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Garden City Telegram from Garden City, Kansas • Page 3

Location:
Garden City, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Garden City Telegram Friday, November17, W7 markets LOCAL WAGON PRICIS Mt $140 up 2 $1.55 Unchf. 10.85 Unehf. 90.12 Unehf. KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK KANSAS CITY -catae 800; calves none, no price test. Hogs barrows and gilts 25-500 higher; 1-2 200-240 Ib 17.75-18.00; 200-220 Ib 18.15-25; 1-3 220-250 Ib 17.30-18.0; 250-270 Ib 17.00-50; sows steady to 50 higher; 14.50-15.50.

Sheep none. 2p.m. stocks (The foltewtnt Price Hem are furnlshtd to Hit by Gaffe A Carkener. Inc. BR 14244.1 Allied Sup A.

Pep. Co. AT AT SF Am. Motors Am. Tob Anaconda Beech Alrc Boeing Beth SU .74 61 26 10 31 44 Chrysler Cities Sv.

Colo Interstate Du Pont East Kod Ford Gen Elec Gen Motors Halliburton IBM Int Harv Int Pap Mont Ward Nat Dlst Nor Nat Panh EPL Penney JC Phill Pet Proct Gam RCA Sears Sp'erry Hd Std Oil Ind etd Oil NJ Texaco Tram Western US Steel West Elec Woolworth 17 3-4 3-4 7-8 3-4 3-8 1-4 41 3-8 3-8 1-4 6-8 40 163 1-4 61 1-8 3-8 58 1-2 1-4 1-2 3-4 1-2 48 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-8 1-4 7-8 3-8 5-8 5-8 7-8 1-4 1-8 1-8 3-4 Cnfcago Llvt Bttf Futures Dec. Feb. April June High 26.06 25.80 25.20 25.27 Low 25.85 25.55 25.10 25.20 Close 25.90 25.60 25.15 25.22 DOW JONES AVERAGE The Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials at noon was up 4.57 at 864.31. ADMISSIONS At St. Catherine Darla Baier, 1701 N.

10th Mrs. Jim Cisneros, 201 S. Ith Ernest Espinosa, 305 W. Mary Mrs. Cecil Haney, 502 Washington Judith Henry, 109 W.

Walnut Melvin Hullet, 1607 E. Fulton William Ives, Briar Hill Man-' or Mrs. Richard Newbauer, 1307 N. lUh Gregory Winter, 1912 Terry Wright, Scott City Cindy Lou Wallace, 1919 Mrs. Michael Rhodes, 1700 E.

Spruce DISMISSALS At St. Catherine Mrs. Dennis Allison, 806 E. Hamline Ronnie Becker, 2106 N. 8th 512 N.

9th Stephen Hawkins, Rt. 1 Sharon Kelsey, 1410 N. 8th Susan Kelsey, 1410 N. 8th Mrs. William Kortz, Ingalls Tina Lane, Gardendale Mrs.

Salvadore Laurelez, Deerfield Mrs. Harold Mulville, Dighton Jennie Rayas, Holcomb Jamie Scott, Westside Trailer Court Edna Sherman, 1304 E. Laurel Mrs. Susie Swindall, 70414 E. Fulton Organist Plans Sunday Concert Organist Robert Edwards will be presented by the Great Bend Arts Council at 3:30 Sunday afternoon in a concert the First Methodist Church, Great Bend.

Mr. Edwards, who is (he son of Dr. Franklyn Edwards, former pastor of the Methodist Curch here, has studied extensively, and was a winner of an Ellen Battell Stoeckel Fellowship for chamber music and eomposUon at Yale University. He has served as visiting lecturer in residence in organ at Wichita State University, and has been organist and choirmaster of several churches in Wichita. Since 1983, he has been a member of the music faculty i McPherson College.

There is no charge for the concert, but an offering will bo taken. deaths Mrs. Jo Ann Newby Funeral for Mrs. Jo Ann fJoste) Newby, 81, Dodge City, mother of Joe L. Newby, 404 W.

Edwards, will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Barber-Dunsford Chapel, Dodge City. The Rev. R. W.

Treder will officiate, with burial at the Maple Grove Cemetery, Dodge City. Born Jan. 29, 1886, at Buckland, sh was married to Roy D. Newby Jan. 13, 1904, at Pratt He died in 1956.

Surviving besides her son Joe, are another son, Cecil, Dodge City; two daughters, Mrs. Reba Orabaugh, Dodge City and Mrs. Rena Dobbins, Lincoln, 18 grandchildren, 9 great-grandchildren. Artie Carter Funeral for Artie Carter, 79, 706 N. 2nd, who died Tuesday at St.

Catherine Hospital, will Telegram Photo KANSAS CHAMBER of Commerce officials took time off for an informal chit-chat while meeting here. From left, are Henry Jameson, state president from Abilene, 1 Emil Salyer, chamber district vice-preside'nt, and Wes Sowers, chairman of the state board of directors from Wichita. New Kansas Chamber Policies Adopted Here Seven new policies in the fields of state and federal taxation, education, retailing and agriculture were approved by the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce's Board of Directors at their quarterly meeting today in Garden City, Henry B. Jameson, Abilene, president, said. On the recommendation of the Chamber's State Taxation and Finance Council, the Board approved a policy that the Chamber opposed the adoption of a proposed constitutional amendment that would permit broad-scale classification of property for taxation.

In the field of federal taxation, the Board approved three new policies. The first placed the State Chamber in support of the U.S. Chamber's policy concerning a federal tax increase which also urged that the federal expenditures be reduced dollar for dollar with a tax incretse. The second policy urged creation of both a new Hoover-type commission and a program evaluation commission, with priority assigned to creation of the latter. The final policy in the federal taxation field adopted by the Board supports retention of the tax exempt status of industrial revenue bonds.

In the education field, the approved a policy favoring election of the new state board of education on a nonpartisan ballot, with qualifications that would exclude persons employed by institutions of learning and members of their governing bodies. The policy also called for election of the first board in November 1968, and subsequently, beginning in 1971, in the spring at the time unified boards are elected. The last provision of the policy called for a four-year term of office with a preferable limitation to three consecutive terms. A new policy covering the federal minimum wage and hour act was approved by the Board on the recommendation of the Retail Council. The new policy rejected extension of existing federal minimum wage laws or enactment of Bronco CCit By VICKI VALENZUELA state laws at this time.

The wlicy emphasized that the Chamber believes that wages must be based upon the apti- ude, productivity and human needs of the individual. The Board approved one new Agricultural Council policy re- ating to agricultural research and marketing. The Chamber supports and recommends that emphasis be placed on both research and action programs of existing agencies in the state. The policy also supports an adequately financed program of federal-state agricultural research to develop new industrial uses of agricultural products by existing agencies. Action on another policy in the field of state taxation was deferred by the Board.

It concerned a proposal to eliminate the exemption from sales tax of materials used in construction projects for local governmental units and educational, religious, benevolent or charitable institutions, provided the exemption would not increase overall costs to such units and institutions. The next Board meeting win be in Topeka, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 1968. "Goodbye, good luck and Ya soon, were the wishes voiced and echoed as Garden City Junior College students pressed closer to the chartered bus of the "'bowl-bound" Broncbusters Football team in a last farewell. Exhibiting enthusiasm and pride, students and faculty here assembled today for an early morning but rousing and "spirited" peprally and sendoff.

Cheers and clapping along with the playing of the school fight song and Alma Mater rose to a small roar as the Busters' bus loaded -and proceeded eastward toward Sterling, where at 2 p.m. tomorrow afternoon, the 2nd annual "Silver Bowl" will be played. the boys have gone, like many other Broncbuster supporters, plan to follow them down tomorrow hoping to give 'our" team the added incentive to defeat and upset the sixth ranked junior college football team. So lets all help in re-asserting Garden City's position on the map by taking our "southwest" friendliness and spirit to Sterling and in doing so also show Iowa supporters that we believe "our" boys (and they are everyone's boy's since they represent the entire city in all their athletic endeavors) that we feel they are No. 1.

Thanks to fine participation and consideration by the istration on Campus, transportation is being furnished to all GCJC students and faculty desiring to attend the Sterling "Silver Also being transported by bus along with the extra added consideration of complimentary tickets (provided for both school's bands by the Sterling Bowl committee) is the Garden City Junior College pep band. Accompanying the band will be Norman Radke, Juco'band instructor, along with the Garden Bronc- buster cheerleaders and a sponsor. All in all excitement is promised for all who attend this year's "Silver So buy your tickets now if you don't already possess them. Remember we need your Well, thats about it for today. In closing, silence may be "golden" but tomorrow afternoon at Smisor Stadium "yelling with Viga" (enthusiastic Bostonian pronunciation of will be "golden." I'll be listening for you.

Go, fight, win you Bronco's. See ya' at Smisor! EAGLES LODGE DANCE be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Watt Funeral Home, Moline. Burial will be at Moline. Surviving in addition to his wife, Berniece, ar a son Clarence, Howard; and a daughter, Mrs.

Virgil Scheuerman, 1607 Belmont; and two grandchildren. Phillips-White Funeral Home was in charge of local arrange, ments. On The Business Scene Mrs. Lera I. Hodgson Funeral for Mrs.

Lera I. Hodgson, 84, of Briar Hill Manor, who died yesterday following a long illness, will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow.at the First Baptist Church, Casper, Wyo. The Rev. Dr.

Clifford Hanson will officiate, with burial in the Highland Cemetery at Casper. Phillips-White Funeral Home was in charge of local arrangements. Mode O'Day to Open New Store Two from Syracuse Colorado Crash Takes 3 Lives I by The Telegram Stanley W. Helmke, son of Mr. and Mrs.

David W. Helmke, 1715 Belmont, is one of 197 freshmen students at the University of Kansas who are participating in the honors program there. As honor students, they may bypass prerequisites enroll in heavier work loads, and take advanced courses and special honor sections. Rhea Foster, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Alton Foster, 804 son, is a member of the brass choir at Fort Hays State College. The choir along with the percussion ensemble will travel together on a tour next week, in which they will perform for five high schools in Kansas. Cheryl Anne Wells, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Wells, 602 N.

12th, was initiated into the Wichita State University chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, Gamma Nu, Spanish Chub. She is a senior at WSU, majoring in Spanish. persons, including a Syracuse couple, were killed Thursday afternoon in a 2-ar crash near Granada, Colo. Dead are Leonard Maxfield, 73, and his wife, Edith, 74, of Syracuse, and Anna Radhel Carr, 72, of Bristol, Colo. The accident occurred about 2:50 p.m.

(MST) one-quarter of a mile west of Granada on US50. A Colorado Highway Patrol Trooper said the Maxfields were driving east into Granada when their pickup truck was struck head-on by a car driven by Mrs. Carr. The Carr vehicle was headed west on the south shoulder of the eastbound lane of the highway and pulled out onto the center of the highway, colliding with the Maxfield pickup, the patrol reported. Maxfield and Mrs.

Carr died instantly in the wreck. Mrs. Maxfield died enroute to a Lamar, hospital. Wreckage of the two vehicles tied up traffic on US50 for about 2 hours before being cleared. Bandits Take 22-Caraf Gem MIAMI, Fla.

(AP) Two masked men raided the penthouse apartment of wealthy Mr. and Mrs. Carling L. Dinkier today, took a 22-carat diamond ring valued at $110,000, and left Mrs. Dinkier with a kiss on toe cheek.

Police said the robbery took place at the plush Palm Bay Yacht Club, which Mrs. Dinkier helped build in 1965 as a place where "the potentially rich young people can enjoy themselves whUe they're making it." Returning to the eighth-floor apartment after a United Fund dinner at the club, Dinkier walked into the 'bedroom and found two men waiting. He said each carried an automatic pistol with silencer. "We're being held up honey," the multi-millionaire owner of hotel chains called out to his wife, who had gone into the kitchen. After binding the couple with tape, the men took the pear- shaped diamond from Mrs.

Dinkler's finger, found two emeralds (while ransacking the apartment, and apparently left down an.interior fire escape. Just before leaving, the men taped the mouths of their victims and one of them leaned over and kissed Mrs. Dinkler's cheek. Mrs. Byrte E.

Barber SCOTT CITY Mrs. Byrte Elizabeth Barber, 92, Scott City, died yesterday at Park Lane Rest Home here after a long illness. Born Nov. 14, 1875, in Linn County, Iowa, she was married to Clarence D. Barber Feb.

21, 1907, at Sioux City, Iowa. He died in 1980. She had lived in Republic County until moving to Scott City in 1982 to live with her daughter. She was a member of the Methodist Church, Scandia; and the Order of Eastern Star. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs Arno Messenger, Scott City'; two brothers, Ben Wagner, Redding, and Will, Omaha, a sister, Katherine Wagner.

Larchwood, Iowa; 4 grandchildren, 7 great-grandchildren. Funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday at the Scandia Methodist Church, with burial at the River View Cemetery there. Friends may call all day today at the Weinnmann-Price Funeral Home, Scott City, and at the Bachelor-Faulkner-Dart Mortuary, Scandia, all day Sunday. The day after Thanksgiving has been set for the opening of the new location of the Mode O'Day Store, owned and operated by Mrs.

Alice Rose Meredith. New location will be at 209 N. Main, and will more than double the size of the present store, which Mrs. Meredith opened in 1953. There over 1,100 square feet of display room, four dressing rooms, and 350 square feet of stockroom.

Two additional clerks will be employed, Mrs. Meredith stated. Mode O'Day Company, which is owned by Gamble's, is one of the world's largest producers of women's apparel. The new store will stock dresses, sportswear, robes, lingerie, hose, sweaters, coats and suits and other items of women's apparel. Mrs.

Meredith, who lives at 1115 N. llth, has been a Garden City resident most of her life. She has a daughter, Janice, who is a junior student at Missing Boy Found Safe Civic Center Calendar of FRIDAY, NOV. 17 National Campers and Hikera 8 p.m. SATURDAY.

NOV. 18 Boys Boxing 9, 10, and 11 a.m. Children's 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., at 117 East Fulton. Junior High 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.

SUNDAY, NOV. 19 Piano Teachers League 1:30 and 2:30 p.m. MONDAY. NOV. 20 Old Timers Club 1 to 4 p.m.

Faculty Dames 7:30 p.m. Cancer Assn. 7:30 p.m. Body Trimmers 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY, NOV.

21 Shuffleboard 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Twin Mothers Club 7:30 p.m. Jayce'e Jaynes 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22 ShufHeboard 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.

FAIRFIELD, Conn. Two-year-old Tod Plancon, missing since Thursday when a car in whiclh he was seated was stolen, was found unharmed today on an enclosed front porch of a Fairfield home. Police said Mrs. Stephen Sherwood found the child on her porch shortly after 7 a.m. Precisely how Tod got there was not immediately determined, but police said he had apparently been put out of the car by the person who stple it and had made his way to the Sherwood porch.

The car was recovered by police late Thursday night after it was apparently abandoned near Mountain Grove cemetery. Both the boy and his small plastic car seat were missing from the car, authorities said. Little Tod, son of Mr. and Mrs. William K.

Plancon Jr. of Fairfield, was riding in the back seat of the car earlier Thursday when his mother Elaine, 21, stopped to visit a neighbor. Mrs. Plancon told police she left the child in the oar with the motor running while she went to the neighbor's front door. Before she could ring the doorbell, she said, a boy about 17 years old jumped into the car and drove off.

The mother and the neighbor, Mrs. Burt Andren, were unable to catch the car in the Andren's auto. Mrs. Meredith owner Kansas State University, where she is a home economics major, Frontier Boardings Here Show Increase Boardings on Frontier Airlines flights here during October showed a 27 per cent increase over the same month a year ago. Over its 14-state system, the airlines showed a 42 per cent gain in scheduled passenger miles during the month over October, 1986.

At Garden City, boardings totaled 272, compared with 215 for the same month a year ago. Central Airlines was merged into Frontier Oct. 1, and this was the first full month of operation for the merged company. Ulysses Man Buys Registered Shorthorn Harry W. Schmidt, Ulysses, has purchased a 3-year-old cow, Melba Princess 2d and her bull calf from Henry Giesaking and Sons, Garden City.

The animals are registered Milking Shorthorns and the record of transfer has been made by the American Milk- ing Shorthorn Society. Old Timers Club to 4 p.m. No Juco and High School. Garden Cif fans To Be Honored Four Garden Citians are among 117 members of the Wichita State University Marching Band to ba honored at the annual Band Recognition Day banquet tonight in Wichita. Special recognition will be given to an outstanding freshman and upper classman.

Those in the band from Garden City are John P. Barton, Richard R. Hopkins, Kenneth R. Rauhut, and Charles E. Ortiz, Director of the band is James Kerr, professor of Music at WSU.

Gregory Boles Wins A Notional Contest National contest winner in Mattel's coloring contest was Gregory Boles, 6, son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Boles, 305 Davis. He competed in the age group of 6 and under, and was one of six boys from Kansas in this group to win.

He received a Major Matt Mason Deluxe Space Action Set. The contest is sponsored by the Pillsbury Company. How to Succeed in Looking for Church by Really Trying 1. Ask about the ways in which the church seeks to to its local community. 2.

Ask how it ministers beyond itself. 3. Ask if you are needed and wanted. 4. Visit a Sunday morning worship and get acquainted.

The Community Church, A United Church of Christ, will welcome your inquiry. 3rd and Walnut, BR 6-5623. It needs you! DONT MISS IT! HURRY! SALE CLOSES NOV. 22 Close-out on all Drugs, Sundries and Fixtures Discount On All Merchandise OPEN DAILY Monday through Saturday 9 am. to 12 MM CST and 1 p.m.

to 6 p.m. CST Going Out of IMUMU Everything Must lo Sold BACON DRUG COMPANY HfNKY N. VAN DOREN, Owner Deerfield, Kansas BIG STORWIDE FOUNDERS DAY SALE STARTS TONIGHT 6:30 till 9 P.M. One of the biggest value events in our history. FREE coffee and donurs..

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About Garden City Telegram Archive

Pages Available:
107,591
Years Available:
1955-2009