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From the pulpit

Christmas happened ‘to you’ and ‘for you’"For there is born to you this day in the city of David, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord" (Luke 2:11). Merry Christmas! In the name of Jesus. Amen. There is born to you a Savior. He comes to save you. He comes to bring peace to His people on earth. He comes to reconcile God and sinners. He comes to us and we are saved!Everything depends on that Baby in the manger coming to you. Your salvation, your forgiveness, your life, your reconciliation, your resurrection, your redemption — your everything. For without that little Baby, we are totally lost and condemned, eternally separated from God by our sins, and are never at peace. Without Baby Jesus, we cannot be saved.But Jesus has come. The Virgin conceived and bore forth her first-born Son. She wrapped Him in swaddling cloths and laid Him in the manger, because there was no room in the inn.That's not a story, it's what actually happened. Yet, it's not enough that it actually happened. No, what saves us from the terrible things we do and say both to God and to one another is that all of this happened "to you" and "for you."So, the angel points the way. "You'll find Him where I announce to you He is." He announced, the choir of heavenly hosts sang, and they went and found Him exactly where they said He'd be — right down to the manger.But Baby Jesus doesn't come "to you" anymore in the manger, does He? He isn't on the Cross, where He won your salvation, either. No, He comes to you today in His Word and in His Supper.As you hear and sing His Word today and eat His Body and Blood, Baby Jesus comes "to you." He came in the manger and He delivers Himself to you this Christmas in His gifts of Word and Sacrament. "To you" is for you! Merry Christmas "to you!" In the name of Jesus. Amen.

Bits By Betty

Christmas in 1921The following appeared in the Rock County Herald on Friday, December 16, 1921:CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL FOR KIDS TOMORROWArrangements for Community Christmas Tree Celebration in Luverne Completed3,000 BAGS OF CANDY TO BE GIVEN KIDDIESMoving Picture Shows Will be Free for Children 13 years and Under During AfternoonTomorrow afternoon is the time, and Luverne is the place, when and where the kids of Rock county will be entertained, and in carrying out this laudable undertaking the committees in charge of the arrangements are to be assisted by both Santa Claus and Uncle Sam.There will be no stringent demarcation as to at what age a person ceases to be a kid, either — anyone may qualify under this classification without regard to age — for all that is needed is the proper juvenile spirit.While "everybody is cordially invited," special efforts will be expended in seeing that the kids, and particularly those under twelve years old, experience a delightful time.To this end three thousand bags of candy will be given away, and all children under thirteen years will be admitted to the theatres free of charge during the afternoon. Special features designed to appeal especially to the kid mind are to be shown, and if necessary, two shows will be given at each play house.Christmas trees have been erected on Main street and these will be suitably decorated and illuminated for the occasion, and will be left mounted until after Christmas.The main interest of everyone, will, of course, be focused on the arrival of the two distinguished gentlemen of the day — Santa Claus and Uncle Sam.Coming down from the north at 1:26 o’clock on the Rock Island, they will be met at the station by the Luverne band and a crowd of young and old kids, and the festivities are to start immediately after.Owing to the amount of baggage that Santa Claus and Uncle Sam find it necessary to carry, special conveyances will be provided for them in parade lines on the trip up town.A large committee of citizens will meet at the First National bank at 1 o’clock and march to the Rock Island station to assist in handling the kids that congregate there and aid in keeping them out of harm’s way when the train pulls in.But the main point is that Luverne will endeavor to entertain every kid — small and big, young and old — in Rock county tomorrow afternoon.Will you be there?Donations to the Rock County Historical Endowment Fund can be sent to the Rock County Historical Society, P.O. Box 741, Luverne, MN 56156.Mann welcomes correspondence sent to mannmade@iw.net.

Room with a view

Dear Santa,I hope you’re staying cozy at the North Pole and resting up for your big night of special deliveries. There is even enough snow way down here in Minnesota for us to enjoy a white Christmas.One of the first things I should say in this rare letter is that I’m sorry I haven’t written for so many years. I think I forgot how to make wishes — or at least stopped believing they’d come true.I always knew that Santa was more than a portly man in a snowsuit (no offense). I knew you existed in "love and generosity and devotion." That’s how New York Sun editor Francis Pharcellus explained your existence to Virginia in an 1887 editorial, anyway.He wrote, "Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children nor men can see. … Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world."My own Santa letter has been difficult to write because the things I want for Christmas aren’t anything your elves can make: I want to have time to read good books, shop with my sisters, hang out with my Mom and laugh with my friends. I want to taste my grandma’s caramel rolls again. I want to learn half of what my Dad knows. I want to feel comfortable in my own skin and stop finding gray hairs. I want to be pleased with my work. I want enough challenges to make me strong but not so many that I am burdened … and one day have a dishwasher.I’ll just have to remember that even if all my Christmas wishes don’t come true, that you’re still at the top of the world listening to them and accepting my lists."How dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus!" Francis Pharcellus said. "There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight."So, Santa, I’ll still believe in you if I don’t find a dishwasher in my kitchen and if I wake up Dec. 25 and see that you haven’t eaten the cookies I put out for you.I still believe the best things are the unseen.Until next year,

For what it's worth

Yesterday was the first day of winter, and because yesterday was Wednesday, it is also sometimes referred to as hump day in reference to being the middle day of the week. I look at yesterday as a sort of hump day in reference to the length of daylight hours. While yesterday was the shortest day of the year, that means that today the daylight hours start to reclaim some time from the nighttime side of the ledger. While it’s not yet a noticeable increase, we are over the hump.You can also tell we are getting close to a holiday and, of course, in this case that means Christmas will be here in a few more days, thus the rise in gas prices. On the subject of raising prices because of a holiday, I’ll share this story with you. My wife, Mary, and I were going to go to Redwood Falls for New Year’s Eve. I called the casino hotel to make a reservation and they were understandably booked for the night. I called the Redwood Valley Lodge, a nice hotel that we have stayed at a number of times this past year. I was happy to hear they had rooms left and proceeded to book a room. That is, until the reservation clerk quoted me the rate at nearly double the regular rate that I have paid several times the past year. When I asked her how come so much, she replied, "Because it’s New Year’s Eve." I told her they would have to gouge someone else and declined the reservation.Anyway, back to the task at hand. With just three days before Christmas and tonight set as men’s night for shopping in Luverne, I’d better start making a list. Oh, and one more thing: Merry Christmas.

To the Editor:

Christmas at the PalaceWhat an evening! We would like to thank George McDonald for being the Master of the evening and all the participants who shared their talents and time at the Christmas at the Palace. It was our pleasure to bring you this holiday tradition to the historic Palace Theatre. Also a special thanks to all who attended the concert!Dianne OssenfortLorna BryanLaDonna Van AartsenSue SandbulteJanine Papik

At home in Hills

It is my belief that the demise of many American marriages starts with the selection of the Christmas tree.First, couples and families argue over whether to buy artificial or real. Either way, the choices continue.Artificial tree sections in retail stores consume tons of space and offer a wide variety – short, tall, fat, skinny, with lights, with fiber optics. I wouldn’t be surprised if some actually play carols.If going with a real tree, the decision has to be made as to if you cut one down or go to the store and pick one out. Both choices are going to be chilly and require gloves.Regardless of which direction you head, the event will usually cause someone to lose patience, young children to lose interest and the tree hasn’t even been stuffed into the back of the car.Once it gets home, that is when the real "fun" begins.Before I continue, I should say that picking out the Christmas tree and subsequent decorating are my favorite part of the holiday season. I love Christmas trees. If I had my way, they would stay up until Valentine’s Day.Unfortunately, in my family the hunt for the tree was never an easy task.As a child, we always had a fresh-cut tree. My mother would stay home decorating the house while my father piled all of us children into the van and headed for the nearest tree farm.My other siblings didn’t always share the love my father and I had for the hunt. They would get cold and bored and want to just pick a tree and go.My philosophy was different. I was sure there was one perfect tree somewhere out in the field, and my Daddy and I were going to find it. Of course, by the time I would find one and permit my father to crawl underneath to chop it down, we were all chilled to the bone. The poor man — he really tolerated us as children. I am sure these moments were not among our best behaved, but he always showed us great respect and smiled a lot.Once the tree was brought home, my mother would get a chance to react. No matter how hard we tried, I don’t think we ever managed to get a symmetrical tree, and usually it would be too big for the house.This forced my father to spend more time out in the wind, snow and inhumane temperatures "trimming the tree" to fit in our house.Once the tree was in the stand, the family, especially my sister and mother, would have a small fit. It was no longer the perfect tree – now it was this bush-like thing we had brought home that was ruining the beautiful Christmas wonderland my mother had created.When one of my younger brothers, Johnny, approached puberty, he developed several allergies. This was just the excuse my mother had been waiting for. No more real trees because they make poor Johnny sneeze and his eyes water.So out went my father’s tradition.Instead, he spends about two hours matching up the color coded branches of our family’s fake tree. Woo-hoo!Fast forwarding to my adult life with my husband, David … we get real trees. Moreover, I promise the day we go to get them ends with feelings of joy and accomplishment, but the process is a bit hairy.I do not have the patience of my father, so when things start to go badly, I get crabby.We never argue over which tree to get, he usually lets me choose. Somehow, even after years of follies, I still manage to get a tree that is too big and we don’t ever notice this fact until it is already in the house.So we get our one little saw and start taking the inches off. In the past, this process has led to the bottom of the tree being uneven, causing the tree to be tilted when it gets in the stand.About now is the time I really test my husband’s love for me. This is my special thing, yet I start to feel defeated and think it will never look pretty.However, like my father, he grins and moments later has solved the problem – the first of our Christmas miracles.Now the lights come out, another area open for "discussion" in families. Which lights do you hang — colored, white, big, small? And do they blink? Much of which doesn’t matter because half of the strands don’t work.After my father placed the lights on the tree, my siblings and I would begin the race to hang up ornaments. Somehow, each one was special to each of us. This would lead to fighting, fighting usually caught on video tape.In the end, we would all stand around the tree, listening to Christmas carols, agreeing that this was the most beautiful tree in the world.It surprises me that my parents and my husband tolerate all of this year after year.This year my husband found a way to avoid all the fussing and deciding. While I was at work, he picked out a flocked tree at Wally’s Nursery.When I arrived home, he took me to Wally’s and showed me the most perfect tree I have ever seen. It was small, the perfect shape, came in a stand and actually fit in both our car and our house.It was in our house and donned with lights in less than a few hours. It was a great Christmas gift.Maybe picking out the tree, lights and ornaments isn’t a fiasco for all families, but I would be willing to guess every family has something during the holidays that causes temperatures to rise. This year, try to exercise patience and toleration with one another.Chances are, the tensions are coming from a good place. In my house, it was just that everyone wanted the holiday to be perfect for everyone else.Well, this is not a holiday about perfection; it is about family and reflection. As long as you have those you love around you, the holiday will be great. Everything else is just icing on the cake. And really, for adults it is all about the cake.Merry Christmas Crescent readers! I hope you and your family have a fantastic holiday. I hope that you and your loved ones are healthy, travel safely and take the time to notice how precious this time of year really is.

Village Voice and Viste Manor News

The Village Library is located in the Garden Room on the lower level. The hours at Tuff Village Library are from 9 to 11 a.m. the first and third Saturday mornings of the month. Come in and check out our selection of books available. A number of changes have been happening at Tuff Village. Elaine Kellenberger moved to apartment No. 112 and Sig Jacobson to apartment No. 111. We would like to welcome Steve and Irene Ruzick from Dawson to room No. 102. Irene is the former Irene Rortvedt. Nelma Shearer, Tempe, Ariz., and Carolyn Crawford visited Fran Sandager on Tuesday evening. Jim, Sherri and Sigrid Wald from Pierre, S.D., and Karl and Vicki Dieters from Larchwood, Iowa, Carol and Richard Sundem, Sioux Falls, S.D., visited Steve Ruzich Sunday afternoon. Steve and Irene Ruzick attended a Thompson Christmas reunion in Larchwood on Sunday evening. The halls of the Village have been filled with the sound of music, thanks to carolers from the Hills Blue Ribbon 4-H Club and the Christian Reformed Church. Congratulations to Ruby Feucht and Vivian Tatge on the arrival of a new great-grandchild, a baby boy, Riley Richard, to Shannon and Melanie Tatge. Saturday a Christmas dinner was served at Tuff Village. Special guests were tenants of Viste Manor, Morningside Manor and Sunview Manor. Lutefisk and lefse was served and was enjoyed by those in attendance. Tenants and staff of Tuff Village would like to wish everyone a very merry and blessed Christmas.

Peeking in the past

10 years ago (1995)"F&L Management joined the Southern Hills Apartments in opening the complex to the public for the first time last Saturday. …According to Tom Serie with F&L Management, a small amount of work remains to be done in all but one of the apartments." 25 years ago (1980)"Marlin DeNoble, along with several other men, was shingling the new Christian School building last Tuesday when he fell from the misty roof to the ground.Marlin was taken to the Luverne Community Hospital where he was examined and was found to have cracked his pelvis and fractured his wrist." 50 years ago (1955)"Because of action taken at a meeting of Hills Legion Post 399 last Monday evening, Hills will again have a Boy Scout Troop. Plans for organizing a troop have been underway for some time, with Post Commander Conley Helgeson and Superintendent Lommen spark plugging the movement."75 years ago (1930)"The Rock County 4-H club had their annual meeting Wednesday at the home of County Agent and Ms. C.G. Gaylord. New officers for 1931 were elected as follows: Lloyd Ellsworth, president; Pearl Skovgaard, vice president; Inez Lorange, secretary; Orva Baustian, treasurer; Herman Skovgaard, song and yell leader; and Magnus Christianson, reporter." 100 years ago (1905)"Playing croquet Christmas day is uncommon in Minnesota; but the day, this year, was so warm and tempting that some of our expert players could not keep themselves indoors and as a consequence spent several hours playing and they seemed to enjoy themselves greatly."

Hills local news

Congratulations to Shannon and Melanie Tatge, Beaver Creek, on the birth of a boy, Riley Richard, weighing 8 pounds, 1 ounce, on Wednesday, Dec. 14, at Sioux Valley Hospital, Sioux Falls. S.D. Riley joins a sister, Lauren, who is 3. Riley’s grandparents are Rick and Lila Tatge, Beaver Creek, Paul and Marlene Stueven, Welcome, and Rod and Linda Rath of Sanborn. His great-grandparents are Ruby Feucht and Vivienne Tatge of Hills, Dick and Leah Doorneweerd, Beaver Creek, and Wilfred and Evelyn Stueven, Luverne. Congratulations to Melanie and Shannon and all the family on your little miracle!Steve and Irene Ruzich, Dawson, have taken up residency at Tuff Village. Irene will be remembered as a former resident of the Hills community when she was Irene Rortvedt living on the farm east of Hills. When you see them, be sure to welcome them to Hills.June and Marvin Albers had visitors for the day on Sunday, Dec. 18. Avor (Sam) and Lucille Boeve of Dell Rapids, S.D., spent the day visiting with the Albers. They are also long-time friends and go back many years together. Sunday, Dec. 18, Kathryn and Wendell Erickson had lunch with their daughter Kirsten Erickson of Sioux Falls and granddaughter Nicole Anderson of Portland, Ore. Nicole, a student at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, was home in Sioux Falls for the weekend, so Kathryn and Wendell were able to visit with her while she was here. They had a very nice time and hadn’t seen Nicole for several months. Twila and Bob Kirsch traveled to Heron Lake on Sunday, Dec. 18, to attend the Sunday School program of two of their grandchildren. On Wednesday, Dec. 21, Ellie Sandager celebrated her birthday with a surprise "High Tea" party hosted at the home of her daughter-in-law, Shirley Sandager. The idea of a "High Tea" party was put together by Jo Wulf and carried out with the help of Shirley, Dawn, Nancy and Beth Sandager. The "High Tea" consists of several courses which make up a whole meal and, of course, tea. There is a savory course, a sweet course, etc. And of course, all the ladies (no men, please) wear hats and gloves. Approximately 25 people attended, and a great time was had by all. Congratulations on your birthday, Ellie, and I applaud all of you who put this together and came up with this idea. It’s very original and sounds like lots of fun!

Hills EDA meets Dec. 13

MINUTES OF THE HLLS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITYDecember 13, 2005Linus Svoboda, President of the Hills EDA called the meeting to order at 6:09 P.M. with the following board members present: Linus Svoboda, Keith Elbers, Jim Jellema, Pete Hoff, and Ross Metzger. Others present: Connie Wiertzema, EDA Secretary, and Lexi Moore, Reporter-Hills Crescent. Motion by Jellema, seconded by Elbers to approve the minutes of November 7th. Motion carried. Motion by Elbers, seconded by Hoff to approve payment of the November expenditures. Motion carried. Motion by Elbers, seconded by Hoff to transfer the apartment/pet security deposits for unit #506 to the new owner. Motion by Elbers, seconded by Metzger to transfer $40,300 from EDA checking into a three month CD at 2% interest. These funds will be used as reimbursement to Kuntze, Bundesen, Hyink and Brandt/Kerkhove for the 10% per year new housing reimbursement planNo further business, meeting adjourned at 7:20 P.M./s/ Connie J. WiertzemaConnie J. WiertzemaEDA Secretary(12-22)

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