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Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 17

Publication:
Argus-Leaderi
Location:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Wednesday, May 20; 1953. THE DAILY ARGUS-LEADER; SIOUX FALLS S. D. 17 CoivdthouASL Tlmvx Flandreau to Host JunsJialA. MRS.

CHARLES L. EGAN Young GOP Group Requiem high Mass will be celebrated at the Yankton Catholic Church at 9 a.m. Thursday for Mrs. Charles L. (Flora) Egan, 63, of 716 W.

5th St. Mrs. Egan, Sioux Falls resident. si tine Flandreau, May 20 A dinner meeting of the Young Republican groups of District 8 is to be held in thi Cove here at 7 p.m., Friday. Those planning to attend are be Judge John T.

Medin has signed a judgment of foreclosure of the Crisp Manufacturing Co. 1 at Dell Rapids and has ordered sale of personal property and real estate to satisfy mortgages held by the Reconstruction Finance Corp. Judge Medin ruled that the mortgages held by the Reconstruction Finance Corp. are first liens and that the county sheriff is to hold a public auction on the premises on Highway 77 near the east limits of Dell Rapids. In so far as possible, money received "from the sale will be used to pay to the plaintiff $9,772.93 as principal and 'interest, $161.90 for 1945, died at a local hospital Sunday.

Spending ing asked to telenhone 8-0050 in, most of her life 2 Vacancies On Planning Board Filled K. E. Benson and W. E. Bentzinger Succeed Mc-Nerney, Jacomst Mayor Henry B.

Saure today announced the appointment of K. E. Benson and W. E. Bentzinger as new members of the City Plan Commission.

They replace R. J. McNerney and H. J. Jacomet, each of whom declined to serve a second five-year term on the planning board.

McNerney was chairman from the time the board was organized five years ago. Benson is a civil engineer and member of the engineering firm of in YanKton, sne was one of the Sioux Falls by noon Thursday to make reservations. According to Sullivan Barnes, Minnehaha county Young GOP chairman, this meeting will be in sponsors of the Sacred Heart Hospital there. She also had been active in the Yankton Amer of delinquent taxes, $20 ad vanced to the plaintiff and attorney of monthly meeting of the I Hffmvt Attn Vt a nnimtti VAnnrr flllU GOP Minnehaha 1 Xr Young County fees. Woods, Fuller, Shultz Smith represented the plaintiff and Van ican Legion Aux- group.

F. N. (Denny) Cosgrove, Pierre, mary. Rosary will Mrs. Egan be recited at the Kebeiseman-Nel- state Republican cnairman, wui De the main speaker at the banquet.

Buren Vogt appeared for Crisp Manufacturing Co. Maie Paernik Orgusaar has been awarded a divorce from Rudolph Orgusaar by Judge Medin. She also was awarded custody of a minor son Funeral Home in Yankton ct 8 pjn. Wednesday. Burial will be in Yankton, The Banton-Sorenson Funeral Home was in charge of local arrangements.

Benson Schmitz. Bentzinger, an child, $80 a month for support ot Travel in Switzerland Cheapest for Tourists St. Moritz, Switzerland (JP) The native Swiss in this world-famous holiday region are wondering just how hospitable you must be for the sake of tourists. For an ordinary Swiss, traveling from the Swiss border town of -5- -rsw ft I -i n-iTiffmiumn i 11 i ni 'IfisWif Mi3l 1 iwwisiiifliMii siilSiyTaB architect, is connected with the firm of Harold Spitznagel Associate. The planning body, which consists of nine members, will meet in the near future to name a new president.

City Auditor J. L. Smal-ley serves as its secretary. the child and Orgusaar is to pay all bills incurred prior to commencement of the action. The couple was married in Sioux Falls Jan.

31, 1952. Gene Pruitt represented the plaintiff. Harry Grant was counsel for Orgusaar. MARRIAGE LICENSES Colonel N. Nensec Columbus.

Ind. INFANT ALARM Missoula, (JP) Don't groan, Pappy, when that cry-baby wakes you up in the middle of the night he may save your life. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Melon were asleep in heir home here when the kitchen refrigerator caught fire.

But their bawling baby woke them before the fire spread. i Campocologno by train to St. MASTER OF THE ARTS Lionel Barrymore, recently 75 and eldest member of the famed stage family, shows some of the pictures he has painted at his home near Chatsworth, Cal. rnyuw ivu wm WiMoribL the fare is $3.75. For a Unna Pamnal aiiv Co lie i 1.1V TV Cl 1 It AJ.

AVIllfS A V1UU Ulll Gertrude M. Van Beek Sioux Falls tourist, coming from Tirano, Italy, three miles beyond the border, the fare is only $2.75. This is part of the railway's scheme to attract tourists. State Liquor Store Questions Legality Of Fair Trade Laws South Carolina's coastal plain is called the 'low country" and its Music, for imperial balls in the time of Napoleon III sometimes was supplied by mechanical pianos. KELO-TV Slates Further Testing Minor Changes Indicated for Autos ol 1954 Stylists and Engineers Are Already Working on Plans for 1955 By DAVID J.

WILKIE Associated Press Automotive Editor Detroit, May 20 () With possibly one or two exceptions the nation's auto makers will Introduce few major styling and engineering changes in 1954 model cars. All companies already have finalized their next year's models and have their stylists and engineers working on 1955 cars. The producers, obviously, are not disclosing the changes planned for next year, but information obtained from among the tool makers indicates most of next year's cars will rely on minor changes for customer appeal. Before World War II major styling changes were made about every other year. However, the cost of making such changes has doubled and in some instances trebled since the late '30s.

Now the broader changes come about once every three years. Styling and design changes cannot be implemented on the spur of the moment to meet changing competitive conditions. They have to be planned many months in advance. Thus, if a manufacturer has a model that isn't going over very well, he finds it difficult if not impossible to withdraw it and substitute another on short notice. Most car makers have had experience with design that didn't win 100 per cent public approval.

In more than a few instances these were designs far ahead of their time. Because of these experiences the auto manufacturers are extremely cautious in introducing radically different designs in new rriodel cars. It is significant in this connection that it took an "invasion" of the American market by European-built sports cars to get American manufacturers to build similar models. Now just about every American car builder has a sports model in production or in prospect. American auto manufacturers probably were justified their slow approach to the sports car market.

They aren't yet certain just how great will be the demand for the racy, two-passenger sports models. The commitments most companies have made with respect to production of these models indicate they still are being tried out. Meanwhile the feeling appears to A Federal Court test of the con Thefts of Two Cars Reported From Chester Incidents May Be Linked With Minn. Job, Say Authorities Television S.F. Firm Moves In Rig to Begin Drilling for Oil Dakota-Texas Oil Co.

of Sioux Falls began moving a rig into Western Potter County today preparatory to spuading in a well this week end, President Sam Fantle Jr. reported. Fantle said the well will be drilled to production or to granite, the latter being expected at 3,800 to 4,000 feet. Location of the local firm's operation is the NW4 of the SEV4 of Section 27, Township 119, Range 78 west in Western Potter County. Wakefield Drilling Co.

of Wichita, the largest independent drilling company in the state of Kansas, will do the drilling for the Sioux Falls firm. THE MOST HONORED NAME IN THE INDUSTRY! stitutionality of U.S. and South Dakota "fair trade" laws may comei here in December in a case between three distillers and a Sioux Falls liquor store. Eugene Mahoney, lawyer for! State Liquor Store, defendant in a fair trade action filed here. questioned the constitutionality of the laws in his answer to the dis-! tillers' briefs.

Mahoney alleged that the South Dakota Fair Trade Law of 1939 is "unconstitutional and void for the i reason that it is repugnant to and in violation of the Constitution of the State of South Dakota" and also of the United States Constitution. His contention with respect to the Federal Trade Commission Act of last year (Public Law 542) was the KELO-TV slated test patterns again tonight and hoped to do some programing, Joe Floyd, president of Midcontinent Broadcasting said today. Sioux Falls' television station got a test pattern on the air at 8:13 o'clock last night. The pattern was on and off the air during the evening. The station didn't use full power.

Floyd said that "we should be all ready by Sunday to go into a full program schedule." He declared that "this evening we expect to have a test pattern between 6:30 and 7:30 and program as much as we can." Floyd said that again tonight the station may have to stop transmitting to permit further checks. Technicians today continued checking the equipment and tested the coaxial cable which connects the antenna with the transmitter. Workmen on the 500-foot tower which supports the antenna used a portable telephone for communication wtih the ground. Man From Parker Arrested in Crash A Parker man, H. W.

Eichel, was arrested for driving on the wrong side of the road following an acci Madison, S.D., May 20 Two late model automobiles were stolen at Chester, S.D., last night or early this morning and the thefts, authorities believe, may be connected with an oil station robbery at Rushmore, Monday night. Sheriff Norman J. McGillivray of Lake County said that a stolen car which was definitely the getaway car in the Rushmore job, was found abandoned near Flandreau in Moody County this morning. The license plates had been removed. Vehicles stolen at Chester belonged to Fred Spawn and Bob Brown, both of Chester.

Both were parked in front of the residences and the keys were in the Spawn car. Sheriff McGillivray said that it is possible one of the cars was stolen by the party who abandoned the vehicle at Flandreau. Deputy Sheriff George Hefner, Chester, reported the thefts to the Madison office at around 6 o'clock. McGillivray said the Spawn car was a blue 1949 Ford club coupe with license number 40-1358. The Brown car is a dark green 1951 Ford four-door bearing a license number of 40-3431.

same. Meantime, The State Liquor Store, 125 N. Main continued under a Federal Court temporary restraining order which prevents it from selling to fair trade brands of whiskeys at less than retail prices set by the distillers. John S. Murphy is the attorney for Seagram, Frankfort and Calvert America's favorite TV now 5 ways finer for '53 1 New automatic UHF-VHF tuner Advanced, built-in multichannel tuner gives you the finest reception possible.

It's automatid UHF ond VHF channels are on the same dial. (Optional, at extra cost.) 2 New, automatic "Magic Monitor" circuit system more sensitive, more efficient. Brings In the finest TV pictures possible and holds them at their finest. Steps up power; ties the best sound to the clearest picture ail automatically! Improved RCA "Deep Image" picture tube has micro-sharp electron beam plus a phosphor screen so superfine it's coated with billions of tiny crystals gives you ftne-grain, deep-image pictures. A New long-distance reception steps up picture per-" formance in far-out fringe areas.

Greatly increases sound sensitivity through the "Golden Throat" tone system. Distillers. The three separate suits charged the Sioux Falls store with cutting prices to the detriment of i distillers. The suits contended other retailers had signed fair trade agreements, but that the Sioux Falls store had not. Charles B.

Page is president of the store. 21 -inch Kerby Big screen performance with table model convenience. Cabinet is finished in shaded antique. Also available with (notching consolette tOitQ base, extra. Model 21T303.

New, wider range more stylet and finishes than ever before in RCA Victor historyl Mrs. B. Weaver Is Victim of Illness A long illness claimed the life of Mrs. Blanche Weaver at a local hospital this morning. Mrs.

Weaver, 66, had been a Sioux Falls resident since 1919. She had been living with a daughter, Mrs. Alvin Neuharth, 713 S. Walts since the death of her husband in 1935. Blanche Ethel Luten was born in Lee County, Jan.

21, 1887. She was married to Cyrus Weaver in Monmouth, 111., June 12, 1912. She was a member of the First Baptist Church. In addition to her daughter, she is survived by a son, Lt. Truman Weaver, in the Air Force in Phoenix; a brother, T.

J. Luten, Burlington, and seven grandchil dent miles southwest of Sioux Falls Tuesday afternoon. Highway Patrolman Jim Breen said Eichel was going north on a country road 15 miles west of Sioux Falls and 1M miles south of Highway 16 when he met a car driven by William F. Dewald, 2201 S. Main Ave.

Breen said Eichel was driving on the wrong side of the road. A road maintainer had smoothed that side of the road, Breen said, and Eichel was driving on the smooth side. The two cars met at a grade and Dewald was unable to get out of the way, Breen said. The cars crashed head-on aoing estimated damage of $500 to De-wald's car and $600 to Eichel's car. Eichel appeared today in Municipal Court and entered a plea of guilty to the charge.

He paid $20 of a $25 fine, plus $12.60 costs. A $5 suspension was allowed on condition the Parker man attend the next driver training institute in Sioux Fails, set for June 12. SERVICE AND INSTALLATION TJtumdpjciL QbWtL JL JBJL RED PRISONERS TO RAISE VEGETABLES Soul (JP) Communist prisoners of war will be raising their own food this spring and the 8th Army expects the prison camps to be relatively self-sufficient. Prisoners will raise Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, corn, barley, soybeans and red beans under the supervision- of armed Allied guards, 2910 S. MIN.

AVE. SIOUX FALLS Leonard N. Weinant, Dell Rapids, was found guilty of reckless driving. He received a $20 fine, $5 of which was suspended on his attending the Tuesday night traffic school. Police Patrolman Earl Westendorf was complaining witness in a court trial.

Richard James, Brookings, was dren. The body is at the Miller Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mt. Pleas- charged with operating a motor ant Cemetery, be growing that many of those announced as contemplated plastic body designs will wind up with sheet steel bodies. At the same time" other manufacturers reportedly are pushing plans to introduce a couple of small, lightweight makes, of the conventional type.

The demand for the smaller units appears to have been fairly well established. One of the anomalies of the car merchandising situation is that while price appears to be a major consideration in the demand for the lighter and smaller cars buyers in most instances appear to want most of the extra equipment offered with them at added cost. Generally this runs the cost of the smaller car up pretty close to that of the conventional size vehicle with only standard equipment. The sales experts insist that operating economy as well as price is a factor in the demand for the smaller vehicle. However it has been more or less a common practice for the car buyer to haggle about the price of his new car and the allowance on his old one and then spend an additional $500 or more on optional equipment.

New Varieties of Tomato Are Grown Man Gives Himself Gifts of Watches Lucerne, Switzerland (JF) Somewhere in the world there's man who will give himself another present this year, although he doesn't If you like Leer vemcie witn irauer wimuui turn-pensation, operating a motor vehicle with trailer without license plate, and operating a motor vehicle with trailer without flares. He pleaded not guilty to the first count, which was dismissed. To the other counts he entered a plea of guilty. On the second count he was fined $50 and assessed $12.60 costs. On the third he was fined $1.

He paid the costs. Both fines were suspended on condition the Brookings man pay some bills incurred following an accident Monday know what it will look like until he receives it. And he doesn't care what it will cost! chlitz love VOllli ingenious Swiss watchmaker, who i Ln 77 miles Anderson Serv north of the Holger Davis, Calif. (JP) New varieties of tomatoes are being produced here by heretofore difficult crossbreeding. This is being done at the University of California College of Agriculture by smearing a bit of plant growth hormone, called chlorophenoxyacetic acid (CPA), on the back of the flowers just before pollination time.

Geneticist Charles M. Rick declared one possibility of the technique was development pf a tomato resistant to many diseases which plague commercial varieties. He said the small fruited Peruvian tomato, highly disease resistant, might produce better tomatoes when crossed with present market types. a I A every year makes him a costly, handmade timepiece that is never duplicated. Six years ago the watchmaker received a letter which No harsh said: "I would like to place a standing order for one watch a year.

Each watch must be original in movement and design there must be no other watch in the world like it. When you complete each watch you must tear up the plans. You Just the kiss of the hops needn't tell me about each watch Many bacteria can survive being frozen in ice. in advance. I want each to come ice Station.

A wheel came off a trailer being towed by James, causing a load of metal junk to be strewn across the highway. William Weinzell, 509 N.JFrank-lin paid a $50 fine after changing his plea from innocent to guilty on an intoxication charge. Jerry Maher appeared for him. Delorez Drapeau, 1409 S. Minnesota was sentened to 30 days in jail, fined $100 and assessed $12.60 costs.

She pleaded guilty to a vagrancy complaint. Harmon Bowler, 523 S. Duluth was charged with being a fugitive from justice. His case was passed to Thursday, and he was ordered held under $2,000 bond. Bowler was recently arrested here upon request of Utah authorities.

He is wanted in Provo, Utah, on an auto theft charge. Police said his case has been referred to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Lewis W. Webster, 315 N. Minnesota and Ernest J.

Krohse, as an annual surprise. And never mind the cost." The latest watch required 18 SUPPLIES PARACHUTED TO FRENCH PRISONERS Hanoi, Indochina (JP) The Communist-led Vietminh consistently fail to answer pleas of the International Red Cross to permit the delivery of foodstuffs and medicines to captives held by the Vietminh but they're being delivered anyway. French planes, flying over prisoner of war camps in Vietminh-held territory, have just dropped another eight tons of badly needed supplies. Most medicines and foodstufTs were parachuted in North Viet Nam, around Yen Bay, Tuyen-Quang and Quang-Yen, and in the Thanh-Hoa area. 90 miles south of Hanoi.

French Union soldiers and held prisoners by the Vietminh long have been short of foods and medicines. The Vietminh are estimated to hold about 4,000 men from France and the French Union, and may have upwards of 20,000 yietnamese captives. months to make. It is a pocket model, with a Viking ship repro duced on the dial in platinum set 1322 COLORIZER PAINT COLORS IN ALL FINISHES with 57 diamonds. A platinum oar is suspended from each side ot the ship.

At the touch of a button, the oars flip up. The left oar slides up a scale indexed trom to iz to give the hour, and the other one ascends a scale marked 0 to 60 to record the minute. Rt. 3, were eacn nnea $-20. pieao-'i ing guilty to speeding.

In action $5 was suspended on tne next drivers school. ft ft Dr. John V. Madison discussed 216 W. 7TH ST.

DIAL 4-4969, We Give Gold Bond Stamps The Rio Grande is 1,800 miles long. problems of the public schools and compared public and private schools at the Tuesday meeting of the Sertoma Club. Ed Gerloff also VV' zk'qp tfSrS This dry and mellow beer this beer of matchless flavor is the world's largest WiS'S pPS seller. Year after year more bottles and cans Iff ii FJffJy of Schlitz are bought millions more $JP fX' than of any other beer. This popularity i is the result of the most conclusive taste -'00' dtest in beer history.

reported on discussions concerning impending school bond issues at a recent meeting of representatives from all local service and civic or TAFT IN HOSPITAL WITH PAINFUL HIP Washington, May 20 (JP) Sen. Tatf of Ohio, the Senate Republican leader, entered Walter Reed Medical Center today for an X-ray and treatment of a hip that has been causing him pain. Office aides said the hip had been bothering him recently and that he had visited the hospital several times for treatment. They said he expects to be in the hospital several days. ganizations at Washington High A.

School. Ardeen Foss was program chairman. Guests were Al Roth-lisderber, New York, and R. A. Beck, Sioux Falls.

PRETTY FACE is coming to SIOUX FALLS NEW HAVEN RECALLS BATTLE EACH YEAR New Haven, Conn. (JP) This city is perhaps the only place in the country which annually recalls the battle of Seicheprey, the first major land engagement involving United State troops in World War Seven platoons in a machine gun battalion of the 102nd (Yankee) division, consisting chiefly of New Haven men, were surrounded by Germans near Siecheprey, France. A counter-attack rescued them after 80 had been killed, 150 taken pris CHINESE NATIONALIST WANT PACIFIC ISLANDS Taipeh, Formosa (JP) Chiang Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalists apparently hope that Okinawa and the rest of the Ryukyus, strategic Pacific islands between Formosa and Japan, one day will come back to Chinese rule. Evidence of this was provided by a letter sent to Foreign Minister George Yeh by the control Yuan, Free China's highest watchdog body. The letter, inspired by press reports that Japan intended to discuss with the United States the "problem of the Ryukyus," asked Yeh to pay close attention to the situation.

The Nationalists all along have claimed the Ryukhus were part of the Chinese empire before they were taken by Japan, Schlitz is available in quart bottles, 12-ounce bottles and cans. Also in 24-Pak and handy 6-Pak cartons of cans and "one-way" bottles that require no deposit. The Beer that Made Milwaukee Famous SOON oners and 400 wounded. Each year, on the anniversary of the battle, 1953 Jo. Schliu Brewing Company.

Milwaukee. Wit, city officials take part in a cere mony on New Haven green..

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Pages Available:
1,255,758
Years Available:
1886-2024