Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 16
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 16

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 72 totall of fun on OF 50 50 is Wednesday, June 22, 1983 Obituaries Monty Shadoan Monty Shadoan Monty Shadoan, 33, a Florence High School teacher, died unexpectedly of heart failure at his home in Missoula Monday. Mr. Shadoan was born on June 22, 1949, in Bozeman, a son of John and Helen Shadoan. He attended schools in Bozeman and was graduated from Montana State University in 1971 with a degree in English and secondary education. On March 20, 1971, he married Vicki Lohmuller in Bozeman.

Before coming to the Missoula area in 1980, he taught high school in Belgrade and Absarokee. Survivors include his wife, Vicki, Missoula; three daughters, Jennaya, Wintre and Misty, all of the family home in Missoula; his father, John Shadoan. Bozeman; Harold Ellwein Harold J. Ellwein, 60, a former Missoula resident, died June 11 in a Spokane hospital. He had emphysema.

Mr. Ellwein was born on Dec. 24, 1922, in Zeeland, N.D., and spent most of his school years in Missoula. As a young man he moved to Sunnyside, and then to Othello, where he lived for 32 years and worked for the Bureau of Reclamation. On Nov.

10, 1944, he married Delores Marie Vanlandingham in Sunnyside. Survivors include his wife, Delores, Othello; a son, David, Walla Walla, his mother, Sarah Ford, Othello; a sister, Elenora Cogbell, Kennewick, three brothers, Hubert, Wolf Creek; Roland, Bent City, Leland, Port Orchard, two sisters-in-law, Estella Aune and Betty Hummer, both of Missoula, and three granddaughters, Stacy and Kari Ellwein, both of Kennewick; and Amy Ellwein, Walla Walla. Funeral services were held in Othello. John A. Jones ST.

IGNATIUS John A. Jones, 71, died of natural causes Sunday at the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation town of Hays. He was born Aug. 15, 1911, to Albert and Maude Jones a at Ruebens, Idaho. On Feb.

7, 1933, he married Amelia M. Tellier at Culdesac, Idaho. The couple lived at Culdesac for several years before moving to St. Ignatius in 1937. Mr.

Jones retired after 20 years as a lineman for the Flathead Irrigation Project. After his retirement he was self-employed as a handyman. He loved to fish and hunt. Survivors include his wife, Amelia Jones, St. Ignatius; seven sons, Alfred Jones and Lubert Jones, both of Ronan; Leo Jones and Dalon Jones, both of Missoula; Dennis Jones, Charlo; Kenneth Jones, Zillah, and Ira Jones, Arlee; four daughters, Pauline Nicholson, Arlee; Marie Ashley, St.

Ignatius; Vicki Belgard, Hays, and Adeline Upton, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa; two sisters, Lavina Allen, Tacoma, and Nellie Drake, South Haven, 50 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. Rosary will be recited 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Fearon Funeral Home Chapel. Mass of the Resurrection will be Thursday, 10:30 a.m.

at the St. Ignatius Catholic Church with the Rev. Joseph Retzel as celebrant. Burial will be in the St. Ignatius Catholic Cemetery with military graveside rites provided by McCarthy Post 106.

Active pallbearers will be Mr. Jones' grandsons, and honorary pallbearers will be his closest friends. Record Fire calls City department Corner of Washburn and South avenues, medical aid, 1: 19 p.m. Tuesday. 434 S.

St. electrical short circuit, 9:40 p.m. Monday. 1301 Scott White Pine Sash false call, 8:34 p.m. Monday.

720 Turner No. 9, medical aid, 7:12 p.m. Monday. 200 block, East Broadway, medical aid, 3:29 p.m. Monday.

Marriage permits Kevin Clifford LaFlesch and Leslie Louise toeLaer, Mis- soula. Donald L. Pettijohn, soula, and Nettie Jane Clinton. Glenn Richard Janes, Around soula, and Laura Patricia Haggerty, Butte. George Martin Olsen and Faye Lanell Killian, Missoula.

Jon Stover Nelson and Priscilla Jane Meylor, Missoula. Casey Gunter and Geri Lynn Anderson, Missoula. Edward Alan Neumiller and Karen Lee Faubus, Missoula. Births Community Hospital Gina and Gary Brown, girl. Maureen and James Dougherty, girl.

Laura and John Kallis, boy. Pamela and Bruce Luoma, boy. Divorces Mis- Mark James Brady and Hagen, Patricia Ann Brady. Stacy Earl Reed and Rose Mis- Marie Reed. Missoula Judicial Review Committee, Wednesday, 3:30 p.m., Mayor's Conference Room, City Hall.

Agenda: Health Board bylaws amendments; garbage ordinance enforcement; uniform fire code adoption. Plat, Annexation and Zoning Committee, Wednesday, 4:30 p.m., Engineer's Conference Room, City Hall. Agenda: final plat review of South Ridge Townhouses; opposition to Lot 11A, Mosby Leisure Highlands; uniform building code ordinance. Poverty Awareness Week V1 it, p.m., Missoula County Courthouse lawn. Commemorating 20th anniversary of People's March on Washington, D.C., and tribute to Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech.

Families for Drug-and-Alcohol-Free Youth, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Missoula County High School Administration Building, 915 South Ave. W. Call 728-7294 or 721-1254 after 5 p.m two sisters, Sandra Morris, Missoula, and Judy Peterson, Los Angeles, and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Livingston-Malletta Geraghty Funeral Home.

Burial will be in Bozeman. The family suggests memorials to the children's education fund, the Missoula Federal Credit Union. Joe Ashley Joe Ashley ST. IGNATIUS Joe Ashley, 77, died Tuesday of natural causes at a Missoula hospital. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by the Fearon Funeral Home.

Sister Mary Aloysius Sister Mary Aloysius, 88, formerly of Missoula, died Monday at Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane. The former Mary Elizabeth Small spent 66 years a as a Sister of Providence. For 54 of those years she taught school at DeSmet and Wallace, Idaho, and Missoula. In 1971 she moved to Spokane to the Mount St. Joseph retirement home for the St.

Ignatius Province of the Sisters of Providence. A memorial service with rosary and vespers will be conducted at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the retirement home in Spokane. Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated by her brother, the Rev. Harold Small at 9 a.m.

Thursday, at West 12 Ninth Spokane. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery in Spokane. Besides her brother, Sister Mary Aloysius i is survived by a sister-in-law, several nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews. Howard L. Beatty WHITEFISH Howard L.

Beatty, 65, of Columbia Falls, died of cancer Tuesday morning in the North Valley Hospital at Whitefish. He was born Dec. 12, 1917, at Great Falls, the son of Lee and Georgina Beatty. He was raised and educated there, graduating in 1936 from Great Falls High School. He worked for the Great Northern Railroad: at Great Falls until enlisting in the U.S.

Army in December 1940. After his discharge in 1946 he returned to Great Falls where he resided until moving to Whitefish in January 1948. He operated the Whitefish Mobile Oil Station until 1952 when he returned to work for the Great Northern Railroad as a switchman. He retired from the railroad i in August 1977. He was a member of Holy Nativity Episcopal Church of Whitefish and the Whitefish Moose Lodge 642.

On April 17, 1943, he married Juanita "Billye" Shafer at Fort Lewis, and is now survived by her at the family home in Columbia Falls. He also is survived by two sons, Patrick Beatty, Poplar, and Jay Beatty, Vallejo, two daughters, Kathy Thomas, Columbia Falls, and Judy Haraseth, East Helena; a brother, Marshall Beatty, Somers; and four grandchildren. Memorial services will be conducted Friday, 7 p.m., at the Austin Funeral Home. The Rev. H.

Douglas Fontaine of Holy Nativity Episcopal Church will officiate. Cremation has taken place. The family suggests memorials to the ALERT Helicopter, of Kalispell Regional Hospital, Kalispell. Loraine Vivian Long and William Baylor Long. Janet Kay Beeler and George L.

Beeler. Carla Cox Carmichael and Paul Dale Carmichael. Court Justice of the Peace Janet Stevens Anthony Ray Tallant, 19, Missoula, was charged Tuesday with burglary, a felony. Tallant is accused breaking into Tire-Rama 601 W. Broadway.

Bond was set at $2,500. District Judge Jack Green Robert John Garding, age unavailable, Missoula, pleaded innocent Monday to a charge of accountability for criminal sale of a dangerous drug, a felony. Garding is accused of providing cocaine that another person sold to an undercover agent. He will be tried before District Judge Douglas Harkin. Jody Haider, 24, address unavailable, pleaded guilty Monday to a charge of accountability for theft, a felony.

Haider is accused of aiding or abetting the theft of a tractortrailer truck. Sentencing was set for July 18. Richard Neil Bear, 26, Missoula, pleaded innocent Monday to two counts of criminal sale of a dangerous drug, a felony. Bear is accused of selling methamphetamines and marijuana to an undercover agent. He will be tried before District Judge John Henson.

Todd Lavon Shutt, 19, address unavailable, pleaded innocent Monday to criminal mischief, a felony. He is accused of breaking windows. He will be tried before Henson. Gospel Music Concert by "'The Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Seventh-day Adventist Church, 800 South Ave. W.

Free admission. Missoula Senior Citizens Center, Wednesday: snack bar, 10 a.m. -4 p.m.; call Christa at 728-3710 before 10 a.m. for noon nutrition lunch; bridge and other card games, 1 p.m.; pattern dancing, 7 p.m. Call 549-8970 for home chores, information and referrals.

International Order of Job's Daughters, Bethel No. 13, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., 126 E. Broadway, Masonic Temple. Agenda: Installation. Missoula Rotary Club, Wednesday, 12:10 p.m., Edgewater Restaurant, 100 Madison St.

Program: Joseph A. McElwain, chairman of the board of Montana Power Co. in Butte. Parks and Recreation Free Juggling Demonstration, by Tom Garrett Wednesday, 2 p.m., Northside OFFER WHILE SUPPLY LASTS (OLDEN DRACON Gold Snap Popper Colored Ground; Space Sparklers I BOX Smoke Bloom! Shuttle DRACON WHAT A box Balls Flowers as Starts a (OLDEN A BUY! I NO LIMIT 101 ONE spinner boxes WHILE then of 6 poppers. Just throw them Our biggest selling item gold I the sidewalk and watch SUPPLY LASTS Sure we our Light it and the flower rises to NO price low because breaks into sparklers, want you happy.

Colored spin a red green spinner going them crack. Kid's love starts to and then sparklers them smoke in each bomb. changes color in opposite directions! REG BOX REG. love them! REG. PKG.

REG. EACH REG BOX BOX EA. ea Pkg. d1 20 TIME SHOW OPENING FRIDAY. JUNE 24 DRAGON Coke Enjoy SAT.

(OLDEN (OLDEN 2 GIANT LOCATIONS NO ASSORTMENT 3 beside FREE Reserve FREE North GOLDEN St. Country Buy early DRAGON aerial Motors while and and STICK we ground have and ON NEW Russell our Russell BADGES St. SUNDAY best assortment St. between FOR LOCATION selection! Bridge. THE the KIDS underpass DRACOM COLDEN DRAGON FAMILY FIREWORKS NO 1 00420 GOOD PRICES GOLDEN DRAGON GOLDEN DRAGON DEN- 2 DRAGON GOLDEN TO DRAGON CADEN DRAGON Cascade leaves counties' association By CHARLES F.

MASON voted against the withdrawal, said he thinks the action of the Missoullan may cause MACo to collapse, noting that both Missoula and Yellowstone counties also are considering withdrawCascade County's withdrawal from the Montana Asso- ing. ciation of Counties will not necessarily result in Missoula But Palmer said the Missoula commissioners would County making the same decision, Commissioner Bob "wait until the dust settles" before making any decision. Palmer said Tuesday. Palmer said he thinks it is still possible to "reform "I'm they withdrew," Palmer said. the organization from within." But he added that it may not surprised The Cascade County commissioners voted 2-1 Tuesday be difficult.

to withdraw from MACo. The vote came in the wake of a Missoula pays about $7,000 a year to belong to the orsetback to urban counties at the annual MACo meeting in ganization. MACo is a member of the National Association Billings last week. of Counties, which is based in Washington, D.C., and is The urban counties had attempted to base association largely a lobbying organization in Congress. The Montana voting powers on the dues each county pays.

Since urban affiliate addresses state issues and lobbies at the Legislacounties pay more, that would have given them greater ture. voting power. The attempt was defeated. Lewis and Clark and Gallatin counties. withdrew from Urban-county members, including Missoula's commis- MACo two years ago.

sioners, have complained that rural counties dominate the urban control the executive statewide board, they are still outnumbered in the general memberorganization. Although counties now Cascade County Commissioner Dick Gasvoda, who ship, which must approve all important decisions Two drug defendants plead innocent Two Missoula men have pleaded innocent to drug Tuesday that all the adult defendants facing charges have charges filed in the wake of an undercover investigation. been transferred to District Court. Although not all of the defendants have entered pleas, those who have have Robert John Garding, age unavailable, pleaded innocent Monday to a charge of accountability for criminal sale pleaded innocent. of a dangerous drug, a felony.

Garding is accused of One of the defendants, Plath said, is 17 years old and providing cocaine that another person sold to an under- facing a charge in Youth Court. cover agent. That defendant who was not identified is Garding will be tried before District Judge Douglas charged with selling cocaine to one of the undercover Harkin. agents. Also Monday, Richard Neil Bear, 26, pleaded innocent Plath said if the youth is convicted of the charge, he to two counts of selling dangerous drugs.

Bear is accused could be kept under the supervision of the state Departof selling methamphetamines and marijuana to an under- ment of Institutions until he turns 21. cover agent. The youth was arrested about 10 days ago on the He will be tried before District Judge Jack Green. charge, according to Plath. The two men are among 12 defendants facing drug Plath said he would not file a motion to have the case charges as the result of a three-month investigation into against the youth transferred to adult court.

He said that drug peddling in the Missoula area. Two undercover agents such a motion would not be worth the effort. from the state Department of Justice assisted local sheriff's deputies in the investigation. The youth's arrest is the last arrest to be made in conMissoula County Deputy Attorney Russell Plath said nection with the undercover drug operation, Plath said. The Saving Texas Instruments Home Computer Sale! TEXAS 49-00 COMMANU The Attack Price Sale $139 Less TI Rebate Texas Instruments Computer Your Net Cost Home computer console connects to 10" video After TI $89 or, with RF modulator, directly to your TV set.

(Sale Price inRebate cludes RF modulator.) With built-in TI BASIC language. monitor available at our reguiar low price See Our Complete Selection Of Home Computers And Software At mart Everyday Low Prices Sale 108 VIDEOSTAK Sun. 10-7 ORGANIZER CARTROCIS Open Daily 9-9; COMBAT T.V. CARTRIDGE GAMES INTELLIVISION 3.97 Sale Price Cartridge Organizer ATARI A Warner Communications Company ATARI 2600 Sale Price 94.97 42-00 KMART SALE PRICE 94.97 LESS MANUFACTURER'S REBATE 20.00 0.00 Video Game PRICE AFTER REBATE 74.97 ADDITIONAL REBATE WITH The Computer system gives you System true-to- CARTRIDGES OF TWO SELECTED 10.00 0.00 life sounds, on -screen scoring and difficulty-level options. With 2 joysticks YOUR NET PRICE AFTER and cartridge.

FACTORY REBATE 64.97 SELECTED FROM THE FOLLOWING ATARI 2600 CARTRIDGES: ASTEROIDS, YAR'S REVENGE, MISSILE COMMAND, STAR RAIDERS, BERZERK, SPACE INVADERS, DEFENDERS. GAME CARTRIDGES MUST BE PURCHASED WITH THE 2600 VCS CONSOLE. "SEE STORE FOR DETAILS." 3626 BROOKS STREET.

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 The Missoulian
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Missoulian Archive

Pages Available:
1,235,221
Years Available:
1892-2024