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Iowa City Press-Citizen from Iowa City, Iowa • Page 2

Location:
Iowa City, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWO IOWA CITY nflllliUIIIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUllllllllinill Miss Mildred Burnett has return-! 13, 19 ISffl PERSONAL CHAT iTiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiT Mrs. Grace Chaffee has return-, Mr. H. L. Bremer has returned ed after a vacation of several i business trip to Chicago weeks i ago.

which she spent at Chi-j and to o'her cities in the east. i Messrs. Frank and Alois Kessler V. Miller, of West and Miss Margaret Kessler of be recal'ed as' Solon, are spending the day in Iowa Mrs. George Liberty, who will Miss Lois Abbott, is convalescing after an appendicitis operation at the Mercv hospital.

Mrs. Wesley Kadlec, of Jefferson township- is here to i isu her ton. County Recorder J. M. Kr.dtec.

Pr. and Mrs. E. Thoen. 1026 1 have rfcturne 1 to their home after spending the Miir.rner with the qpctor's father.

i Mr. Thoen. at Kenser. Iowa. Iowa, after visiting friends here.

Mr. J. O. Maruth again able to be at his place of business alter being confined to his home as the result of an operation for the removal of his tonsils. Miss Lillian Filean has returned to Iowa City from Perry.

Iowa, where she spent most of the summer at her home. Mr. R. H. Pohler and daughter.

die uio of Mis. Pohler's bi other. D'-. Howard White, at Davenpor. Misses Mary Carson an! Shrader motored to to visit Miss MearJon who is teaching 'here.

Mr. Omen Bishop of Church street began work as instiuc- tor in Coe Colbge at Cedar Kapdis today. He is in the department of ps biology. Miss McClenehan. cf lorme- state tondent of schools Mr.

P. E. i Clenehan of Des Moines. arrived here yesterday. She will be a in the L.

A. department of the universry this year. Mr. and Mrs. WilHam Kostf-f rkv anu Rose, aiso their illiaT.

r. of Los Angeles a is.ting relatives and friends. I FLORIDA'S ALLEGED "WHIPPING BOSS" ON TRIAL i FOR RIOTING MAC ON, GaT "ll--Testl- for the defendant was in- jtroduced today at the trial of Dr. C. A.

Yarbrough. charged with rioting growing out of the flogging-' of R. F. Mills. Dr.

W. A. Little, a physician, testified as a character witness. At Iowa university, the pre-', Oa cross examination he was ask- school laboratory of the Iowa if he had heard rumors that Child Welfare Research station 'r. Yarbrough was the "whip- will begin its third year on Mon- in of Macon.

"I've heard day. September 24th. that rumor," was the reply but it The laboratory is conducted was ruled out on objection that Pr. T. Baldwin and Dr.

L. I Jt was not Provable. Stecher. with the assistance Pr Ruskin S. a physician.

Miss Harriet Horn. Miss Camilla testified that Dr. Yarbrough's Sunier And other members of the i char ter was On cross ex station staU for educational woik with children 2 to 4 years of ege Twenty-Second Iowa Regiment Association Honors Campfire Ends Reunion Sons and daughters of the brave soldiers of the 22nd Iowa regiment It consists of a building especially ualiul1 Du Ku said he had hearrt onl through the news Papers of Dr. Yarbrough being Miss Helen McChesney and Mr. Fred McChesne'y re'uined from Des Momcs they attended Ken? o-thy-Bieiring edding.

Miss Helen Mackintosh of Hop- kiaton. will arrive here re- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eden, Miss Isabella Eden and her brother, CHfforr. Lone Tree, are Iowa City visitors today.

Miss Isabelle 1 ilans to enter the I morrow to she work. 4CO enter the university. wis: take rcst-grad-! She will reside a Dodge street. training department, this Mis A. Ppse, Mis.

Imogeae Holcomo. Holcorob's son. Verie comb, a a de lighttul weeks' vac.r.:oa en: in the MS-'ea the home Mrs, Pr-ge's s.s:er. Mis G. E.

House, G-eeley. Colorado, sper: ten Es'es park and wer: various George er, acconran.ej icsm here 3-reeIe ard Miss Veda James of Boone. arrived here jesterday to attend the university, she will be a sen- i Miss Vest has returned lor in the L. A. department.

to Iowa after s. ple-sant, ---summer's vacation during Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Zenishek of she sens at Bridgtcn. Solon have returned to their home! Maine. -ere she was Counsellor after visiting at the home Mr. at a rls' camp. ani Mrs.

John Haman. on Church Mr. William F. Wade, business the Press-Citiren. on 2.

two Denver. Colorado ids Springs Scl: Lake points of interest in Catherine Donica has come' here from her. home in Cedar Ra-I She will be a iunior the i L. A. department of the state uni-i vcrsity this year.

I and the Mr. Mrs. Peter Rogers and ani Mrs. Martin Rogers have for Fomosa. Kansas, tney visit the home '-3- Mary -vho was for-; merly Mary Ann Rogers, Mrs.

Lee R. Johnson has return ed to her -home at Xew York City, afrer s. three months' visit at the where I home her parents. Mr. and Mrs.

of Joseph Slavata. Mr. J. Burhop who has been i assistant operator at the local air A. Gay.

220 South a had as her 'deaases! ttottrisfus! gently Meach! Mrs Lian staeet. guests, her cousin. Mrs. Harcmon, also Mrs. Hammon's daughter.

Miss Mary EUen Ham- inon and Mrs. Grabtree, all of Washington, D. C. They Jaave no- left for their -homes in tha city, accompanied by Mr. Forman Gay, who will' spend two weeks at the home of Mrs.

Mrs. George Cronin 925 South Gilbert street, has just returned from ten months' visit in Germany. She left here the 12th of November ana went to Hamburg, Germany, where she visitel her I mail radio station. has been trans- ferrpri to Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. where he will have charge of the air mail radio station.

Yonr complexion, can be completely Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius lur- DCairfctnij OT7 ITT A I C7t, j.t_ es ese three kinds of care. This marvelous new cream. Joes all tkree! Delightfully fifegrant to use.

Delightfiil in results. Price lOWA'CITY, IOWA Whetstone's 2 Stores rensen. She also has three sisters and two brothers living there. One brother lives at Rentzberg and one is a teacher at. Hamburg.

She also Visited in Kiel Hanover and Heide. Mr. and Mrs. S. Love Kelley have arrived here from Chicago are visiting at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. T. Dell Kelley. 416 South Summit street. leave here today, accompanied Mr.

T. Dell Kelley. Mrs. Kelley will go Omaha to visit her sister and the Messrs. Kelley will go on to Salida, Colorado, where they will be joined by their brother, Dr.

X. H. Kelley who will accompany them on a hunting trip. RE For In Between Seasons FALL U'WEAR They're just the right weight for this month and next--light enough, yet warm enough. Made with half sleeves and both the three-quarters and full length style.

Made by Vassar and Cooper. $1.75 Others And Up Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Callahan North Liberty plan to move her the latter part of the week an reside in their new home i Sunnyside. Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Hunter an Miss Hortense Watson drove Davenport this morning and wi spend the day there. Mr. Lawrence Camp who ha been teaching in the high schoo at Beaconsfield, Iowa, during th past year, arrived here yesterda and will enter the universit where he will be a senior in th college of education. Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Slarata have moved from their home on North. Linn street, to their new- home at East Iowa City. Mr. anr Mrs.

J. M. Barry and family wil occupy the former Slavata resi dence on North Linn street. Mr. and Mrs.

Bela Smith and Mrs. Josephine Sanford have returned to their home in Cedar Rap ids after visiting at the home Mrs. Anna Aldeman and her daugh ter. Miss Helen Aldemaii, Eas College street. Miss Marjorie A.

Mars has re turned from a vacation of several weeks which she spent at varlou points in Illinois, most of the time being spent at Chicago anc Champaign. Mr. M. B. Drorsky has been subpoenaed to Judge Martin Wade's court (IT.

S. district) at Davenport, where he will servo the petit jury during the ber term. Mrs. Mary C. Hunter and sons Mr.

William L. Hunt, an instruc tor, and Mr. Theodore A. Hunter a graduate student of the uni versity, have returned from a motor trip through the west. The outing covered a period of two 1' weeks, good weather and roads 1 adding to the pleasure of the I trip, which included visits al Cheyenne, Estes park- Rocky Mountains National park Lookout mountain, Denver and Pike's Peak.

Mr. Tony Marias returned this morning from Chicago where he has been He attended the of his cousin at which there were about four hundred guests. He was also present at a christening at which there -were four children baptised. This was followed Ity a feast and a celebration. While in Chicago Mr.

Marias had the pleasure of visiting with some of his friends and relatives whom he had not seen for twenty-three years. "CLOTHIERS IOWACITYIOWA BRIGHT NEGRO IS CALLED BY MARSHALL NOW Marshall, Texas, will be the new home of Mr. Lynn P. Collins, one of Iowa university's ablest colored students. He has been called to the Bishop college there, and will fill the chair of oivics and an3 coach the athletic candidates.

His salary, for the opening year, will The young teacher, is but 21, and vas a sophomore hero last year. He is a Shenandoah boy, and his three brothers, Robert, George and Eugene, have been star athletes at Coe college. desiened and furnished for work with little children. Plan of Work The jounger children are to come at 9 o'clock and remain until 10:30, when the older ones arrive for an aour. and a half's session.

During the morning the children are occupied with simple and flexible schedule of singing. games, stories, nature talks. and occupational projects. Various mental examinations are made on each child together with physical measurements month on the date df its birth. Opportunity is given the parents fpr con- fernces on the physical and mental development of their child.

The work cf the pre-school lab oratory is extended and enriched in a more formal way for children 5 years of age in the junior primary room, conducted with the cooperation of Dr. Horn, Mr. M. C. Del Manzo and Miss Frances Hungerford.

in connection with the university elementary school. Psychological, social, educational and physical measurements are made as in the pre-school laboratory. The junior primary will open September 17th. Application for admission should be made at once to the principal of the. university elementary school.

The pre-school laboratory wiiJ open September 24th. Application for admission should be made to the Child Welfare Research, station. Children not previdusly registered in the schools will be admitted only after conference with the staff who will be able to see children and parents all day Friday, Sep tember 14th. this called tne "whipping boss." Joseph Erb, a pioneer working for the -Iowa City Light and Power company this morning, in front of North Linn street, was all but asphyxiated by the fumes while tapping a main. His fellow workers lifted him out of the trench and saved his life.

The pulmotor was brought to the scene from the city hall by Chiefs J. J. Clark and J. J. Lorack, but as not necessary as he had rallied.

The chief took him tome in the Clark auto, however. A great duty is before them, to "carry on," after these noble dr fenders of the flag are gone, and the association sees a clear path to the successful achievement of its hopes along that line. Accordingly. the association, whose biennial reunion closed last night, voted unanimously, at its final business session of 1923, to make these sons and daughters members of the 22nd Iowa association. Boys and Girls Appreciate Honor.

The boys and girls, young men and young women, thus honored, appreciate the tribute that is paid to their loyalty, and grasp the responsibility that has been placet! upon them. They will take up the welcome burden, and bear it well, without doubt. In token of the new honors that iiave come to the younger generation, the association, as reported herein, elected air. Richard Bowen, a well-known son 'of a fine, old veteran, long since mustered out the secretary- tre'asurership of the 22nd Iowa association for the coming biennium. Escort Elders to Hall.

The sons and daughters last evening escorted the grizzled warriors of 1862-1865, to the Chamber of Commerce, last night. There, the final campflre of the 1923 reunion was held. Roster ts Complete Completing the roster 'of enrolled attendants on the reunion, both as to members of the 22nd Iowa, and the affiliated Grand Army comrades from Samuel J. Kirkwood Post, "fliree other good soldiers 01 the big war added their names to the 1923 registry. They were as follows: A.

M. City. John Yearick, Iowa City. Charles Sailor, Lisbond. Oratory Is Pleasing After the feast, the post-prand- ial oratory appealed to one and all, and the speakers were warmly applauded.

Excellent addresses, brief but pertinent and forcefully eloquent, were deliered by Rev. S. E. Ellis, 'Attorney Walter M. Davis, Iowa City; Past Department Com-; mander E.

J. Bealer, Cedar Rapids; and Mrs. Will Weber, Iowa City, past department president of the W. R. and Mrs.

James Luscombe, president of the Iowa City corps. i The Welsh quartet prov choice music and was cheerec the echo as usual in each stance, both as to singing reception thereof. Warriors Are Grateful The grateful warriors att ing the reunion adopted fee tions, thanking, in the name their "few surviving var the Twenty-second Iowa' vo teers" the people and Johnston county for their pitality. and especially voU their gratitude to Kirkwood No. 8, the W.

R. Iowa and the Chamber of Comnce to Judge Ralph Otto, Legion mander LeRoy A. Rader, and speakers above mentioned, their patriotic addresses. Regretful Goodbyes Spoken ArJ now the biennial reun the Twenty-second Iowa ment association of 1923 is a ter of history. Iowa City the brave men goodbye reg fully.

CITY BRIEFS Master Noble Chalfant. son Mr. and Mrs. Noble Chalfant, leave soon for Limon, Co where he will spend the com year. He enter school the Mrs.

Chalfant has relatives Lincoln county, and the el Chalfants may remove there so time during the distant days come. Try a want ad. Colonel John P-. Irish, according to fine news from the Golden Gate is improving greatly in California, where the Oaklander recently was able to conduct a rousing rally in behalf of the Japanese sufferers. The former Iowa City editor and publisher (long owner of the Iowa City Press) was dangerously ill earlier in the year, and even his intrepid spirit weakened, an 3 he was despondent for a time.

Newit is indicated that the spleniid Hawtfeye pioneer is 'gqing good," and is taking old stand as one of Oakland's loremort citizens, in the activities of coast life. PIF. aum. TO PITTSBURGH Prof. Walter L.

Myers, of Iowa lity, after spending the summer in research work at Chicago university, is planning to go to Pitts- burgs, as a member of the faculty of the university of Pittsburgh. An Iowa colony will be developed there, if the Pennsylvanians continue to call S. U. I. 'men, as the past.

Prof. Myers was graduated here 1908, when he received his B. He taught in the English department, beginning in 1909, and won his M. A. here in 1912.

He preparing for the honor of a h. D. this year. A scholar of marked ability, his uture in the Pennsylvania insti- wherever he goes, still ligher, is assured. Mrs.

Myers and their son, John, will accompany the Hawkeye edu- -ator east soon. Friends will wish he family happiness and good for- une in the Smoky City. Scout work in Iowa City aa vicinity may be extended. At a meeting of the Boy Scout executive committee last Evening, Mr. H.

F. Pote 'of Des Moines, a prominent official, addressed that brganization, arguing for extension work in this bailiwick, and today both he ani Regional Director John Piper of Kansis City are conferring with N. W. Gowens, and other local officials. The council has plans in mind for developing the work, but' is not ready to make them public.

Friday and Saturday SPECIALS AT BRADY'S The Largest Grocery and Market in Town PHONES 820,821,822 FREE DELIYERY Groceries and Meats Fancy Alberta peaches per bushel $2 .50 3 large cans sliced pineapple $1 .00 5 Ibs. sugar Limit one purchase 45c 6 boxes matches 29c 2 Ibs. Peaberry Coffee 55c 10 bars P. G. or Big 4 White Naptha Soap 15 Ibs.

good potatoes 33c Dressed and drawn chickens, per Ib. 30c 10 Ibs. home grown i sweet potatoes 39c Mr. Fred Howald passed away this morning at 3:30 o'clock, aged 53 years, 10 months and 24 days. He passed most of his life nea Solon.

Surviving are two sisters, Mes dames William Eister, of Iowa City, and Eliza Clementz, of San Francisco. The funeral will be'held Sunday afternoon at 10 o'clock, from the Dqnotiue mortuary, and buria will be at Solon. Friends of the Tforthy man will tender sympathy HOME NEWS When a packing jcase arrives at a store, filled with new goods, the event nterests every reader of his newspaper--and that packing case is as full of material as is of new and novel tocks. Any good store is interesting that it is a ity to allow its advertis- ng to become dull. will want to look nice when the students return -x Why not let me.

take your measure for a new fall suit now-Remember my tails ored suits cost you no more and tney wear longer because they fit. Mike Malone Tailor 224 East Washington 2 Ibs. Nut Oleo 45c Pressed and drawn chickens, per Ib. Beef roast per Ib Large granges per dozen Rib boil 2 Ibs. for 39c 'Picnic hams per Ib 15c 3 cans good corn 29c 2 Ibs.

Pure Lard 35c mini LAMPS LAMPS Hours in Evening 1 Hour in AM. Hours in EM. Buy by the Carton For a Short Time Only We Are Offering a Limited Supply of Bryan Marsh Mazda Lamps in Carton Lots at' OFF You will need several cartons before the winter is over. They come five lamps in a carton. Here is a good chance to stock up on high grade electric bulbs at a IOWA CITY LIGtiT POWER CO.

Operated by United Light Railways i IN FW SPA PERI.

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About Iowa City Press-Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
931,772
Years Available:
1891-2024