Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 3

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

If You Ask following question asked Thursday, June 18: "City, officials have recently dlstnssed. the sfhility of haviftj a one pet cent sates'tax in Mitchell. What Is your reaction to GEORGE MORGAN Rt. 4, Mitchell "ft's getting kind of high al- are high enough." MRS. GORDON BAILEY Mitchell "I think it would be alright- It evens things out a little bit." DAVE KINER GOI! S.

Montana "If we need it, I imagine it's GERALD fRltLE Stickney "It would be a lot better than What's Happening? PMB Museum Mon. through Sat. 8 a.m. 9 p.m.; Sunday 1-9 p.m. Pony Baseball 5:30 p.m.

at Hitchcock Park today. The Mitchell Pony Hills team opens their home schedule against Winner. DeMolays p. m. Sunday at the Masonic Temple.

The initiation is open to the public. Father's Day All day Sun- J.I, VWU1V4 VHVimvm ,7 the four per cent tax we have day a final reminder if there are gifts still in the thinking stage. a.m.-9 p.m. Mon. through 1-9 p.m.

Sunday. AA Meeting 7:30 p.m. Sunday at 424 E. 9th; public in vited. now.

Ex Mitchellite Dies in Alaska Bernard J. (Bud) Bollock, 54, formerly of Mitchell, died June 16 of an apparent heart attack at NakNap. Alaska. Burial with military rites will be at Truckee, Calif. Monday, June 22.

Mr. Bollock had lived at Truckee for the past 11 years except for 100 days each summer when he worked at NakNap on a fish boat for the government. He was born in 1915 at Mitchell to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bollock MRS.

ALBERT ROSTERS 904 E. 13th "It would be a very good thing. Then everyone would pay in, not just the taxpayers." Locals For entertainment nightly, go th A to the Moonlight Lounge. Adv. Sr He had served in me Army born June 20 at Methodist and Fred amjL seven sisters, Lnda Wick has returned homejLeora Purdy Whittier Calfc; ter a vacation at Lake Okobo- gagr Stringer, Garden Grove, J1 Dawson Creek FallsM-to; 1.

after racing Sunday, June 21 at 8:00. In case of rain, it will be Tuesday, June 23. Mrs. Thede of Boone, Iowa, and daughter, Joan, and son, Jonn, visited at the home of Eda good idea but I hope it'ward Crampton on Wednesday, doesn't drive out-of-tawners other shopping areas." 17. Mr.

Crampton is uncle to Mrs. Mary Thede. Rehearsing For Pageant Rosann Bussmus of Mitchell practices her Charleston routine which she will'be doing In the Miss South Dakota Pageant in Hot Springs June Mrs. F. Moeller Rites at Stickney STICKNEY Funeral services for Mrs.

Fred (Elizabeth) Moller, 93, will be at 2 p. m. Monday at the United Methodist Church with the Rev. Henry Vix officiating. The body will lie in state Sunday afternoon and evening at the Lien Funeral Home, Burial will be in Silver Ridge Cemetery.

She was born Dec. 30, 1876 at Lake City, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heidinger and died June 18 at a Mitchell hospital. On Feb.

23, 1898 she married Fred Moller at Mt. Vernon. Survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Walt (Clarice) Wittig, Stickney; Mrs. J.

W. (Edith) Anderson, Mitchell, and Mrs. Hilda Calley, Miami, three sons, Albert and Harry, Mitchell, and Clarence, Mt. Vernon, 10 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband in 1948, one daughter, four brothers and four sisters.

Wins Case NEW YORK (AP) A 22- year-old polio victim denied a city teaching license because she is confined to a wheelchair has won her case. Acting Schools Supt. Irving DWU Professor- MKeftifl Urges Protection for Ancient Village Site Graves, Village Remains Dakota Wefleyan Professor Dr. Orlando Goering looks over an ancient Indian burial mound, above, at Lakeview Golf Course. Below, a copy of his article on the area's first inhabitants is surrounded by pottery and bison bone frag' ments in a shallow pit by the lake.

According to Dr. Goering, the village site where the pit is located may lose its historical value unless steps are taken to preserve it for further study. (Republic Photos by Winheld) fat but which hit iiliM 4- paft. Archaeologists fliggest that softer soil next to Firesteel reek stimulated agriculture, and remains of trenches and wooden palisades around the village suggest that corn was an attractive plunder lor migratory tribes. Remains of many different pottery have caused airchaeiooigists to site a "pottery capital;" this variety suggests the village was a center for othef cultural groups in the area.

Dr. Goering and have stressed the desirability of preserving the for future excavations and as an outdoor museum for the public. Otherwise, cas- nal collecting and the forces of nature will make only a memory of these remains of an ancient culture. Unless action is taken to care for this part of South Dakota's heritage, it may disappear as quietly as dew on the grass when the sun burns away the mists of early morning. Egeland Rites At Alexandria By Republic News Service ALEXANDRIA Funeral services for Leonard Egeland, 57, were to be at 2 p.

m. Saturday at the Montgomery Funeral Home with the Rev. Peary Wilson officiating. Burial was to be in Greenhill Cemetery. Mr.

Egeland was born May 9, 1913 at Cylinder, Iowa, to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Egeland and died June 18 at a Mitchell lospital of injuries received earlier in the evening in a farm accident at the JaVern Hofer farm south of Alexandria. Survivors include his widow. the former Mary Fausch; two; daughters, Mrs.

Doug (Jeanine)Bleeker, Mitchell, and Mrs. Rodney (Leona) Brakke, Oma. and two brothers, Nelvin: and Tilman, Cylinder. Nature took its course in Mitchell Thursday afternoon as approximately 60,000 bees followed the queen and swarmed around this light pole in front of Body Shop in the 100 block of East f'irst Balcom, general manager of Mitchell Motor keeps bees as a hobby and used a ladder to remove the bees. lie took them out in the country into an orchard where he has collected a couple of hives.

(Republic photo by Johnston) ROTC CADET WINS SCHOLARSHIP Jan Ryberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard C. Ryberg of Mitchell, was one of four Air Force ROTC cadets at South! Dakota State University in Brookings who received one-j year scholarships. Each scholarship covers tuition and incidental fees and provides a textbook allowance.

Treat Father to a FREE ICE CREAM CONE at With Thfs Ad DRIVE INN Lake Mitchell CARD OF THANKS Words cannot express our thankfulness for all of the prayers, kind deeds, flowers, memorials, cards, and thoughtfulness to us by our dear relatives, friends, neighbors, employers and co-workers, and to the Unique Study Club at the time of the sudden death of our loved one. A special thanks to The Rev. Robert Vessey andj Father Esser for their prayers! and words of comfort. May God bless each one of you. Mrs.

Harvey Mann and Lori Mr. Mrs. James Hubschman, Lisa and Julie BORROW to A By MARK WINHELD Republic City Editor Acting Schools supt irving pp it ellth lived in the village Anker said Thursday that Judy jLake Mitchell is only wree Mandans Heumann would get her licensei aee Dlu a spate 01 ouuui, uuu and that she would teach in schools clear. Partly on the basis ofi Indian legends passed down over generations, Dr. Goering argues that those who built the of mounds and especially those be- or Ari- be able to years lies between the sunlit that have 1 grass on top and broken bits of pottery embedded in dark earth at the bottom.

Nearby, grass kara cultures. Pottery fragments and bison $3500 from TIREY PATTERSON bones indicate that inhabitants of the lakeside village site were covered i corn farmers and buffalo hunt- These remains have been ramps as well as staircases. Complains mound's "present" "problem for ers. These remains have ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, iJJXre andshroud the sleep found in shallow pits which may AP) A cl k4y ist at who will never againioriginally have been storage this base has written to the brown seas buffalo'caches for corn, but later be- White House complaining about 4u nldering from horizon to hori- came trash pits, the appearance of Vickie, Mrs. 6 About 30 i odges have been Richard M.

Nixon poodle, in aj casua visitors come to identified at the village site, one recent newspaper picture. up bits of pottery and of which was excavated and is just as displeasing fragments from the built in a 1930's WPA project see a poodle in need of groom-'j but only a few it to see a beag Bknow i ed of the latter wrote fjnnrinp nrrvfes- 27 28. Miss Bussmus Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. IC C.

Orval Bussmuss and will rep- picked up by his ears," wrote rD Orlando Goering, profes- resent the National College of Shirley Moody, who also runs a ur of sociology at poodle salon. FEDERATED FINANCE MONEYMAN 300 NORTH LAWLER Phone 996-5533 Mitchellite Is Pageant Candidate Business. (Republic Photo by Johnston) versities throughout the state, an increase in entries over the past several years, The theme for this year's pageant is "Stepping Into The Seventies." Miss Bussmus will be stepping into the Seventies with a dance routine from the Twenties. Her talent includes doing the Charleston. Miss Bussmuss, who measures -19 34, is a 1968 graduate ol Mitchell High School and Rosann Marie -Bussmus, 'simply states her favorite hob- daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Orval by as, "Meeting new people, do- Bussmus of Mitchell, will rep- ing new and different things, resent the National College of The red haired, brown eyed Business in the Miss South Da- Miss sor and Dakota Wesleyan, who has been reviving interest in the remains of this area's first residents. He is afraid that even these remains may be in danger of disappearing. Dr. Goering is author of an archaeological summary of the i sites, "Mitchell's First 1 An Overview of Mitchell point average (4.0 is vulage an Burial is required for the dean's oun of the mounds, excavated project, MITCHELLITE ON NCB'S DEAN'S LIST Diane LaRayne Houska, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Iner Houska of rural Mitchell, has been named to the dean's list following the spring quarter at the National College of Busi-j ness in Rapid City. A 3.4 america Corporation. in a 1930's WPA project, revealed 70 human skeletons. Dr.

But there's Beatle music ga-'Goering and others have sug- mostlyjgested that the mounds may be sessions for the burial places of those who lived in the village by the lake Mound-building was apparently own and some footage showing how Beatles work on the widespread practice among DUBJiicaa in mo n.u., U1B OeaUBS wuin uil me inuai- a -a kota Pageant in Hot Springs of the National College of Bus-i ca aspects of their i ure s. many groups, diffused through- June 27 28. imess in Rapid City and wishes Also include( in the tage out much of what is now the Miss Bussmus will compete to represent a company as their John Lennon flowerlike iUnited States and Canada, 21 other girls represent- public relations speaker in the brjdei the amous 0 0 The identity of those who ing various colleges and uni- near future. proving she can wisecrack like lived in the village and 'e best of them. Iburied in the mounds is THE HILARIOUS NEW MOVIE THAT WILL MELT YOUR CHOCOLATE BAR! "Suppose They Gave aWar and Nobody Came" Color NOW thru TUESDAY! Shows at 7:00 9:05 Sun.

at 1, 3, 5, 7:10 9:15 NEVER BEFORE WERE THEY TOGETHER AGAIN FOR THE SECOND TIME! CHRISLAW TRACE-HARK SAMMY IAWJI. 1AWNW STARTS SUNDAY Sunday Continuous from 1:00 p.m. Show Times Week Days 7:30 9:35 Ends "Let It Be" At The Theaters ROXY STATE lie un- Now Showing: The hilarious comedy that poses the unique question in the title, "Suppose, They Gave A War And Nobody' Came?" The Comedy's all-star cast is led by Tony Brian Keith, Ernest Borgmne, and Don Ameche. The film pits Uncle Sam's peacetime army against a group of townspeople in an hilarious battle of wits. Tony Curtis, Brian Keith and Ivan i (Hogan's Heroes), playing a trio of veteran army buddies, find themselves keepers of the peace as "community public relations officers." Leading up the "campaign" against the soldiers on leave from the nearby army base is Ernst Borgnine as Sheriff "Fats" Harve.

When the three public relations officers' first efforts at toothing townspeople tail- Now Showing: "Let It Be" Ever hear of a movie without a screenwriter? I The latest Beatle movie is; one. Didn't need one. Because it's all impromptu and unrehearsed. A camera was set up to watch them at play and at iwork and that's what the new 'film intimate "at home" with The Beatles. It's called "Let It Be," ui honor of their latest song hit and it is in color, an offering from United Artists, an entertain nt the three soldiers resort to their 'next best alternative, declaring war on the town.

The mixed-up hilarity is now in high gear and ready for the climax. In color, rated GP, All ages admitted, parential guidance suggested. ONE HOUR The Mot in Dry Cleaning THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Suits Dresses 2 For 2 piece suits and dresses count as 1 garment One Hour Service No Extra Charge Next to Rev's TV ESTATE SALE Hanson County Farm ALSO Dwelling In Ethan 1, 3M01-59 2. Outlet IS to Town of Ethon OPEN FOR BIDS Inquirt of Tinan, Carlson, Podrnos ft Smith, Mitchell, S. for Nellio Estatt.

LAKE VUE DRIVE-IN FRI. AND Western Comedy At It's Best Starring Clint Walker Kim Novak Zero Mostel GREAT BANK PROW WARNIH ARTf SAT. NITi DUSK to DAWN 4 MOVIES 1. "Fever Heat" Nick Adami 2. "Riot" Jim Biewn 3.

"Draeula" 4. "Valley of Gwongi" COMf EAIIY STAY UTI.

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

About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
75,074
Years Available:
1937-1977