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  • Editor's Notebook

    Bill Blauvelt|Jul 29, 2021

    Earlier this week, while visiting with a home owner, I learned of a problem at his home he was still dealing with. A couple days before he had attempted to replace the water control parts serving a porccelain commode’s water closet. ( Since Superior is the Victorian Capital of Nebraksa, I want to be correct and use proper Victorian descriptions here and not use what the Victorian’s would consider gutter language to describe what happened.) The repair job took longer than expected and my friend ran out of time before the refill valve was adj...

  • Ask a Pastor Column

    Jul 29, 2021

    Presenting Biblical answers to tough questions Q: Why are we supposed to go to church? What is church good for? A: The word translated “church” in our Bibles refers to a ‘called-out assembly.” In other words, a church is a group of people who have been called out of their culture and society by God to become part of something completely new and different (1 Peter 2:9-10). Members of this group are called saints (Colossians 1:2), beloved brethren chosen by God (1 Thessalonians 1:4), holy brethren (1 Thessalonians 5:27), believers in Christ...

  • Puffs

    Allen Ostdiek|Jul 29, 2021

    “Doctor’s Advice . . .” Seems most of us around my general age range grew up with a respect for doctor’s advice. We were constantly told the doctor was the expert and knew more than we did. I suspect that is true in many, if not most, cases. However, every so often something comes up that make me wonder just who does the best. Nancy and I just had our annual heart doctor appointments and we were give a whole set of new guidelines considering the amount of water to drink on a daily basis. I can remember from many years ago that it seemed most al...

  • Love My Crazy Life

    Teraesa Bruce|Jul 29, 2021

    I can’t believe we are at the end of July already. Where has the summer gone? Oh wait, I know, I’ve spent it running around like a chicken with its head cut off. This past week Jacob went back to Dad’s for another short visit. One tank of gas. We picked up the Omaha boys for a visit. Another tank of gas. We took the Omaha boys back to Omaha. You guessed it, Another tank of gas. The price of fuel right now burns my tail feathers. We shall not speak any more on that topic; I don’t want to be in a crummy mood all day. The money pit has taken up mu...

  • Country Roads

    Gloria Schlaefli|Jul 22, 2021

    Things change and I certainly realize this the older I get. The last several wedding ceremonies I have been attended have been held outdoors at what is called a chosen “Venue” which officially is termed as “the place where something happens, especially an organized event.” Popular venues for weddings include a barn not far from the Schlaefli Farm and along the shore line of a lake, on a rolling prairie hill and on a grassy golf course. More than 50 years ago, in what some would term as being “too many years ago,” the wedding ceremony was almost...

  • Editor's Notebook

    Bill Blauvelt|Jul 22, 2021

    I’ve been told history repeats itself and this newspaper is filled with old news. At least part of the time, both are true. History does tend to repeat and this newspaper tries to report on both what is happening and what has happened. In this space last week, I wrote about a photography project of more than 50 years ago that included taking pictures of the late George Higher’s home located about seven miles southwest of Superior along what is now known as Diamond Road. Last week I reported on his great-grandchildren’s memories of the house. La...

  • Ask a Pastor

    Jul 22, 2021

    Presenting Biblical answers to tough questions Q: What does the Bible have to say about anger? Is it a sin to be angry? A: The Christian’s ultimate standard for right and wrong is the character of God Himself (see Matthew 5:48 for one example). This gives us a solid basis for saying that it is not always sinful to be angry, since we are given many examples of both God and Jesus Christ becoming angry (Matthew 21:12-17; Romans 1:18). That being said, anger can lead to sin even though it isn’t always wrong to be angry. Therefore, it must be han...

  • Puffs

    Allen Ostdiek|Jul 22, 2021

    Gosh, last week I had a number of items I was thinking about for this space. However, I did make a note of them and have seemed to have forgotten most of them by Monday morning. So, I think I’ll cover several items without any particular system in mind. VOTING — I have watched with great interest the changes in the voting laws around the nation this year, to date. It is interesting. Last year the Liberals won the national office of president and now control the federal government. On the local level in many, many states, the more conservative i...

  • Love my crazy life

    Teraesa Bruce|Jul 22, 2021

    First and foremost, I have a mistake I need to correct. A couple of weeks ago, I wrote an article about the Fourth of July events in Oak and made a mistake. I said the pastor’s name was Keith, it is not. It is Kevin Bogus, and I know this. I often make that mistake. I am sorry, Kevin, and I hope that my embarrassment and acknowledgment of this mistake keeps me from making it again. Another boneheaded thing I did this week was trying to save a kitten along the highway. As I drove home from the money pit Saturday, I noticed a cute little black a...

  • Country Roads

    Gloria Schlaefli|Jul 15, 2021

    Recently I saw a social media post made by a great-granddaughter sharing her memories of visiting her great-grandfather’s house as a child. The house was a large two story house that once stood along a road my parents would travel when going to a neighboring town. I remembered that house well as a child. I often wondered about the history of it and the family who once called it home. So many childhood memories are made in our great-grandparent and our grandparents’ homes. Though many of those houses do not exist anymore, as most older farm hom...

  • Editor's Notebook

    Bill Blauvelt|Jul 15, 2021

    As a college junior, I took an advanced photojournalism course offered at Kansas State University. I made friends with a fellow photography student who apparently kept close tabs on the weekly surplus sales held at Ft. Riley. Thanks to his updates on what was being offered, I made several Tuesday afternoon road trips over to the post in search of irresistible deals. Once I found 100 foot rolls of Ansco film selling at a fraction of what I was paying for a comparable Kodak film. I bought several...

  • Ask a Pastor Column

    Jul 15, 2021

    Presenting Biblical answers to tough questions Q: What does the phrase “’Vengeance is Mine,’ says the Lord.” really mean? A: “Vengeance is mine,” Is an often repeated promise from God to right the wrongs that surround us in this world (Deuteronomy 32:35; Psalm 94:1; Romans 12:19). Any time we see wrong done to ourselves or others we can often feel a strong desire for payback or revenge. If we act on this desire the Bible calls it taking vengeance. While the Bible does not say that wanting justice is wrong it does tell us we are not to take jus...

  • Puffs

    Allen Ostdiek|Jul 15, 2021

    I didn’t plan on writing about golf this week, but I played in the “Over 50” golf tournament Sunday at the Lawrence Country Club. That provided the incentive for some of the following observations: * I probably don’t take the game seriously enough as I suspect most people that are as inept at the game as I am would have quit long ago. But I do enjoy getting out and playing. * I played with some men who are probably among the better golfers at the Lawrence Golf Club and I learned a lot from them. One of the things I learned was not to throw m...

  • Love my Crazy Life

    Teraesa Bruce|Jul 15, 2021

    By Teraesa Bruce This week I am writing to you from the pool. With the fair beginning and half of my guards off to church camp, I am short-staffed, so I am down here “managing” things. Working at the pool is like that dream, you know the one, you are standing in front of the class in your underwear! George took his vacation days to work on the money pit. It’s been chaotic, to say the least. He and Jacob spent several days pulling wires, framing for windows, installing a door and cursing. So much cursing. LOL. For a while, I kept trying to co...

  • Country Roads

    Gloria Schlaefli|Jul 8, 2021

    Living on a farm most all of my life has given me an appreciation of the country life. Mostly it’s the simple things that draw my attention to my surroundings such as the lovely smell of freshly mowed alfalfa; the fragrance of the rain as it falls on a summer day; the sweet smell of the blooming yellow clover. Memories include being a young girl and climbing into Dad’s truck box that had just had wheat augured in and then walking barefooted around in that grain feeling the grain as it went between my toes. I liked climbing up into the com...

  • Editor's Notes

    Bill Blauvelt|Jul 8, 2021

    While looking through the archives, I found a copy of the Manhattan Mercury newspaper in which a story I wrote in November of 1965 was published. For my first college level reporting class, I wrote about a college stunt I was involved with. Unlike some student stunts which are filled with danger, ours was pretty harmless, if you don’t take into consideration college students losing a few hours of pre-Thanksgiving break sleep. While I didn’t have a hand in organizing the stunt, the organizers expected me to use my connections and get them the...

  • Ask a Pastor Column

    Jul 8, 2021

    Presenting biblical answers to tough questions Q: Is America a Christian Nation? A: I have read many works on the founding fathers and the birth of our nation, along with documents written by the founders during that period. The conclusion I have reached personally is the Christian worldview was indeed one of the principal influences on the founding fathers as they forged the framework of this country. I am as sure of the Christian basis for their decisions as I am about anything in secular history. Let me give you an example of this...

  • Puffs

    Allen Ostdiek|Jul 8, 2021

    Very interesting . . . At least to me. On occasion I do get contacted about some things I have written about. I hope you don’t think I’m boasting, but most of the time people let me know they enjoy what I’ve written. Some of the time I have furnished information about something of a historical item, or just plain trivia and I’ll get contacted. Well, last week was such a time. Jack Gilsdorf, Lawrence native and LHS alumni of 1960, called about the item I wrote a couple of weeks ago about the book I read concerning the nuclear accident in Cher...

  • Love my crazy life

    Teraesa Bruce|Jul 8, 2021

    We had a busy weekend with all of the holiday festivities. Friday, we were in Oak for the Fourth of July block party and pot luck. I took a cake made by the women at Caps Cafe. Time got away from me like it always does, and I forgot I needed to make a dessert. So last minute, I texted Chelsey and asked if there was any way she could whip one up for me. Then I forgot to take a spatula! Oh well, folks figured it out, and what was left, the boys finished as a snack when we got home. If I could keep my family out of it, I would buy a few made-up...

  • Country Roads

    Gloria Schlaefli|Jul 1, 2021

    Happy 245th Birthday of The United States of America! As we celebrate Independence Day over the week-end and into Monday, there will be picnics, BBQs, ball games, camping by a lake, fishing, boating and the firing off of numerous fireworks. Some people will be sporting patriotic shirts, caps, and displaying American flags at homes, businesses, campgrounds and on the towns’ main streets. What exactly are we as Americans celebrating besides the official birth of our country? It should be we are also celebrating our freedom that was won at a p...

  • Editor's Notebook

    Bill Blauvelt|Jul 1, 2021

    A longtime subscriber to this newspaper, Ken Torring, drove over from Deshler on Friday. He stopped at the newspaper office to ask if I might be related to Charles Blauvelt, the former editor of the Arapahoe Public Mirror. One of grandfather's older brothers was named Charles but he was a harness maker not a newspaper editor. Prior to suffering a stroke and retiring to Colorado, he was employed by the Dutton-Lainson Company at Hastings. Harness was one of many things the company has made and...

  • Ask a Pastor Column

    Jul 1, 2021

    Presenting Biblical answers to tough questions Q: Some Bible passages tell us to ‘pester’ God with our prayers, others say we should avoid vain repetition and just have faith; what gives? How often should we ask God for what we want? A: First let me say it’s normal to see a tension between different Bible passages that address a given topic. If I tell one person to drive west to get to Mankato, then tell another to drive east to get to the same place, it can seem like a contradiction. Until I tell you the first person lives in Belleville and th...

  • Puffs

    Allen Ostdiek|Jul 1, 2021

    “Operation Rescue” is a Pro-Life organization from Wichita, Kan. This week I’m going to use information directly from one of their writers, Cheryl Sullenger, to talk about elections. It may seem strange to talk ‘elections’ here almost two years from the next one, but Cheryl brings up some important items that one needs to think about long before any of us go into that election booth. What follows is mostly from her. “No matter what you believe happened on Election Day and the days that followed the 2020 Presidential Election last November, t...

  • Love my crazy life

    Teraesa Bruce|Jul 1, 2021

    Just another busy week in this house. Robert is on leave and has been home since Tuesday. I had thought he wasn’t coming home until Thursday evening, but plans change. My house is somewhat clean and put together. I have my dads to thank for that one. We had my dad over for dinner last Wednesday, and then on Friday, my “bio” dad and stepmother came for a visit. We had a good visit with both! Managing the pool has been a challenge this week as well. With one assistant manager on vacation and the other ill, I feel like I’m running in circles...

  • Lannie Hanel

    Jul 1, 2021

    Lannie Lee Hanel, 74, died Thursday. He was born on May 17, 1947, to William Arnold and Olive Grace (Houdek) Hanel. Lannie grew up on the family farm. He attended Agenda schools and played 6-man football for the Agenda Huskies, graduating in 1965. Following high school, Lannie attended Kansas State University, graduating in 1971 with his doctorate in veterinary medicine. In 1970, he married Kathy Craig, and to this union, two daughters were born, Kasey and Kelly. Dr. Hanel started his veterinary career in Courtland in 1971. He opened his own...

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