The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 21, 1960, Section One, Image 1

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    STM : !I»T 3 V -
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Kay Nlsson and I tennis Kemper were crowned king and qin-en of
sports at the Page sports banquet held last Wednesday night. Also
pictured are Ronald Parks and Ionise Iaiehcke. Frontier photo by
ltennls Iekes.
Dennis Kemper; Kay Nissen Are
King, Queen of Page Sports Banquet
Dennis Kemper and Kay Nissen
were crowned King and Queen of
Sports Wednesday evening at the
athletic banquet which was held
at Fellowship hall in the Page
Methodist church and was served
by the WSCS.
Superintendent Vernon Linnaus
acted as toastmaster.
Dennis Kemper, King of Sports,
gave a brief review of the year's
athletic prowess, a season of 18
wins and five losses in the basket
ball division with first place tro
phies at the Sandhills Gateway
tournament, the Sandhills Gateway
conference and the District tourna
ment. They placed second in the
Holt County tournament.
Kay Nissen, t|ueen of Sport*,
reported a fairly successful year
In Girl's volleyball with more
wins than losses. They entered
two tournaments. A game with
Chambers, lost by seven points,
and Clearwater, a one point loss,
were the most exciting games of
the year, said Miss Nissen.
Linaus introduced Coach Ron
Park who, in turn, presented Ralph
Brostrom, a former superintendent
of the Page school, who spoke to |
the group.
Mr. Brostrom rernin
_ 41. ..4 a nnitn
in his profession and told them he
had signed a contract as principal
of the Jefferson Elementary School
in Grand Island a goal he had sot
for himself.
Mr. Park, a former member of
Brostrom’s ball team at Page, and
his boys have held a special
interest for him with a memory of
a lost game played with St. Mary’s
because of over-confidence anti a
few careless plays and he shared
their moment of triumph when
Park’s team upset St. Mary’s in a
surprise retaliation match.
Congratulating them on their
year he remarked that the world is
not interested in the storms you en
Page Banquet—
(Continued on page 4.)
John Baker Named
Creighton Top Student
John Baker, son of Mrs. Henry
Lohaus, was named as one of the
top 18 students at Creighton Uni
versity in Omaha this past week,
according to Rev. Carl M. Rein
ert, S. J.
Baker is a freshman student at
Creighton.
Teachers Meeting Held
The Holt County rural teachers
met at the Town House Tuesday
evening for their annual banquet.
Fifty five teachers were in atten
dance.
The Sandhill Ramblers furnished
musical numbers.
A short business session was held
with Larry Sawyer, presiding.
Knox Officials Set
Repair Bill at $100,000
Knox County roads suffered much
damage during the spring thaw that
caused Holt County's estimated
$71,638 flood damage.
Knox puts the snow removal cost
at $33,000 above the normal ex
pense and expenditures of $100,000
in repairs and damage. A $40,000
bridge and approach loss is a ma
jor portion of the repair bill.
Guard Will
Drill Sunday
National Guardsmen of Company
D will assemble at O'Neill early
Sunday morning. The protestant
men will meet at the Armory where
Rev. John Hart will be in charge of
the 8 a m. service. The catholic
men will attend mass at St.
Patrick's Catholic church.
A three hour drill on Land Mine
Warfare will follow the church
services.
The afternoon drill will feature a
four hour Rifle Platoon in attack
of fortified installation and a com
bat formation.
All 4xainimY mill Ka rviif^tfvlArrc
The public is invited to view the
simulated warfare.
Legion to Buy
Parking Facilities
The American Legion post voted
Tuesday night to purchase the lots
west of the club house for a park
ing lot. No indication was given as
to when the post will take over the
lots, now consisting of a used car
; lot.
Simonson post has also been
awarded a certificate for Ameri
j canism and community welfare for
the years 1958-1959. The post was
1 commended for its participation in
the Highway 281 dedication activi
ties.
A stag party set for tonight
(Thursday) will be held to raise
funds for the parking purchase.
Glen Packard
Services Held
Funeral services were conducted
on Tuesday, April 12 at Petersberg
for Glen Packard who died sudden
ly on Sunday after suffering a
heart attack.
Survivors are his wife and twc
children, a son, 18 and a daughter
15. Mr. Packard is a brother-in
law of Mrs. Henry Fleck of Cham
bers and Delbert Whiting of Ewing
who with their families, attended
the funeral services.
,a*V’'• * c. •* . •• «Pr- HLnawsL-.' . s ®
lectured with relay trophies are the winners of the Holt county track meet KHO and mile relay
teams. From left, front row, Leonard Havronek, Den ils Tomlinson, Bill Eby and Jerry kllcoin. Back row,
Marv Miller, Darold Ermer, Bob Eby, Don Schaaf, Jerry Dexter am! Supt. Milton Baack. Frontier photo
and engraving.
THR WRATHRR
ST, » S 5? Section One
Friday 15 65 46
Saturday 16 . _ . 58 39 -44
Sunday 17 _ 52 32 T
Monday 18 SB 37 ,
Tuesday 19 _ 77 43 Twelve Pages
Wednesday 20 65 44
"The Voice of the Beef Empire"
Volume 79 Number 52 O'Neill, Holt County, Nebraska, Thursday, April 21, 1960 _f_ Seven Cents
O'Neill Invitational Track Meet
Wednesday; Local Men Are Timet s
A number of O'Neill Chamber of
Commerce men have been flexing
their trigger fingers during the past
week in anticipation of the O'Neill
Invitational track meet to be held
here next Wednesday.
The Chamber is sponsoring the
meet and Chamber members will
be acting as timers and starters.
All men will be equipped with color
ful beanies and stop watches, com
pliments of the Bulova watch com
pany and McIntosh Jewelry.
The agenda for the meets calls
for a couches meeting at 10:30
Wednesday morning to draw for
positions. Eight class A teams
and 10 class R teams have In
dicated they will enter.
The meet will he the first night
track meet held at the new athletic
field. All finals in the running
events will be held at night. The
field events will be held in the af
ternoon
Class A teams entering are Bur
well, Plainview, Neligh, Ainsworth.
Crofton, Albion, O'Neill and Valen
tine.
Class B teams consist of Atkinson
St. Joseph, Spencer, Stuart, Elgin,
Naper, Spalding Academy, Verdi
gre, Ewing, Page. St. Ludger, St.
Mary's, Bassett, Chambers, Atkin
son, Butte, Clearwater, Springview,
Bartlett and Tilden.
Rock and Gem
Show Tomorrow
And Saturday
A Rock and Gem show under the
auspices of the Presbyterian Wo
man's association will be held at
Fellowship hall Friday and Satur
day.
Thirteen tables will hold the show
ing and a sixteen foot transparency
case will hold 150 slabs lighted
from the bottom so every color and
pattern in stone may be seen and
appreciated.
Specimens wili be mounted.
Identified as to kind of stone and
area where it is to be found.
One table will hod tortilla bone,
dinosaur bones, petrified palm root,
a petrified mastadon tusk from
Bassett and local petrified wood.
There will be thunder egg epeci
mens found in Oregon, formed in
lava beds: as lava cooled bubbles
formed and agate flowed up into
the cavities; also very grotesque
and unusual lava casts; limb sec
tions where the entire limit has
Ixten replaced by agate formation.
Among the pre-historic speci
: mens are mud waumps from
Nevada and fern fossils found in
Illinois and femwood from Knox
ville, Ta., some very nice speci
mens from Omaha. There is rock
crystal from Arkansas, onyx from
Old Mexico, quartz crystal with
rutile from Brazil, banded amethy
stine from Madagascar, other
showings from India, the Canal
Zone and nearly every state in the
T Tninn
A prize specimen is ammonite
found on the Washechek home place
in South Dakota which is said to
have been formed one hundred
million years ago, trellabite formed
in coal mine areas, a pair of double
flow black obsidon, imported carved
onyx, carvings in ivory, pink, rose,
lavender, black, white and green
quartz. Tiger Eye (petrified asbes
tos).
A crystal weighing 30 lbs is in
this collection.
Lapidary equipment shown will
include a mlnature tumbler in
operation, drill, sunder and polish
ing wheel, lap wheel and tumb
ler diamond saw blades.
A 20 inch saw, running in dia
mond oil, is used for big jobs in
his shop. The blade is a steel blade
impregnated with industrial dia
monds and is sharpened with a
brick.
The Washecheks have become
authorities in a field of five million
rock hounds and he has been cited
i as a top example of rehabilitation.
Language Contest
Winners Announced
Eleven group language contests
for the Holt County Rural Schools
were held during the last part of
March and the first part of April.
The county contest was held Sat
urday. April 16 for the winners of
the contest groups. The first five
winners in each group were:
Grade T 1st. Gary Stauffer, Dist.
55; 2nd. I,arry Seger, Dist. 155;
3rd, Mary l^xt Kaup, Dist. 168; and
Linda Whtaker, Dist. 107; 4th.
Jerry Gotschall, Dist. 210; 5th,
Marilyn Zakrezewski. Dist. 60.
Grade 4 1st, Jody Diane Siebert
Dist. 155; 2nd, Fred Johring, Dist.
92; and Darla Pickering, Dist. 4;
3rd, Arlyss Peter, Dist. 65; 4th
Diane Kaup, Dist. 58; Cynthia
Dierking. Dist. 228; and Barbara
McVay, Dist. IK; 5th, Sandra
Kaye Funk, Dist. 46; and Cindy
Jones, Dist. 210.
Grade 5- 1st, Marcia Ziska, Dist.
168; 2nd, Gwenda Ra Schultz, Dist
33; 3rd, Debhie Waldo. Dist. 228;
4th, Harold Morgan, Dist. 69: and
Jim New'ton, Dist. 20; 5th, Gloria
Schindler, Dist. 46.
Grade 6—1st, Donna Stamp, Dist
46; 2nd, Jane Wabs, Dist. 14; 3rd
Dorothy G. Newman, Dist. 86
4th, Jerry Brockman, Dist. 141
5th, Del mar Pinkermnn. Dist. 38
and Roger Hoffman, Dist. 74.
Grade 7 1st, David Frickel,
Dist. 74; 2nd, Lorraine Sandall,
Dist. 136; 3rd, Judy Syfie, Dist. 53;
4th, Kathryn Thiele, Dist. 131; 5th
Linda Thompson, Dist. 23; one
Sharon Winings, Dist. 206.
Grade 8--1st, Shirley Skrdla, Dist
169; 2nd, Delores Ros»nkrans
Dist. 4; 3rd, Joan Riffey, Dist. 8;
4th, Debbie Eisenhauer, Dist. 156;
and Darla Waldo, Dist. 228; 5th
Curtis Miller, Dist. 170.
Gallaghers Hold
48th Anniversary
Sunday Evening
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gallagher
of Inman observed their 48th wed
ding anniversary Sunday evening
at the home of their son-in-law anr
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A1 Hamik
Other guests were Mr. and Mrs
George Winkler and family and Mr
and Mrs. Jim Gallagher of O’Neil
and Mrs. Frances May and child
j ren of Inman,
A three-tier anniversary cakt
j was baked and decorated by Mrs
Matt Beha and -was served with icf
I cream and coffee.
Mr. and Mrs. Gallagher have
lived their entire married life ot
the ranch southeast of Inman when
' 1hey went to live as newly weds
A new house was built when theii
older children were small.
The Gallaghers are the parent;
of six children: Mrs. Elwin (Leona
Cronk of San Bernardino, Calif.
Mrs. Frances May. Inman: Mien
ael, Inman: Pat, Ontario, Calif,
and Mrs. A1 (Betty) Hamik of O'
Neill. One son Jack, died oversea:
during World War n. There are 1!
grandchildren.
Mr. Gallagher has two brothers
Joe of Inman and Jim of O’Neill
and five sisters: Mrs. Charle:
(Helen) Gilligan of Sioux City, Mis
Neil (Anna) Chase of Sheldon, la.
Mrs. Marne Harte and Miss Be;
Gallagher, both of Inman and Mrs
Frances Kemp of Pamona, Calif.
Mrs. Gallagher has two sister;
living: Mrs. Alice Halley, Seattle
Wash., and Mrs. Olive Warner o
Omaha.
Wedding Reprinted
i From the files of the April 25tl
1912 issue of the Frontier we an
reprinting the wedding of Mr. an;
Mrs. Gallagher. Please note th<
small ways in which the 48 yea
; old write-up differs with that o
today and the many ways in whicl
the styling has not changed will
the years.
On Thursday morning, April 18
1912 there occurred a very prett;
] wedding in the Catholic church a
aiaiioru cti which unit* xvu. uum
Gallagher and Miss Genie Craij
were joined in the bonds of hoi;
wedlock by Rev. W. J. O'Sullivan
The ceremony was witnessed b;
a large group of relatives am
friends of the contracting parties
The bride was attired in a hand
some wedding gown of white sill
net over satin messaline witl
wreath and veil and was assisted b;
the groom’s sister. Miss Helei
Gallagher. The groom was assistec
by his brother Mr. D. P. Gallagher
After the ceremony at the churcl
the wedding party went to the horm
of the groom’s parents where ai
elaborate wedding breakfast wa:
served.
The bride is the youngest daugh
| ter of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Crai)
j and is a lady of many fine qualifier
The groom is a son of Mr. am
Mrs. M. Gallagher, one of the mos
respected and prosp°rous familie
of the community and is a youm
; man of worth and industriou
habits.
The happy couple start out 01
life’s journey under the most prc
mising circumstances and wil
I commence housekeeping at one
on a farm owned by the groom’
father south of Inman.
Car-Calf Fight; Die
Raymond Hurtig, Orchard, wa
i driving peacefully Monday aftei
noon near the weigh station when
black angus calf belonging t
Sammy Regan decided to pick
fight with his 1958 Edsel.
Both teams lost.
$500 damage was done to tl
Hurtig auto and the calf was kille<
Officer Hastreiter said that M
Hurtig was not injured.
Romanian Princess Caradja Tells
j O'Neill Students 'Beware of Russia'
Rosenkrans' Race
Stork; Lose 12
Miles from Town
While Easter morning found
1 most people attending church in
I new Easter bonnets, Mr, and Mrs.
| Roger Rosenkrans of Dorsey found
I themselves in the midst >f a race
| with the stork and the Rosenkrans
were the losers.
A 6 lb., 4 oz., baby hoy, Lynn
, Roger, w’as born at the Van Gmnet
i corner, 4 and miles north ot
Page at 5:45 a m. Sunday. Mr. end
I Mrs. Rosenkrans had left home at
5 a.m. that morning hopefully ex
| pectant and fully expecting to ar
rive at St. Anthony's hospital in O’
j Neill in time for a normal hospital
birth.
Saturday's rains had made roads
heavy and rough and the new' par
ents were 12 miles from O'Neill
'when the baby arrived. Both mo
ther and son are doing we!' and
expect to return heme Friday.
The Rosen k i a ns have four chil
dren at home, Marion, 16, Fred.
15, Dolores, 14, and Jerry, 11
Dolores had won second place in
the 8th grade language contest orly
I Saturday nignt but now fee's she
I is second place priv winner of the
w'eek following the early morning
Easter event.
Mrs. Rosenkrans is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lindberg of
the Meek community while little
Lynn’s paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Rosenkrans of
Redbird.
Atkinson Youth Wins
Straight "A" Honors
Duane Humphrey, Atkinson, was
named to the dean’s honor list at
Hastings college with a straight
"A” average. Humphrey is a Hast
ings sophomore and one of 13 stu
dents with straight A records.
Also on the dean’s list were
j Jane Peterson of O’Neill and Con
j nie Hitchcock, Stuart.
It was visiting day in O’Neill for this group from rural school 16
iuul they stopped at The Frontier to watch the work. Pictured arc,
f Danny Hansen, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hansen, Karla and
1 Sharon Anson, daughters, of Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne Anson, Sandra
! and Bonnie Johnson, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Johnson,
Diane Dcvall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Devall, Marilyn Risor,
r daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kisor, Norma Walters, daughter of
f Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walters, and the teacher, Mrs. Lawrence John
1
, son.
Eiitrict M mk Contest
Brings 2,000 to O'Neill
O’Neill will again be playing host
i to the B, C and D classes of the
1 District III Music Contest held
i yesterday , today and tomorrow,
i The program follows.
Wednesday—2.30 p.m at St. Mar
- y’s Auditorium. Piano entries in
; solo, duo, and quartette arrange
. merits.
1 Thursday—8 a m. at St. Mary’s
t Auditoriam. Class D instrumental
* solos.
Thursday—8 a.m. ai St. Mary’s
; Recreation Room. Class C instru
mental solos, trios and miscellan
l j eous.
Thursday—8 a.m. at O’Neill
1 High School Auditorium. Class C
' and D Mixed Chorus and Glee
’ j Clubs.
Thursday 1 p.m. at St. Mary’s
Auditorium. Class C and I> in
strumental duets, trios, quar
•; teTes, sextettes, clarinet choir,
boys low, medium and high voice
a quartefje and boy’s octette,
o mixed quartette and girl’s triple
a trio, sextette and miscellaneous
vocal.
Thursday—1 p.m. at St. Mary’s
e
[• Music Contest—
(Continued on page 5.)
Poem by Daughter of
Page Couple Selected
The American College Poetry
Society of Los Angeles, Calif., has
announced! that Judy Simmons
entry "An Ode To Life" will he
included in their third semesterly
Anthology to he published in May.
Entries from colleges and uni
versities from nearly every state
and Canada province will appear
in the publication.
Miss Simmons is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William Simmons
of Page and a senior at Wayne
State Teachers’ College.
Page Boy Escapes
Injury in Auto Wreck
Ralph Simmons. 17 was involved
in a one car accident Thursday
about 2:30 a.m. 2 and 3/4 miles
east of Page, near the Harry Parks
farm home when his car went out
of control, crossed the right ditch
and hit the bank turning over end
ways in the mud.
This Is what Ralph Simmon’s Nash looked like Thursday morning
after he rolled It Thursday night east of Page. Simmons was trapped
In the ear but managed to push o|>en the back door and escape un
injured. Frontier photo by Dennis Iekes.
Six Are Honored
For Scholarship
Six youth from this area were
among the 525 students honored for
high scholarship at the University
of Nebraska’s Honors convocation
Tuesday in Lincoln.
They were Francis A. Murray,
O’Neill, junior; Leross G. Holcomb,
Chambers, I .aura M. Prokop, Ver
digre; Jerome J. Twibell and
Michael R. Voorhies, Orchard, all
sophomores; and Roland L. Han
sen, Inman, and Sharon Ewanson,
Amelia, freshman.
Little Leaguers
Ready for Play;
152 Register
Jerry Schmidt, spokesman foi
the O'Neill Little League, said this
week that 152 names were reoelvet
from interested kids for the O’Neil
1 Jttle league.
Ten teams were formed from fh<
list -4 major league teams and i
minor league teams. The majoi
league consists of (he Braves, Phil
i lies, Indians and Cardinals.
The minor league loams and theii
coaches are Yankees. Junior Ander
son, coach; White Sox, Johr
Schmit, coach; Tigers, Louie Coker
coach; Senators, Dwight Philbrick
coach; Dodgers. Francis Holz
coach; and the Giants, Elroy Liob
coach.
The minor league season starts
May 16 and the major league is ex
pected to get under way the 25 ol
May. Elkhom Valley play will
staid May 9.
A trophy for first and second
place major league finishers and a
trophy for first place minor league
team will he given.
Mothers of little leaguers arc
now soliciting funds for the league.
Because of the great amount
of advertising in iliis week’s
issue of The Frontier a lot of
news had to be saved for next
week’s paper.
A number of pictures will
also be printer next week.
Be sure to look elosely at
the advertising in this week’s
paper for many, many bar
gains during the city-wide
j clearance sale Thursday, Fri
day and Saturday in O’Neill.
Hovey Services
Held at Stuart
STUART Funeral services foi
William Harrison Hovey, 71, were
conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. a-1
the Stuart Community church wit!
Rev. Herbert Young officiating
Burial was in the Stuart cemetery
Mrs. Harry Cowles, Mrs. Bot
Brayton and Ora Yarges sang
They were accompanied by Mrs
Mark Nelson as organist.
Pallbearers were: John and
Robert Krotter, both of Spencer,
Herbert Kaiser of O’Neill and
Donald Krotter, T. E. McGuire
and Keith King.
The late Mr. Hovey wa3 l>on
March 4, 1889 at Stuart, the son o
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hovey.
On January 26, 1916 he was uniter
in marriage to Rose Mary Moot
at Lincoln. To this union six child
ren were born.
Mr. Hovey died Saturday fron
a heart attack. He had been it
failing health since last June, lh
lived in Stuart his entire life wit!
the exception of three years, 1917
1920, spent in Casper, Wyo. H<
farmed for a time and was an em
ployee of the William Krotter com
pany at the time of his death. Hi
was a member of the Methodis
church having been baptized by hi;
grandfather, Hariman, a minister
in early childhood.
He is survived by his wife, Rose
sons Richard of O'Neill, Willian
Harrison, jr.. of Onawa, la., How
ard J. of Herrick, S. D., an<
[ Dudley John of Pensacola, Fla
who is in the navy; daugh'ers
Mrs. Archie fRose Marie) Bright o
O'Neill and Mrs Richard f Selem
i Belie) Kazda of Winner, S. D., am
112 grandchildren.
Fled Country
When Attacked
By Communists
Princess Catherine Caradja u
Romanian refugee told O'Neill stu
dents Wednesday to "Head your
papers, your editorials, listen to
your commentators, and think and
act to defend all the things we hold
dear before it is too late ’
The princess who has lived be
hind the Iron Curtain, spoke U'i< re
a joint assembly of St, Mary's and
O'Neill high school students yester
day. She strike to students clw ifly
of the communist threat to the
world today.
Enroute to the Nebraska press
convention in Omaha this weekend.
Princess Caradja is in O'Neill as
a result of her association with
Carroll (Cal) Stewart, former
Frontier publisher. She is assisting
Stewart in researching his Ixxik
concerning the Ploesti bombings,
“Black Sunday.”
The dynamic speaker is in the
United States with a special visa
for a coast-tcvcoast speaking (<>ur.
She was an overnight guest in the
William Froelich home while in O’
Neill.
Mrs. Caradja outlined her carlv
Princess Catherine Onrodja
life and the fall to Russia of the 10
middle European countries after
World War II. She told them how
her Romania fell by inva. ion from
without by the USSR and how
| Czechoslovakia fell from subver
I sion within. "The soviets have no
wish for war," the Princess told
j her listeners. "No, they wish to
capture us, and put us to weak for
them on their conditions just to
j take over and go on from there.”
The Princess pleaded for Ameri
cans to "Awaken to the threat that
I the Reds are working both openly
j and under-handedly and the infil
; tration is going on so gradually that
one hy one the European states
; have fallen.”
The loss has boon so gradual,
| she stated, that America will some
| day awaken to the fact that we are
very small in comparison to the
vast army of Reds against us and
our way of life.
The Princess was forced 1o flee
Romania in 1916 when the country
i fell to 1he Germans. After the war
she went to Bucharest where she
took over an orphange founded hy
her mother. She added a foster
homo section and continued thin
work all through the German oc
cupation and bombings of World
War IT.
The Russian invasion and succed
ing Red government followed and
finally in 1949, she was forced to
stop her work there In 1952 the
Princess escaped from behind the
Iron Curtain and spent several
years in England and France
speaking about her experiences.
Princess Caradja feels that the
only way she can now he of real
service to her country is to toll
those in the free world about exist
ing conditions behind the Inn Cur
tain. She feels that Americana, in
their good lives, have no compre
hension of what Communis'um is
really like.
The Russians discipline families
through their children, the Ro
manian princess said. The knock on
the door in the middle of the night
goes on with relentless repitition.
The head of the house is taken
away, homes are invaded, the
! children may he sent to work in the
■ fields or mines and the husbands to
Siberia. Because of this families
work and comply with Russian
1 wishes for the sake of tneir chi'd
1 ren.
The Princess eneo magod (lie stu
dents to wake-up and read Jntelli
1 gently so that we can act now to
1 protect and defend our precious
freedom.
i _
Men Charged In
Beer Party Raid
i»
, Ronald Hasenpflug and Matt
lTvnos were charged in county
l | court this week with procuring
, liquor for minors The action grew
. j out of a raid Friday night by
I Sheriff I^eo Tomjack and Officer
! Gene Hastreiter.
»
The two men raided what was
f to have been a “beer party’’ on
i private property. No one was
II caught drinking.
I The hearing will be April 29.