Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

St. Cloud Times from Saint Cloud, Minnesota • Page 8

Publication:
St. Cloud Timesi
Location:
Saint Cloud, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8A Databank St. Cloud (Minn.) Times March 24, 1990 his life, was in the U.S. Navy, and worked as a foreman at Landwehr Heavy Moving, Inc. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Lee (Kim) Hunsperger, Cathedral City, Calif; brothers and sisters, John, McHenry, Dorraine Sigwanz and Donna Mae Toia, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Erv and Robert, St.

Cloud; Duane, St. Paul; Joseph, Hicksville, N. Bill, Oakdale; and Ronald, Cottage Grove. He was preceded in death by his parents. Pallbearers will be Bill, Steve, Todd, Joe and Bill Mund and Jerry Sigwanz.

Roland Neutzling, Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Tues Eldred Davis, 53, Long Prairie LONG PRAIRIE Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at United Methodist Church, Clotho, for Eldred P. Davis, 53, who died Thursday at Long Prairie Memorial Hospital. The Rev.

Bonita Orr will officiate. Burial will be in Pleasant Mound Cemetery, Clotho. Friends may call from 3 to 8 p.m. today at Stephan-Stein Funeral Home in Long Prairie. Eldred Davis was born Feb.

5, 1937, in Long Prairie to Glen and Nellie (Pe-trie) Davis. He married Edna Frahm Feb. 10, 1962, in St. Peter's Catholic Church, Browerville, and lived most of his life in the Twin Cities area, where he farmed and worked in heating and air conditioning service. He had been a resident of Long Prairie for the past year.

Survivors include his wife; sons and daughter, Edward, Long Prairie; Eugene, Apple Valley; Mrs. George (Elaine) Braum, Eldon and Eldwin, Burnsville; Eric, Farmington; brothers, Merlin, Monticello; and Leslie, Clinton and Roland, Eagle Bend; and three grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his father and sister, Lavonne Daniel. Pallbearers will be Merlin, Leslie, Clinton and Roland Davis, Ralph Ritter and Richard Randall. Elmer Van Scoik, 60, Royalton ROYALTON Elmer F.

Van Scoik, 60, Route 2, died Friday at his home. Funeral arrangments are being made by Brenny Funeral Home in Royalton. Edward Walther, 82, Menahga SAUK CENTRE Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church for Edward E. Walther, 82, Menahga, formerly of Sauk Centre, who died Thursday at St.

Joseph's Hospital, Park Rapids. The Rev. Bernard Kahlhamer will officiate. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Friends may call after 2:30 p.m.

Sunday at Schad Funeral Home in Sauk Centre. Parish prayers will be 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Edward Walther was born Nov. 29, 1907, in Fulda to Charles and Bessie (Ankrum) Walther.

He married Mar-cella Handorff July 24, 1940, in Glen-wood and moved to a farm in the Sauk Centre area. He lived in Westport 18 years, working as a carpenter. In 1962, he moved into Sauk Centre, where he was a member of Our Lady of the Angels parish. He had been a resident of Menahga for the past two years. Survivors include his wife; daughter, Mrs.

Marlene Akerson, Menahga; brothers, John, Glenwood; Floyd, Ocampo, and Clarence, Sauk Centre; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents; son, Charles; sister and brothers, Mabel Chicca, Lloyd, Frank, Alfred and George; and one grandson. Pollkoarorc will Vx Stan SfllfkinfiTI. Deaths Huldah Bouma, 89, Paynesville PAYNESVILLE Huldah M. Bouma, 89, formerly of Aitkin, died Friday at Paynesville Community Hospital.

Funeral services will be 3 p.m. Sunday at St. John's Lutheran Church, Aitkin. The Rev. David Becker will officiate.

Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Aitkin. Friends may call after 6 p.m. today at Anderson Mortuary. A prayer service will be 7:30 tonight at the funeral home in Paynesville. Huldah Bouma was born Nov.

25, 1900, in Cowling, 111., to George and Emma (Webking) Kirsch. She married Kenneth Bouma at Zion Lutheran Church, Brainerd, and had worked at O'Brien Clothing Store in Brainerd and JC Penney stores in various cities. The couple moved to Aitkin in 1942 where they owned and operated Bouma Dry Goods Store for many years. She later moved to Minneapolis and eventually to Paynesville, where she worked at Ben Franklin. She was a member of St.

John's Lutheran Church and was active in Paynesville Women's Circle. Survivors include her sister-in-law, Merle Bouma, Minneapolis. She was preceded in death by her parents; husband in 1963; brothers, Frederick, Valentine and Christof; sisters, Matilda Fogelstrom and Emma Buss; and one infant sister. Pallbearers will be Don C. and Andy Anderson, Kenneth Fogelstrom, Wil-lard Reem, John Hamdorf and Gordon Root.

Rev. Michael Jakobek, 66, Robbinsdale ROBBINSDALE The Rev. Michael Jakobek, 66, formerly of St. Cloud, died Thursday at St. Mary's Hospital, Minneapolis.

Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Archbishop John Roach will officiate. Burial will be in Resurrection Cemetery, Mendota Heights. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m.

Sunday at the church. Knights of Columbus will pray at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the church, followed by parish prayers at 7. Arrangements were by Gearty-Delmore Funeral Home, Robbinsdale. The Rev.

Michael Jakobek was born Oct. 22, 1923, inSt. Cloud to John J. and Anna Rose (Deppa) Jakobek. He was ordained June 4, 1949, in St.

Paul's Cathedral in St. Paul, and served as parish priest at St. Mark's, St. Paul; Immaculate Conception, Watertown; and St. Anne's, Hamel.

Survivors include cousins. Richard Mund, 55, St. Cloud Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at St. Mary's Cathedral for Richard A.

Mund, 55, 421 Eighth Ave. who died Wednesday at St. Cloud Hospital from injuries suffered in a two-car collision March 10 near Fores-ton. The Rev. Nicholas Landsberger will officiate.

Burial will be in Assumption Cemetery. Friends may call from 3 to 9 p.m. Sunday at Daniel Funeral Home. Parish prayers will be at 4:30 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Richard Mund was born April 12, 1934, in St. Cloud to Joseph and Alvina (Klein) Mund. He lived in St. Cloud all Grossinger, 71, Route 2, who died Thursday in Champlin. The Rev.

Patricia Hinker will officiate. Burial will be in Kimball Cemetery. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Dingmann Funeral Home. A prayer service will be 7 p.m.

Sunday at the funeral home in Kimball. Gladys Grossinger was born Oct. 20, 1918, in Watkins, to Edmund and Elsie (Schultz) Wylie. She married Raymond Grossinger Aug. 27, 1938, in Watkins, and lived in the Kimball and Watkins area all of her life.

The couple farmed in Kingston Township, Meeker County, and she worked as a seamstress at Fingerhut for 18 years, retiring in 1980. She was a member of Kimball United Methodist Church and United Methodist Women. Survivors include her husband; daughters and sons, Darlene Munk-berg, Minneapolis; Mrs. Thomas (Bonnie) Butler and Mrs. Roger (Phyllis) Unterberger, Champlin; Mrs.

Will (Diane) Johnson, Salt Lake City, Utah; Ronald, St. Michael; Gary, Kimball; Randy, Buffalo; Mrs. Douglas (Kathleen) Page, Eden Prairie; and Mrs. Randy (Patricia) Moser, Rockford; sisters and brothers, Mrs. Glen (Hazel) Vick, Minneapolis; Edward, Minneton-ka; Harold, Kimball; Mrs.

Douglas (Dorothy) Bystedt, New Hope; and Wil-bert, Fairhaven; 17 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents and daughter, Vernice. Pallbearers will be Kevin Munkberg, Duane and Craig Butler, Jim and Tim Unterberger and Aaron and Brooks Grossinger. day at Immanuel Lutheran Church in St. Paul, for Roland Neutzling, 67, resident of Waite Park Nursing Home, who died Friday at St.

Cloud Hospital. The Rev. E.K. Bentley will officiate. Burial will be in Elmhurst Cemetery, St.

Paul. Friends may call one hour before services Tuesday at the church. Arrangements were by Dingmann Funeral Home, Sauk Rapids. Ronald Neutzling was born Oct. 13, 1922 in St.

Paul to Julius and Emma (Trapp) Neutzling. He had lived in St. Paul and had worked with Civil Service for many years. He had been a resident of the nursing home since 1977. He was a member of Immanuel Lutheran Church, St.

Paul. Survivors include his sister, Evelyn Swennes, San Diego, Calif. He was preceded in death by his parents; brothers, Warren and Harold; and sister, Leanore Miller. Pallbearers will be Karen, Gary and Scott Massman, and Jon, David E. and David Miller.

Gladys Grossinger, 71, Kimball KIMBALL Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at Kimball United Methodist Church, for Gladys M. Bush hates broccoli, but others love it 5 Bob Helle, Kurt, Mark and Brad Kirck-of and Arnie Walther. Ramsey County pact may end workers' strike ST. PAUL (AP) A tentative contract agreement was reached Friday that could end a 4-day-old strike by 1,400 Ramsey County workers, union officials said.

"Everybody is happy we're reached an agreement," said Tom Hennessy executive director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees local union. Neither Hennessy nor Dick Brainerd, head of the Ramsey County personnel department, gave any details of the tentative agreement. Both sides said they expect the workers to ratify the contract when they vote on Sunday. WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush is out of the mainstream when it comes to broccoli. People love broccoli, and government statistics prove it.

"We called it the vegetable of the '80s," said Agriculture Department economist Gary Lucier. He said broccoli consumption more than doubled in the United States between 1980 and 1988, going from an annual average of 3 pounds per person to 6.8 pounds. Back in 1970, Americans on average wereeatingonly IV2 pounds of the vegetable each year. Both fresh and frozen versions move quickly off the supermarket shelves, though most people prefer it fresh, ac also a significant cash crop for Arizona, Texas and Oregon and is produced in smaller quantities in other states. Maine, for example, where Bush has been vacationing most of his life, is the biggest supplier in New England.

"We've gone from zero to about 3,000 acres over the past six or seven years," said Russell Libby, director of the Maine Department of Agriculture. Maine broccoli farmer Lance Smith said it was too bad the president didn't like broccoli, but he was entitled to his own opinion. "But you know, he really hasn't looked good," said Smith. "We've noticed he's looked a little peaked. That could be it." cording to statistics.

Lucier said health concerns played a major role in the big jump. Broccoli is high in vitamin and has a substantial amount of vitamin says a pamphlet from the United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Association. Bush's distaste for the food was revealed last week when he banned it from Air Force One's galley. It made headlines when he told questioning reporters on Thursday: "I do not like broccoli and I haven't liked it since I was a little kid and my mother made me eat it and I'm president of the United States and I'm not going to eat any more broccoli." Although the vegetable was dis- covered thousands of years ago, California farmers began growing it experimentally for the U.S. market in the 1920s, shipping just a few crates East.

It is so perishable that it requires the quick transport of modern times to make it to stores any distance from the fields in edible condition. The USDA didn't even keep records of acreage planted in broccoli until 1946 when about 18,700 acres were planted to the crop nationwide. By 1989, the acreage had jumped to 121,500. The amount of broccoli that could be grown on each acre more than doubled in those 45 years. California fills 90 percent of the country's demand for the plant, but it's Births ST.

CLOUD HOSPITAL Huschle, Dale and Deborah, 16218 State Highway 22, Eden Valley, boy, Friday. Pearson, Kemp and Cindy, 418 Polk Big Lake, girl, Friday. Volkers, James and Donna, 11072-340th Avon. ST. GABRIEL'S HOSPITAL, LITTLE FALLS Scott and Cheryl Johnson, 1301 Seventh St.

Brainerd, girl, Friday. Will, Donald and Marlys, Route 4, Pierz, boy, Friday. Maternity ward hours: Visiting hours for maternity wards at area hospitals are: St Cloud Hospital, 1406 Sixth Ave. 7 to 8:30 p.m. suggested family birthing visiting hours, other times can be prearranged with the family; St.

Gabriel's Hospital, 81 5 Second St. SE, Little Falls 2 to 8:30 p.m.; Law log ST. CLOUD POLICE DEPARTMENT Vandalism Sue Cheeley, Cold Spring, reported at 8:17 a.m. Wednesday that a window had been broken at the Granite City Pet Hospital, 1743 Seventh St. S.

Value: $175. Group: $100 million in health funds squandered Craft Magazines 7Ksustand mZm MAGAZINES BOOKS COMCS Division Place Fashion Center 253-0851 Hrs: M-F 9-8; Sat. 9-5; Sun. 11-5 WASHINGTON (AP) A federal program to provide community mental health services to the poor and uninsured is an "abysmal failure" because up to $100 million was squandered building for-profit hospitals with swimming pools and tennis courts, a consumer group charged Friday. Half of 575 community mental health centers funded under the program are violating federal regulations that require them to be non-profit, to provide certain essential services and to make some services available to the poor, Public Citizen Health Research Group said.

"One of the most visible consequences of the failed program has been a significant increase in the number of seriously mentally ill homeless and an increase in the number of mentally ill persons in jails and prisons," the group's report said. stitute of Mental Health, said officials are aware of problems with the program and 10 months ago began to identify centers out of compliance and to seek recoveries. Asked if he were aware of any fraud or abuse, Leshner said, "I don't know of it and if we do know of it, we will correct it That doesn't mean that there aren't centers that are out of compliance, but I don't see any fraud and abuse." Public Citizen said that between $50 million and $100 million is owed the federal government by mental health centers that received federal construction grants under the program and are out of compliance. It based the estimate on reports of inspections of 158 centers in the program. "The Community Mental Health Centers program has been an abysmal failure," the report said.

A report by the House Government Operations subcommittee on human resources and intergovernmental relations chaired by Rep. Ted Weiss, said its investigation has revealed the same kinds of violations. Weiss called for a General Accounting Office investigation to determine the extent of the problem. And the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services is beginning an investigation of the matter, in response to a request by HHS Undersecretary Constance Horner, a spokeswoman for the inspector general said. Alan Leshner, deputy director of the National In From Page 7A ins ra Soap I AJU I I lUU PI iflipi 11 Ul i ATT PUT AN ELECTRIC GIHAR IN YOUR HANDS FOR AND TEACH yOU TO ROCK! nni then heads for the ranch, intent on proposing to Nikki.

Kay throws Rex out of the house after Rex confronts her about her affair. Kay tells Rex she wants a divorce. Adrian tests his plan to do away with Cassie. Rex accepts Jill's offer that he stay at her place. Adrian's gun fires by itself, blowing the head off of a dummy.

Adrian realizes his plan will work exactly as figured. LiUQi nri07rn rmn 5 This mm i beginning course is for people Treasure Chest Thrift Gift Spring Fashions To Please Everyone Our Merchandise Is Now Put Out Daily. Spring Cleaning! Consignment Appointments How Being Taken Call 255-1808 age thirteen through adult who want to olav I A SEE US FOR COMPLETE LINE OF Howard Miller Ridgeway Ansonia Linden (Schmid Germain Brass Clocks) Le Coultre Atmos electric ing Llanview. After Brenda assures Michael that Dan need not be removed from the hospital staff, she announces that she is quitting her job. SANTA BARBARA: Cruz is forced to arrest Kelly for drunk driving.

Laura realizes she has shot Sasha. Laura sneaks Sasha's dead body into her car. At Julia's, Laura puts the corpse in Julia's bed. Returning home from her romantic evening with Mason, Julia finds Sasha's body. Mason and Julia hide Sasha in Julia's garage freezer, knowing that if they turn the body in to the police, Julia will be fingered as the assailant.

Stephen obsessively stares at a photo of Sophia. Cruz warns Eden not to get into trouble while she investigates the picture of Derek and the other boys. The headmistress of the orphanage agrees to try to remember the names of the boys in the picture. Cruz investigates several cop killings that appear connected to drugs. Michael plans to join the police force.

Ethan finds Gina working as a waitress and asks Phyllis, the hostess, not to tell Gina he saw her. THE YOUNG THE RESTLESS: Planning to remarry Nikki, Victor chases her and Jack across the country. Although Jack changes his flight plans, hoping to outsmartvictor, Victor remains on his tail. Jack agrees to take Nikki back to Genoa City when she gets overly concerned about Victoria and Nicholas. Jack plans on marrying Nikki in Genoa City before Victor returns.

The Jabot jet, in which Victor is traveling, lands in Iowa when there is a minor electrical problem. Returning to Genoa City, Victor asks Douglas to stand up for him at the wedding. Victor guitar. Emphasis is on rhythm and For all you night owls who love to win, join us for our special Feature Event II of our Weekend Double Features. Our special late show starts at approximately 9:00 p.m.

every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night following our first regular session. There really are more ways to win than ever before. Bring your friends and be a part of the win-ningest game around at the winningest place in town. You won't want to be anyplace else! CASH 111 Oil ALL THE EXCITEMENT! blues techniques. which form the basis of most MN Certified Witchmiktr Oockmater Free In-Shop Eitimete rock music.

lust $34.50 includes 8 weekly classes, the use of a guitar, amp, case and all lesson matenals. MONDAY-FRIDAY HABERH00D CLOCK DOC 1513 W. St. Germain St Cloud NEEDED EIGHT WEEKS JUST 255-9461 CALL OR NtXISCSSION BEGINNING WEEK OF APRIL 2 Merchandise Donations Always, Always Welcome We are a non-profit organization. Volunteers Needed Holy Spirit Parish Breakfast Crossroads Center 253-9671 March 25 8 a.m.

p.m. Eggs, Sausage, Hashbrowns Cinnamon Rolls Served Adulti $3.00 Family Style Children 3 FREE 1615 South 1 1th Avenue St. Cloud, MN 56301 3120 ROOSEVELT ROAD, ST. CLOUD JUST NORTH OF NATHAN 25I-2S00 Mon-Thurt: Doort open at Sneak Previewt-6pm; Feature Event-7pm Thin, Sat Sun Motineei: Doort open ot 12:1 5pm; Sneolt Previewvlpm; feature Everrt-2prn hi, Sat Sun: Doort open at Sneak Previewt-6pm; Feature Event 17pm; Feature Event ll-9pm Seommd Si. Bemdia's CmIk (2625), Sft.

rVtet end Schaak (3096) and Si. Cloud Mi Club (3097) 7, 7 schmitt music centers 3rd St. PlazaBehind TargetDayton's 10 a.m.-9 p.m. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat.

i JiMAM 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the St. Cloud Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About St. Cloud Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,048,215
Years Available:
1928-2024