The
town council announced that the Presbyterian Church bell would be used
in case of emergencies. The following year, in 1926, a new
electric siren was erected on a 10-foot tower on the Brenton-Loring
building, presently housing Hoover Hardware and Uptown Cafe. One
switch was in the telephone office on the second floor, the other at
street level.
The third major fire in the Dallas Center business district occured
November 16, 1937. Headlines - $50,000 Fire Loss; Four Buildings
Razed In Most Destructive Fire in History of Dallas Center.
It was 5:10 p.m. when the sounding of the electric siren brought an
excited crowd onto main street. Fire had broken out in the basement area
of the Schramm Drug Store at the southwest corner of the business
block. The four buildings where were destroyed were of solid brick
or brick veneered construction. Valuable merchandise, barber
equipment, furnishings of the Masonic Hall, some of the furnishings of
the post office, Brenton's Bank and groceries and sundries from
Helfenstein and Royer's were lost. Ironically, the town water tank
had been drained and repaired and was not yet refilled. Thus it
was necessary to summon fire trucks from Perry, Adel, Grimes, Waukee and
Granger. Post office records were lost but all first class mail
was saved by postmaster O. F. Ward and assistant, Mary Miller.
Articles from the bank and store were piled across the street in a
jumbled mess. A fire wall east of Helfenstein and Royer's stopped
the fire from progressing further east. Swigert's Cash Grocery
Store and Fox Insurance building which housed Mike Dignan's Barber Shop
in the basement were saved, although much of value had been removed as a
safety precaution.
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