Aug 22, 2008 | Grant Tribune-Sentinel
Harvesters nearing home after hot, long summer
With nothing but a couple of rain delays to hold them back, the crew of Weber Custom Harvesting has finished in Nebraska and is headed west.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Police Find Fatal Car Wreck 1 Day After it Happened
Keith County officials didn't discover a wrecked Pontiac until a day after an accident that killed a Colorado woman last week.
Colorado woman killed in car accident
A Colorado woman was killed in a crash southwest of Brule, Neb., late Thursday night or early Friday morning.
Mary Bieber began temporary postmaster duties in Grant on May 28. By Jan Goff Managing Editor A temporary replacement has stepped in for Bob Bounds, Grant's postmaster for the past 24 years-something that still ...
Reuters
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Reuters
Farmers switch from diesel-powered irrigation
By Rebekah Kebede
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Under pressure from diesel prices that have doubled in the last year, farmers in the arid regions of the United States are increasingly abandoning the fuel in favor of electricity to run their irrigation systems.
"Farmers are just switching off (their diesel engines) as fast as they can," said Wade Hill, owner of the diesel distributor Happy Jack's Petroleum in Brule, Nebraska.
Farmers in the dry areas of Kansas and Nebraska, as well as the Texas panhandle, depend on pumps powered by either diesel, natural gas, or electricity, to draw water out of wells to water their crops.
Two chambers honor Village Cafe South Several members of Perkins County Chamber and Keith County Chamber gathered in Grant on Monday at Village Inn Cafe South for a ribbon cutting ceremony and First Dollar ...
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