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Carroll Daily Times Herald from Carroll, Iowa • Page 4

Location:
Carroll, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Officers Elected by Young Democrats Mike Malloy was elected president at a meeting Monday night of the Young Democrats of Carroll County. Mary Neumayer was elected secretary- treasurer. Mary Neumayer gave a report on the Young Democrats District Caucus June 28, in Atlantic. She commented on the well-informed YDs who at tended, and was impressed with the extent of their knowledge of politics including the upcoming elections. "All YDs can learn so much from these meetings, especially from the exchange of ideas," she said.

She added that some of the YDs at the caucus follow their candi- Socia Calendar A.B.C. Club, Mrs. William Frank H.N.H. Club, Mrs. Dennis Letting Town and Country Club steak fry STOP Club, 7 p.m.

Standard Farm Center Lutheran Guild Circles: Eunice, Mrs. Larry Jung, Lake View; Mary, Mrs. A. P. W.

Thielking, Lake View; Martha, Mrs. Ted Krogh, Lake View; Ruth and Sarah, 6:30 p.m., Graham Park Golden Circle euchre dates throughout the district helping with their campaigns. Dr. J. G.

Donovan, Carroll County Central Committee chairman, offered his help and the help of the central committee in keeping the group informed of national, state and local politics. He suggested the YDs plan to discuss practical politics to learn more about the political system. Arrangements will also be made for all county YDs to meet the Carroll County candidates and hear their policies. Dr. Donovan invited all county YDs to attend the next central committee meeting at 8:30 p.m.

Monday, July 20, at the court house meeting room. All YDs were urged to watch a special TV program to be aired from 8 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday over KRNT-TV. The gram is titled, "The Democrats Respond, Part 1." Fund Raising was discussed as one activity the YDs can help with at this lime. The organization agreed to have a benefit softball game and a door to door campaign for "Dollars for Democrats." Dates for these activities will be announced shortly.

YD hats and vests will be ready next week. Mary Neumayer will contact members concerning the date of the next campaigning and where to pick up outfits. All YDs were urged to help with the summer activities. Anyone interested in more information may contact Mary Neumayer, Mary Gnam, Monica Balk or any other YD. Dorothy Kammin attended the meeting as adult advisor.

503 North Adams St Carroll, Iowa enneiu ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY JULY BARGAIN DAYS PIECE GOODS SALE! Prices effective thru Saturday! POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS in interesting textures, washable! QO Reg. 4.99 yd. NOW d. COMBED COTTON DANSTAR SPORTCLOTH, easy care solids or prints. Reg.

1.09 yd. NOW yd. PENN-PREST FASHION CORNER Solids, Reg. 69c NOW JOC yo Prints, Reg. 79c NOW 67c PENN-PREST Solids, Reg.

1.79 NOW 1.52 ya 1.68 Novelties, Reg. 1.98 NOW yd. COMBED COTTTON CREPE SCREEN PRINTS, finish. 1 ir Reg. 2.19 yd.

NOW ADONNA SALE! YOU SAVE ON THESE SHAPE-MAKERS! Prices effective through Saturday. Criss-cross girdle of a spandex powernet. Average, tall XL. Reg. $7, now $6 spandex panty with inner bands of elastic.

Average, long. Reg. $9, now $7 spandex powernet panty girdle puts you in the greatest shape, and does it comfortably. Sizes ML, XL. REG.

$6, NOW $5 Expand-a-thigh panty girdle of spandex powernet with mesh inserts, Self panels. Sizes XL. REG. $8, NOW $7 Nylon lace cups lined with cotton. Machine washable bra.

Reg. 2.50, now 2 for $4 Stretch strap bra. rayon, span- lex elastic; stretch straps. Reg. $3, now 2 for $5 SALE! PIMA PRINCE T-SHIRTS Long wearing, absorbent blend of pima cotton.

Never lose their shape. Flat knit, crew neck style. Sizes 4-18. Pima Prince briefs have a duoble back for extra long wear. Knit of pima icotton in a sturdy, long wearing lxl knit.

Sizes 4-18. Reg. 3 for 2.6?, NOW 3 FOR 2o27 tffestive thru Saturday Timet Hara 14, Carroll, Iowa Tuesday, July 7, 1970 To Be Graduated Mrs. Joan Tigges Kraft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Paul A. Tigges, Carroll, will be graduated July 26 from St. School of Nursing, Archbishop Bergan Mercy Hospital, Omaha. After Sept. 1, Mrs.

Kraft will be employed in the Pediatrics department of Bergan Mercy Hospital. About Town- Mrs. Behrens' 75th Birthday Is Celebrated A picnic dinner and lunch was held Sunday at the South Side Park to honor Mrs. Elizabeth Behrens, Carroll, for her 75th birthday. Her birthday was June 27.

Mrs. Berhens' brothers, John and Joe Slbbel, Halbur, attended. Her children from Carroll attending included the John A. Behrens, Lawrence Behrens, Joe Behrens, Paul Brincks and Jim Ausman families. Grandchildren and grandchildren attending included the Clete Behrens family, Carroll; the Matt Murrane family, Bayard; the Orlin Stein kamp family, Wall Lake; the Jerry Behrens family, Denison; the Walter Grate family, Lake View; the Jim Kitt family, Gray; Gary Behrens and Sue McAlpine, Sheldon; Marlene Behrens, Carroll; and Ray Nepple, Templeton.

Mrs. Behrens had 28 grand children and 12 great-grandchildren. A Crack in the Bell by dot monahan "There's a crack in the bell, dear Liza, dear Louis. There's a crack in the bell." Well, fix it! Don't leave it to Liza or Louis. We all have to fix it.

America's treasured relic was rung July 8, 1776 to announce the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Throughout the years the Liberty Bell has been rung on special occasions by Philadelphia officials. It rang out on June 6, 1944 for the last time when Allied forces landed in France. Today the Liberty Bell rests its tired 2,080 pounds in the first floor Tower Room of Independence Hall in Philadelphia. She is very old now, and there isn't much she hasn't seen in this land.

She saw the British turned away from the shores, and since then so many wars she has all but lost.count. Webster says war may be called a so America wouldn't have to face the shame of labeling another, the Pentagon gave her a Korean How many wars left for her? Webster says you may also call her a The old bell has seen her land split in half over slavery. One may visit the old plantations that today still carry the scars of an internal war. To the northerner a Confederate flag is amusing. To a southerner it is a reminder of defeat, and perhaps a southerner realizes "it could happen It did.

Visit an antique shop in the South, ask why are there not cherished possessions to be seen and you are met with a cold stare. "Sherman burned our land and all that we held dear." A history book will never teach any of us of war. Nor will Webster. Today the old bell is seeing dissension, violence and uprisings unlike anything since the War between the States. Her inscription still reads loud and clear.

"Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof," from the Bible (Leviticus Do you hear it? I Do you help get out the vote? Do you really know what the man you support wants for your country? Or do you go into the voting booth and pull levers, without reading the men's names, just because your father pulled those levers? Do you vote? Do you realize that teenagers today know far more about our form of government than you? Are you one of those critical of an 18-year-old vote? Isn't there something tell-tale in the fact the children feel a need to seek the vote? And within the home. Are you the head of the house? Do you dispense discipline, so that the next generation can better discipline itself? Or are you afraid to say "No, you can't see that movie." "No, tonight we are using the car." Do you teach your children to respect and support the police in this city? A nation is only as stong as its people. Sacrifice is an old- fashioned out-moded word. God is spelled G-O-T. I got this and I got that.

We say there should be a day declared "Dependence And let the Liberty Bell ring out! This day, an American will fly my flag. an American, will pledge myself to my nation, my neighbor, and my God. I will get involved." So fix the bell, Dear Liia, Dear Louis. Fill the crack with dependence, upon one another. And the sound of bombings will cease, and all that will be heard, one tired happy old bell.

Ignore her and one day she may fall with the city of Philadelphia, Atlanta, (again), and all the others. "It can happen here." Personal Paragraphs All ten of the children of Mr and Mrs. Ed Winn were with them for a picnic Saturday at Lake City. Included were Mr. and Mrs.

Delbert Anderson and daughters, Lake City; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Winn, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Short and Mr.

and Mrs. Steven Schmickle and families, Cedar Rapids; Mr. and Mrs. Marion Winn and family, Mt. Pleasant; Mr.

and Mrs. Glen Winn and family, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cota and family, Des Moines; Jim Winn and a friend, Omaha; Mr. and Mrs.

Marvin Mooris and family, Ralston; and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wahlert and family, Minneapolis. Spending the Fourth of July at the Jack Kaufman home in Milford were Mr. and Mrs.

Bob Saylor, Berneice Kuhlmann and Ed Hoehl. The Kaufmans, form er Carroll residents, moved to Milford in June, 1969, and spent the summer at Crescent Beach Lodge, where Mr. Kaufman was head chef. Both worked at the Vera and Coilas Club during the winter and at the present time he is at Teeg's Steak House and Mrs. Kaufman is a waitress at the Black Coach.

Think Black and White! Sophisticated or simple, this china is available at The Loft in modern and traditional patterns. A special area for the brides is set off with jet black under-lay as well as background we feature stemware in Orrefors, Reizart, Block and Sasaki Swedish glass by Stanley Corcoran Royal Lear- dam cut crystal. In China we show Block New Young Image by Nori- take Esperanza Bavarian from Germany Royal Tetau and many others. Two new patterns by Pickard in Black and White. With these we suggest runners from Designers Workshop in yellow, aqua, blue.

Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Quinn left Monday for their home at Fredericksburg, after spending the holiday weekend here visiting Mr.

Quinn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Quinn and family, and his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

Duane Quinn and family. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lambertz returned home Monday night after a week's business trip to Spearfish and Belle Fourche, S. D.

They also went sightseeing, in the Black Hills, where of special interest was a hand-hewn and carved replica of "Stavkirke" (Stave Church). The original church in Norway is 400 years old. The Carroll couple visited other points of interest and spent some time with relatives near Sturgis, S.D. HAS SURGERY Mrs. Estherline Blum of Carroll underwent major surgery Monday morning at Baptist Memorial Hospital, Kansas City, Mo.

She is in Room 228. Upon leaving the hospital she plans to recuperate at the home of her sister, Mrs. James H. Heath, in Kansas City. Mr.

and Mrs. Joe Bennett and daughter Becky left Monday for their home at Ontario, after visiting here for over two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Goreham, and her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

Ray Goreham and family. They also visited Mr. Bennett's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Bennett and family, at Glidden.

Before coming to Carroll they stopped at Grand View, to visit her brother, Lawrence Goreham. Students (Continued From Page 1) Recipe for Welcome! .1 quick phone call Phone 792-3609 .1 charming, hostess with "The Most Famous Basket in the World" Stir hospitality, warm friendliness And you'll a generous and delightful welcome Open Every Friday Till 9 p.m. Every Other Nits Till 5.p.m. Couple Wed In California Holy Family Catholic Church, Orange, was the scene of the June 20 wedding of Roberta Jean Petersen and Joseph Lickteig. Their parents are Dr.

and Mrs. Paul Petersen, Santa Ana, and Mr. and Mrs. Roland Lickteig, Carroll. Attending their sister were Sandra Petersen, maid of honor, and Carol Petersen, bridesmaid, both of Santa Ana.

Dr. Lester DeNoyelles, Long Beach, was his nephew's best man. The Rev. Donald Strange performed the 3 p.m. ceremony.

A reception for 75 guests was held at the bride's parents' home. The couple is now residing in San Francisco, where he is employed at San Francisco Children's Hospital. Mrs. Lickteig attended her son's wedding. Play '500' at Mrs.

Kanne's Mrs. William J. Kanne was hostess at her home Monday evening to members of the Friendly Neighbor Club. Eight games of 500 were played, after which lunch was served. High score prize was won by Mrs.

Kanne. Mrs. Lyle Schleisman won second; Mrs. Elizabeth Beyerink, traveling; and Mrs. Arnold Ludwig, low.

The club's next party will be July 22, with Mrs. Ed Lenz as hostess. tions, seeking dormitory or similar accommodations. "We have even considered a convent," he said. Dixon added that the students had been window shopping, swimming and "taking it amazingly well.

The only people who are shook up are the adult administrators." Some 600 students in Paris were moved into a suburban school that is on vacation. "The situation has improved," said Mrs. Linda Stevenson of Seattle, Wash. "French families have oaMed to volunteer to take in students, but most of them want to stay here at the school so hey won't miss their plane. The extreme hospitality of the French people and the marvelous attitude of our own students 'have saved the situation.

All the rest we'd like to forget." Several hundred students were estimated to be in Rome. Their meals and rooms had been paid for in advance, but the sightseeing tours scheduled for them were canceled. A U.S. consular official said ortly about a dozen bad come in seeking help with various problems. BOARD TO MEET The Carroll County Board of Education will meet in special session at 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday, in the office of the County Superintendent of Schools to prepare the budget and attend to other business which might arise, Lyle O. Tenold, county superintendent said. Lengemanns Note 45th Anniversary (Times Herald News Service) MANNING Friends and neighbors honored Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Lengemann on June 24, in observance of their fourty- fifth wedding anniversary.

Lunch was brought and served by the group, which also presented a purse to the couple. They received roses from the rural Char-R-Sew Club, and a special decorated wedding cake from their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Louie Andresen of Charter Oak; also flowers from their grandchildren. Prizes during the evening were awarded to Mrs.

Russell Mohr, Mrs. Joe Knueven, Mrs. Virgil Genzen and Mrs. Frank Handlos. South Dakota Guests at Brockman Home (Times IJprald News Service) ARCADIA Airman Steven Kracht and his wife of Rapid City, S.D.

were Sunday overnight visitors of his grandmother, Mrs. F. A. Brockman. Mr.

and Mrs. Dean Sundrup and children, Kurt, Kathy, Kent and Kelly of Iowa Falls visited Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Agnes Sundrup of Arcadia who is -residing at the Carroll Manor. Mr. and Mrs.

Wayne Duffy visited Mrs. Sundrup Sunday afternoon. Edward Erps attended the baptism of his great grandson, Anthony Hill son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hill of Deloit at the Methodist Church at Deloit Sunday morning.

Attending the L.W.M.L. Convention at the Walther League Camp at Lake Okoboji Thursday to Saturday were Mrs. Elmer Behneman and Mrs. Harold Koepke who were delegates. Mrs.

Philip Wenzel and Mrs. Otto Grundmeier were guests who accompanied the delegates and attended the three-day convention. Mrs. Eugene Jones of San Marcas, Calif, entertained 30 women from Westside, Carroll and Arcadia at a coffee Friday afternoon at the Arcadia Presbyterian Church annex. Mrs.

Jones is visiting several weeks with her sons. SIGN NEW ALBANY, Ind. (AP) A dairy barn near here has. this sign painted across one side: "Moo-tel." NOW SHOWING AT YOUR LUXURY THEATRES Mariners' Annual Picnic Held Sunday MANNING Mariners of the Presbyterian Church held their annual picnic at Willow Creek Park on June 28 after attending communion services at the church. A short business meeting was held, and the group decided to have no regular meeting in July.

They will serve two brunches on Sunday morning during the month of August for the members of the Presbyterian and Methodist Churches, who will be worshipping at the Presbyterian Church during the month. CARROLL THEHTCR CARROLL ENDS WEDNESDAY Evenings at 7 9:05 P.M. HEY KIDS BEAT THE HEAT! No. 6 Summer Show BALLAD OF JOSE" 1 and 3 P.M. DRIVE-IN THEATRE HI-WAY 30 EAST ENDS WEDNESDAY 'A MAN CALLED HORSE" Plus 'GUNS OF MAGNIFICENT 7" LAKE CITY ENDS WEDNESDAY 'GOODBYE, MR.

CHIPS' Evenings at 7 9:30.

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About Carroll Daily Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
123,075
Years Available:
1941-1977