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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 10

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Family World (Corrlgan Photo) Miss Joyce Placek Weds Charles Brewer Miss Joyce Ann Placek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Placek, Tripp, and Charles W. Brewer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Harry Brewer, Indianapolis, Indiana, were married Aug. 5, at the Mount Marty Chapel in Yank ton. The Father Norbert Novak officiated. The couple were attended by Cindy Placek, maid of honor and Bob Mehl, best man. Also'assisting were Marilyn Placek and Dawna Dicus.

Ushers Dave Schroeder, Bruce Jung, and ChetO'Neil. A reception followed the ceremony at Kochi Inn with Meg Marriot, Mary Marqueson, Linda Konz and Ted Wallendorf assisting. The bride has a B.S. degree in nursing from Mount Marty College, Yankton, and wiD be employed at Providence Hospital in Wayne, Neb. The bridegroom will attend Wayne State College, Wayne, to earn his Master's degree.

He will also be basketball assistant and Barry Hall resident director at Wayne State. Mitchell couple wed at 1st Reformed Church Miss Diane Lubbers and Daniel Konrad, children of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Lubbers and Mr. and Mrs.

Clifford Konrad, all of Mitchell, were wed in an Aug. 6 ceremony at First Reformed Church of Mitchell before the Rev. Curtis Liesveld. Attending the couple were Lori Peterson, maid of honor; Mike Loop, best man; Lori Lubbers and Dawn Lubbers, bridesmaids- Paul Konrad and Tom Young, groomsmen; Melissa Lubbers, flower girl; and Danny Kyte, ringbearer. Personal attendant was Lois Lubbers.

Seating guests were Duane Lubbers and Ron Olson. The reception followed in the church parlors. Mrs. Konrad is a graduate of Mitchell Senior High. Her husband graduated from MHS and is employed by Commercial Asphalt of Mitchell where they are at home at 316 W.

Fifth. Ann Landers Coincidence spooks Ann Dear Ann Landers: A friend sent me something that stopped me dead in my tracks. I don't know what to make of it so I'm sending it to you for comment. Thank you very much. How much of it was 'coincidence? I refer to the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln and John F.

Kennedy. Both Lincoln and Kennedy were concerned with civil rights. Lincoln was elected President in 1860; Kennedy in 1960. Both were slain on a Friday and in the presence of their wives. Both were shot from behind and in the head.

Their successors, both named Johnson, were Southern Democrats and both were in the Senate. Andrew Johnson was born in 1808 and Lyndon Johnson was born in 1908. John Wilkes Booth was born in 1839 and Lee Harvey Oswald was born in 1939. Booth and Oswald were Southerners favoring unpopular ideas. Both Presidents' wives lost children through death while in the White House.

Lincoln's secretary, whose name was Kennedy, advised him not to go to the theater. Kennedy's secretary, whose name was Lincoln, advised him not to go to Dallas. John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln in a theater and ran to a warehouse. Lee Harvey Oswald shot Kennedy from a warehouse and ran to a theater. The names Lincoln and Kennedy each contain seven letters.

The names Andrew Johnson and Lyndon Johnson each contain thirteen letters. The names John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald each contain fifteen letters. Both assassins were killed before being brought to trial. Both Johnsons were opposed for re-election by men whose 38 start with Spooked In New Jersey Dear N.J.: That makes two of us. I have no explanation to offer.

Mighty strange, is all I can say. Dear Ann Landers: We moved to this town last month. During a routine gynecological examination, a physician who was recommended highly asked me, "How old is your baby?" When I said, "My little girl is eight months old," he replied, "She really ripped you up, didn't she?" I was stunned by his lack of sensitivity. I already knew I had been "ripped up fl and was self-conscious about it. Better he should have suggested a repair job which he did not.

Neddless to say, that doctor lost me as a patient and he will never know why. I have regretted ever since that I didn't tell him off. Aren't you shocked that a physician could be such a clod? Reno, Nevada Dear Reno: Nothing shocks me anymore, especially when I know that 50 per cent of the doctors who practice medicine graduated in the BOTTOM half of their class. I agree you should have told the doctor off. then it's SO easy to think of exactly the right thing to say the next day.

CONFIDENTIAL to Do You Happen To Have That Yes, I do, and it's a good one, Angelina Alioto, wife of San Francisco's mayor, said it. 'Behind every successful man is a good That should be changed to 'By the side If you stand in a man's shadow too long you'll wilt. Stand by his side and you'll get some sunshine." There is a big difference between cold and cool. Ann Landers shows you how to play it cool without freezing people out in Jier booklet, "Teenage Sex Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1400, Elgin, 111.

60120. It's better to sleep on what you intend doing than to stay awake over what you've done. Karen Byers Women's Editor Phone 996-5516 Calendar of events Aug. 15: Palace City Square Dancers 6 p.m. Hitchcock Park picnic; no dance Saturday.

Sheldon School Picnic 12 noon at the FMB Museum. Welcome Wagon 8 p.m. bowling at the Village. Aug. 16: a.m.-6 p.m.

Elk's Lodge sponsored by Blood Services of South Dakota. For more information call Methodist Hospital, League of Women Voters 8 p.m. Oscar Howe Art Center Mrs. Inda Avery, Alexandria, guest speaker. WWI Barracks and Auxiliary 1:30 p.m.

Meadowlawn Plaza. Aug. 17: Senior Citizens 2 p.m. birthday party. Degree of Honor 8 p.m.

Senior Citizens building Vivian Unzicker, Laura Goll, hostesses. TOPS No. 91 1 p.m. YWCA. TOPS No.

177 7:30 p.m. YWCA. Mitchell Garden Club 9:30 a.m. Hitchcock Park workshop. Aug.

18: Catholic Daughters ol 8 p.m. church hall. Senior Citizens 12 noon pot luck. Aug. 19: Senior Citizens 8 p.m.

games. Aug. 20: Senior Citizens 1:30 p.m. card party. October bride Major General and Mrs.

Harvey Jablonsky announce the engagement of his daughter, Dorothy Lea, to Curtis son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Uhre of Letcher. Miss Jablonsky graduated from Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C. and Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

Uhre graduated from the University of South Dakota and is special assistant to Senator Hugh Scott. An October wedding is planned. To be wed Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gebhart of Mitchell, announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathryn Ann, to Myron Dean Buchholz, son of Mrs.

Esther Buchholz of Avon and the late Julius Buchholz. Miss Gebhart is a graduate of Mitchell High School and is employed by the 'Mitchell Country Club. Her fiance is employed by Uwatonna Manufacturing in Mitchell An Oct. 16 wedding is planned. If fll (MokePhoto) Karen Maxwell becomes bride ofjudson S.

Lee The Mitchell Wesleyan Church with the Rev. Glenn Wessel officiating on Aug. 8, was the scene of the Karen Maxwell-Judson Scott Lee, children of Mr. and Mrs. John C.

Maxwell of Scottsdale, Ariz, and Lincoln T. Lee of Litchfleld Park, Ariz, and the late Henrietta Lee. A reception followed in the church fellowship hall. The bride is a graduate of the Methodist School of Nursing and has been working for the Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. Her husband graduated from the University of Texas and is employed in the Lockheed AFB.

They are at home in San Antonio, Texas. (Moke Photo) Sandy Mechtenberg is bride of Dave Rouse Married Aug. 7 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Parkston before Father Joseph Mardian were Sandy Mechtenberg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Mechtenberg of Delmont, and Dave Rouse, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Don Rouse of Wakefield, Neb. In the bridal party were Jody Mechtenberg-, maid of nonor; Pat Sudbeck, Judy Carroll and Janet Groen, bridesmaids; Don Rouse, best man; and Tim Rouse, Tom Mechtenberg and Alan Mechtenberg, groomsmen. Lighting candles were Cindy Rouse and Angle Rouse. Site of the reception was the American Legion Hall at Parkston.

Mrs. Rouse graduated from Parkston High School and the University of South Dakota. She is employed at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Her husband is a graduate of Wakefield High School and is associated with Rouse's IGA.

They are at home in Sioux City. Psychological reactions cause 6 pregnant 9 male Have cravings for anchovies with ice cream or corned beef hash on cling peaches? Suffer morning sickness or abdominal pains? Then you must be an expectant father. In 1976, an estimated three million men will become fathers, reports the Health Insurance Institute, and several hundred thousand, give or take a dad, will experience their wives' pregnancy symptoms. Psyched up? The University of Birmingham (England) says that the one in nine men who develops the symptoms may do so as psychological reaction to his wife's pregnancy. The feeling, whatever comfort it brings, has nothing to do with any men's liberation movement or even sexual identity confusion.

According to psychologists, male symptoms of pregnancy are a reflection of anxiety stemming from the fear that a loved one may be in danger. The man who identifies strongly with his wife during her birth pangs, they say, undergoes something similar in order to share her burden. Male pregnancy symptoms are not new. They date back to ancient primitive rituals during which a husband would act out his wife's labor with appropriate moaning and groaning during a "lying-in" period. Doctor's advice Any cures for the "expectancy" feeling? Experts advise transferring it into positive action.

Doctors Arthur and Libby Colman of San Francisco suggest that the husband give his wife, as she becomes increasingly dependent on him (luring ner pregnancy, the support she needs by being ''especially helpful, loving and affectionate" as they await the child's birth together. Since male pregnancy symptoms may be the result of unrealistic fears about the "dangers" confronting the wife and expected baby which arise out of ignorance about the childbirth process, enlightenment for the husband may be in order, experts advise. Helping helps Attending classes in prenatal care along with their wives might make a husband feel more participative and dispel many of his worries about the impending event, the experts say. Another remedy for those "expectancy" blues, especially if they concern the expenses of the new arrival, is medical insurance. Chances are, points out the Institute, that three out of four new fathers have group health coverage through their place of employment which will help pay for the costs of the baby's delivery and hospital expenses.

HEROINE LOSES SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Janet Calmels, a dental assistant, was waiting for a street car when she heard a scream and saw a young man run off with an elderly woman's purse. Miss Calmels gave chase. She and a man who joined the chase caught the snatcher and were holding him for the police when a friend of the snatcher came along, wrestled him free and they both escaped. Miss Calmels, however, managed to recover the woman's purse and return it to her. Then she discovered something.

During the chase a $100 bill she had put in her knee sock for safe keeping had slipped out and disappeared. Betrothed Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Syrovatka of Lesterville, and Mrs. and Mrs.

Myron Mebiiu of Plankinton, announce the engagement of their children. Linda Marie and Kim Allen. Miss Syrovatka and her fiance are both juniors at Dakota State College, Madison. No wedding date has been set. Hints From'Hefaite 'Once in a white "splurge is a pay day tradition Dear Folks: Every once in while we ah like to splurge even though that "once In a while" may only come once a year.

But for yean I have been going to a little tea shop, once every six months, and ordering what they call their "Olive Nut Sandwich." DO NOT ask me what they charge because you would be calling me a looney bird! But enough smiles and compliments will nearly always get me the recipe, ft worked in this case and I make it myself now every payday. It does not pay you to make a naif recipe because it lasts weeks in your fridge. So mike the whole recipe up or you will be sorry. Let six ounces of cream cheese stand at room temperature until it is soft. Mash with a fork and add one-half cup of mayonnaise.

Chop up pecans until you have one-naif cup full. Chop salad olives until you have one cup full. Put that in your bowl and add two tablespoons of the olive juice with a dash of pepper. No salt. Salad olives are very inexpensive because they are the imperfects or broken ones.

Check your prices and compare. Stir well. This will be mushy. It's supposed to be that way. Put this in a pint fruit jar and refrigerate, for at least 24 to 48 hours.

Mt will then become thick. You won't believe it but it will. You will have nearly a pint of delicious, deluptious, delectable, delicate spread such as you never have put on your poor palate in the past! This should be served on very thin toast. Fresh thinly sliced bread will do. I always serve mine topped with thinly sliced lettuce.

Be sure to cut the sandwiches into tiny fingertip sizes. Then you will really feel as if you are going first-class. One of my neighbors with a bunch of growing teensters wraps foil around the bottle and puts it in the back of her refridge so they won't gulp the whole bottle down. On her depressed days she takes out her treasure and goes to her living room to eat lunch all by herself. How's that for spoofing the kids? And, folks, don't gripe about the price because as far as we can figure it only cost a little over a dollar for the whole kabootle.

For those of you who live where pecans are impossible to get, I have used chopped celery but it will hot keep but a week in your fridge. And it won't be the same. So? I'm not hungry right now. I just indulged myself so why don't you all too? Kisses for the day and I'll see you in tomorrow's paper. love.Heloisf Dear HeloUe: I fill a detergent bottle with soapy water and when the kids picnic outside, I let them wash up with no mess and tracking of dirt into the house.

Just a couple of squirts and a paper towel and you are all set. This is really good for a yard full of kids before snack time. Ivory, Dear HeloUe: Last summer when I painted I rinsed the brush in turpentine, wrapped it in aluminum foil, tied it in a plastic bag and hung it with the bristles down. I put a piece of aluminum foil over the opened can of paint, put the top on and put a plastic bag over the whole can and set it aside. A few months ago when I decided to paint I found the brush soft and ready for work, the paint only mixing scholarships of $75,000 The Business and Professional Women's Foundation awarded scholarships to 228 women across the country for academic programs or vocational training to further their careers.

The scholarships are offered for women over 25 years of age taking job-related courses at accredited schools. The June awards included $75,000 in BPW Foundation Career Advancement Scholarships and $25,000 in Clairol Loving Care Scholarships administered by the BPW Foundation. Scholarship recipients may be enrolled in full-time or part- time programs, in any career field that promises advancement opportunities for the applicant. Study in a foreign country, correspondence courses and doctoral programs are not included. Scholarships range from $100 to $1000 with financial need a key requirement.

The recipient of a $200 scholarship from the foundation is Mrs. Phyllis Ruth of Mitchell. She is working toward a B.A. degree at Dakota Wesley an University. mtie MUSIC MVSIO anything for a song at MITCHELL MUSK Downtown Mitchell and was smooth and good.

It was marvelous not to have to fight to get that top off the paint, nor to work and work to Mast bit of paint out of the brush. So thankful for aluminum foil, plastic and VOU, (Cool Photo) Wedding service unites Plane couple on Aug. 6 Miss Ranae Nelson became the bride of Gary Schoenrock, Aug. 6, at the Platte Trinity Lutheran Church, with the Pastor Arlo Eidsness officiating. Parents of the couple are Mr.

and Mrs. Leo Nelson, Platte, and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Schoerirock, Platte. Attendants were Carmain Johnson, matron of honor; Larry Schoenrock, best man; Twila Klein, Janell Fischer, Lynn Ridgeway, bridesmaids; Larry Burma, Doug Beltman, and Ron Samuelson, groomsmen.

Also assisting with the ceremony were June Schoenrock and Tim Nelson. Paul Johnson, Lyn Indanl, and Jim Johnson ushered. A reception was held in the Platte Community Building. The bride and bridegroom are both graduates of Platte High School. The bridegroom is attending Mitchell Area Vocational- Technical School and is employed at Jack's Campers in Mitchell.

The couple will reside in Mitchell. (Barger Lucy Studt, K. Halversbn are married at Presho Nuptials were recited by Miss Lucy Studt and Kim Halverson at Zion Lutheran Church of Presho on Aug. 7 as the Rev. Robert Gardner officiated.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John Studt of Presho and Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Halverson of Kennebec.

Attending the couple were Debi Miller, maid of honor; Doug Halverson, best man; Lavonne Studt, bridesmaid; Cory Halverson, groomsman. Organist.was Sonja Ambur accompanying Delia Moore and Linda Bingen, vocausts. Ushering were Robert Studt and Kirby Sweeney. Also helping were Clint and Kent Newsome, Steve Halverson, Shelli Halverson and Randy Halverson. Those assisting with the reception in the church social rooms were Mr.

and Mrs. William Newsome, Mrs. Robert Studt, Cheryl Halverson, Mrs. Roger Studt, Ina Lee Peterson, Harla, Dana and Sharon Halverson, Delia Moore, Lori Coble, Teresa Authier, Mrs. Myles Johnson, Mrs.

John Luurs and Mrs. Earl Gregory. The bride is a senior at Lyman High School of Presho. Her husband is an LHS graduate and attended South Dakota Stale University. He is employed by the American Creek Soil Conservation office in Kennebec where they are at (Brown Photo) Miss M.

Kirchhevel marries John Jerke Miss Milinda Kirchhevel and John Jerke were married Aug 7 at the Zion Lutheran Church in Mitchell, with the Rev. Theodore Vogel officiating. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Clara Kirchhevel and the late Gerhardt Kirchhevel, Mitchell, and Mr and Mrs. A.R.

Jerke, Mitchell. Attending the couple were Janet Klinger, matron of honor; Gordon Goldammer, best man; Lula Jerke, Judy Jerke, Judy Niewedde, bridesmaids; Dave Johnson, Leon Brech, Wayne Klinger, groomsmen. Also assisting with the ceremony were Michele Peters, Michael Kirchhevel, Edith Goldhammer, Dave Ver Steeg, and Patty Zard. Albert Schmidt and Arlin Kirchhevel ide isa graduate of Lake Andes High School and attended the University of South Dakota, Springfield, for one year She is employed at Herter's Manufacturing. The bridegroom is a Mitchell High School graduate and attended Mitchell Area Vocational School.

He is employed at Muth Electric. The couple will be at home in Mitchell. POURING-BLOWING INSULATION Cellulose Fiber Vermine Resistant Fire Retardant UL Listed Call 996-7621 BfKLEIND HOME IMPROVEMENT 114 E. 1st Mitchell Vow Afoul For Auto Life Call WES PIERSON 996-4331 412 S. Sanborn.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
75,074
Years Available:
1937-1977