Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 2
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

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

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

DEATHS Sioux Falls ALBERT JOHNSON Funeral services for Albert C. Johnson, 67, of 1604 S. 7th will i be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Gospel Tabernacle. he died Wednesd a near I Chamberlain while en route to Rapid City.

Born April 25, 1898, at Hendricks, he married Margaret Mae Smallwood June 1 11, 1927. They moved to Sioux Falls where they lived since their marriage. He retired two years ago from Northern States Power where he was employed 38 years in the operations department. Survivors are the widow; six sisters, Mrs. Mabel Sagmoe and Mrs.

Twedt, both of Hendricks; Mrs. Gena Morseth, Minneapolis; Mrs. Benne Reppe, Sacramento, Mrs. Olaf Watne, Sioux Falls; and Mrs. Arthur Rasmussen, Trent; and two brothers, Virgil, Hendricks; and Walter, Sioux Falls.

(Miller) Area MRS. CAROLINE BREKKE 'BRYANT, S.D. Funeral services for Mrs. Caroline Brekke, 84, were Tuesday in Bethlehem Lutheran Church. She died in a De Smet hospital.

Born Nov. 29, 1880, at Baltic, she was married Nels Brekke Feb. 10, 1902, lived on tand a farm at Vienna until 21 years ago when they moved to Bry. ant. She was preceded in death by her husband.

Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. Nelmer Carlson, Willow Lake; Mrs. Iver Spilde, Sioux Falls; and Mrs. Victor Froke, two sons, Arnold, Vienna; and Norman, Sioux Falls; 10 grandchildren, 23 great-grand-children and two great great grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Marie Klungseth, Bryant.

(Ahrens) ANTON ROTH LUVERNE, Minn. Funeral services for Anton Joseph Roth, 75, will be at 9 a.m. (DST) Saturday in St. Catherine's Church. He died in the home of 1 a son.

Born April 22, 1890, in Indiana, he lived there until 1921 when he moved to Granville, Iowa, where he married Catherine Winkle April 21, 1914. The couple moved to Ashton, Iowa, in 1932. He moved to Luverne in 1944. He was preceded in death by his wife in June 1956. Survivors are six sons, including Verne, Luverne: two daughters, including Mrs.

Clem Hatting, Luverne; 34 grandchildren and eight grandchildren. (Holm) GUSTAVE TIEDE PARKSTON, S.D. Funeral services for Gustave D. Tiede, 78, were Thursday in Sale United Church of Christ. He died Monday at home.

Born May 21, 1887, at Parkston, he married Paulina Koe-ary nig Feb. 24, 1911, in Parkston. She died December 1961. He farmed at Parkston until 1946 when he retired. Survivors are four sons, Arnett, Ruben, Harold and Verall of Parkston; one daugh(ter, Mrs.

Ruben Lindeman, Parkston; 13 grandchildren and one great grandchild; three el brothers, and Reinhold, both of Parkston; and Theodore, Mitchell; six sisters, Mrs. John Stwizer, Mrs. John Mogck, Mrs. Emanuel Bietz Mrs. Ted Juhnke, all of Parkston; Gust Winter, and Mrs.

Elcer Schoppert, Mitchell. Mehlhalff-Hanson) JOE HORN ARLINGTON, S.D. Funeral services for Joe Horn, 61, will de at 10:30 a.m. Friday in the Johnson Henry Funeral Home. He died at home Tues- He was born July 10, 1903, in Oklahoma Survivors are the widow, 01- ga; a brother, Bert; and four sisters, Goldie, Jane, Marie and May.

REV. AUGUST HEIN TRIPP. S.D. Funeral services for the Rev. August Hein, 90, were Thursday morning.

He died at home Monday. Born May 1 1875, in Germany, he was active as a minlister for 50 years. He served the Tripp church for 17 years before he retired in 1950. Since then he was intermittent supply pastor here. Other parishes he had served were at Clinton and Boyden, Iowa, and Clatonia, Neb.

He married Maria Zeitner. Survivors are the widow; four daughters, including Margaret, Tripp; and six sons. (Schmiedt) MRS. MAGDALENA HEINRICY DELL RAPIDS, S.D. Funeral services for Mrs.

Magdalena Heinricy, 82, will be at 9:30 a.m. Friday in St. Mary's Church, and the rosary will be 4x8 PLASTER BOARD Thick Each $136 Lowest Priced Wallboard in Town Ward Lumber Co. GOOD WOOD GOODS 14TH PRAIRIE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS Serving Real Estate and Property Interests in Sioux Falls area for 48 PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LEASING AND REAL ESTATE SALES, APPRAISALS INSURANCE, R. J.

HOBSON 200 Boyce Greeley Building Sioux Falls, S. Dek. 2 Sioux Falls July 1, 1965 Heads Rotary Don G. Cook of the J. J.

Roberts Cook Co. has assumed his as Realty. president of the Sioux Falls Rotary Club, succeeding H. R. (Pete) Scheid.

Tom Barron has succeeded Cook as vice president. Other new board members who have taken office are Jack Douglas, John Ewing, Dr. Robert Quinn and W. H. Rork.

said at 8 p.m. Thursday in St. Mary's Church. She died Wednesday in a Dell Rapids hospital. Born July 12, 1882, in Iowa, she was married to John Hein- ricy in 1910 at St.

Donatus, Iowa. He died in 1934. The ple moved to Dell Rapids 1919. Survivors are five sons, cluding Arnold Raymond, Trent; and Leo and Joe, man; four daughters including Mrs. Richard Hurney, and Mrs.

Paul Skovly, Falls; 32 grandchildren, brother and three sisters. manson) Democrat Continued from page 1 ficials and the general public. Some of the special items were for construction projects. The special appropriation items included $15 million for state aid to education for the biennium, $5.4 million for the adult welfare program, $3.8 lion child welfare and 000 the so-called short grass for program. IT ALSO included $100,000 for construction of the battleship South Dakota memorial at Sioux Falls, and $2.6 million for the education facilities fund at statesupported institutions of higher education.

The facilities fund is for construction. Others were a $1 million dietfacility at Yankton State Hospital, $380,000 for a vocational education building at Southern State College and fund for an adult educational center at the University of South Dakota. One other act of the 1965 leg-: (islature is currently before the state Supreme Court. It involves an action to a referendum on the state's law broadening the sales tax. SEN.

HIRSCH defended the inclusion of the special spending items in the general appropriation bill. "The arbitrary attitude of Democrats in killing all special appropriation bills left the Republicars in the legislature no other course of action but to provide the appropriations that former Oster now com-1 plains about. "We did it fully aware of what the Constitution provides and recognized that if they choose now to contest that action and the court strikes any or all of these appropriations, the responsibility will rest squarely at the feet of the people who attempted to use them as a legislative blackjack on the apportionment Democrats in the legislature defeated the special appropriation items, which were proposed by Republican legislators and the GOP administration, to increase their bargining power on legislative reapportionment. At the time, House Minority Leader Elvern Varilek, D- Geddes, charged Republicans -ttempted "to reapportion us out of the legislature." Republicans denied the Boe Names Plowman to Bank Post PIERRE (AP) Gov. Nils Boe Thursday announced the appointment of R.

L. (Ray) Plowman, Armour, to the state Banking Commission. Plowman succeeds L. A. Pier, Belvidere, whose term expired Thursday.

Plowman was born on a farm near Ramona and has been in the banking business at Armour for 19 years. A graduate of Watertown High School, he graduated from Augustana College, Sioux Falls, and received a master's degree from the University of South Dakota. Before entering the banking business at Armour, he coached two years at Parker, and was superintendent of schools at Tripp. Plowman is known in state athletic circles and was a basketball and football official for many years. He has been active in Armour civic affairs and served as school board treasurer there for a number of years.

Ethics Continued from page 1 long-time top aide, into buying $1,208 worth of advertising time on the Austin, television station controlled by the John- son family. couin JENKINS EXCUSED Jenkins resigned at the President's request last October after disclosure that Jenkins had been arrested twice on morals charges. On advice of psychiatrists the Rules Committee excused him from testifying but he answered questions and denied pressuring Reynolds to buy the advertising time. One of the sidelights 1 the report was a Justice Department document, printed as an appendix, which said Ellen Rometsch, a West German beauty who figured in the Baker case, admitted being a call girl. She had lived in the Washington area while her soldier husband was attached to the embassy of West Germany.

It said Mrs. Rometsch, who has since gone back to Germany, admitted knowing Baker but denied any intimacies with him a "or with any government officials including congressmen, Cabinet members, or persons connected with the White House." NAMES LISTED NAMES LISTED The Justice Department summary also listed other admitted prostitutes. with who Washington claimed asso- officials. It disguised their identities as "Mrs. "Mrs.

"Miss and so on. "Mrs. A admitted to having sexual intercourse with persons in the executive, legislative and judicial branches of government but declined to identify the individuals involved," the summary said. "She said she did not want her husband to know of her past prostitution activities." A letter from Atty. Gen.

Nicholas Katzenbach suggested that publication of the entire file on Mrs. Rometsch "would serve to destroy the reputation of sevferal individuals on the basis false of allegations which may be or which are wholly unrelated to the subject matter of the committee's inquiry." Mass Demonstrations SEOUL (AP) South Korean students continued mass demonstrations Thursday against their government's amity treaty with Japan. Informed sources said President Chung Hee Park will send the accord to the National st Assembly for ratification next week. The biggest demonstration was in Pusan where 1,300 high school boys answered police tear gas shells with stones. Police up the demonstration and arrested 300 youths.

BEST PLACE TO DINE OUT IS THE Sheraton-Cataract Motor Inn charge. HIGH 82 LOW 62 May We Help You Spruce Up Your Home? NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL BANK BANK DOWNTOWN STOCKYARDS COLONIAL SIOUX FALLS Unusual Fireworks Will Be Seen in S.F. Display Disability Bill Delayed WASHINGTON (AP)-A proposed constitutional amendment on presidential disability ran into a senate revolt Wednesday -built around charges it could create two presidents and two cabinets--and was held over until next Tuesday for a showdown vote. The House passed the legislation unanimously by voice vote shortly after noon and the Senate was expected to follow suit quickly. Instead the plan for removing a disabled president from office -and for returning him when he recovered touched off a mushrooming debate led by Sen.

Robert F. Kennedy, D- N.Y., with others voicing doubts too. TIME REQUESTED Sen. Albert Gore, said one key provision was vague. Sen.

John Sherman Cooper, agreed with him and Gore asked for more time to study the language. Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the Democratic leader, finally obtained agreement for a two-hour limitation on debate when the measure is taken up next Tuesday and announced there will be a roll call vote. If approved in its present form by a two-thirds majority it goes to the states for ratifi cation. Three fourths of the states would have to approve to make it law the 25th Amendment to the Constitution.

No presidential action is required. But if the Senate revises the language the proposal would have to go back to a SenateHouse Conference Committee. The proposed constitutional change would specify: -If the President formally declares himself disabled, the vice president takes over. The president can then return to office by sending Congress a written declaration he has recov ered. -If he does not act to remove himself, a majority of the Cabinet, or some other body Congress may designate, plus the vice president, can declare the president unable to perform his duties and the vice president takes over.

-The president resumes office at once when he informs Congress that no disability exists, unless within four days the of declare in writvice theresident and a majority ing to Congress that the president is still disabled. MUST CONVENE -Congress then must convene within 48 hours if not in session. It has 21 days to rule on the issue. A two-third vote is needed to uphold the vice president's challenge. If Congress does not act the president automatically is restored.

-To fill the vice presidency, the president will nominate a candidate who would take office if confirmed by a majority vote of both House and Senate. Kennedy claimed that a president who learned his Cabinet would vote with the vice president to declare him disabled might fire the cabinet and appoint a new one. Then the situation could arise, he said, when ther would be two presidents and two cabinets. DES MOINES (AP)- contest over plans Rath Packing Co. to buy the assets of Needham Packing Co.

of Sioux City was in the hands of members of the Iowa Supreme Court Thursday. FOR RENT TV, REFRIGERATORS, WASHERS and RANGES $15 may purchase of new or used appliance. Feay's Friendly Service 1622 W. 12th 338-3961 a en DOOMED HOTEL-Once the mecca for kings, magnates, diplomats and celebrities, the 30-story, Savoy Plaza Hotel in New York City is now virtually a ghost hotel, awaiting demolition to make way for a 50-story General Motors office building. -AP Photofax Ghosts Haunting Swank Demolition-Doomed Savoy NEW YORK (AP) Except for seven guests, the with their 1 rich decor were empty.

On every floor the thick-carpeted hallways stretched long and silent beside wall mirrors and ivory panels. The magnificent Savoy Plaza was virtually a ghost hotel. The remaining guests will have to get along without food, drink and room service, but a staff of about 50 will remain until the tenants find other abodes. Sentiments were sad as staff members and patrons bade farewell Wednesday to that gracious domain to make way Weather S. D.

Area Forecasts Southeast: Mostly sunny and warm this afternoon, but thundershowers 30 per cent of area late afternoon and in extreme Southeast this evening. Partly cloudy and a little cooler tonight and Friday. Lows tonight 56-60; highs Friday 75-80. South Central: Mostly sunny and warm this afternoon, but thundershowers 20 per cent of area near Nebraska border late this afternoon and clear to partly cloudy tonight and Friday Thundershowers likely Philip-Martin section late Friday, Lows tonight 55- 60; highs Friday upper 70s. North central and Northeast: Partly cloudy north central, variable cloudiness with thundershowers 40 per cent of northeast this afternoon and evening.

Clear to partly cloudy and a little cooler tonight and Friday. Lows tonight 52-60; highs Friday upper 70s. West: Clear to partly cloudy this afternoon through Friday. Thundershowers 30 per cent of south portion Friday afternoon. Little change in temperature.

Low tonight 52-57; highs 75-80. MINNESOTA: Variable tonight, with showers and thunderstorms 40 per cent of state this afternoon, and in east portion this evening. Cooler west portion tonight. Lows tonight 56-62 east and 50-58 west; Friday mostly fair with little temperature change; highs Friday 72-80. IOWA: Considerable cloudiness tonight, with showers or thunderstorms over 40 to 60 per cent of the state.

Most numerous thunderstorms and locally heavy rains likely in the west and central portions tonight. Warmer in the east tonight. Friday partly cloudy and warmer southeast and south central. Lows tonight in the 60s; highs Friday in the 80s. State and Nat'l State Aberdeen 78 60 Huron 79 65 Lemmon 73 55 Mobridge 79 59 Philip 83 61 Pickstown 83 67 Pierre 80 64 Rapid City 80 57 Sioux Falls 79 66 Watertown 76 62 National Atlanta 88 68 62 58 Chicago 79 58 Des Moines 82 65 Duluth 73 46 Fargo 72 60 Aberdeen, 122; Sioux Falls, Lemmon.

City. Tr. Temperatures Fairbanks 75 58 Honolulu 86 74 Int'l Falls 76 46 Kansas City 82 70 La Crosse 76 77 55 Los Angeles Mason City 83 61 Miami 83 79 Minneapolis 74 58 Orleans 92 75 New York 77 61 Omaha 79 67 Phoenix 106 S. Francisco 83 55 Sioux City Seattle 89 62 Valentine 83 64 Washington 89 63 Precipitation Watertown, Huron, Pickstown, Mobridge. 1.13; Sioux Local Temperatures Today Yesterday 3 a.m.

66 67 9 6 p.m. m. 75 a.m. a.m. 70 Midnight 68 Noon 78 Sunrise today, 4:49 3 p.m.

83 Sunset today, 8:1: Relative humidity, 77 per cent. Precipitation: Trace last 24 hours. Total for year to 18.34 inches. Normal to date, 13.24 inches. MiLLER tuneral-Home 3 Since 1902 MR.

LE ROY AUSTIN, 421 W. 8th St. Reverened Charles Schardein of Church of the Nazarene, will conduct the service 10 a.m. Friday in our chapel. Interment at Hills of Rest.

Roger Nordstrom, Director. Mrs. ROY J. (VIOLA) HOBSON, 2425 S. Main Ave.

Dr. Arnold Herbst will officiate at the service 10 a.m, Priday in the Pirst Methodist Church, 12th and Spring. Interment at Mt. Pleasant. Alven Iverson, Director.

There will be an Eastern Star Service in chapel 7:30 p.m. Thursday. MR. FRED W. BATHE, 605 S.

6th Ave. Rev. Orin Scandrett of the Free Methodist Church will conduct the service 1:30 p.m. Friday in our chapel. Interment at Hills of Rest.

Roald Eidness, Director. MR. ALBERT C. JOHNSON, 1604 S. 7th Ave.

Rev. Andrew Teuber will conduct the funeral rites 2 pm. Saturday in our chapel. Roger Nordstrom, Director. The light of the Lord can overcome the shadows of man's making.

12th and Main Ave. Types of fireworks never before seen in this part of the country will be part of the seclond annual Fourth of July fireworks display Sunday evening at Howard Wood Field. Size and scope of the display is indicated by the fact that 387 huge aerial sheels will be fired into the air, while there will be 10 und features. The aerial units lude stars, shells, moons and flowers with changing colors. At one stage of the program 200 9-inch shells will be discharged within short period.

Special ground displays will Fireworks Stand Is Shut by City South Dakota Fireworks won't be allowed to sell merchandise at a stand located on property annexed last year into the city of Sioux Falls. Circuit Judge Francis Dunn indicated he will deny a temporary injunction designed to prevent police officers from closing down the stand. The stand at issue has been located on property leased from Sioux Valley Cycle Club on April 5, 1962, for a period of five years. The site is near the intersection of Highway 16 and Highway 38 east. That area was annexed by the city July 7, 1964.

Dunn ruled that property annexed as a part of the city is subject to all ordinances of a municipality. Assistant City Attorney Paul Mundt represented the city. Gene Pruitt represented the plaintiff. Safe Driving Plea Is Made PIERRE (AP) Gov. Nils Boe Thursday issued a special plea to all motorists to make the Fourth of July weekend a happy and safe holiday.

Boe noted that in the past three years, South Dakota has not recorded a highway fatality during the July 4 holiday period. He urged all motorists to make a special effort to extend courtesy to others on the highway and to continue the nonfatality record. "South Dakotans may be proud of their July Fourth holiday driving record in the past year," he said, "and I have every confidence they will make a personal effort this weekend to observe the rules of good driving SO that the birth date of our nation shall not be marred with highway tragedy." CANOE GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)- An Indian canoe unearthed near Lakeland in central Florida is estimated to be 3,000 years old. FLOWERS By Butlers 133 N.

Phillips 336-2388 include the flag-raising at Iwo Jima, Uncle Sam, the Statue of Liberty, the Liberty Bell and a reproduction of the USS South Dakota with guns blazing. The program will begin at 8:30 p.m. A Civil Air Patrol drill team will present a performance during the Municipal Band concert which is to start at 7:45. Gates at the field will be opened at 7. The evening's event is sponsored by the Chamber of Military Affairs Committee.

Henry Shulkin is chairman of a subcommittee responsible for the fireworks. Baby of the Day for the march of commerce. The 30-story, Sa-' voy Plaza, famed for its ap-: pointments, cultured atmosphere, of personal patrons, is catering coming to down to be replaced by a 50-story General Motors office building. were protests from long-time tenants and various tradition committee groups. A recently circled the hotel for hours with a mobile loudspeaker sounding objections.

But the tall white brick and marble building standing on -Fifth Avenue at the southeast corner of Central Park, was doomed to demolition 38 years after it opened on the site of its predecessor, the old Savoy. City Brief Harold Spitznagel, Sioux Falls architect, told members and of the Downtown Kiwanis Club about a White House conference which he attended in May. The conference was conwith the preservation of natural beauty in America. He also showed several slide pictures of the numerous billboards in the Mt. Rushmore area.

Catherine E. Schoenmann, city librarian, will attend the annual conference of the American Library Association in Detroit. The meeting will bel held from Sunday through July 10. Robert Blake, audio- visual director in the Sioux Falls public school system, will be a visiting staff member at the Summer Institute in Educational Media to be held Monday through Aug. 13 at the University of North Dakota.

Mike Cosgrove, a senior at South Dakota State University from Meriden, Iowa, is summer interning in the Farmers Home Administration Office in Sioux Falls. He is majoring in animal science and belongs to Farm House Fraternity at the university. DIES IN S.C. SIOUX CITY (AP) A. M.

Davis, 73, prominent Sioux City property owner and manager and insurance man long in various civic fund appeals, died Wednesday night. He had suffered a series of heart attacks. Funeral services will be held here Sunday afternoon. Stockholm-Sweden may institute speeds" on roads. Sioux Falls Argus-Leader 200 Minn.

Sioux Falls. S.D 57102 Vol. 80 No. 182 Published afternoons and Sunday morn ings by the Sioux Falls Argus-Leader division of Speidel Newspapers national organization promoting through the publication of progressive news papers the best interests of the com munity and the home William Leopard, publisher Anton Yeager. executive editor F.

Christopherson, John A Kennedy Contributing Editors Haggar comptroller LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN SOUTH DAKOTA-OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY NEWSPAPER Member Audit Bureau of Circulations SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Evenings and Sundays: Seven issues In South Dakota, Minnesota. lowa and Nebraska: Year $16.00 A Months 8.50 OUTSIDE THE FOUR STATES Year $24.00 Months 13.00 Months 7.00 SIOUX FALLS CITY HOME DELIVERY By carrier evenings and Sundavs. 40c cer week The Associated Press in entitieo sively to the use for republication the local news printed in this paper as well all Associated Press news dispatches. rights of republi cation of specia: dispatches are also reserved Second Class postage cald at Sioux Falls South Dainta JERALD In KENT, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Kenneth Crouse of Avon, is one year old. in- Col. Elkton; Sioux a (Her- Likes Johnson, So Votes Twice LOS ANGELES (AP)-Police said Edward L. Williams, 40, accused of casting two ballots in the last presidential election, told arresting officers: "I voted twice for President Johnson because I liked him and his policies." Officers said that Williams, a restaurant maintenance man, told them Wednesday when he was arrested that he thought it would be all right to vote twice because he had skipped some previous elections in which he didn't like any candidate. Williams used an alias the sec-' ond time, police said.

(Advertisement) What about that painless "Air Force" Diet? Joseph Alsop tells why he now counts carbohydrates instead of calories has no hunger pains and feels fine! Also: a companion article warns of Risks in the LowCarbohydrate in July Reader's Digest now on sale. (Condensed from McCall's and Good Housekeeping) People have faith in Reader's Digest CORRECTION MORRELL PRIDE CANADIAN BACON By LB. RED OWL JUST THE THING YOU NEED FOR THAT VACATION TRIP TRAVELER BAR CARRIERS FITS MOST MODEL CARS Completely assembled, one piece, heavy steel bar with attractive grey enamel finish. Hinged, rubbed-padded roof plates adjust to any roof contour. Strong safety straps secure bar to gutters, Lashing straps use fast, safe key-lock method.

LIST PRICE VACATION 6.15 WHOLESALE SPECIAL CAMPBELL'S PRICE $3.74 THOUSANDS OF ITEMS AT WHOLESALE Campbell Supply East 8th Street at Indiana 336-2494 Mon. Sat..

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Argus-Leader
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Argus-Leader Archive

Pages Available:
1,254,594
Years Available:
1886-2024