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The Daily Republic du lieu suivant : Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 2

Lieu:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Date de parution:
Page:
2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Dee. 1, 1971 Mitchell Daily Republic, Mall December 8, 1971 By GANN Republic VALLEY News sergineral services for Irving W. Knight, 83, will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Free Methodist Church in Wessington Springs with the Rev. K.

Oliver Brekke Burial will be in Prospect Hill Cemetery at Wessington Springs with Lee's Funeral Service in will charge bey of arrangements. bynthe Gann Valley Masonic Lodge if weather permits. Mr. Knight was born July 4, 1888 al Merton, lo Mr. Mrs.

William John Knight and died Dec. 6 at his home of an apparent heart attack. He had lived the past years in Buffalo County. On Sept. 6, 1916 he married Bernice Homewood of Jerauld County at Huron.

He was member, of Masons and.had "Buffalo County register of deeds for several years and as school board ficial member of the county board of education. Survivors include six daughters, twins, James King, Stephan, and Mrs. Donald Urban, Chase, Mrs. Robert (Beth) Patton and Mrs. Maynard, (Dorothy Ann) Willman, Springs; Mrs.

Gene Lou) Kirkpatrick, Bloomington, and Mrs. Bailey, Grand Rapids, Michine sons, Franklin, Harold and Wayne, Gann Valley; Donald, St. John, Darrell, Rapid City; Roger, Ft. Pierre; James, Alpena, and David. Irving, Texas; and a brother, Fred, California.

He had 100 descendants 14. children, 54 grandchildren and 32 great grandchildren, Irving W. Knight Rites at Springs Dougherty Says Elderly Face No. 1 Problem RENNER, S. D.

(P) Lt. Gov, William Dougherty spoke Monday at the annual meeting of the Mapleton Township Fire Department- in Renner. Doughterty told the group, "the plight of our senior the number one problem facing South Dakota, He added a. responsiblity to provide immediate tax relief to the elderly 50 they can continue to live in their own homes. Dougherty concluded that old should be a time to live not just linger.

Mrs. Moore Rites At Chamberlain By Republic News Service CHAMBERLAIN- Funeral: services for Mrs. William (Rose) Moore, 84, will be at 2 p.m.| Thursday at the McColley Funeral Home with Daryl Titterington officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery. She was born July 29, 1887 at Chamberlain and died Dec.

5 at the local hospital. On Oct. 3, 1910 she married William Moore. Survivors include three. sons, Scott, Crystal Lake, Donald, Wilton, and Chandler, Chamberlain; two daughters, Mrs.

Helen Koch, Chamberlain, and Mrs. Kenneth House Dundee, a brother, Jesse Routier, Grinnell, Iowa, 13. grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband in 1950, four brothers and a sister. WEATHER TABLES EXTENDED FORECAST Fair to partly cloudy with a warming trend Thursday through Saturday.

Lows from zero tol 10 above Thursday increasing to the teens by Saturday. Highs in: the 20s Thursday increasing to the 30s by Saturday, MITCHELL WEATHER Average precipitation for portion of year to date 22.16. Total precipitation for portion of year to date 18.67. High Saturday 33. Overnight low 10.

High Sunday 32. Overnight low 22. 7 a.m. temperature 20. Precipitation none.

Record high 67 in 1939. Record low -16 in 1950. Sunset tonight 4:55. Sunrise tomorrow 7:54. Rapid City 43 17 Pierre 31 23 Philip 37 20 Aberdeen 23 23 Watertown 32 15 Huron 31 22 Sioux Falls 35 18 Plekstown 45 27 Valentine 25 Lemmon 14 Mobridge 19 Sioux City Omaha 35 30 Norfolk 40 24 TEMPERATURES Pcp PRECIPITATION 25-Yr .47 .53 2.10 .60 .68 2.92 Av Av Rec 1.41 1.24 3.45 2.43 2.50 7.30 2.73 3.21 10.58 3.98 4.03 8.16 2.96 3.06 8.84 2.71 2.60 8.49 2.23 2.12 6.72 1.25 1.48 4.82 .69 .67 2.71 .50 .49 2.13 MISSOURI RESERVOIR DISCHARGES Jap.

.07 Feb 1.32 Mo. Mar .78 April 2.48 May 2.16 June 4.17 July 2.14 Aug 1.54 Sep 1.40 Oct 1.49 Nov 1.50 Dec .05 PIERRE (PI Oahe Reservoir elevation 1,602.45 feet above sga level, up .27 feet. Average discharge rate 20,700 cubic feet per second: tailwater 1,422.33 feet, temperature 43 degrees. Big Bend was not discharging Tuesday, Red Forces Bombard Phnom Penh With Rockets, Blow Up Key Bridge By ROBIN MANNOCK Associated Press Writer PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (AP) Communist forces bombarded Phnom Penh with rockets today, blew up A key highway bridge southwest of the Cambodian capital, and continued besieging ment troops northwest of the city.

One of the 100-pound rockets crashed into a slum area on the western edge of the city, smashing three two civilians. houses and Three other rockets hit' wounding around the Phnom Penh airport, and 10 were fired at Cambodian command post at Bek Chan, about 12 miles west of the casualties city. There was no report in or damage these two attacks. Sappers set off an 1 charge at a crossroads bridge on Highway, 3 about 14 miles southwest the city, Meanwhile, two Cambodian battalions pushing westward from the capital to relieve the beleagured garrison at Phnom Baset, 14 miles to the northwest, ran into heavy opposition from May Close Smaller MillsAir Quality Proposals Handed Pollution Group RAPID CITY -South Dakota's Air Pollution Control Commission was handed, at a public hearing Monday in Rapid City, a series of sug. air quality regulations both gestions for making its proposed el more effective and less detrimental to certain specific industries.

Black Hills Forest Industries, particularly, predicted that if the regulations as proposed go into effect, smaller firms, and even some larger mills, could be forced to close because the technology is not yet available to bring compliance. their tepee burners inCharles R. Arment, consulting forester with the Western Wood Products Association of Denver, one of eight persons describing the forest industry's problem, said every mill would like to shut off its burners and sell wastes now burned. But with the technological, economic and sociological consider- Apartment House Fire Takes One Life SIOUX FALLS (A) An elder: ly Sioux Falls woman was dead on arrival at a hospital after fire gutted her apartment Monday night. Cause of the blaze in which Mrs.

Ione Reynolds, about 70, lost her life was not determined. She apparently died of smoke inhalation. The fire was in the Parkview Apartments on South smoke damage Kiwanis was to several of the other apartments. Report (Continued from Page 1) claimed its troops had destroyed 96 Pakistani tanks on the western front. An Indian spokesman admitted the loss of Mandiala but claimed that the Pakistanis were thrown back in the Punch sector near Mendhar.

"The hard outer in the core of East Paki- has stan's defenses been smashed, and our progress now should be much more rapid," said Maj. Gen. F. R. Jacob, the chief of staff for India's Eastern Command.

Jacob said the Indians have occupied Jessore airfield and were battling to clear the army cantonment about four miles outside the town. Jessore is about 20 miles from East Pakistan's western border and is believed to be defended by about 5,000 Pakistani troops and a local militia. The general said Indian advances were continuing on all fronts in East Pakistan, and wide areas were under the control either of Indian troops or the Mukhti Bahini, the East Pakistani guerrillas fighting for independence. Jacob added that the Pakistani army's communications in the eastern province have: been smashed, and it has no hope Another spokesman reported reinforcements. that the Indian Navy and Air Force were maintaining an effective blockade of the East! Pakistani coast and had cut all air and sea routes between the two halves of Pakistan, which are divided by 1,000 miles of dian territory.

Indian spokesmen claimed the capture of Feni, cutting the road and railway between Dacca, the East Pakistani capital, and Chittagong, the chief port; that the Pakistani army had been cleared from the northern border; that Indian forces were pressing on Sylhet, in the northeast; that Comilla on the southeast had been surrounded, and that Indian units were three miles from Jenia, important communications center. The general said since the war began Friday, 427 stanis have been killed on the Eastern front. 219 have been wounded and 480 captured. In the air war. the Pakistanis claimed to have downed 95 In-! dian aircraft since the war began Friday.

but admitted only two losses of their own. India claimed destruction of 52 Pakistani planes and admitted los-: ing 19. India had 625 combat' planes and Pakistan 250 when the fighting began. Antiaircraft guns opened up in Bombay. India's most populous city.

after radarmen re-, ported a flight of Pakistani jets coming in from the Arabian Sea. Hospital officials reported about 70 persons were wounded, some seriously, shrapnel' from antiaircraft guns. the North Vietnamese 1st Division. U.S. helicopter gunships jet fighter apparently failed to dislodge the North Vietnamese from their heavily fortified bunkers.

The reinforcements linked up briefly with the garrison at Phnom Baset but were driven back by a North Vietnamese counterattack. Two miles beyond Phnom Baset, the district town of Bat Doeung was overrun Monday and officers in the field said that only about 50 of the 200-1 man garrison had reached ty. In Saigon, the South Vietnamese military command said its paratroopers searching a Cambodian area four miles east of Dam Be found the bodies of 29 North Vietnamese troops killed by air strikes along with 42 bunkers that had been destroyed or damaged. Dam Be, a major North Vietnamese staging area and supply point, is north of Highway 7 about 30 miles from the Vietnamese border and 85 miles northeast of Phnom Peuh. Only small patrol actions were reported in South Vietnam.

The South Vietnamese mand announced that 2,500 South Vietnamese rangers and armored troops had closed out a week-long drive south of the Saigon-to-Phnom Penh highway, just inside Cambodia and about 85 miles west of Saigon. The communique said 45 North Vietnamese, and Viet Cong were the operation, and 17 weapons were captured. Eight Vietnamese were killed and 29. wounded the communique said. Kneip To Go To Bicentennial Meeting in DC PERRE (A) Gov.

Richard F. Kneip announced Tuesday he would go to Washington, D. Friday for executive board meeting of the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission. The commission is considerling sites for the nation's 200th birthday celebration. South Dakota's Mt.

Rushmore is being considered as one of: the primary focal points for the celebration. Kneip said the commission had asked him to be present at the meeting. He said he would be accompanied on the trip by Les Helgeland of Yankton, chair. man of the South Dakota Bicentennial Commission, Mrs. Anna Mohr Rites Are Set At Alexandria ALEXANDRIA Funera services for Mrs.

Peter (Anna) Mohr, 90, will be Thursday at 10 a.m. In St. Mary's Catholic Church with Father Joseph Desklewicz officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery, The body will lie in state Wednesday evening with scripture reading at 8:30 p.m. at Montgomery Funeral Home.

Mrs. Mohr died Monday at a Mitchell nursing home, She was born in Germany Feb. 10, 1881 to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weiland and married Peter Mohr in 1903.

Survivors include sons, John, Ethan: Peter, Mitchell; and Willard, Emery; daughters, Mrs. Joe, (Marie) Jungwirth, Sioux City, Iowa; Ralph (Catherine) more, Parkston: and Mrs. Leo (Gertrude) Scheich, Mitchell; two sisters, Mrs. Charles Torbett and Mrs. Mayme Stoffer, Mitchell; and 28 She was preceded in death by her husband.

News (Continued from Page 1) order new labels warning against the use of 3-per-cent hexachlorophene products for total body bathing and advising a for Dad! A TIE TACK by b. david Each child or grandchild is represented by a stone in their birth month color. Choice of white or black Mother of Pearl center, yellow or white finish. $7.50 Free Gift Wrapping KNODEL JEWELRY Mitchell, S. D.

thorough rinse after 1186. In addition, A drug bulletin has been sent to 600,000 doctors and other health professionals advising them of the action. Companies 30 days to respond, and six months to prove hexachlorophone'8 effectiveness A germ killer. The tons effect on the hundreds of other hexachlorophene products. including the relatively new feminine hygiene deodorant sprays remained In doubt.

Some physicians claim the sprays cause skin Irritation. The labeling order will apply to such products as by Winthrop Laboratories Division of Sterling Drug. Hyper pilaze by Colgate-Palmolive, and Gamophen brook Division of Ethicon. Ironically, it was the pHisoHex manufacturer who sent FDA the most devastating report linking hexachlorophene to brain damage. Winthrop Labs told the government Nov.

18 that newborn monkeys develloped lesions when bathed daily for 90 days with a 3-per-cent solution. Earlier studies have shown that rats developed brain damage after being fed hexachlorophene, and that human infants absorbed theut chemicano into their blood obvious toxic symptoms." MARRIAGE COLUMBIA STYLE "Caprice" $275 from the "Diamond Treasure" Collection created by COLUMBIA ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS Registered Jeweler American Gem Society Miller Jewelry Phone 996-3879 305 N. Main Mitchell House To Vote On $6 Billion Antipoverty Bill By JOHN BECKLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The House scheduled A vote today 'on a $6-billion bill to continue federal antipoverty programs two more years and launch a major' now child-development program. led drive to kill the bill In the face of a White of a presidential veto if it passes, Speaker Carl Albert has tried to rally support for it by calling today's vote "the paramount moral vote of the session." Some of. the steam may have been.

taken out of the Republican opposition by the 63-17 vote for the the Senate last week. Twenty Republi cans supported it, including the lop, GOP chief leaders. target of opponents is the proposed House, childdevelopment program, which would provide a full range of educational, nutritional and medical services for pre-school children of working mothers. The services would be free for children from families with incomes under $4,300. Fees based on a sliding scale according to Income would be charged others he families.

eligible All for the familles program. The bill authorizes $100 million this year to set up the program and $2 billion for fiscal year starting July 1 to put it in operation. If fully funded, which is unlikely in view of the Nixon administration's opposi: tion, It would take care of about two million of the estimated six million pre-school children of working mothers, Besides potential costs of the program, the administration objects to a provision giving local communities top, priority in centers. It wants the operating development have control. There also is fierce opposition from conservative Republicans and Democrats to the whole concept of the program.

They charge 1L would undermine the role of the family and subject children Lo social perimentation. The fight over the child-de. velopment program has scured another major novation in the bill: creation of An independent. corporation to take over the legal-services program now run by the Office of Economic Opportunity, The bill authorizes $1.9 hillion for the OE0 for fiscal 1972 and 1973 to continue its vArious Lipoverty programs, $1.4 billion for job training and neighbor. hood youth services, and $500 million to operate Head Start until it is absorbed into the new child -development program.

The total is $160 million more than President Nixon has budg. eted. Chew! FASTEETH Long-holding FASTEETH' Powder. It takes the worry out of wearing dentures. ations, it may be several years before suitable markets can be found for sawdust and bark from Black Hills mills or befor adequate waste disposal will be feasible.

Specifically, the forest Industries urged a special section be added to the South Dakota reg. ulations to account for the special problems of tepee burners. Larry Burtzlaff of Wheeler Lumber Division of St. Regis Paper emphasized that while wood smoke is a nuisance and highly visible, it is not a toxic pollutant and is composed largely of water wapor. The stringency of South Dakota proposals is far in excess of wood smoke's role as an air pollutant, several persons stressed.

Black Hills mills other' compete with in states with mucy less severe controls, it was repeatedly stated. Lloyd Todd, Black Hills National Forest staff officer, added that although there may be alternatives to fire in the future, it is now a valuable tool for'est management, as in disposing of -logging slash during necessary timber harvest. He suggested the state might revise its regulations to base open burning restrictions on smoke dispersal conditions rather than simply time of day. Dr. Robert Gartner, South Dakota State University, also asked the commission to include controlled burning research and SDSU among exemptions in es on open fires.

He also noted research on wood residue uses, such as in livestock feeding, soil conditioners in combination with livestock wastes and as a soil stabilizer in place of hay. Gartner went on to suggest the commission relate to broad range air quality problems, such as radiation and soil and dust pollution resulting from poor farming, highway construction and real estate development. Provisions against degrading existing quality was a conof Hoadley Dean, prasident of Western South Dakota, Development. efforts Co. to This attract ennew business, he said, recommending the state follow federal guidelines in the question of non-degradation of ambient air quality.

Monday's hearing, conducted by Charles Carl, executive officer for the commission, was the first of several across the state this week in advance of a commission meeting Dec. 14. Hearing Set for Pat Pickering SIOUX FALLS (P Preliminary hearing for Patrick B. Pickering, charged with the murder of a fellow South Dakota penitentiary inmate, will be held next Monday in municipal court. Pickering, 25, demanded the hearing when he appeared be.

fore Judge Robert J. Patterson. The request was made through his court appointed attorney, Marvin K. Bailin. Pickering is codefendant in the action with James L.

Nelson, 31, also a state penitentiary prisoner. Nelson's preliminary hearing will open at 2:15 p.m. Wednesday. The men are jointly charg-1 ed in the strychnine poisoning death of Wayne H. Sherwood, 23.

Highway Work Will Continue Despite Dispute YANKTON Yankton-Vermillion four lane roadwork will proceed according to present time scheduling regardless of force changes in the highway department's, plans at Vermillion due to student legal actions. That was the word received by Yankton Chamber of Commerce President Lloyd Reedstrom at Pierre from South Dakota Highway Director Jack Allmon. Reedstrom said that the dispute and legal action at Vermillion resulting in 8 restraining order halting construction of the Highway 50 segment in the community could alter the department's plans as to which seg. ments of the proposed fourlane would be started first, according to Allmon. Regardless of the legal bassle.

Allmon told Reedstrom. timetable on the overall project would not be held up. Current planning calls for letting and construction in fiscal years 1973-1974. Read the Want Ads HOWEVER YOU SAY IT-IT'S STILL "Merry Christmas" CONTEST Correctly identify the country from which each of the following Yule greetings originate and win a GIFT CERTIFICATE from Montgomery's Froehliche Weinachten Glaedelig Jul Vrolijke Kerstmis Sretan Bozie Joyeux Noel Vesele Vanoce Boldog Karacsony Felices Pascuas Buon Natale Rozhestvom Kristovym Gledelig Jul Feliz Navidad Glad Jul Mele Kalikimaka Nosteria Lui Christos Sa Va De Folos Chrystos Rordzajetsia Slawyte Jeho Copy on separate sheet of paper. and mail to us or bring it to our store.

All correct entries will receive a GIFT. CERTIFICATE worth $5.00. ENTER NOW "til Christmas Certificates mailed Jan. 1st. SEE OUR UNUSUAL ARTIST DECORATED CHRISTMAS WINDOW Montgomery's FURNITURE ALEXANDRIA, S.

D. Open 13 Every 'Til Night January Exciting Gifts for the Young and Young-at-Heart by The Big fashion news for the young or for the youngat-heart is Knit Wear long sleeve or short the most Comfortable Sport Look you can find Stop In and let us give you a Personal Showing Priced from $5 to $10 Boxed Gift Wrapped FREE! IN MITCHE .29 .04 '70 1.28 4.27 1 50 3.38 1.28 1.20 2.00 2.18 2.19 .48.

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