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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 47

Location:
Des Moines, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jtfly 1942 PES MODCES SUNDAY REGISTER 7W lotmns Flock to Lakes for July Meat. Relief Clear Lake T. Ratiaaar't loan Krt SarviM) CLEAR LAKE, IA. Summer stock became a topic of interest in the Clear Lake resort picture last week. The Cobblestone Players end a week-long presentation of "The Tender Trap" tonight and will open Tuesday evening with "The Pleasure of His Company." A landmark on Clear Lake's north shore, the Lake Shore Hotel, enters its eighty-sixth season this year, while another pioneer counterpart, the Outing Club, on the lake's south shore, will be marking its seventy-fourth anniversary-Marking a fiftieth anniversary as a summer resident of Clear Lake liW.C DeweL editor emeritus of the Algona Kossuth County Advance.

He has spent every vacation for the put half-century at his Algona beach cottay on the south shore. At the Lake Shore Hotel this weekend are Mrs. Audrey Needham of Mission, Mr. and Mrs. Wright Ringham and Mr.

and Mrs. Reiu Dumas, Mr. and Mrs. John Gilbert and family. Mrs.

Vernon Gossen and daughter, Mrs. Aivena Larson and daughter. Jody Barta, Caroline Porter, Sandy Meyers and Mr. and Mrs. David Altken.

Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Strass-burg and son of Akron.

Ohio, are among the vacationers at Armsbury's Cottages this weekend. Others include Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vander Schel of Pella; Mr. and Mrs.

Le Allen Lauen of Albert Lea, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hill and family and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sheldon and family of Waterloo; Mr.

aid Mrs. Don Papin of Iowa City, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fulton and family of Creston; Mr. and Mrs.

T. Fitch and family of Garwin; Mr. and Mrs. R. Tietge and family of Muscatine; Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Schneider; and family and Mrs. Delia. Schneider of Reinbeck; Mr. and Mrs.

William Cunningham and family of Cedar Rapids and Mr. and Mrs. AI-vin Lindaman and family of Parkersburg. i Morses and R. B.

Johnsons of Council Bluffs. Families arriving at Clement's Beach this weekend include the Vernon Poeh-leins, Roy Folletts and the L. Stanfields, all of Des Moines. Guests at Vacation Village include Messrs. and Mesdames Roy W.

Clough and family of Storm Lake; Gerald Fleming and David of Cedar Falls; Fred T. Weldrop and family of Fort Dodge; Harold Thompson and Susan of Cedar Rapids; Raynold Wierda and family of Sioux Center, and W. Cook and family of Montezuma. Des Moines families at Vacation Village include those of Robert Moorehead. R.

B. Ohme, Charles White, Jack Park, M. Murphy and Dr. Samuel Zoeckler. The Fred D.

Carls of West Des Moines also are there. Cottagers Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Knudson have opened their summer cottage, the Press SPIRIT LAKE Continued on Page 8 storewide Harry Langland of Nevada; Mr. and Mrs.

Kenneth Felper and family of Newton; Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Pitsor and family of Fort Dodge; Mr.

and Mrs. Mauri-en Thompson and family of Humboldt; Mr. and Mrs. E. Dreyer of Alden and Mr.

and Mrs. Joe Long and daughter Ingrid of Cedar Rapids. Des Moines residents vacationing at the Lake Shore are Mr. and Mrs. Elder Gunter and family, Mr.

and Mrs. Dale Derrick and sons, Glen Lull, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph KIrkwood and family, Jane Foster, Marlene Smith, Spirit Lake-Okoboji (TIM Raj.itaT a Iowa tftrvtrti SPIRIT LAKE, IA. Conditions were approaching normal again this weekend in the lakes area after the Tuesday night storm which covered roads and streets with mud and water and raised the level of the lakes as much as 18 inches.

Events scheduled for the weekend were being held as planned. "All Iowa Days," with its three-day vacation for many state officials, closes today with the guests being entertained by the Okoboji Protective Association, the host group. Races at the Okoboji Yacht Club this weekend include a Sunday morning Windward and Return race for all classes at 10:30 a. m. Iowa Great Lakes Ski Club will present two shows today, at 1 p.

m. and at 5 p. m. in front of the State Pier at Arnolds Park. "Send Me No Flowers" will open Tuesday at the I i 'in i Have a Rose, Mommy With a toddler's delight in discovery of nature, Kyle Kipper gives his mother one of grandma's roses to smell, lie and his mother, Mrs.

Jerry Kipper of Los Angeles, are spending July visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Burnes, 674 Sixty-second st.

She is the former Judi Burnes. "Kippie" will be 2 on July 19. Eunice Brings Fitness Program to Home specials Ofeoboi Summer Theater for a six-day showing. Visitors Here are some of the visitors in the area this week: The Cedric Clary family of Clarinda and Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Gaylor and daughters of Davenport are vacationing at a all's Beach this week. Families who are current ly vacationing at Clement's Beach include Mr. and Mrs. W. K.

Bromwell, jr, of Marshall town; the Howard Schroeder family of Sioux City; the Bernard Ris-volds of Traer, Dr. and Mrs. T. A. Kapfer and family and the Marlmena Quijano family of Greenfield; LeRoy 88 Salt Prices Effective Through Saturday! Ben s.

Plaitic heuiewares, practical and handy around the house. Durable polyethylene plastic won't break, chip, rust or mar. Choice of big laundry basket, round and rectangular dish pans, cutlery tray, 2-pc. mixing bowl set, 12-qt. pail and 14-qt.

embossed wastebasket. Colors, a aa Values to 98c each, now 53c or JwU I i I on as her personal charge. At the end of the three weeks at "Camp Shriver," the child had become a well-mannered human being. Desperately afraid of the water and of all animals, he had learned the first strokes of swimming and how to sit on a pony. Director of Camp Shriver is a young man of brawn and brains picked up four years ago by former U.

S. Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy in Palm Beach, Fla. Ambassador Kennedy spotted John "Sandy" Eiler as an unusually fine physical and mental specimen after Sandy had taught the future first lady, Jacqueline, to scuba-dive. IS Sports Joe Kennedy asked Sandy to work for him and teach all his grandchildren some 15 sports.

With the close of Camp Shriver, Sandy is up in Hyannis Port, giving lessons in such items as horseback riding, surf-board riding, skin diving, water skiing and touch football to all the children of President Kennedy's brothers and sis-1 ters. I The president's own two' youngsters. Caroline, 4, and, John, 18 months, will learn their sports from San-, dy, loo. During the winter, Eiler, is in charge of physical fitness courses for the parochial schools of Boston. 'Charming' Key U.

S. Representative Marguerite Stitt Church 111.) has found a new use for a 40 year-old Phi Beta Kap-j pa key she won at Wellesleyi College during her under-' graduate days. I She has added it to the: handsome gold charm brace- i let ursi given 10 ner win affection by her staff on Capitol Hill. One of the charms, besides that key of knowledge, is a tiny golden model of the place where Mrs. Church raises a strong voice for progress, the Capitol of the United States.

Vto'r' Stol pti'tcl twd (iittt mt'U tit eemegt lof ytort w4 Iwja. jo rde wk, lep. ten, cHiinKtjrt, ('rin. Utol far hoirti, cob nt, boat, ttyf to apply kf Vuth, ipfr or rolitr. LA.WOamONCO.MC.

CAUfOtNU S.K kv ptlat, karvar tt nlt fMT iH-m. STOP DRY ROT By Dorothy McCardle Excluilv toTba Rtflittr) WASHINGTON. D. C. President Kennedy's most public spirited sister is Eunice Shriver, wife of Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver.

For Mrs. Shriver. her brother's physical fitness program began right at her own home for 35 "exceptional" children for three weeks during June. Eunice was a social worker before her marriage, and more than any of her family, she is disturbed by the plight of mentally-retarded children. So she had buses bring the boys' and girls to the Shriver 300-acre rented estate on the outskirts of Bethesda.

every day, except weekends, for a program of supervised outdoor play from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. She turned over the swimming pool, playhouse, ponies, and playing fields of her property to these youngsters.

Own Time, Too And she turned over her own time to them, too. In shorts and sneakers and with her own three children in the group, Mrs. Shriver and some 35 local high school students, who volunteered as counselors, worked wonders with the 20 boys and 15 girls among the day-campcrs. A large proportion of them were Negroes. One Negro boy, whose "home" consisted of two rooms used by 17 relatives, had been flailing the world for months.

Eunice Shriver took him -v Mrs. Shriver Club Calendar Till Auiiirr to Intamatimwl luiwlwon. 12 m- WfrfnfWiJ. Maritmuif Hall. trn Camp ThurU.

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Turt' m. hrm.n rhHlih rt N) CrM A- at i r. hh 3n sjin MnTmn Cpl lwhfon at -huTh: TV-9 a TMi-'i' 'r- Hunna. 4114 Thirtih ft. PA 1 Acetate tncet briefs, feather edge elastic waist, Picot elastic leg opening.

White, colors. Sizes 5 to A. Reg. 3 pr. 81c liP rf.

Cuihien feet seeks for men. Heavy weight with nylon rein-forced heeC toe. White. Sizes 10- Reg. 3 pr.

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Cannon terry kitchen towel in red. turquoise, pink, gold. Small checks and fringed ends. 15x30-in. Reg.

39c. OQ We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities! Ben Frankliri Stores Ked or turquoise. Reg. 1.29 ADEl AMES ANAMOSA IOONE CEDAR FALLS 20V-II Um St. CENTIIVILLI CHARLES CITY CLARKSVILII TAMA TRAER RiDi Sfr WASHINGTON WATERLOO kM A.

I URH Lagan. A Den Strat WIST MOIMIS lt Sa il DECORAH MAQUORETA PRIMSHAR laaty Stoft eloora rockwell city mason city elkader sheldon McGregor hamrton sijley i MT. VERNON HARTLEY Hr SWRIT LAKE KJFVADA IDA 6R0VI STORM LAKE Fair ORANSE CITY Sfiti'f-Speif MADRID POCAHONTAS JTUAIT.

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About The Des Moines Register Archive

Pages Available:
3,434,270
Years Available:
1871-2024