Observations all along the line - Kimball & the Southern Panhandle First
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A walking trail to the Tri-State Marker – where Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado meet – will allow one to experience the High Plains without disturbing the natural beauty of the private property. Previously, the landowner got to the point where he was thinking of closing off access to the marker because the private property was being damaged by carelessness. The Tri-State marker is on land owned since the Depression by Dennis Kieler's family. His grandfather paid 7 cents an acre for it. Their hous...
Employees of RES, who work on Kimball area windmills, recently made donations to help buy Christmas presents for local families, and RES helped the cause by matching the funds. When the Kimball County Sheriff's Office heard about what RES was doing, it sounded similar to what they were doing. The sheriff's office and RES soon partnered up and combined everything they had done. More than $1,000 was raised all together. DeeDee Guzman from RES went to Cheyenne to shop for the presents after being...
Tuesday morning Kimball had its newest police officer sworn in at the City Council chambers. Katherine Terrill, the city clerk and deputy treasurer, swore in Joel Mauer. Mauer is finishing up his last month of training and will start at the police academy in April. For 12 years he served as a police officer in Massachusetts, including five years under cover. Later he became a corrections officer in Wyoming and Nebraska. Officer Mauer is a familiar face in town, as he worked at the post office...