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Williamsburg Journal Tribune from Williamsburg, Iowa • Page 5

Location:
Williamsburg, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Thursday, April 16, 1942 Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bullers and family moved the first of the week to the Mrs.

Herman Wardenburg house in the west, part of town. They Journal-Tribune, Williamsburg, Iowa Official City and County Paper Page Five have lived for the past ten years in an apartment in their photograph studio on the south side of the square. 60 BALES Of Binder Twine and that is all we get this season. We Have Some Planter WIRE It is very hard to get. CREAM SEPARATORS Used DeLaval Electric.

Cream Separators Hand DeLaval Cream Separators CORN PLANTERS A Few New and Used TRACTORS McCormick-Deering Bert Hanson Phone 24-Williamsburg Give Your Home a Lift With WALLPAPER During the Cleanup Fixup Campaign Spring is here and there is nothing that will brighten your home more than colorful new wallpaper. Our shelves are filled with hundreds of new 1942 patterns, which will assure you of a wide selection for every room in the house. Come in and see for yourself these bright colors and varied patterns all at prices that will save you money because we bought our 1942 wallpaper months ago and that means you save the rise in price. Star Drug Co. Phone 31 Williamsburg N.

ENGLISH RIVER Ky Mrs. C. H. McDonald Mrs. Carmichaol fell on the porch and seriously hurt her right leg.

She makes hor home with her daughter, Harold Moore. Mrs. Hugh Butler and daughter were with Mrs. Carmichael over the With the Boys In Service week end. Mr.

and Mrs. Louis Foubcrt and Mr. William Foubert were recent callers in Cedar Rapids t'j sec Mrs. Walter Kennedy, who remains quite poorly. Mrs.

Larry Elwood and Mrs. C. H. McDonald were Williamsburg shoppers Tuesday of last week. Many friends of Guy Miller called at Marengo hospital to see him.

He returned home Thursday. Rev. and Mrs. Kettell arc the owners of a new car. Miss Jerry Goodman remains quite poorly.

She has pneumonia. Mrs. A. E. Foubert assisted Mrs.

C. H. McDonald in paipering Friday. Most everyone in this vicinity answered the call Saturday for help when the call was given out over the telephone lines that Floyd D. Faas" residence was on fire.

The fire truck from Milleraburg and Williamsfourg arrived and it was soon under control. Mrs. A. E. Foubert and family spent Saturday in Williamsburg ai guest of her sister, Mrs.

Louis Furman. Mrs. Grace Knock spent Sunday with Mrs. Homer Cheney. Mrs.

Sylvester Herdlicka accompanied Mrs. John Myers to Marengo Monday and spent the afternoon with her mother, Mrs. Carrie Keil. Mrs. Carl Berstler of Chelsea spent a few days with her mother, Mrs.

Frank Herdlicka, and assisted with the care of meat. Jacky Dunn is on the sick list at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Berkey Healey. Mr.

and Mrs. Larry Elwood, Mrs. Charles McDonald and daughter Wil- 7ia and Miss Mildred Foubert attended the surprise card party and dunce on Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Murphy's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary at the J'arnell hall April 9.

SOUTH AMANA By M. G. Berger Mrs. Ray C. Ackermann spent a day of last week at the parental Henry Haldy home at Middle.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Young visited Sunday with relatives at Marengo. A load of hogs was trucked to market from the farm east of here operated by Egon Doehrmann for the local farm department. Mrs.

Helen Shoup visited over the week end with her daughter Wilma at Cedar Rapids. George Young and Henry Berger, Jr. started Monday to repair fences and clean the ten acre cemetery plot in the southeast part of Washington township. Visitors at Iowa City Saturday afternoon were Mrs. Theodore Berger and daughter Joanna, F.

J. Ruff. Shirley Shoup and Lillian Berger. Many of the local gardeners were busy last week with the setting out of onion sets and planting potatoes. A large number of fruit trees and berry plants were also planted.

The Lenox Lassies 4-H club and the 4-H club from Walford and the Amana's Best 4-Hers boys' 4-H club were guests at a party given by the Amana's Best Climbers girls' 4-H cluib at the Amana community club house at West Monday evening. E. C. Edwards received a letter on April 10 from Odas Furman. on thu U.

S. S. Salt Lake City, thanking the Knights of Pythias Lodge for the medal received by him from the lodge. The letter was mailed March 29. It is from the supreme lodge and the local lodge engraved the name of the member and his lodge on it.

They have sent three other medals to members in our country's service. Mr. and Mrs. John Huedepohl, Mrs. Herman Witte and Alfred Newkirk returned Friday from Boise, Idaho, where they had visited with Milton Huedepohl, located at Gowen Field.

Milton is a son of the John Huedepohls. He is expected to bo sent to Washington state. Mr. and Mrs. H.

F. Witte and Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs of Earlville left Sunday to visit with their son and daughter, Lieutenant and Mrs. Melvin Witte, at Camp Robinson, Ark.

Private John L. Naughton's address is Bat. 56th TR Camp Callan, California. Dean O'Donnell's address is the same. The M.

F. Naughton family received a letter this last week from their son, James, who is in Ireland. It was written on his trip over and he had not arrived yet. Raymond Wille, who has been transferred from Fort Snelling, Minnesota to Fort Riley, Kansas, spent from Sunday to Wednesday morning at the parental home. Wendell H.

Black of Marengo has enlisted in the army. James Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.

Cook, has enlisted in the army air corps. He will not be called for some time to give him a chance to complete his year at the University of Iowa. He is a sophomore there. Ernest Sandersfeld, stationed at San Diego, California, is spending a seven day furlough at the parental Henry Sandersfeld home in Iowa Murrin motored from Fort Benning, Georgia and arrived here Sunday to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

L. C. Murrin. Vincent Naughton, son of the James L. Naughton's, and Giles Quinn, son of the P.

J. Quinns, have received their call to be inducted into the U. S. armed forces April 22 and are to report in Marengo on that date. James Quinn, who was inducted into the army in Chicago April and was first sent to Camp Grant, 111., is now located in Jefferson Barracks, Missouri.

Sehoenfeldcr, who is in service in the U. S. Navy, is spending a five day leave in the Oscar Schocnfelder home while en route to Washington, D. where he will attend a radio school. Former Clerk of Court's army address is Private Kenneth McCune, Co.

Infantry, 90th Division, Fort Barkeley, Texas. COUNTY FEDERATED CLUB CONVENTION (Continued from Page One) said, is that they awaken too slowly and sometimes to late. The time will come, he said, when our daughters will be working as mechanics in factories turning out war products and our sons will be at the firing line. 'Russia saved us and we will have to save her. This summer will be the turning point of the war, that is, we know how long it will take to win.

Britain does not dare to let her army out of the country for if it is conquered it would leave our own coast vulnerable. We must not only win the war but must enforce the peace after it. Mrs. Glenn Ellis led the audience in singing the "Star Spangled Banner" at the close. Mr.

and Mrs. D. F. Haviland and son Francis, who have been visiting the E. C.

Edwards home, left Friday for the home of Mr. Haviland's parents in Mt. Pleasant. Tuesday they went to Des 'Moines to visit at the home of Mrs. Haviland's sister, Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur Clark. MUSIC STUDENTS GO TO PRE- STATE CONTEST Six Firsts Win Way to State Contest, Oskaloosa At the music contest icld in Wellman Friday and Saturday, the local school students, directed by A. J. Running, received six firsts and fourteen seconds in Class B.

The first rating events will go to the state contest to bo held in Oskaloosa April 30, May 1 and 2. They are Imogenc Blythc, string bass solo; woodwind quintet, Shirley Yoder, Oren Peterson, Loretta Sinn, Marion McConncll and Bob Yoder; girls' glee club; Juanita Lortz, soprano; Betty Meyer, mezzo soprano, and Iiima Heitshusen, contralto. Butty Sinclair, who won a second in the band conducting contest, will go to the state also, since there were no first given. Those receiving a second rating are Lois Meyer, French horn solo; Betty Sinclair, cornet trumpet solo; Bob Dane, 'baritone euphonium solo; concert band; Betty Wallace, piano; Bob Yoder, oboe solo; trumpet quartet trio, Betty Sinclair, Orlen Imhoff and Jacqueline Engelbert; Betty Wallace, alto saxophone solo; boys' quartet, Millen Weljen, Oren and Keith Peterson and John Roberts; girls' sextet, Lois Meyer, LaDonna Recce, Marion McConncll, Ruth Mattfeld, Irmn Heitshusen find Shirley Yoder; Millen Wetjen, tenor solo; boys' glee club and mixed chorus. Winnings in the county were Victoe second in woodwind; North English, second, brass sextet, and Victor, second in that wmio group; cornet trumpet solo, North English, first; concert band, Victor, second, and Conroy, first; piano solo, Lacloru, first; brass quartet, North English, second; boys' quartet, Victor and North English, second; baritone solo, North Knglisli, first; mixed quartet, North Knglish, second; girls' sextet, North English, second; girls' sextet, North English, first; mezzo soprano, North English, second; boys' glee club, Victor, first; mixed chorus, Victor, first; mixed chorus, Victor, first; boys' glee club, North English, first; contralto solo, North English, second; girls' glee club, Victor, second.

Murengo did not enter the contest this year. Mary Bean returned Saturday night from Excelsior Springs, where she had been spending the past two weeks. Pretty in Seersucker Dresses, priced Lytle's'Casb Store. 51-lt. Reduce the Cost of Pork Production and insure rapid growth by feeding Murphy's Cut Cost Concentrate, pig- meal, Sugared Schumacker and Rolled Oats.

We have a fresh supply of each. Call at our up-town store on Wednesday and Saturday Nights. HARRIS SON Phone 70 Williamsburg WITH YOUR. A Ml AL FUH A UIMl MAID-RITE VtNDwiCHU IMM ARiUIIU'lin. I I I I I I Maid-Rite i I I I HAMBURGER You now get York Creamery's CHOCOLATE MILK At the Old Price! I I East Side Cafe! Phone 134 Bus Depot F.

L. Mahannahs Celebrate Golden Wedding Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Mahannah of Perry celebrated their golden anniversary Tuesday at the (home of Mrs.

Mahannah's mother, Ms. C. D. Popham, in Wellman. Quinnic Po-pham and F.

L. Mahannah were married Thursday evening, April 14, 1892, at 6:30 at the donee of the bride's father, C. D. Popham, nine miles southeast of Williamsburg. The Rev.

J. W. Potter of Wellman officiated. Mr. and Mrs.

Mahannah left the next day for their home in North English, where Mr. Mahannah was in business. Attending the golden wedding celebration from here were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnson, who attended the wedding of the couple fifty years ago, and Mrs.

Harry Lee, who drove them to Wellman. R.HESS I FrL, Sat. and Sunday 1 SPECIALS GUM, AH Flavors .3 for lOc ICE CREAM quart bricks 29c CONES, Double Dip each 5c Giant Malted Milks lOc ANKLETS All Sizes, All Shades, All Prices, lOc up LADIES' SILK HOSE Full Fashioned Greeting Cards for All Occasions Bricker's 5c to $1 Store Eggs for the breakfast table mean energy to build planes and ships and tanks. We'll help lick 'em with eggsl That means produce more eggs. That means give the hens what it takes to make egjs.

That means, oa the Dr. Hess Research Farm, add DR. HESS POULTRY PAN-A-JON to the ration. PAN-A-ION is a two-job product, it supplies the hen with both tonics tod minerals. Tonics stimulate Appetite and the consumption of feed.

Minerals arc as essential to egg production as the proteins and hydratea in grain. Dr. Hess Clark get as many as 33 oBtnfeggs per bird per year from their PAN-A-UW birds. We think you 11 get more eggs if you use PAH- A-nnt. Will you try it? WE'LL FIGHT 'EM WITH HOG MEAT! PORK CHOPS or a slab of Uncle Sam says that'll help give us trie energy we need to fight these dictators! Produce pork as economically as you all the hog profit you can.

Save feed and get shoals on the market sooner by adding Dr. Hess Hog Special to the ration. Hog. Special is a two-job product. Its tonics help the hog make better use of bis feed.

It also supplies essential minerals. A hog needs minerals, just as be needs the proteins and carbohydrates in grain. We believe Hog Special will help you produce pork more profitably. Star Drug Co, Phone 31-Williamsburg It's Time to Change to Lubrication! Phone 27 for Service WASHING and Our Specialty Phone 27 for Service BATTERIES A Size for Every Make of CAR Phone 27 for Service Visit Our FIRESTONE Store Complete Line of Auto Accessories Phone 27 for Service O'NEILL Oil Co. For All Your Car Needs Phone 27 for Service.

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About Williamsburg Journal Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
24,790
Years Available:
1930-2022