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Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 2

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Argus-Leaderi
Location:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

a Data From NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, NOAA, U.S. Dept. of Commerce COLD a Rein 30 Showers Snow FORECAST 40 Flurries Figures Shew Low Temperatures Expected 40 50. Until Tuesday Morning leelated Precipitation Not Indicated- Consult Local Forecast Weather Scope Data by National Weather Service a and The Associated Press SIOUX FALLS AREA cloudy with light variable winds and warmer Monday night. Lows 15 to 20.

Partly cloudy and a little warmer Tuesday with highs in the low and mid 40s. SOUTH DAKOTA Fair to partly cloudy and warmer Monday with high in low 30s extreme northeast, upper 40s extreme southwest, Partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday. Lows 'Mond a night teens northeast, 20s southwest. Highs Tuesday lower 30s mid 40s northeast, mid 40s to low 50s southwest. MINNESOTA Fair to partly cloudy with gradual warming through Tuesday.

Highs Monday 15-25 north, Lows Monday night 0-10 above north, 8-18 south. Highs Tuesday 20s north, mid 30s south. IOWA Increasing cloudiness Monday with highs 30 to 35 west and in the 20s east. Clearing Monday night with lows in the 20s west and teens east. Partly.

cloudy and warmer Tuesday with highs mostly in the 30s. Bob Carleton DeMolay Chapter Installs Officers Bob Carleton was installed as master councilor of Liberty Chapter, Order of DeMolay, in ceremonies Sunday at the Masonic Temple. Dan Duba was installed as senior councilor and Roger Backhaus as junior councilor. Installing officers were Randy Merle Artus Duba, as master senior councilor; Raymond Backhaus, junior councilor; Harry J. Carleton chaplain, and Richard Getting, marshal.

Tom Luke was organist, Frank P. Gibbs, chapter adviser, conferred representative DeMolay awards upon Roger Backhaus, Mike Curtis and Myron Semrau. He conferred leadership correspondence awards upon Bob Carleton and Craig Shotwell. A reception followed the ceremony. Cease-Fire Continued from Page 1 had been killed and 70 wounded since early Monday when the communist troops launched a heavy barrage after encircling the marines by using NATION'S WEATHER Sunny, warm weather is forecast for Monday for most of the country west of the Mississippi.

Cold weather is expected from the Great Lakes to the South Atlantic coastal areas. Showers are forecast in the West and snowflurries for the Great Lakes. (AP Wirephoto Map). TEMPERATURES Sioux Falls Monday Sunday a.m. 6 p.m.

20 a.m. 9 9 a.m. Midnight 3 Noon p.m. 30 Sunset 5:34 Sunrise 7:47 Relative Humidity Precipitation: None the last 24 hours. Total for, the year to to date: date: .58 .43.

inches. Noryear South Dakota Sioux Falls 23 13 Watertown 24 10 Pierre 27 16 Philip 28 15 Lemmon 25 17 Mobridge 26 14 Aberdeen 27 16 Pickstown 25 13 Rapid City 32 16 Huron 25 16 City Studies Auditorium Cleanup Bids The City Commission Monday received bids for cleaning and painting the Coliseum Auditorium which received smoke damage when the adjacent Annex was destroyed by fire on Jan, 5. Bids referred for study are as follows: Painting--Charles Roe Painting, $12,170, and Robert D. 01- son Painting Service, $18,550. Cleaning of walls, floors, ceilings and fixtures Servicemaster, $14,689.

aiSleaning fabric seats Servicemaster, and $1,453, and Vallet Cleaners; 689. Cleaning stage curtains and draperies $3,613. Servicemaster reported it would reduce its offer 5 per cent if it is awarded both proposals where the company submitted bids. as shields for their movement. Fifty-five miles northwest of Saigon, government troops cleared Tay Ninh of Communist forces that had held the southern precincts of the provincial capital for three days, but fighting continued along Highway: between the city and Saigon.

South Vietnamese aircraft, tanks and armored personnel carriers were blasting at VietCong and North Vietnamese forces in fortified positions in treelines along the highway near Trang Bang, 30 miles from Saigon. MILLER Mineral Home Singe 1902 MRS. DALE A. (KATHERINE) HERRICK. 1204 Gordon Dr.

Rev. Edward Novak will officiate at the service 1:30 P.M. Tuesday in the First Lutheran Church 12th Dakota. Interment will be in the Hills of Rest. MRS.

A.K. (JOSEPHINE) BAILEY 1208 N. Lincoln Ave. The funeral mass will be 2 P.M. Tuesday in St.

Joseph's Cathedral Chapel. Interment will be in Mt. Pleasant cemetery. Scriptures services will be conducted 7:30 P.M. Monday in Millers Chapel: Relatives friends and invited to attend.

MR. JOHN FLETCHER COWLEY Brandon The service is scheduled for 3 P.M. Tuesday in Millers Chapel with Rev. Don Niedringhaus of Brandon Lutheran: Church officiating. Interment will be in the Hills of Rest.

MRS. ANNA STOCKWELL Garretson Manor Rev. Walter Gullixson will conduct the service 1:30 P.M. Wedriesday in the Bethel Lutheran Church 20th Covell. Interment will be in the Hills of Rest.

MR. ALFRED THOMPSON 722 S. Glendale Ave. Arrangements are pending. 13th and Main Ave.

DEATHS Sioux Falls Mrs. Anna Stockwell Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Bethel Lutheran Church for Mrs. Anna Stockwell, 83, Garretson, who died Saturday in a local hospital. Anna Hass was born July 17, 1889, 3, at Gladbrook, Iowa.

When she was 11 she moved with her family to Pipestone, and when she was 17 they moved to Murdock, Minn. She married Henry J. Stockwell, Dec. 16, 1908 at (Murdock, and in 1910 they moved to a farm east of Sioux Falls. They moved to a farm near Garretson in 1940.

She was preceded, in death by her husband She moved to Sioux Falls in 1947 and recently had been living in a Garretson nursing home. Surviors include four sons, Harry, Carrelsoni, Reuben, Arlington; Ramona, and Rex, Lennox; two daughters, Mrs. Henry Meester and Mrs. Harvey Onken, both of Sioux Falls; three sisters, Mrs. Fred Peterson, Mrs.

John Brady and Mrs. Lillie Fish, all of Sioux Falls, 14 grandchildren and eight great -grandchildren. (Miller) Frank J. Burns Funeral Mass will be celebrated at 2 p.m. Tuesday at St.

Mary's Church for Frank J. Burns, 20, of 1729 S. Wayland who was dead arrival at a local hospital Saturday. Results of an autopsy to determine the cause of death are not yet known. A parish rosary will be at 8:30 p.m.

Monday at the Barnett Funeral Home. Interment will be in the Black Hills National Cemetery. Mr. Burns was a member of the rock group, "The Cascades." He previously attended the University of South Dakota at Vermillion. Mrs.

Dale Herrick Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the First Lutheran Church for Mrs. Dale Herrick, 56, of 1204 Gordon Drive, who died Friday at a Sioux Falls hospital. Kathrine Thompson was born Oct. 9, 1916, in Moody County.

She was married to Dale A. Herrick July 21, 1935, in Flandreau. She 'had lived in the Flandreau area until they moved to Sioux Falls in 1946. Survivors include the widower; two sons, Duane, Marshall, and David, Sioux Falls; a daughter, Mrs. Marvin Gamberg, Muncie, eight grandchildren; a brother, Clifford, Tucson, and two sisters, Mrs.

Norman Stordahl, Sioux Falls, and Mrs. Robert Westover, Egan. (Miller) Alfred Thompson Alfred Thompson, 75, of 722 S. Glendale died Monday morning in a local hospital. (Miller) Mrs.

Albert Schraeder Mrs. Albert Schraeder, 68, formerly of 1201 N. Main died Sunday night at the Odd Fellows Nursing Home in Dell Rapids. (George Boom) Frank Leichtman Funeral services are set for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Barnett Funeral Home for Frank Leichtman, 83, Rt.

4, who died Saturday at a local nursing home. He is survived by two brothers, Phillip and Leo, both of Sioux Falls, and a sister, Mrs. John Sweep, Sioux Falls, Mrs. Kathryn Klaser A Requiem Mass will be cele- FOR RENT TV, REFRIGERATOR, WASHERS and RANGES may apply on purchase of, a new or used appliance. FEAY'S FRIENDLY SERVICE 1622 W.

12th 338-3961 2 Sioux Falis Argus-Leader Jan. 29, 1973 For mail delivery, Jan. 30, 1973 Mrs. Hertha Jerman Funeral Home in Salem. Clifford H.

Nelson CANISTOTA, S.D. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the United Church of Canistota for Mrs. Hertha Jerman, 88, who died Sunday in a Sioux Falls nursing home, Hertha Kehrberg was born Sept. 17, 1884, in Iowa.

She was married to George G. Jerman on Feb. 22, 1905, at Kingsley, Iowa. The couple farmed in Iowa and later moved to South Dakota and farmed in the Salem and Canistota areas. In 1947 they moved into Canistota.

After her husband's death in Mrs. Jerman continued to live in Canistota until eight years ago when she moved to the Good Samaritan Village in Sioux Falls. Survivors include six daughters, Mrs. Walter Townsend, Canistota; Mrs. Earl Douglas, Newton, Mrs.

Morris Parry and Mrs. Carl Kostboth, both of Sioux Falls; Marguarite Stratton, Olympia, and Mrs. Fern Kasten, Parker; two sons, Parker, and Martin, Canistota; two brothHers, Ferdinand, Kingsley, and Herman, Otterbein, and number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A prayer service will be at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Kinzley FLANDREAU, S.D.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the United Methodist Church for Clifford H. Nelson, 59, who died Saturday at a Flandreau hospital of an apparent heart attack. Mr. Nelson was born March 15, 1913, in Moody County.

He lived his entire life on the farm where he was born. He married Gladys Arms May 9, 1935. Survivors include the widow; two sons, LeRoy Brookings, and Dwaine, Colorado Springs, a brother, James, Salem; a sister, Mrs. Rolland Wiley, Salem, and six grandchildren. (Thomas) Nellie Mae Kirby BRADLEY, S.D.

Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Haugland FuMae Kirby, 80, Bradley, neral Home in Clark for died Saturday at a Watertown hospital. Nellie Mae Gates was born Jan. 21, 1893, at Broken Bow, Neb. She moved to the Bradley community in 1912 and was married to Emmett J.

Kirby in Clark Dec. 15, 1914. They farmed in that area until retiring in 1956. She was preceded in death by her husband in 1969. Survivors include three sons, Robert, Watertown; Merritt, Sioux Falls, and James, Burnsville, three daughters, Mrs.

Audrey Grigg, Portland, Mrs. Laurence Gebur, Bradley, and Mrs. Chester Wilkerson, Lebanon, four sisters, Mrs. Florence Jones, Minneapolis; Mrs. Anne Jones, Seres, Mrs.

Beatrice Hathaway, Coon Rapids, and Mrs. Gordon Hathaway, Great View, Washington, 14 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Frank Boyd PIPESTONE, Minn, Funeral services were held Monday at 1 p.m. for Mrs.

Frank Boyd, 40, Pipestone, who died Saturday, at her home. Ann Wesson was born April 20, 1922, in San Mateo, Calif. As a girl, she moved to Westfield, where she graduated from high school. She attended the Faulkner School of Nursing. She was married to Dr.

Frank Boyd in New Hampshire July 6, 1934. They lived for one year in Boston then moved to Jasper, for three years before moving to Pipestone. She is survived by the widower; six children, Kathy, Elizabeth, Jo Anna, Susan, Wil(liam and John, all at home; the mother, Mrs. Margaret Wesson, Southington, a brother, William, South Hadley, and a sister, Mrs. Charles Gorham, Cheshire, Conn.

(Tucker's) Jens Erie LAKE PRESTON, S.D Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the United Methodist Church for Jens Erie, 87, who died Sunday at a Lake Preston nursing home, Mr. Erie was born Oct. 2, 1885, in Norway. He married the former Clara Larson and the couple farmed in the Lake Preston area until retirement.

Survivors include the widow; a daughter, Mrs. Harold sen, Rapid City; a son, Leonard, Phoenix, Ariz; five grand-er; children; two great-grandchildren, and three sisters. (Johnson-Henry) Agnew Starts On 7-Nation Asian Tour ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE, Md. (AP) Vice President Spiro T. Agnew departed Sunday for Saigon on a sevennation Asian tour just 15 hours after the start of the Vietnam Agnew's press secretary, J.

cease fire. Marsh Thompson, said the trip is intended partly to assure these countries "we're not abandoning our friends." He said the trip is designed also to display "the interest we have in doing everything we can to see that those countries enjoy freedom and self-determi-ling nation." Agnew's first visit will be to South Vietnam. Other countries he will visit, in order, will be Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia. Budget Continued from Page 1 alone. The cooperation of Congress in controlling total spending is absolutely essential." He added: "Should the Congress cause the total budgeted outlays to be exceeded, it would tives inescapably of face the alternahigher taxes, higher terest rates, renewed inflation, or all three.

I oppose these alternatives; with a firm rein on spending, none of them is necessary." With apparent intent to set cost-cutting example, Nixon announced a shakeup of his executive. office under which five its agencies will be abolished moved elsewhere and its staff will be cut from the present 250 to 1,686 in 1974. The five are the OE0, the Office of Science and Technology, of Affairs. the Office of Emergency, Preparedness and National Aeronautics and Space Council. This was the budget's impact on some major segments government: DEFENSE Nixon said the budget "assures us of sufficient strength to preserve our security and to continue as a major force for peace," even without relying on a peacetime draft.

The budget will permit continued development of the Trident sea-based ballistic-missile system and the B1 advanced manned strategic bomber, and begin development of a strategic submarinelaunched cruise missile. SPACE Instead of the expected cuts, the space program won a $74- million increase in funds for 1974, to a total of $3.133 billion. The reusable space shuttle will get $475 million instead of the $200 million. present, a three-man experimental space station, also is being pushed forward. It will test man's ability to live and work in space for up to 56 days.

HEALTH The President invited a tussle with Congress by calling for an end to federal hospital construction under the program, but his budget Burton for an over increase of 14 per cent in outlays for health programs, mostly on Medicare and Medicaid. A $91-million increase. in funds for cancer research and $28 million more for heart research progroms favored by Nixon-are requested. But other research programs of the National Institutes of Health would be decreased or held even. Education Nixon proposed a special revenue sharing program to combine a number of education programs, and called for a cutback in funds under the '1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

A deep cut was proposed in Elsewhere Mrs. Magdalena D. Amato Thursday in Rockford, for Mrs. Magdalena D. Amato, 53, Rockford, formerly of Salem, who died Jan.

after a lengthy illness. Magdalena Teske was born Jan. 1, 1920, in Salem. S.D., where she attended school. She attended the Methodist Schocl of Nursing in Mitchell, S.D., graduating in 1943.

was married to Paul J. Amato" in St. Paul June 28, 1944. She is survived by the widowfive children; her father, Daniel Teske, Sioux Falls; five brothers; one sister and two grandchildren. O'CONNOR PRINTERS 3600 South Duluth Sioux Falls, S.

D. Phone 605-336-2195 The High Noon Optimists sponsored Tri Star Basketball for Boys 8 to 13 Shoot, pass and dribble contest for each age group Prizes for all Feb. 13 8:00 am to 1:00 pm Prizes for all Whittier Jr. High and Augustana College gyms. Seven State Families Told Sons, Husbands Coming Home brated at 9 a.m.

Tuesday at St. Joseph's Cathedral for Mrs. Kathryn Klaser, 79, of 1227 N. Minnesota who died Sunday at a local hospital. Catholic Daughters will recite a rosary at 7 p.m.

Monday at the George Boom Funeral Home to be followed by a parish scripture service at 7:30. Kathryn Lynch was born June 25, 1893, in Linn County, Iowa. She moved to Sioux Falls as a child and lived here until her death. She married Matthjus Klaser Nov. 3, 1019, at Sioux City.

Her husband ad preceded her in death in 1971. Survivors include two grandchildren and two great-grand-1955 children. Area Myrtle Cue PIPESTONE, Minn. -Funer. al services will be held Tuesday at 10 a.m.

at Tucker's Funeral Home for Myrtle Cue, 74, Pipestone, who died Saturday in a local hospital. She was porn Aug. 16, 1886, in Wisconsin, At an early age, she moved to Aitkin, Minn. 1920, she moved to Pipestone where she worked as a typesetter for the Pipestone County Star until her retirement. Her only survivors are a number of cousins.

Richard C. Krueger MADISON, S.D. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the West Center Baptist Church for Richard C. Krueger, 72, Madison, who died Sunday at a Madison hospital.

Mr Krueger was born Dec. 7, 1900, at West Union, Iowa. He spent most of his life in Madison and married Lydia Zielke there on Feb. 25, 1925. Survivors include the widow; three daughters, Mrs.

Charles, Brown, Salem, Mrs. Cecil Richter, Onida, and Mrs. Gerald Palli, Ramona; two sisters, Mrs. Oscar Mueller, Hot Springs, and Mrs. Clara Blat-: rewick, Sioux Falls, and 11 grandchildren (Weiland) A.

M. Godbey PIPESTONE, Minn. A. M. Godbey, 85, Pipestone, Monday in a Pipestone hospital.

(Tucker's) Letha Hagen CANTON, SO. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Anderson Funeral (Home for Letha Hagen, 68, who died suddenly at her home Sunday. Letha Isabelle Rhead was born Sept. 6, 1904.

She was married to Thomas Hagen. Until this past year she had been employed at the Canton-Inwood Hospital. Survivors include a son, Wayne, Sioux Falls; daughter, Mrs. Robert Ahlers, Salem; two brothers, Truman Rhead, Canton, and Vernon Rhead, Sioux Falls; a sister, Mrs. Amber Kent, Sioux City, Iowa, and nine grandchildren.

Cornelia Slater MADISON, S.D. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Weiland Funeral Chapel in Madison and at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Scandia Lutheran Church in Centerville for Cornelia Slater, 88, Madison, who died Sunday in (Madison.

Cornelia Peterson was born in Zumbrota, May 7, She married Gilbert Slater, in Sioux March 12, 1913. He died 1942. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Don Kappel, Madison; two grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Hans Owren, Mrs.

Sigvold Knudson and Mrs. Bert Harmon, all of Centerville, and Mrs. Erick Anderson, McIntosh, and a brother, Ellsworth Peterson, Centerville. Interment will be in the Riverview Cemetery at Centerville. Mrs.

H. J. Vahl EDGERTON, Funera: services will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the First Chris tian Reformed Church for Mrs. H.

J. Vahl, 76, who died Monday at a hospital in Pipestone. Gertrude Van Bruggen was born May 15, 1896, in The Netherlands. She came to the U.S. with her parents in 1906, and the family settled in North Dakota.

On Feb. 24, 1920, she was married to Henry Vahl in Valley City, N.D. The couple lived in the Colton vicinity until September 1972 when they moved to the Edgebrook Rest Home. Mr. Vahl died in December of 1972.

Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Conrad Intveld, Brookings, a son, Harold, Edgerton; 10 grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Axel Formo, Litchville, N.D., and a brother, Gerrit, Redlands, Calif. (Tucker's) Matthew Henson, a black member of Admiral Peary's expedition, placed the American flag at the North Pole in 1909. E-Z-KARE YOUR WASH 'N WEAR ONLY VALLET CLEANERS SOUTHGATE WESTSIDE 36th Minn.

11th Prairie Seven South Dakota families have been told their sons and husbands are. coming home from Vietnam. They were given the welcome. news by various branches of the service Saturday after the North Vietnamese released a list of prisoners of war. But while these families rejoiced, the uncertainty for othcontinued.

Force Capt. Charles Lane of Aberdeen was shot down over North Vietnam in 1967. He is still listed as missin action. His wife said she recognized him in a photograph of prisoners in 1970, but later that year she had been advised by a peace group that he had died in a prison camp. No official word has come, however, from either the Pentagon or the North Vietnamese.

The Air Force told Mrs. Lane Saturday night that her husband would continue to be listed as missing pending an investigation. Lane's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Johnson of rural Volin, say they haven't given up hope that he is alive.

The POWs from South Dakota who will be coming home are: -Air Force Lt. Leo T. Thorsness of Sioux Falls. -Air Force Capt. Ronald M.

Lebert, whose parents live in Watertown. -Air Force Capt. Jerome Heeren of Brockings, -Navy Lt. Cmdr. Dale V.

Raebel, whose parents live in Milbank. -Air Force Lt. Col. Willis Forby, whose parents live in Onaka. -Navy Lt.

Cmdr. Richard Jury Awards No Damages For Omission A suit for damages claimed because the telephone company failed to include business advertising in its directory was denied by a jury in Circuit Court. The action was brought by (Leonard A. Weber, doing busi-ling ness as Midwest Furnace Cleanagainst Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. The complaint alleged the company was negligent when it failed to include plaintiff's new number and advertising in the 1971 directory.

Damage totaling $10,000 was asked. The jury, composed of six men and six women, decided that the plaintiff failed to prove that the omission constituted negligence, Attorneys were Richard Sabers and Russ Kading for the plaintiff and Gayle Fisher for defendant. Judge Wayne W. Christensen presided. special aid for schools in areas where federal installations add education costs--the "federally impacted areas." The budget called for $131 million the program, as against $467.5 million this year.

Welfare In tacitly conceding defeat for Nixon's welfare-reform plans, the budget says Washington instead will help states remove ineligibles from the welfare rolls and eliminate inequities in the system, A cutback of $1.2 billion state-federal public-assistance programs, is 1 billion, anticipated, Most of for the decline will result from the transfer of aged, blind and disabled beneficiaries to a newly federalized program in the Social Security system next Jan. Want Ads Get Results Dial 336-1130 Ratzlaff, whose parents live in Aberdeen. -Marine Capt. Lawrence Freise, whose parents live in Huron. Mrs.

Thorsness says she hasn't yet planned any celebrations for her husband. She's waiting for more concrete details from the Air Force on when he'll be released. But there will be celebrations, she says. Heeren's mother, Mrs. Carolyn Heeren, says she can't yet believe her son is coming home.

But she said, "It's such a wonderful feeling. She added: "I'm not making any special plans for his return. I'm just so happy we'll have a chance to be together again." Mrs. Ellis Forby of Onaka said she was thrilled when the Air Force called her Saturday night to report that her son was coming home. Forby has a wife and two daughters who now live in Phoenix, Ariz.

Mrs, Forby said the family has had only a couple of letters since her son was shot down in 1965. Commission Seeks Bids, Sets Hearings The City Commission Monday set Feb. 12 for receiving for various purposes. Bids are sought for a year's supply, Asphalt and following: road oil Manhole covers frames and catch basin grates and frames. Pipe for the Sewer Department.

On Feb. 20 a hearing will held on a special assessment curb and gutter and sidewalks on Main Avenue from street within the Downtown ban Renewal District. A hearing will be held Feb, on a special assessment for gutter on the east side Judy Avenue from 22nd to streets. Commissioners gave second reading to an ordinance $10,000 to be for chase of the Rock Island northwest of 26th Street Southeastern Drive and 10 res of abandoned right-of-way. The tract begins near Street on the west side of river and extends to the side of the river for nearly half mile beyond 26th The bridge spanning the Sioux River will be for trian passage.

The land will converted for park usage will be available for hiking, cycling, nature study and trail usage. Commissioners awarded contracts to American Cast Pipe for Water Department valves. The bids accepted mechanical joint valves, 421, and butterfly valves, Kearns Machinery Co. awarded a $2,644 contract supply a trash pump for Sewer Department. An application for rezoning from RS2 to RA1 residential E.

20th Street and Sycamore (Drive has been withdrawn. new application for rezoning west of Sycamore Drive tween 20th and 21st streets been submitted and referred the Planning Commission. Travel requests were proved for Lt. Max Madsen Eugene Horst a venile officers trafattend seminar at Minneapolis. Advertisement are you WEIGHTY? New water pill, WEIGHT-LET, guarantees to lose excess body fluids or money Gentle, fast, relieves pressure, Feel better! IN MEMORY MRS.

MATT (KATHRYN) KLASER 1227 N. Minnesota Ave. The Catholic Daughters Rosary at 7:00 p.m. followed by the Parish Scripture Service at 7:30 p.m. will be recited Monday night at the George Boom Funeral Home.

Requiem 1 Mass will be offered 9:00 a.m. Tuesday at St. Joseph Cathedral. MRS. ALBERT (EDNA) SCHRAEDER Formerly 1201 N.

Main Ave. Odd Fellows Home, Dell Rapids, S. D. Arrangements pending. Admiral Color Admiral.

The Model SPORTSTER 18T130 18" (diag. meas.) Portable Color Go broke! for Take color home without this going Admiral for $28995 color portable. Compact cabinet. CART AVAILABLE FEAY'S SERVICE FRIENDLY 1622 W. 12th Phone 338-3961 bids and be for 10th Ur- 20 curb of 26th allowpur- bridge and ac- 19th the east oneStreet.

Big pedesbe and biother two Iron were $9,863. was to the at A behas to apand ju-.

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