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May, Sept4
Page Two THE MOUNT VERNON, IOXVA, tIA~VKE~qE-ttECORD AND THE LISBON HERALD Thursday, Scpt~a~ber 18,
I
THE HAWKEYE-RECORD ers "rest" during the Churchill lat Cot college are enjoying a house Park. They expect to go clear to Iconduits and other fixtures and appliances Turn to page 7 for the
for the purpose of conducting electricity Ad Section 1
hnd THE LISBON HERALI) meeting had built up their anger. Iparty this week end at the Bider- [the coast and south through Call- [for lighting, power and heating purposes " . ~. ~ ]
wa Quoting Time again "Last week t man hotel at the Upper Palisades ', fornia. Mrs. Anion Dvorak is stay- / has been filed by the Iowa Electric Light
|04 ~nG AYe l~ortn Mount Yernoa, IO
"" *- - d most of them felt it was the end I The Franklin Township Farm[lug with Ruthann and Leo while i& Power Company, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, ~01~tl[flV~ ~ -4
Offici41 Newspnper Mountvernon ~n Bureau held their September their folks are away. l in the office of the Iowa State Commerce "~" "~ d
Linn County of a beautiful friendship. If so, it I Commission; that said petition asks the M15 1~ Of ~lL !
--------~ betokened more than that: the be- meeting Tuesday evening in the K. [ Ben Neal and sons started to right to construct, operate and maintaiu ,~k~[ 1 West
.~aid electric transmission line over, along ~m~~jm- over th(
Lloyd MeCuteheoa Estate. Proprietorginning or a new era in White P. Hall. cut corn Monday getting ready to and across the following described public ~ ~ Im ~ f his me1
PnbhshedJnmeSat W.MountMeCutrhecn.vernon an~EdilmrLisbon House relations. ~ " [ this? Poor L ud Hedge comes [ DOWN. There's the whistle before Mrs. Emil Dolezal, Mrs. AI Pi-]ingi fill silO.silo lastChaS'week.Platner started fill- lands, highways, streamsand private ~ U ~[ ~ -
" "~ sda " anu a reference about the report- I trudging into the English room fol- [they can try for the extra point and sarik and Mrs. Robert Henik were Ilands" ~ ~ m L J John K[.
in Linn County. lo y y. ~. " flowed by about five or six dawn Mt. Verron wins 6-0 hostesses to the Friendship club ~ ~ ~ (0600 volts) ~ :v.~.~ qW,q iting her
opine years ago this newspaper [ cast fellow- students. Miss Hughes ] Beginning at the soutbeast corner of the ~ ~4fJ,~ Mr tnd
THE MOUNT VERNON HAWKEYE commented on the great change in ~ at the Dolezal home on Wednesday
~=~:=~-=:~ ~==~ ~.~.~.=:, Southwest Quarter (SWl/~) of Section ~ " " "
Founded in l$fl by S. R. Baumanthe tenor of news from Washing- throws the group some newspapers ; afternoon. Miss Nama Lathe from
THE MOUNT VERNON REMARKER ton when Herbert Hoover left andand Lud comes out of the ensuing WA:C I~ACI~ WHEN the Art Department of Cornell col- 1 Defense Bond I'iThirtysi NorthRange(36)'sixT (6)hiPwestEighty'tW of the (82)5th ~~~ tIOUID.TABtETS.gLVe.' ~hlcago,
,' . ' ay after1
ded ,n IR ~ by M|nard Lozl r aPes v 1" bcm fight reading a paper at the desk,Items of Interest in Monnt Vernon lege a chalk talk on her trip thru / QUIZ ]P.M Lmn County, I thence west ~~lm~. '0fMr an
V~n 1M.Y.1 nv Mmar~,~,~ . e e t e a e president. !in the north margin of tbc highway on
trip through Mexico this summer the south line of said Section Thirty-six ~ Were: La
FoundedTHE InLISBON1894 byHERALDw. F. Stahl withMr" Hooverthe reporters.didn't getMr alongRooseveltWell, coPeggYle andMageejamesD nKingSanderS nare reading' Bette I And LislN)n i0, 20, 30 Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Biderman (36), two-tenths (2/10) of a mile ~ ~ - sinII ~ Junctio]
nuemrr|puon ~=w . . has had a most favorable press one.an thercarolynPaper Neal, r whatLeoraWe Foster,left of TEN YE, AR.~ AGO called on Mrs. Howard Neal on ! The Iowa .S.tate Commerce Commission ~r ]~ Our de ~
Friday evening at the St. Lukes I Q. What and when is Retailers- fixed 1~, th~rt'e~h0)(30thl~kdaYA.~. S~pnte~ ~ t'~epe~eb~ ~t Liberty
I for-Defense Week?
One year, in Linn and adjoining tfrom the standpoint of the Wash- Gwen Smyth, Peggy Magee, and September 17, 1931 hospital where she underwent an A. Retailers-for-Defense Week place for.hearlng said petition. ~ ~ fnl eonsJdelh~~h, in of
counties, per year v":':':"$1"~01ington reporting, office at Des Moines, Iowa, as time and ~ and /hnuKkt" ! and Mrs
OnecountiemYear, outsidebut withinLinn anUtheaa~ommgstate, I The story from Time is mention- l anybody else who we didn't men- B.C. Busby has had a bronze operation the week before.
per yea'r . . $1 75 ed because this affair of personal- tion are haggaling over the re-plate made which he will place on Mrs. C. F. Meyers is suffering I is this week--September 15 to 20-- ~nv o~:~cttons to tbe granting of such i~ ~ tton in tf~e ~a ~l n~ ~,
during which the retail industry ifranchise must be in writing and filed in ~Jr-|~ ~ need. u
One ,ear. out~ide the ,tare $2-0 0. tities may prove to be of more im- rosining newspaper. Suddenly the the large elm tree at the right side with asthma and a heart at-/wilI concentrate its efforts to en- flrviPb~yda~sthbe~hies da~temom~s~ anriat. l~a~t ~ '~. i r~edLsij
" class mail matter at I portance in time than a layman / editor shouts, "The meeting will of the Lincoln highway going west, Itack" Her daughter, Mrs. Mil- i list customers interest in buying I Iowa State Commerce Commission suggests ~ |~L - -~]d ~ staving 3
the~phrte~off~c~e~Oe~oaunt. . . - Vernon, Iowa, and might think. The working press,lnow come to order!!!" Everyone thisside of the Ollie Duncan farm. dred Crispman from Cedar Rap-]Defense Savings Stamps at retail that the objector be rep ted at the ~ L
,is~n. ,~ya. !as the reporters are known may grabs a seat as the storm grad- It will be a memorial to P. T. ids is assisting withthe care of, Ihearing by someone who has full author- ~ ~ce~'~ ~
Me-em-~r--r, lowe Press Asaecmtion, National become more critical of th ' ity to act for it ! ~ JOHN~J[~O~ ~ [
Editorial Asmciation, Fureign Advertirs: I dent and it m e presi- I ually subsides. YOU" will get your Smith, who saved the tree when her mother, outlets throughout the country.
Q. What kind of retail stores Dated at Des Moines. Iowa, August 29, 'r ~ } |~ 1P',mevn! Ha~e
ing Representative ~bo~ BIdg bWaD s MoinesNewsPsP~jowa.' I Washin ton newsaY be inreflectedan in the assignments in on time or ELSE!" road graders were at work. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Milholin and !are selling Defense Savings;IOWA* STATE COMMERCE COMMISSION,~ ~viountmaonudn~i$I~ la- / r
inc 405. t - --[ g ~ entirely (L.H.) Silence follows. "The[ The enrollment at Cornell on Mr. and Mrs. Emil Dohzal spent Stamps? Attest: Gee. L. McCaughan Secretary. i P
~iotices for entertainments or other gatlh~llegitimate way. Personally we Imeeting~ is now adjourned' Swish! Wednesday evening totaled 499 as Sunday evening at the home of A. Department stores, grocery iSeptlllS~'File E-5106 - ----- J~
erings to .wbichinaic:arUc~a~gen~ents think that it would be a good thing lSwish! Swoosh! The schoolhouse compared to 478 at the same time Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Pitlik.
Di~play'adv~rti~'in~ rateafurnihe on ap~~a~re"d~f~;~b~a~ndre~.~utmi n:h2~re$~tit~h:i;?~nt~da::mth:b::tmmis is now fuly depopulated except last year. i stores, variety stores,hardware "~"'"'" --'= "~-"'~ ~
I Miss Hughes and some struggling Prof. and Mrs. T. R. McConnell Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neal called lstores, drug stores--every sort of
land Miss Edna Kegley will leave [ n their daughter, Alberta, Wed-'retail outlet--carries stamps.
t - HAPPY HUNTING FOR ',
nesday evening in Cedar Rapids,NOTE---To buy Defense Bonds
ewsnaper Fratermty Mourn : ~typists up in Mr. Hawker's room. on Saturday for Toledo, Ohio, also Mrs. Howard Neal at St. and Stamps, go to the nearest post
plication u* resnonqlfl~ ~dvere, ~r. -- CLASS NEWS
N ! nAbl MARK The Speech Class (in case you where Prof. McConnell will start I,ukes hospital. Mrs. Neal is get- office, bank, or savings and loan # #
t ing along just fine and hopes to association;or write to the Treasur- /~~~A~J ~.~/~A~ '7"~ [~[~V~" ' ~
Death Of Carlton Rlcnarus be home soon.
[er of the United States, Washing- ri,
The newspaper men of the state 00 prior / tei i"I
mourn the loss of Carlton Rich- [after spending several weeks fur-lAlso Stamps are now on sale at Mou
ards, editor of the Toledo Chroni- lough at his home. He helped a~retail stores.
cle, who was taken in the prime of man from Cedar Rapids drive a F--5106 ~~-CE
life from a community in which he new car through to Portland, Ore.
had been an immense factor for Edward hoped to get a job in ~ /'" D " MiN~'F ~lS' "FH !
good. Mr. Rtchards published an machine shop for a while. ~BEFORE THE IOWA STATE COM-
excellent newspaper which was
proven by the various honors he Mr. and Mrs. Anton Biderman i MERCE COMMISSION E ART E PLACE!
and the paper had won. The con- and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Witouseks TO THE CITIZENS OF LINN COUNTY: Here's the perfect gift! (
notation, a thorough gentleman, in from Ely left last Wednesday for a Notice is hereby given that a petition
for a franchise to erect, use and maintain Every bride hopes she'll .
every sense of the word would trip through the. Yellowstone poles, wires, guy wires, towers, cables,get a Toastmaster Hos- ~" --
briefly describe Carlton Richards pitalitySet.ThisDeLuxe ~
character. His paper was exceed- moclelhasgenerouswal- $~.~
ingly fair. One who has looked
over his paper almost every week D R E S S PA R A D E
,l nut tray, Iamous two-
for years can readily understand,
as stated at the funeral service,
that his pas~sing will leave a place
in the Toledo community which
will be most difficult to fill.
Two Newspapers In Eastern
Iowa Change Hands
This newspaper extends fraternal
felicitations to the new owners of
two of our valued exchanges.
Thomas C. Peterson has purchased
the Solon Economist of Frank C.
Shimon and Frank J. Mattas and
A. C. Kuipers, publisher of the
Wellman Advance, has purchased
the Riverside Leader which he will
publish in connection with the Ad-
vance. We wish both of those men
success in their ventures
Navy Censorship Policy
Doesn't Make Sense
The censorship attempted by the
President and Secretary of navy
Knox Is getting crazier every day.
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
says that it has reacted by the
public not paying much attention
to the Greer incident knowing that
it was not the first such one, pub-
licity of others being suppressed
except when the secretary of the
navy told of one in a magazine ar-
ticle.
This newspaper stated last week
that the Chet Rich family had
seen the British battleship Rodney
in the Boston harbor where it had
been for three months while under-
going repairs. Many Boston peo-
ple knew that fact. Anyone could
see it by looking in the harbor. Yet
no word of it appeared in the press
because the press was trying to
taters. A football team, and also brief forms.
the school is sometimes judged by The Bookkeeping Class (in case
the conduct and sportsmanship of!you did't know it, Mr. Hawker has
the student body at games. It is lit too) (monotonous, isn't it) is
not so much whether we win or studying records, of what I've for-
lose, but it is the attitude we have gotten.
during and after the game. P.S. Mr. Hawker is a busy ban,
Secondly we must get behind the : isn't he! ?
boys on the field and show them] We don't know how the girls
Vernon to come out on top this
year, but before games can be
won there must be an incentive.
Let's make the incentive then and
and show the players that we're
really with them.
NEW ttVARD SCHOOL
TEACHERS
Mi.qs Lucy Ice Brumbaugh.
In the Ward school, we have
Miss Lucy Lee Brumbaugh as the
new third grade teacher. She
;comes from Maryville, Missouri.
i She went to Northwest Missouri
State Teachers' college where she
i majored in Primary Education.
kept." Her impression of the
town is: "It's a very nice town. I
like the trees all over it. I like the
people whom I've met, and being
a small town, I'll get to know them
better, and have a chance to
know many more. That's what I
like about a small town."
Some of the things she likes are:
picnics, art, music, ice cream and
chocolate cup cakes, bycicling, and
cooperate with the cockeyed cen-!red colors and she doesn't like to
sorship even though they knew it climb hills.
I
Was
crazy.
].~flss Jeanne ~coby
The ~flrst such case occurred in " ~ " ,
" ~ : - ~tleshi- I M~ss Jeanne Scoby of Sleepy
Aprt~ wnen the t~rl 1sn oa~ . p I ~] ~.: '
in New York S l aye lVllilneso~a is ~ne tourtn grade
Malaya anchored '
teac'her Sh
Z::d; oLfa~)::plber ada~lioew ~tth ~ tary educatioen mt~ hr:tnliv:/s~yenf
. ; Minnesota in Minneapolis
M S Malaya" on their caps wen~ She " " "
"~",~ liKeS the school because it's
ashore and talked freely about the .
~. i nezter equipped than most small
ship being hit by a t~erman tot-
pedo on" March 20. Yet the navy l scnoo~s. ~ne l~Kes the town be-
wanted no mention in the press.
Recently photographers and re-
porters were allowed aboard the
British aircraft carrier Illustrious,
~being repaired at the Norfolk navy
yard, to see her new commander
Captain Lord Louis Mountbatten
review his men. Heretofore there
cause the people are so friendly.
Incidentally after she had told a
story to the class a little boy said,
"Why Miss Scoby you know that
isn't true!"
She likes lemon chiffon pie,
sports, riding, poetry, music--es-
pecially symphonies, mail, and
had been no mention of this fact spinach. She doesn't like cabbage,
nor does she like to wear hats, but
in the press because of the volun- she likes them on other people.
tary censorship.
Now a surburban paper near Coach Lloyd Goettel
Seattle states that the British bat- I This is Coach Lloyd Goettel from
tleship Warspite is in the Bremer- Harpers Ferry, irginia. He went
ton navy yard on Puget Sound for lto Western Union college at Le-
repairs. This paper said, "The en- Mars, Iowa. He majored in In-
tire population of Bremerton, fig- dustrial Arts. He teaches Manual
uratively, need only look out of the
window and see the ship lying
there. Many islanders have seen
the vessel. Thousands of Seattle
residents know where she is. Brit-
ish tars move freely about, telling
frankly where their ship is and
what she went thru at Crete. There
isn't a foreign agent who hasn't
already told his government about
the Warspite."
Training (advanced and beginners),
seventh and eighth grade arith-
metic, boys physical training and
is the high school coach.
He likes Mount Vernon very
much--very pretty. He says the
school is fine--very nice. He likes
fall sports and woodworking.
He says there are several setbacks
in our football team this year.
I They are: Jack Koch, one of our
section of the Hawkeye we read.
Vernon quickly answered, "Oh, is
there more than one?"
WARD ~AX~HOOL NEWS
Kindergarten
The kindergarten are drawing
pictures of people and houses, and
are cutting animals out of paper.
'They are also singing songs and
playing games.
First Grade
The First Grade have been learn-
ing poems and organizing a verse
choir
Second Grade
The Second ,Grade are starting
their farm unit and they will visit
a farm next week.
Third Grade
The Third Grade is going to
study about the farm, the build-
ings, machinery, and the animals.
They were studying a story of a
little waterdrop. Their teacher
read the story to them and they
will make a little booklet of the
story. --Audry Burnett
Fourth Grade
The fourth grade are studying
Norway and how the people live.
They are making a project of a
Norwegian farm.
Fifth Grade News
Billy Richter has gone to Penn-
sylvania to visit for a week. The
fifth grade were weighed and mea-
sured in health class.
Sixth Grade News
The Ward School rooms have
been painted this summer. There
i are two new pupils, Ruby Moore
and Alvin Flouda in Sixth Grade
--Shirley Boots.
different parts of the room.
"Now please turn to page 86
(pause) the story today is"
"I'll raise you six"
"I'll raise you one."
"I'll call."
"Straight flush."'
"Now if you'll notice, Poe, in
some parts, is quite gerry."
"Well really I just can't stand
her hair that way, she's always
trying to be sophisticated.
"Oh say Mary, did you hear
what happened the other night at
Lisbon ?"
"Now, page 87, underline the
word 'priacanthus'."
" we went to Stanwood, and
when . . ."
"Will you take papers with me?
I've just got to make him . . ."
"You know at football practice
last night . . ."
dan, Sue Kepler, Eleanor Lowe and
Anna Zache.
Wayne Hunter went to Chicago,
Ill Tuesday to enter the Chicago
Presbyterian Theological Seminary.
TIVEN"II~" ]T, AR.~ AGO
September 21, 1921
Miss Henrietta Hahn, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hahn, be-
came the wife of Ralph Hartwig,
of Cedar Rapids, at a quiet wedding
in Cedar Rapids Monday afternoon.
President Charles Flint arrived
in England safe and sound, after a
voyage, it is safe to assume was
more or less eventful. The vessel
struck a couple of rough days, and
two rough days are enough to cause
an eventful trip.
Kenneth Wise, wire chief of the
local telephone plant for some
time, has been transferred to Cedar
Rapids. His place has been taken
by R. C. Hopwood, of Waterloo
Cornell college has more students
enrolled this year, by about fifty
than she ever had in the past. Al-
most half of these students are
men. The freshman class numbers
372
The farming section south of
town will have a job on its hands
husking the corn this year. Two
wind storms put the corn down and
tangled it up in bad shape, and the
wet weather of the last three
weeks is causing some of it to spoil.
Donald and Craig Boyd have re-
turned to Ames, where they will
continue their courses in electrical
engineering at Iowa State college.
J. R. Burge arrived home Thurs-
day night from a two months stay
at the home of his son James, at
Rose,own, Canada.
~TY YEARS AGO
September 19, 1911
The Cornell college conservatory
unloaded thirteen Chickering pi-
anos last week, six of them being
grands and seven uprights. All
these were selected by Miss Hart,
while she was in Boston this sum-
mer.
During the storm last Wednes-
day a large barn and its contents
on the James Hoffman farm were
destroyed.
T. I. Mitchell has sold three corn
huskers already this fall to Thee.
Stinger, Harry Stinger and Charlie
Lacock. The corn in this vicinity
is the best that the oldest in-
habitant can remember.
Gent Border died Wednesday
evening of last week after an illness
I of only a few weeks The cause of
I hls death was a complication of
lung troubles.
Wesley Rogers is taking a course
in scientific agriculture at the Iowe
State college, Ames.
Lee Stinger is making a sub-
stantial improvement on his farm
in the shape of a fine barn.
On Wednesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Ophelia Wirt will oc-
cur the marriage of Miss Virgie
Wirt and Jesse Heller. The Misses
Phillips Lottie Clymer, and Sylvia
Turner honored the bride to be at
a shower last evening.
Palisades
Mrs. Charles Ford
No newspaper with any honor
would publish secret information
of any kind to aid Nazi agents. But
for them to be asked to suppress
information that is not secret and
Chat thousands know about is dif-
ficult to understand, and looks re-
diculous. One can't feel that
Frank Knox, a very successful
newspaper man, is honestly In sym-
pathy with such a policy.
A British naval attache, accord-
ing to the Merry-Go-Round said
the; other day: "You know I think
it is awfully sporting of you news-
paper fellows not to publish any-
thing about our ships being in your
navy yards. Of course we have no
objections, but it's fine to see you
co-operating with the president. I
star players, has an infected hand; " 'Kiss me, oh kiss me, my dar- Mrs. Ben Neal and Mrs. Warner
there is nobody to play end; thereling,' the hero kept saying. Well Peterson were among the 30 worn-
is only one senior out for football; really, that's the best movie I've
and most of the other boys haven'tseen in a long time One clinch en attending the Franklin town-
had much experience ' ] ship home project tea Friday after-
' lasted ten minutes--I timed it."noon in the Methodist church par-
ADVICE Tinkle! Tinkle! The bell, and i lors in Lisbon, Miss Margaret Stew-
It has been thought necessary to everyone springs into action, there i art, new home demonstration
help our inexperienced seventh is a bang and a crash, more bangs i agent, discussed the storage of
graders, and freshmen by printing and crashes. The teacher says, i vegetables and gave a waxing dem-
an auwce column. This rather "Assignment for tomorrow test onstration.
painful talk has been assigned to over the unit." ' The New Century club opened
goodUS so Wewill,WilltotrYmakein allclearSinceritYsomeandof what"That'sit's unfairabout;,I don't even know their activities for the year with
our school policies. We who have1 Moral" The loudest barkers are[a! sades ne lodge 'Cl CkonlUnche nTuesday.at the Pall-
had that grand old lady, "Exper- /always with the sideshow [ The new members of the public
ience" for our teacher, set forth I P S I don't get the point either, school faculty were entertained by
the following rules to be observed /ASSE~IBLY
by all ~ < the old members at a picnic Wed-
" At the assembly Friday the nesday evening at tbe Palisades
gu]m) int ::~:ol~e~ln~lplfr~maCh:i:nig members of the student council iState Park.
s ,~ : ~ were announced. Beginning with Cornell faculty members hac
UppO~C lb WUUIUL U~ qUlt~ 121II- ior~)luuen. TnlnK O all ~ne me-
I the Seniors they were: Betty June luncheon Wednesday noon at the
barassing to him in tbe middle westmerits of pleasure you'll be depnv- ~
,rleuges, ~wary uarot rlat~enoerg- ~laerman no~e~ at the upper JUbil-
ee,all those isolatiomsts knew about t: frite Wht~o:::ndmiwg:}d even g:~ ]er Bill Burnett, Vernon Paul. Jan- s~des where they were in session
'Yes it is embarrassing for him lhave some of our rades low~Yred lots: Gloria Hedge Earl Edwards. for the day 85 dined there Wed-
' " " " mor " Y^ g~ "ISophomores' Gwen Smyth Junior I ne~day evening when their wivesi
but ~t ~s much e so because the lWouldn't that b~ ~u, I " ' ' "~ '
Brace Freshman- Monies Blood I joined the group
news has been suppressed and has Don't sign out of Study Hall " " ', '
Tom Wooff Eighty five members of the Cot
gotten around, as suppressed news Sust ~et u~ and walk out What " I -
usually does rather than because ,-' "~ ~ ~ " Jean Houstman was presented I college faculty in Cedar Rapids,
of the news:' ~fm;o:cA,tcn:tirl:t:dlS'u:nyw:hYe with a trophy for her Poppy Day!and their wives dined at the Pall-
Is The Honeymoon Over?
According to Time, the biggest
press news in Washington last week
was that, the "White House gang
--the little group of reporters
whose beat is the President--were
hopping mad at Franklin Roose-
velt. Most of them felt he had
played them for suckers . . ."
"For eight and a half years they
have given him loyalty and admira-
tion interrupted by only a few brief
peeves But the gang that saw
him most usually stood up for him,
until last week when they were
madder than since the days of the
Hoover administration."
The run-around on the Churchill
meeting, answering of bona fide
questions with irritable wisecracks
teacher's sight?
And please don't make up work
missed on account of absence. Do
the teachers a kindness. They will
have no assignments of extra work
to make, no bother of correcting
more papers and averaging more
grades They can simply flunk
you and be through with the whole
affair.
There's no need to bother about
i coming to school on time. If you
arrive ten or fifteen minutes late
i you will aid in "The Great Cam-
i paign For:h: Elimination of Con-
,fusion in Halls" You know--
!"Lose a minute and save a life."
i But most of all, never, never,
i take a Chalk Mark writer too ser-
iously. In all probability he is
merely trying to carry out a re-
quired duty.
Essay by Mrs. Dana Wilcox. It was i sades lodge Saturday evening, fel-
l
the first trophy of his kind ever i lowing an afternoon business ses-
I presented. ! sion
I New members for the Velvet / Twenty members of the Tri Pelts
Curtain were asked to join. Cheer ~ II --'
Leaders were also introduced. They
are Juniors and are as follows:
Gloria Hedge, Elizabeth Wolfe and
Bette Cole.
MT. VERNON VS. DE WITT
We now switch you to the Foot-
ball game between Mt. Vernon and
l)eWitt.
Here we are in the press box at
the field in the local stadium. De-
Witt has the ball on their own 45
yard line. They come out of the
huddle, there's the center, it's a
pass down into the coffin corner,
IT'S INTERCEPTED BY HER-
'RING! Now he's down to the 20
[yard line. On the 25 he laterals ~J I
CALLS FOR
To "suit the suits" proclaimed
highest in Fashion pick Morilyn's
suit oxford of soft, pliable suede,
so adaptable, so comfortable to
complement any tailleur and
compJiment the woman whose
happy choice it is.
202 S. 2nd Street
slice Toastmaster toast-
er, four lap trays, crystal
dishes, and toast-trim-
mer. $23.95. Standard
Set, $19.95.
DE LUXE HOSPITALITY SET
$17.95
DE IUXi TOAST :N JAM SIT
Another happy choice! A stunning
tray set with Toastmaster automatic
toaster and colorful jam and marma-
lade iars and toast plate. Costs only
$1.95 mote than toaster alone.
Yeal
$8.50
us tal
Pal
thes I
]hskets
JR. TOAST 'N JAM silt Clo
An eyeful f vahe--a welc ~:~ffr~llr Lin
modest money, with wa " t0~ e
Franciscan Ware }am iar and ~ ( 10set
plate, and non-automatic l oas"'-
Jr. toaster. Toaster alone, $7J0,
L[GT C U flTANti POW
IOWA 1
I Mount Vernon Office Dial 3012 Lisbon Office phone
Cedar Rapids, Is. i
New oil lasted 5,683 miles
longer than the runner-up
in Death Valley Death-Test
CERTIFIED
Your own engine gauge-stick can tell you
best about Conoco Nth motor oil. Next-
best is to buttonhole the most frugal car
owners you know around town. Some
have never yet added a quart since chang-
ing to Conoco Nth. And you can see why
right here--by the mileage figures from
the Certified Death-Test of Conoco Nt/,
oil vs. five other big brands.
The whole big success of Conoco Nt/,
started down in Death Valley--so hot
you can't sweat. Here 6 new stock cars,
strictly alike, each got one 5-quart fill of
some one oil being tested. Then the Offi-
cial Referee clamped on the locks; never
a drop of oil could be added.
Eyed by impartial officials every in-
stant, the cars all reeled off their 57 miles
hourly. Here and there on the desert a
carcass lay bleaching--and desert death
awaited these car engines, too. For none
could finish till its oil hit bottom--finish-
ing the engine beyond repair.
CONOCO gave nearly Twice the
miles averaged by the others tested!
The 5-quart fill of Conoco Nth lasted
13,398 miles Certified. Conoco Nth
outlasted one big brand by 8,268 miles.
Even the best of the five was outlasted
5,683 miles by Conoco Nfh oil. Such a
real difference must have a real source.
And two real life-givers created by man
two modern synthetics are in
Cohere Nth motor oil.
You know of modern vitamin synthetics,
making up for Nature's life-givers lost in
some modern food processing. Similarly,
the extreme refining needed by oils for
current cars has been destroying Nature's
best life-givers ! But in their place today
Cohere Nth brings your engine the two
patented Cohere synth~s.
One of these--man-made under the
famed Germ Processed oil patent--
will keep your engine OIL-PLATED with
lubricant that can't all quickly drain
off of inner surfaces. So OIL-PLATING
is on guard against wear in advance!
And the latest Conoeo synthetic--
man-made under U.S.Pat. 2,218,132--
will cheek "/es~ring'" of oil that's en-
couraged by foul leftovers from every
engine's normal firing. This common
oil trouble is now checked or inhibi~d
by the new man-made Cohere life-
giver-- Thialhene inhibi~r.
i
5 BIG-NAME OILS bought retail bY
Referee. One 5-quart fill per car. Not another
drop throughout the hot desert Death-Test"
You'll never Death-Test your Cohere
Nth oil in sinister Death Valley, any more
than you repeat other proving-grotmd
tortures. You'll still drain and refill at
recommended intervals. But how you'll
expect to stretch the distance before add"
ing a quart, judging by this big fact: "q
heavily advertised oils in the Certified
Death Valley Test were outmileaged 74~
to 16=% by Conoco Nth oil. Economy
like that counts up into dollars ! Change
to Nt~ oil today at Your Mileage Mer~
chant s Conoco station. Continental O~
Company--Pioneers in Bettering Arner"
ira's oil with Synthetics
C~' D T,~,I~ r~ I hereby certify thaf;
I.It/lllI.U the De e ~est
ath Fall y a~d
and related work were thoroughly
fairly conducted. Engine Destruction oc-
curred in each case at the mileage state(],
er ls k
Consulting Englneer, who during Academlc ye .~,
Profe~or of Automotive Engineering, Purdue Univer~"r
BEST 0IL COMPANY
C. W. Carbee, Operator mek No. 1 W.E. Kohl, Operator Trucl N '
On Sale at the Following Service Stations:J. F. Cooper & Son Garage, Mount Vernon;
Zimmer Garage, Lisbon; G.A. Kohl, Mechanicsville; Bowers & Schoor, Mechanicsville
MII
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