2 ib3 4 439,'"264, 11-41 2.s'" / 1 989 --116 2s, 4128 /75 2s ( 471 1-492 2s: 443 2s -401 6, 14th year no. 37 November 12, 1968 -490 2 810 o - 421 'S 427 28 5 2t - 473 a )r 543 0 s448 o S17 0 506 @ 45 'S 1160 14 915 174 880 174 .520 174 093 17,k 250 335 16, 250 o 4 164 0180 137 0 is.+. 1 85 0 is'! 345 0 14 340 @ 14:11 Cold Weather "It's too cold to work in the shop Kam, and too wet to be in the fields," said Willard Hannagan, Manhattan, right. Hannagan and John B. Collister, Man- 006 hattan, were talking about cattlemar- kets in the area. The first good cold snap of thesea- Mina son in the G&G area last week changed a lot of work schedules. i.m.CAttle re conslp .5 0 9p 17,551 8 0 17,55 3 p 17,55 3 @ 17,60 5 0 17,65 © 17,60 3 p 17,65 o 3 p 17,40 )@ 15,05 3 @ 15,75 3 @ 15,80 p 14,30 p 11,00 16.25 p 10.50 @ 11.50 17,00 12.25 12,00 17.58 High School Cornland The land on which this corn was grown near Topeka will become the siteof a new 1111 Seaman High School, but it has already been a classroom for an FFA class underthe guidance of James Hundley, agriculture in- co, structor at Seaman, right. With him are Gene Berg and David La- mott, two leaders of the FFA group which 0 formed a cooperative to farm 30 acres of the land on which the school is to be built. Equipment came on loan from the Kan- investment. The land use was free, with With Hundley guiding them, the students sas Farm Machinery Co., John Deere agen- the Seaman school board allowing the -boys secured a loan of $700 from the Production cy nearby the field. In mid -May, the boys to farm the land in exchange for keeping INA, KS Credit Assn. at Holton. The first loan paid planted 27 acres of milo, saving three acres the entire 65 acres of the plot free of weeds. to plant to corn later. Each of the boys was to receive a portion for fertilizer from a Meriden cooperatve The project was expected to gross about ;er bfin5°11 and a small amount of seed. Later an addi- of the profit based on the amount of time he tional $400 was borrowed. $2000, making a profit of $900 on the $1100 put into the project. Tagedy ing $3,054,000. it contends Milk Producers Inc., ton area association of dairy - forms "a gigantic super co -open me n and two Waco, Tex., dairy- The suit asks $3 million dam- November i<A1` for ative," designed to stifle compe- 12, 196g Anti -Trust Test men against the two largest ages for MAP and $54,000 Lis tragedie David Simons Sr., who allegestition by smaller groups such as f; milk producing groups in the orshave su he was forced out of business MAP. GRASS &GRAIN ir only s Of Regional Midwest and Southwest, the MAP, in the suit, said the two The Mid -Kansas The 2 -000 -member Milk Producers by the associations when he re- Published news weeki) 1-rge groups have "virtually Moro, each Tuesday 'nc., and Harold Nelson of Sanfused tojoin. The younger (Box 1009) at ; Dairy Co-ops absolute control over production Manh A suit charging violation ofAntonio, general manager of Simons is a party to the suit Kansas, 66502by atta:. because he alleges he was of-and sale of milk in Texas, Ar- AG PRESS anti-trust laws against two milkboth groups . kansas, Oklahoma, New Mex- Dean Co Marketing Assistance Plan fered a bribe by the larger producing groups, one of which groups to join and to persuade ico, Kansas and Tennessee" as E. R. Woodward has a Wichita office, has beenInc. (MAP), a Houston associa- Second classpostage his father to join. well as control of production Manhattan, Kansas. paid filedin U.S. District Court intion of 70 dairymen, and David and sales in other states not Subscription: Simons Sr., and David Simons The suit alleges violation of $3 year Houston, Tex. the Sherman -Clayton Act in that named. CIRCULATION....... The suit was filed by a Hous-Jr., of Waco, filed the suit seek- . It K -Hill Mart Inc.. furniture & appliances herein publicly announce that a meeting has been held, and further that this corporation will be open for business on or about Oct. 24, 1968, Manhattan, County of Riley, State of Kansas; further that said corporation has retained the services of Collier Associates, a professional sales firm, and has ordered this firm to liquidate all of the beginning inventory directly to the public. K -Hill Mart Inc. believes this is the best and quickest way to begin business. Further, that fol- lowing a reasonable time for this opening liquidation the display floor will be completely restocked and a permanent pricing structure will be installed. Sorry Folks! OPEN NO N1TES FREE Till FINAL6DAYS P.M. DELIVERY Buy it (At These Prices) NO with "On The Spot" DOWN charg EASY CREDIT PAYMENT throul Only 3 sets I Trade Only 9 I All row cc Heavy Vinyl 6 inch solid foam Only 2 Only 12 Occasional Same Queen Size Norge Electric Full Size Interne heads, RECLINERS MATTRESS & Boston Rockers TABLES tractor CLOTHES DRYER an See yc Interna Cherry red Olive BOX SET 15 lb. capacity nance Black Auto. heating setting LAMPS 3900 Lint screen Limit 2 Reg. Reg. 9900 Reg. 69.95 179.95 900 Reg. 1/2 PRICE 39.95 18°° 6 only Only 28 Only 6 Only 24 sets Only 6 sets Trad'I Styling 650 x 13 whitewall tubeless TAPE KING SIZE HIDE -A -WAY WALKIE RECORDERS TIRES MATTRESS & Remote Control SLEEPER SOFAS 4 ply nylon TALKIES Lifetime Guarantee 12==, Compact Portable Gold o Olive talk BOX SET Tape Included Carry Out Only Push to Pepper Tele. antennas Opens to full size Other Sizes Available Reg. 9900 With batteries 189.95 88 Reg 16 Reg. 12900 Reg. lc 95 97 $24.95 219.95 26.80 ea. Reg 9 Pair 1uplus excise 14.95 4 OPEN N1TES Till8 HERIN( P.M. Pionet AHNINE r4k, Furniture & Appliance Chaps COUNC. Macho MARY Rrux 741171f14,71' WAK1 MANHATTAN East Over the Viaduct on Hiways 177 and 18 Pr 6-9707 The company had profits of agedy Stays With Area Family IH To Open $37.2 million on sales of $1.28 Grass & Grain billion, compared to a $31.8 mil- 12, KANS. - Plagued bygers, 17 years old, was killed 3 lion net on sales of $1.3 billion ern tragedies,the Calvin Wil-when a tractor turned over and A Salina Store their worst. November 12, 1968 SALINA - International Har-in the previous year. have suffered fell on him. Lower poultry prices and low- son, Bradley Wil- Two years ago one of Calvin vester will open a new company - news heir only Wilger's legs was lost when itowned store here after an agen-er soybean margins had hurt ?.sday waejciy, caught in the power takeoff ofcy void of several years. the company's first half results a grain trailer. but company officials noted "im- Mar hat The store will be at 1-70 and Ss Three weeks ago, a grain aug-US81 just east of a Skelly truckproved economics" in the latter enottr er fell on him and broke one of stop. part of their fiscal year in ani- ward. his arms. J. F. Sullivan, Wichita, Inter-mal agriculture, including broil- er prices, and consumer pro - agePaid The exact details of the acci-national's district manager, said duets, including pet foods, cer- eAr dent which killed Bradley lastthe store will be ready for cus- SAVE Friday are not known. He wastomers around January 1. It willeals and frozen foods. ...14, working alone, using a scoop onhandle a complete line of farm the tractor to pick up silage equipment, trucks, farm trac- around the silo. It is believed tors and light -duty industrial Irrigators Meet the scoop hit a little knoll andequipment, he said. flipped the tractor over. George Frost, Hays, willman- At Great Bend ON CORN It took several hours to extri-age the store. Frost, the retail GREAT BEND - Kansas Ir- cate Bradley's body. manager at Hays for 10 years,rigation and Reclamation Asso- He was born August 9, 1951, has been an Internationalem- ciation members have chosen a! Concordia and was a lifelong ployee 27 years .He willmove to Great Bend for their fifth an- resident of the Linn community. Salina this month. nual meeting on December 5, 25 miles north of Clay Center. Russell Herpick, Extensionir- PICKERS! He was a senior at Linn high rigation engineer at Kansas school. Late Year Surge State University and secretary, e time! In the accident which cost has announced. Attention of the Calvin Wilgers his leg, he en- Association will be on a water dureded excruciating pain for By Purina development with reports and more than an hour while keep- Ralston Purina earnings havediscussion of Kansas water ing himself from being pulled rken sharply inthe fourth management district law, the into the power takeoff asit quarter, offsetting a poor firststate water development of the ground his leg away. half andbringing profit for theprogram of the U.S. Corps of Then he got on a tractor andyear ended September :30 someEngineers and the new state drove to his home for help.
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