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Cover credits AERIAL PHOTO BY KEVIN WRIGHT Garfield County Bank finances color cover for Remuda Multi-color ou annual covers is expensive but our hearts were set on a color picture of Jordan this year. Joe and Leo Dutton took us up in their planes for some aerial shots of our town. Then the bank came though with the finances. Thanks to all involved. We thought a short history of the bank might be appropriate here. Jordan had been without a bank since 1934 when Fred Winter left a South Dakota bank to start the Garfield County Bank of Jordan in 1959. The bank opened its doors on March 14, 1960. The officers were Winter as pres- ident, Boyd Isaacs as vice president, William Nefsy as vice president, and Winter received assistance in his duties as CEO from his wife Viola and Milton P. Schrank. HAROLD ISAACS The bank has grown from its start- ing capital of $125,000 to $1,261, 000 during the past 22 years. It is the first bank in Jordan to really survive. Prior to it, the First State Bank of Jor- dan operated for a brief eight years from 1913 to 1921, reopened later that year only to close again in 1926 During that period the Farmers State Bank opened and two years later in 1919 became a national bank. By 1934, Farm- ers liquidated voluntarily and was absorbed by the First Nation- al Bank of Miles City. Winter resigned as president in; the spring of 1982 Currently, Harold Isaacs is president and Phillip Fellman is vice president. The Board of Dir- ectors also includes J. E. Stanton, Har- old Hageman and Fred Winter. FELLMAN AT RIGHT: Shelley Ryan, Assistant Cashier; Debbie Cooley, Teller; Lillian Brooks, Cashier; DeEtta Kerr, Bookkeeper and Rene Gibson, Teller. NOT PICTURED: Gene Buxcel, Executive Vice President and Rickey D. Mart, Assistant Cashier. For all your building needs. We specialize in farm and agriculture buildings. Econo Lumber VIOLA AND FRED WINTER HAROLD HAGEMAN J. E. STANTON
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DaleFellman Feeds Jim McWilliams mill manager lloyd McKenna JEANNIE, BREM, DAN, BRUCE, LORI AND DALE FELLMAN CHARLIE MURNION DENNIS WEST TERRY WAHL GARY LOOMIS
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Volume 39 1982 REMUDA Spring Supplement Letter from the Editor Our first deadline is looming in the near future and I miss Carol. Annual seemed to run so smoothly when I wasn't editor, now I'm buried in ladder diagrams, unfinished pages, and lectures from Ma. This year the staff has come up with some really good ideas. We are following a magazine format in the annual and hope that it will be a successful idea. The first sixteen pages are the Spring Supple - ment, reviewing all the exciting happenings of last spring. The rest of the annual is full of the events which took place between August 30, 1982 and March 1, 1983. Our special thanks go out to the members of the community who have put so much effort into helping with research. Without them our jobs would have been much more difficult if not impossible. This year’s annual staff and I hope you en- joy the annual. I'JltQMJL Index of Supplement 2 Academics Jordan places 4th in Academic Olympics 9 Music Festival is April 16. 4 Achievements Spring brings awards and trips. 10 Sports Five go to State Track Meet. 6 Fun Carnival grosses $1,150. 13 Affairs JoDee Lee are Prom royalty. 7 Rodeo terry Jay Murnion go to Nationals 14 Education Pluhar awards dip- lomas to 30 grad - uates. 8 Drama Up the Down Staircase is spring production. 16 Alumni Whatever became of... Remuda sent to press March 4 Last year’s Remuda staff compiled a 144 page annual. The last copy was sent to the publishers March 4. To print 210 copies of that book cost approximately $5, 000. Two hundred copies were sold at $10. each. Good salesmen sold enough ads to make up the difference. We appreciate our advertisers and hope you will patron- ize them. It is a happy day when the last copy of the Remuda is sent to the publishers A cause for real celebration! And what could be better than Mex- ican food ? Ma cooked all we could eat of tacos, enchiladas, frijoles, burritos and rice. After stuffing ourselves, we tried to work it off with exercises and a wild Pit game. Then all we had to do was wait for the results of all our hard work. The Remudas came the first of May in plenty of time to get everybody's personal messages written in before school was out.
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