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'First Snow'

First Snow has arrived replacing the garden’s fading colors of fall with a twinkling coat of brilliance. It covers the brown, lost remnants of summer with a blanket of hope.
First Snow gives mortals a hint of the new creation described by John in the book of Revelation. “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, … And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death, or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”
Every year, Creation becomes “a new earth” as First Snow provides her with a brilliant robe of white.
First Snow brings with it the promise of glorious new life which comes only after death.
The earth falls silent, overwhelmed by the offer.
First Snow grants new beauty to the garden, with frost outlining the remnants of summer. Ice-coated dogwoods and coneflowers give muted tribute to a season now past.
Snow forms cloud-like pompoms on still-standing seed heads, and frozen grasses extend their blades in silent worship.
The garden, once vibrant and buzzing, is now a place of solitude and rest.
But, wrapped in a pure white quilt of First Snow, the garden is more glorious than when last summer’s butterflies hovered over a riot of pink, yellow and purple.
With no dew on the roses, the garden is transformed into a new kind of beautiful.
First Snow drifts over the memories of fall and promises the garden’s beauty is not gone – it’s been transformed.

City of Luverne Ordinance No. 30

City of Luverne Ordinance
No. 30, Fourth Series
ORDINANCE NO. 30, FOURTH SERIES
AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING CONVEYANCE OF REAL ESTATE
(115 WEST WARREN STREET, CITY OF LUVERNE, ROCK COUNTY, MINNESOTA) 
THE CITY OF LUVERNE DOES HEREBY ORDAIN:
SECTION 1. Pursuant to City Charter, Section 12.05, the City Council is authorized to sell or convey the following described real estate located in the City of Luverne, County of Rock, State of Minnesota, described as follows, to-wit:
Legally described as follows:
Lot Ten (10), Block Two (2) Warren & Kniss Addition to the City of Luverne, Minnesota
To Paul Reif
SEC. 2.  The Mayor and City Administrator are hereby authorized and directed to execute such legal documents as are necessary to accomplish this sale and are further authorized to execute and deliver a warranty deed upon complete fulfillment of all terms and conditions.  
SEC. 3. This ordinance takes full force and effect seven (7) days after its publication.
(12-01)

Christmas comes early in the Peterson household

Thanksgiving is in the books for another year and Christmas is just weeks away … that is, for most of you.
The Petersons are celebrating Christmas this coming weekend. Our kids and their families will be coming to Luverne from North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and, of course, Minnesota.
With busy work, school and sports schedules, it seems getting together at Christmas just doesn’t work.
This isn’t the first year, and no doubt won’t be the last year, we gather together for Christmas on a day other than Dec. 25.
There are some benefits to celebrating Christmas early. You get your shopping done before many people even start theirs, and of course the return lines are shorter. Because it’s too late, Cyber Monday is a non-event.
Also, you can start your post-holiday diet weeks earlier.
As I think about it, we celebrated Christmas last year the first week of December as well. When we reminisce about that gathering, we refer to it as last year’s Christmas.
I know it sounds like I am complaining about getting the family together at a time other than on Christmas Day, but I am not.
I know there are families out there with circumstances such as travel, other family commitments, maybe health issues, that prevent them from making a trip home, or maybe they are serving in the military stateside or even in other parts of the world.
 The Star Herald can help bring a little Christmas cheer to our service men and women.
We are collecting greeting cards again this year that will be sent off to military personnel around the world. There are some guidelines that need to be followed, and you can find those on page 14 in today’s Star Herald.
May you have a Merry Christmas whenever you are celebrating it.

On the Record Nov. 21-26, 2022

Dispatch report
Nov. 21
•Complainant reported motor vehicle theft.
•Complainant picked up items belonging to subject.
•Complainant requested to speak to sherriff about parking.
•Complainant reported semitrailer swerving.
•Complainant reported semitrailer crossing center line and fog line.
•Complainant reported a transient.
•Complainant reported vehicle driving at high rate of speed past residence each day.
•Outage was reported.
•Complainant reported car racing around the industrial area.
Nov. 22
•Complainant filed domestic report.
•Complainant reported a vehicle driving at high rate of speed and in and out of traffic.
•Complainant reported theft from a trailer.
•Complainant reported a civil issue.
•Complainant requested assistance with retrieving belongings.
•Complainant reported a hit and run.
•Complainant reported damage to property.
•Complainant requested to speak to deputy.
•Cottonwood County arrested subject on warrant.
Nov. 23
•Outage was reported.
•Complainant reported a scam.
•Complainant requested assistance.
•Complainant retrieved personal effects from vehicle.
•Complainant reported found property.
Nov. 24
•Deputy assisted MSP on a traffic stop.
•Deputy assisted MSP on a traffic stop.
•Complainant reported a threat.
•Assistance from another department was requested.
•Complainant reported child maltreatment.
Nov. 25
•Complainant reported damage to railroad crossing gate arm.
•Complainant reported vehicle is parked odd.
•Complainant reported a stalled vehicle parked suspiciously.
Nov. 26
•Complainant reported a disorderly.
•A request was received to confirm warrant.
•Complainant requested gate at city park to be kept closed until specific date then opened.
•Complainant reported vehicle with collector plates and questioned usage.
•Complainant reported vehicle driving wrong way on Highway 75.
•Complainant reported an open storage unit.
 
In addition, officers responded to 1 motor vehicle accident, 4 deer accidents, 1 transport, 20 ambulance runs, 4 paper services, 1 animal complaint, 1 fingerprint request, 7 burn permits, 1 vehicle impound, 4 gas drive-offs, 2 alarms, 1 drug court test, 5 purchase and carry permits, 33 traffic stops, 8 abandoned 911 calls, 2 tests, 2 welfare checks, 1 OFP and 1 follow-up.

Respond to H-BC survey by Friday, Dec. 2

Friday, Dec. 2, is the last day for Hills-Beaver Creek School District residents to turn in the district facility survey. A survey link is necessary to answer questions related to providing input to the school board’s long-term facility plans. One survey link was sent to residences last month. If a new link or an additional link is needed in the household, email business manager Amanda Rozeboom at a.rozeboom@isd671.net to request an online survey code or a paper copy of the survey. Paper copies can also be obtained at the elementary school in Beaver Creek or the secondary school in Hills.

Menu Dec. 5-9, 2022

LSS meals at Generations
 
Monday, Dec. 5: Hamburger patty on a bun with cheese, glazed carrots, vegetarian baked beans, dessert.
Tuesday, Dec. 6: Pork loin, baked potato with sour cream, corn, dinner roll, fruit.  
Wednesday, Dec. 7: Beef stew, vegetable, biscuit, fruit, cookie.
Half-Price Day sponsored by C & B Operations.
 Thursday, Dec. 8: Goulash, mixed vegetables, fresh fruit, bread stick.
Friday, Dec. 9: Chicken fiesta hot dish, carrots, fruit, dessert.
Half-Price Day sponsored by Main Street Financial.
LSS Dining offers well-balanced and affordable meals in a community atmosphere.
Call Pam Franken at 283-9846, extension 11 to reserve one day prior, to arrange to pick up a dinner or for home-delivered meals.
Gift certificates are available at the meal site or online at www.lssmn.org/nutrition.

Remember When Dec. 1, 2022

10 years ago (2012)
•The Christensen girls are on a mission to bring affordable, high quality, gently used, upscale clothing to Luverne’s Main Street.
Sisters Sue (Christensen) Hoffman and Amy (Christensen) Cowell are opening Sassy Seconds, a used-clothing store, Dec. 1 in the former Roberts Barber Shop at 119 East Main.
Hoffman owns and operates Great Planes Travel located next door, so she said adding another business made sense.
 
25 years ago (1997)
•What started out as helping his dad grow navy beans has turned into a business on the side for Hills resident Wendell Erickson.
Erickson said it all began during World War 11, Dec. 7, 1941. Erickson’s father, Raymond, farmed and raised navy beans on rented land in east central Minnesota.
But, during the invasion of Pearl Harbor, he lost his three employees to the service and had to look to his sons for help. Back then, Erickson said there was a big demand for navy beans, due to war rationing.
After those three years, Erickson said he quit growing beans because it was so time consuming and labor-intensive until the invention of the electric eye bean cleaner.
Erickson recently started growing navy beans again on land he owns in Grand Forks, N.D. He has found a renter there who is willing to raise navy beans on the 80 acres.
 
50 years ago (1972)
•In a major business transaction this week, Tony’s IGA Foodliner here was sold to Hy-Vee Stores, an Iowa based supermarket chain. Tony’s was owned by Anthony Sieperda, of Rock Rapids, who has owned the business here since buying National Council Oak, February 13, 1960.
Named as manager of the store by the new owners was a former Luverne young man, James Viland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Viland. He began his duties here Monday. Daryel Buss, who has been manager of Tony’s IGA, will continue for a period as assistant manager, and will later be assigned to a management position with Hy-Vee, it was announced.
Hy-Vee is said to be the largest food store operation in the state of Iowa with 87 stores throughout the state.
 
75 years ago (1947)
•Luverne’s newest business, to be known as Mrs. Norgard’s Tot Shop, will be opened to the public Saturday.
Located in the Wildung building, just south of the Luverne Style Shop, the store will be operated by Mrs. A. C. Norgard. Mrs. Norgard announced this week that the store would deal exclusively in wearing apparel for infants, toddlers, and girls up to 12 years of age.
The public is invited to visit the store on opening day Saturday.
 
100 years ago (1922)
•The proposition of merging the Luverne cemetery with that of the Maplewood cemetery, reported as accepted at a meeting of the trustees of the Luverne association held Wednesday evening.
As outlined in these columns in previous issues, this provides for removing the bodies now interred in the old Luverne cemetery to Maplewood, and the eventual sale of the Luverne cemetery land, the funds and property of this association to go to the Maplewood association.
It was announced that the officers of the Maplewood association had arranged to set aside suitable lots for the re-interment of bodies now in the old cemetery, but it was decided to postpone the work of moving them until spring.
The unplatted portion of the Luverne cemetery, consisting of about 22½ acres of land, was leased to W. I. Ward for the ensuing year at the Wednesday evening meeting.

Kristi's Assumes Name

Kristi's assumes name
Minnesota secretary of state 
Certificate of assumed name
MINNESOTA STATUTES, CHAPTER 333
The filing of an assumed name does not provide a user with exclusive rights to that name. The filing is required for consumer protection in order to enable consumers to be able to identify the true ownership of a business.
ASSUMED NAME: Kristi's 
PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS:
211 E. Main Street, Luverne, MN 56156 USA
NAMEHOLDER(S):
Name: Kristi K Knutson
Address: 204 W. Main, Luverne, MN 56156 USA
If you submit an attachment, it will be incorporated into this document. If the attachment conflicts with the information specifically set forth in this document, this document supersedes the data referenced in the attachment.
By typing my name, I, the undersigned, certify that I am signing this document as the person whose signature is required, or as agent of the person(s) whose signature would be required who has authorized me to sign this document on his/her behalf, or in both capacities. I further certify that I have completed all required fields, and that the information in this document is true and correct and in compliance with the applicable chapter of Minnesota Statutes. I understand that by signing this document I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Section 609.48 as if I had signed this document under oath. 
Signature : /s/ Kristi Knutson
MAILING ADDRESS: None Provided
EMAIL ADDRESS FOR OFFICIAL NOTICES: kristiknutson@gmail.com
(12-01, 12-08)

1943: Colby recalls seeing James brothers in Rock County

The following article is part of the Diamond Club Member group that began in the January 7, 1943, issue of the Rock County Star Herald. Members of this group consist of persons of age 75 and older.
The following appeared in The Rock County Herald on July 1, 1943.
One of the few living persons in this area who can claim having seen Jesse and Frank James, the famous Northfield bank robbers, is Mrs. Ellis W. Colby, Luverne.
Although she has had many exciting experiences during her life, the most chilling moment perhaps came when a sheriff’s posse informed her and her brother, George W. Nelson, that the two men they had seen riding on horseback were the noted desperadoes.
Were Herding Cattle
Mrs. Colby and her brother were herding cattle on the prairie in Martin township when the two riders came over a knoll. She recalls how she and her brother admired them as they came nearer because they not only rode beautiful horses, but they were gaudily dressed. Both wore belts that glittered in the sunlight, and had white gloves on their hands.
“I can remember just as plain as if it were yesterday,” Mrs. Colby states, “that they came close to where we were, and one of them called out, “Hello, there; we’re going on!”, and continued to ride in a southwesterly direction. My brother and I were talking about them when from almost the same direction came a couple of other men. They asked us if we’d seen any riders and we told them we had and pointed in the direction they had gone about a half hour before. Then one of the men told us that he was the Sheriff from Luverne, and that the men we had seen were the James boys.”
Changed Horses
Although the posse continued on the trail of the bandits, they never caught them. Later it was learned that the two had stopped at a farm near Klondike, Iowa, and had changed horses. The farm was operated by a distant  relative of Mrs. Colby’s mother.
Mrs. Colby literally “grew up” with this section of the country because she came here before much settling had been done. Born in Helgeland, Norway, Feb. 16, 1865, she was christened Nickolena by her parents, Nels and Chisttianne Nelson. Her father was a farmer, but also was a violin maker and a shoemaker. Although he never learned to play a violin, he could tune one so it would satisfy the ear of even the best musician.
Three Months at Sea
Mrs. Colby’s father died in Norway, and because most of her mother’s relatives had gone to America, her mother decided to take her two children and go there also. Mrs. Colby was five and one-half years old and her brother was a little over two when they boarded a sailboat and started out for the United States. They were on the ocean 11 weeks. Although a mere child at the time, she can remember several incidents in connection with the long journey. One time, all passengers were ordered to their quarters because of a storm. Mrs. Colby recalls how the boxes slid from one side to the other as the ship rocked in the high wind, and how water splashed into their stateroom.
Also during the trip, an epidemic of measles broke out, and her brother became seriously ill. She recalls how the steward told her mother to take the boy up on deck, “if you want to save his life.”
Most thrilled event of the whole trip was seeing land again after almost three months on the water, Mrs. Colby states.
Rode in Cattle Car
Coming from New York to Ft. Dodge, Iowa, in a cattle car is another of Mrs. Colby’s varied experiences. She explained that travel in those days was not always in luxurious coaches. Although she does not remember a great deal about the trip, she does recall looking at the passing scenery through the openings between the boards of the rack siding of the car.
The train went only as far as Ft. Dodge, and their destination was Buena Vista county, so relatives came to get them with an ox-team and covered wagon to Beloit, Iowa, a small village across the Sioux River from Canton, S. D. There they lived two years with an aunt and uncle, and her mother “proved up” an 80-acre claim.
Mother Worked
Mrs. Colby’s mother worked like a man during those first few years in order to support her family. She helped in the harvest fields, with the grain stacking and even with the threshing. She earned 75 cents a day, which was considered a pretty good salary for a woman. As soon as Mrs. Colby was old enough to help with housework and take care of children, she began working away from home for her board, room and clothing.
A few years later, her mother remarried, and they moved to Martin township, Rock County. There Mrs. Colby experienced the visit of the James brothers, the grasshopper plague and the blizzard of 1888.
The day the grasshoppers came, she recalls, her mother was washing clothes by hand in the yard. When they began to settle, they kept falling in the tub so fast that her mother was unable to scoop them out fast enough, and she gave up the task.
The men had just begun harvesting when it began getting dark, and looking toward the sun, they saw the grasshoppers coming like a great cloud.
Destroyed Potato Patch
They came home at noon, and during the hour they were eating their noon meal, the hoppers had stripped every leaf from a field of corn near the house. “I remember my mother had a nice garden, and a beautiful potato patch.” Mrs. Colby states, “and by three o’clock that afternoon, there wasn’t a thing left.”
Because of the scarcity of fuel, Mrs. Colby learned early in life to twist hay and flax straw. In the winter they would pile it high like cordwood along the side of the wall, just in case a blizzard would strike.
Speaking of blizzards, Mrs. Colby recalls that her husband had been digging a well on their farm the day the blizzard of 1888 struck. He had just come in to change his clothing and had sent his hired man into the well to do the digging when the storm arose. His first thought was of getting the man out of the well, and while he was doing that, the cattle began to go with the wind away from the farm yard. After considerable work and anxiety, they were finally driven into the barn to safety.
This story will continue in next week’s edition of the Star Herald.
 
         Donations to the Rock County Historical Society can be sent to the Rock County Historical Society, 312 E. Main Street, Luverne, MN 56156.
Mann welcomes correspondence sent to mannmade@iw.net.

Lucille Feekes-Graff

Lucille S. Feekes-Graff died Nov. 24, 2022, in Luverne.
Visitation is from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 30, at Miller Downtown Chapel in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. A funeral service is at 11 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 1, at The Church of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints in Brandon, South Dakota. Interment will be at Hurley Cemetery.
Lucille Holbrook was born on Dec. 19, 1930, to George and Lucy Holbrook in Lake Wilson.
She married Roulland Feekes in April of 1947. They lived in various places in the Sioux Falls area and raised seven children. She began working for the Third Street Laundromat in the mid 1960s, and she and Roulland later purchased the business. Lucille managed the business until they sold it in 1976.
When the children had all finished school, the couple moved to Logan, Utah, and then Hyram, Utah. Lucille worked for Bourns Networks until Roulland retired in 1990. They then moved back to Sioux Falls. Roulland died in 2003.
Lucille moved into a retirement community where she met Donald Graff. They were married in April of 2006. Don died a year and a half later. She continued living in the retirement community until she began suffering from dementia. She then moved to the Good Samaritan Society – Mary Jane Brown Home in Luverne and lived there until her death.
She is survived by her children, Dale (Kathy) Feekes, Virginia Feekes, Bob Feekes, John (Sheila) Feekes, Tim (Shari) Feekes and Ted (Shannon) Feekes; 33 grandchildren; 85 great-grandchildren; 30 great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Roulland Feekes; her late husband, Donald Graff; son Douglas Feekes; parents; siblings; great-grandson Landon Feekes; and great-granddaughter Justine Aarhus.
Arrangements were provided by Miller Funeral Home of Sioux Falls, www.millerfh.com.
(1201 F)

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