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

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Argus-Leaderi
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Sioux Falls, South Dakota
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2
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P.M. EST Sept. 17 from U.S. WEATHER BUREAU 72 70 Ares 70 Shewers STATIONARY High Temperatures MIL FORECAST For Daytime Sunday NATION'S WEATHER Weather Scope Data by U.S. Weather Bureau and The Associated Press FORECASTS SOUTH DAKOTA Mostly fair Sunday through Monday with chance of some cloudiness with isolated thundershowers extreme west late Monday.

Warmer Sunday and a little warmer Sunday night and Monday. Highs Sunday 72 to 80. MINNESOTA Mostly fair with mild temperatures Sunday through Monday. Highs Sunday 68 to 74. IOWA Partly cloudy Sunday and Sunday night Fair to partly cloudy Monday.

A few scattered showers south Sunday and in extreme south Sunday night. Little change in temperatures. Highs Sunday in 605. Around World (Continued from page 1) American military build-up in Thailand. Mansfield said in an interview he had little official knowledge of U.S.

military operations in the little country bordering Viet Nam. But he said he accepted as credible news reports that two new large military bases were under construction there. "In view of the present conditions, as they actually exist, there probably is a need for these bases," he said. Invited to Run ST. LOUIS, Mo.

(AP) -Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said in a taped interview that President Johnson has invited him to be his running mate in 1968, but Humphrey added that Johnson "is still at liberty to change his mind." Humphrey said he would like to be vice president again, but that whether he will be the 1968 candidate is up to the President. Curb Red Guards HONG KONG (AP) Red Chinese army troops have moved into Canton to curb a violent group of youthful Red Guards reported to have mistreated the aged and infirm in the drive to forge a new China, travelers from Communist China reported Saturday. Signs from Peking, however, were that the purge of so-called rightists from the Chinese Communist party continued, with indications that new might roll from the top echelons. Nuclear Sub Launched GROTON, Conn.

(AP) The Navy's 24th nuclear attack submarine, with the "LBJ" brand of President Johnson on her keel, was launched Saturday. The 292-foot Pargo bears the same name as a World War 1I submarine that made nine patrols in the Pacific on June Sioux Falls Argus Leader A Newspaper for the Home 200 S. Minn. Sioux Falls, S.D 57102 Vol. 81 No.

260 Published afternoons and Sunday mornIngs by the Sioux Argus-Leader division of Speidel Newspapers national organization promoting through the publication of progressive papers the best interests of the community and the home William H. Leopard, publisher Anson Yeager, executive editor F. C. Christopherson, John A. Kennedy, contributing editors W.

T. Haggor, comptroller Member Audit Bureau of Circulations LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN SOUTH DAKOTA CITY AND COUNTY NEWSPAPER. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Evenings and Sundays. Seven Issues In South Dakota. Minnesota, lowa and Nebraska: Year $17.00 40 Months 5.00 9.00 Year $24.00 OUTSIDE THE FOUR STATES, 6 Months 13.00 3 Months 7.00 SIOUX FALLS CITY HOME DELIVERY By carrier evenings and Sundays per week The Associated Press is entitled exciusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this news paper as well as all Associated Press news dispatches.

All rights of republi cation of special dispatches are also reserved. Second class postage paid at Sioux Falls South Dakota. Rain is expected Sunday in the south Atlantic coast to middle Mississippi Valley, a- long the west Gulf Coast, in the northern Rockies to the Pacific Northwest. It'll be cooler along the south Atlantic coast and Pacific Northwest. Warmer weather is expected over the plains and northern Rockies and seasonable elsewhere.

(AP Photofax) Sioux Falls TEMPERATURES Yesterday Today 6 p.m. 60 Sunrise 6:09 55 Sunset 6:32 12 midnight 52 Total precipitation for year, 18.30; normal precipitation, 21.36; maximum temperature for 24-hour period 12 midnight, 63; minimum, 48. National The WEATHER ELSEWHERE By THE ASSOCIATED PRSS High Low Pr. Albany, cloudy 74 38 Albuquerque, clear 84 50 Atlanta, cloudy 63 60 .13 Bismarck, clear 71 40 Boise, clear 92 57 Boston, cloudy 71 51 Buffalo, cloudy 72 47 Chicago, cloudy 73 52 Cincinnati, cloudy 80 50 Cleveland, clear. 72 40 Denver, clear 73 47 Des Moines, cloudy 69 49 Detroit, cloudy 73 42 Fairbanks, cloudy 63 37 Fort Worth, cloudy 75 66 Helena, cloudy ..82 40 Honolulu, clear 91 75 Indianapolis, cloudy 76 49 Jacksonville, cloudy 85 71 Juneau, rain 53 43 .08 Kansas City, cloudy 74 58 Los Angeles, clear 92 71 Louisville, clear 76 52 Memphis, cloudy 79 51 Miami, cloudy 86 76 .90 Milwaukee, cloudy 69 47 clear 72 51 New Orleans, rain 85 72 .26 New York, cloudy 75 52 Okla.

City, clear 69 63 .05 Omaha, cloudy 59 48 .27 Philadelphia, cloudy 75 44 Phoenix, clear 95 71 Pittsburgh, clear 73 42 Ptlnd, clear 71. 45 Ptind, rain 73 58 .02 Rapid City, cloudy 63 48 Richmond, clear 75 40 St. Salt Lk. Louis, City, cloudy clear 74 83 45 48 San Diego, clear 84 67 San cloudy 75 57 Seattle, rain 66 57 Tampa, cloudy 88 76 Washington, cloudy 76 49 Winnipeg, cloudy 74 40 (T-Trace) 1964, that President John- son came to Groton to chalk his initials on the Pargo's keel. Shipyard workers later welded the initials.

Giant Question The Giant Question submarine, VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI came home from vacation Saturday to tackle an intensive round of decision making, starting with Viet Nam and the giant question of contraception for Roman Catholics. The first item is an encyclical to be issued Monday dedicating October as a month of special prayers by the world's half Catholics for an end to the Viet Nam war. The Vatican said it would be a papal document "of notable importance." It is the fourth encyclinical of his pontificate. Rematch Likely WASHINGTON (AP) Winners and losers in the Senate struggle over President Johnson's open housing-civil bill agree that a rematch is like. ly next year.

At the moment, neither side is ready to forecast the outcome. But both acknowledge that the current engagement probably will end Monday when a second bid to shut off debate and force action is expected to fall short of the two-thirds vote it needs. CANCELS TRIP LONDON (AP) American evangelist Billy Graham, who is in London for followup meetings of his summer Greater London Crusade, has canceled a trip to Scotland on medical advice. Dr. T.

W. Wilson said Graham began to feel ill before leaving New York last Wednesday. MiLLER Home Since 1902 MR. GLEN HERSRUD, Hopkins, Minn. Service Pending.

Charles Schrover, Director. MRS. ARTHUR (CHRISTINE) NEUHARTH 1724 South Van Eps Ave. Rev. Stanley Mueller of the Asbury Methodist Church will officiate at the service 1:30 P.

Tuesday in the Asbury Methodist Church. Interment will be in the Hills of Rest Cemetery. Roal E. Eidsness. Director, everlasting kindness will the Lord have mercy on thee.

Isa. 54,8. 13th and Main Ave. Sioux Falls Sept. 18, 1966 SECTION A DEATHS Sioux Falls GLENN G.

HERSRUD Funeral services for Glenn G. Hersrud, 30, Hopkins, will be held at Zion Lutheran Church in Sioux Falls at 2 p.m. Tuesday. Mr. Hersrud, employed by the Gaffin Equipment Hopkins, died in a St.

Louis Park, hospital Saturday, of injuries received Thursday while loading farm machinery. Mr. Hersrud was born Nov. 23, 1935, at Hetland. He grew up in the Beresford area and attended school there.

He was married to Betty Lou Loger June 15, 1963, in Sioux Falls, and they moved to Hopkins in January of this year. Survivors include: the widow; two daughters, Cheryl Kay and Sheila Jean, both at home; three sisters, Mrs. Verlo Mortinson of Sioux Falls, Mrs. Don Carnicle of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Mrs. Walter Jonnes Hudson; two brothers, Roger of Colman and Duane of Sioux Falls; his father, Gerhard Hersrud of Beresford, and his mother, Mrs.

Foster Robinson, Fond du Lac, Wis. (Miller) WALTER B. GROGAN Requiem Mass for Walter B. Grogan, 48, of 802 W. 3rd will be said at 10:30 a.m.

Monday at St. Joseph's Cathedral. Parish rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. and Catholic Daughters of America rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Sunday at Barnett Funeral Home.

Mr. Grogan died of a heart attack Friday afternoon. MRS. SAM CORNELIUS Requiem Mass will be said at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at St.

Joseph's Cathedral for Mrs. Sam Cornelius, 63, of 732 S. 2nd Ave. She died at a local hospital Saturday morning. Parish rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m.

Monday at Barnett Funeral Home and Catholic Daughters of America rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Lorraine Castle was born July 23, 1903, in Fairview. She was married to Sam Cornelius in 1929 at Larchwood, Iowa. They moved from St. Peter, to Sioux Falls in 1946.

She is survived by: the widower; eight sisters, Mrs. Russell Brandts of Carter Lake, Iowa, Sister Mary Ernestine, RSM, of Douglastown, N.Y., and Mrs. Lester Brown, Mrs. Margurite Adams, Mrs. Eleanor Lewis, Generva Castle, Mrs.

Catherine Devaney and Mrs. Roland Nelson, all of Sioux Falls, and three brothers, George of Sioux Falls, James of Minneapolis, and John of Jamestown, N.D. Area ARCHIE M. McKAY ORIENT, S.D. Archie M.

McKay, 1 73, longtime rancher and farmer at Orient, died at the Hand County Memorial Hospital Saturday. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Methodist Church here to be followed by Masonic rites at the Orient cemetary. He is, survived by: a son, George, Orient; two daughters, Mrs. James Johnson, Miller, and Mrs.

Robert Dixon, Miranda: two brothers, Colin, Orient, and Henry, Chicago, and three sisters, Belle McKay of of of Orient, Mrs. L. M. Trottman of Miller and Mrs. C.

M. Thompson of Los Angeles. (Sorum) Chamberlin at Corn Palace MITCHELL (AP) Robert Chamberlin, Democratic candidate for governor, will attend the Corn Palace week activities here Sunday through Saturday. Tuesday he will campaign in Yankton and return to Mitchell that night. Chamberlin and his family will be introduced at the Corn Palace show Thursday night.

Today's Record the 1800 block on S. West Avenue. Katherine Jean Keena, 1203 N. Dakota $750; David Lawrence Scharthan, 2400 S. Euclid $400, and a hedge and lawn at the R.

R. Eleeson residence, 1124 S. Norton $20. William D. Lias, Humboldt, $145, and Artis L.

Hoiland, Corson, $240, at 18th Street and Minnesota Avenue. Anthony A. Haub, 1308 S. Duluth $50; Henry L. Lien, 5628 Circle Drive, $225, and Laura A.

Messner, 5704 W. 15th $35, at 12th Street and Elmwood Avenue. Thefts A 1960 dark green Ford from Kenneth Brander, 2720 E. 26th St. Taken from 200 block on N.

Main Avenue. Loss $600. Shotgun, spare tire, pair of waders and two boxes of shotgun shells from trunk of car owned by Robert Fetersm 615 W. 15th St. Loss $233.

Vacuum cleaner from Ramada Inn. Loss $170. Parking meter broken off and taken from 100 W. 8th St. Loss $68.

Vandalism Darlene Tallman, 3000 E. 10th, reported front window of trailer house broken at that address. Garden hose damaged at Harry Hodkins residence, 412 N. Franklin Ave. Aerial broken on car owned by Charles Burkard, 901 N.

Duluth Ave. POLICE CALLS mann, 4303 Lila Road, $65, in Richard W. Feltis, 3210 N. 9th $90, and David L. Nielson, 5009 W.

39th $40, in 1800 block on S. Minnesota Avenue. Myron J. Steever, Tea, $100, and Lyle D. Bly, 1309 S.

10th $20, in 100 block on S. Main Avenue. Leonard G. Chase, 4101 S. Minnesota $95, and Sheri D.

Dieven, Larchwood, Iowa, $90, at 31st and Minnesota. L. Van Den Hoek, 6612 W. 15th $150; Roger A. Schiager, 2812 W.

31st $75, and Cherry L. Kunkel, 1500 E. 12th $25, in 400 block on E. 10th Street. Lanny L.

Brech, 1228 N. Dakota $150, and Carrol M. Steward, 209 Euclid $60, in 1400 block on North Drive. Gregory L. Higgins, 3100 S.

Summit $70, and Patricia L. Jones, 801 W. 43rd $125, at 39th and Norton. Roland B. Block, 28, Canton, was injured when the motorcycle he was riding hit a parked car owned by Richard Wrathmalk, 924 W.

11th St. The accident happened in the 900 block on W. 11th Street. The only damage was $75 to the motorcycle. George R.

Trabing, Alexandria, $85, and Gary E. Bor- Construction (Continued from page 1) Accidents for Osco Drugs is 70 per cent completed. Work is expected to be finished in six to eight weeks. A new glass and glazed tile front has been placed and new heating and air conditioning system installed. A new ceiling is being placed and store fixtures being installed.

Bids will be let in the next two months on renovation of the first floor of the present Post Office-Federal Building at 12th Street and Phillips Avenue. Final plans and specifications are being reviewed by General Services Administration at Kansas City. Federal agencies presently renting space in the city will be housed in the remodeled area, at an estimated cost of $240,000. The new building for First Federal Savings Loan Association is one-third done at 12th Street and Minnesota Avenue. Concrete is being poured on the roof structure of the $200,000 building.

Excavation is finished and footings are being placed for construction of a $64,858 addition to Church of the Good Shepherd. Foundation has been placed and brick work is ready to start on the $60,000 Westminster Presbyterian Church at 26th Street and Bahnson Avenue. The building will be of brick construction with wooden roof. The Sunday School wing to Grace Lutheran Church is 80 per cent completed and was to be partially occupied Sunday. Included are a large meeting room and kitchen facilities.

Painting has been started and ceilings placed. Completion date is Oct. 1. Workmen are putting in the foundation for Christian Reformed Church at 26th Street and east of Cleveland Avenue. The $150,000 project is expected to be finished in April.

Excavation has started on Lowell School addition, a 1000 project at 18th Street and Summit Avenue. Work is 50 per cent completed on a D-X service station at 41st Street and Cliff Avenue. Men students have moved into a new $200,000 dormitory at Sioux Falls College. The building was completed this month. Dedication ceremony is set for Oct.

15. Remodeling of the building occupied by Stewart School of Hairstyling is 90 per cent completed, at 11th Street and 2nd Avenue. Completed are facilities for the school, Mr. Z's Restaurant, Mayflower Gift and Beauty Supply and Signature Loan. I I OFFERS YOU THE VERY LOWEST INTEREST ON EVERYTHING WE DO AND FURNISH Custom-designed, heavy erected and MORNING STAR 48' with delivered free to your lot, enclosed, at great savings! KITCHEN D.R.

B.R. 14.4" 9-0' L.R, B.R. B.R, x13-2' 5 100's OF OTHER PLANS-OR USE YOUR OWN FOR EVERYONE on all our labor and materials FINANCINOR WITHOUT MONEY. You not only get the finest quality home, but you can own a Capp-Home free and clear within 10 years at the lowest financing rate anywhere! You can also pay down, or cash. A Capp-Home is much more than a roof over your headl Contact us or your Capp- Home man! Your Local Representative: OSCAR SAKARISON 1017 North Maple Watertown, South Dakota Ph.

605-886-4247 People in the News WASHINGTON (AP) Presi- lisher, Bennett Cerf of Random dent Johnson got a renewed invitation to visit the Philippines when he met this week with the Phillippine president, Ferdinand E. Marcos. While it was understood that no firm plans have been made for a Johnson trip to the far Pacific, there has been recurrent discussion in White House circles about such a journey. MOSCOW (AP) American defector Harold M. Kock, issued a statement Saturday condemning the United States for its role in the Viet Nam war and calling the Soviet Union a "country which symbolizes peace and equality for all." The statement; put out by the news agency, Tass, was the first word from Kock since he assailed a the United States on Moscow television Tuesday.

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)Gen. Suharto, leader of Indonesia's new government, said a team of Indonesian observers will be sent to the United Nations session which opens Tuesday in New York. Foreign Minister Adam Malik is scheduled to arrive in New York but it was still not clear here if Indonesia would definitely return to the world body this year. WASHINGTON (AP) The State Department announced that Secretary Dean Rusk will fly to New York Monday for a week of meetings with foreign ministers attending the opening of the U. N.

General Assembly's fall session. Rusk wants to sound out the Russians on Viet Nam, on a treaty to ban the spread nuclear weapons, a range of other items. Another potentially significant meeting is due with French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville. MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) The nation's of Selective Service that draft indirection regulations should have a ferment provision for parttime college students.

Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey said the number of full-time students who have been inducted is small and "I feel our law makes no provision for part-time students." NEW YORK (AP) Author Jim Bishop said that Mrs. John F.

Kennedy had attempted to prevent him from writing a book on the assassination of President Kennedy. Bishop said Mrs. Kennedy had asked him twice by letter two years ago to drop plans for a book to be called "The Day Kennedy Was Shot-" When he declined, he said, the Kennedy family silenced most sources and brought pressure on his GOP Gains in Congress Predicted House. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (A.P) Thich Tri Quang, powerful leader of the radical Buddhists, was reported to have ended his antigovernment, antiJohnson fast after 100 days. The 42-year-old monk was said to have bowed to appeals of unified Buddhist church, the Vien Hoa Dao.

ELLINGHAM, England (AP) -Jack Francis won best in show, 17 first prizes, two seconds and a third Saturday at Ellingham's produce show. Totally blind, Francis cultivates his garden by touch. COLCHESTER, England (AP) Heather Russell, 33, almost completely paralyzed by polio for the past 11 years, went to the altar Saturday in a special chair equipped with a breathing machine for her wedding at a local church. After the ceremony she signed the register, holding the pen in her teeth. Miss Russell married Ronald Strudwick, 54, a hospital worker.

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) A man from Little Rock, won first prize for crocheting lover 24 State women Fair at on the new Saturday. JerCarlson Winston Pryor was awarded the top prize for two doilies he submitted by mail. The contest was part of the domestic arts division at the fair. The theme is "The Wonderful World of Women." Humphrey Sees Better Times for Rural America Murville.

SHENANDOAH, Iowa, (AP) Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, seeking to hold Democratic congressional gains in Iowa, insisted. Saturday times are rural America and will get better. "The Johnson-Humphrey administration has made its pledge and will keep its pledge, that the American farmer will receive fair prices and fair inW come for his time, his investment and his labor," said Humphrey in a speech prepared for delivery here. Humphrey ticked off a host of figures on Iowa's economyfrom a 44 per cent increase in the sale of combines between January and July to a 12.9 per cent rise in personal incomeand said they add up to this: "Our farm states- and the people who live in their cities and towns, and on the farmshave lifted themselves out of the dismal and discouraging of the 1950s." YANKTON, S.D.

(AP)-Sen. Carl Curtis, said here Saturday night that he doesn't see a federal tax increase ahead of the November election and none afterward if Republicans gain enough seats in congress. Curtis and Sen. Karl Mundt, appeared at a press conference during the South Dakota Young Republican Convention. They both predicted a "rebellion at the polls" Nov.

8. "I don't think (Democrats) will have enough votes after the election to get a tax increase," Curtis siad. Mundt predicted the GOP will pick up 45-60 seats in the House and a minimum of four in the Senate because of "great unhappiness" among farmers because of the Johnson administration's stand on agriculture and because of Great Society problems. The issues, he said in answer to question, will have a impact on South Dakota's legislative races." Curtis said that a gain of over 40" seats in Congress "will stop the Great Society dead in its tracks." He said the Johnson administration had taken a "calculated risk" it will pick up enough votes in the big cities to offset the loss of the farm vote. Curtis and Mundt said other major issues facing voters are high costs of living, lower value of the dollar, tight money, the highest interest rates in 40 years and the Viet Nam war.

The voters, said Curtis, will "support the war, but nobody likes it." Curtis said the issues bring "a rebellion that could equal the 1938 rebellion when the GOP nearly doubled its strength in the Senate and made a big gain in the House. FIRE CALLS 8:55 a.m. Saturday, smoke in basement at 1229 N. Spring Ave. 12:22 p.m.

Saturday, trash fire at Veterans Hospital. 12:36 p.m. Saturday, car fire near city garage. City Brief The Minnehaha County Sherday afternoon Turkey iff's Posse participated, SaturDay parade at Worthington, Minn. Drama classes of Washington High School and Lincoln High School will have a joint picnic at Tuthill Park at 1 p.m.

Sun- day. STATE OF EMERGENCY KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) Malaysia's federal government has clamped a state of emergency on its Borneo territory of Sarawak in a move to crush a rebellious chief minister and counter the threat of Communist violence. George Boom Funeral Home Mrs. Otto (Jennie) Reiners 227 South Holly Ave. services will be Funeral, p.

Monday, September 19th at First Presbyterian church, 2300 South West. Ave. with the Rev. Leland Laack officiating. Burial will be in the Mount Pleasant Cemetery.

3408 EAST 10th ST. SIOUX FALLS, S. D. DON'T FORGET! Here Are The Biggest Dry Cleaning Bargains Of The Year MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY ANY GARMENTS 5 999 NO LIMIT Suits, and 2 pc. dresses count as one, suedes, furs, formals excluded.

Pleats extra. DRESS LAUNDERED SHIRTS 4 LOCATIONS CONVENIENT ONE HOUR CLEANERS 104 No. Phillips JOHHNY On The Spot CLEANERS 11th Duluth 13th Cleveland 34th Minnesota Mail This Today To CAPP-HOMES DEPT. 1143 Dupont Minneapolis, Minn. 55411 Please send me more information! NAME ADDRESS.

TOWN OR RFD. STATE. El own a lot I don't own a lot but could get one.

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Pages Available:
1,255,518
Years Available:
1886-2024