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Carroll Daily Times Herald from Carroll, Iowa • Page 10

Location:
Carroll, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
10
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Deaths, Funerals NORMAN W. MILLER (Times Herald Nema Service) MANNING Norman William Miller, 69, of Manning. died unexpectedly Wednesday morning at St. Anthony hospital in Carroll. He had been in ill health about six months.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. from the Zion Lutheran Church in Manning. Pastor E. F. Heinicke will officiate.

Burial will be at the Manning Cemetery. with nephews as casketbearers. Friends may call at. the Ohde Funeral Home in Manning. Mr.

Miller was born June 25. 1900, at Maple Grove, Pa. to John S. and Jennie Zeel Miller. He attended school at Maple Grove and Oak Grove, worked as a farm hand until 1920 when he moved to the Westside area.

Following his marriage in 1924 to Alma Hansen, the couple farmed near Manning. He later followed the carpentry trade at Newton for 20 years. His wife died in July, 1956. On April 14, 1957, he married Minnie Dreier. They moved to Manning about five years ago.

He is survived by his wife, Minnie; his mother. Mrs. Jennie Pugh of Chambersburg, three sisters, Mrs. Florence Baker, Clarksburg, W. Mrs.

Grace Hudson, Defiance, Ohio; Mrs. Clara Brindle, Martinsburg, W. and one brother, Walter of Manning. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Alma; one sister, Mrs. Mary Sixeas, and his father.

MRS. FRANCIS WETTER (Times Herald News Service) LAKE CITY Mrs. Francis Wetter, 79, longtime resident of Lanesboro, died at St. Anthony Hospital in Carroll Wednesday night, Jan. 7.

Funeral arrangements are pending at the Huffman Memorial Chapel, Lake HEW (Continued From Page 1) they voted twice for the $1.26 billion increase Nixon objects to. Eighty-six House Republicans are caught in the squeeze between the GOP administration and the powerful education lobby that got the funds added originally to the bill. It takes a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate to override. House action probably would come late this month if there is a veto. The last time a presidential veto was den was 10 years ago when Dwight D.

Eisenhower was unable to kill a federal pay raise bill. If the House should fail to override the President, then the veto would be upheld without any Senate action. In such a case, Congress would have to try again to come up with an acceptable funding bill for HEW. Griffin said party loyalty should sway GOP members of Congress to back the veto, even those who might vote for the appropriation Nixon considers too expensive. City.

Mrs. Wetter's survivors include three sons, Donald of Des Moines. Vernon of Greenview, and Richard of Chico. and a daughter. Mrs.

Marjorie Schmidt of Glenville, Ill. ROY H. BRANT GLIDDEN Final rites were held here Wednesday for Roy Herbert Brant, 60. of Glidden, who died Jan. 4 at St.

Anthony Hospital in Carroll after a long illness. The Rev. William Clevenger of Buffalo Center conducted the services at 1:30 p.m. at the Dahn-Woodhouse Funeral Home, assisted by the Rev. Leslie Warner of the Friends Church, Greene County.

Mrs. Robert Teters was organist and accompanied Robert Fey as he sang "'Beyond the Sunset" and "Face to Pallbearers were Donald Grant, Gary Brant, Mahlon Galand vin, John Ealy. Burial was in Richard White, Paul White Dillavou Cemetery, Greene County. MRS. TERESA VON BON DEDHAM Requiem high mass for Mrs.

John (Teresa) Von Bon, 63, was celebrated Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. by the Rev. Henry Moyer at St. Joseph's Church. Burial was in the parish cemetery, under the direction of Sharp Funeral Home, Carroll.

Pallbearers were Mart Kanne, William Meshek, Louis Bueltel, Joe Haverman, Don Pletchette and Bernard Wiskus. Relatives were in attendance from Des Moines, Red Oak, North Little Rock, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Carroll and surrounding area. Mrs. Von Bon died Jan. 4 at St.

Anthony Hospital, following an illness of six weeks. WILBUR L. DeMOSS GLIDDEN Wilbur LeRoy DeMoss, 71, retired Glidden farmer, died at 3 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 7, at St.

Anthony Hospital in Carroll following a long illness. Rites will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Dahn-Woodhouse Funeral Home here, with burial in Westlawn Cemetery. Officiating will be the Rev. Dr.

O. E. Cooley, minister of the United Methodist Church, assisted by Earl Loudenback. Friends may call at the funeral home. Mr.

DeMoss was born May 25, 1898, at Chatsworth, a son of LeRoy and Grace Sloan DeMoss. He was married to Elizabeth Gerrish at Boone on Aug. 25, 1927, and they came to the Glidden area from Blairsburg 40 years ago. They moved into Glidden eight years ago when Mr. DeMoss retired from farming.

He was a member of the United Methodist Church at Glidden and of the Odd Fellows and Rebekah Lodges at Scranton. Surviving besides his wife are three sisters, Mrs. Courtney Tucker, Mrs. Wenzel Albright and Mrs. JoAnn Peters, all of Stevens Point, two brothers, Mike DeMoss of Wisconsin and James DeMoss of California; several nieces and nephews and his mother-in-law, Mrs.

Anna Gerrish of Glidden. AUCTION ON SATURDAY, JAN. 10 Sale Starts Promptly at 1:00 on Livestock We had a real good run of local livestock last week, selling more cattle and hogs than expected. The prices on feeder pigs was very active, we had a $29.50 top on pigs sold by the head. The market on all livestock was good, with a good demand on everything.

So if you have livestock to sell sign them to the Farmers Sale Co. and get the top dollar. All consignments are appreciated. Will not be as large this week on account of cold weather around 150 are waiting till next week. We will have some real good Shorthorn steer calves all weaned vaccinated.

Have good Hereford steer heifer calves. Some good Angus calves. Expect 30 head of yearling heifers, if not too cold. Will wait till next week if weather is bad. May have 10 or 12 Hereford stock cows.

More by Saturday, HOGS SOME SHEEP Feeder pig demand good. 40 Good feeder pigs do nol MISC. have weight. Several small articles. Will not have a Dairy Sale in January.

Will have one in February, Farmers Sale Co. Incorporated C. W. Bedford, Manager, Phone 9876 Barn--Phone 2572 Times Herald, Carroll, la. Thursday, Jan.

8, 1910 Reilly (Continued From Page 1) thedral. Des Moines. They lived in Des Moines for six months and then moved to Carroll. Mr. Reilly entered the Army in 1917.

and following his discharge returned to Carroll. With I the exception of some time at Scranton and Charter Oak, where they operated grocery stores, Mr. and Mrs. Reilly have continued to live here. Mr.

Reilly had been associated with Warfield. National Pratt Biscuit Company; and Howell; and Western Grocers. He was a salesman for the latter firm when he was injured in an auto accident in 1936, and had been retired since the accident. He was a member of Holy Spirit Church; an honorary life member and former secretary of the Elk's Lodge No. 1637; and a member of Maurice Dunn Post No.

7, American Legion, and of Charles Carroll Council Knights of Columbus. Surviving with his wife are a son, Owen, of New York City; a daughter, Mrs. Joe (Patricia) Hanley of Allendale, N.J.; three grandchildren and a sister, Agnes Reilly of Dubuque. Five brothers preceded him in death. Mr.

and Mrs. Reilly have resided in the Anne-Mar Apartments at 207 East Fifth Street. Holiday Visitor Returns to Home in North Carolina (Times Herald News Service) ARCADIA Merlin Wiebers of Winston Salem, N.C., turned to his home Dec. 30 after spending the Christmas holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ray Wiebers. Dinner guests on Christmas were the Gordon Wiebers family of Denison and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Erps and sons. Verner Jentzen of Charles City spent the holidays with his mother, Mrs.

Elizabeth Jentzen. They were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Einsphar of Odebolt on Christmas Day. Houseguests in the Mr.

and Mrs. William Walter home over the holidays were Mr. and Mrs. Ron Fedder son of Wichita, Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Ellington and Nathan of Maryville, and Capt. and Mrs. Lowell Walter and family of Grand View, Mo. Monica ter accompanied her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.

Fedderson, for a visit until Jan. 2. Mr. and Mrs. Don Booth spent the Christmas holidays in the Harold Rodman home in Sioux City.

Mr. and Mrs. Myron Noelck and Michael of Naperville, Shirley Noelck of Evanston, and Mrs. Violetta Noelck of Westside visited in the Ray Wiebers home Tuesday evening. Mr.

and Mrs. William Jentzen and Bill were Sunday dinner guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ransom at Walnut. Other guests were Mr.

and Mrs. William Ransom and Sheryl of Wall Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ransom of Denison. Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Lussman of Carroll were hosts to their family Friday afternoon. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Allen Anderson of LeMars; the Don Mohr family of Breda; the Lynel Onken family of Carroll and Mr.

and Mrs. Elvin Andersen and Terry and the Wilbert Lussman family. Sheriff's Deeds Not Subject to Tax (By lowa Dally Press Association) DES MOINES Deeds executed by sheriffs in connection with their official duties at a tax sale are not subject to the documentary tax, the state attorney general's office informed Sac County Attorney Jim Graven in reply to a query. Section 428A.3 of the state code expressly provides that no public official shall be liable for the tax with respect to any instrument executed by him in connection with his official duties. If the deed is executed by the sheriff, the transaction would not be subject to the tax, the attorney general's office pointed out.

LAW ASSIGNMENT IOWA CITY Robert Peters, third year student at the University of Iowa, is among a group of Iowa Law Students gaining legal experience in such locations as the attorney general's office, county attorney's office, and in service agencies for the disadvantaged. Peters, son of the Clark Peters of Carroll, is assigned to help answer mail from the inmates at Fort Madison penitentiary. Swine Prices 50c to a Dollar Higher CHICAGO (AP) Butcher hog prices were 50 cents to 1.00 higher at the Chicago Stockyards Thursday. Receipts totaled 2.500 head and shippers took 1,700 of the supply. Cattle arrivals numbered only 300 head and there were not enough slaughter steers on hand for an adequate test of the market.

CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) Audit (Continued From Page 1) choice of travel accommodations, are made on the spur of the moment and we feel that if reservations were made far enough in advance that tourist accommodations could be obtained." Furthermore, he suggested that the reimbursement for the use of private transportation under conditions other than those designated in the operations manual be limited to round trip tax exempt plane fare exclusive of first class fare and that no intra-city driving be reimbursed. The University of Iowa, Smith said, has been interpreting this rule to mean that besides plane fare, the user of a personal car should be paid what it would have cost for taxi or limousine from the airport and return. The comments were contained in the regular audit of the Iowa City institution. Net expenditures for teaching programs, in fiscal 1969, were $35.5 million, which resulted in a unit cost per student per year of $2,075, an increase of $210. Mrs.

Roger Snyder Installed as Matron (Times Herald News Service) LAKE CITY Lake Queen Chapter No. 119, Order of the Eastern Star held open installation at the Masonic Temple in Lake City Saturday night, Jan. 3. Mrs. Roger Snyder was installed as worthy matron.

Other officers installed were Roger Snyder, worthy patron; Mrs. Clayton Roller, associate matron; Harold Astleford, associate patron; Mrs. Marion Gordon, secretary; Mrs. Frank Heath, treasurer; William Carpenter, conductress; Mrs. Jack Miller, associate conductress; Mrs.

Ed Clow, chaplain; Mrs. Harold Astleford, Ruth; Mrs. E. G. Jones, Adah; Mrs.

Judy Hendricks, Mrs. Roy Christensen, Martha; and Paul Gidel, sentinel. Mrs. Calvin Wooters, electa; Mrs. Paul Gidel, marshal; and Mrs.

R. O. Bruce, organist, are yet to be installed. Mrs. Richard Rasty was installing officer; Mrs.

Paul Gidel, installing marshal; Mrs. Calvin Wooters, installing chaplain; and Mrs. Jack Wegner, installing organist. After the officers were installed, Mrs. Marion Gordon, outgoing worthy matron, presented a ceremony, and escorted the worthy matron to the various stations where her officers presented her with gifts and best wishes for a successful year as they join the Convoy of Chapters with their "Ship of Hope" for the new year.

The worthy matron then invited the newly-retired worthy matron and worthy patron, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Gordon to approach the East, and presented them with their past officers' jewels. Mrs. Snyder then introduced her family and told the colors, flowers, and theme for the year.

A social hour followed. The serving tables was centered with appropriate flowers, with blue candles and napkins, and pink and blue mints to carry out the colors. Candied white doves centered the cakes which were decorated with the Lighthouse emblem, and blue candles. The lunch committee included Mr. and Mrs.

William Carpenter, Mr. and 1 Mrs. Paul Gidel, and Mr. and Mrs. Marion Gordon.

The Weather The Weather in Carroll (Daily Temperatures Courtesy of Iowa Public Service Company) Yesterday's high Yesterday's low -11 At 7 a.m. today At 10 a.m. today -11 (Thursday) Weather A Year AgoCarroll temperatures a year ago today ranged from a high Daily Record Court House Applications to WedBernard Bellcock, 23, Rockwell City and Connie C. Bower, 19, Coon Rapids. New Vehicles RegisteredMiller McCarty Chick Coon Rapids, Ford van.

Real Estate TransfersGeorge F. and Rose Ricke to Ralph A. Ricke, Sec. 29, Twp. 84, Range 36.

George F. and Rose Ricke to Esther Hausman, Sec. 29, Twp. 84, Range 36. Justice Court (Frank Gach) Jail Sentence- Frank Spaulding, Scranton, false wearing of military uniform, 18 days in county jail in lieu of $75 fine.

Assault and BatteryMerle Hallinan, Carroll, assault and battery in connection with an altercation in a cafe west on Highway 30 in $10. Defrauding Inn KeeperWilliam Peterson, Audubon, defrauding an inn keeper in Carroll, $15. Traffic FinesDarrell Voege, Carroll, failure to yield, Betty 'Tool, Carpoll, night speed, $12; David Martvedt, Story City, truck speed, $10; Kenneth Ruger, Pender, night speed, $20; and Joyce Clark, Churdan, improper left turn, $5. Hospitals ST. ANTHONY HOSPITAL Dismissals Jan.

7- Anthony J. Vanderheiden, Carroll James A. Bireline, Adair Leland D. Jacobsen, Scranton Mrs. Anna B.

Kelley, Westside BirthMr. and Mrs. Curtis Hofstad, Glidden, a son, Tuesday MANNING GENERAL HOSPITAL ('Times Herald News Service) Admission Jan. 6-- Gerd B. Gerdes, Wall Lake Dismissal Jan.

6- Merle McMichael, Gray Carroll Markets GRAIN Soybeans, No. 2 $2.29 Corn, No. 2 yellow 1.07 Oats .60 Chicago Grain These Markets Are Furnished by The Humphrey Grain Company GRAIN March 146 May 145 144 144 July 1381 Sept. 140 CORN March 121 121 34 May 124 124: 124 5 July 1263 126 1261 Sept. 124 123 OATS March 64 65 May 67 July 671 671 671 Sept.

March 114 1133 May 114 July SOY Jan. 2493 2497 March 257 2533 252: 253 5 SOY BEAN MEAL Jan. 79.15 77.60 78.25 March 74.00 73.25 73.35 July 73.00 72.30 72.40 Weather Elsewhere By The Associated Press High Low Pr. Albany, snow 19 -12 Albuquerque, clear 35 19 Atlanta, cloudy 30 8 Bismarck, snow -2 -14 .01 Boise, cloudy 25 21 Boston, clear 26 13 .05 Buffalo, snow 21 .07 Chicago, snow 0 -5 Cincinnati, clear 9 Cleveland, snow 18 -4 Denver, clear 23 do Des Moines, clear -1 -15 Detroit, snow 14 -5 .01 Fairbanks, clear 3 -16 Fort Worth, clear 41 19 Helena, clear 1 -15 Honolulu, cloudy 78 66 Indianapolis, clear 0 -13 Jacksonville, clear 45 21 Juneau, clear 32 3 .15 Kansas City, clear 13 -3 Los Angeles, cloudy 70 48 Louisville, clear 9 0 Memphis, clear 20 10 Miami, clear 58 39 Milwaukee, snow 3 -2 .03 clear -3 -14 New Orleans, clear 38 20 New York, cloudy 25 Okla. City, clear 28 Omaha, clear -3 -17 Philadelphia, cloudy 30 9 .05 Phoenix, clear 61 34 Pittsburgh, clear 17 -5 .03 Ptlnd, clear 22 10 Ptind, rain 40 34 Rapid City, clear 5 -16 Richmond, snow 32 13 St.

Louis, clear 9 -1 Salt Lk. City, cloudy 25 8 San Diego, cloudy 70 35 San rain 53 50 .03 Seattle, cloudy 45 40 Tampa, clear 49 36 Washington, cloudy 35 9 .07 Winnipeg, snow -13 (M--Missing; T-Trace) Modest Advance is Posted by N. Y. Mart Hogs butchers 50 to 1.00 higher; 1-2 sorted 200-230 lb butchers 29.00-29.50; 1-3 200-240 lbs 28.50-29.00; 2-3 240-260 lbs 27.50-28.50; 2-4 260-280 lbs 26.50- 27.50; 3-4 290-300 1bs 25.00-25.50; sows 1-3 300-400 lbs 23.25-24.00; 2-3 500-600 lbs 21.50-22.50. Cattle 300; calves none; supply mostly slaughter cows fully steady; load mixed good and choice 950 lb slaughter heifers 28.00; utility and commercial cows 19.75-21.50; utility and commercial bulls 24.00-26.50.

Sheep 100; not enough on hand for an adequate price test; part load mixed good and choice 117 lb wooled slaughter lambs steady at 28.00. DES MOINES -(USDA) Iowa-southern Minnesota direct hogs: Estimated receipts movement slow because of cold weather; demand good; butchers 50-75 higher, some 1.00 up for midsession Wednesday, U.S. 1-3 200-230 lbs 27.25-29.00, few 29.25, 230-240 lbs 27.25-28.75; sows 25-50 higher, instances 1.00 higher, U.S. 1-3 270-330 lbs 22.50- 23.75, few 24.00, 330-400 lbs 22.00- 23.50. SIOUX CITY (AP) (USDA) Hogs butchers higher, mostly 1.00 higher, U.S.

1-3 190-240 lbs 29.00-29.50; sows 25 higher, U.S. 1-3 300-350 -Ibs 23.50-24.50. Cattle fully steady; choice lb steers 27.50- 28.50; choice heifers lbs 26.50-27.50. Sheep 350; not established. OMAHA (AP) Hogs butchers higher, 1-3 200- 230 lbs 29.00-29.75; few 30.00; sows uneven higher, 325- 600 lbs 22.00-24.75.

Cattle calves 50; all slaughter classes steady; choice steers 27.50-28.50; choice heifers 27.00-28.00. Dynamite Blast; Family Escapes HAWARDEN (AP) An employe of Iowa Beef Packers, his wife and young son escaped injury early Thursday when a bomb exploded at their home here. Sioux County Sheriff Ted Hoogland said the bomb, consisting of dynamite, was placed at the corner of the house. He said it caused considerable damage to windows, a door, and part of the foundation. The employe, Daryl Kratochvile, was sleeping upstairs with the other two members of his family when the device exploded about 12:30 a.m., the said.

Kratochvile is employed at the Dakota City, Iowa Beef Packers plant. Members of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America struck the facility last August, sparking a labor dispute which has been punctuated with violence. Weight Club Begins Year (Times Herald News Service) WESTSIDE The Westside Weight Club began its new year with ten former members and four new members joining the weight watchers. Prizes were awarded to the five top losers for December, and a new contest begun for January. Members must be weighed in at the first meeting of each month to be eligible for this contest.

A new contest was begun, called a Ha-Ha contest. Each member contributes five cents before weighing, along with their name. After all have weighed in, If the name drawn is a person who has lost weight, she receives the money; if she has stayed the same, she gets half; and if she has gained weight she only gets Ha-Ha, and the money is held for the next week. No pig or queen awards were given. Next meeting will be Jan.

14 at 7 p.m. BITTER COLD of 29 to a low of 3 degrees. IOWA FORECAST Partly cloudy and continued very cold Thursday night with chance of occasional light snow flurries mostly east, lows 15-25 below zero. Friday partly cloudy and not so cold, highs above 5 below northeast to 10-15 above southwest. NEW YORK (AP) The stock market posted a modest gain in quiet trading early this afternoon.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials al noon was up 1.71 to 803.52. At noon The Associated Press 60-stock average had risen .7 to 275.5, with industrials up 1.3, rails off .1, and utilities up .9. The margin of advances over declines among individual issues traded on the New York Liquor Store Change Part of Pilot Program (By Town Daily Press Association) DES MOINES Very shortly, customers at the 11 self-serve state liquor stores will no longer have to fill out their own order blank. Homer Adcock, chairman of the Iowa liquor control commission, explained the change was part of a "pilot program." The first three state stores to be affected are the ones in Des Moines. Instead of making out and signing a sales ticket.

a person will merely select the liquor he wants to purchase and take it to the cashier. When the sale is rung up on the cash register, the code number and per bottle price will be recorded, Adcock explained. If this pilot program works well in the self-serve stores, Adcock said it may be put into use in the 187 conventional state liquor stores. The difference being, of course, that these would not be self-serve stores and a purchaser would have to tell a clerk what liquor he wanted to buy. But it would eliminate filling out and signing a sales slip.

Although this is one of the recommendations of the Governor's Economy Committee, Adcock said the commission had been thinking of moving in this direction for a long time. Weather (Continued From Page 1) He said Mrs. Graf awoke him about midnight saying she was feeling worse and he then found Janelle unconscious. He said that he carried Janelle to the door to get some air, then returned and found Mrs. Graf also unconscious.

Graf was listed in and good her condition daughter and Mrs. as satisfactory at Sumner Community Hospital. The Weather Bureau said the mercury would stay below zero at most Iowa points with northwesterly winds continuing at 15 to 25 miles an hour. Afternoon temperatures ranged from around 5 to 10 below zero in the northeast and zero to 5 below in the southwest. No relief was in sight for Thursday night, as the fast called for lows of 15 to 25 below zero.

Indications were that temperatures might moderate a bit Friday and Saturday, but hardly enough to star: anyone mooning over seed catalogues and planning the summer garden, Pay Boosts to Audubon Employees (Times Herald News Service) AUDUBON Employees of the Audubon county highway maintenance department have been granted pay increases averaging about 15 per cent. The action was taken at the annual organizational meeting of the board of supervisors. In other action, the county board reappointed members of the county board of social welfare. They include Chairman Paul Worster of Audubon, Mrs. Annabel Frederiksen of Kimballton, and Mrs.

S. R. Anderson of Brayton. Vern Jensen of Audubon, was renamed to the county zoning commission, JAIL SEMINAR JAIL SEMINAR AMES John Lloyd of Coon Rapids, with 40 other architecture students will present a graphic and conceptual 'solution' to the problem of area jails, during a seminar or publie 'jurying' to be sponsored jointly by the department of architecture at Iowa State, and the Iowa Council of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, Jan. 8.

The meeting, open to the public, will be held in the Gallery Room, Memorial Union, from 2-5 p.m. Stock Exchange widened te more than 200. The firming trend that got under way in late trading day carried over and apparently encouraged investors. There were no major developments to inspire the market, and its performance was without definite trend. Steels.

rubber issues, farm implements, utilities, nonferrous metals, oils, airlines, tobaccos, and drugs weremo stly higher. A number of large blocks were traded on the Big Board, among them 49,500 shares of Kaiser Industries, up to 21; 50,000 shares of Union Camp, up to 30.000 shares of Texaco, up to and 25,000 shares of Getty Oil, off to Prices among the more-actively traded Big Board issues included Fairchild Camera, up to Continental up 1 to 44: Litton Industries, off to 321; Xerox, up 10 and Chrysler, off lo 33. American Stock Exchange prices included Kaiser Industries, up to Mite, up to Nortek, off to Tyco Laboratories, up to 23; Telex. up to and American, up to 27. NEW Stock 8, 1970: AlliedCh AlliedStrs Am Brds Am Can AmChain AmCrysS AmHome AMK Cp Am Mot Am Smelt Am Std AmSugar Am Anaconda Armour Atl Rich Avco Beat Fds BendixAv Beth Sul Bo'ng Air Borden Brunswik Case JI Chrysler CollinsRa Con Edis Con Oil CPC Intl Curtis Wr Deere duPont East Kod Eltra Cp Fairmont FooteMin Ford Mot Fruehauf Gmble Sk Gen Elec Gen Fds Gen Mot Gen PCm Goodrich Goodyear GtWestU G'hound Hershey Homestk IBM I.C.Ind YORK (AP) Noon quotations Thursday, 26 Int Harv Int Salt Int 60 Interst 29 Iowa Ill Ta 26 30 KC Kn'cott 35 Kraft Co Krsge Leh PrtC Loch Air 32 Marcor 49 45 Martin Maytag M'dith Mobil 34 Nat Gyp Am Rk 221 Nat Penney Pa Cen Pep Cola Phill Pet Pn'walt Proct QK Oats 46 RCA 18 Rey Tob Safewy 25 Sear Rob SFe Ind Sou Pac SperryR 39 Oil Cal 53 Oil Ind Oil NJ Swift Co Texaco Textron TRW UAL Un Elec 18 Un Pac Uniroy 20 Unit Air US Gyp 59 US Steel 35 WU Tel Westg El W'wrth ADVANCEMENT HALBUR Dennis Naberhaus, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Wilfred Naberhaus of Halbur, has been advanced to Specialist Four. He is stationed with the First Battalion in Vietnam. His address is: Spec. 4 Dennis Naberhaus, E-478-64-1966, Cav.

APO San Francisco, 96321. C. F. Reilly Carroll-Age 76 Friends may call at the Sharp Funeral Home starting at 1 p.m. Friday, Rosary: 3 p.m, Friday.

8 p.m. Friday by Charles Carroll Council Knights of Columbus and Holy Spirit parish. Elk's Memorial Service 7:30 p.m. Friday. Requiem Moss: Saturday, 12 noon at Holy Spirit Church.

Officiating: Very Rev. Leo Lens, V.F, Interment: Mt. Olivet Cemetery. SHARP FUNERAL HOME Carroll, lowe Serving Carroll Area 29 Years.

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Years Available:
1941-1977