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Newspaper Archive of
The Mount Vernon Hawkeye-Record
Mount Vernon, Iowa
July 27, 1939     The Mount Vernon Hawkeye-Record
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July 27, 1939
 
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• rKHE MOUNT VERNON, IOXVA, HA VKEYE-RECORD AND THE LISBON HE]RAId) Thursday, July "THE HAWKEYE-RECORD aml THE LISBON HERAIJD 104 2rid Ave., North, Mount Vernou, Iowa ofri~ll Newspaper Mount Vernon and Lhm County Lloyd McCutcheon Estate, Proprietor James W. McCutcheon, Editor Puhlished at Mount Vernon ana ~lsoon, in Linn County, Iowa, every Thursday. THE MOUNT VERNON HAWKEYE Feuded Jn 1889 by S. H. Baumau THE MOUNT VERNON REMARKER F~nded in 1853 by Minard Lozier THE LISBON HERALD Founded iu 1854 by W. F. Stahl Sub~ription Rate O~ y~r, in Linn and adjoining counties, per year ............... $1,50 One year, outside Linn and adjoining oountitm, but within the state, per ,,at ........ . ................. Oue y~r, outside the state ........ ~z. Notices for entertainments or other gath- erings to which a charge is made, le canto per line, minimum charge 25 cents: Card of thanks and resolutions of respect 10 eente a line, minimum charge $1.00 Display advertising rates furnished on ap- plication to respo~sibl~ advertisers. Momber, Iowa Press Association, National ]~lit~rlal Association, Foreign Advertis- i~ Representative, Iowa Newspapers, Inc., 405 Shops Bldg. Des Moines, lowa. Entered as second class mail matter at the post office of Mount Vernon, Iowa, and Lisbon, Iowa. ;wX¥:i A i :W ILINN I E.A. GETS Items of Interest in Moun ! ivus~lY It• • ttq~lIRlrMkT~ And Lisbon 10, 20, 30 Years Ago]~|l~.w £1.1.11/I¥~FN/ [ AMM S • aAdldJL~V nlalJWSdJLM n, TEN YEARS 9,A?O I -------- August 1, 1.2.1 1 l,'ollowing closely on the coin- The oats that are coming out of! )ietion of tile Iirst project, olficials the separators this week are of good quality, good color and are averaging about 50 to 70 bushels per acre• The resolution of the necessity for the proposed rock surfacing on South Fourth street, Boulevard, Summitt avenue, F'ifth avenue, and Tenth avenue south, was adopted by the Mount Vernon council, at a called meeting Wednesday eve- ning. Joe Yanechek drove his new car through the scale house at the I,'rank Svoboda farm last week, knocking out the end of the bulld- mg. C. F. Butler, a well known citiz- en of Spring, tile and surrounding community, uiade the I,adies Aid Society of the IAnn Grove church a gift of $50, last Saturday morning while they were having a bake sale in the Frank Jordan store. 1)ilion Bridges, Lloyd Staal), Earl Yocum and Merle l,ong left Tues- day morning for Fort Snelling, Minn., witere they will ,be in train- ing camp for a month. Morris McCann of Lisbon is [~ ~ [ ~ nursing a bruised leg and arm the 'esult of an accident on his motor- cycle, Tuesday evening as he wan Urges Stop Signs At Farm Driveways Along Highway ._-------. Stop signs at farm homes, is the suggestion of a farmer made near Si.bley, in the Sibley Gazette-Tri- ,bune, following an wccident in which three memebrs of a farm family were killed when their car was hit as t'hey drove onto a high- way. A stop sign would be a re- minder to "stop, look and listen" before entering the highway. Driving onto a highway from a farm or a side road is a serious business which requires the full at- tention of the .party doing it. It is ~t good habit to always stop, al- though there may .be no stop sign• A farmer may stop many times but he in a hurry or a little care- less once, and an accident may occur. Another thing that might help prevent such accidents would be for every farmer who lives on the high~vay to cut the bushes, weeds or trees along his drive way near the highway, so a motorist on the highway can see whether anyone is coming out of the drive way. Dailies Attempt To Make Light of 'High Life-' Warning The warning of Governor I~uren D. Dickinson, of Michigan, against drinking and "high life" has at- tracted wide publicity, with a tend- ency on the part of the stories in the daily press to accept it in a humorous vein as the opinion ot an old fogy. Regardless of the attempt to make light of the old gentleman's impressions of the New York meet- ing he attended, there is just as much danger of high life and drinking now, as there waS in the old days when respected families fr(rwned on it. In this modern day and age, a voice warning young people of drinking and high life is so seldom ,heard from a man in political life that it attracts wide attention. Welcome Fred [Beckman To Iowa Iowa newspapers will welcome Fred Beckman, former professor of Journalism at Iowa State col- lege, back to Iowa as he takes over the editorship of the Knoxville Journal. Editor M. L. Curtis of the Journal has just begun a six year term as chairman of the Iowa Liquor Control Commission. Mr. Beckman founded the Iowa State College of Journalism and was in charge of it until 12 years ago w~aen he went to St. Paul to ,be editor of the Farmer's Wife. As Ward Barnes says in the Eagle Grove Eagle, "It is going to ,be fun to watch 'Professor' Beck- man in his dealings with stern realities of which there are no sterner to 'be encountered than when running a countryweekly• Pardon, Prof. Beckman,we re- mem.ber you taught us to say, • Community VCeekly~.'' Wo will miss the rip snorting Republican editorials of ,Mel Curtis, which ,we have read for years, but we know that the Journal will be in very competent hands under the editorship of Fred Beckman. A TI~:ADMILL POR 1~II)0 On June 12 last the National In- stitute of Health, a government agency, took bids on treadmills for dogs. The specifications are as fol- lows: "A treadmill for dogs rang- ing in weight from 10 to 50 pounds with a mean dog weight of 22 pounds. It should be operated by .motor wi~h suitable power to pro- duce speed of from 2 to 20 miles per hour, three horse po~¢er is the minimum capacity, it should be adjustable for running at various inclinations and should have a variable speed transmission• The width should be 18 inches and of suitable length with side guards to retain the animal on the treadmill. It is to be equipped with an electric tachometer and should operate with the minimum of noise, etc." There, lMr. Taxpayer, is one of the dam phool things the New Deal Is throwing away your taxes on. Tread~nills to exercise dogs! What next? of the Linn County Rural Electric Cool)ertttive Association have re- ceive(1 word of tile ai)provttl Of the second application and the allot- ment of $225,00iL0(~ for the con- ~;truction of 226 nIiles of line in seven Johnson county townships, six townships in Linn and one in I~enton to serve a total of 665 farrners. Preliminary sign-np and survey has beon undcrv,'ay Sillce early spring and every effort will be made to construct the second Soil Conservation Receives Emphasis In 1940 AAA Plan Soil conservation will have in- ~.reased en}t)hasis in the 1940 AAA coming heine from work at Cedar f~al::u~:g'o~mt~,(sa:i~,t~)' kl~'A l~i(()~in, Roberts Wilson celebrated her mittce, who represented h)wa at fourth birthday on Thursday after the National AAA (onferenc(. in noon with a party. Fourteen friends \\ aslm~.g:°n' ~:.'t: "' ,(~(tIiett:d ;:::°t~:e and tt~eir mothers were guests, m(enuau( s ~ • P':" • 1340 farlrt program. TXVENTY YEARS AGO In a letter of J. F. Wagor, chair- July 30, 1919 man of the county AAA comniitee, Crar' ig l~oy'd and Ed Pitlik leftKlein said the next year's farm Wedne~day for Kansas, where progra.m will also provide a better they are to join Warner Petersou opportunity for operators of sniall who has *been working in the har- farms to participate, and tt*e re- vest fields, at the sum of six dol- sponsibility of adnlinistratiou will tars a day, with board and lodging, continue in the hands of fitrmer Corp Warren McKune's leters in- committees. dicate there is little chance of hint An important recomniend-ttion getting to come home. He is in ~ffecting soil conservation, and ~Nallendorf Germany, in the First which should help small farmers division, serving on guard duty. take part in the program, wa~ that Lieut. Rufus Parsons has decid- there be established a minimum i~d to remain in the army for tris3oil-building allowance of $20 per life work. He is at Petersburg, farin. Another important soil con- Va in reserve officers training servation recommendation is one is at home. The last to return were with established AAA policy of ~(enneth Kohl and Heston Phelps decentralizing ad.ministration of who arrived on Saturday• VCTtile the program wherever possible. Eisbon has some Gold Stars on her] "The national conference was [lag they were front the surround- ] held a month earlier this year than ing 'territory J last," Klein said. "Tiffs will give 1)wight Ink arrived in New York J farmers in 1940 a better opportun- u week ago Thursday going to [ ity than ever to know well in ad- Can~ ip• .Merritt for a wce'k and then [ vance of the planting season what to Camp Dodge Fred Alexander I t'he program has to offer them. :and Raymond Fawcett and GeneI "t¢ecomii~endations adopted at i l)avidson reached the good old U. | the national conference will be S. A. on the transport "America"| used for drafting specific provi- on July 22. Walter Current reach-] sions of the 1940 program. In gen- ed Norfolk Va on Monday. ] eral it will continue on the saine Prof C 'R Keyes will spend aJ lines as the 1939 progranl. Changes few days" this week on "The[ recommended are those which will Heights" at McGregor attending] simplify administration of the pro- the convention of the Iowa Con-|gram, or make it more effective servation committee. [ front the standpoint of soil con- " ~ ] servation." THIRTY YEARS AGO [ The conservation program pro- July 27 1909 | rides for establishment of national Miss Daisy Spry had the tnter-[~Hiotments for soil-depleting crops esting experience, in Liverpool,/and a national goal for soil-buihling Eng., of being mistaken for a suf-crops and practices, which will bt fragette and as a result of which broken down to individual farms. she lost the buttons from her coat, The national wheat allotment of she writes. They were suspected J62,000,000 acres for 1940 has al- -~ ere ~ ea~ in la~ge ~c~tdy been announced Othei spe because they ~ "~ "' g " "~ [ ...... - '" " hats and veils. J cial allotments, such as corn, cot- Mrs. BaPbara Clark, a resident [ Ion, tobacco, and rice, will be made of this county for seventy years, [later in,the season when the size passed away at the ,home of her JOf the 1939 crop is definitely st of town on known Changes m rates of pay son Marley, north "e 1" - "" " ~ "- Monday July 21 Jment on these comnlodities will A in'o'rchant in' Lisbon market-]be made on the basis of what the ins his weekly receipts of eggs re-] allotments are for them. marked that the forty cases] As in 1939, there will be two dif- brought the producers about $60 I ferent payments which farluers more than the same number last ] may earn in' 1940. These" a~e" the season he fl uled conservation p£yments and th~ year and for the ~" ," 'g ", [ ~ ' ~ * , • re ~as aid on his pmce adjustment payments about $1000 mo "'"P'' ' I " ' ' • ' receipts alone. I -- rwo hundred and thirty tickets • 1 Portable Mills were sold to Cedar Rapids. htst __ Thursday. Cedar Rapids and Bar- Must Be Licensed nums circus certainly have nothing --, to complain about Mount Vernon. The 4Sth General Assembly pass- Park on Thursday evening, after [ eDDIUPUll 1 17 ~j~l[~lwho is soon moving with herfamilyI which they spent the evening at the i~ll]k|l~,]Vll~Lir~ l~r, VV i~ to .,Chicag°" .Officers of the. club .I James Kern home. asms~ed Mrs. ~yKe m serwng re- O. B. Haeseler and Otis Babcook l Mrs. Harry Freeman freshments. The president, Mrs. combined oats the last of the week. I -- I Don Peterson, presented Mrs. Dar- DEATH CALLS BOB REED [row with a basket of handkerchiefs Melvin Haeseier did the work. The I " , yield is reported around 36 bushels Robert Andrew Reed, 23, a car-Jgifts of the club members Mrs J and of good weight, i penter, died Sunday morning at St. ]D. Graham and Mrs. Courtier were 'lLuke's hospital, where he had spent special guests• Brookside a month receiving care and several ------ blood transfusions. voted to close the school for one Mrs. Will Robinson ] Born February 5, 1916, son of CLOSE SCHOOL ~Richard and Mamie Tisdale Reed, ]one mile north of Springville where The Hazel Hill school board met ihe grew to manhood. He was in special session at the school house graduated from the local schools in on Friday evening. Owing to the fact only five pupils 1933. He is survived by his parents, two will be enrolled next year, and after i sisters, Lucille Reed of Cedar Rapids conferring with the county super- intendent, Miss Moray, the board!and Mary Elizabeth at home, six brothers, Russell Reed of Morley, I Richard, Ralph, William, Gene Lee land John at home. demonstrations were given, the meeting being in charge of the boys and girls 4-H clubs of Greenfield township. Miss Jessie Ilsley of Ottumwa is visiting in the home of her sister, Mrs. Will Robinson and family. Funeral services were held in th( Hunte Funeral Home on Tuesday at 2 p. m., conducted by the Rev. David deBest of Hopkinton. (Additional Springville items will be found on page six.) NIl'rICE O1.' AI)I)()INT.MENT ()F AI)3IINI,";TIL:~'I'I{IX No. 15275 State of Iowa. l,inn (~ounty. HE: NOTICE IS HI,]I{I.]I~Y GIVF]N, ,flint tt~e und¢,rsigued has I)ceu oil i this 25t11 d:Iy of July, 1939. duly appointed and qualified as Ad- inistratrix of the estate of S. H. l,'i.~}~el hits, of I,inn County, Iowa, d(','eased. All l)crsolls indc/)ted to ~ai(l estate arc requested to inake illlrnctiiate l)aylnent thereof to tl/e uml'.~r~i/ned. Those having claims ~/ainst the same will file them, Pallbearers were blood doners for duly authenticated in the office of the transfusions, namely Donal Gor- 'he Clerk of the IAnn County, Iowa don, Melvin Nelson, Hobart Fowler, I)istriet ('putt. Carl Schade, Loren Brown, Ronald I,]STHI,]t¢ F. IClSHI,]L, Caldwell. Other blood doners were Administratrix Ralph, Richard and William Reed, (:- .M. Wilson, Attorney. Harry Raft and Lucille Reed. 7:'~7:8:a-1(~ S. J. DOLAN FUNERAL "*"'*"***:**:°*:"-*'%*~:~:0:'*:**:":**:"~:*':':'°:":°°:°°:**:' Funeral services were held on BUSINESS CARDS Monday morning for Stuart Joseph Dolan, son of Hayes R. Dolan, who lives northeast of here. The funeral ":":*':°':°:":":":'*:":°°:'*:'°:":":~-7":°°:':*e°,:~:"-'-:* Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher spent cortege left the family home and F.F. EBERSOLE, M.D. • • services followed in St Josephs Thmsday evening with Mr. and Mrs ....... • First door east of Methodist church: • lr Rnhin~on. ~atnollC cnurch at Prairieburg, the F~o~-m-an--l~ob'mson has combined R'IV~r ~olM:2~°~tbwas ~el~h~rg~• Telephone 120 wheat for Donald Brokaw and oats • " . 9, 911, Mount Vernon, Iowa ' • near Prairieburg was graduated for Henry Seegar, Frank Robinson ...... : ........ ~ Dealers: Bob Current East End Station; Arthur Leo Driscoll, Chas. Driscoll, and his ! n'om me Iviarl.on nigh scnoo~ m ~s~u Physician and Surgeon .+~... ~r;,, ~.: .... and was married to Miss Edna Hap- i'a .er............... , ............. West End Station; Emil Reyhons, Tanl wagon • pet o~ t~eaar ~tapius In ~une xs~ at Office Gearhart l~sidenee] Mount Vernon; Jack Davis, Lisbon Standard Sta Mr. and Mrs. Dave Drlscoll and/ f , • Marion His mother died in 1931 Mount Vernon, lowa i ---- ~ amHy of near Martelle assmted . • Friday at tho T.on rl.i~.,~al h.m~ I Stuar~ passed away suddenly Mon- w-hHe~they ;verecombin'h~; ......... t day, July 17, at his home in Artesia, Office Phone 63-R2 Res. 63-R3 ~ ~ " I,~ • - '. • Calif where he and his wife have ~4y ~4t)SCL~ AN~ SUF~E~ T/4[~ ~.,-r, oalNI ~JLl~-a Arthur Vanderbflt is having his " Calls Answered Promptly hnu¢~ ~in~r~ 4lived since their marriage. He is ...... ~ ....... sur I PAINS IP4 N~Y HEAlSAN~ WA~ Ot,,l- ~l~/," rr~,,- ..ellOR • ,,..o.wr"~" ~u.,,~,.,~'""'n .,,u,~,,~,.,.'D"~" ........... ,av= ,* ' v'ved by his wife', his father', Day or Night t.STEAD ov our i FOO. BEYONO Qt~m~l"- " luncheOnnonor ............ o~ onmlssMOnda~lsteyy o~af'mu~mmwarn°°n in" IT.It threepatricia., sisters,, at home'L°raine', and twoD°riSbrothersand, E.C. PRALL, Dentist S~4OP PIN Gi SHOOL D BJi~-- IM QUICKIN ......... ~ ^~t-," ,V~ELIEF-- r~. ~., ,- ~ ~'*' cV~~,f,,,¢~. (,j~USI~" -" ~ PAIN PILL Vu,~ / __tl ..................... ', t~ernard and Ronald Dolan of Sati ~.vlYs. rCaYl van(leroll~ana Mrs. . " Phones Edith Robinson. ] coy, Cahf. I I~I-'I~I~ESTI°~ Mr. and Mrs. Chas Driscoll and -- Office -- 242 Home -- 204W \ family were Tipton callers on Sat-I Misses Leta and Mabel McShane urday evening, i spent Monday and Tuesday at the Mount Vernon, Iowa Fred Baker has purchased a per-Ifarm home of their brother, Fred tion of the Bardue land, lying to the [ McShane and wife, near Marion. ~. south of his present farm• ] Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Batchelder and Veterinarian ±sir• and Mrs. Donald Robinson IMax were Sunday evening callers and daughters were Sunday guests ~ in the Milo Lacock home near Whit- Phones: in the parental Asa Robinson home. tier. Mr. and Mrs. Lew Baker of Cedar/ Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Pearson and Office 40-R2 Residence 40-R3 Rapids spent Saturday in the Verlon[Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Carbee called Mount Vernon, Iowa Baker home and assisted in thresh- ] Sunday in the W. K. Wild home at "---'- -----~. 1~~ -- ing. [ Anamosa. Mrs. Ida Andre and Mr. and Mrs.~ Zoe Loes of Alburnett spent sev- Attorney-At-Law Archfe Frazier of near Anamosa] eral days last week with the Frank Practice in state and federal courts ~pent Sunday in the home of Mr.[ twins Pauline and Geraldine.CounseIor-at-Law and Notary Pub- and Mrs. George Longerbeam. [ Mrs. Sadie Pearson and Helen lic. Off:ce over DeLuxe Coffee Mr. and Mrs. Claire Scott were[ were recent dinner guests of Mr. Shop, Mount Vernon, Iowa. hosts Sunday for a high noon din-[ and Mrs. Cecil Lewis near Martelle. ner, complimenting Mr. Scott's par- I A number of relatives and friends Phones: Office 129 Home 43[ ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Scott of I from here attended the funeral of /f]~ Did you ever take a medicine to stop head" Mechanicsville, Miss Pauline Fair- I Alfred Walker Resell, aged 71, on --~ ache and have the headache stop and a sto~° ley and Hiram Cromer of Cedar lSunday at 2 p. m. in the Methodist Funeral Directors /~ ach ache start? Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Cook / church at Central City. Rev. E. C. C. B. Johnston, Licensed Embalmer We'll wager you didn't take an Anti-pain of Mechanicsville. [Allen officiated. Surviving are his Don't forget the annual school ] wife formerly Hulda Hoag of FI. R. Johnston, Licensed Enbalmer Pill. Anti-Pain Pills do not upset the stoVa" picnic and reunion on August 6 the I Springville; two sons, Lewis Revell Lady Assistant When Wanted ~ ach. They take effect quickly too--and they first Sunday in August, held along [ of Casper, Wyo., and Dr. Ivan Resell taste like wintergreen wafers. ' can't have Dutch creek in the Anamosa state I of Shennandoah; and a daughter,Mount Vernon and Lisbon You cant do good work--you park• Everyone come and bring I Mrs. Roy Crozier of Delhi. a good time when you are suffering from the usual picnic requirements and a t Mr. and Mrs. Carl Price of Ana- covered dish. I mosa and former Springville rest- Neuralgia Headache Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Jenkins and[dents, are announcing the approach- Muscular or Periodic pains Why don't you try the Anti-Pain Pill w.ay.~t~ baby of Cedar Rapids spent a few ing marriage of their daughter, F,dly equipped ~ relief? We believe you will be delighted with ~a~ days last week in the home of Mr./Helen, to Lloyd Groth, son of Mr. for all emerg- ~ results. Thousands of others are. and Mrs. Verlon Baker• Mr. Jen-Land Mrs. Paul Groth of Olin. The e n e I e s. Our It will not cost much. Anti-Pain Pills sell ~o~ kins was enjoying a short vaca- [ wedding will be solemnized on July tion. f29. The young people will be at service is srm- one cent each, (less in Economy Package) pathetic n n d one pill usually relieves. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Vanderbilt[home on a farm west of Olin. Miss understnnding. Get Anti-Pain Pills at your Drug Store._ ,, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. [ Helen attended school here for Regular pkg. 25 for 25c. Economy pkg. 125 for $1.~, and Mrs. Joe Vanderbilt and the[many years and has many friends evening in the home of Mr. and Mrs. l in this vicinity• ~ I ~ Frank Krumroy in Meehanicsville. [ Dr. Clarence Darrow, who came .,,,tt~s'roN's Misses Eldora and Elsie Koppen-]to Springville, July 1, 1935, will dis- I"uneral ltomc h aver spent Wednesday in Spring-[eontinue his practice here to pursue .xrount V ernop R T ville at the Chas. Starry home. ~special post graduate work in surg- and Lisbon ADVERTISEMEN Mrs. Kate Hines enjoyed a recent lery at Cook County Hospital, Chi- visit with her daughter in Michigan• [ cago. Dr. Courter, a recent gradu- Mr. and Mrs. Will Fairley spent late from medicine at S. U. I., will Saturday at the Chas. Driscoll home [ take over his practice on July 29. assisting with the oat combining. [ L.B. Christman and C. F. Butler, Mrs. Ida Andre visited the first [two of our older residents, are able of the week with her sister, Mrs. [to be out again after several days George Longerbeam, and assisted [being confined to their homes. with threshing duties. ~ Mrs. G. L. Dyke entertained the Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis ~ Monday club at a tea on Wednesday were guests in the Arthur Siver [in her home honoring Mrs. Clarence home on Sunday. [Darrow, vice president of the club, wir. and Mrs. Kenneth Benesh and[ Shirley spent Saturday evening in [ Cedar Rapids with relatives. / Miss Myrtle Manly and Mrs. ,' Arthur Slyer were callers in Ana-I mosa on Tuesday• [ Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ayers andI Mrs. Louis Warner of Columbus GOOD FURNITURE, PRICED MODERATELY, CONVENIENT TERMS Open Saturdays U I~. M. p.B. Turkle reports the sale this edalaweffectivcJuly4,193',L*hat Junction and Miss Myrtle Manly k~ H --O ~" e~y ~/O~ week of the Ed Johnston farm of all corn shellers, i)ortable mills and were Sunday guests for dinner in g 182 acres to John Kirkpatrick, at oat hullers Inust be licensed for the Allen Slyer home, and were a consideration of $150 per acre. the balance of the )'ear 1939. afternoon callers in the Arthur Sir- The Mount Vernon council is The fees for the corn sheller are er h°me" ~ ~ ~S ~h~ working on a proposition of open- $15.00 per year and the portable ........ ing up a street from d~pot street mills and oat hullers are $25.00 ~].~~.~,~I~B~:,__, atI' D~~ to the Mount Vernon Lumber corn- per year. ~k$~ll~, I n~(~b~ M party land now used for a pasture.The fees for the balance of the . " • The Northwestern is laying one year 1939 will be just one half JJ hundred pound steel on their east of the above. All those not licens ............~; ......... " ......... ' n- , i oound track, through this part of ed by July 31st, a pe alty of 5 /c ~--'---" j the system. The steel gang is ,here per month will be added to the W=--~~ today, ,but hope to get to Bertram fee. tomorrow. THE WORLD'S GOOD NE will come to your home every day through | Scotts Mill THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR [ Mrs. Gerald Scott BEG YOUR a. ,,,te,'n.t, on , o..t. :ah: tT;e ]r:o hc ::ed:fr Sg t:t,::mt? This newspaper begs the pardon ~oereCoras for you the world's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor | spen l n i uo~ exploil; crime or sensation; neither does it ignore them, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Caraway and 3f anyone who was concerned in ~.t deals correctively wlth them Features for busy men an~e lalth~e [ two children of Cedar Rapids spent theappearedrecent indiam°ndthe paperring storYtwo weeks:Which amily, including the Weekly Magazine Section. . ....... j mer days as possible . . . that's the Westinghouse Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph ago. The item was represented to The Christian Science Publishing ~ociety ........ | Automeal Electric Roaster. Duncan. ~ne, Norway Street ecston. Massachusetts Mrs. Lila Ires spent the week end the newspaper as being from the l in the home of her brother, Gerald regular Coon Creek correspondent, ~leaso enter my subscri,tion to The Christian Science Monitor for | This compact, thrifty roaster cooks a whole a period of [Scott and family, which the correspondent states is 1 ~ear $12.00 6 months $6.00 3 months $3.00 1 month $100 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Decious and erroneous. We are sorry this er- Saturday issue, including Magazine Section: l year$2.60. 6 is~au$1es0S05e [ meal all at one time for from two to ten persons i family attended the Penick and roneous item appeared and beg the ..................................................... I . . . and does it deliciously. You need not heat :Ford employees' picnic on Sunday pardon of everyone connected with ! at Iowa City. it. " ......... .... all. The insulated Automeal keeps all the heat Address . ....... | up the kitchen with your fuel burning range at Joe and Mrs. Lila Ives were enter- k within, and turns out an entire piping hot meal tained at dinner on Sunday in the Mrs. Naohaniel Dean ready to serve. home of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Scott and Jane. Eugene Hampton was a Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Hoffman and Take it out in the yard, or right in your din- r'.P dinner guest also. Mr. and Mrs. George Wallick spent I , Large insulated lifting Mary Ires was a Monday morn- Saturday evening in Tipton taking ling room It s ideal for apartments and summer * ~imndY ~ • _ vent burned fi~gers. . ing caller at the Gerald Scott home. in the sights of Tipton's big day. I cottages, too, and plugs into any ordinary outlet, he.at nro~f ~1~.~ too shoW~ .~. I~ Miss Catherine Caraway and her Mrs. Letha Kaplan and Mrs Rus- ., -----~---- = ...... w- mother and sister, Mrs. James Car-:sell Mallicoat spent Sunday at the: Today s low electric rates assure you of very low meal cooking Easily w~ ~[~ away and Miss Gladys Caraway, of Kepler State Park where they en-] operating cost. You may choose from gleaming celain lining." Roaster ¢1y#¥ Monmouth were callers on Friday in joyed a picnic dinner with their the Ralph Duncan and Gerald "families who went earlier in the] ]white or polished black porcelain.See it demon- only .................................... ~FP Scott homes, day to try their luck fishing ........... c C~r_les B_achman and son Ralph s Mrf and_' Mrs. Fred Alexander ] EXCLUSIVE DRY CLEANERS [strated today at this store! OUlU neu uats xor usmonu ~erry pen~ ounuay evening at the mrs. 209 3rd Ave SW I on Monday. George Caraway com- Josephine Helmer and Paul Bowers I .~ Dial 2"8131 J bined for John Knapp last week. homes , C~larRapids, Iowa [ How to Get=a=' Steel Roaster S t I1 $ Faye, Roy ,Wayne, and Shirley The hum of the threshing ma-1 Duncan spent Thursday with their homeChine started at the Fred Alexander t@ ----~ [ 1'51m 1~11~ # grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry on Tuesday. . • ] • u • • • ]~,~,~ • • • Caraway. Mr. and Mrs. Than Dean and f) SCOTT MeINTYRE & CO |[ Durin~ th/s httrodnc~ry offer only, yon gets matchin~ ffo~-~l~ Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Scott and Jane Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Stoneking spent 1 ~ Investments " | were visitors Wednesday evening in [ Sunday at Cedar Valley enjoying a t | .... '_ |[ designed Automeal Stand PREE with each Autome.~"u~$v'~ l~! the Gerald Scott home. [ picnic dinner and supper. They I I mwa lectric Light & Pewer Co. stock bought and sold. [ ho tght complete with china bake dish in handy wire ratio, ~ Myra Jane Scott spent the first of Itried their luck at fishing at several ! | 303 Merchants National Bank Bids, Cedar Rapids, Is. last week with her brother-in-law [points without much success, t l HARLAN "RI ....... " " / thrifty broiler grid. ~ this time-saving kitchen ¢90 ~!~ Streets.and sister, Mr and Mrs. Ralnh,. Imosal Mr.spentand MrS.saturdayJameSnlght.KernandOf Ana-sun_i~ v= D L~, LISDOn, iowa 1 unit today, all for only ..................................... ~ .................. #~ ------------------ /day at the Golden Miller home• On i @ - I ~% Sunday they went to Conrad Beach, |j I J0WA UCHTAN P0W[- 0MPAI Wore Prince Alberta • I In the "nifty ninette," most lnear Cedar R.ap]ds, where.they en-,l COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE ] United St s . !joyea a pmmc alnner in honor of i ate senators wore Prince I C CHAMBERS INSKE .... __ ". . . Mrs Gladys Collier of Marion I! " - EP OPTICAL CO. I ~lner~. "Jrne ~roeK.c°a~ was a sym- whose birthday fell on Tuesday. 't| Realize--Real Eyes bol of statesmanship and a beard I 0 OWN E0 Mr. and Mrs. Than Dean and Mr., | 221 3rd St S E ,, ..... t was the mark of a man of matur~..y and Mrs. Golden Miller enjoyed a i| : • • • • ueoar ltaplus, iowa | Phone 265 Mount and substance, picnic supper at the Anamosa State 9- -: _-_-- _- ~ _- ~ _--- _- -- -_- _ __ _ _- :___