The ADvisor 11/27/19

Page 1

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019

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2 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Holiday Happenings Chamberlain

TO ALL!

SD

Thursday, November 28th

The Community Thanksgiving dinner will be at the Chamberlain Community Center on Thanksgiving day. All are welcome and this is a free meal.

Friday, November 29th

4:30-6:30pm Sourp & Santa 7pm Parade of Lights

Saturday, November 30th [Shop Small Saturday]

Byre Brothers

170 Airport Rd Chamberlain

605-234-5771

8-10:30am Community Breakfast* @ CCC 10:30-2:30pm Santa’s Workshop for Kids Twelve Days of Christmas Passport Promotion Free Movie Matinee - State Theatre every weekend in December

Sunday, December 1st

Winter Wonderland @ American Creek Day-use area

*free will donation

Happy Holidays Happy Holidays wishing you

BURKE

FUEL OIL & PROPANE CO

1200 E King Street, Chamberlain, SD | 605-734-6905

Happy Holidays! Wishing you all the joys of the season and happiness throughout the coming year!

100 Paul Gust Rd • Chamberlain, SD 57325

605-234-5559

Ledger art EXHIBIT

Wishing all a very happy “Holiday Season!”

Dakota Plains & Gallery Gifts Holiday Open House

Saturday, November 30, 2019 (Small Business Saturday) 1pm - 4pm Register to win Star Quilt - Drawing December 20, 2019

308 Eagle Ave. Chamberlain, SD

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605-234-1606

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Seasons Greetings

215 N Main, Chamberlain, SD • 605-734-6545

AUTHENTIC NATIVE AMERICAN GIFTS

R & J Gravel & Construction

Owner, Rod Reuer

H o l i da y s

to all from... Chamberlain Food Center

Rod’s Welding

24969 344th Ave. Chamberlain, SD

Happy

DAKOTA INDIAN FOUNDATION

201 N Courtland St. Chamberlain, SD

605-734-5555

1000 E. SD Hwy 16 Oacoma, SD

605-234-5005

209 North Main Street Chamberlain, South Dakota www.dakotindianfoundation.net/dpg 605-234-5472

Seasons Greetings! Have a Happy and Healthy Holiday Season!

from all of us!

Dakota Family Medical Center Chisum Peterson PO Box 498 • Chamberlain, SD 57325 605-234-4214 office 605-730-4214 cell/text

101 South Front St. Chamberlain, SD 605-234-6584


Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 3

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Host a restaurant bash with ease And it’s wise for hosts to develop a budget for their parties while also considering other ways to make their get-togethers successful.

On-site expenses

When shopping restaurants and other venues, ask the establishment managers to give a thorough rundown of proposed expenses. Get all estimates in writing so they can be easily compared. The financial management resource The Balance says that common venue expenses can include room rental, food and bever-

ages, security deposit, insurance needs, valet parking, taxes/gratuities, and other addons. These add-ons can include plating fees for cakes made off-premises or corkage fees for host-supplied wine.

Explore entertainment

Mingling and conversation are part of restaurant parties, but hosts can facilitate even more guest interaction by planning entertainment for the party. Discuss with the venue whether hired musicians or other entertainers are permissible.

Something as low-key as a table-side sleightof-hand magician or a tarot card reader who can offer psychic intrigue may be fun.

Personalize the menu and space

Decorate the venue within reason, and abide by the rules of the house. Decorations may include festive balloons, ribbons or chair covers or colorful flowers or centerpieces, and takeaways for guests. Discover if you can work with the chef to curate a special menu. This helps the kitchen staff immensely because

Davison County 4-H Shooting Sports Indoor Shooting Registration December 2 & December 3 at 6:30PM

Power Lift/Recliner

Archery • BB Gun • Air Rifle Air Pistol • 22 Rifle • Pistol

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Davison County Fairgrounds Call Davison Co. Extension Office for more information • 605-995-8620 or Bryan 605-770-4385

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package. It’s perfectly acceptable to offer some carafes of wine or pitchers of beer on the table and ask guests to pay for their own specialized drinks. If you do not opt for a full open bars, ask the wait staff explain to guests what is and isn’t included before they order.

Make parking accessible

Decide on bar service

Selecting a venue with on-site parking or valet service can make things more convenient for guests. A few simple strategies can help hosts navigate the process of hosting parties at restaurants.

Alcoholic refreshments can quickly consume a budget, so frugal hosts might need to reign in expenses in the this department. Wine and spirits can be expensive if they’re not included in the restaurants price-fixed party

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they’ll only have a set number of dishes to prepare rather than having to make foods off the larger menu all at once, says the food, home and wellness site MyDomaine. Familystyle appetizers also are effective. Print out custom menus with the event title on top, or ask if the restaurant can make them.

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Metro Creative Editorial People who love to entertain but don’t have the space to do so at home often take their love of hosting to nearby restaurants. While much of the work on the day of the party is likely to be performed by restaurant staff, hosting a gathering at a local establishment has its challenges, particularly in regard to planning. It’s easy to focus solely on the cost of hosting a restaurant party, as that’s likely to be the foremost consideration for hosts.

For Deliveries Please Contact Alyssa Herman @ (605) 553-0353

1900 Highland Way, Mitchell 605-996-5208

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4 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Airbnb partners with Olympics for 2028 games

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ings, multiple-property hosts and limits on renting when spaces violate local property rules. In a joint news conference, the company and the committee expressed excitement and a positive vision for the venture. “Since it was founded in 2008, Airbnb has grown to become a global household name. This partnership supports the future sustainable operations of the Olympic Movement and demonstrates the ongoing appeal of the Olympic commercial programmes to the world’s leading brands,” the IOC said in a statement.

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the head of the IOC, expressing a desire to rein in the rentals and threatening to ban them in certain neighborhoods for “destabilising local businesses and competing harshly with traditional hotels.” “By removing a significant number of lodgings from Paris, Airbnb contributes to rising rents and worsens the shortage of apartments on the rental market, at a cost for all Parisians, in particular the middle class,” Hidalgo wrote. Airbnb has said it is working with local governments to implement new home-rental rules in an attempt to cut down on scam list-

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markets and cities at an exponential pace. This month, its CEO said the company would verify each of the 7 million listings after a shooting at a California rental property, and in October, the company was the subject of a Vice investigation involving a widespread rentallisting scam. Officials from Paris, which will host the 2024 Summer Games, are pushing back against what they’re calling a “risky” deal, according to The Guardian. The city is one of Airbnb’s biggest markets, with an estimated 60,000 listings. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo sent a letter to

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probably generate, as a result, more revenue and listings. Athletes, meanwhile, will be able to sell training sessions and other meetups with fans through what’s deemed an “Airbnb Olympian Experiences” platform. “By joining forces with the IOC and our Airbnb hosts, we’re committed to providing travel experiences that benefit the global sporting community, as well as the local communities hosting the next five Olympic and Paralympic Games,” the company said on its YouTube channel. Airbnb has faced criticism in recent years as it grows into new

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Airbnb is partnering with the International Olympic Committee to expand accommodations in host cities through the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles, the two organizations announced Monday. The short-termrentals platform will become an official global sponsor of the Olympics in the deal, reportedly valued at $500 million, which both sides expect to be “economically empowering, socially inclusive and environmentally sustainable,” they said in a joint statement. Typically, host cit-

ies have to construct hotels, attractions and stadiums as part of sweeping infrastructure projects that routinely cost billions of dollars. When the Games are done, these new buildings often go unused, with little to no economic return; Montreal, which hosted the 1976 Summer Olympics, notably got stuck with a $1.5 billion debt that wasn’t paid until 2006. Under the Airbnb deal, cities will be able to set aside a certain number of units specifically for Olympics use. Being an official Olympics partner will boost visibility for the lodgings company and

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By Drew Jones The Washington Post

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 5

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Google looks to banking as it widens its reach By Greg Bensinger and Renae Merle The Washington Post Google is wading into the highly competitive world of banking, adding to its long line of businesses as regulators scrutinize tech giants for potential anti competitive concerns. The web search giant will offer checking accounts beginning next year through a partnership with Citigroup and Stanford University’s credit union, according to a person familiar with the matter. Consumers will access their accounts through the

NEW BOBCATS

Google Pay mobile app, meaning it won’t compete directly with traditional banks that have storefronts seemingly on every corner. The arrangement gives Google a potential trove of new data about spending habits, income and other details, valuable for better understanding average consumers. But it will likely face scrutiny as part of a broad probe into Google from regulators and state attorneys general. Known as Cache, the banking program was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal. Details of the check-

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ing accounts like fees and limits weren’t immediately available. With a plethora of mobile, online and traditional banking options available, Google will have to find something to differentiate Cache from competitors to convince consumers to switch. Google joins tech giants including Facebook, which is working to launch a cryptocurrency known as Libra, and Apple, which has its mobile wallet and a credit card, that have pushed into the financial services industry. U.S. banks have struggled with how to

react to Silicon Valley’s encroachment into the banking world. Some have partnered with tech start-ups in hopes of gaining access to younger consumers who may rebuff traditional banks but could need a mortgage or small business loan later in life. But the industry has fought efforts by tech companies to provide some banking services directly to consumers. Square, the mobile payments company, and Rakuten, known as the Amazon of Japan and operator of U.S. rewards program Ebates, have applied for a special bank-

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ing license that would allow the companies to offer checking and savings accounts. Walmart attempted to obtain such a license more than a decade ago but retreated amid aggressive resistance from the banking sector. The industry is expected to mount a similar campaign against Rakuten and Square. Google is taking a potentially less threatening route by partnering with Citigroup, which would control the regulatory pipes of the checking accounts offered by the tech giant. But some senior executives have cau-

tioned that tech companies could leverage such relationships into building their own financial infrastructure or siphon off valuable consumer data. Citigroup and Google will be co-branded on the accounts. U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., who sits on the Senate panel overseeing banking, said on CNBC Wednesday that he had concerns about technology companies getting too deep into banking and that there may need to be additional regulation. “There ought to be very strict scrutiny,” said Warner.

SMALL BUSINESS

Saturday NOVEMBER 30, 2019 • HOURS VARY BY STORE •

Bobcat S750: Cab/Htr/AC, Eng-Blk-Htr, Suspension Seats, Keyless, Pwr Bob-Tach Bobcat S773: Cab/Htr/AC, Eng-Blk-Htr, Pwr Bob-Tach, Radio, Standard Control Bobcat S850: Cab/Htr/AC, Eng-Blk-Htr, Airride, Keyless, Selective Joy Stick Controls, Radio, 2-Speed, High Flow

34681 248th St. • Chamberlain, SD • tomcook@cookimplement.com • 605-234-5254

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Give the gift that keeps on giving, a subscription to The Daily Republic!

For every Daily Republic gift subscription purchased by December 31, we will make a donation to the Newspapers in Education (NIE) program used by many area schools.

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• $5.00 for every gift purchase that is an extension of a current subscription. • $10.00 for every gift purchase of a new subscription.

Gift Recipient Information

Name: ________________________________________ Delivery Address: _______________________________ City:___________________________________________ State: __________________ Zip: ___________________ Phone: ________________________________________

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Your Name: ___________________________________ Billing Address: ________________________________ City:____________ State: _______Zip: _____________ Phone: _______________________________________ Email: ________________________________________  o I Would Like A Gift Card Sent

o 3 Months $58.76 o 6 Months $113.88 o 1 Year $223.08

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6 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

How to use a pop of color in a small space By Michele Lerner The Washington Post Design articles often suggest a “pop of color” to perk up an overly neutral palette in your home. But if you live in tight quarters, how do you know how many pops are too many? We asked Debbie Lori Travin of DLT Interiors in New York City to share her insights about using color in your home, particularly when you are living in a studio or one-bedroom apartment or in a home with smaller rooms. “The use of color in a small space needs to be done strategically and sparingly,” Travin wrote in an email. “If there’s too much color, the space becomes unsophisticated looking; more like a child’s room. If there is not enough color, it could

look rather dull and uninspiring.” Here are Travin’s recommended steps to using just the right amount of color in a small space: ► Start with a neutral palette for the key pieces of furniture, which include the sofa and chairs. ► Decide which accent colors makes you happy and go with that. Remember, you want to design a room you enjoy looking at and spending time in. ► Once you decide which accent color you like most, decide where you would like to use it. Using color sparingly and precisely is a challenge and requires editing accordingly. Here are other ways to use color in a small room: ► Add color with the

pillows. She chose light blue and orange for one room because her client loved that combination. ► Choose an accent piece of furniture in a color to add personality and punch into the room. For example, she chose to use a soft, blue animal-print fabric on benches in one project, which, she said, added panache to the room and balanced with the light blue pillows on the sofa. ► Incorporate artwork. This is a great way to introduce color into a small space. In her client’s home, she added a large painting with oranges and blues over the sofa to tie in and bring all the colors together. ► Include metal. In a client’s home, she added gold accents in the cocktail table and

LAND AUCTION MELLETTE COUNTY +/-480 ACRES SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7TH @ 1:00 P.M. CST White River High School Gymnasium

This rare opportunity offers productive crop ground, excellent range land and unlimited wildlife potential all in section 23. It is the total package! Property will sell as 1 parcel in its entirety, consisting of ±480 acres. This parcel has ±140 acres of crop ground planted in 2018 to alfalfa with ±340 range land. Pasture contains hard grass that has not been utilized since summer of 2018. This offering consists of rolling hills and woodland ravines ±7 acres of private lake/dams. West River/Lyman Jones Rural Water Access on property with Cherry-Todd Electrical Coop power line adjacent to the west boundary. Large Variety of ground with multiple types of wildlife. 2019 taxes are $1,799.30 – $3.75/acre Legal Description: South 1/2 of 40N 28W SEC23 along with the South 1/2 of the North 1/2 of 40N 28W SEC23 Property Location: From junction of US Highway 83 south of White River go 6 miles East on Highway 44 and 5 miles south on White Wind Road. Or from Wood, SD travel 7 miles West on Highway 44 and 5 miles South on White Wind Road. Terms & Conditions: This acreage amount has been determined based on information obtained from the Mellette County Assessor’s Office and other sources deemed reliable. This acreage will be used in calculating the final sale amount. The fences may or may not, be located on exact property boundary. Any fencing or surveying shall be the responsibility of the buyer. Property will be sold subject to seller confirmation. Successful bidder shall make a 15% non-refundable earnest money deposit at the conclusion of the auction with the balance due in certified funds at closing on or before Friday January 3, 2020. Possession of the property shall be granted at the time of closing. Davison County Title Company shall provide the escrow account and complete the closing at the location mutually agreeable to the buyer and agents. Title: Title will be transferred by warranty deed. An owner’s policy title commitment showing merchantable title, subject to easement of record, will be provided and will be available for review at the time of the auction. There are currently no leases in effect on the property. The 2019 and all prior year’s taxes payable in 2020, shall be the responsibility of the seller. The closing agents’ fee, and cost of owner’s policy of the title insurance, will be divided equally between buyer and seller. All seller mineral interest (if any) transfer with the title. Announcements made day of sale take precedence over printed material. Haines Auction Company license #12589 represents the sellers only in this transaction

Steve Schmidt, Dan Schmidt, Candy Schmidt, - Owners Sale Conducted by: Haines Auction Company More info. can be found at www.hainesauctions.com or by contacting Wayne W. Haines - Phone 605-680-0612 - Email: hai9@midstatesd.net

150.82 ACRES FARMLAND JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP MCCOOK COUNTY

AUCTION

We will offer the following farmland at auction at the Wieman Auction Facility at 44628 SD Hwy 44 or from Marion SD, 1 South and ½ West on

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3 • 10:30 AM Land is located from Emery SD, 1 ½ miles East on 261st St and 2 North and ¾ East on south side of road. This land will be sold indoors at the Wieman Auction Facility by Marion SD. The real estate consists of 150.82 acres (+ or -) of unimproved farmland. The FSA Office indicates that it has 143.51 acres tillable and the balance in grass and trees. Approximately 32 acres can be affected by waterfall that passes through it in wetter years. The predominate soil types are Clarno-Crossplain Complex, Clarno-Davison Loam, Clarno-Crossplain-Davison Complex, Tetonka-Canisteo Complex, Clarno-Bonilla Loam, Crossplain Clay Loam and it has a soil productivity index rating of 75.7. The land lays generally level and is in a strong area where the opportunity to purchase land does not prevail itself very often. The annual real estate taxes are $3726.36. We invite you to view this tract at your convenience. For a buyer’s info packet, visit our website, www.wiemanauction.com or call 800-251-3111 and we will send one to you. Legal: The NE ¼ except the North 483’ of the East 828’ of the NE ¼ of the NE ¼ in Section 20-102-56, McCook County, South Dakota Terms: Cash sale with a 10% nonrefundable downpayment the day of the sale and the balance on March 2, 2020. A Warranty Deed will be provided. Title Insurance will be utilized with the cost split 50-50 between buyer and seller. Possession granted upon final settlement. 2018 and 2019 Real Estate taxes paid by sellers. 2020 RE Taxes paid by buyers. Sold subject to confirmation by the owners. Wieman Land & Auction Co., Inc. is representing the seller in this transaction and sorry no “Buyer Broker” offered on this transaction.

MORRIS TERVEEN – BRUCE TERVEEN LINDA KRANZLER – MURIEL KOLBECK Wieman Land & Auction Co., Inc. Rich, Kevin, Mike, Ryan & Derek Wieman, & Nathan Timmermans, RE Brokers, Marion SD 800-251-3111 Auctioneers & RE Brokers

Dale L. Strasser Freeman SD 605-925-7745 Closing Agent

side tables as well as in the lighting. Gold is a warm metal and works well with orang-

-

es and blues, she said. Silver accents add a cooler tone to blues and oranges. Either one

works beautifully and adds another dimension to your room’s colors, she said.

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Auctioneers Note: This is another large and interesting auction of consignments by Area Farmers & Dealers. Online bidding will be available at Proxibid.com with a 2.5% buyer’s premium and a $750 maximum per item. Older equipment starts promptly at 9 AM sharp with 2-3 auction rings all day. A 3rd auction ring will sell trucks-trailers-vehicles-augers @ 11 AM. For more details/pictures, please call our office or visit us online at WiemanAuction.com. South Dakota sales tax will be charged. This ad is subject to additions and deletions. All consignments must have been approved by the Wiemans - sorry we are full! We have excellent loading and unloading equipment. Financing and trucking are available. We are in our 71st year of selling. We offer honest and fair treatment to all because we appreciate your business! Bring a friend and come prepared to buy! If you are driving a good distance – please call to make sure the item is here. Welcome to the “Machinery Mall of South Dakota!” Our next auction is March 4th, 2020.

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 7

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

How Facebook is gearing up to protect the US Census

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By Cat Zakrzewski The Washington Post The presidential election won’t be the only big test of Facebook’s efforts to fight misinformation in 2020: It’s also a census year, and the social network is ramping up its defenses against hoaxes that could turn people off from participating. Facebook convened officials from the U.S. Census Bureau, other tech companies and several civil society groups for a summit in its Washington office yesterday as part of the company’s “ongoing coordination and discussions about protecting next year’s census from interference,” Facebook spokesman Kevin McAlister said. Social media has exploded dramatically since the last head count a decade ago. Disinformation experts are concerned that it could now be a prime tool for foreign adversaries or domestic political groups seeking to undermine census participation, especially from groups typically wary of the government-led population count. There could be “an explosion of potential [misinformation] and disinformation once public awareness of census grows in the first quarter,” Cameron Hickey, a disinformation researcher who attended Facebook’s summit, said in an interview. The stakes are high: The census is the primary tool to determine how many House seats and therefore electoral college votes a state receives. And it’s a significant factor in the redrawing of congressional districts. It’s even the underpinning for a wide range of federal data that informs decisions about everything from health care to the economy. And the clock is ticking for Facebook’s leaders: Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg have promised the company will treat the census like a high-priority election. The company has also said it will roll out a comprehensive policy specifically outlining how it will respond to those seeking to interfere with the census. They’re particularly on the lookout for falsehoods on the platform that could discourage groups such as minorities, immigrants and

people who don’t speak English from turning out. Census officials will be working with the company to try to dispel common hoaxes, such as anything that alludes to the Census Bureau sharing information it collects with law enforcement. (The Census Bureau is prohibited from doing this under U.S. law.) Fears of foreign attempts to interfere with the census have been on the rise since Russia exploited social networks in an attempt to influence the outcome of the 2016 election. The census could be a prime target for adversaries seeking to undermine U.S. political institutions. But experts say domestic disinformation efforts could be just as formidable as people try to influence turnout for political gain. “If your goal is to undermine trust in government, the census is a perfect lever for that,” said Alex Howard, an open government advocate who attended Monday’s summit. There have been rumors, lies and misconceptions surrounding the census since it began, experts say, but with the rise of tech giants, they can be shared much more quickly and at a greater scale than ever. And today’s polarized political environment is primed for the spread of falsehoods. Already, Hickey says he spotted of misinformation earlier this year surrounding the Trump administration’s failed push to add a citizenship question to the 2020 Census. Other tech companies haven’t announced plans for a policy on the census specifically, but they do say they’re also committed to protecting it. Twitter is hosting a training today with Census representatives to address best practices, Twitter spokeswoman Katie Rosborough said. The company’s policies prohibit sharing false information about how to participate in a civic event such as the census. Two Google employees participated in the summit at Facebook. Google spokesman Nu Wexler said the search giant and its subsidiary YouTube are “committed to combating disinformation and fraudulent activities to help protect the integrity of the 2020 Census.”


8 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Holiday

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lack Friday marks the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season. Come Black Friday, shoppers strive to get the lowest prices on gifts for their loved ones. Much of the focus of Black Friday is on finding the best deals, but it can be interesting to take a breath and learn how this phenomenon developed and how it has evolved over the years. "BLACK FRIDAY" The term "Black Friday" was originally associated with gold prices and manipulation on the part of speculators Jay Gould and James Fisk. This scandal occurred in September 1869. Commodity prices plummeted 50 percent as a result, and the term "Black Friday" was coined to refer to that drop. The phrase "Black Friday" also became famous for all the wrong reasons in 1966. Philadelphia police used it to refer to the Friday traffic jams and crowding in downtown stores from tourists and shoppers who flooded into the city in advance of the Army-Navy football game held the Saturday after Thanksgiving each year. Bigger crowds and rowdiness contributed to long hours and stressful shifts for local police. BLACK FRIDAY REINVENTED The retail industry started using the term "Black Friday" in the late 1980s. Spin doctors turned previously negative connotations into positive ones by

associating the phrase with stores turning a profit and moving accounting ledgers from "red to black" thanks to big year-end sales. Retailers and consumers rallied around low-cost "doorbusters" and other discounted prices. Interestingly enough, according to the National Retail Federation, Black Friday really hasn't been the most lucrative day for retailers over the years. In fact, greater profits and larger crowds are often seen on the last Saturday preceeding Christmas. SHOPPING WEEKEND EVOLVES While Black Friday may have been the catalyst, in recent years shoppers have made the entire weekend of Black Friday a lucrative one for retailers. Many stores now open on Thanksgiving and extend sales through the entire weekend. Small Business Saturday and Sunday promote patronizing mom-and-pop stores. Cyber Monday emerged when online shopping became a popular way to grab deals, and it marks the close of the opening weekend of the holiday shopping season. In 2017, Black Friday weekend attracted 174 million shoppers who spent an average of $335.47, according to the NRF. MetroCreative COUPON

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 9

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Vaping apps go up in smoke on Apple’s App Store By Marie C. Baca The Washington Post Apple removed all vaping-related apps from its App Store on Friday, siding with experts who call vaping “a public health crisis” and “a youth epidemic.” Some of the 181 vaping apps removed by

Disease Control and Prevention and other groups that have linked vaping and e-cigarette usage to fatalities and lung injuries. The App Store is a powerful platform that generates billions of dollars in revenue for Apple. Apple sets the rules for what is allowed on it, affect-

Apple permit the user to control the temperature or other settings on vaping devices. Other vaping-related apps offer users access to social networks or games. The App Store has never permitted the sale of vaping cartridges through apps. Apple cited evidence from the Centers for

ing millions of users and developers. Some critics complain that Apple applies its standards unevenly or is too restrictive, while others say the company hasn’t gone far enough to curb harmful apps. Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment

about the criticism. Apple says it hasn’t approved a vaperelated app since June. That’s when the company updated its app review guidelines to prohibit anything that encourages or facilitates vaping, the company said. Vaping-related illnesses have killed at

least 42 people and put thousands in the hospital with pneumonia-like symptoms, according to the CDC.

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10 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Teen authors urge boys to express their feelings By Mary Quattlebaum The Washington Post Riley Campbell, Shirelle Hurt and London Jones noticed that boys and girls are sometimes given different messages by family, friends and society. It’s OK for girls to cry and show gentle or vulnerable feelings. Boys are often told to hide these feelings. They are expected to be tough and angry instead. The Washington, D.C., teens saw this happening to younger brothers, to kids they tutored and to their peers. So they decided to write a book about the problem, which all three labeled “toxic masculinity” in separate phone interviews with KidsPost. “Man Up!” came out last week. It is one of four picture books published this fall by Washington-based Shout Mouse Press, which specializes in illustrated stories and young adult fiction and nonfiction by local teens. So how do you go from an idea to a published book? Riley, a junior at Ballou Senior High School, noted that one of the biggest challenges was to create a relatable main character and to “do a book that would be kid-friendly but still

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peers telling her team that toxic masculinity is too serious for a kids’ book. But she and her co-authors disagree. They see the problem as widespread. And they found few picture books about toxic masculinity, according to London, who is a sophomore at Anacostia High School. “It needed to be talked about in the open,”

said Shirelle, a junior at Dunbar High School. “Young boys shouldn’t be shamed for their feelings.” In “Man Up!” a boy named Aaron is teased for crying when he’s upset by a hurt dog or friends who cheat at video games. Fortunately, Aaron has an older, understanding brother he can turn to. He learns

that by talking about his feelings, he can help his friends be more open as well. Shout Mouse story coach Barrett Smith helped the three teens fine-tune the tale. The pictures were created by Joy Ingram, an art student at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. London hopes the

story will encourage empathy in readers. “Maybe they will put themselves in Aaron’s shoes and ask, ‘How would I feel?’ “ he said. “Then they can become more open-minded.” The three authors said they would like to make another book. They said that creating for kids has stretched their writing in new ways.

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 11

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Tesla unveils pickup truck to market By Dana Hull, Ed Ludlow Bloomberg Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk took to the stage late Thursday to reprise a familiar role: pitching a future vehicle to a throng of adoring fans. This time, it was the “Cybertruck” — his name for Tesla’s new electric pickup. The angular vehicle, which has a stainless-steel skin, starts at $39,900 and will come in three variants, Musk told a packed audience in Hawthorne, California. Customers can order the truck with a deposit of just $100, though production “nears in late 2021,”

Tesla said on its website. After a “Blade Runner”-inspired introduction, Musk had Tesla’s long time chief designer, Franz von Holzhausen, smash the truck’s steel exterior with a sledgehammer, showing that it did not dent. But it was the second demonstration, of “Tesla armor glass,” that was the real show stopper: von Holzhausen unintentionally shattered two of the truck’s windows with a metallic ball, causing Musk to say “Oh my ******** g**.”” Given how product launches are usually scripted and

rehearsed, the broken windows were the evening’s big surprise. Tesla shares fell as much as 3.2 percent to $343.55 pre-market in New York. The stock was up 6.6 percent this year through Thursday’s close. The evening began with a slide show of standard pickup trucks throughout the years, and Musk’s vow to make something different that runs on sustainable energy. “You want a truck that’s really tough, not fake tough,” Musk said, in what seemed to be a veiled swipe at Ford Motor Co.’s slogan. “A truck you can take a

sledgehammer to that doesn’t dent.” Tesla fans in the audience liked what they saw. “It’s like something out of a movie set,” said Elizabeth Lepek of Marina del Rey, Calif., a current Tesla Model X owner who placed a $100 deposit for the Cybertruck. “It’s so futuristic. I like the design of it. There’s nothing quite like it on the road.” But traditional truck buyers are a tougher audience and less likely to be impressed by Silicon Valley sizzle. “It misses the core truck buyer,” said Gene Munster, a managing partner at venture cap-

ital firm Loup Ventures. “A contractor is not going to show up to a work site in this truck. That said, Tesla will still sell some of them.” The hashtag #cybertruck quickly began trending on Twitter as potential customers started sharing their views about the futuristic design — and the window snafu. And though it will take a long time before the Cybertruck hits the streets, that’s something Tesla customers are used to. Musk unveiled a Semi truck two years ago, but that vehicle has yet to enter volume production. The lucrative fullsize pickup market in

the U.S. is dominated by the Detroit 3: Ford’s F-150, Fiat Chrysler’s Ram 1500 and General Motors’s Chevy Silverado. Japanese automakers have spent two decades and billions of dollars to get in on the gravy train, but U.S. brands still control almost 92 percent of the half-ton segment, according to IHS Markit. “The design will be questioned, but over time the specs will help win over pickup loyalists,” said analyst Ben Kallo of Robert W. Baird. “But the volumes are expected to be low, and the Model 3 and Model Y continue to be the focus.”

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12 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Our family stories share a window to the past By Lara N. Dotson-Renta The Washington Post When I was a little girl, I spent summer evenings in my maternal grandmother’s bed holding Tilín, a little hand-sewn rag doll clown. She had given him to me when I left Puerto Rico for the mainland United States, something to clutch when I missed her. He was green and, at a few years old, soft and worn. I missed my grandmother a lot in those first years away, when the air of the Northeast felt unspeakably cold and I could not yet understand the language coming from people’s lips. In the summers, Tilín would travel back to my grandparents’ home with me, and when we were there, the world seemed right again. We had a routine: My grandmother, Mima, would make me a hot chocolate and turn on the air conditioner. As the room cooled and the lights dimmed, I would wrap myself around Mima and listen. Every night she told a different story, but each one gave me a different piece of her life, a sense of who she was and had been.

When I was about 8 years old, she told me about her first vivid memory. She was a toddler, and her mother was dying of tuberculosis. She remembered being kept away from her bedroom and being pushed back as she tried to edge closer, her father and extended relatives carrying her away each time and explaining that she could not approach her mother. This recollection of her mother on a bed, her arm extended toward her, is her worst memory, but it’s also bittersweet, as it is the only crisp memory she has of her mamá. As the years passed, she wove her childhood together for me, making it feel as familiar as my own. As a young girl, Mima accidentally stepped on a baby chick (pollito), killing it. She kicked it into a ravine in a panic so as to not get in trouble. She developed a fear of chickens and avoided pollitos thereafter, her lingering chagrin palpable when I brought some of the chicks my grandfather kept in their yard into the house as pets. Mima taught me latitude and longitude by

showing me how she had once tracked the progress of the Allies and the Nazis on a map. She told me about how, during her school years, children carried newspapers in school so that they wouldn’t get their uniforms dirty if they had to lie on the floor during aerialattack drills. My favorite stories, though, were about how she became a teacher and earned her master’s degree in education (quite the feat in 1950s Puerto Rico) and met my grandfather, the man with the sparkling green eyes. Mima would show me blackand-white pictures of them together, and she let me read the letters Mimo wrote to her from Korea, where he fought as part of the all-Puerto Rican 65th Infantry regiment. I remember drinking warm milk while I listened with rapt attention, delicately thumbing the old photos marked in elegant handwriting. I examined my grandfather’s faded draft card, gently handling it, long before I understood that his time in Korea was why he would wake up screaming at night, mistaking the rickety

ceiling fan for a helicopter. Mima’s stories were about family, but they were also a window into history that no textbook could rival. Each night before bed, Mima would transform herself, bringing out props and clothing to make her stories come alive. It was a special time that helped us forge a close bond, and the stories painted a picture of a Puerto Rico that no longer exists. As I struggled to adapt to life on the mainland United States, her stories helped me bridge “aquí y allá” (here and there), eventually allowing me to feel at ease in both places. As I got older and life got harder, her stories gave me solace and strength. I told myself I came from a long line of women who had seen dark times and adversity and come out on the other side, and I steeled myself with the knowledge that I could do the same. Somehow those stories of sadness, silliness and endurance gave me something to hold onto in times of instability, a sense of assurance and calm when things were difficult. I feel incredibly for-

tunate to carry the accounts of elders with me, particularly as my grandmother’s memory fades. Dementia has now taken a part of who she was, but her story and that of our extended family survives with me and my mother. The baton has been passed, and now I sometimes find my mother, whom my children have named Baba, snuggled in bed with them, giggling about a story involving hairspray and a candle when she was a teenager. When something goes awry for them, they will be able to look back at their parents and grandparents for quirky stories of things going sideways and, more often than not, righting themselves again. They’ll see people whose flaws and virtues mirror their own, hopefully claiming legacies they can learn from and be proud of. This is especially true of narratives about those we have lost. Since my father-in-law died, my husband and I have made an effort to tell our kids snippets about him, stories about his sports team enthusiasm (go, Dodg-

ers!), and his favorite foods and holidays. Recently our 7-yearold daughter, who was only 6 months old when my father-in-law died, eagerly slapped butter all over her waffle before reaching for the syrup. When I suggested that perhaps the waffle would like to breathe, she giggled, “I’m just like Grandpa! He liked a little waffle with his butter too!” I smiled, remembering the pat of butter carefully layered over each waffle pocket on my father-in-law’s plate. This small detail is meaningful to her and allows her to feel like she knows her grandpa, not because he is a physical presence but because his spirit has been kept alive through words. I think of my own relatives, past and present. I carry them with me because of the stories I was privy to, the tales someone took the time and care to share with me. I hope that someday my children will pay those stories forward, except then the stories will no longer belong to me, but to them and those who follow.

Bank robber accuses police of illegally using Google location data to catch him By Deanna Paul The Washington Post It was a Monday afternoon in May when police say a man wielding a silver and black handgun ordered customers inside the Call Federal Credit Union in Midlothian, Va., to their knees and demanded the bank’s manager open the safe. The robber fled with $195,000, witnesses said, and was long gone by the time authorities arrived. After surveillance footage showed the assailant holding a cellphone before he entered the bank, police drafted a search warrant asking Google to provide location information from every user that was within the vicinity of the bank within the hour of the crime. The results came back with 19 anonymized individuals. Virginia police whittled down the list to nine users and then asked Google for additional data from an expanded time frame. According to court documents reviewed by The Post, police contacted Google again: they wanted three users’ account details, including names, email addresses, subscriber

information and phone numbers. A month after the third request, on Aug. 13, Okello Chatrie was arrested. The type of request made in Chatrie’s case, also known as a “Geofence” warrant, is increasingly being sought by law enforcement across the country. These warrants, which target a geographic area instead of a suspect, compel tech companies to turn over location data from any user interacting with its technology during a specified time. “Individuals may be caught up in this search by merely using an Android phone, conducting an internet search using Google, running a Google application such as Google Maps or YouTube, or even receiving an automatic weather update from an Android service,” Chatrie’s attorney, Michael Price, wrote in an October motion. Geofence warrants, he said, “ensnare anyone who uses Google services at specific times ... sweeping up innocent individuals in an

unconstitutional dragnet search”; court documents noted that within the vicinity of Credit Union was a major highway, a Ruby Tuesday restaurant, a Hampton Inn hotel, a storage facility, two apartment complexes and a church. Calling the warrant an illegal Fourth Amendment search, Price asked the court to suppress any evidence obtained from it. “No valid search warrant would permit the police to search every house in a neighborhood or pat down everyone in sight. Yet, with a Geofence warrant, law enforcement can do just that,” he continued, and “without ever demonstrating any likelihood that Google even has data connected to a crime.” Chatrie, 24, has pleaded not guilty to the charges; if convicted, he faces up life imprisonment. Prosecutors called the case the first of its kind, though the issue has come up in other states, including New York, North Carolina, Florida and Minnesota. Experts anticipate Geofence warrants will be the next big Fourth Amendment

battle when it comes to digital privacy. Geofence warrants raise two interesting legal questions, according to Andrew Ferguson, author of “The Rise of Big Data Policing: Surveillance, Race, and the Future of Law Enforcement” and a visiting law professor at American University: Do people have an expectation of privacy in their location revealed by digital clues? And do search warrants for overbroad collection run afoul of particularity concerns? “For example, is a warrant for all the phones in a bank building particularized enough when you know you will be collecting information from innocent people? Does it matter if it is 19 innocent people or 190? Or 1900?” Ferguson asked. “These are questions that police will need to resolve before seeking a warrant and judges will need to answer before signing a warrant.” Google received enough reverse location history warrants that it developed a three-step process to respond: It provides an anonymized data set; if needed, it

turns over additional location history; and for relevant devices it produces basic subscriber information. “We vigorously protect the privacy of our users while supporting the important work of law enforcement,” Richard Salgado, Google’s director of law enforcement and information security told The Post. “We have created a new process for these specific requests designed to honor our legal obligations while narrowing the scope of data disclosed and only producing information that identifies specific users where legally required.” Although the company said it only turns over historical-location data when served with a search warrant, neither follow-up request in Chatrie’s case was court-ordered. Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court was tasked with deciding whether law enforcement needed a search warrant to compel service providers to hand over cell tower location records, which track a person’s minute-by-minute movements. The court held

that they do. But data in that case was collected nearly a decade ago. Since then, network technology and accuracy has advanced tremendously. The location information stored in Google’s Sensorvault is even more precise than cell site location information: Court records mentioned that Google can pinpoint a person’s whereabouts to approximately 20 meters, while cell site location data is “a few thousand meters. More, the company’s software permeates smartphone technology. According to Pew Research Center, 96 percent of Americans own cellphones. Google Maps is the mostused navigation app, appearing on 67 percent of smartphones, and its closest competitor is the Google-owned app, Waze. Android operating systems control nearly 90 percent of the smartphone market share worldwide. “This will become one of the most common legal battles in court,” Ferguson said. “Almost everything we do leaves little digital locational clues that are a warrant away from collection.”


Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 13

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Four ways to place an ad.

Republic The Daily

Online p! a M e l a S e Garag

Call: (605) 996-5515 • 1-800-529-5514 Email: dailyclass@mitchellrepublic.com Online: www.mitchellrepublic.com/classifieds Mail: 514 N. Main Street PO Box 1288 Mitchell, SD 57301

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Mon-Fri. 8-5 * Closed Sunday To Place Your Freebie Classified Ad (Under $100) Please Call Our Hotline At 605-996-5517

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We at the Daily Republic wish to give you the best service we can. We ask that you check your ad the first time it appears in the newspaper. If you need to make any changes, or corrections, please call and we will gladly change it for the next possible edition. We cannot be responsible for any cost that might result from any error or omission above the cost of the advertisement. No refunds. If you have any questions when you receive the bill on your advertising, please contact us immediately. Freebie ads are only available to customers in good credit standing.

Your headquarters for newpaper and online listings across the region

The most regional jobs...

PERSONALS

UNFURNISHED BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES APARTMENTS

FREE Bible Correspondence Course 1603 East 2nd, Mitchell

NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help Your advertisement you self-publish will appear in 150 your own book. FREE author subSouth Dakota daily mission kit! Limitand community newspapers across FREE FREE FREE! ed offer! Why wait? now: the state that are Are you interested Call Christian evi- 8 5 5 - 6 2 3 - 8 7 9 6 read by more than in (MCN) dences? Creation 814,000 people Evolution? based on an aver- and age of 2.2 newspa- Contact us for a Free 10 lesson per readers per Christian Evidences household and a C o r r e s p o n d e n c e total circulation Course Write to: base of more than Christian Evidence 370,000. Correspondence For more Course www.jobshq.com information, call 1508 Wisconsin Ave SW Huron SD 57350 The Daily Republic Classifieds FREE at 605-996-5515 Nondenominational Bible Video Studies 996-1964 for appointment

HELP WANTED GENERAL

PERSONALS

ATTENTION CATHOLIC’S That are homebound and the elderly. DISH or DIRECT TV channel WGN has a very nice 1/2 hour 5:30 am Sunday Mass with a choir. You watch, you decide.

Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 855-651-0114. (MCN)

CHRISTIAN MOTORCYCLIST ASSOCIATION meets at Marlins Roadhouse Second Saturday of each month. For more information about Bible Study call Tim 933-0828 or AmySue 630-0353

MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED GENERAL GENERAL

COMPUTER ISSUES? FREE DIAGNOSIS by GEEKS ON SITE! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 EMERGENCY $20 OFF ANY SERVICE with coupon 42522! Restrictions apply. 1-844-938-0797. (MCN)

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HELP WANTED TRANSPORTATION & LOGISTICS TRUCK DRIVER

Full-time with Class B CDL. Clean driving record. Pre-employment, drug & alcohol testing. Contact

Schoenfelder Construction

3131 W. Havens, Mitchell

605-996-3254

DUPLEXES FOR RENT DUPLEX IN MT. VERNON, 2 bedroom, 1 bath w/ washer & dryer, gas furnace & central air. $600 dep. $400 per mo. plus utilities. No pets. No smoking. Call 605-770-3915

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Unit Manager-1856488 RN/LPN-1855157 Deli Associate-1856690 Route Sales Specialist-1855862 In-Home Aide-1856652

We are looking for reliable youths or adults to deliver papers early mornings in

Chamberlain 48 papers South Side

Emery

44 Papers

Parkston

Route Route Route Route

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48 Papers Free Subscription ($175 VALUE) No Sundays or Major Holidays ~ No Collecting

Call Adam 605-990-6378 or 1-800-529-5514

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE Head Start Health Coordinator

Exp. with young children, school districts &/or social services preferred. BA/BSN or RN with current SD nursing license or cert. required. 11-mo. work agreement paid over the yr. with holidays/wknds off. Hours typically 8-4:30. Oversight & coordination of compliance w/ Head Start Health performance standards but not limited to immunizations, dentals & physicals. Min. starting salary: $43,820 w/paid annual/sick leave, plus fringe benefits. Duty station to be determined preferably within counties of Charles Mix, Davison, Bon Homme, Hutchinson or Douglas. E-mail resume to: debbie.merkwan@sccdinc.com An Employment At Will/Equal Oppty. Employer

HELP WANTED HOSPITALITY & TOURISM

HELP WANTED HOSPITALITY & TOURISM

NOW HIRING • Housekeeping - Part-Time Day Shift. Must be able to work wkends. • Front Desk Agent - Part-time 3-11 pm shift. Must be able to work most weekends/15-20 hours a week. Competitive starting wages, accrued PTO, employee discounts with IHG hotels, holiday pay, friendly work environment Please Apply at 810 E. Spruce - Mitchell or email: kimp@tkohotels.com

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments, Autumn Crest, 400 W. 19th, For elderly or persons with disabilities. Rent based on income. Equal Housing Opportunity. 770-5832 or Skogen Company 605-263-3941 3 BEDROOM Townhouse. 500 W. 19th. Rent based on income. Equal Housing Opportunity. 605-770-5832 or Skogen Company 605-263-3941

RESORTS/CAMP/ VACATION (RENTALS) DO WARM WINTERS SOUND GOOD?? Bring your RV down to the warm Rio Grande Valley. J-5 RV Park in Mission Tx. will welcome you with a country setting, friendly people and lots of activities to keep you busy. We have a special for first time visitors. Phone us at 956-682-7495 or 515-418-3214. Email info@j5rvparktexas.com Tom and Donna Tuttle, Managers (MCN)

FARM LAND FOR RENT

Lombardi Court Apts-Large 2 & 3 bedroom apts. ATTENTION Rent based on income. Playground. FARMERS Full basements. Large Track of Call Mandy 770-7324 Land FOR RENT or email mandy@apc- Immediate Possesmanagement.com Equal sion for Spring Housing Opportunity. Planting. Miner County - Redstone Township 777 Acres Musick ProperCall TODAY ties quiet & spa(507)696-5779 cious 2 bed/2 bath apts available in ATTENTION city & country settings. Features cenFARMERS tral air, large walkLarge Track of in closets & onsite Land FOR RENT laundry. $750 rent Immediate Possesincludes: water, sewer, sion for Spring garbage & garage. Planting. Davison View photos & details County - Mt. Vermusickproperties.com non Township Call Michelle 1336 Acres 605-999-6800 Call TODAY (507)696-5779

ANIMALS/PETS FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FOR SALE A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call 1-888-894-7038 (MCN)

Here is another beautiful cat that is ready for adoption from the City pound. Call 605-996-3242. Ad Courtesy of Mitch- Attention: Oxygen ell Animal Rescue Users! Gain freedom with a Portable Oxygen Concentrator! No more heavy tanks and refills! Guaranteed Lowest Prices! Call the Oxygen USED FURNITURE Concentrator Store: 855-536-0324 Large Selection (MCN) Montgomery Furniture Alexandria 605-239-4311 BATHROOM RENOVATIONS. EASY, ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seat2 BOOKCASES, ed showers. Call dark walnut, 25x60 for a free in-home solid wood, $50 consultation: each. Call 855-836-2250 605-630-1653 (MCN)

HOUSEHOLD MISC.

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

BEST SATELLITE TV with 2 Year Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo with 190 channels and 3 months free premium movie channels! Free next day installation! Call 855-824-1258. (MCN) BRIGHT YELLOW sofa in great condition, $40. Large living room chair, $25. Tall bookcase, $10. Portable dishwasher, $25. 605-292-0295

CHECK OUT THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY Running in the Classified Section every day!

Changes Made Daily!

31” x19” BATHROOM VANITY TOP, almond white swirl with single handle faucet, $20. Call 605-996-4139

TWO BOXES of Winchester Ballistic Silvertip 7mm Rem Mag, 150 grain, $70. Call 605-630-4480

DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1-844-316-8876. (MCN)

AUCTION ADS

AUCTION ADS

AUCTION ADS

HOMES FOR SALEWANTED FARMLAND SURROUNDING AREA TO RENT Price Reduced to $349,000 79 ACRES CUSTOM HOME in Jerauld County. Very Good Soil Productivity index of 84.0. +/-64 Tillable acres, currently in Alfalfa. +/-10 acres of pasture. Rural water. 2015 house built with Amazing Quality & Craftsmanship. 40 mi. from Mitchell, 14 from Wessington Springs & 15 from Woonsocket. 605-490-0700 for more info or showing.

WANTED: Farm Land to Rent for 2020 and Beyond Contact Sheridan Larson 605-354-2127

FARM MISCELLANEOUS GRAIN STORAGE BIN FOR RENT, 14 miles north, 2 miles east, Alexandria, S.D. 55K bushel. Call 605-770-7368 for information

LIVESTOCK &

RESORTS/CAMP/ RELATED EQUIPMENT VACATION (RENTALS) Orlando + Daytona Beach Florida Vacation! Enjoy 7 Days and 6 Nights with Hertz, Enterprise or Alamo Car Rental Included Only $298.00. 12 months to use. Call Now! 844-277-5137. (24/7) (MCN)

HELP WANTED SKILLED & TRADES

MUSICK LIVESTOCK Buying horses daily. 605-999-8086

ANIMALS/PETS FOR SALE GIVEAWAY: 2 orange tiger kittens, almost 2 months old, 605-292-0656

HELP WANTED SKILLED & TRADES

Davison County Highway Dept. accepting applications for open positions The positions will require that the applicant have a valid South Dakota driver’s license, along with a Commercial Drivers License (CDL). Knowledge and experience with heavy equipment preferred. Excellent benefits package. Applications are available at the Davison County Highway Department at 1224 West 5th Avenue, Mitchell, SD. Closing date will be upon filling the position. Davison County is an EOE

ONLINE ONLY 8:00 A.M. with soft close on Monday, November 25, 2019 at 6 P.M. Consignment Farm Equipment & Misc. Items at Auction. Auctioneers: Dean/Edwards & Associates *********************************** FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29 11:00 AM Davison County Land Auction 70.33 Acres located 3 miles west and 1/8 north of Mitchell, SD Located: at property Owners: L J & T Ventures, LLC. Auctioneers: Dean/Edwards & Associates LLC, Justin Dean, Myron Grosz, Lanning Edwards, Bill Maddocks SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 11:00 A.M. Ponderosa Bar, Real Estate and Personal property sold as a total unit Located: 109 S. Main St., Plankinton SD 57368 Owner: Ponderosa Bar. Auctioneers: Curtis Auctioneering LLC, Don Curtis #18018 & Mitchell Realty LLC, Ralph Kiner #10849 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3 10:30 A.M. 150.82 Acres Farmland Jefferson Township McCook County Auction. Land located from Emery SD, 1 1/2 miles East on 261st St and 2 North and 3/4 East on south side of the road. SOLD INDOORS AT Wieman Auction Facility at 44628 SD Hwy 44, Marion S.D. Owners: Morris Terveen, Bruce Terveen, Linda Kranzler, Muriel Kokbeck. Auctioneers: Wieman Land & Auction Co., Inc. Rich, Kevin, Mike, Ryan & Derek Wieman & Nathan Timmermans SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7 11:00 A.M. Moving Auction Located: 1501 W. Spruce, Mitchell Owners: Doug & Connie Krantz. Auctioneers: Curtis Auctioneering LLC, Don Curtis 1:00 P.M. 480 acres of Millette County Crop & Pasture Ground. Located: White River High School, 201 2nd St., White River, SD 57579 Owners: Steve Schmidt, Dan Schmidt, Candy Schmidt. Auctioneers: Haines Auction Company WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11 9:00 A.M. Annual Year-End Consignment Event held at the Wieman Auction Facility Located at 44628 SD Highway 44, Marion, SD or from Marion, SD, 1-mile South and 1/2 mile West on Highway 44. Auctioneers: Wieman Land & Auction Co., Inc. Mike Wieman, Ryan Wieman, Kevin Wieman, Rich Wieman, Derek Wieman, Nathan Timmermans THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12 11:00 A.M. Large Farm Machinery & Daily/Livestock Equipment Auction Located: 25321 488th Ave., Garretson, SD – From Garretson, SD (Watertower) – 2 miles east and ¼ mile south Owners: Brad & Monica Nussbaum. Auctioneers: Chuck Sutton, Dean Stoltenberg, Jared Sutton & Bob Julson


14 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 855-752-6680 (MCN)

Get NFL Sunday Ticket FREE w/ DIRECTV Choice AllIncluded Package. $59.99/month for 12 months. 185 Channels PLUS Thousands of Shows/Movies On Demand. FREE Genie HD DVR Upgrade. Call 1-844-245-2232 or Earthlink High s a t e l l i t e d e a l Speed Internet. n o w . c o m / M F C P. As Low As $14.95/ (MCN) month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed. Fiber Optic Technology. LEM jerkey canon Stream Videos, and three shore lunch jerkey racks. Music and More! Call Earthlink Today Both new in boxes and never used. 1-855-679-7096 $40 Call or text (MCN) 999-3374 for information. FREE AUTO INSURANCE Lung Cancer? QUOTES for uninsured and Asbestos exposure insured drivers. Let in industrial, conus show you how struction, manufacmuch you can turing jobs, or military may be the save! Call cause. Family in 855-648-7642. the home were (MCN) also exposed. Call 1-866-795-3684 or VIAGRA and CI- email canALIS USERS! 60 cer@breakinginjuGeneric Pills SPE- rynews.com. $30 CIAL $99.00. FREE billion is set aside Shipping! 100% for asbestos vicGuaranteed. 24/7 tims with cancer. CALL NOW! Valuable settle888-297-2414 Ha- ment moneys may blamos Espanol not require filing a (MCN) lawsuit. (MCN)

AUTO DETAILING PERFECT TOUCH AUTO DETAILING “The Difference Is In The Details”

Automotive * Tractor * Combine Cleaning Located in tan building north of 8th Street & Hwy. 37 Bypass...Mitchell, 605-990-2833

AUTOMOTIVE

H&R Salvage 996-8271

Buying automobiles as is- no prep work needed. Farm machinery, white goods, wire & all other metal. Roll off containers & farm clean up is available. Also BUYING aluminum, aluminum cans, copper & brass.

CLEANING RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Cleaning Available 17 yrs. experience Call Isabel Boyle for Estimate 605-999-9927 TNT Explosive Commercial Cleaning Quality service unmatched prices. Don’t wait start saving today. FREE quotes & references available Carmen 605-770-6226 Tntcleaning@santel.net

CONSTRUCTION

NEW QUEEN SIZE hand and machine made quilt, $100. Call 605-996-1757 Over $10K in Debt? Be debt free in 24 to 48 months. No upfront fees to enroll. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt Relief 855-995-1557. (MCN) PAIR OF MENS Pants size 33x30, new, $9. Wrinkle free pants, 32x30, $9, never worn. Men’s black occasional shoes size 9, $10. 605-996-4703 SAVE ON YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION! World Health Link. Price Match Guarantee! Prescriptions Required. CIPA Certified. Over 1500 medications available. CALL Today For A Free Price Quote. 1-866-710-6889 Call Now! (MCN) SIZE 7 TONY Llama cowboy boots, $35. Haier countertop dishwasher, never used, $50. One used tire, P275/65 R18, $15. 605-630-4483

CONSTRUCTION

Quality Homes, LLC 1525 W. Elm Ave., Mitchell * 995-6215 www.customtouchhomes.com

We provide construction expertise, knowledge and materials that will make your building experience pleasant & rewarding. On & Off-Site Construction of New Homes

DOG BOARDING/ TRAINING

JK LAB KENNELS

Your dog’s home away from home.

Lee & Kari White - 605-996-2655

ELECTRICAL Commercial, Farm & Residential Wiring

FREE Estimates

996-3563 Home

DB ELECTRIC- Danny Ball Commercial H Farm H Residential 29 Years Experience Mitchell, Woonsocket & Surrounding Area 796-4321, Cell 350-1105, Fax 796-1421

Experienced Reasonable Prices Houses Additions Pole Barns

Dana, Matt & Jake Hohn

Midwest Drywall Hang, Tape & Texture Patch & Repair

Travis Kelly • Mobile 605-770-2355 • Mitchell

CLARK PAVING LLC Asphalt/Concrete

Driveways - Parking Lots Sidewalks - Sand Sealing Crack Sealing - Striping Snow Removal

Brad Clark 996-4495 - Mitchell SD - 770-4499

COMMON CENTS CONSTRUCTION Concrete M New Construction Remodeling M Tree Removal

Call Jim Winter 605-770-9561

Travis Baker Commercial - Residential & Farm 770-0415 or 990-2490 Free Estimates

EQUIPMENT REPAIR

AMS Oil Dealer Service small engine & recreational vehicles. Boat repair, tune ups and winterization. Bruce Trebil 605-770-6721 or 996-1752 trebsrepair@gmail.com

FLOORING

Building Site Dirt Work * Demolition Basement Digging * Concrete & Blacktop Removal

Crushed Gravel • Screened Gravel Black Dirt • Clay • Sand

Call 605-996-1163 or 999-2183

FREE AD

Totaling $100 or less Call 605-996-5517 Please leave your phone number, name, address and speak slowly & clearly with ad information & cost of items.

2013 Ford Edge limited, loaded, new tires, $11,995. 2014 GMC Terrain SLT2, loaded, Nav., roof, leather $11,995. 2012 Ford Escape, new tires, battery, VIAGRA & CIALIS! like new, $5,595. 60 pills for $99. 100 Doug’s 605-999-7149 pills for $150. FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! 1-866-306-9928 CASH FOR CARS: (MCN) We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2002 and Newer. Competitive Offer! Nationwide FREE Pick Up! Call Now For a Free Quote! 888-366-5659 (MCN) Trailer Sale: Santa’s new UTV, Side by Side, ATV utility trailers; 3 HORSE Aluminum Slant DONATE YOUR $12,500.00; Tow CAR, TRUCK OR dollies $999.00; “11 BOAT TO HERIModels” of “DUMP TAGE FOR THE Trailers”; 10 Colors BLIND. Free 3 Day of 6’X12’ Cargo Vacation, Tax DeTrailers ; For more ductible, Free Towinfo & prices: ing, All Paperwork w w w. F o r t D o d g e - Taken Care Of. TrailerWorld.com. CALL 515-972-4554 1-855-977-7030 (MCN) (MCN)

homesHQ.com

Meet the HomesHQ Team

Kristie Welle HomesHQ Sales & Digital Manager

TRAILERS

HOME IMPROVEMENT

GRAVEL

kristie@homeshq.com 701-451-5635

MISCELLANEOUS SCHMIT PUMPING

Pit Run Gravel - Fill Dirt Clay - Black Dirt

Septic & Drain Cleaning

Darin 770-5376 or 239-4914 Alexandria, SD

• 15 ton of pit run gravel - $125 • 25 ton load with a side dump of belly dump - $175 Delivered within 5 mile radius of Mitchell. For quotes or prices on fill dirt, clay, black dirt or large number of loads. Call 999-7428

HANDYMAN ODD JOB & HANDY MAN Experienced in many things including:

Painting - Home Repairs - Yard Work Fencing - Decks and Much More! Over 5 years experience in the installation and repair of wood, gas and corn stoves DON’T HAVE TIME TO DO IT YOURSELF...GIVE ME A CALL, I DO IT ALL! Free Estimates - Licensed and Insured

Kitchen & Bath - Drywall - Flooring Basements - Windows & Doors Siding - Decks and more

PAINTING/ PAPERING

And Custom Sheet Metal

605-996-8616

TESSIER’S INC. 996-7548

OH MY CARPET by Jack Earl Save lots of money on carpet. Featuring AIRO carpet for wet basements. Will measure & deliver. 605-770-1577

INSULATION

Superior

Spray Foam 605-770-4662

The construction industries Most Efficient Insulation.

Tree Removal Trimming and Stump Grinding Serving Mitchell & Surrounding Areas for over 55 years

New Construction, Pre-finishing of Woodwork & Repainting Interior & Exterior

Call 605-996-1243

Any 3 rooms up to 300 sq. for $74.95

605-990-5325

Drilling - Complete System Installation Heating and Cooling Check us out at: waterfurnace.com

Insulation •Replacement Windows •Permanent Siding

Miller & Vermillion 1-800-658-3531

Serving South Dakota Since 1939

WATER SERVICE

DAN’S WATER SERVICE Water Softeners

PLUMBING

Commercial & Residential

KROHMER PLUMBING

Drinking WATER System 40+ years Sales & Service

996-6685 or 1-800-870-6685 SERVICING ALL BRANDS

996-2752

Commercial - Agricultural - Residential

LAWN CARE JOSH’S MOWING SERVICE

Lawn Mowing - Dethatching Aerating Lawn Fertilizing & Spraying

Residential & Commercial

Weekly Mowing Services * Free Estimates

Josh Gebel at 605-990-2833 Mitchell

*INSURANCE CLAIMS SPECIALIST *COMMERCIAL ROOFING *RESIDENTIAL ROOFING *STORM & FIRE RESTORATION *SIDING *GUTTERS *WINDOWS *LEAF GUARD

WHEATRIDGE Lowest Prices in Town

Call 605-999-0357 or 996-1845

SELF-STORAGE

999-5844 ] 995-0408 MSTM Storage

Sizes 5 x 10 thru 12 x 28 Cheapest prices in town!

999-8468 or 995-0095 Where Quality Does Matter Commercial - Residential

Mowing M Dethatching M Spring Clean-Up Fertilizing M Aeration M Edging M Fall Clean-up

REGGIE SIEGEL

996-2781 - Mitchell SD - 630-9266 Insured/Bonded

WINDOWS

STORAGE

*Parking lot sweeping*Sidewalk edging Residential & Commercial

Free estimates Serving Mitchell since 1995

Sales - Rental - Service Softener, Filters, R/O’s Water Coolers, Deionization Bottled Water & Salt Delivery 801 S. Sanborn Blvd. 605-996-3477 1-800-529-0122 www.darringtonwater.com

605-990-2710

JASON HOHN’S LAWN CARE Lawn mowing * Dethatching * Core Aerate

605-239-4242

HOME IMPROVEMENT

605-770-1376

ROOFING

Liquid Fertilizing programs * Bush trimming

AFFORDABLE GEOTHERMAL

Call Ken 605-996-0821

Dan 770-2118 Jason 770-4048

605-630-0192

Heating & Air Conditioning Sales & Service

TREE SERVICE/ STUMP REMOVAL TREE TRIMMING CUTTING REMOVAL

No Job Too Small

Jeff Farrow - Mitchell, SD

Sales and Service for ALL your Heat and Cooling needs

DIXIE VEURINK TRUCKING 3020 South Ohlman - Mitchell Back fill Basements * Finish Grading

TO PLACE A

2000 DURANGO, could repair or use for parts, Call 605-292-0656.

HEATING/ AIR CONDITIONING

HOHN & SONS CONTRACTING LLC

Cellular 770-2207/770-8114 or 770-8238

TICKETS TO ANY of the 6 MACT performances of “The Nutcracker”. Will sell both for $25. Call or text 605-770-2165.

Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! Strong recent work history needed. Call to start your application or appeal today! 1-866-276-3845 -Steppacher Law Offices LLC Principal Office: 224 Adams Ave Scranton PA 18503. (MCN)

FARROW’S

T.K. ELECTRIC

995-0595 Office

Stay in your home longer with an American Standard Walk-In Bathtub. Receive up to $1,500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-855-372-3080 or visit www.walkintubquote.com/midwest (MCN)

TREE SERVICE/ STUMP REMOVAL HAWKEYE TREE & STUMP SERVICES LLC Look for our ad in Advisor 605-682-9830

CUSTOM BUILT WINDOWS to fit any size opening in your home. Free estimates The Window Shop 605-996-6777 124 S. Main St. - Mitchell, SD Guaranteed Lowest Install Price

Buying a new car?


Wednesday, November 27, 2019 • Advisor • 15

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

P latte

s! a m t s i r h C y err

M

Holiday Happenings • November 30th • PARADE OF LIGHTS & LIVE NATIVITY

This “HOLIDAY SEASON” let us pause and reflect the blessings in our life....

Parade starts at 6:30 pm with the Live Nativity happening both before and after at the Platte Food Center Parking lot!

the entire staff would like to wish all a

• December 7th • SANTA & MOVIE DAY Drawing for all ages - 10:00 Santa at the Chamber - 11:00 Movie - 2:00

“Merry

• December 14th • SKATING & SHOPPING 120 Main St. • Platte, SD 337-3681

Merry Christmas And Happy New Year!

Christmas”!

Younger Kids: 11:30 - 1:00 Older Kids 1:30-3:00 Drawing for all ages - 1:00 Platte Community Building

Hope Your Holiday is a Showstopper

MOVIE TIMES Friday, Saturday, Sunday at 7:30 pm and Sunday afternoon at 2:00 pm

PEACE ON EARTH

With our gratitude for your goodwill towards us this year.

LYRIC THEATRE

521 Main Street - Platte • 605-337-2319

36590 SD-44, Platte, SD 57369 •(605) 337-3374

Filled With Our Gratitude

Happy Thanksgiving & Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas From Our Herd to Yours

HOLIDAY WISHES & A HEARTFELT THANKS! 12 EAST 7TH STREET PLATTE, SD 605-337-3325

Make Merry Hope your holiday is filled with sugar, spice and everything nice!

PLATTE LIVESTOCK MARKET

620 E. 7th St., Platte, SD • 1-877-742-5402 • midwestagcenter.com

Wishing All a Very Happy Holiday Season!

Merry Christmas, and many thanks!

Bob & Gus Middendorp 12 E. 7th Street, Platte, SD | 605-337-3009

001807896r2

1-800-337-2655 SALE BARN • 830-5784 DUSTIN MCINTOSH 680-1818 ALVIE TIMMERMANS • 680-1900 SCOTT KIRSCH 680-1892 MARSHALL RINGLING • 680-1972 JOHN DEAN

May peace and happiness be yours this holiday season. Merry Christmas!

Ringling Trucking Company Ross Ringling 27462 SD Highway 45, Platte, SD * 605-337-2492

701 E 7th St., Platte, SD • 605-337-2154


16 • Advisor • Wednesday, November 27, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

We make protecting your home our priority

3 Locally Owned Since 2001 3 25 Year Labor Warranty 3 Over 30 Years Experience 3 Daily Site Cleanup FREE ESTIMATES FINANCING AVAILABLE

Trusted Construction At Affordable Rates!

Serving Mitchell and the Surrounding Area for over 18 Years

(605) 996-8648 As the owner, I don’t just stand behind my work...I stand on it!


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