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Carroll Daily Times Herald from Carroll, Iowa • Page 12

Location:
Carroll, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
12
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Deaths. Funerals 10 2 Daily Record 'I LOUIS McTAGGART Louis'McTaggart Of Elkader died there at 2:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 28, after a long illness. He was the father Of Mrs.

John Loftus of Charles City, a former Carroll reside'nt. and the uncle of Mrs. FredTirickman of Carroll. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Elkader.

EDWARD GRUHN MANNING Edward Griihn, 64, of Mesa, formerly'of Manning, died Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 27, Services will be held in Mesa at 2 p.m. Monday. Gruhn is survived by his wife; the former Hazel Juels of Manning: a brother, Henry Gruhn of Manning; and seven sisters. Mrs: Albert (Lena) Jansen and Mrs.

Ella Steen of Manning, Mrs, Glen (Alma) Custer of Harlan, Mrs. Frieda Langbehn of Columbus, Mrs. Alfred (Ann) Mahnke of Albert City, Mrs. Gilmer (Ida) Anthony of and Mrs. Lenus (Helen) Andersen of Arcadia, Mrs.

Gruhn's address is 4104 East Main, Mesa, 85201. MRS. BERTHA BURGART Mass of the resurrection for Mrs. Bertha Burgart. 85, of Carroll was celebrated at 1:30 p.m.

Wednesday at Holy Spirit Church here by the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Leo Lenz, V.F. Pallbearers were Kenneth Testroet, Ronald Testroet, Tom Burgart, Dick Burgart, Randy Burgart and Daryl Boes.

Interment was in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, under direction of the Twit Funeral Home. Relatives and friends attended from Minneapolis, New Hampton, Charles City. Cedar Falls, Ionia, Carroll and surrounding area. Mrs.

Burgart died at St. Anthony Regional Hospital, Nov. 25. Weber Inter-agency Tour Outlined Dale. Berns outlined the Nov.

22 inter-agency tour of area conservation efforts at the Tuesday evening meeting of the Carroll County Soil Conservation District commission meeting. 'Representatives from the ASCS county committes and office, the Carroll water shed farm board, county board of supervisors and county extension SCS and SCD personnel. Terraces, ponds, and structures were observed at the county home, Robert Wright, Leland Roden and Berns farms and the Merritt access rock dam: The commission plans a December meeting with Carroll County legislators. John Bohling Carroll Age 68 Friends may call at tfie Sharp Funeral Home, Carrttll after 7 p.m. Rosary: 8:00 p.m.

Thursday 8:45 p.m. Thursday 3:00 p.m. Friday 8:00 p.m. Friday 8:45 p.m. Friday Mass of the Resurrection: 11:00 a.m.

Saturday at St. Lawrence Church Officiating: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry Karhoff'.

Interment: Mt. Olivet Cemetery FUNERAL HOME Carroll, loWa 'Serving Cdrroll for 34' years (Continued From Page 1) Maquoketa, Republican floor leader, and W. R. Rabedeaus, R-Wilton. With the Democrats apparently holding the upper hand in the Senate with a 25-24 split and one vacancy, there apparently will be some key personnel changes, namely someone replacing Ralph Brown, a Republican, as secretary of the senate.

Among the names of Democrats being bandied about for the position are Clark Rasmussen, former Democratic state chairman and now an aide to U.S. Senator Harold Hughes, former State Senator Andrew Frommelt, Dubuque, and Bart Rule, an assistant to State Senator James Schaben: -0- The word "around the rotunda" is that Sen. William Palmer, D-Des Moines, is in line to become chairman of the Senate appropriations committee. $10 Million Hospital Annex Plan Announced DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)Mercy Hospital officals have announced plans for a $10 mil- P6'n addition, including for and consultant fees. Construction is tentatively scheduled to begin in the fall Of 1976, hospital administrator Sister Mary Gervase said.

BABY BAPTIZED Stephanie Jill Nieland, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Nieland Jr. of Carroll, was baptized Sunday, Nov. 24, after the 11:30 a.m.

mass at St. Lawrence Church by the Rev. James R. Smith. Sponsors were the baby's aunt and uncle, Mrs.

Virgil Nieland and Larry Nieland. Dinner was served afterward for the baptismal party and families. Stephanie was born Nov. 1 at St. Anthony Regional Hospital.

PEN EVERY NIGHT Monday thru Saturday till 9 p.m. IMKAMEMCMI WESTGATE MAUL enroll, '1W, tv 4 Markets GRAIN Soybeans, No. 2. Corn, No. 2 yellow 3.25 Oats 1.65 OMAHA, Neb.

(AP) (USDA) quotations Friday: Hogs: barrows and gilts 200-260 Ib 1.00-1.25 higher, instances 1.50 higher, 260-320 Ib 1.50-2.00, some 2.50 higher; U.S. 1-3. 200-250 Ib 40.00-40.50; 2-3, 250-270 Ib 39.50-40.00; sows 25-50 higher; 300-600 Ib 32.50-34.00. Cattle and calves: 5.800; small supply slaughter steers and heifers strong, cows strong to 50 higher, feeder cattle consigned to Friday auction; choice Ib steers 37.50-38.50, one load with end prime 1,111 Ib 38.75; choice Ib heifers 36.50-37.50; utility and commercial cows 17.00-19.00, a few utility 19.25. Sheep: 250; bulk of supply sold direct to dealers, no test of trade.

Estimated receipts Monday: Cattle and calves hogs sheep 700. DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-USDA) Minnesota direct hogs: Estimated receipts Friday 80.000; actual receipts Wednesday week ago 76.000; year ago 53,000. Butchers mainly 50 higher, instances 75 up from midsession Wednesday or strong to mostly 50 higher than close; trade fairly active; demand generally good; U.S. 1-3 200-230 Ibs. at country points 38.25-38.50; packing plants 38.50-39.00; sows about steady; U.S.

1-3 270-330 Ibs 32.50-33.75. Sheep: Estimated receipts Friday 500; shorn lambs 1.00-2.00 higher Wednesday, choice and prime 90-110 Ibs No. 1 and 2 pelts 40.00-42.00. choice 38.00-40.00; wooled lambs steady, choice and prime 90-110 Ibs 36.50-38.00. Wall Street NEW YORK (AP) -Prices drifted downward amid a general holiday weekend lull in the stock market today.

The noon Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 3.13 at 616,16, and losers outnumbered gainers by about 5 to 3 in slow trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Analysts noted that many investors were taking a four-day Thanksgiving holiday. Safeway Stores, the Big Board volume leader, lost 4 to 36. The company said it was studying a switch to last-in first-out accounting for its inventories, a step which the company estimated would reduce reported 1974 earnings by $1.25 a share. At the American Stock Exchange, the market-value index eased .03 to 63.63.

The NYSE's composite common-stock index faded .13 to 36.98. Financial Corp. of Santa Barbara, the Amex volume leader-, lost IVi to in trading that included a block at 5V 4 1,000 in Loot at Truck Center Thieves mads off with more than $2,000 worth of loot from the Miles Lane Trucking, Inc. center north on U.S. 71 in a break-in there early Thursday morning, Carroll County Sheriff John G.

Longnecker reported Friday. Longnecker, whose office along with the Carroll Police Department is investigating the break-in, said the investigation has turned up "some suspects" who are being checked out. The break-in took place between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Thursday, and was discovered by a trucker who pulled into the center.

Longnecker said officers were told the building was locked prior to the break-in. A small door on the southwest side of the building was found open. But the sheriff said it appears the door was not pried open. Included in the goods taken were six truck tires, three citizen band radios, 10 batteries, a calculator, a starnp machine, an air and an impact wrench, a saw and a drill and several other items. Longnecker said a Farmland seal was broken off one of the semi trailers outside the building, but said it is not believed any meat was taken from the trailer.

COURTHOUSE License to Wed- Kenneth C. Ward, 51, and Georgia Hovey, 28, both of Carroll. New Vehicles Herald D. or Bethel J. Doty, Coon Rapids.

Ford. Real Estate J. Bruce and Alice H. Annear ot Roberta Linn, Part of Lot 5, Oakshire Acres, a subdiv. of Lot 6, Irreg.

Sur. Sec. 27, Twp. 82 Range 33 W. SHERIFF'S OFFICE Two-Car Accident- Cars driven by Michael L.

Schlichti, Audubon, and Alexander D. Toms, Carroll, were in collision Thursday three-quarters of a mile east of Halbur, the Carroll County Sheriff's office reported. The accident occurred as the Toms vehicle was southbound and attempting a left turn, and the Schlichti vehicle was attempting to pass, the accident report said. No injuries were reported. POLICE DEPARTMENT Hit and A car owned by Robert D.

Brown, Carroll, was struck by an unidentified vehicle while parked in the Carroll County State Bank parking lot Wednesday, police reported; No injuries were reported, MAGISTRATE COURT Traffic MAGISTRATE COURT (Raymond Snook and Martin Tan- Creti) Traffic Fines- John W. Malett, Carroll, speed, $20; Larry Bock, Carroll, speed, $20; Michael Nemmers, Carroll, speed, $20; Dwight C. Stowe, Anita, speed, $20; Lawrence E. Nielsen, Glldden, stop sign, Henry Sieffes, Halbur, stop or yield, $10; Thomas McLaughlin, Bayard, failure to stop after accident, $40. I Muhlbauer, Arcadia, and Loran Dentlinger, Halbur, were each fined $20 on a charge of injuring or tampering with a vehicle.

Assault and Gary Farkner, Jefferson, assault and battery, $25. Disturbance- Gary Farkner, Jefferson, disturbing the peace, $25. Beer Violation- Ned J. Kennebeck, Dedham, possession of beer by a minor, $25. (Scheduled Violations) Traffic Kracht, Ankeny, speed, $20; Carol Dammann, Manning, muffler, $10; John Richmond, Booneville, speed, $20; James Yates, Clinton, speed, $20; Lyle Wittry, Des Moines, speed, $20; Leonard Fiscus', Harlan, speed, $20; Jeffrey P.

Grouse. Carroll, failure to drive on right side of road, $15; Cynthia A. Sporleder, Lidderdale, speed, $20; Jeffery K. Marquardt, Carroll, speed, Gerald A. Klocke, Rockwell GltVv speed.

$20; Robert L. Havermah, OarrollV'Speed, N'icKdla'sftol. Schechinger, Portsmouth, speed, $20; Franklin M. Jessen, Scranton, speed, $20; Carol Hutchinson, Denison, no valid license, $5. Highway Commission- John A.

Anderson, Sergeant Bluff, increased loading capacity- registration, $49 and overwidth, $25. Births Neb, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Schwartz of Papillion a Nov. 24.

Grandparents are Mr, and Mrs. Joe Overmohle of Roselle and Mrs. Agnes Schwartiof Omaha. Recommend Law License Suspended DES MOINES A grievance commission of the Iowa Supreme Court has recommended to the court that the law license of a Grundy Center attorney, T. C.

Strack, be suspended for 36 months. Last year Strack pleaded guilty in federal court at Des Moines to income tax evasion charges and received a six month sentence from Federal Judge William C. Stuart. Strack was accused of "willfully and knowingly" attempting to avoid paying a large part of income tax due on his, 1966 and 1967 federal income'tax returns. Records show that he paid $1,249.53 in federal tax for 1966, while the government claimed he owed $3,419.55.

Strack paid income tax of $1,135:14 for 1967 and the government said he owed The recommendation to suspend Strack's license to practice, law for 36 months is the-longest yet recommended by any grievance commission. The previous high was 18 months in the case of former Congress an a Bromwell of Cedar Rapids. Members of the grievance commission are Edgar Des Moines; J.C. Irvin, Shenandoah; Elton A. Johnson, Corydon; EarlKlay, Orange City and A.

W. Bass, Cedar Rapids. The commission filed its report with the supreme court on Wednesday. KIWANIS SEES FILM A- film, "Growing Up in which depicted the poverty of that area, was shown by Reese Abbe, program at the weekly dthwr meeting of the, Carroll Kiwani's Crub' Wednesday night at Tony's Restaurant. Wayne Daniels presided over the business session.

Next week's meeting will feature the corn yield contest. Business Briefs Charles E. Knoblauch of the Carroll Copy Center attended the International Graphic Arts Exposition at McCormick Place in Chicago. The exhibit, known as "Print is held every six years and the exhibits feature all phases of the printing industry. -0- Ron Von Bon of Dedham recently attended the ACCO Seed district sales managers workshop in Peoria, Illinois.

The workshop updated ACCO district sales managers of the seed supply situation for the 1975 planting season. Special guidance for making the best possible use of the available hybrids was given. New hybrids were discussed by members of the corn and sorghum research staff and sessions concentrating on how district managers can further their growth and development as territorial managers were also held. -0- Clifford Smith of Jefferson will be among a group of 20 pork producers traveling to Pittsburgh, Pa. for a Fine Iowa Meats pork promotion in 120 Fox Foodland stores on Dec.

3. Working in conjunction with Rath Packing Company, the promotion is being sponsored by the Iowa Pork Producers and the Iowa Development Commission. Quake Shakes Up Californians HOLLISTER, Calif. (AP) Central Californians had their Thanksgiving holiday 'punctuated by a moderate earthquake that broke windows and tossed groceries off some store shelves. No injuries were reported because of the quake, centered six miles north of here, but the tremor was felt in 10 counties from San Francisco to Monterey.

The five-second shock struck at about 3 p.m. Thursday with a magnitude of 5.25 to 5.5 on the Richter scale, said Dr. Bruce Bolt of the University of California's seismographic station in Berkeley. The Richter scale is a measurement of the earth's movement as registered on seismographs. The famous 1906 San Francisco earthquake measured 8.3 on the scale.

County Will Report on Ag Accidents Carroll and.three neighboring counties are among 24 counties selected at random to participate in the new Iowa standardized farm accident reporting program which begins Dec. 1. Dale Mull, extension agriculture engineer at Iowa State University and head of the new program, said about 4,000 of Iowa's 130,000 farm families will be contacted during the survey. The survey has two major objectives: (1) to learn of, frequency, severity, types, time and places of accidental injuries among rural people; (2) to develop both short-range and long-range safety and health educational programs on a county wide and statewide basis. The engineer stressed that all information given by local farm families is confidential and that identity of a family will be kept anonymous.

summary publication will be prepared from the survey data, but individuals, will not be identified. Hull said the program has nothing to do with the Iowa department of revenue, Internal Revenue Service, local taxing bodies, federal OSHA or to the Iowa labor department's enforcement of ISHA. Counties participating in the survey are Clay, Plymouth, Winnebago, Worth, Hancock, Franklin, Allamakee, Fayette, Carroll, Greene, Shelby, Audubon, Hamilton, Story, Dallas, Linn, Scott, Adair, Warren, Lucas, Keokuk, Bremer and Lee. Extension staffs in each county are recruiting interviewers to contact farm families selected at random to secure the date necessary for the statistical study. "This is probably the most thorough and intensive survey of farm accidents ever undertaken in Iowa," Hull said.

He pointed out that Iowa is second only to Texas in number of farms, and-leads the nation, in number of farm tractors and implements owned and used by farmers. "The survey should give good insight into the causes and costs of occupatiohally related illnesses and accidents bc'c'urring to Iowa's farm residents," the engineer said. This information will make it possible to attack Iowa's own unique farm safety problems with extension programs applied in appropriate areas. Three Die in Holiday Traffic By The Associated Press Three persons have died in traffic accidents on Iowa highways during the Thanksgiving holiday period. Jerome Bonert, 21, Hopkinton, was killed Thursday when the car he was driving left Iowa 136 north of Dyersville and overturned, Delaware County sheriff's officers said.

Keith Erixon, 65, Onamina, was killed Wednesday when his car struck a bridge railing near Underwood, state troopers said. Both men were alone in their cars when the mishaps occurred. Eugene McBride, 55, Muscatine. was killed Wednesday when the pickup truck he was driving was struck from behind by another truck driven by Richard Truitt, Muscatine, officers said. The Weather IOWA FORECAST Tonight light snow ending followed by partial clearing and colder west, light snow continuing east.

Saturday partly sunny west, cloudy with light snow ending east. High Saturday 25 to 32. Low tonight 7 to 14 west, low to mid 20s east. 10W A XTENDED FORECAST Sunday through Tuesday- Fair and warmer Sunday and Partly cloudy with a chance of rain or snow Tuesday. Highs in the 30s ly Sunday and the upper 30s to mid 40s Monday and Tuesday.

Lows in the teens Sunday and the 20s Monday and Tuesday. The Weather in Carroll (Daily Temperatures.Courtesy of. Iowa Public Service Co.) Yesterday's high .28 .20 At7a.m. today 23 At today .26 Precipitation (24 hours prior to 7 a. trace of snow.

Weather A Year Ago- High temperature a year ago today in Carroll was'55 and the low, 28 degrees. Families Note Communion ARCADIA Several families hosted dinners for their children following first communion services at St. John's Church here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.

Lyle Vpnnahme hosted their son, John. His sponsors Mr. and Mrs. Lome Steinkamp and grandparents Mrs. Leona Vonnahme and Mr, and Mrs.

Herman Grote were present. Jim Henkenius was guest of honor at his home, sponsored by his parents Mr. and Mrs. Hen i Grandparents Mike Berger of Halbur and Mr. and Mrs.

Louis Henkenius of Westside were guests. His sponsors are Mrs. Cyril Helnrichs and Vern Henkenius of Dallas City; Dinner' guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Berg to note Roger's communion were ifa.

and Mrs. Vernon Stangl and Sheila of Manning and Mr. and Mrs. Frank 1 1 Food Price Freeze NEW YORK (AP) The supermarket chain has announced a price freeze on about 1,000 products bearing its own labels and instituted an "Early Warning System" on price increases in its stores across the nation. The company said the price freeze on private labels will extend at least until Jan.

1 and will cover over 1,000 items bread, cheese, coffee, canned fruits and vegetables and frozen foods. Under the early warning system, the company said, beginning Monday all stores will post weekly lists of products up in price and the amount of the increase seven days before the change takes effect. WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz said today that he regrets that his criticism of Pope Paul VTs position on birth control has been interpreted by some as intended "to impugn the motives or the integrity of any religious group, ethnic group or religious leader." "It is unfortunate that a few remarks that I made at a news breakfast with 20 reporters last Wednesday morning were taken out of context in one account of that meeting and escalated in the news with an interpretation clearly not intended," Butz said in a statement issued by his office, The secretary was quoted in Thursday's New York Daily News as having used a mock Italian accent to criticize the Pope's position on birth control by saying: "He no playa the game, he no maka the rules." Butz said at the time the remark was off the record. CHARLESTON, W.Va.

(AP) Opponents of the tentative contract between the United Mine Workers Union and coal producers appear to be picking up strength in the nation's coalfields. At a Thanksgiving Day meeting in Bellaire, Ohio, Local 2262 President William Yost joined the growing list of low-echelon officials voicing opposition to the agreement reached last Sunday. "The contract doesn't add up to snuff," Yost charged: "It's really a sad day when coal miners get sold down the road." Specifically, he said the pay scale is too low and there is not enough vacation time. He also criticized UMW President Arnold Miller for failing to win increased medical and dental benefits. A 12-foot tidal wave swept across small islands in the center of Bangladesh's "cyclone alley," and first reports reaching Dacca today said 20 people were dead.

In the Philippines, the toll in the wake of Typhoon Irma climbed to eight dead and and rescue officials rushed aid to nearly 300,000 persons whose homes were destroyed or damaged on the main island of Luzon. Irma struck Luzon Thursday with winds reaching 115 miles per hour and initial reports estimated crop damage at $6 million. Today the storm weakened to 90 miles an hour as it headed but to the South China Sea. The Bangladesh-cyclone roared inland Thursday from the Bay of Bengal on the southeastern coast near Burma. ROME (AP) The world's major grain producers and importers met today on ways to feed a half billion starving people in Asia and Africa and agreed there was enough grain for immediate needs.

The Soviet Union and China boycotted the meeting. The United States and other wheat exporters met with representatives of famine-stricken countries amid reports that the world's wheat production would be lower next year, forcing further depletion of already dwindling grain stocks. ATHENS, Greece (AP) Archbishop Makarios was acclaimed by tens of thousands of Greeks today as he stopped in Athens on his way home from exile to confer with Greek officials on the future of Cyprus. Speaking from his hotel balcony, the archbishop told cheering Greeks that he was willing to concede self-determination to the minority Turkish community on Cyprus "but not partition of the island." GOLDFIELD. Iowa (AP) A body found by firemen in the ruins of a farm home about five miles north of this Wright County community Thursday night was tentatively identified as that of Homer Hawthorne, 73.

An autopsy was scheduled to determine whether Hawthorne may have died prior to the fire that destroyed the house where he lived alone. ANKARA, Turkey (AP) Premier Sadi Irmak resigned today after he failed to win approval in the National Assembly for a government of-independent parliamentarians and outside technocrats. Irmak's action means continuation of the political deadlock that followed the resignation Sept. 18 of former Premier Bulent Ecevit. President Fahri Kpruturk accepted Irmak's resignation and asked him to stay on in a caretaker role until a new government is formed.

Hunger Strike by IRA Couple LONDON (AP)-Dolours and Marion Price, convicted bombers and members of the Irish Republican Army, began a hunger strike in London's Brixton prison today only "hours' after the British pa rlia ment enacted emergency measures to deal with terrorism. Dolours 23, and Marion, 20, ended a 205-day hunger strike in June after they had received assurances they would be allowed to serve the bulk of their life sentences in a prison in their Northern Ireland homeland. A announcement said the two women began refusing food because of Home Secretary Roy Jenkins announcement in the House of Commons Thursday that they would not be transferred to Northern Ireland, Jenkins was speaking during a marathon sitting of parliament to rush through legislation increasing police powers to deal with the IRA. i-.

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About Carroll Daily Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
123,075
Years Available:
1941-1977