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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 2

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 Bainraaf, Feb. 10, Dail.f Pepn jtafl Febtnary 12, Nixon Gets Personal Report From Agnew By FRANCES LEW1NB Associated Press Writer CLMEE Alaskan Leaders React To Appeals Court Ruling By JOHN MORRISON Associated Press Writer ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Alaskan leaders have reacted with shock to a U.S. appeals court ruling which again las sidetracked at least temporarily construction of a pipeline altf to "tap The" of the" Ar" made l(J ia uie (AF) President Nixon gets a tj slope NDonal report at the Western, The iso-page opinion to ay from ic public in Washington late Fri- President Spiro T. Agnew, just av overturns a lower court i. VV 1 mi lon to cision by ruling that an extra- eight Southeast Asian nations.

fe der ai land corridor for He is the first of Nixon's two tne proposed 7 89 ii oi i ipe top post-war emmissaries to re- violates provisions of the Demos (Continued from Page 1) rlghts-of-way over public land must be limited to a width of 25 feet on either side of the pipeline. Hence, U.S. Circuit Court of hours each week, to offer a $1.70 minimum for persons Anna Maher, Plankinton Rites PLANKINTON Funeral na Maher, 92, her home in 8, will UbS Donald Molumby officiating. body will lie in state Hence, U.S. Circuit court UI Tne win lie in state Appeals for the District of Co-, na 6 in Sunday evening at the church; liimMa Hie lAR.tnn* With anflUal prOSS TeCBlplS Ol UA lumbia declared, the 146-foot right-of-way the Interior Department has proposed granting to Alyeska Pipeline Service is illegal.

Alyeska is a consortium of several oil com less than $250,000. Rosary will Sunday. Burial be at 8 will be Sunday. Burial be in amendment failed 20- plMk cemetery under the soruum 01 several oil panies with interests in the ur1 Prudhoe Bay oil fields of the "Donnelly's bill does not give fair minimum wage," Mirer of Cazer Funeral Miss Maher was born Dec. 25, 1881 to Mr.

and Mrs. Ber- Arctic Slope. tufn from talks with Asian leaders. National Security Ad- Mineral Leasing Act of 1920. 'This is the worst possible William A.

Egan. 1920 law specifies that viSer Henry A. Kissinger was opinlon tnat could have come," in Hanoi today and will be in a an tn Atatira Oov Peking next week. said fllde t0 Alaska Agnew has had little to say publicly on his 13-day tour, which ended when his jet arrived at El Toro Marine Air Station near here Friday afternoon. Be went to the Newporter Inn In-iiearby Newport Beach for rest before report- Nixon.

At his last Asian stop in the Philippines, where he conferred at length with President Ferdinand Marcos, Agnew said: "I reaffirmed the intention of the, United States to meet its treaty commitments in the in general, and the Phil parties agree that construction of the proved ge iJ2 inch diameter pipelineis im- in lme Wlth the possible if all construction work must width take place within the Minnesota Indians En Route jland-use permit until Congress changes the applicable law," the court ruled. An oil Ippfcies in" particular. As we ap- i ea der UPl A to one i more state's Donnelly said Miller's changes would be "expensive to enforce, and inoperable. The amendment shows hasty and incomplete a ii laoi 10 mr. ana mis.

oer- nard Maher at Hastings, Neb. She was a longtime resident of She is survived by a nephew, Lawrence, Huron. thoughts. There are no records anywhere in the state to offer Fred A. Koepniek Rites at Kennebec By Republic News Service Digest of New Bills PIERRE Of) Digest of bills for the South Dakota Legislature Feb.

9: SENATE Final Passage definition of apartment house (31-0) mistake in state code (32-0) First Passage persons charged with felonies tight of discovery (18-16) motor fuel tax audit (31-3) education aid to dependents of prisoners of News (Continued from Page 1) deaux a deputy state's attorney for purposes of the invffstig- tion. The commission authorized the expenditure of up to $2,000 to aid Roubideaux in his investigation, Hospital Report MITCHELL St. Joseph Cindy a Randy ett 1 trr I Salem. Mrs. Id Bullis, Wudel, WilUahi Swank Krcil, Mitchell; Kimball; G'en Reliance; Mrs.

war (28-6) fair fund procedures (33-0) board funds funds in higher education facilities account (31-0) accounting "ungodly complex." Alyeska declined to predict the effect of the ruling. The proposed pipeline would run 789 miles from Prudhoe Bay on the North Slope, at the northern tip of Alaska, to the ice-free port of Valdez on the Gulf of Alaska, where the crude oil would be transferred to supertankers for shipment to U.S. markets. Donnelly successfully 60, will be at 2 p.m. Monday at the United Methodist Church amended his measure to Exempt Kennebec with the Rev.

Joel servants and babysitters from the minimum wage. Indians at Among those contesting con- cooperate with the Philippines that and other nations in this re tnai gafd." The Philippine public information office said Marcos told Agnew about Asian security problems and about an assassination plot against Marcos last year in which it was alleged at least one volved. American was in- Eddie Benton, Executive 1 the American Indian (AIM) at St. Paul, thering of some 90 Indians he hoped Custer "would go down in history as a turning point for Indian people." Benton declared, "Custer has 'stood for 97 years as a The information agency said monument to the last Indian- Marcos showed Agnew the con-1 white war, and now it is a fession of an American said to monument to the hatred of be involved in the plot and racism that continues in this proach a new era of peace, we st Paul called Frlday for a struction were the Wilderness should devote more attention to carav an to motor to Rapid City, i Society, Environmental Defense the economic and social prob- SD near troubled city of Fund and Friends of the custer, to support Indians in Earth. Friday's ruling came on their appeal of an opinion issued in Washington last August by U.S.

District Court Judge George Hart, who had lifted a temporary injunction blocking pipeline construction. He had ruled that the Interior Department and Alyeska had abided by the National Environmental Policy Act in publication of a environmental impact statement. Since then, environmentalist attorneys narrowed their legal attack to two key arguments: that the impact statement was inadequate and that the proposed federal permits would violate federal right-of-way limitations. It was not clear immediately what legal alternatives were left open to Alyeska and Interior Department attorneys. Meanwhile, 'Alaskans including Egan and U.S.

Sens. Ted Stevens and Mike Gravel were talking about seeking congressional amendment of the 1920 right-of-way law to circumvent the decision. Harris officiating. Burial will be in the Kennebec cemetery with milltarv rites. 0) The senate took a second look The McColley Funeral Hotne Is at bill it had killed Thursday in charge of funeral that would gve defendants in arrangements.

felony cases the right to all Mr. Koepniek died Feb. 8 at information in the case. Kennebec of an apparent heart The vote Thursday was 17-16, attack. He had ooerated the but 18 votes are needed for Standard Oil bulk passage of any measure in the He was born Dec.

1913 senate. On reconsideration at Archer, Iowa, and on April Friday the bill passed 18-16. Sen. Oscar Austad, R-Sioux Falls, opnosed the measure, saying he knew of no prosecuting attorney who favors the change. 13, 1943 married Irene Schmitt at Chamberlain.

He was a veteran of World War II. Survivors include his widow, one daughter, Mrs. Joe (Linda) Rebstock, North Highland, "And," he said. "I know of three brothers, William, no other state that has such Albert and Emil, Archer; two asked the United States to investigate reports of other Americans volved. Agnew's Stops in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Singapore, South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.

also allegedly in- trip also included Leslie Anderson Rites Monday By Republic News Service PLATTE Funeral services for Leslie Anderson, 62, Mitchell, will be at 2 p.m. Monday at the Bijou Hills Church with Adolph Johnson officiating. The body will lie in state at the Cool Funeral Home in Platte Sunday afternoon and evening. On Monday the body will lie in state at the Milliken Funeral Home in Mitchell from 10 a.m. until 11 a.m.

when there will be a short service. The body will then be taken to the Bijou Hills Church. Burial will in LaRoche Cemetery under the direction Funeral Home. of the Cool Mr. Anderson was born May 3, .1910 in Iowa to Mr.

and Mrs. August Anderson and died Feb. 8 at the University hospital in Minneapolis. On June 24, 1943 bai married Viola Thomas at Pendleton, Ore. He had been employed by Montgomery Ward at Mitchell for 26 years.

Survivors include his widow; one son, Leslie (Jay), Platte; one daughter, Mrs. Gary (Louise) Moir, Sioux Falls, and five grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a son. country. "It's time we erase this hatred and conflict." When he called for volunteers to join him in a caravan, about half a dozen raised hands.

Benton, who suggested those who stay home could pay for the gas, said he expected about SO to make the trip by the time sympathizers arrived from other points north. Meanwhile, to the east and Artley Skenandore, Executive Director of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Commission, said AIM leader Dennis Banks had telephoned him from South Dakota to ask him to mediate. Skenandore has not been called on officially to help mediate the dispute, which arose from the slaying of an Indian at Buffalo Gap, S.D., on Jan. 21, and subsequent manslaughter charges placed against a white man. Skenandore called the situation at Custer "inflammatory" and "very grave." "It is important to recognize Montana Indians En Route to South Dakota MISSOULA, Mont.

(AP) About 40 Indians prepared to leave Missoula en route to embattled South Dakota today. Gene Heavy Runner, 23-year- old Blackfeet, termed the things for what they are," he strife in Custer, S. "a na- added. "Feeling, attitudes of non-Indians are just what they were 100 years ago. coWboy-and-Indian wars are prevalent." The Mrs.

VanNoort at Stickney WEATHER TABLES FORECAST 'jFair skies with a cooling trend. Highs mostly in 30s Lows in teens. iv MITCHELL WEATHER 'Average -precipitation for portion of year to date .84. Total precipitation for portion of'year to date .97. Friday 28.

'Qvernight low 6. .7 a.m. temp. Sat. 8.

Precip. last 24 hrs. none. Record high Feb. 9: 62 In low Feb.

9: -38 in 1899 Sunset tonight 5:56. Sunrise tomorrow 7:38. TEMPERATURES LPcp Wptertown Pierre Philip Lemmon Mobridge Aberdeen Pickstown Sjpux City Rapid City Huron Sioux Falls valentine Omaha 22 30 1 8 Tr did not report 31 24 22 32 31 32 28 28 38 29 4 3 3 12 10 7 6 4 9 10 Tr PRECIPITATION '73 '72 Av Av Rec Yr .91 .06 .606 ,66 2.92 '62 ,06 .62 .60 .66 2.92 '62 .72 1.41 1.24 3.45 '06 1.25 2.43 2.50 7.30 '42 8.93 2.73 3.21 10.56 '42 3.50 3,08 4.03 8.1$ '20 3.21 2.96 3.06 8,84 '15 .73 2.71 2.60 ,70 2.23 2.12 1,02 J.25 1.48 l.W ,69 .67 .42 .49 8,48 '44 6,78 '01 11 2.71 feOlbe etevatjon 1602.75 above leve), BO change in the pest Wmja taiiwate.r feet the Want Ad By Republic News Service STICKNEY Funeral services for Mrs. Gerrit (Agnes) VanNoort, 72, will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the United Methodist Church here with the Rev.

Henry Vix officiating. The body will lie in state at the Lien Funeral Home on Sunday 3 p.m. Burial will be in Silver Ridge Cemetery. Mrs. VanNoort died Feb.

9 at a Mitchell hospital. Survivors include her widower and 10 children. She was born in The Netherlands Feb. 27, 1900 and came to the United States when six years old. In August 1917 she married Gerrit VanNoort and they lived in Iowa until moving to the Stickney area 25 years ago.

Survivors include her widower; five daughters, Agnes Wulf and Nancy DeBoer, Hawarden, Iowa; Ann Overweg, Mt. Vernon; Clara Brunsma, Stickney, and Doris DeBruin, LeMars, Iowa. Five sons, Jake and Gerrit Hawarden; Bill, Piedmont; Bernard, Sioux Falls, and Marven, Stickney; two sisters, Anna Elgersma, Hudson, and Hattie Huenink, Nebraska; 34 grandchildren and 18 great- grandchildren. She was preceded in death by tional emergency for Indians" and said about 1,000 Indians are expected to arrive in near- still by Rapid City, S.D., by the weekend. Heavy Runner, a leader of the Missoula chapter of the American Indian Movement (AIM) said the Missoula group planned to join Indian caravans headed for South Dakota from a nrovision." Sen.

Homer Kandaras, D- Rapid City, said, "This bill only provides equal access to the truth. If lack of access to the truth is convicting possibly innocent men, that frightens me." The senators voted 28-6 for a bill to waive tuitlbn to post- secondary education In the state for dependents of prisoners of war or persons missing in ac tion. "The bill would involve only $400 maximum a year for each dependent," Sen. Homer Harding, R-Pierre, said. "It is an insignificant amount for the losses the children suffered without a father during their sisters, Mrs.

Edith Schmidt. Winona, and Mrs. Earl Bondermann, Archer, and one granddaughter. He was preceded in death by formative Sen. Mike Brandon, O'Connor, said the D- bill an infant son, three children, one sister a brother.

rand- one Report (Continued from Page 1) raised, particularly for psychiatric disabilities, the signf- cance of the increases was disputed, by the staff director of the House committee, Oliver Meadows. 'One group gets a little mi- Washington and Oregon. He said the group had planned to leave early in the morning but ran into trouble getting money needed to finance the journey. Heavy Runner, who said he has been in contact with Indians involved in the rioting in Custer, commented: "It's just like a bomb there." He said, "Indian people are not going to take any more delays this time, what happened in Custer is going to be an example of what will happen state by state, tribe by tribe." Heavy Runner quoted Chief Crazy Horse, who said: "Tomorrow is a good day to die." "The AIM people are ready to die for our cause," said Heavy Runner, who added that Indians will not tolerate any more killings of Indians, He charged Indians have been found slain on streets around the country and that law enforcement officials have termed the deaths as suicides. discriminated against other children whose father or mother might be in prison or away from the home.

"Those kind of children have the same right to an education as the children of a POW," he said. "Nowhere in the bill does the issue of the need of the h'M come into focus." The senate delayed until Monday an appropriations bill seeking $643,000 for the state's weather modification program, an effort to increase annual rainfall and suppress hail statewide. Monday's calendar included a measure creating a statewide personnel system for all state employes, A bill to create a state lousing development authority has been introduced in the senate. The bill, offered Friday Is aimed at creating a group to have flexible power to meet housing needs of low arid moderate income people in the state. Sens.

Don Bierle, R-Yankton; Mike O'Connor, D-Sioux Falls; E. C. Pieplow, R-Aberdeen; Harvey Wollman, D-Hitchcock, and Homer Kandaras, D-Rapid City, sponsor the bill. "About 17 per cent of all units in the state were substandard in the 1970 census," Bierle said, "and 27.8 per cent of the state's population lives in housing that is overcrowded or lacks some a son. Jet Appeared Out of Control Before Crash ALAMEDA, Calif.

(AP) An eyewitness says a Navy jet which plunged into an apartment complex here resembled a shooting star and appeared to be completely out of control before impact. But the five-member Navy board of inquiry panel failed to turn up any evidence Friday whether mechanical or human error was to blame for the crash on Wednesday night. Eight bodies and portions of a ninth have been recovered. Searchers continue to sift the ashes of the Tahoe Apartments building for victims officials say may have been cremated by the intense fire which destroyed the structure. They say some victims probably will never be found.

The death toll probably will total 10, including the pilot, said Roland W. Prahl, Alameda County chief deputy coroner. Some residents unaccounted for previously have now reported lihey escaped, 'he said. "I was facing the window and observed what initially I thought was a shooting star or meteor," Lt. A.

D. Longquist testified at the Navy inquiry Friday. Longquist, a pilot at Alameda Naval Air Station, Sadd Watched ject for about three seconds Wednesday night from his home, less than a mile from the crash scene. "It appeared to be trailing sparks. There were no identifying features to know it was an aircraft," Longquist added.

It was descending rapidly at a 60 to 80 degree angle from my viewpoint" and was or all plumbing." O'Connor said "completely uncontrolled flight either the pilot was incapacitated or had no control." Lt. Richard Joseph, a flight surgeon, told the Naval board pilot, Lt. Robert Lee Ward, 128, of Gary, N.C., was killed in Legislature (Continued from Page I) about diseases such as phenylketonuria, which affects unborn infants. Kandaras said South Dakota had been one of only three states which had not required the testing. "Approximately one-third of the babies born in South Dakota are either tested improperly or not tested at all," he said.

The law would also provide that physicians be educated on proper testing techniques. Four other measures were approved during the short floor session Friday, three the hell chopped out," said Meadows. "The younger guys are getting it in the neck." The administration has defended the change as an effort one dissenting vote. One bill would restrict the sale of money orders to the state. Its backers said would protect the public from fly-by- the housing authority to offer revenue bonds for money to make loans to families who have not been able to buy a conventionally financed home.

"We anticipate the full use of skill, knowledge and experience of existing lending institutions in implementing this program-," he said. Kandaras said there are indications that the federal government soon will ask the states to assume a major role the measure the crash. Military clothing and a human hand believed to be Ward's were recovered from the rubble, along with eight charred bodies. X-rays and dental charts are being used to identify the victims, Mrs. F.

Mehlhaff, Parkston, Dies PARKSTON Mrs. Fred process for municipal funds (33? SB16 Increases state minimum wage (23-11) Introduced classification of property for taxation SB153 Increases cigarette (O'Connor, Austad) tax (Austad, Hall) trandatory mill levy rollback (Austad, Mayer) one cent to state gas tax (Ahan, Pieplow, Jackson) requirements for teachers certificate (Jackson, Leddy) study of local government article of constitution (O'Connor, Pieplow) provisidns of grievance process (Mickelson, Kandaras) educational program on occupational safety and health (Bierle, et al) $30,000 for Indian icholarsbips (Schreier, et al) municipal retirement system (Trask, Quintal) state bousing development authority (Bierle, SB163 Includes motorcycles in motor vehicle franchise law (Harding, Schreier) SB 164 Changes state treasurer's duties (PieploW) tax on original registration of aircraft (Jones) membership on state racing commission (Mahan) SB167 Repeals dairy marketing commission (Sutton) $11,650 to Speede Excavation Co. for payment of services (Grams, Miller) HOUSE Final Passage for testing and treatment of metabolic diseases (67-0) First Passage guardianship procedures (65-0) money orders (66-1) sales of State Optometric Association to negotiate group contracts for vision care (67-0) Authorizes seasonal for moving vehicles (Lydia) Mehlhaff, 89, at died the in nroviding housing. Saturday morning House bills creating a state Parkston hospital, development finance authority Funeral arrangements under and a State Economic the direction of the Hasson Development Loan Guarantee Funeral Home are incomplete. Commission were introduced byi the State Affairs Committee, i Underwood, and Merle Ponv exceeding load limits (67-0) Introduced Provides minimum wage for penitentiary inmates (Barnes) Provides bounties for predators (Lyons, et al) HB 7 80 Changes state billboard regulations (Kauth, et al) Reimburses utility investigation fund (Kleven, Hersrud) Regulates devices for testing moisture content (Curran, et al) Requires, loyalty oath of alcoholic beverage licensees Changes board of nursing home examiners (Olson, et al) Redefines beer for taxation (Songstad, Kelly) Provides fine for public employe strikes (Sivertson) Allows board of charities and corrections to lease property (Danekas) HB788 Retains state livestock sanitary board as separate unit (Pommer, Walter Muter) Defines public funds (Linda Miller) Establishes state development finance authority (Committee on State Affairs) HB791 Creates State Economic Development Loan Guarantee Commission (Committee on State Affairs) Repeals county child The development finance authority would have power to make loans to local development corporations to promote mer, introduced a bill to retain the State Livestock Sanitary Board as a separate unit.

Gov. Richard employment, increase income I Kneip proposed that the board and improve the economic be placed umder the Depart condition Of the state. The loan guarantee com of Agriculture in reorganization of state govern- mission could provide bonds for ment. development of resources, and "Our bill," Pommer said, expansion of employment attach the board to the portunlties. A transfer of $1 agriculture department for million from the state cement reporting purposes only.

This plant reserve fund is asked to will assure coordination and create a loan fund for commission's purposes. Sens. Bierle, Pieplow Curtis Jones, P-Britton, the give the board freedom and responsibility to operate eland fectively." 'In- Sens. Gene Mahan, D-Akron, to match government benefits! ni nt operators, more precisely with actual! measure earnings lost because of dis- 8tate ibility. Meadows said pay- troduced a bill proposing that Pieplow, and Jack Jackson, the State Health Pe operate an educational to inform state provisions of the Federal Oc- cents per gallon, The cupatlonal Safety and Health from the wouW btuied th Pepartment Huron, sponsors of a bill itional program wcreasmg itate tax on business of the motor fuel from to eight welfare board law (Radack) school district laws (Vigen, et al) notice in parental termination proceedings (Vigen) co auditor to furnish U.S.

court with precinct registration lists for random jury selection (Kolker, Barnett) minimum population of sanitary districts (Lebrun, Jelbert). state snowmobiles (Endres, Kolbo) leaders and mayors from sev- Jtamoaugn neuan.e tTill6 jtapnaei rtitAaiiuiia. eral BUCK iiius i otter the offensve aga oth- Birth Mr. and Mrs. John daughter, 9 2 ma a yor rf the second A I i supporters traveling toward the Black Hills from other parts of the country continued to be a main topic of conversation at Custer City Hall today.

'We think dropped some, attention as far as has the a is said Reese, "but the security hasn't been relaxed. We're just playing it hour by hour." All Custer businesses were ordered closed at noon Friday in anticipation of expected trouble, but the majority of them were open for business to- An estimated 100 armed officers ringed the Custer Cdunty Courthouse for several hours Friday afternoon, but the security was reduced to a few patrols on the streets Friday night. The Building was old the Courthouse scene of a club-swinging melee between Indians and law enforcement officers last Tuesday. Reese said Custer County officials also agreed Friday to an AIM request to establish a five- man commission to monitor law enforcement handling of any racial discrimination complaints lodged against Custer authorities in the future. Reese said AIM requested that two members of the commission be Indians.

He said the commission will be named in the near future. Civil Rights Commission Accuses Nixon By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) From President Nixon down, federal enforcement of civil rights acks a sense of commitment, gays the United States Commission on Civil Rights. "There is no government- wide plan for civil-rights enforcement," said a commission report published Friday. Without presidential lead' ership "a steady erosion of the progress toward equal rights, equal justice and equal protection under the Constitution will occur," the study said.

On what should be done, it added: "The first requirement of any such effort on the part of the chief executive and his appointees is that of an unequivocal, forceful implementation of all the civil rights laws now on the books." Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler declined to comment on the report. For the first time since Congress created the commission 1957, the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh was not listed as a member.

Father Hesburgh, president of the University of Votre Dame, turned in a routine resignation after the election in November and President Nixon accepted it. The commission's vice chairman is Stephen Horn, president of Long Beach (Calif.) State University, are: Mrs. Other Frankie man, a St. Louis members M. Free- attorney; RittsHtldfor Alexandria Infant ALBXANPRIA rites for Christina Marie Sievert, infant daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Maynaw Stevert of rural Alexandria, were Feb. 7 at the cemetery at The Rev. H. KolbKk officiated- Maurice B.

Mitchell, chancellor of the University of penver; Robert S. Rankin, professor emeritus, University of North Carolina; and Manuel Ruiz, a Los Angeles attorney. The commission issued the first in its series of reports two years ago and found that despite "an impressive array of federal civil rights laws, executive orders and policies, the promise of equal justice for all Americans had not approached reality." Now, in a third follow-up report, the commission's contusion is that the federal effort highly inadequate. "Our findings are dismayingly similar to those in our earner reports," the study said. dtv in the state can: Kimball: Dale lakltme'to dT th ese pr ob 1 Fraser Plankinton; Jody Allen lems with us, some of the may- Moody, Letcher, Robert ors be able to find the daruj Banks said he was declaring and Mrs.

Lawrence Webb, Rapid City a neutral zone be- nehu es Harold cause the people, were willing Sorensen Mitchell; Emil Fiala, Mt. Verndn; Ronald Moller, Mt, Vernon; Louis Warejcka, Plafte. AREA HOSPITALS Parkston St. Benedict Admissions Mrs. Randel Schoenfelder, Ethan; Gertrude Cremer, Parkston; Alfred M.

Hohn, Ethan. Discharge Mrs. Carolina Fisher, Triop. Birth Mr. and Mrs.

Randel Schoenfelder, Ethan, son, 7 pounds 15Va Feb. 9. Wessington Springs Jerauld County Memorial Admissions Mrs. Darrell Roetman, Wessington Springs; Rory Bishop and Irene Tiyotia, Ft. Thompson; Marie Budde, Woonsocket.

Discharges Josephine Daharsh, Woonsocket; Kirsten With Horn and Errol Hawk, Ft. Thompson; Ronald Thompson, Mrs. Marvin Bitterman and John Kludt, Wessington Springs. Birth Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Walder, Wessington Springs, daughter, 7 pounds 12 Feb. 9. Mrs. R. Dollman, Platte, Dies By Republic News Service PLATTE Mrs.

Roy (Blanche) Dollman, 59, died Feb. 9 at a hospital in Rochester, Minn. Funeral arrangements under the direction of the Cool Funeral Home are incomplete. McGovern (Continued from Page 1) this year," more acreage said. Senator McGovern said that it would be unwise to assume that exports will continue at record levels, although our goal should be even greater because last year's sales were caused largely by poor.weather in other countries.

He said it will be important that the new farm bill, due to be considered by Congress this year, provide adequate income safeguards as a protection against overproduction and consequent prica drops. He pointed out that the Family Farm Act, which he and Senator James Abourezk plan to introduce in the Senate, would help preserve the family farm by banning ownership of farms by large non-farm conglomerates. "Just as we cannot definitely tolerate a world food situation which leaves at least half the world's people in a state of undernourishment, so the natiqn cannot continue to force its people to move from already underpopulated rural areas and small towns into thi congested cities pressured by the problems of transportation crime, and waste 1 Senator McGovern said. Open House Mr. and MM.

Ted Folkerts of Emery will be hosted at an open house Feb. 11 2-4 p.m. at Emery Baptist Church fellowship hall hosted by their children. No other vitattons will be tent. More than 2,000 are enrolled In "Know Your Bible' FREE nondenominatlonal I Join them by enrolling in the Lesson Home Bible Study Course by mall.

For lesson, lend your name and address to; "KNOW VOUR BIBLE" Box Sioui Center, Iowa 5125ft ents even at the current level short of average industrial gs. ratings reduction for Proposed because found that "the mus- the strength, the abUity to move are not so signUi- cant, regards earnings, in a njOH? technological society as ye now are in," according to hj VA source. power to negotiate group con- gives theAcr The baby association A houw bill with 30 it a Mitchell tracts (or visual care. Also approved was a bill allowing to be issued for moving oversized vehicles on state highways, and a measure revising state law court approval of certain settlements- Monday the house was scheduled to take up two bills aimed revising tbe on adoption, is A Other aimed at bridling South Dakota's billboard reguUtions eluded: into compliance with federal A wjiate wronosti The measure would prohibjt reacaee full iw on advertising within feet of minimum foi claim' an interstate highway ia- wd I 1. 7' JAM planning, and areas adjacent to primary hi vvi Open House fl wedding aiiiveriary I 1 T' 6r fUJdrei, PRY CLEANING PRESSING AT LOW-LOW PRICES MIN'SIFIICI SUITS Udiei' 2 PC.

SUITS orDRESSIS n.35 2p, 1.29 30c SIWINQ MACHINI SUVJCI fntf KIPAH Mil locki tf alf klnii APFllANCI IIPAIR FABRIC CARE 124 Mitcbtll Fh.MW'M!T.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
74,426
Years Available:
1937-1977