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I
JANUARY 4, 1933
ii
LONE TREE REPORTER, LONE TREE, IOWA
PAGE FIVE
- =
I Mrs Vincent ¥oita who ha been a 1 Rayner Burge is spending the week
l,ati at University hospiPd since at the lmme of his grandparents, Mr.
THIS ANI) THAT
operatmn for goiter :oon. I Laura and Marc(Ala Pa;dzek are
I "Ve are in recalls of a r:Mtanee ".Mdn;g this week in Iowa City wth
,tfrom A. L', Keeb.r of Long tL ch. sett- their nephews, Howard and Robert
ing ahead his nbscription a mp!e of I3'? Sh,'a4(;
A(lam an I IYrock went T:. I:ov,arl flu:kius farn;ly were: ',yrars. Mr. K(,eler says th very-
'.port "Wednesday afternoon i \\;\-?t Liberty on Monday to visit tl'm¢ ", fine ouc ttlere, tlut t',',.= it has Another Ilia DANCE at Fisher fall
and Mrs. Heath who were 5if.< il<kin' s.ster. Mrs. Fred Miller bern a littl+ too wet to s-:ir them Saturday nght wih tLe Missouri
Sunday until Wedn(sday v he is qui;,: seriously ill ',ith hear lh"t;'lY" Nighthawks. Adv
a New Year holiday and a!so " Mr. a::d Mrs. Paul Speraw and son
Mrs. Adam celebrate her lrouble
was New Years day. 1 Mr. and Mrs. John Stettler and
Herbe,'t drove to Joliet. Saturday and
Ullrich and Leon Rud-;.p.,nt New Yar's at the home of Mr.
.t last week at the home of lAet,e . parents. They returned
a's parents, at Clinton, In. hem> Tuesday.
OUNCEMENT----
I hove taken over the management of the
Mid-Continent Sermce station, commencin
January 1st, and will appreciate a share of your
business.
I shall attempt to render the best of ser-
vice at all times, as w.'ll as sell petroleum pro-
duts well knom to be <ff the highest quality.
Drive in and let me serve you.
Car Of
lack Star Coal
On Track
best coal value for your dollar on the market
59
per ton at the car
F. J. Ullrich, Mgr.
L
Deposits Insured
in this bank have their deposits pro-
by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
by Congress in the National Banking Act of
the extent of $2,500.00 for each depositor's
deposits.
protection became effective January 1, 1934,
bank was admitted to the Temporary Insur-
of the Federal Deposit Instrrance Corpora-
The protection is extended to the 837 depositors
have and to all who become depositors.
€
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is a
4
controlled corporation managed by offi-
by the President of the United States.
4
M00RCI1AN00S i
SA VI/¥68 BANK !
r
ree, ...... Iowa
Mr. and Mrs. Alfr d Lennabauh,
Eug-ne of Mt. Vernonl Ind. were Mr. and Mr... Sheldon Forbids; and
Monday and Tuesday isiter's with Lawrence Forb(:s attendd a show in
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ziegler awl family. I Muca:be Sunday eventn.
Josept.ile and Bill Platt :,uent the
first part of the vacation wJh th4r Mrs. Georg Frus and ehildrr, n and
aunt an duncle, Mr. and Yrs. J, J. Mrs. Mary Prizler and dauahter. Erma
Hudnall of Muscadine. pent Christmas in MinneaDoli; re-
Worm your chickens with Saltsbury's
Worm Caps. At Doerres Feed Stor
Adv.
Word has been received of the
death December 30, of Mrs. CePAda
McQuown. at Redlands. CaVf. Mrs.
McQuown had been ill eig;rt days,
suffertug from a heart attack. She
l will b? remembered by many Lone
Tree fclks, having lived on a farm
south cf town for a number r:f years.
Mr and Mrs. Matt Green and fam-
ily moved recently from a farm south
of to'n to the Corbett house in
Sunnyside addition.
Mrs. Mary Swedersky had a painful
i l accident last week. She caught her
hand in wringer and had to have
several stitches taken. Her daught:-r
Mrs. Charles ttorak, and Norton of
I Ainsworth are with her.
I ! DANCE to the music of the Missouri
it Nighthawks. Saturday nigh:. Jan. 6th,
!t at the Fisher hall. Adv.
Mrs. Bart Nelson is quite ill at her
turr£ng last Thursday, They vi::it,l
Mr, and Mrs, Paul Prizler and family.
Mr. a_d Mrs. Arthur Sehuessler an-
nounce the birth of an 8/ pound
daughter on December 81. The new
arrival has b-an, named Donna Kay.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hotz and
family returned Sturdav from Fort
Dodge where the3- visited a few day.
at the Frank Stanek home.
Mr. a.d Mrs. E. C. Green and fam-
iiy returned New Year's day from a
week's vistt with relatives in South
Dakota nd western Iowa.
lt:hest market prtce paid for furs.
Bert P. Doerres. Adv.
The annual meeting of the Lxme
*Tree Telephone company was held at
the telephone building Tuesday evem
i ing. Owiv.g to the fact that a quorum
was n'A present, the old directors will
,hold over for another year. No other
i husiness was i ransacted.
! H. VI. Huakins was in Des Moines
i
,home here. being taken sick on New on business. Tuesday.
1Year's day. It is beLeved that she I Mr. and Mrs. H. ffW. Huskins and
suffered a slight stroke, but is racer- daughters Erma and Virginia, ere
ering z, ic.ly apparently. Mrs. Mose :'isitor:z t the F. T. Miller home on
Fonntain as been with her prt of New Y,.ar's day They went to see
,., he ti,,e. Mrs. Mdler. who is confined to her
'- Fa;tr Kottensette who haa been home with illness.
a[ M:rcy h,,;II.tal for several week3 '
" '., sufficiently re:proved so that he _Miss Florence- " \\;Valker cf Clinton,
'.) • of
J x[,:,. to ,(,ug.t Lo:.. li:s morn- Iowa, and Mr. Prrmtis Frlvag
-. N(n.wav. Iowa'. wera weekend guests
:: in[:, Thur:.,!ay.
.,,r ?;o W. N SbelPmbarer ham. Miss
H,ahest market price paid for fur. Wrdkr is enntL-=uin7 her visit for a
Bert P. Doerres. Adv. few days.
V(itbur .Mashes called on Mrs. Mary l Mr. and Mrs. Etdo Reid of Laurens,
DraI)?r Wednesday. }Iowa. were overnight guests at the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank layner and XV. N. Shellnbarger hom e Tuesday.
5fiiss Bess Ra)mer spent Wednesday
Use Lee's Oil Wormer for your pig
with Mrs. Anne Burge and family, and hogs. At Doerres' Feed Store,
Mrs. Ed Mumm received news on Adv.
Thursday of the death of her cousin,
Joe EpIdng, who passed away at the Ralpa ttudachek is visiting Harold
Univer:;ity hoslital Mnesday mor Magrnder this week.
ing following a long illness. On Fri-
day morning she recved wm'd of the
death of her aunt, Mrs. Theresa Epp-
ig of Davenport. Mr. and Mrs. Henry. Weird Eastern Country
Schapveld of West Iberty and Mrs. Seems other Spr
Mumm attended the funeral qesday The name, Mountains of the MtL
morning at St. Joseph's church. Is believed to have arisen from a mt
taken translation from Arabic; but It
A good stock dip at 75c per gal. has fitted well lnto the atmosphere of
Itt Doerres Feed Store. Adv. mystery that has surrounded Ruwen-
Mr. and Mrs. William Idle of near zori for centuries : and it has a flgura-
Cranston wer e Sunday dinner guests tire Justification hecause of the weird
at the home of Mrs. Nancy Keeler. appearance of the mountain slopes.
Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Nicholson, Jmltor The relatively few white men who
have made the arduous climb have all
and Florence Jea spent New Year's
noted the impression that they had
day at the parental J. A. Niche(son
blundered Into some alien world. The
home near Gladwin. combination of excessive moisture, el-
Mr. and Mrs. F. V. Shoquist and titude and equatorial sun has produced
daughters, Patty and Ruh, of V- I a unique vegetation that in many ways
ton, returned to their home Saturday ] is utterly fantastic.
after few days visit ith relatives ] After emerging from the dense tree-
mad friends here. ] Ical forests of the lower slopes, a
Mss Ellen Johnson of Chicago vi- I climber feels like a Lilliputian visit-
Red her friend, Mrs. W. D. Klrkpat- ] Ing the meadows of Brobdingnag. He
walks among parsley plants, nine feet
rick from Fday trntil Monday, I high, "hird-seed" three times his
,Powdered Blue Vitrlcl at Doerre' height, and heather plants, relatives
Feed Store. Adv. of the low Scottish shrub, that have
expanded Into great trees 70 and 80
Friends of Mra, M,. Day have had feet tall To add to the weirdness, col-
recent word that she is still seriously ored mosses--brown, yellow, green.
ill at Sac City. MrlL'Day is suffering white and red---are, all about under-
!rein an infection i her foot. foot and overhead. They grow In huge
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Crwford have cushions that encircle the limbs of the
a daughter, Carmen Kay, born at their heath trees like giant mushrooms ira-
home Saturday, December 30. paled on a skewer. The unearthly ap-
pearance Is heightened usually by fog,
Supt. Axthelm's mother. Mrs. M.ry through which the strange growths
Axthe!m of Keota spent several daY loom dimly; and there is a continual
at the Axthelm home at Christmas drip of water from limbs and moss
time, the Axthelms taldng her hcm, clumps.--Montreal Family Herald.
, ad spending a day with friends at
V¢shlngtom
Mr. and Mrs. John Klein spent Sun- Eagle Was on First Coin
day in Davenport at the home of Mrs. I,aued by United States
Klein' brother, tI. V. Ra'sche. Her When the bald eagle was up for dis.
father. Whn. Rasche. ho had been, cussion as to Its being placed on the
there for several weeks came home seal of the United States, says Scion-
with them. tiflc American, Benjamin Franklin op-
posed it and offered the American wild
A ggcd au.ortmeut of ;eel tnks turkey as being more distinctly Ameri-
at Doerres' Feed Store. Adv, can than the Caesarean old hawk. The
Mrs. Chas. Corny, St., wet to Iowa eagle won and was adopted on June
City Tuesday, called there by the 20. 1782, as an emblem for the great
death of a niece. Mrs. Abbie K. Sunier seal; it was also placed on the first
who passed away that morning at coin issued by the United States, in
Mercy hoslEtal following an opera- 1765.
ion. Funeral services war e held This same old bird has been held in
from the Oathout funeral hom n reverence and superstitious regard as
Thru6av afternoon, with burial in welt as used In symbolism, and her-
Oakland cemetery Mrs. S: ;,:r bd aldry, and depicted tn all methods of
lied h-r entire life in [ow: ,,9-- She art expression known to the North
, ,v ~ of a. American abort,in¢ back in prehis-
toric times.
Mr. ad Mrs. WL N. Shellenbarger A one of the outstanding totemic
spent Xmas in Norwev. Mis Jane
" animals, the eale gave its name to
:MeNo returned home with them :Lad
many clans, tribes, and fraternities.
stayed rill Saturday. religions aqd otherwise, in North
Jeanette Carol is the name of the America. Nearly every clan or gens
(]a, uhter born Deember 27 to Mr. had an eagle emblem at ,'-
.,ne period
-,,a .- Tlrold lgrl at he Cecil in its hlstory--t was depleted on pot-
hlladv home rilliam3bffrg. The to-- '
. ......... etry, textiles, beadwork,
young ldv is the fir.t reaf rz, nd. quillwork, shields, ertss, totem poles,
child of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Nhellady. house and $:rave posts, pipes, ttles,
and nearly all objects pertainlfi to
hwt:'le vd Iwrv Ktrl)u¢Ick cult and ceremony of many old tribe
,..^.,+ ,-,,,d,- M.av ,-i their
aunt. Miss Elizabeth tlirkpatrtck.
Bears "Roll in Wealth"
in Streams of r ,.
I3u;;i)ite world Inmey standards. Ur-
SUS horribles, the Alaskan :rizz}y bear,
stiek, to the ao!d standard, or rather,
the gold standard ,<licks to Mm. Wh(r
a IJniw,r:dry of Michicran forelry pro-
feN:got went t,:'-sl,<cting in befit bides
IJrouaIlt frorll |,le l'ul{on rta:(H]. ]Of}l;,
in" for lL<,w tyl,o Of an:lla] paraaites,
t!e [ouhd the (:xD?"ted lhmq ar:d Illv:,x-
I)ected tlal.:os of gold scata:rfd through-
oul; the f,r.
V'I!O llle lH'of::gor hlIIlI.q for l):.ra-
sites he e;tFi:fuIly COI:d)S (Hit the sus-
pected fur tlIld l.lltq-i "'pails" the dust
in a s::ait di::i w:th wzHer, much lls
gold is IaUIff.(i by prospectors. Pan-
ning his bwtr dusl. the I)I'ofsgor Was
pleased to iiml fleas, dead and dried
up. Looking more close!y Ie say yel-
low flakes. Examined under the micro-
scope, with the surrounding organic
material stained, tile yellow metal
gleamed out characteristically and un-
mistakably.
How the bers collected the gold
flakes in their thick lur is a myatery.
Small amounts of gold are found in
many Alaskan stream beds and tim
metal may have been caught under
the animal's claws, later to be trans-
ferred to the fur [n scratching opera-
tions, or the bears might have "rolled
in wealth" on the shore of some quiet
Yukon stream, picking up stray flakes
of the mineral that old sourdoughs
jaave sought ever since th great
strikes of the 0.
| ..... _
, Rice Leading Crop
The lraw:Ior in tl:, Far E:p,? will ba
i ll]]flZtq] Ht [lie VtlN[ liTl?OUl[ of tiC(. •
IZF:v,'rl fief| Ctti.",I|!/ol ill 1',' ():'ict.
l " ill FI:/ 'y l!i(' VOI'] }.' [ll<S| lilt
., it : ::'::x'h fo)d 1,:r :t billion
, t .... ['5 V:!H' .v(:IrPc ro:,,]! S
:7 ': ".h:,ch i, lhree /ita(,; the.
%::', ,., Ib,. (,rl,i's rllw COID)IL Mort?
ti,: *I . Ht't'ON are devobd [o
i> V!'V;.. /kllt)hCl' ItlH:lZillf fact ts
lh::i tI;('t'( :lFt" I;'IWOOD 5.{"*Q{) itll(l 7, IT)
l.:iItds of thi or(,a[, l{ice does not
hrive in ,'. w*atimr, tmr when young
v,'rl it I}:Iixri}w woedr< For this re,'lsol
it is planled in (liked flfqds of nmd.
and whez lhe sprollt.; are tall enough.
water is let in. thus killing the weeds
without injuring the rice. .Many local-
itles produce two crops a year.
Safety Pin Is Ancient
Safety pins, Instead of being a mod-
ern invention, as most people suppose,
are so old that their origin is lost ifi"
the midst of antiquity, says Pathfinder
Magazine. A very beautiful specimen
was dug up In Sweden, the workman-
ship of which was quite rtch. The
ancient safety pins were made of
bronze--an alloy of copper and tin. It
was at a comparatively late date that
men learned how to make a fire hot
enough to smelt iron and make stcl.
Most of our safety pins are still made
of bras.
. Your little glrl or
boy will get a thrill out
oJ making this demon*
straHon at our store.
EVEN A CHILD
(:AN TUNE IT
This new Grunow also has
living tone that gives you per-
feet reception from anywanted
station, at a turn of the dial.
The Si-lec-trol does it. It ac-
tually tunes the set for you. t'
.: Make this demonstration. It
will thrill you.
00arner b Adams
Furniture and Funeral Service Lone Tree, Iowa
00.sM'E SEE IT
OUR DEPOSITORS TO BE
INSURED AGA, ST LOSS
On January 1, 1934, the Lone Tree
Savings Bank became a member of
the new Federal Deposit Inshrance
Corporation.
Commencing on that date all cur
depositors have 100 percent protectio
up to $2500. Later, according to the
provisions of the bill, large deposits
will be insured.
Bv reason of the fact that this
bank l;las qlralified nnder rigid exam-
ination, w( can offer our customers
this additional service mid prmeetion.
Further information "gill be glad-
ly given if you will call at this bank.
SAVINCS BM00III