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Fact or social media chatter?

Congratulations to our Fourth of July Committee and the Cardinal Pride Committee for their work with the Luverne Chamber and CVB to secure fireworks for our summer celebrations.
Fireworks are expensive and sometimes difficult to secure, but we can be grateful we’ll enjoy two great shows this summer — one on the Fourth of July at The Lake and another at the Luverne City Park for the Cardinal Pride all-school reunion Party at the Park on July 16.
In the process of planning fireworks for the two events, discussion arose about parking safety for the July 4 event, and someone misconstrued that the event was being moved to a different location and/or a different date.
Almost overnight, social media “blew up” with comments that fanned the flames of confusion and misplaced indignation. “How dare they move fireworks from July 4 to a different date?” “Why are donations for the July 4 fireworks being spent on the July 16 fireworks?” Many remarks were directed at the Chamber office, which is now in the position of trying to set the record straight.
Maybe we can help:
•July 4 festivities will include July 4 fireworks, per tradition.
•July 16 fireworks at the park are in addition to, not instead of July 4 lake fireworks.
•July 4 fireworks were purchased with donations to the July 4 fireworks.
•July 16 fireworks were purchased with donations to the July 16 fireworks event.
Maybe we could also gently suggest that questions be directed personally to those with answers — perhaps donors, fireworks professionals, committee leaders or — more obviously — chamber staff.
Had Chamber staff members been asked directly (and listened to sincerely), they may have avoided being the target of misinformed and harsh online criticism.
Now, at a time when these same community leaders are busy planning our great summer celebrations, their attentions are diverted to undoing the damage of thoughtless social media chatter.
We hope those who participated in this reckless (or inaccurate) dialogue will opt for a better mode of communication in the future.
And kudos once again to the folks who are sincerely working on the summer celebrations that make Luverne a great place to celebrate holidays and come home to for reunions. We are grateful for your efforts.

As a dog lover, I'm grateful for people who find and return lost pets

Our family dog became lost several years ago.
We returned to our acreage one day to find the kennel door open and our beloved Ginger nowhere to be found.
Fortunately, only hours passed before Ginger was safely back at home. She ventured six miles from home and allowed a family to keep her safe until we arrived.
However, not all lost dogs are safely returned home or willing to allow humans to assist them.
Luverne Elementary music teacher Beth Capistran is a dedicated pet foster mom with Tracy Area Animal Rescue and works with The Retrievers, a nonprofit organization that finds lost dogs and returns them to their owners.
Beth has successfully helped dozens of canines who are so frightened that reunions such as the one we had with our beloved Ginger are not possible.
The longer the missing dogs are away from home, the more their survival instincts take over, and they shy away from humans at all costs.
Recently, two Goldendoodle females were lost in my neck of the woods around Hardwick.
Beth often uses her social media site to post notifications of lost dogs. She’s adamant that lost dogs should never be chased.
“These pups are so very scared that if you even look at them, they will run the other way. If someone keeps driving around the area, they will move from the area they are in. Please — if you see them, just call or text in the information and leave. Totally ignore them. We really need them to stay in one area so we can humanely trap them.”
Beth gives up many hours of sleep to keep watch on a humane trap.
On June 4, one of those 5-year-old Goldendoodles was safely trapped. The other is still on the run.
Beth is the Goldendoodles’ case manager, her first assignment with The Retrievers.
“I put on many miles putting up intersection signs, putting down feeding stations, moving cameras, setting up the trap and finally being able to successfully trap Wendy last night — six weeks to the day that the two dogs went missing.”
Wendy was very thin, full of ticks, tired and missing some hair after putting on “more miles than FedEx delivery people at Christmastime.”
I’d be extremely humbled and grateful if someone like Beth would spend weeks of her precious time trying to bring my dog back to me.
With the fireworks season just around the corner, more family dogs like Wendy and her sister could become scared, run away from people and hide. The more frightened the dog is, the harder it is to bring the animal home safely — sometimes the dog will run into traffic, with disastrous outcomes.
Beth recommends calling The Retrievers phone number, 612-321-8774, with possible sightings. Do not yell, approach or chase.
The Retrievers website, theretrievers.org, has many find-your-pet resources. They also have a dedicated team of case managers like Capistran.
A special event will take place June 16 at Take 16 in Luverne. For $25, pet owners can have their animals microchipped so they can be reunited if the pet becomes lost and is found by a Good Samaritan.
For Beth, fostering pets and finding lost dogs allows her to make a difference locally.
“My students ask me about it and I tell them that everybody needs to find their niche in life to do something to make our world better. Helping animals is what I do to help.”
Beth is definitely a dog’s best friend.

Decision to go without cable TV is an easy one; what to replace cable with, not so much

We finally did it. The Petersons recently said good-bye to cable TV.
When we moved to Luverne nearly 18 years ago, we had two choices of cable providers, Mediacom and Knowledge.
I believe those were the company names at the time. They have changed their names so many times it’s hard to remember for sure.
We have actually subscribed to both cable companies over the years, going back and forth, based on price, service and which one carried Fox Sports North.
Back in the day, both cable companies had business offices here in Luverne, but both have long since abandoned their local business offices.
The Peterson household, like many of yours, purchased the trifecta package of landline phone, internet and cable TV. We long ago dropped the landline phone with very little drop in the trifecta package price.
So, with just internet and basic cable TV, we decided to dump the $200 cable option.
It wasn’t a tough decision, considering cable consisted of three South Dakota Public Television Stations, three Hallmark channels and at least two, maybe three, Dakota News Now stations and 30 or more channels we never watched.
Deciding to dump cable was easy, but actually getting rid of it was more complicated.
It took us months to decide what to replace cable TV with. It was the topic of family get-togethers. It was and still is a frequent topic at our morning coffee discussions and one we mostly all agree on.
Long before we took the “dump cable TV” plunge, Knowledge had become Vast, and as of today their latest company name is Bluepeak.
It’s really no secret, but Bluepeak is phasing out of the cable TV market, and landline phones won’t be far behind.
To bring an end to all this, I’ll do the math for you.
The Petersons’ monthly internet/cable TV bill was $206.
Today our monthly internet bill from Bluepeak is around $53, and after lengthy discussion we went with YouTube TV at a cost of $55. So, after adding it all up, we’ll be saving $1,176 a year – or about 11 tanks of gas.

Four volunteers join Hills Fire Department

Four Hills residents were recently sworn in as volunteer firefighters.
Todd Bundesen, Brock Harnack, Szaun Bruesch and Kale Wiertzema accepted the oath to protect the community.
According to chief Jared Rozeboom, adding the four new members brings the number of volunteers active in the department to 19. “I would like five more,” Rozeboom said.

On the Record June 16, 2022

Dispatch report
June 3
•Complainant on W. Hatting Street reported theft.
•Complainant on Edgehill Street reported finding an airsoft gun.
•Complainant on N. Kniss Avenue requested assistance with evidence pickup.
•Complainant on W. Hatting Street reported theft.
•Complainant on Main Street conducted walk through during event.
•Complainant on W. Hatting Street reported storage unit broken into.
•Complainant on 21st Street, Steen, reported a fire.
June 4
•Disorderly subject was reported at location on S. Kniss Avenue.
•Complainant on S. Kniss Avenue reported road rage.
•Subject was arrested on Rock County warrant in Yellow Medicine, Granite Falls.
June 5
•Trespassing issue with intoxicated person on S. Kniss Avenue was reported.
•Complainant on W. Main Street reported suspicious activity.
•Power outage was reported.
June 6
•Complainant on 161st Street, Luverne, reported harassment via text message.
•Complainant on 3rd Street East, Jasper, reported suspicious activity.
•Complainant on Luverne Street, Magnolia, requested a vin check on motor vehicle.
•Deputy out with vehicle at location on U.S. Highway 75 and 191st Street, Hardwick.
•Complainant requested to speak with deputy about harassing communication.
•A warrant check was conducted on S. Summit Avenue, Hills.
•A warrant check was conducted on S. Second Street, Beaver Creek.
•Complainant on 20th Avenue, Valley Springs, South Dakota, reported possible stolen vehicle.
•Complainant in Springwater Township reported a found driver’s license.
•Complainant on S. Donaldson Street reported a verbal dispute at location.
•Complainant on S. Kniss Avenue reported bazaar interaction with male party.
•Complainant on N. Donaldson Street reported items stolen during incident earlier.
June 7
•Complainant on S. West Park Street reported threats at location.
•Complainant on 101st Street, Magnolia, reported black smoke from area.
•Complainant on 80th Avenue, Jasper, reported a vehicle fire at location.
June 8
•Complainant on N. McKenzie Street reported comings and goings of unknown people.
•Complainant on W. Main Street reported a woman dug up a plant from in front of business and tried to leave with it.
•Complainant on S. Donaldson Street reported theft.
•Complainant on E. Bishop Street reported neighbors shot a squirrel with a bb gun.
•Complainant on S. Kniss Avenue reported several people outside her window.
June 9
•Complainant on N. Cedar Street reported a burglary.
•Complainant in Luverne requested to speak to sheriff.
•Complainant reported a missing person.
•Complainant on 121st Street, Luverne, reported a fire.
•Complainant on S. Church Avenue, Hills, reported neighbor is taking pictures of his house.
•Complainant on Cedar and Dodge streets reported blue motorcycle driving erratically.
•Complainant on S. Church Street, Hills, requested to speak to deputy about harassment order.
June 10
•Subject posted threats through social media.
In addition, officers responded to 1 motor vehicle accident, 3 deer accidents, 1 transport, 1 escort, 9 ambulance runs, 1 paper service, 3 animal complaints, 4 fingerprint requests, 20 burn permits, 4 alarms, 6 drug court tests, 5 purchase and carry permits, 1 stalled vehicle, 8 traffic stops, 6 abandoned 911 calls, 2 tests, 1 welfare check and 3 reports of cattle out.

Thanks to friends and family ...

Friends and family of Sewing Basket employees made quick work of the store’s half-block move on Monday, May 30. They used a straight truck for large items or simply grabbed armfuls of smaller merchandise for the move down the block to the Mall on Main on east Main Street in Luverne. At one point there were 30 volunteers helping. “We had everything moved out by noon,” said Sewing Basket manager Erica Kracht.

Celebrations June 16, 2022

Bridal Showers
A couple’s shower for Megan Atkinson and Brandon Wolf will be from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at the Adrian American Legion.
 
A bridal shower for Kyla (Stulen) Gemuenden, bride of Jack Gemuenden, will be from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, June 18, at Take 16 in Luverne.
 
A bridal shower for Hayley Wipf, bride-to-be of Trevor Teal, will be at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at the American Legion Hall in Hardwick.
 
Open Houses
Berniece Jansma Barstad will celebrate her 80th birthday with an open house from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at Bethany Meadows Community Room, 3008 E. Aspen Boulevard in Brandon, South Dakota.
 
Card Showers
Carol Van Maanen will celebrate her 80th birthday on June 30. Greetings can be sent to PO Box 135, Hills, MN 56138.

College News June 16, 2022

Bose receives Truckload Carriers scholarship
Seth Bose, a Luverne High School senior, was awarded a $2,725 scholarship from the Truckload Carriers Association (TCA).
In addition to grade point averages, applicants scored on a variety of categories including major selection, extracurricular activities, financial need and work experience.
An applicant must also be an employee, independent contractor, or a child of an TCA member company.
Bose’s father, Michael, is an employee of K & J Trucking Inc. of Sioux Falls.

 
USD Vermillion names honor students
Several area students were named to the Spring 2022 dean’s list/academic honors list at the University of South Dakota Vermillion. To be eligible for the dean’s list, students must earn at least a 3.5 GPA on a 4.o scale with at least 12 graded credits. Students named to the academic honors list must earn a 3.5 GPA or higher but have fewer than 12 graded credits. 
Named to the dean’s list from Luverne are Sidney Biever, Gracie Bosch, Tia Hadler, Autumn Nath, Mackenzie Petersen, Sadie Reisdorfer, Madison Reisdorfer, McKenzie VanGrootheest, Lauren Ver Steeg and Mace Walgrave. Mary-Frances Ladd earned academic honors.
On the dean’s list from Ellsworth are Annie Appelhof and Morgen Dreesen. Devin Dreesen was named to the academic honors list.
Oftedahl makes president’s list at Central Lakes
Carlton Oftedahl, Luverne, was named to the president’s list for the Spring 2022 semester at Central Lakes College in Brainerd and Staples. To be eligible for the president’s list, students must earn at least a 3.75 GPA on a 4.0 scale with at least 12 credits.

1943: Diamond Club spotlight turns to Luverne's William Tomlinson

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.
March 4, 1943
To have seen a real prince and princess as a boy was one of the many interesting experiences of William C. Tomlinson, Luverne. Mr. Tomlinson was the son of Joseph and Mary Tomlinson. He was born in Nottingham, England, April 5, 1866, and recalls that Prince Albert of England and his wife had come to Nottingham to dedicate a museum which had been remodeled from a royal castle which had been damaged by fire. At first the instructor of his class at school had decided to permit his pupils to take the day off for the occasion, but later changed his mind.
Intent of seeing the royalty, Mr. Tomlinson and about five or six friends left the school without permission and went to see the royal procession. They would wait on the street corner until they passed, and then would run as fast as they could to the one beyond and wait until they had passed again. This kept up until the boys were almost eight miles from home, but they had the satisfaction of having seen the prince and princess, although they went without a thing to eat from morning until 10 o’clock that night.
Nottingham, which by the way, was the city made famous by Robin Hood, was one of England’s big manufacturing towns. Its factories provided work for men, women and children of all ages. When Mr. Tomlinson was seven, he worked in a hosiery factory, daily turning 100 dozen pairs of stocking inside out for 16 cents. He was so small, he had to stand on a stool beside his work table.
Later he worked in a lace curtain factory and became quite expert at his duties. When he was 19, a number of young men were being selected from the various factories to go to Australia to work, but Mr. Tomlinson followed his mother’s request. She had told him that if he wanted to leave England, he should go to America.
Having an uncle and aunt living in Illinois, Mr. Tomlinson decided he would leave home, and on St. Patrick’s day, 68 years ago this month, he boarded a boat for the United States. The boat was not a luxury liner, he recalls, for on the trip to England, it had been loaded with cattle. After they were unloaded, it was remodeled somewhat into a passenger vessel. It was seaworthy, however, and that was the main thing. He landed in Delaware Bay on the last day of March, and on April 2 arrived at Bloomington, Ill. From there he went to Arrowsmith the following day.
The trip to Arrowsmith he recalls vividly. The ground had thawed and the mud was so deep and sticky that the road was almost impassable. In those days, nearly everyone traveled on horseback. If they went to town to make a few purchases, they would put them in a grain sack, climb on the horse and ride back home.
Mr. Tomlinson hired out at $18 a month that first spring, and although he found the work considerably harder than it was in the factory, he never became discouraged.
“I guess I was born about 30 or 40 years too soon,” he states, “as at that time, the only machines that had seats were mowers and binders. It was all walk from sun up until sun down and at first, I became so footsore I could hardly walk. When I would go to bed at night, my feet were almost raw from blisters, but the next morning, they would feel pretty good, and I’d start all over again.
“Finally, I found an old timber man who made me some moccasins. They really helped, and later, I was able to buy a certain kind of shoe they had on the market, for about $1.15. After that time, I didn’t have any trouble.
Many farm implements which are now being used had not yet become common. All corn stalk ground was cultivated before the small grain was planted. There were no grain elevators, and when the corn was sold, it was shoveled directly from the wagon box into the box car.
He worked as a hired hand for three years, and then married May Coss at Bloomington in 1889. They began farming for themselves and it was not all sunshine, according to Mr. Tomlinson. “In those days, a farmer was on his own. He had no help from Uncle Sam and often, the going was pretty hard. We sold oats for 10 cents a bushel, corn for 15 cents, and hogs for $2.50 a hundred. We managed to live, and after the Spanish-American war, things became somewhat better. I sold corn the year of the Spanish-American war at three bushels for a dollar. After that, prices continued to get better,” he declares.
There was a great deal of timber in the vicinity where Mr. Tomlinson lived in Illinois, and he recalls that he bought an acre of woodland for $12.50. This strip furnished them with fuel for three years, and it still had many trees on it when they left Illinois to come to Rock county.
They came here in 1903, after Mrs. Tomlinson’s uncle had told them of the inexpensive and productive land. Mr. Tomlinson never regretted making a move as he states, “Here, I was able to make two dollars to every one I made in Illinois.” They farmed one year south of town, then moved to the Bierkamp farm in Springwater township which was their home for six years before they moved to Luverne.
Mr. and Mrs. Tomlinson became the parents of six children, five of whom are living. They are Albert I., Emery and Lee Tomlinson, all of Luverne, Dewey Tomlinson of Sioux City, and Mrs. Vera Eckert of Imola, Cal.
Since Mrs. Tomlinson’s death last month, Mr. Tomlinson has lived alone in his home. He does his own cooking and housework, and other work about the place and is in good health.
 
         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.

Remember When June 16, 2022

10 years ago (2012)
•Luverne First Presbyterian Church congregation members celebrated a mortgage burning Sunday to mark the last payment on their building improvement loan. In 2000 the church completed a major renovation and expansion project that completely turned the sanctuary to face the opposite direction. The project, which cost roughly $1.5 million, was covered by three loans through church organizations. The final payment on the final loan was made earlier this year — 10 years ahead of schedule.
 
25 years ago (1997)
•Luverne High School is in the process of replacing a head boys’ basketball coach for the fourth time this decade.
At Thursday’s meeting, District 2184 School Board members accepted the resignation tendered by Bob Churchill, who was a social studies instructor and basketball coach for the past three years. Churchill will move to Owatonna, where he will be the head basketball coach and continue to teach social studies.
 
50 years ago (1972)
•One century ago, a group of Norwegian pioneer settlers organized the Blue Mound Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church of Rock County at the home of Ole Nilson, northeast of Luverne.
This coming Sunday, the founding of the Blue Mound Lutheran Church will be commemorated with a special centennial worship service at 10 a.m., a fellowship dinner at noon of members, former members and friends, to be followed with a commemorative anniversary program at 1:30 p.m.
The Rev. James M. Florence, Kenneth, is the present pastor. Guest pastor for the worship service will be the Reverend Dr. Edward A. Hansen, president of the Southwestern Minnesota District of The American Lutheran Church.
 
75 years ago (1947)
•A new sporting goods store will be opened here Saturday by Carstens Brothers.
Located in the Carstens building in the place formerly occupied by the Mari-Posa beauty shop, the store will deal exclusively in sporting goods of all kinds.
The location gives the owners a floor area 16 by 40 feet. Installation of new shelving, show cases and cabinets is being completed this week. Glass is used in shelving, and indirect lighting over the shelf and cabinet displays gives the new store a distinctive, modern appearance.
 
100 years ago (1922)
•Next Wednesday, June 21st, will be Community Sales day in Luverne and on that day virtually unlimited opportunities to purchase seasonable goods at greatly reduced prices will be offered.
Forty-six of the business concerns of the city have joined in making this the second monthly bargain day to be held this spring, one that should draw buyers from a considerable distance.

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