Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 139, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1961 — Page 9
WEDNESDAY, JUNE M, 1981
Nebraska Out For Tourist Business
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) — This is the year Nebraska goes out after the tourist business which state officials believe the state deserves. Nebraska, rich in the lore of the old west, was the scene of Wild
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i Bill Hickok’s rise to fame. Over its undulating prairies rolled the wagons along the old Oregon Trail. The Mormon caravan which wound its way to the Great Salt
Lake put in its toughest winter at Omaha. At famed Old Scout’s Rest ranch near North Platte, Buffalo Bill Cody put together the nation’s first rodeo. Most of the buildings of picturesque Fort Robinson near Crawford, the cavalry remount station where Chief Crazy Horse was gunned down, still stand. So do Chimney Rock, Scott’s Bluff, and Courthouse Rock, memorable
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
landmarks on the Oregon Trail near the city of Scottsbluff, where the deep ruts of the covered wagons still are visible. Not Luring Tourists But despite all of this and more, Nebraska government officials say the state is not luring the tourist traffic it should. The state has begun to do something about it. The game commission is stepping up work on the state’s park system. More money
will be spent on advertising, a field in which Nebraska has trailed neighboring states. Among the attractions a tourist would find in Western Nebraska are the Scottsbluff National Monument from which the Oregon Trail landmarks can be seen, and Chadron State Park, the state’s largest, which has 1,500 acres of wooded canyon and picturesque bluffs. To the south is Lake McConaughy, largest of the Platte
River chain of lakes and in central Nebraska stands Sioux,Lookout, Indian memorial near some famed old Indian battlegrounds. In the eastern end of the state are the Homestead National Monument, near Beatrice, the Nebraska Museum and art galleries at Lincoln, the Winnebago and Omaha Indian reservations near Macy, and Lewis and Clark Lake, which is formed by the mammoth Gavins Point Dam in northeast
• J / .. . ■ Nebraska. I Boys Town State A solid tourist attraction for many years has been Boys Town, the boys home founded by the late Msgr. Edward Flanagan on the west edge of Omaha which has grown to a modern small city of 1,000 population, peopled by homeless or unwanted boys. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
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No Kicking Now LARRY 'I HOLLYWOOD (UPD — Hawaiian Harry Luaik became a motion picture actor because ba - was kicked in the face by a horse. For the filming of Fred Kohlmar's "The Wackiest Ship in the Army” director Richard Murphy wanted someone with a beatentype face to play the part of the Navy chief petty officer, Luaik was selected for the role. He says he was kicked in the face by a
Hearty Salad NEW YORK (UPD—Beans *n’ greens salad is hearty. Drain 1 (1 pound can of cut blue lake greens beans well. Combine 3 tablespoons of oil, 2 tablespoons of wine vinegar, 1 teaspoon of salt, >4 teaspoon of pepper and 1 teaspoon of instant minced onion and toss lightly with beans in large salad bowl. Chill well. Just before serving, add 2 quarts of crisp romaine, broken into bitesize pieces, 3 tablespoons at crumbled blue cheese and 1 diced, hard-cooked eggs, and toss lightly. Makes about 6 ' ■' "~ r m [ 1 ■ does not worry about her .■ nose being shiny—-the one she’s holding, that Is. This ■ * nose cone is being prepared ’ for radar detection tests at Republic Aviation. Janet’is an electronic engineer- | ( AMBASSADOR TO US.— J David Ormsby-Gore, one of Britain’s most skilled diplowin become Britain’s ambassador to the United States this fall. A firm friend of President Kennedy since the’ days when father Joe Kennedy was ambassador to the Court of St James’s, Ormsby-Gore has been Britain’s alternate delegate to the United Nations and its top negotiator at the Geneva nuclear test-ban talks. " - I wlllhi f d I WM ’fr IMI | f ft 'I ■ H I RHP r n I. L_ INTO THE SEA —Discoverer XXIV, launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base. Calif., headed toward orbit with a mysterious payload inside its capsule, but something went wrong. Instead of [getting into a space groove ' around the earth, the satellite plunged into the Pacific 1,000 miles south of Vandenberg after just four miftutes et ►telemetry ai*tp*laL . .
