparations far trararrangements for the usua'rally in Peking and other. Senator Eugene Mcci ~ Minn.) : is tel1in.g friendhe inay try to visit Chinahe cakes be Senate in JBL\jo1~17#y Warh~ngton 1Intp igen ,$? Sgndlcate)I


15(Page 4), .. -, ComstockF--~UIZ, <strong>Ord</strong>, Nebr., Thursday, , . Septembet' 24, 1970 Eerenice Cornell visited w i t hMrs. Marian Long and Mrs. IvanAnderson Saturday afternoon.Rev. RonaId Ciraff held religioussprviceg at Park~iew Qn Sepf.Couple's New Grandson, . ,, .;h- >: Is . Latest-' ~riday two brothers of 'Fr~ukanulewicz were here and sent- C lshjng with Frank. They hereFlo~d and Ben of Loup City.Wednesday E m 111 a Novosadook Elizabeth Severson to Burellto see ,si?ter, Gertrudeel, who is m Parkview PE::iunda y son . Don , of Grand Is-. > . -13. Scripture read' was 1 forp-thians 2:13-16 an 3:l-3. dlagramwas used. o *plain thenatural n~ari, splr~tuql man a?dthe cnrnaf man, Mr. Graff explpnedthat the patural man does nbtknow Christ. He play be ever Sorod and 9 chu~h go'el, butoesn't hale Christ so he ca!~know Iiim. This persop rules hisown life - doesn't haye Christtp depend on. The splrltual manhas. Christ in hislife' and ,isChrlst contr?lled,,and gives fruitsof a Cbristlan hie. The carnalplan bas accepted Chrjst but dogsgrow into a splrltual Christ~an.He follows his own desiresMr. and Mrs. Lewis Dockhornof Hampton, Ia., came the mgrn-.kg of Sept.'.l4 for a few dayswith his mother, Mae Dockhorll.They had spe -t a little time witha sister and %rother at Lincolnand a brother in Grand Island.They spent a night with Maeand one with the Eldon Kokes.,Monday they were with hfae atthe Rujngs duringthe peek, an? the entire member-,ship met Frlday during actiyityper~od.. ' Rogene Borncikel,---Publicity . - Chairman~ m b Larsen a of Grand Island'visited her brother, Oscar Larsen,'and his wife Friday. Mrs.Xda Steffan and Iyfrs. MaggieHenry and spent accompanied their time her with to Mrs. <strong>Ord</strong>Steffan's aunt, Emma Hansen.I watertown ~onurnenl Works, Inc.Monuments are Our Precioiq Heritage,C~lgpare Quality ,The date of the auxiliary's angyalcarnival was set for Nov.14.' IHostesses for the eveningwere Edith Joho artd LaverneKjrby.'-AI YOU MUST 1IRe-Regis. +, k.1. If you change addresses 'I-,r * ' . .2, If you change your ngme (e.g. througtiaqe 1. . 'hI3. If you wish to change yo;r party affi1, I Last dqy for voter regisfrqtion -John Re Hus~~II2nd Friday preceding any electionCemetery Lettering 'Phyo 728-5404 . , ' <strong>Ord</strong>. Nobr. Oclqber 23 for General election on Novelnber4l.V CI5%*Savings Account. Or save $500 in anyother First Federal Lincoln account,Travel A larnt"Ail ,right," panted John, ''I'll gice the only prayer fFfiEE T'his attrictive Seth Thomastravel alarm features red leatherette' 'case, raised brass numerals and hour- marks, 1uQillous hands and hoyr dotsand a 40-hour bell. Free-when you save$20 a month in a Tran$m$tic Automatic- Savings Account, or save $250 in anyother First FederalTincoln account.Super DhrwinHybrid Tulip ~ d b sFREE Just in time for planting-one, , .dozen Super Darwin lbbrid tulip bulbsdirect froni Lisse, Holland. The finesttulip bulbs in the world produce huge -red btoolns on long stems. One doze'i~bulbs-free-when you save'$l0 a lnantllin a Tran$matic Automatic Savings Account.Or save $50 or more in any otherFirst tiederal Lincqln account.- 5.127%** on Tran$matic SplitiRate ACCOUO~S, earned $am dayof depos~to day of withdrawal,~ -, r 5.25%* - 5.390%** on 90-day, fran$matic yotic@ Ac~ounsnt~.6:25%* 5.390%** ..on new 90-day $100 Ceitificates of Depos!Q,* > ,5.75%' - 5.918%*"n12-month $1.000 Certificates of Dep~q6%' - 6.1 83%** on 24-month $5.000 Certificates of Dsp08huer ntced annual interest ratd.*%d ounded Cont~nuQusly~eldperyear.FEDERAL'. FIRSTLINCOLNIn Lincoln ... Home Offjcg 1235 N Street and southjj3th I Cotner Ofti e 135 North Cotnerjn Omaha ... Countryside Vtllage 8706 Plc~lic / Homestead Center 2101 South 42nd Street / Broak Park 90th and MapbOutgide LLincolO or Omaha call US-FREE. Dial "0 'and ask for ENTERPRISE (ZENITH in Iowa) 1234.Or call collect lo (402) 435 211 1.Lh -% nVoI ;Read Ephesians $:IS-21I We way sm'le at this story; yet if is true that no matter. $' ' Be filled with the Spi;it, , , and for ever,thingwhat We face.,>he Chr~sttan sh0uld glve thanks "alwj13s and- giving thanks in ths name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God the for everything.' .. d Father. (Ephesians 5;{9-20, RSV)In a world filled with tridls ;lnd discouragenlents, the exenreri croabo a field charged by Friences of life can make us bltter or better The way to: an angry full. They starb for the nearest fence but it was ecome better is to give thanks alwa~s for eversthing.soon apparent they could npt make it before the anima1,reached,- them. One'said $0 the othgr, "Pray, John! \Ve're in for ~t."PRAYER: 0 God, help US to be grateful in all situations,. , for we kn0.w that all things work together for good to theillJohn $ns~~ei'ed, "I can't. I never made a public prayer in that Io~e you. Amen.my 11fe."r ; : THOUGHT FOR THE DAY."Byt io~j nlust!" said his fqiend. Be thankful that God's a!lsulers are wiser than ourpra, ers. 'know -b -. june A. Larson (Wisconsin)0 Lqrd, for;: what we are about to receive, n~ake us. trulythankful!;: 3~dpyriaht - THE UPPER ROOM+Our Lady of PerpetualHelp ChvrchSunday Masses, 8 a.m. andfO a.m. Weekday Masses8:15 a n~ : on Saturdays 7a.m. Rev. Stanley C: Gorakpastor.St. Wettcpslaus, GeraniumMass at 7 a.m. and 10 8,m. Ialternating Sun gys, ~lrsfFriday of-rnogt$ Mass at7:30 ?~m., Father JosephlSzy nal. pastor.St. Mary CatholicChurch, ElyribMass eyery Sunday, 8:30a.m.; weekday Mass, 7:30P.m., except Wednesday a dfirst Friday qf the on(%7:rO p.m., Con essions $forddally Mas . Confessloas onSaturday rom 7 to 8 p.m.,Bible Adu i t Educabon Class8:45 p.m. every secon andfour month 4 at Wednesday the paruh of a1 the IIIElyria, Family Enrihirdentprogra on Sunday's as an.nounee? in the church bulletin.Father Albert A. Godlew.ski, oastor.C -St. ~hdrer9's ChurchEricson, Nebr, -Sunday Masses: 1st 3rd L5,th undays, 10 a.d; 2nd &4th 8 undays, 8 a.m., Confes-'sions before Sunday Masses.Parish Board Meeting: thirdSunday of each month afterMass Hubcrt J. Spanel, pastor.346 3495.Sacred Heart ChurchBurwell, Nb. !Masses: Sat. evening at 7,p m.; Sun, lst, 3rd, '5th, 8a.m.: 2nd, 4th,.10 a.m.;weekdays, 7 a rg. ;Codes.dons: Sat, 6:30 And 7:30P m. IIuhert J. Spanel, pas.; tor. 39q-3195.First Presbyferian ChurchThurs., Sept. 24, 7 to 8p.m , Chancel choir rehear.sal. Fsi., Se t. 25, 10315 a.m ,Minister's $our, KNLV. SunSept. 27, 9:30 a.m., worship:10:30 a.m. Church School(nursery provided) : 7 p,m ,Mariners Get Together, Jer.ry Watsoj~'~ home. Mon ,Sept. 28, 8 p.m , SesslonNeeting. Wed., Sept. 30, 8:45p.m. Fam!l Nlght (nurserycare provi&d). Kenneth J.Bunnell, pastor.LOUP UNITEDMETHODIST PARISHClarence Campbell, Leon.ard Clark, ,Robert IIopkins,pastors: Ray Smith, lay' speaker. Frt , Sept. 25, 10: 15a.m., Minister's Hour, KNLVSept. 28. 3:30 p.m.. .IIligIl choir rehearsal.Sept. 30. 6:30 p.m.,iHigh U.M.Y.F.; 7 p.mior High U.M.Y.F.; 8Chancel c h o i r8:30 p.m. Finance Cctee. Thurs.. Oct. 1. 2<strong>Ord</strong> W.S.C.S., guests oem.kcqdiaSun, Sept. 27, 9:30 a.m.Worship; 10:30 a.m., ChurchSchool; Thurs., Oct. 1, 7 Scotia ChurchP.m., Junior High U.M.Y.F. Sun., Sept. 21, 9:30Morning Worship: 11Cotesfield Churcha.m. Chulch Schoot,. Thurs. Sept. 24, 8 p.m'Administcatice Boa1 dSun Scotia (Salem) ChurchSUI~ Seyt 27, 9$ept, 27, 9.45 am. Church Morning Worship, 10Scho 1, 10.45 am . Morning ('hprch ~,-hool. Thurs,-' wors\ip. Thurs . Oct. 1, 2 1, 2a ;av 'drd Christian Cbyrch' " ."Thurs , Sept. 24, 1b:30Elb~ Churcha.m., Moments of TruthThurs., Sept. 24, 8 p m.,KNLV. Sun. Seot. 27. 9:45Administrative Board. Sun.. ~alriry Baptist Churcha.m., Bible scho6I; .11' a.m.,,Sept. 27, 9 a.m., Chu~ch Sun., Sept. 27, 9:4518rhool; 9:45 a.m , Morning9 CommunionGospel Preaching. Service J. and . 11. Bible classes; 11 a.ni,. \Vorship.ship Service; 7 p.m., iSchroeder, pastor.Service. Wed , Sept.'Mira Valley Churchp.m., Bible study and 1: Sun., Sept. 27, 10 a.m., meeting. J. B. Tweter ,t Church School; 11 am., tor.IBethany Lutheran Church,. Morning Worship; 3 p.m.,Syn ,- Sept. 27, 8:15 a.m' Jynior High U.M.Y.F. Wed,,p r s 11 f p at Dannevirkc:'Sept, 30, 6:30 m, Senlor St. John's Lutheran Ch&;l5 a.m : Iiil u M.Y F. ~Eurs., ~ct. 1. " Sun, Sept. 27, 8:30,, Worship at <strong>Ord</strong>.Sgnday school after each2 p.m,. W.S.6.S, Guest Day, ,Worship; 9:40 am, SIschool and Bll?le classt,?' servlce. Louis R. Trebus,pastor. North LoupJohn's Worshlp S e rI .r Sun.. Sept. 27, 10 a.m , broadcast each S u nChurch School; 11 am., KNLV, <strong>Ord</strong>. Paul F. ,Morning yo~ship wi,th pic- mann, Jr., pastor.I, nlc following s e r v 1 c e at. N ~rth Loup park. Bring bas. North Loup Seventh Da<strong>Ord</strong> Evangelical Free Church,Wed., Sepf. 23, 8 p.m.Junior and Senlor High Bi.bla Study; 8 p.m., Mid-WeekService: Sun.. Seot. 27. 9:45a.m . Sundav school: 11 a.mMorr jng worship; 8 p.m ,junior and Senior Iilgh Bi.blt: Study. Ronald Graff, pas-Bethel Baptist ChurchSun., Sept. 27, 9:45 am,,Sunday school; 11 a.m.,Worshlp Service; 7:30 p.m.,Prayer Ti!ne; 8ning Servlce. ROES" &::pastor.I.. vr .This Page Is Made Possible by People Wilh The Desire lo SeeVALLEY GRAIN CO). 1'Burwell h North LouPManagement 6 Employees7 '?FIRST NATIONAL BANKMember F.D.I.C.Off~cers h Sipff-ORD ANIMAL CLINIC~ y Paul . LambertDr. George BakerOr. Dale KarreQRP REST HOMEyiylafp+ida & o;ur GuestsNESTATE BANKr F.D.I.C.,nk & StaffIr HASTINGS-PEARSONMORTUARYNg on* is fnore understandingor more qualified to $en+ youeorge E. Hastlngsllding 0. PtarsonW.-K-K APPLIANCE COMPANY&, EmployeesORD LIVESTOCK MARKET7- - ,LE MOT~RCO., INC.Your Xuthorlzed Fo (( OeqlefS. D. Lep & ~mp\oyeeqket lunch and table service.Baptist - Church:: <strong>Ord</strong> Church Fri., Sept. 25, 7:30Yri., Sept. 25, 9:45 p m., Senior Ihgh Blble Stuter Game Part for Junior p.m., choir practice. Sa&I,. a.m.. Church Sun. SC~OOI; Sey. 21, 11 a.m., 9:45 Worship: Day. Sept. 11:45 26. 10:30 a in,,Mqrntng Worship. M o n . . bath School.. . (jrealer Church Going Valley [own1ARMSTRONG INSURANCED. E. ArmstrongROWBALPLUMBING & HEATINGMr. 4 Mrs. Richard RowbalKOUPAL & BARSTOWLUMB R CO.Glen Holtr & Employhe,' 1BEATRICE FOOD CCMeadow Gold Oa~ry ProMr. h Mrs. Wi!IiamE. Proskoc~lROMANS MOTOR FREIGlack h Gl~a Romans bTHE ORD THEATRERelax h Enloy a Good AMr. 6 Mrs. Ed Christ1C I


+ serced.Chalk Mine .Our fanlily along with Mr. xndMrs. Bill Cook and grandson,Brandon, Mr. and Mrs. Eldoll~fntek and Mr. and Mrs. LyleRasmussen and Cindy had a picnicat the Chalk Mines Sundayevening. Just after we arrivedthere the lightning started andwe could tell &e were in for astorm so the Inen moved 2 picnictables inslde the mine and with aqeik~ng light from a good flashl$hf.be had our picnic anyway.1,decided that on a hot night-orany other warm nlght the mlae$odd b'e a perfect, place to- picriic.It,is so nice,asd cool thereand n6 fipsquit6es;' biut be sureyou, have at least one good flashlight.along. And did you knowthat in the case of a po,uring rawwhile you are therk joif cad drtkethe cars in one' at, a time to loadGp? (Which we did when we$ere ready to leake). An inch ofrain fell thereabouts. And it'sreally something difffrent to be.I ii I, L*pW.,,,,,~ n,.., st@,n3Is -Even in Bad Weathera. - Good VA large famib gathering has'acation Snot a Sunda e\ent at the countryBy Dena Sintek '. ' the Chalk'Mines during an el. There were 11 ladies present.' r ' - ectrical stoln~ as u.6 were.Mrs. Pearl BarZz Salled on---Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mulligan Mon-Gy brother L. H Wilson Jr; of day mprning. .Mountain View, C?l!f. has , just Weddesday dinner uests ofreturned frod a buslqess trip to , Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Ho B mes wereEast and West:-P&is an, Italy, Nr. * aad Mrs. Earl }Voody ofGreece, brael, Den I ark andEngland,,'He ha$ had quite anqnusk~ai trip but his family herein <strong>Ord</strong> and North Loup are gladhe is home and safe as he was. '.* . *Auto -*Fire - *Homeomers*&ife - 'Health - *AnnuitiesLiability t. Cr~p Hail +"Service that Safisfies"Rolland Whit6 ='drd, Nebc? 728-3217+.Your, ~ a Bureau r ~ ' Ins. Agent*?ai!.able1~it,hkt h;,m$ership ..., C...'. 3% *, .(f. Ip re t t y' close to the hijacked~Ianei that were blbwn up too.Roger Otto, son of Mr, andMrs. Arthur Otto of North Louis now stationed at the ~ava!Trainipg ' Center at San Diego,Calif. His address is: S.R. RogerOtto, B663976, CO 371 NTC-RTC,San Diego, Calif. 92133.C--valley drift Club met at thehome of Mrs. Charles LundstedtThursday with ten members present.Mrs. Verlin HansOn and Mrs.Brice Severance led the craftaqsson. Nrs. Darrell Cox won theoor p?ize. The club will sell sta-tionerf a ~ recipe d cards as theirnext project. Mrs. Dewey Nee1was a sp&$ial guest.Mrs. Eennie Sintek, Mark and&like and Hattye Sautter andkwlston, Mont., Mr,. and Mrs.Vernon Ferris of Billin s, Mont.and Mr. and Mrs. ~eralcf Holmesof Scotia.Mr, and Mrs. Harold Hoeppfierreceived word of the death oftheir reat granddaughte?' WendyLyn Xnderson, daughter of Mr.agd Mrs. Jim Anderson of ColradoS rings. The baby was bornSepf. $, 1970 and passed, ayaySeot. 15. 1970 after a br~ef 111-n'ess. M< and Mrs. Merrill Andersonof Colorado Springs, formerlyof North Loup and GrandIsland are the grandparents.. I received a call from JohnAnderson, ham iadjo operatorat <strong>Ord</strong>, that he had talked, bys ort wave to Warren Balley( P ormer North Loup resident) onSe t. 18 and Mr. and Mrs. Baileyha: been host to several formerNorth hup people the night before.They were: Gilbert Babcock,Sam Sample, Jim Bell, Mr.'and Mrs. Dod Paddock, KeithL..1:)fice until a'new posfma$ti\es in North Loup, Ar-, Friends and relative5 :of Mr, cadia and <strong>Ord</strong> The ladies areR. H, Petersep were s0tr to sisters of Mrs. George Jensett andhear of pis linexpected at^ Walter (Rurti) Holmei.solnetline Su?dag durrqg the M$; and Mrs. Gerald Jensennight. ' ' - spent Sunday and 3londay inRelatives df Gale Sinteki'of &incoin on business. Jlr. andHouston, Tes, udre glad' tP hear Mrs? George Jensen spent Sunofhis release from the Sam . day hnd Monday uith CrystalHouston hospital there after sev- and Alvin Jensens uhile theirera1 day's undergoing tests {ihich parents were gone.shoued hlm to hare inner ear Air. and Mrs. Wajne Monkinfection and setere sinus trouble, ,and f?n%ify of Oxford were heek-1Ie will be able to return to work end guPsts of Mr. and ilrs. Erlothis week. Cox. * ,Don't forget the Seventh Day --Baptist annual Lord's Acre TU~-Key supper; t~ be ,held., q~yldau;, Flo er powerNov.' 1. *&s. Ernla Mulligan was host-Miss Ginger Bridge was honor- ess recently to members of theed with a bridal shower Tuesday Happy Circle Club add foure reping at the United Methodist - JoAnn Duda, Lo3 Snow,~kurcb Ginger a,nd Mr. LakerseS~re.psoli'ic~ll be mbri,ed Oct. 3a1 the North Loup United Metho-&dist Church.Nr. and grs. Gene Pletcherwere hosts toa supder Saturdayevening at the American LegionClub in St. Paul. Their guestsfor the evening were Mr.Mrs. L. J. DeNojer. Mr7, and %.,dLavern Veleba, Mr. 4lfred Bqse,$ilberf.Seigel, Bert Craft, Mr. andvestsIarie JorgenSeh, and WlllnaHopkins. Mrs. Mary Jorgenseuas co-hostess.A special treat during the afternoonmeeting was a demonstrationlesson by JoAnn Dudashowing how chenille flowers aremade.During the business sessionMrs. Jim [Ruth) Duda was electedpresident Also named as offleerswere Mrs. Albert Clau-home oP hIr,'and hlrs, FlogdPeterson. Spcpding the day togetherwere Ir, and urs, JoeDaorak and tRe 8111 Chalupsk!~of Buruell, the Robert Jablonsklfdrnlly of Loup C~ty and Mr. andMrs. Paul ,U'agner, the Bob~mo?ak family, Mrs. Joe Sed-Watts, the former Esther SmithMrs. Pearl Bartz were Saturdav and husband and Mr. and Mrs. rs. Roy Duinnell, Laverile sen, vice-president; Mrs. L e o n' 1dinner guests of Mr, and Mrs.Sorensen apd Ginger Bridge., Woods, secretary; hlrs. Da\ eLI yd Wilson at <strong>Ord</strong>.Stekens treasurer; and Mrs.Mr. and Mrs. R. F Ypdy of!Vorne'n*s Society of ChristianLewlston; Mont. and Pl r., a n dCarl schauer, nehs reporter.Service niet at the United Metho-Mr< Vernon Ferris of' Billings,dist Church on Wedhesday eve-Mont. were houseguests of Mr. Hastin 5-Pearson Mortuary, <strong>Ord</strong>,ning. Mrs. Don Beilben and Mrs.and Mrs. George Jenseo a few ~ebra~lp.24-6bftf ecarroil1 Thomas were hostesses.Mrs. Vernon Thomas gale thelesson.Mr. and. Mrs. ?on Benbed andfamlly tqslted with Mr. and Mrs.Charles Lundstedt and girls - Saturdaynight.Mr. and Mrs. Eldon" Sintekspent Sunday afternilon with Mr.and Mrs. I3en Sintek in St. Paul.Captain and Mrs. Bob Andersonand Bobby and Miss SusanAnderson visited at the home ofMr. and Mrs. Harold Hoeppnerthis week. Susan is Bob's sister.The Anderson's are stationed atmin not A.F.B. North Dakota andhave been on a trip to Yellowsloneand the Tetons. They visitedBob's parents in ColoradoSprings and Mrs. Anderson? folksin Denver before coining toNorth Loup. Susan will visit inMinot for a ?coyple of weeks.The Happy Jacks 4-H Club metat the hoine of Diane Lundstedton Sept. 19. There were 7 mem-bers present. New project bookswere handed out and discussed.Flection of officers was held witbthe following results: residentLaurie Smith, vice presijent PennySperling, ~ecretary Jill Pamer,treasurer. Ronda Shoemaker,reporter Diane Lundsfedt, rec-reation leader Echo Spetling,historian Roxanne Sperling. Thenext meeting will be at RondaShoemaker's Oct. 2 after school.Members are to bripg contact paperand a shoe box. - DianeLundstedt, news reporterPearl* Bart& and Ella Mott]were d~nner guests of Mrs. Victoria,Duda in ,<strong>Ord</strong> Thursday,-The birtkjdiy~ of Mrs. AnnaOtto and Mrs. Hazel Ingrahamwere celekated at the home ofMrs. ,Edna Coleman recently.Floqd Redlon. Mr. Bailey.attendedthe Nebraska-California ballgame with Jim Bell Saturdaebening. Mr. and Mrs., Johnerson of <strong>Ord</strong> spent nlne days inColorado Aug. 30, visiting andfishing with Mr. and Mrs. WarrenBaile at Grand Junction andGrand dsa, Colo.hrs. Leonard Edwards washostess to 13 members of theHarmony Extension Club ThursdaySept. 17 at the home of Mrs.Hay Van Slyke in Scotia. Newofficers were elected for the corningyear. They are: President,'Mrs. Leonard Edwards; VicePresident, Mrs. Gordon Stillman;Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. PaulWaltman and Courtesy ChairmanMrs. Bennie Sintek. Mrs. ~eciiSe\erance was appointed to takeover the Secretar job of Mrs.L le Rasmussen uKo ~111 be unagleto attend. Cards were playedand prize winners were EulalaEdwards, Bev Stillman andLeora Lundstedt.Mrs. Hannah Sheldon gnd Mrs.ZIuldah Smith of Arcadia spentfrom Friday till Sunday eveningin Lincoln with Mr, and hlrs.Bill Shonerd and son, Mr. andMrs. Dennis Gaibler and daughterand Mrs. Jim Roberts. DebbieSheldon stayed at the SonnySheldon home while her motherwas away.Mrs. Cecil Severance took herson Terry Keown to Lincoln Mondayfor a checkup with hisdoctor.Vr. and Mrs. Da~id Davies ofBoulder, Colo. were Sunday andMonday guests of Mrs. Dessie,Vo eler. * ,ir, and Mrs. Clair Barber andf mlly, Warren Moctiz, Nrs.(!oldie Thoinpson and Mr. andMrs. Dell Barber were Saturdayevening supper guests of Mr.and Mrs. Sheldon VanHorn.Mrq. Huldah Smith of Arcadiais spendin a few days with her;daughter; &rs. Hannah Sheldon.Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Sintek andSteve spent Saturday night andSunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ken-dal Gunlicks in Cozad.Mrs. Pearl Bartz spent Fridayevening with Mrs. Edna Coleman.Mr. aqd Mrs. banny Thompsonand Bradley of Lincoln wereweekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.Floyd Thompson and Susan.Mr, and Mrs. Vernon Thomasleft by plane from Omaha Sept.9 for Elmendorfe Air Base inAnchorage, Aiaska where theyvisited Mr. and Mrs. VictorThomas, Patricia and Mark. TheThomas' had never made theacquaintance of their little grandson,who is 16 months old, untilthis visit. The Thomas' reportthe weather there is very similarto ours, flowers still bloomingand tree leaves just turning.They returned hoine Sept. 16.Victor Thomas' duty, will be overand he will be home !n December.The 1941 graduating class ofNorth Loup High had a get togetherof area residents in GrandIsland Sunday Bvening at theIioliday Inn, in anticipation of areunion of the whole class nextMay. Those attending were Mrand Mrs. Bill Schultz (Etta Dunbar)of Aurora, Mr. and Mrs.Dale Hellewege of St. LiboryMr. and Mrs. Maynard Desef ofWood River, Mr. and Mrs. ClairBarber, Mr. and Mrs. CharlesBoldt '(Winsome Meyers), Mr.and Mrs. Jim Houts (Annabel)McbTindes) all of Grand Islaad,Mr. and Mrs. Fdward Iludsona d Mr. and' Mrs. Menzo Fuller( A udrey Babcock) of North' Loup. \John IIamer, North Loup postmaster,has resigned from thepostmaster lob and taker, a jobas mall carrier for Rt. #l out ofNorth Loup. Mrs. Opal Beebe isofficer in charge at the Post' Of-:, 1 p‘,ii.7.QUIZ, Qrd, Nebr., Thurtda~~).,Sppte,u:bef.2d W70- (Page,7), 'members coplinued on to theirCalifor~lit:~h~me..";--&r: and MIS. Don Long drovelacek, and Mr. and Mrs. JasonLathrop, all -- of <strong>Ord</strong>.Mr. and 'Rlrs Lj nn Baker,Jorene and Brgce of MonteryPark, Callf , spent Se\eral 'dabsin <strong>Ord</strong> recently ~cith SfrS. Baker'spayents, IZr, and hlrs. CllfEF1 nn. They left Friday for Colo.raio vl he1 e Iheir daughter' willenter her second sear at AdamsState College. The 'other fanlilyto fill City, lean, to spend Sunday'iyllb Mr. and Mrs. CliffordAiche'$on,I' MY,.. "Chief" Stwage and Drying bins , "- ,and Mrs. John Se~i kla\\,ere Saturddy supper guests ofJlrf. Helen Beran, hlrs. Ne~rkla'sblrthdav L{ as celeb~ated.*. I ,- "., . &tf < .I*:-. -JA . I,,,,P"' ' . (_' L._frS1 :: iisted below are sizes of "Chief" Ins ,we have contracted. fpr. peliverhd, ptu,s ,%'A'.the ei ra savings we pass, on to you ,by A uying in volume. call fo4a~ lf'yo-q nq$ bstorage or drying bin. r ~ ~ ,,: ; , - .Ng. Bi~s Bv. Size $ ~ 3 ~ , ~ ,Carlead ? ~ricg* .?* - ;,. -'2 3,500 ;';i, : s $844.00 . > ;, +4.958 21, &' f1610.W: :;:flO4$.00 4 . $.5,80 $ i 1833.00 *, 1189.06 I6,606f:%::%9,950 27' 1 6't'- 4 11.060 27' 60' $3064.00 % - . -':$ WE INSTALL. ERECT dnd SERVICE WHAT WE $EL$> :.-*1Arebdia, Nebraska ,.&-rb '**.L . - 2 .$'.-Tf::: *:,;. '* 2 f C-7-BDON :MURRAYPteasmorPotatoChipsTwin Pack39c* r* -, 3 hb 8 ,, , it'I tPhone 789-323511I\ 4% +.I 'Ktull-lime gas furnace is the cleanest, inost deperldabte"heating system you can buy. It's alijo codplelely (autotnatic."Justset the thermostat, and relax in warm, $wencomfort. But when you want lo heat new rood gdd~tion!#. ,,Or cold garages, or chilly basenlent rhc room$-withoutaltering your present duct system-you need somethingelse. The Mini-furnace: an automatic gas robm heater.it'll go anywhere you need the extra heat. And operate8s safely and dependably as your central gas, furnace:Just set the thermostat, and relax 'in warm, even corn-fofl, F~eat for between-season. heat, tqo. See the full' tl\np of gas [o$,m heaters at any ~~nsas;k$braqka office,of at your gas appliagce dealer's: The Gas Mi$-furnacgIs bere; --. ---+---: 12...cWheel AligynrotBatancingBrake Work(Adjust@r - Re-)8 Gdiator Rep& .HEApLIl iHT CHECKL *.,OK/i4 .-1 .* . KANSAS -NEBRASKA TROM~KE, ' ~~AJ%~!AL GAS COMPI;\NY IN,$&-' IF YOULIVE BEYOND OUR GAS LINES CONTACT YOURL-P DEALER FOR IfiF PAME DEPSNQPSILE SERVICE.RUBBERWELDERS14th a d oOI~, NC~I.


NOTICE TO CREDITORSIN THE COUNTY COURT OF V$LLEY COUNTY, NEBRASK 4IN THE MATTE13 OF THE: ESTAlEOF RICHARD J. CIOCIIAN, DE-CEASED. The State ,of Nebraska, to, all Con.cerned: Not~ce 1s hereby glren thatall claiins a-ainst said estate must bef~led 011 orobefore Januar 12, 1971,or be forever barled, a d tint ,a hear-Lng on clallns will bP held In thlsCourt on Janualy 13, 1971, at 10o'clock AM. Rollin R. D>e-- - .-Valley County JudgeHastings-Pearson Mcrtuary, <strong>Ord</strong>,IL \V CLWII~ Lawjer .NOTICE TO C~EDITORSCOUNrY COURT OF VALLEYCOUNTY NEBRASKA Estate of~allie~ln$ Tolen. DeceasedTHE; STATE OF NEBKASI

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