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Newspaper Archive of
The Mount Vernon Hawkeye-Record
Mount Vernon, Iowa
November 10, 1938     The Mount Vernon Hawkeye-Record
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November 10, 1938
 
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-- " i m anm MECHANICSVILLE Ralph Krummel and children of this place and Alfred Krummel of Avoca. A lovely gift was pre- Mrs. T. L. Feyen I sented to Mrs. Krummel. ~THDAY GATHERING MIKE HANLOW---- c~°r~'a~nrVeKrUmmel'yWh°nwas'el'eb~ t~ng" ~x r-I~irthda Su day, I Funeral services were held Fri- day morning from St. Mary's ~idteaanoiloaii~sg~ihi~t~y iI church, conducted by Rev. Father I Frencken, for Michael Hanlow, who passed away at Cedar Rapids, where he had been since last gloom and rain outside did not March. He was born Dec. 3, 1858, 'Sheepshead Bay, New York, the THE MOU~'r VERNON, IO~VA, HAWKEYE-RECORD AN~D THE LISnON H-ERA/.d~ mar the pleasant time, which was so much enjoyed. The guest list son of Timothy and Marguerite! number may be present. included Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Klcppe, Hanlow. In 1875 the family acmeI Dr. and Mrs. Henry Stoffel of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Kleppe and to Iowa and settled on a farm east!Myoming were over Sunday guests daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Chris am McVille, where they lived un- i in the home of his brothel', Charlie Kleppe and family, all of Clarence '~ til 1898, when they moved into I Stoffel and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lancamp, Mr. and town and where he has since madeI Mr. and Mrs. Guy Wright had as ,Mrs. Rudy Krummel, Mr. and Ivh-s. his home. He trod never married, l Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs. John Krummel, Mr. and Mrs. Fred l Surviving are three sisters, ! Paul Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Kleppe, all of Tipton; Henry Lea-'Minnie Hanlow of Los Angeles, IByrne and Mr. and Mrs. Frank show of West Branch, Mr. and Calif., Mrs. McQunis, Belle Plaine, I Woods. The afternoon was spent B and Mrs. George Burgert of Cedar Rapids. Ia. Interment was in Rose Hill cemetery. Rev. Hassebroke of Dubuque University, preached here in the Presbyterian church Sunday morn- ing. He came as a candidate for the pulpit. Miss Lewis from Du- buque accompanied him here. On Sunday morning, Nov. 13, a con- gregational meeting will be held and a vote taken to establish a new pastor. It is hoped that a goodly tier Hybrid Produced Right - Processed Right- Marketed Right The Greatest Values in Hybrid History Days Large Small Edge Maturity Hill Drop Hill Drop Drop IOWA 939 .....110-115 IOWA 942 .....110.115- $3.75 IOWA 931 .... 100 105$3.75 IOWA 13 ...... 115-120 $4.00 $4.75 ILLINOIS 960 .115.120 $4.00 $4.75 FOR NIGHER YIELDS, FINER QUALITY, AND BEST ALL. OUND PERFORMANOE PLANT "You Can Pay More--But YouCan'ti Buy Better" BOOK YOUR ORDER NOW . . . . . TAKE DELIVERY LATER Also Booking Orders for Clover, Alfalfas, Timothy and Other Field Seeds at Substantial Savings. Inquire for Prices HOW TO ORDER Orders may now be hooked any of the firm, ii,ted below. These firms are authorized operators of Bruns Seed Depots. lu the near future a eomplete and large stock of hybrid seed corn, and all other umJor farm ~eds, wB! be placed lu their custody, for the convenience of farmers living In these trading urns. Farmers are urged to BOOK THEIR ORDERS NOW by calling at their nearest Brans Depot, or mailiug same direct to Davenport. ]IAQUOKETA, Iowa ............ F. J. Peterson MENDOTA, Illinois ................ L. J. Oester ]IONMOUTH, Illinois ......... Allen Feed Mill ~IT. PLEASANT, Iowa ..... W. F. Burket & Co. ~IT. VERNON, Iowa .......... G. A. Beranek I)ELWEIN, Iowa .............. Potter Hatchery PRAIRIE DU CHIEN, Wis. Kedl Implement Co. PRINCETON, Illinois• S.L. Bradley & Sons ROCKFORD, illlnols . United States Hatcher) SIGOURNEY, Iowa..Bruns Seed & Grain House STRAWBERRY POINT, Iowa Feulner Hdwe. TAMA, Iowa ............ Darrah Hdwe. WASHINGTON, la. Smart & Parrish hap. Co. WATERLOO, Iowa ....... Farmers Feed Stor,, WORTHINGTON, lena Jaeger.Sunset Hdwe. M, ED0, lllinols ..... Detwiler Bros. Hdwo. Co. BELOIT, Wlseousin ...... ~ 8. Babeoek & Sons BROOKLYN, Iowa .......... Grieve & Eckluud DEEP RIVER, Iowa .......... Wolfe Feed Store DIXON, Illinois ............ Public Supply Co. FAIRFIELD, Iowa ......... Snyder Hdwe. Co. FRE~PORT, Illinois Freeport Feed & Supuly Co. GAI,ESBURG, IIlluois ........ C. J. Verene HAMPTON, Is. Haekbarth-Nelson Farm Supply INDEPENDENCE, Is. Bechter Feed & Seed Store 10WA FALLS, lows ............ Walsh & Knox KEYSTONE, Iowa ..... Keystone Mercantile Co. LA PORTE CITY, Iowa .. Lehman & Klock LA NALLE, Illinois ..... Trl-Ci~y |,nplement Co. MANCHESTE]~ Iowa ...... Miller Implement Co. DAVENPORT, IOWA Talk to the hundreds of satisfied Bruns customers about their savings in seed. Let us book your order now for March 1st delivery BERANEK McCormick-Deering Headquarters Mount Vernon, Iowa ~-- ~ ---_ -- -2- 1 socially. I Monday, blanketed this section of Rich Kerwin and Mrs. Clara[ the country. Burroughs, Ellis and Char]ie An-l Judge Goffney gave a political dre of this place and Doris AndreI address in the school auditorium of Marshalltown left Monday for[ here Monday night. St. Augustine, Fla., where they will spend the winter, centrall,mn Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Spry and Mrs. Anna Koch home. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. McCormick had as their dinner guests Friday night, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Woods, Mr. and Mrs. John Nye and Ivan Stanley. A happy evening was spent together playing bridge. The Gracia Guild of the Presby- terian church will meet Friday evening Nov. 11 with Mrs. Gilbert Dutton. Plan to be there. The Ways and Means Society of the Presbyterian church will meet in the church parlors at 2:30 on Friday afternoon, Nov. llth. The Missionary society will meet at the same place to complete the quilt and are requested to meet at 1:30. The Delta Dek Bridge club met on Thursday evening, with Mrs. John Cook. Mrs. Charley Stoffel and Ella Conner won the prizes. The Royal Neighbors held a meeting Tuesday night and three new members were initiated. Re- i freshments were served. ! Harry Shrope, living south from town, had the misfortune of break- ing his ankle while at work on the farm. He is able to be about on crutches. Mr. and Mxs. George Conner, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Conner and son Keith, and Chauncy Conner were Sunday dinner gueets in the O. J. Noslev home north from IAs- ben. Miss Verna Ward gave a shower at her home Wednesday afternoon for Miss Mary Walshire, whose marriage to Jack Ward will take place in the near future. She re- ceived many lovely gifts. Mesdames C. R. Schaffer, Claire Scott, Mame Thimmes and Miss Pauline Fairley gave a miscellan- cons shower Saturday night in the Schaffer home in honor of Marjorie Davis Cook, a recent bride. The refreshments were carried out in a color scheme of pink and white. Metalic roses filled with nuts and confections were favors. The bride received many lovely and useful gifts, which will gn'ace her new home. The evening was spent playing Chinese Checkers. The Marak Steffer Co. Club, were entertained Saturday evening in the Harry Enck home here on West Main St. The occasion was in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Murphy of Cedar Rapids, a recent bride and groom. A gift was presented to them and the evening spent in playing Chinese Checkers. Re- f~esbments were served. A sad accident occurred on the Lincoln highway just east of town Friday night when a man from Montour, Ia., ran into a truck and was found dead. A.M. McCormick was called from Tipton and we un- derstand it was not exactly known whether the rain had impaired his vision or that he had suffered a stroke and was unable to control his car. The family was notified and with an undertaker from To- ledo, came for the body at once and returned to their home. LeMar "Dugan" Hines has mov- ed from his mothers home on North St., which was recently sold to Mr. Crock, to the upstairs rooms in the old Jim Wilson house on South St. For the benefit of our "'foreign" readers a snow lasting all day All Farmers Feeding Pigs Should Feed Riverside Pig Meal for faster growth, and healthier pigs; me re weight at less cost. Let us prove to you that you can save money by feeding Riverside Pig Meal. We can save you dollars. Try it today l Manufactured and for sale at Riverside Feed Stores AH Kinds of Feed, Flour, Hay and Straw blain Store 119 14th Ave. S.E. Store No. 2 222 1st St. N.E. Phone 2-7120 Cedar Rapld~ We Will Deliver Free --2- -- ~--2-~.J -- ~:tb 0~-~-*'~- --------~- ------- ~ii: i ~T . • • z .z t'~ Ix.._" ..... " ....... ~'.~I I veyors then deliter lids corlt t~ i tlxe build[ItS a:,d diMribaLed to eaek e 1-1 DrlU ~.orn ~rlcr u~lt~g ~ ~-~z I , th of 1 ins ver 12 ho l~ew gyp y P |sorting belts which run the el g 1 t no b . E y " nrs direr- " • " " "" 'oc-~ed on "Just A ~of the building. Inferior corn is ltlou of the heated air Is reversed steel arylng DIns z vtg " = ]discarded and the choice ears de- to permit uniform drying. ¢ .... o--DoWitt Iowa I livered to nny particular drying Brnns' "Just.A.Mere" farm also ~v~ ~j~ u~.~. ~. , • [ bin After drying is completed, con. I is noted for its ca~tle i'(~ding opel'- • [veyors carry- the corn to a sheller[ations. The two large silos, nt ex- ....... i " win- nn" market and from there the shelled corn treme left, are filled with alfalfa 1~0 l~ruus ~eefl ~ompnay ox inn.Seen eoru fro g a ''|goes to temporary storage binslensllnge. At present a feed grind- Dr venport, Iowa, growers o! uy-l s " 68 feet[ prior to being taken to the Daven-[ ins house is being constructed near A eemeut base 148 ay In.id seed corn, have a sight well hol~ .. ne bnildfn bins and[ port plant for final grading and[ these silos, also a large f~dl~g .................... ~l us me w g, ./baggfug Jfloor with new type troughs is worts mxm.g me ..me p UUleqntpmeut" The drier consists or/ The ~yiug process Is qul~ auiplauned. A specially designed con. nt then. ausg.A. ter " [arm,[ n "T" slmped building flanked, wlth operntlou. Hot all" Is foreed eltherl veyor system will transport feed to keated east of DeWar, Iowa, sol14 large steel drying bins, six on|up or down through the bins of[the troughs. When completed It will. one side ann e gng on me omer. ! klghwny No. SO. On this model farm[ ........... [ earn. The beat is f urn shed by two [ be an easy matter to take .en. eg THese Dins are eonuee ea nt non, recently completed construe-I ............. | high eapnelty trueg.muauwd hen t-] 400 to ew ease on lull te l. runs- to sue aottom m sty suets m me ~on of a new hybrid seed_ earn ] _ P. ........ dl [ lug plants whleh can be seen m / much as the hybrid pmnt m. m nee est nunam re er TUg etevator ao drying plant, sald to be the larg ].. g P P • . ..... "[ the foreground. Each unit has n[ for only a short time ten y mur, a son ! ties suown on the left nouses me I t of Its kind nnd h ring a sen n / /newer nlant, espedal y designed | he drying bins can be utilized for - truck dam elevatin machinery, "- " ~paclty of 80,000 bushels. [ P' "" ~" - " r | blower nod large oil burning fur. ] storing feeding corn used iu t~s m,. ....... ,i...,~.~ ~,~ .... s,,! eonveyors, sorung ores,snene ,[ hare. Their eomblaed output is [ ex~ensne cattle feeomg program. dr: igu, employ~ the most e~efent[ e e. . | about 10:000,000 B: T. U.'s per hour] ..The Bru.ns Seed Comlmny. e.or- ud scientific medteds of seed corn[ The hybrid corn as it comes trom| which ts sumeteut to operate[ amlly invfces any wuo are mter- 4r~'~ng. ~ucb of this knowledge/ the field is dumped on a conveyor[nil the bins at one time. Thelested to visit their "Just-A.Merq' wa~ gained by the Bruns organiza-I ~ elevated to overheadt sortlng[eou heated alr is driven with eonsld-[ farm and see for themselves what M~ Mm~ugh ~ year~' "experience s. Speelal self.feeder ype "/eruble fore~ Into the air duot~ of| b going on. (. Thursday, November 10, 1| 4-H leaders and assistants. Among the first to finish corn picking in this vicinity were Lee and Arlo Stinger and C. E. Neal and son were next in line. There is still plenty of corn to pick yet but the weather over the week end will cause some delay. Norman Techau has been picking corn for Douglas Ruble. Glenn Edsil has been assisting Archie Minish and Archie picked with the pickers Wednesday and Thursday for Glenn Stoner. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Leigh had as their dinner guests on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. John Leigh and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Leigh and Loraine of New Boston, Illinois and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Leigh and family and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leigh. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Koch re- Bo t nm Mrs. Sherman Caldwell, Mrs.[ Callers in Cedar Rapids ........ Herman Nebiker and Mrs. Frankt day were Mrs. Pete ] Mrs. Frank Letner Letner on Thursday called in the'~ daughter Rita and Miss Marie -~- homes of Mrs Emmett Albaugh Duhme. METHODIST SUNDAY SCHOOL and Mrs. Ray Hartung. I .... HAD RALLY DAY SUNDAY A daughter was born last week[ ;tEAI) THE ADS Rally Day was observed Sundayto Mr. and Mrs. John Lnenicka. during the Church School hour in Mrs. C. C. Berry, Mrs. Herman the Methodist church. There was a Nebiker and Mrs. Frank Letner [] large attendance and following the ion Wednesday afternoon attended lesson study a speciai program was!a missionary meeting in the home lib given. Leonzo Berry announced of Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Burgstahler the numbers. Prelude, Miss Helen in Mount Vernon. They also visit- Roselle, pianist; Tuam Dilecta, The Lord Is In His Holy Temple, by the congregation; silent pray- er; hymn, "Lead On, Oh King Eternal" hy the audience; invoca- tion, by Rev. J. Bruce Eyestone; vocal solo, Myra Jane Scott; an- nouncements and The Meaning of Rally Day were given by the pas- tor; "Greetings to All" by Darrell Kitchen; "Big Enough" by F. G. Anderson; exercise, "Meaningful Letters," Ramona Jorgenson, Doris Kitchen. Joe Scott, Doris Decious, John Decious, Osmond Berry, jr., Helen Lnenicka and Deloris Lnen- icks; Careful Workmen, Mary O'- Connor and Richard Schnell; "On: Time, Or Tardy" by Mary Sparks; "How to Do It," Osmond Berry, jr.;i Song by members of the Young Womens class; vocal solo, "Holy Bible Book Divine;; sung by Mrs. J. B. Eyestone and pantomined by three members of the young mens ceived word from their son Sam, class, Paul Anderson, Warren Jar- who is stationed at Long Beach, genson and Leonzo Berry; the adult Calif., with the U. S. N. that he Bible class gave testamonials of had passed from S. 2 C. to S. I. C.~ great men; reading, Erma Lnenicks; and will get his rating Nov. 14. "You Can Help Too" by Caroline This means higher pay as well as Berry; offertory, recitation, "Come a higher rating. Again," by Ramona Jorgenson; Linn Busy Bees Boys 4-H met hymn, "Stand Up For Jesus" by the with the Fischer boys Friday even- congregation; benediction by the ing. Mr. Fischer acted as leader, pastor, Rev. Eyestone. The December meeting will be with Junior Koch. 1Vh'. and Mrs. Harry Dorcas were Monday evening callers in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Con- nor and family. Mr. and Mrs. Barney Pettycoart entertained the Linn and Franklin Corn club in their home Saturday evening. Friends el the family will extend their sympathy in the death of P, obert Slyer. Mr. Slyer had done trucking for a good many in this vicinity. Irwin Coppock is remodeling his barn. Dick Bond of Springy/lie Mrs. Mitt Stoneking spent the has been helping. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Techau and day Thursday with Mrs. Harry children were Sunday visitors in StonekingandWhO Mrs.iS ill. FrankMrS' Herman the Milton Koch home. INebiker Letner called there during the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Edwards andI Mrs. Floyd Kitchen and Mrs. C. family expect to move soon t°lc. Berry called Thursday on Mrs. Mechanicsville. Needlecraft club met with Mrs. Clair Stoneking who is a patient at the Childrens Hospital in Iowa Clarence Neal on Friday afternoon. City. The next meeting will be in two Emmett Albaugh re-shingled his weeks with Mrs. Roy Bowman house last week. Dwight Hawk of when the first follow-up project CedarRapids assistedwith the lesson will be presented by the leaders, Mrs. Bowman and Mrs. Isabelle Coppock. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Minish have had a modern straw loft chicken house made in part of a large hog house. Fred Stinger and Joe Van- ous did the remodeling. Solon Mrs. William Zeller Mrs. Otilla Broulik and Mr. George Petrik from near Mount Vernon visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brash Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Barnes of Maquoketa visited the latters aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Apitz Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beranek and some friends of Mount Vernon attended the dinner at the auditor- ium Sunday. Mrs. Joseph T. Krob, Miss Nellie Rozinek, Mrs. Frank Schleuter and Mrs. Della Votroubek visited Mrs. Myron Neilly and infant son Patrick Joseph at Mercy hospital in Iowa City, Thursday, also Mrs. Ethie L. Brown who is a patient there with an eye operation. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harms and daughter Virginia Fay of Manches- ter were Sunday supper guests of Mrs. Sarah Kohl. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Poduska and sons visited relatives in Cedar l Rapids Saturday evetning. Mrs. Frances Ulch and Mr. and! Mrs. Robert Baker visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Holte in Cedar Rapids °Wednesday. Miss Irene Hradek and Mr. and Mrs. James Schmidt and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chansky of Iowa City and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stan- ford of Cedar Rapids were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chansky. Mr. T. P. Moore, Mr. Henry Moore and Mr. Fordyee returned from Des Moines where the Mes- sets Moore attended a three weeks school course and the group at- tended the state teacher sconven- tion. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Elliott attend- ed the funeral of Mrs. Roy Sanders at Searsboro Friday and returned to their home here Sunday. Linn Grove Mrs. Edwin Harris The N. L. C. C. will meet with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Richardson Fri- day evening. ed the Art Exhibit in Armstrong Hall with Mrs. J. B. Eyestone. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mayhew of near Watkins and Jennie and Ruth Clark of Anamosa were dinner guests at the Will Clark home Sun- day. Merrill Garrett is suffering with a badly bruised fore arm and shoulder, the result of a runaway last Tuesday when his team be- came frightened at a dog while picking corn. Maurice Minor is assisting with the chores. Mr. and Mrs. George Barner and Ceighton Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Switzer and Edith Minor, Mr. and Mrs. John Strother, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Harris attended the sacred concert at the Methodist church in; Springville Wednesday evening, i The concert was given by Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wells and daughter of Chicago. Rex,. Samuel Wiley of Keosaqua, Iowa, a former pastor of Linn Grove will visit in the neighbor- hood over the week end and supply the pulpit on Sunday morning~ Mechanicsville Rendering Co. l.!(,(n~(. No. I 3 PHONE 229 MECHANICSvILLE **VIII Pron)l)tly remove all dead emhmdl~ We pay all telephone Abbey Creek Mrs. Nathaniel Dean Mrs. Letha Koplan spent Tuesday in North Liberty. The community was shocked Tuesday by the sudden death of Mrs. Fred Miller who, all thought was improving from her illness which had kept her confined to her home for nearly a year. We all extend our sympathy to the bereaved family. Those from a distance who came to attend the funeral of Mrs. Fred Miller were her son, Laundes Miller and wife and Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Rose of Columbus, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Dunham and' family of Masonville. Mr. and Mrs. Mirrill Hoffman were Sunday guests with their mother, Mrs. Dora Hoffman. Mr. and Mrs. Arvel Doubenmier and Pauline were Sunday dinner guests at the Than Dean home. Mr. and Mrs. Than Dean were Monday dinner guests at the Gol- den Miller home. The rain and snow storm has de- layed the corn picking in this REX CONN AND MISS GOVE neighborhood so all will have a :ARE ON FRIDAY PROGRAM few days rest. There was no program given in[ Mr. and Mrs. Golden Miller, Mr. the church on last Friday evening~ and Mrs. Laundis Miller and M.r. and Mrs. J. P. Rose of Columbus, because of the stormy weather and] Ohio were Sunday dinner guests bad roads. On next Friday even-[ of their aunt and uncle, Mr. and ing the county agent, Rex. Conn/ and Miss Lucille Gore, Home Des-[ Mrs. Gee. Dunham at Masonville. onstration Agent, will be present/ Mr. and Mrs. Laundis Miller and ~Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Rose, returned ThereWith talkSwill beandotherdem°nstrati°nS'numbers bY tl to their home in Columbus. Ohio, local groups. Divisions Nos. 1 and[ Tuesday. 2 will have charge of the program tl .............. to which there is no admission lSutliff charge. work. Mrs. Anton Biderman was a member of a group of women that visited the Amanas on Thursday. Mrs. Argene Allbee was a busi- ness caller at Iowa City on Thurs- day. A meeting of the officers and those interested in the Womens Project group of the Farm Bureau was held Tuesday afternoon at the home of the township chairman Mrs. C. C. Berry. Mrs. Emma Donnell of Morning l Sun spent a few days last week with her daughter, Mrs. Herman Nebiker and on Sunday went to the home another daughter, Mrs. Leo Freeman of near Cedar Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roselle on Sunday visited Mr. Roselle's sister, Mrs. Mary Danielson of Wood Hall, Illinois and a niece returned home with them for an extended visit. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Beese spent] Sunday in the home of the latter's brother Claude Crozier, north of Mount Vernon. Mrs. Sarah Brannaman of Lis- bon was a Sunday visitor with Mrs. Wm. Beese. Many from this vicinity attended the chicken dinner and supper sponsored by the Catholic ladies last Sunday. 226 Second St. S.E. Cedar Rapids Suits - Finest Fabrics Newest Styles Our Values Cannot Duplicated '15 nd$1 @ For Prompt Removal of all DEAD STOCK Call Our Nearest Collect Cedar Rapids 41 Anamosa 542 Stanwood 800 I,,wa Dept. (,f Agriculture [Accost? No, 1 SANITARY RENDERING CO. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Telephone Mr. Vernon 6000 Exclusive Dry Cleaners 209 3r,! Ave. S ,V l)la] 9-SI ! Cedar l~,pids, iowa Complete Optical Service C, CHAMBERS-INSKEEP OPTICAL CO. Realize---Real Eyes Having decided to engage in other business, I will hold a complete closing out at my residence, located miles northwest of Mount Vernon, 5Vz miles of Springville and 1 miles west of Grange Hall right on the rock road, on Commencing at 11 o'clock. The Following Property: 2 HEAD OF HORSES Team of black mares, smooth mouthed, wt 1500, work swell together a good honest 13 HEAD OF CATTLE 6 milch cows all milking now and due to calf early in March. 1 coming 2 year old er. 2 heifers coming a year old, these heifers are all out of splendid milk 4 spring calves, including Guernseys, Jerseys and a Choice Registered 7-year-old stein cow, a popper. 70 HEAD OF HOGS -- Cholera Immune 2 yearling sows (open) 54 spring shoats in swell shape for feeders, not too fat, one a good one sired by a pure bred Hampshire boar. 14 June shoats, nice ones. 8 HEAD OF SHEEP 7 head of Shropshire ewes. 1 Shropshire buck, 1 year old. These ewes are bred lamb about March 1st. MACHINERY Farmall F-20 tractor, new in 1936, this tractor is just like new, never having done any costume work, always has had the best of care, rubber tired in front. Little 14-inch tractor gang plow, like new; 7-It McDeering tandem disc, a good one; 2 row tractor corn plow; John Deere 14-inch gang plow; McDeering 11-It [ seeder, grass seeder attached; McDeering corn planter, works fine, 90 rods wire; tion steel lever harrow, McCormick 6-It mower; Easy Way loader, Cylinder type rake; McDeering 8-It binder in the very best of shape, only 3 yrs old; 11-ft. tm cultipacker, a real tool; I.H.C. manure spreader; steel wheel truck wagon and rack; high wheeled wagon with combination wood rack and box; 2 single row cor plows, 1 a shovel plow and 1 a surface. MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES 11 bushel (cap) self feeder; Economy Chief800-1b size cream separator, just like neW, 30-gal. butchering kettle; 30 gal stone jar, a dandy for putting away meat, sound aS a dollar; hog troughs; some gas barrels; slop barrels, etc. Forks, shovels and other tools. New hay rope, 125 ft long; grapple hay fork, some pulleys, slip scraper, some Harness collars, etc. Good heavy stock saddle and bridle. Corn, Oats, Hay, Straw, Corn Fodder and Rough Feed 2500 bushels of choice yellow corn in crib. 350 bushels very heavy quality oats, choice for seed. 4 tons of clover hay in the barn. 140 bales of nice bright oats straw to be sold in lots to suit, never had a rain on. 106 shocks of corn fodder cut at a good time. 60 acres of corn stalks, picked by hand, a straw pile, and the run of the farm wit barn and running water, with complete use of the pasture. A lot of wonderful feed. CHICKENS 50 White Rock and Minorca yearling hens. 100 White Minorca Pullets. Some Household Goods Henry Lang's Lunch Wagon on the Premises LBERT S rB ,'E'I'S. , () w n et w. E. Challis, Auct. , Phone 130, Lisbon. Mount Vernon Bank & Trust Co., Clerk h.-_