Prairieland Talk— j On Same Place 60 Years! By ROM AIN E SAUNDERS, 4119 South Slsf St., Lincoln 6, Nebr. LINCOLN Another couple of the pioneers and substantial citizens of southwest Holt county have reached the 60th milestone hand-in-hand together along life's highway, those years devoted to a life of usefulness and establishing a pleasant home far removed from the crowded haunts of men some two miles east of the quiet, peaceful community we know as Amelia. Link Sageser and his charming and capable life companion settled down to ranch life 60 years ago and live today where they started life together. Out of that com munity, looked upon by state house officials here in Lin coln as not able to maintain a high school, Link and Mae sent one of their sons to head a department in the Kansas State university and Dr. Bow- Romatae er Sageser cherishes memor- Saunders ies of childhood and youth where, my guess is, he hopes to end his days where he played as a kid and where he will be near his kid brother, Vem, the other of Link and Mae's two sons, who has fol lowed the life pattern of his parents and built his home on the greenrobed and rose tinted prairie land where father and mother have lived their worthy lives. ♦ * * Friends of L. G. Gillespie note with pleasure that lie is a candidate for the nomination for county assessor. He has served in that office in the past and put other official positions. Prairie land Talker has known Lloyd since his knee pants day*. He has not been a handshaking pol itician, inquiring after the welfare of the wife and kids at home, but as an official entrusted with the affairs of public office I have not known his equal in devotion to official duties. * • • Worshipers in a Methodist church near the scene of destruction by arsonist of the home of a Negro family In an otherwise exclusive “pale face" section of a suburban Lincoln community closed their worship hour by a gracious act. They rais ed a few hundred dollars to aid that colored fam ily to become established in another home. One or more citizens of that section of the Capital City resented a colored family living among them. In such a case the honorable thing to have done was to ask that family to move to another community where a home would be provided for them. The dishonorable thing to do, the lawless and criminal thing was done. And those Methodist brethren and sisters demonstrate their condemnation of what was once by adding to their prayers a gift of money to help in time of need. His first name is John. Don’t ask what his family name ^s. He cuts hair to provide a liveli hood and his life’s mate teaches in an outlying village school to help pay for the home. She takes the car and their two boys tonight to attend a cer tain affair of juvenile interest. John told me he would stay home tonight instead of taking in a meeting down in the city and he would clean up the house and put the lioys room in order, so when they and their mother returned they would find the home “swept and garnished.” Johns and Joes and Jims—think you could do it. Go to it and get the thrill of your life when Mary comes in and looks upon a “man made” job of house cleaning! • • • • What the scribe who wrote the headline calls “A Hip Pocket Shelf-Tier” introduces the story in a Seattle, Wash., paper telling how one dairyman out there pastures his 23 cows. In a building said to be only 10x12 feet are tiers of shelves where are grown oats to serve as grass and the cows turned in a few at a time to get the green oat sprouts, which are then supplemented by dry feed. Imagine Tom Baker down near Amelia with thousand- acre grazing prairiclands putting his purebred Short horns on "shelf rations,” as it is done out in the northwest! * • ♦ Her childish eyes glowed with delight as she looked up and with the inborn instinct of a lady said, thank you! A bit of candy had been given cans encountered that morning. Childhood, then to her, the sixth or seventh of the young Amer icans encountered that morning. Childhood, then youth, maturity, old age. Out of life’s gatherings along the highway of time memories of childhood days are layed away. • • • Indian youth from the Macy and Winnebago reservations of northeast Nebraska marched on the Capital City a day recently, not to scalp the paleface as their ancestors once did, but meet in a gathering to promote friendly relations with their neighbors, the occasion terminating with a dance that followed a gratifying hour at the ban quet board. Had Will Spindler got down with some of his Ogallala Sioux from the Pine Ridge there would have been an added interest in the affair for old man Prairieland Talker. • • • Nebraska’s United States senator, Roman L. Hruska, says in the early new deal days of the 30's a federal deficit of 15 billion dollars was pil ed up in a few years. But the present outlook is for a 15 billion dollar deficit in one year—195» ”if today’s new dealers have their way.” Oh, it is the “new dealers” that toss the billions about. They have been laying it onto President Ike. Editorial— Canons of Ethics: * They*re Most!* The editor of the Ord Quiz challenges the con stitutionality and fairness of the action filed against an Omaha judge who is being cited by the Ne braska supreme court for permitting photographers to take pictures of scenes in his courtroom. After discussing the canons of ethics under which the court regulates the actions of lawyers in the state, the Ord editor concluded it amounted to a closed shop for lawyers. After reaching the above conclusion, the edi tor wrote: “We submit that those who would raise the economic stature of the farmer take a leaf from the books of the lawyers, the barbers and the liquor dealers. Get yourself under the maternal wing of some state bureau! “And, if you want to shoot the moon, adopt some canons of ethics. They’re the most!” Let’s Check It! With April half over, we’ve come upon spring again, a time for cleaning the attic, digging around those flower bulbs, and painting the window screens. And something else to which we ought to pay attention. Along with all this refurbishing, don’t overlook the old physiological machine, that body of yours. It’s time to check up on your health, we’re reminded by the American Cancer society. What this means, of course, is quite obvious. The ACS needs your co-operation in doing two things—getting enough money together to keep scientists working on a way to beat cancer per manently and getting such folks as you and me to go and have a physical examination. ttn _ _ 1 S 1 .UA.ln.n •) Dnnnneo it'e fhn TT IIJ a pil/CMVHl --—- — best way to find out whether anything—including cancer—is wrong with you. Cancer can creep up on you quiet like, and you don’t know you’ve got it until it’s got you. So take a day off from beating those rugs and see your doc. Tell him you want a thorough ex amination to make sure you don’t have cancer. And about that check, the Cancer society says it isn’t insisting on that. If you don’t trust banks, it’s all right with the society. Make out a money order and send it along. Or just good old plain coin of the realm will do. Everybody ought to get into the act, because cancer is everybody’s busi ness. Holt county has an active chapter of the Amer ican Cancer society and currently is waging a fund drive. If you are at a loss to know to whom your contribution should be directed, simply address it to Cancer, O’Neill, Nebr., and you can be as sured you and your community will be properly sredited. What Happened in Canada ■Pie astonishing victory of John Oiefenbaker, conservative leader in Canada, and the crushing defeat of Lester Pearson, liberal leader, was not a 'conservative victory”; it was the outcome of a successful anti-communist uprising. This from our indispensible newsletter. Human Events (edited in Washington, by the way, by a na tive Omahan, Frank C. Hanighen.) The significant “pay off” was what happened in Quebec. Never before was the liberal party— from time immemorial the master of this over whelmingly French-Canadian province—overturn ed in this area. The conservatives won 50 seats in Quebec, in contrast to seven they won in the last general election in June, 1957. Since that last election. Pearson, regarded as a “one worlder” and “softie on communism”, has been the leader of the liberal party. The defeat was a repudiation of Pearson and his attitudes by the strongly Catholic French Canadians; the fact that Quebec province’s Liberal Premier Dupless>s actually swung his influence to Diefenbaker was the tip off which should have warned Canadian correspondence of American papers. Human Event carried a report from Montreal: "The French Catholic repugnance toward Liberal Pearson was the biggest factor in Diefenbaker’s success." Senator’s Contest (Guest editorial from the Lincoln Journal) Senator Watkins of Utah must have paid his income tax early. At least he was in a mood to joke about the rather muddy filing instructions provided by the intematl revenue service. Back on March 17 he announced a contest to translate a 212-word sentence in a booklet telling taxpayers how to fill out returns. For the winner he offered a copy of the book, “Simplified English. He had his tongue in cheek when he made the contest offer. Right now he probably wishes he had bitten it hard- and stayed out of the contest business. His office has received 500 mailed entries so far Some are serious about the contest and some are serious about other things, including Sen. Wat kins. A few called Watkins “stupid” and “befud dled.” One said the booklet only tried to interpret laws written by congress and pointed to one con gressional sentence 416 words long. One woman said she read the sentence, held her head, and "decided to go to jail.” Watkins hasn’t decided who won. He’ll have to decipher the sentence to do that. The better the speaker, the smaller and more understandable are the words he uses,_ CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Pubitohar Entered at the postofflce in O’Neill, Holt coun ty, Nebraska, as second-class mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. This news paper is a member of the Nebraska Press Associa tion, National Editorial Association and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Terms of Subscription: In Nebraska, J2.SC per year; elsewhere in the United States, 33 per year; rates abroad provided upon request. All sub scriptions payable in advance. Busy Hands Club Reorganise*— EWING—Busy Hands 4-H club held a reorganization meeting Thursday evening at the home of Mr and Mrs. Robert McDaniels. Officers elected were: Roberta Jean McDaniels, president; Sharon Johnston, vice-president; Linda Johnston, secretary; Diana John ston, news reporter; Diana Shra der. pianist; Sharon Johnston, song leader. Sewing and cooking are the projects for the 16 memebrs. all girls. Adult leaders are Mrs. Archie Johnston and Mrs. Ro bort McDaniels, assistants will be announced later. The club will meet the first Thursday evening of each month. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Johnston will be hosts for the May meeting at their home. Attends Radar School— ATKINSON—Keith E. Miller, seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude I. Miller, route 4, Atkinson, is attending the radar man school at the Naval station. Norfolk, Va. The Frontier for printing! • See Grandson— Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Price vis ited over the weekend with theii son and daughter-in-law, Mr. an< Mrs. Steven Price of Bellwoo< Rev. Francis Price went to Bell wood on Sunday and they return ed with him. They stopped en route at Norfolk to see their nev grandson at Our Lady of Lourde hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Gonder inger and family visited fron Thursday until Sunday in Omah; visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Me I Carthy and family. When You Si I Were Young . . . Terrible Fire Rages Across Holt Train Started Blaze? Cameron Loser 50 Years Ago One of the worst prairie fires swept over a portion of the coun ty five miles northeast of town. It started from a smoldering hay stack and was carried north to Redbird by a strong south wind. The territory burned is estimated at about 30 square miles and forms a huge D-shaped tract. The north limb extends east to the Antelope slough country and the western limb extends south to the Elkhom river. A strip seven miles wide, extends from a half mile east of Henry Hoxie’s to Hay Point on the Burlington. Three families near the railroad were burned out and several others farther north, besides thousands tons of hay, hundreds of fence posts and scores of tele phone poles. Of those living southeast of O'Neill, James Cam eron is probably the heaviest los er. He saved the clothes on their backs and some horses and cattle Everything else was lost, includ ing his house, buildings, etc. He had no insurance. William Gannon, living not far from Cameron, lost everything but his house, some hay and several head of hogs. He almost lost his family. They had gone to the outside cellar which caught fire and they near ly suffocated. 20 Years Ago Gerald ("Jerry”) Toy, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Toy, was seriously injured when he ran in to the side of a car. He has a skull fracture, cuts and bruises and is unconscious . Deaths: Mrs. Stella R. French, 70, of near Page; Nels Anderson, 84. . . The southwest country has been soak ed with about three inches of rain. Graduates totalled 36 students in St. Mary’s academy and 46 stu i__.ui: .. WVIIU) *11 V-/ J.1V 111 uvtivw*. . . Filings for office include: A. H. Marquardt of Ewing for sheriff; Ed J. Matousek of Atkinson, for supervisor from the Seventh dis trict; John C. Gallagher for city clerk and John P. Sullivan for county assessor. . . Dr. Frank Gallagher of Nebraska City spent Easter with his mother and fam ily. His sister, Miss Hilda, re turned with him to spend a few days in Nebraska city. 10 Years Ago M. A. Coykendall of Washing ton, D. C., a handtype compos itor at The Frontier a half-cen tury ago under the late James H, Riggs and Dennis H. Cronin, is here with his wife visiting friends. . . Herman Rubin, 74 died of injuries when struck bj a car in “an unavoidable acci dent" in Chambers. . . A 10 unit housing project has been startec a half-block east of the William W. Griffin residence. . . Sr. M Bruno celebrated her golden ju bilee in the Order of St. Francis and Sr. M. Casilda, a native ol O'Neill, celebrated her silver ju bilee. One Year Ago Funds for the Saddle club hit $2,740. . . Deaths; Clyde R. El kins, 2, of Norfolk, formerly ol Chambers; Mrs. L. C. Walling 70 ;L ittle Colleen Marie Drueke 18-month-old, daughter of Mr. anc Mrs. Oswald J. Drueke; Haro S. Prouty, 78, of Spencer, a Span ish war vet All CHS Seniors Have Roles in Play CHAMBERS — The Chambers high senior class play was well ' attended Friday evening, April 18 at the gymnasium. The class presented the play “Commence ment”. The cast consisted of the en tire class, including Douglas Dan kert, Mardelle Edwards, Rodney Elkins, Judy Fagon, Phyllis Ful lerton, Gleason Grimes, Darlene Harley, Lonnie LaRue, Diane Porter, Virginia Smith, Lonnie Taggart, Kenneth Thomson, Lor an Walter and Connie Werner. ROYAL THEATRE O’NEILL Thurs. Apr. 24 Ctlumbia Pictures presents Charles Cobum, Nigel Patrick, Wendy Hiller. HOW TO MURDER A RICH UNCLE With Katie Johnson. Cinema scope. Fri.-Sat. Apr. 25.-21 Big Double BIO THE RAWHIDE TRAIL These were the killer-Coman ches. . . gathering for the bloodj night of the tomahawk and the knife! —also— Huntz Hall and the Bowery Boy* IN THE MONEY With Stanley Clements, Patricia Donohue, Paul Cavanagh. Scot' land Yard goes coo, coo, wher those Bowery nutnicks land ir London on the trail of diamond* dolls, crooks, schnooks and * poodle who carries the boodle! Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Apr. 27-28-21 The hilarious story of a gentle man’s gentleman who had a waj with the ladies. Universal-Inter national presents June Allyson David Niven in MY MAN GODFREY What’s a poor butler to d< when he’s trapped in a house ful of gals—and they all want hii ■ very special services? Cinema I scope in Eastman color, Co-star l ring Jessie Royce Landis, Rober • Keith, Eva Gabor, Jay Robinson - Jeff Donnell and Martha Hyer. ' Matinee Saturday A Sunday 2:8 ; Sunday, Monday, Tuesday an Friday and Saturday adraimlon Adults SOc; Children under II . 12c, Free If accompanied by pa* i ent. Wed., Thurs. Family nlte i family admitted for two adul - tickets. Sandwiches Made at Meeting Are Served CHAMBERS- The Better Ways extension club met at the home of Mre. Frank Tracy Tuesday > evening. April 15 with nine mem : bers present Also present were three visitors Mrs. Donald Green, who joined the club that evening, Mrs Fritz Schwager and Mrs. ! Barbara Sturek. Mrs. Edwin Hub bard presented the lesson on | "soups” The county eye examination of grade school children was mentioned to the members. Plans were made for a show and social evening on April 29. Lunch was served by the hos ! tess using as part of the refresh ments, the sandwiches, which had been prepared as a demon stration. The next meeting will bo May 20 at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Waldo. District Library Meet Here April 28 State Officers Will Make Reports Grattan township library will be host to the district meeting of the Nebraska library association in | O'Neill on Monday, April 28. Program will open with a cof fee hour and registration at 9 a m. Coffee will be served by the rVN 0*11 Wnmiin’e rliifi A welcome to the visitors will be issued at 10 a.m., by Miss Alice French, member of the Grattan library board. She will be subsituting for Mrs. P. B. Harty, board president, who is out of the city. At 10:15 greetings will be heard from the president-elect of the state group, Dr. Edith Stick ney of Midland college, Fremont. Miss Louise Nixon of the Ne braska Public Library commiss ion at Lincoln will make a report followed by a message from Don Wright of Linocln, library con sultant. His topic wil be the “Library Services Act Projects". Luncheon will begin at 12:15 p.m., at the Town House. Enter tainment will include a tap dance team — Patricia Hand, Joyce Janzing and Kathleen Reynold son—taught by Mrs. Woodrow Melena. “Books We Have Read’’ will open the post-luncheon session at the library, starting at 1:45. At 3:10 p m., Doctor Stickney will make a report from the sta te association and adjournment is scheduled at 3:30. Miss Bemadete Brennan, Grat tan library, says the meeting anc luncheon are open to the public Luncheon reservations, however should be mailed to her or phone to her—115—before Friday, Apri 25. Current Event Used in Roll Call— CHAMBERS—Kellar club me Wednesday, April 16, with Mrs Charles Coolidge with Mrs. Mel vin Bell as co-hostess. Fourteer members, one honorary member one guest and one child was pre sent. Roll was answered by a cur rent event. Door prizes were awarded Mrs. Raymond Beet and Mrs. Ed Eisenhauer. Tht program planned by Mrs. G. H Grimes and Mrs. Louis Neilsor consisted of a Bible quiz, a birc quiz and a reading by Mrs. Mel vin Bell. Lunch was served. The next meeting will be May 1 at the home of Mrs. Louis Neilson i Visit at Wynot— l Mr. and Mrs. Charles Havranek took her mother, Mrs. Dorothy Barrett, to Wynot on Sunday to visit her sister, Mrs. Blanch Pick. Whileth ere they visited Mr. and Mrs. Ted Pick and family. IF YOU NEED MONEY You’ll Like Our Way of Doing Business! When you need money for any worthy purpose, such an • Old Bins • Installment purchases • Medical Attention • Home and Auto Repairs 1 • Seasonal Expenses, and many other things Just tell us how much you can use! WE’VE SERVED thousands of folks in all walks of life, and in our wide experience we’ve answered most every person al financial problem. You May Apply for $25.00 to $3,000 On your car, furniture, ap I pliances or farm equipment. Payments are always arrang ed to best fit your Income, budget and pay dates. At the name time, we substantially reduce high monthly Install i ment payments through our I common • sense Consolidation 1 Plan. Best of all, once your credit ■ is established with us, you will have a ready source of extra ’ cash whenever you need it. ! Central Finance Corporation i C. E. JONE8, Mgr. Harmon Bldg. O’Neill, Nebr. . I -- Chambers News ' Mrs Charlotte Honeywell and Mrs. Fred Tucker visited in the ! Clarence Knox home Sunday, I April 20. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Beed and Judy and Mr. and Mis. How ard Beed visited the former's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Kaup and two daugh ters at Stuart. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Cai-penter were Sunday dinner guests in the Harry Snyder home at Inman. Mrs. Jim Kirkland of Burwell came Wednesday, April 16, and v isited until Thursday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Wal ter. Mrs. C. E. Tibbets and Mrs. Genevieve Bell drove to Winner. S D., Friday where they v isited their brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Hage meier returned Thursday, April 17, from a honeymoon trip and visited Friday with friends and relatives before going on to their home at Nokomis, 111. They were Thursday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Smith. Members of the Beautiful Val ley Garden club planted a tree at the Perkins Memorial park in Chambers Monday, April 14, in honor of a deceased member, Mrs. Myrtle Bell. Mrs. Cordia Smith spent Tues day, April 15, with Mrs. Charlotte Honeywell. Rev. and Mrs. Ward Smith of Shelton were evening callers. Mrs. Lidgett, Mrs. L. A. Peter son and Mrs. Tony Hubei were callers at the home of Mrs. Char lotte Honeywell during the week. The following relatives gather ported on books available from the state library commission. Mrs Orville Svatos gave a re sume of articles of interest in the "Country Woman" magazine. It was voted to send a gift of $1 each or an article for the ba zaar to the Children's Memorial hospital in Omaha at the first fall meeting. The president told about plans for eye examinations of grade school children which the counts' council of home demonstration clubs is sponsoring. Plans for nat ional home demonstration week were discussed. Mrs. Charles Grimes and Mrs Glen Grimes presented the les son on "sandwiches". Lunch was served by the hostess. The next meeting wil be with Mrs. Melvin Hell the date to lie decided later. O’Neill Local* Miss Mardell Gaskill of Omaha was a weekend guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E, Gas kill. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gydesen and son were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gydesen of Scotia. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Linden 1 berg left Sunday for their home in Newcastle, Wyo,, after spend ing several days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gydesen and children of Cupertino, Calif , were Monday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gydesen. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Kaiser of Atkinson were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herb Kaiser. Mr. and Mi's. Lyle Homback spent the weekend with his t>ar ents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Homs back of Spencer Mrs. Clay Johnson, sr., of O' Neill, Mrs Edgar Stauffer and Dora Townsend of Page attend ed W’CTU meeting in Kearney Sunday and Monday. Accounting AM) BOOKKEEPING SERVICES Morgan Ward ACCOUNTANT Golden Bldg. — Phone 414 O'Neill, Nebr. kit...IN NEBRASKA? UF ' V.'N. Huge lake McCon- ?! aughy it formed by , j Kingsley Dam, the , second largett earth- , 1 - en dam in North ?? .. §g! America. The lake, 10 milet north of -jntnii Ogallala, it 23 milet long. It it a sports man's paradise where fishing and boating are excellent. J I ed at the Edwin Hubbard home Saturday evening to surpise Mr. Hubbard on his birthday anniver sary: Mr. and Mrs. H. VV. Hub bard, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Hub bard, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shavlik and Pam and Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Eason of O’Neill. Mrs. Anna Albers returned Saturday from Springfield, Ore., where she had spent the winter with her son-in-law and daugh ter, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harley and family. Her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Albers, and two boys met her at Grand Is land. The group were dinner guests in the Louis Walter home Sunday. Hail was reported southeast of town Saturday. About three-four ths of an inch of a rain fell in the Chambers Saturday. Mrs. John Honeywell, Mrs. Charlotte Honeywell and Mrs. Fred Tucker were visitors in the Everett Gorgen home in O’Neill Thursday, April 17. Mr. and Mrs. Duane K. Miller and children drove to Omaha Monday. Mr. and Mrs. John Honeywell were Sunday dinner guests of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Verle Tuttle and family at 1 Clearwater. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shalik and Pamela, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hub bard and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Hubbard were Sunday guests in : the C. W. Porter home in O’Neill. Mr. and Mrs. Sewell Johnson and Mrs. Jim Puckett and baby of Atkinson and Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Cooper of Chambers visited Arnold, Marie and Erma Zueleke Sunday. Extension club Meets— CHAMBERS — Valley Center extension club met Friday, April 18, at the home of Mrs. E. R Carpenter, Fourteen members answered roll by naming a favor ite sandwich. The president, Mrs Lloyd Gleed, was in charge ol the business session. The musif leader, Mrs. C. V. Robertson led the group in singing the new clufc song and the song of the month "Fairest Lord Jesus’’. The read ing leader, Mrs. Clyde Kiltz, re Beer Belongs ... to the open- Nebraska division handed hospitality Nebraskans fjjtS United State, are noted for. Serve good, re- jTOjPo Brewer, freshing beer always. It marks \P*Q / Foundation you as a gracious host.,12 FVr"^a,-i Djnk UMg., lincoH Powerful 'A H. P. »*% a h. p. Available in 13 gal horizontal. 21 and 4; gal and larger v#r • Self-Priming, (after cate • Nationally known motor, initially filled). • On'« one moving part. • Guaranteed suction lift of • Corrosion-proof ejector 25 ft. and nozzle. • Compact-fits under kitch- • Supplies up to 1020 gals, en sink. per hour. KELLY’S PLUMBING — O’NEILL — HOW MANYOF THESE MUSIS Will YOUR M HAVE? W. 1. STYLING THAT WILL < STAY IN STYLE a. ALL-NEW V-8 ENGINE 3. MOST MODERN ‘■SIX'* 4. SINGLE-CONTROL LIFTGATE B. FOAM CUSHIONS IN FRONT SEATS OF ALL MODELS | B. j LOWEST PRICE POSSIBLE T. 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