IAGenWeb

Ida County IAGenWeb

 USGenWeb

News Articles 1913 - 1929

The following are articles used in the Ida County Genie Newsletters

 

Ida County Pioneer Record

June 11,1913, page 1 

KILLED BY TRAIN

Northwestern Train Struck Two Little Children

Boy Was Killed Instantly 

 Tuesday afternoon the west bound Northwestern passenger train running over and hour late, ran down two little children at the second crossing east of Battle Creek, the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stolley.

  The boy, Bernard, was 6 years of age, and the girl Lucille, was 13.  The boy was instantly killed, and the girl terribly injured, but yesterday afternoon they did not know whether she would live.

  As near as could be learned the youngsters were out picking flowers and had walked down a little way to the second crossing at the east end of town.

  This is one of the worst accidents of the kind that ever happened in this county, and the blow seems more than the grief stricken parents can bear.

  This is the fourth bad crossing accident in the county in the past year or so, the killing of the Johnson family at the Galva crossing, the killing of Elsie Lamp at the Holstein crossing on August 14th of last year, the running down of the little Damerow boy at Ida Grove this spring, and now this awful thing at Battle Creek.

  The father, F.J. Stolley, used to run a blacksmith shop in Battle Creek but is now in the automobile business.  He married a daughter of Wm. Krause of this city.  In their grief they have the sympathy of all Ida County.

 

 Ida County Pioneer Record

March 10,1926

NEW BUILDINGS ON MRS. MARGARET HALL’S FARM 

  These useful up-to-date buildings were erected last fall on the Mrs. Margaret Hall farm in Silver Creek Township, occupied by Will Julian. The general purpose barn is 26 x 40 and the hog house is 24 x 40.  The hog house has 16 pens eight feet square with a 4-foot passageway. There is a heavy plank floor.

  The Ben S. Noble firm furnished all the material for the new improvements on the Hall farm.  The carpenter work was performed by the local firm of Elser and Son.

  

Ida County Pioneer
February 18,1914, page 1

COUGHING SHE DIED

Mrs. Carl Raabe Died of Internal Hemorrhage

  The neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Raabe on Moorehead Avenue were shocked and pained to learn Tuesday morning that Mrs. Raabe had passed away during the night. The couple retired Monday night shortly after nine o’clock and about midnight she was attacked by a violent spell of coughing. She arose from the bed and had barely assumed a standing position when the husband noticed her sinking and he barely had time to reach her before a hemorrhage set in. Mr. Raabe telephoned for a doctor but by the time the physician reached the home she was beyond all earthly help, an internal hemorrhage having taken place.

  Maggie C. Rohwer was born in Holstein Germany, and when she and the husband came to America, they located in Crawford County first, farming there one year, and then moved to Grant Township, where they have lived four years. They then became residents of Corwin Township, and in 1909 they moved to Ida Grove.  About a year ago they purchased a home on Moorehead Avenue, and last week Mr. Raabe closed a deal for the Blackman residence on Taylor Street in order they might be on the heat line and would have moved into that home about the first of the coming month.  No children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Raabe and the deceased has no surviving relatives in this country.

  The funeral services will be held Thursday, prayer being held at the family residence at 1 p.m. and from the home the body will be taken to the German Lutheran Church, where services will be conducted by Rev. A.W. Brauer, and interment will be made in the Ida Grove Cemetery.

 The bereaved husband has the sympathy of a wide circle of friends and acquaintances.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
1928

VETERAN CARRIER GETS EXTENSION
 

  Harry Conard, carrier on Ida Grove Route 5, this week was notified that the government had given him another extension of the age limit for retirement, granting him two more years of time.  Mr. Conard will be 71 years old on the eighteenth of April.  Mr. Conard was supposed to retire at the statutory limit of 65 years, but was granted a one year extension and then two more years apiece.

  The latest extension is thus his fourth. Mr. Conard has been carrying mail since January 1,1912 and still boasts of good health, although subjected to all kinds of weather in his line of service.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
June 5,1918 page 1
 

IDA COUNTY BOY DIES WHEN SHIP IS SUNK

Elbert Stone, Victim of Submarine’s Torpedo
 

  The first star in Ida County’s overseas service flag have been affixed, and the home of Mrs. Viola Stone, southwest of Ida Grove, is in mourning for a son and brother. Last Saturday Mrs. Stone received a cablegram that her son, Elbert Stone, had arrived in France, and Sunday afternoon this message was followed by a telegram from the war department at Washington that he had died from injuries received in the torpedoing of the transport Modina, off the west coast of England. Only last week the mother received a policy for $5,000 that the son had taken out for her before leaving for duty in France.

  Elbert Stone was born in McCook County, Nebraska, September 25,1893, where he resided until last March, when the family came to Ida County, locating on a farm in Garfield Township.  Just one day before he entered upon his twenty-fifth year, September 24,1917, he left Ida Grove with the second contingent of draft men for Camp Dodge, where he remained until November 24th of that year and was sent to Little Rock, Ark., and from that cantonment was transferred to Camp Greene, Charlotte, S.C., from which place his unit, Co. B, 58th Infantry, was sent to Long Island, where it was placed on board transports for overseas service.  The latter part of last week, while in the English Channel and after a safe voyage across, a Hun submarine succeeded in torpedoing the transport which Private Stone had made the trip.

  No details other than that contained in the message from the war department have been received; a simple statement of death was due to injuries received when the torpedo struck the ship.  The message also stated that the burial would take place in the American Cemetery on French soil.

***Another article said the following additional information***

  Prior to leaving Camp Green for Long Island the family received a letter from him in which he stated that he was enjoying the best of health, and that they expected to moved in a short time, and hoped that it would be their last transfer until they reached France, for he was anxious to get into actual service.   At that time, Harry Stainbrook, another Ida County boy was with him.

  While at Camp Dodge he was called home to attend the funeral of his father, Horatio Stone, and this was his last visit, being moved shortly to Little Rock.  Besides the mother, he is survived by a half brother, Henry Stone, and two brothers and two sisters, all residing in Ida County, Mrs. Chas. Hoy, Blanche Stone and Horatio and Glenn Stone, the first brother mentioned joining the service last week at Omaha.

  They sympathy of the entire community goes out to the mother, brothers and sisters in their sacrifice but their grief is softened by the realization that this boy has offered up his life that the world may be better and safe from the encroachment of the detested Huns.

  

Ida County Pioneer
Died December 25, 1918, newspaper January 8,1919 page 1

BOY ACCIDENTLY KILLED
 

  News reached Ida Grove a few days ago of a tragic accident which happened just before Christmas in a distant corner of Ida County. Ralph Kuehl, aged 13, a son of Mrs. Merle Chapman of Battle Creek, was the victim of the accident. He and Hans Greenwald, another lad, went down to the home of their neighbor, Fred Petersen, who gave them permission to shoot pigeons.  Ralph Kuehl went into a shed to scare the birds out, telling Hans to shoot when the birds came out.  The first charge that Hans fired accidentally passed into the coop, striking young Kuehl in the forehead.  He was not killed instantly and Mr. Petersen rushed to the scene, from the spot where he was grinding feed, and carried the wounded boy to the house.  A doctor was called at once and about 5 p.m., the same day, the boy was removed to his own home, where he died Christmas morning, at four o’clock.

  Ralph Kuehl was born in Woodbury County, August 11,1905, and was 13 years, 4 months and 13 days old at the time of death.  The funeral was held Friday, December 27,1918 and conducted by Rev. Hoelscher.  The remains were laid to rest in Morgan township cemetery near Schleswig

He leaves to mourn his untimely death, his mother, two sisters, Henrietta and Evelyn, and a brother, Merle.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
October 25,1928

VOTES 50 YEARS AT SAME POLLING PLACE

  Christie Bleakley, a resident of Ida County for more than fifty years, states that he has voted for fifty years at the same polling place, the Center school house in Silver Creek Township, Ida County, and that he has always voted the republican ticket.  He says that he expects to do the same this fall.  The first president Bleakley voted for was Garfield. With his vote next month it will make his thirteenth presidential vote at the same polling place.

  

Ida County Pioneer
December 31,1885

Alex Hartley sold a three year old steer last Monday that weighed 1,575 pounds, also a pair of twin 2 year old steers that weighed 220 pounds.

 

Ida County Pioneer
December 31,1885

 We are pained to announce that old gentleman, D.P. Sacquety died this morning at his home in the old town at half past nine o’clock.

 

Ida County Pioneer
October 22,1919 

AUTO UPSETS-HOUSER KILLER

DISTRESSING ACCIDENT BEFALS IDA GROVE PEOPLE THURSDAY ON HIGHWAY EAST OF MOVILLE

 

  The pleasure of the crowds returning from the Sioux City fair last Thursday evening was marred by an accident that befell the automobile owned and driven by Henry Witte of two and a half miles southeast of Ida Grove. One of the occupants, Harry Houser, received injuries which resulted in his death thirty hours afterwards and Mr. Witte was severely cut about the hand and had his shoulder bruised.   The car was badly damaged.

 The accident took place on the Hawkeye highway about six miles east of Moville at about seven o’clock in the evening, when there was considerable traffic of cars returning from the fair.  In the Witte car, which was a late model Hudson touring car, were Mr. and Mrs. Witte, Mr. and Mrs. Houser, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wunschel and Will Wunschel, all of Ida County.  All of these people are neighbors southeast of Ida Grove. They left Sioux City at six o’clock and the car immediately following them was also a Hudson and driven by Claude Crawford, a farmer four miles southwest of Ida Grove, and containing his parents Mr. and Mrs. W.P. Crawford and others.  According to the elder Mr. Crawford, they were about one hundred yards behind the Witte car when the accident happened.  When questioned about the accident, Mr. Crawford said in the Pioneer:

  DESCRIBES THE ACCIDENT

“We saw the Witte car pass a Ford car and just then it seemed to lean over the edge of the road and it appeared to right itself and ran on the four or five rods and then it commenced to lean again, suddenly rolled down the bank, turned over with the wheels sticking in the air and the rear wheel came over against a wire fence.   Almost immediately a fire broke out and I got ready and jumped from our car as we approached.  My son ran our car to a safe distance from the wreck, stopped it and came over where I was. By this time I was helping out the women and the men, but have no distinct recollection of just how I did it or how many I assisted.  I remember pulling one of lady between the broken bows of the top.  We heard a man groaning under the car yet and by this time the flames were leaping up two or three feet above the engine.  My son stopped the engine and went around to the gas tank and tuned all the gasoline out upon the ground, so that the cur burned, there would not be an explosion. However, this gas did not catch fire.  My son and myself, and the three men who were in the Witte car beside Houser, lifted up the car and pulled him from under it, then letting the machine down again. Three of us carried him across the road and laid him down in a nice grassy place one of the men in the crowd went for a doctor.”

  SCENE OF THE FATALITY

  The place where the accident occurred is a fairly level stretch of road, graded not long ago with a good sized crown in the middle, where most automobiles drove their cars when the road was clear.  Where the Witte car took the fatal plunge, there is a bank about three feet high at the north side of the road, which is on the drivers left as he comes east. The Witte car came to rest with the back end against the wire fence, which had to be cut before the car could be turned over.  The ground where the car came to rest was slightly sloping in a direction away from the highway, a direction away from the highway, so the car lay with the greater part of its weight on its right side, the same side on which Houser rode, as he was in the front seat with the driver.

  SKULL WAS FRACTURED

 The weight of the car was sufficient to crush the top of the windshield, but the high back of the rear seat protected the inmates of the rear seat.   Mr. Houser was pinned down under the machine and a considerable part of the weight must have struck him, a blow to the left side of his head being sufficient to fracture his skull and to tear the ear almost off.  Both he and Mr. Witte were cut by glass and Mrs. Houser was probably injured internally, as he had several hemorrhages.  Mr. Witte was cut on the right wrist and several stitches being necessary to close the wound and his shoulder was bruised. He probably received only a glancing blow when the car turned turtle.

  Mr. Witte, the driver of the machine, was nearly crazed with grief over the misfortune and his nerves are still badly shattered from the shock.   Mrs. Houser was rendered almost frantic by the accident to her husband and required attention for several hours.  The other inmates of the car escaped without hurt and were brought back to Ida Grove the same night.

  According o Mr. Crawford, the Witte car was traveling between 25-30 miles per hour at the time of the accident, as the Crawford machine had trailed them the whole way from Sioux City and proceeded at about that rate.

  WILL WUNSCHELL’S VERSION

 Will Wunschell, one of the inmates of the Witte car said that they had been following a Ford machine for a few miles, which would not let them past.   They did not know who were in the Ford car, but he has the impression that they stopped and came back after the accident happened. He says that he thinks the Witte car was going about 25 miles an hour, when it struck some soft dirt at the left side of the road, which would not hold up the heavy car and it went down.  He is certain that Mr. Witte had tooted the horn before attempting to pass the Ford which was in the center of the highway.

  DIED ON WAY HOME
 Mr. Houser was carried to the home of Frank Chase, nearby, and that family kindly turned over their residence that night to the injured people and their families.  Two doctor’s soon arrived and the wounds of the two injured men were sewed up.  It was recognized from the first that Mr. Houser was in a dying condition, but his remarkable vitality asserted itself and he continued to live for hours.  Finally, on Friday night it was decided that an attempt should be made to bring him to Ida Grove to a hospital, where an operation might be performed to relive the pressure on his brain.   He died about one o’clock Saturday morning, while en route between Holstein and Id Grove.

  IDA GROVE PEOPLE HELPED

 The Houser family, from the minute the accident took place had the care and attention of numerous friends from Ida Grove, as there were many persons from this county, who had gone to the fair that day in automobiles. One of the cars contained Mr. and Mrs. Will Forney Jr., and Mrs. Forney proved to be a most excellent impromptu nurse, assisting in the care of Mr. Houser and helped to comfort and sustain Mrs. Houser in her awful strain.  John Schultz and wife, Ferd Brechwald and wife were in another car and stopped all night at the Chase house and helped in any way that presented itself.   Mr. and Mrs. Ab Eisenhower of Ida Grove came along in time to help out the burning car, this being accomplished by means of throwing dirt and several buckets of water on it.

  SKETCH OF MR. HOUSER

 The death of Mr. Houser has cast gloom over this community as he was a popular, industrious and very worthy farmer who has resided in the vicinity of Ida Grove about seventeen years.  He was 47 years old, having being born at Lyons, Iowa, April 17,1872.  His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Houser, are still living.  About thirty years ago he moved to Clinton and lived there thirteen years and came from there to Ida Grove in 1901. He was married to Miss Nina Keller at Clinton on October 12,1898.   She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Keller, who resided in this county until last spring.  When he arrived in Ida County, Mr. Houser went upon the A. Sykes farm, where he remained a few years. Severn years ago he purchased the Mill farm two miles north of Ida Grove.  He sold this two or three years ago and bought a place near Whiting, but continued to farm the Mill place until this past spring, when he went upon he Keller farm, three miles southeast of Ida Grove. For several years during his residence in Corwin Township, he served as township road superintendent.

  Mr. Houser if survived by his wife and six children, the oldest of whom is nineteen; Arthur, Ben, Russell, Lloyd, Leola and Burdette. Mr. Houser was the eldest of six brothers and sisters, the others being: Mrs. Lela Dodd of Wheaton, MN: John Houser, Mrs. Clara Gilbert, Ernest, and Verne Houser of Clinton.

The funeral will be held at his lat home southeast of Ida Grove on Monday afternoon at 2 o’clock by Rev. J.T. Pierce, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and under the auspices of the Modern Woodmen.  Interment followed in the Ida Grove Cemetery.

 

Ida County Pioneer
February 23,1928

AUCTION SALE

  Owing to the recent death of my son, I have decided to discontinue farming operations and will hold a public sale at the Ivan Hess property, at the southwest corner of the Ida Grove Corporation on Thursday, March 1, with sale commencing at 1 p.m.

  Items on sale will be; eight head of horses, pair of blacks, a mare and gelding, 4 and 8 years, weight 1400: black mare 8 years old, wt. 1400: pair of jack mules, 6 years old, wt. 2800: black mare 4 years old, green broke: black mare 3 years old, wt. 1150, not broke: blind horse 12 years, a good work horse.

 Twelve head of cattle, four good milk cows, all to freshen soon: 2 good heifers: 4 last spring calves; 2 small calves.  Two head of hogs.

  Machinery; 2 wagons, one wide and one narrow tire; 9 ft. disc; riding cultivator; Emerson gang plow; John Deere seeder; Janesville corn planter; 3 sec. drag; 4 section drag; bobsled; 3 set of harness, 4 sets of fly nets, good stock saddle, chicken coops, feed troughs, stable blankets, haying forks, shovels, and numerous other articles.

Terms; sums of 10 and under, cash; over that amount 8 months time will be given on bankable notes bearing 8 per cent interest from date of sale.  Mrs. J. Wilkinson

          Todd & McIntosh, Auctioneers       Anderson, Lipton & Co. Clerk

 
 

Ida County Pioneer Record
1923

THREE YEAR OLD BERNICE HINES MEETS DEATH MONDAY AFTERNOON, NEAR HOLSTEIN

 

  Bernice, the little three year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hines, who live on his father‘s farm, five and a half miles southeast of Holstein, was drowned Monday afternoon, December 24.  The little one had wandered away from the house to the banks of a small stream that passes through the farm.  At one place, the shores were muddy from the going and comings of the cattle and the little girl slipped and fell into the water.  The stream was about three feet deep at this point and she must have quickly drowned.

  When the mother missed the child, she began a frantic search and called the neighbors. The body was finally found a short distance down the stream under the ice, where it had drifted. It was impossible to revive the child, as she must have been dead about two hours.

  Bernice is survived by her parents and a small brother and sister. The funeral will be held Thursday afternoon at the Lutheran Church in Holstein and burial will be in the Holstein Cemetery.

 

 Ida County Pioneer
Year ?

SHE SUES FOR $8,000

LUCILLE STOLLERY ASKS DAMAGES OF RAILROAD

Victim of Crossing Accident
 

  Among the new petitions that have been filed in Clerk Snell’s office during the past week is that of Lucille Stolley, by her next best friend, H.F. Stolley, against the Chicago & Northwestern RR Co., in which damage is claimed amounting to $8,000. The plaintiff in this action is Lucille, the 13 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H.F. Stolley, residing at Battle Creek, this county, and the grounds for the action will be remembered by the people of that town in particular.  The petition states that on the 10th day of June, 1913, that in attempting to rescue her little 5 year old brother from in front of the passenger train, and in which she failed, the little fellow being killed, she was struck by the said train and received a broken leg, two ends of the broken bone protruding from the flesh, and the foot being turned at a right angle with the limb: and she sustained on the other leg twelve cuts, bruises and gashes, several of which were clear to the bone in her body; and shoulders were cut and bruised and cut and there was a bruise, cut and depression on the forehead just above the right eye, which has left a scar about one-half an inch long and three-eights of an inch wide.

  The plaintiff claims that the injuries received were of a permanent character, and they also assert in their petition that the engineer did not sound the whistle nor was the bell rung for the crossing where the accident occurred.   At the time of the accident the plaintiff was given great praise for the heroism that she displayed, as her little brother had become fastened in a cattle-guard near the crossing, one of the little feet being caught between the guards, and although the train was nearly upon them this little 13 year old girl never ceased in her effort to get her brother out of danger until she was struck and hurled from the track.

 It is hardly thought that the case will get to trial at this term of courts as the docket is heavy and the McHugh will contest will take up to a week or ten days should it get to trial.

  M.M. White is attorney for the plaintiff.

  

Ida County Pioneer
1928

WAR VETERAN DIES AS FIRE WRECKS HOME

Tempest Meyers Loses Life in Flames

 

Tempest Meyers, a pioneer resident of Ida Grove, was burned to death early this morning in a fire that destroyed his home.  Mr. Meyers settled in Ida County about 1878 and was 85 years old and a bachelor.  He was a civil war veteran, having fought in the union army from 1862-1863.

He leaves no relatives in Ida County, but is survived by several brothers and sisters in Pennsylvania, his former home.  Mr. Meyers lived in a small house at the edge of town.

 

Ida County Pioneer
January 22,1923 page 1

SECOND WEDDING IS A LEGAL ONE

Garnett Brown and Floyd Waits Allege They Were Victims of Bogus Ceremony

 

  Floyd J. Waite of Woodbury County and Miss Garnet Brown of this city, were married Monday afternoon by Justice Geo. C. Hubbard in the office of Clerk Scott.  Miss Brown, the bride, who is still under sixteen years of age, and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Brown, left Ida Grove just before Christmas. It is claimed she met Waite at Sioux City, where, according to their story, they were married in a small house in the outskirts of the city, by a friend of the groom, who had claimed to be a minister, and who had obtained the marriage license for them. They left the day before Christmas in an automobile owned by Hull, the man who married them, and landed in Des Moines where the car was damaged by an accident. Young Waite secured employment there and they were occupying two rooms in an apartment house. The parents here were unable to lean anything of the whereabouts of their daughter until last week when they received a letter from her dated at the state capital city.  The father placed the matter in the hands of Sheriff Dahlquist’s office and requested that they make an investigation, and if he found that they were really married, no trouble would be made.  The sheriff of Polk County was notified of their address and he took the couple into custody after investigating their story, finding that no marriage license had been issued in Woodbury County.   Sunday night Deputy Sheriff Gemmill went to Des Moines and brought the “kids” back to this city, where the services of Judge Hubbard were enlisted to finish the matrimonial knot. The groom is an adopted son of Mr. and Mrs. J.F. Waite, residing near the town of Pierson, Iowa, and Mr. Waite was here Monday to see the boy when he was brought back.  He is a clean, neat appearing young man, past 17 years of age, an energetic worker, his adopted father say, and never has been in any trouble. Miss Brown was born and raised at this city, her parents being among the pioneers of the community. If the party who led them into the mock marriage can be located, he will no doubt be hauled before the court for his work.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
Year ?
CLAUSEN-MACKLEM
 

Bernard John Clausen of Griggs Township, and Vera A. Macklem, were married by Rev. C.A. Van Griethuysen Wednesday, September 17, and will make their home on a farm in the northwestern part of the county.  The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clausen, well known pioneers of Ida County, and the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Macklem of this city, and for a number of years she has been a successful and popular teacher in the rural schools of the county.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
November 6,1918

SOLDIERS BODY BROUGHT HOME
All Battle Creek Turns Out For The Funeral Of Jens Saxen, Who died in England

 

 The remains of the first Ida County soldier to reach home from a foreign shore, those of Jens Saxen, reached Battle Creek Monday, April 12.  The body was shipped from England where he died October ? 1918 in the U.S. hospital near Liverpool. Saxen entered the service of the United States in the big call of July 26,1918 and was sent to Camp Gordon, where, after a short period of training, the men were sent to Europe.   He was a member of the 19th Company S.A.R.D.

  The body arrived in Battle Creek, entrapped in a large U.S. flag and accompanied from New York by a military escort of the 17th U.S. Infantry

  The members of the Battle Creek post of the American Legion met the remains and escorted them to the home of his father Thomas Saxen.

  After 10 o’clock a.m. the flag was dropped at half mast on the city flag pole, and raised at full mast at 12 o’clock.  The legion marched at attention with colors furled to the home and escorted the body to the Presbyterian Church where funeral services were conducted by Rev. Koyker.  He paid a glowing tribute to the men of the service and especially the one in whose honor he spoke. At the conclusion of the service the Legion again took charge of the remains and the march was taken up to the final resting place of the brave young man who gave his life in defense of his country’s honor.  The service at the grave by Rev. Koyker was short but impressive.  He uttered a short prayer and Bugler Stone blew “taps”.

  The return from the cemetery was made by the Legion at quick time with the colors flying at the head of the column.  As a mark of respect to the dead soldier all of the business houses closed during the services at the church and cemetery.

 

 

Ida County Pioneer Record
Year?

BROKE INTO BARBER SHOP

About ten o’clock Sunday night, Boslaugh barber shop was broken in by having the screen cut and the glass smashed in the north window on the side of the alley.  The intruder removed $2.15 in nickels lying in a showcase.  Suspician was at once directed to two boys, Scotty Fobes, aged 12, and Walt Moore, aged 14.   They were round up by Sheriff McLeod and Fobes confessed that he broke into the shop leaving Moore on the outside.  All but 30 cents of the missing money was found on the boys.  As this is not the first trouble they have been in, they will be taken before Judge Hutchinson if he comes to hold court on Friday, and action under the Juvenile delinquencies.

  

Ida County Pioneer
November 7,1923

LAD MEETS A SUDDEN DEATH

Seven Year Old Cecil Pfleeger Thrown By Revolving Wheel and Skull Crushed
 

Cecil Ernest Pfleeger, the seven and a half year old son of Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Pfleeger of a mile east of Ida Grove, met almost instantaneous death Monday afternoon at 4:15 in a mysterious accident on the Arthur road.

  The little fellow in company with his older brother Earl, and several other children, was returning from school, Blaine No. 6, taught by Miss Putzier.   They were overtaken by two wagons loaded with shelled corn, being hauled by Joe Monroe and his son Randall, from the Leonard Smith farm to the Sykes farm.  It is said that Mr. Monroe offered the children a rid, but they declined to get on the wagon. As the second vehicle passed them, it is said that little Cecil ran along beside it in the road.

  Exactly what happened will never be known.  It is supposed that the little fellow stumbled and one foot slipped into the revolving wheel.   He was carried with its revolution and as the wheel completed its circle, the little boy was lashed against the ground, the back of the head striking the hard gravel surfacing.  The boy sustained a fracture at the base of the brain, producing a hemorrhage, that caused death in a very few minutes.

  Stricken with grief, Mr. and Mrs. Monroe rushed the little fellow into Ida Grove and to a doctor’s office, but it was seen that the child was already dead. The father of the lad was notified of the sad accident as he was picking corn on the Lipton Ranch.

  The accident happened near the residence of Mrs. Ed Bond, on the old Crowley place, and Mrs. Bond was among the first to reach the scene.

  The Cecil was a bright little fellow and the idol of his family. The funeral will be held this afternoon at the home at 2:30 o’clock, in charge of Rev. Yates.  The child was a grandson of George Allen, who recently moved to Indiana and a nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Julian

 
Ida County Pioneer Record
August 25,1925

COUNTY’S HEALTHIEST FARM GIRLS

 Some of Ida County Girls have reason to be proud of their achievements in sewing, others have won some local farm at basketball or music, but for five girls, they have the honor that is perhaps superior to any of these; for in the health contest at the recent Achievement Days of the Farm Bureau they were declared the healthiest of all girls in the contest. The girls are; Marjorie Kimball, Battle Creek; Irene Lemberg, Holstein; Doris Bockwoldt, Galva; Kathleen Gallagher, Arthur; Leona Stouffer, Ida Grove.  Doris was awarded first place and Irene second.

  

Ida County Pioneer
Year 1923

DECLARES HER MARRIAGE FALSE

15 Year Old Companion of Convicted Store Robber Goes Home To Mother
 

  Miss Opal Cavert, who has been working in the home of Chris Miller in the eastern part of the county, left Wednesday for the home of her grandparents at Hiawatha, Kansas.  The young lady, who claims that her age is 15, has had an experience that should prove a warning to girls who take up with strangers. She met Herbert Carson, who was traveling through Kansas as a farm hand, and he induced her to leave her home and went to Council Bluffs where she was supposed they were married, a ceremony being performed in that city.  They came to Ida County, Carson secured a farm in Blaine Township and the girl in the home of Mr. Miller, whose wife was ill.   Then followed the breaking and entering of the Kuhl store at Arthur and the sentencing of four men to Fort Madison for a term not to exceed ten years by Judge M.E. Hutchinson less than forty-eight hours after their capture, and the looking up of Carson’s pedigree shows that he is a married man with a family, therefore the marriage to Miss Cavert was a fake. She has gone back to her home she left, no doubt a sadder and wiser girl.  She is matured far beyond that of the average girl of her age and would be taken for several years older than her real age.  At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Miller she made friends and they were favorably impressed with the unfortunate young lady. 

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
Year ?

FIRST COLORED WEDDING
 

The first marriage in Ida County wherein the contracting parties were of African descent, took place in the office of Clerk Scott at the courthouse.

Thursday, O.H. White, age 24 of Fort Scott, Kansas and Albert Nelson of Crowberg, Kansas, applied for a license, and asked that Clerk Scott find someone to perform the ceremony, he then sent for Judge Geo. C. Hubbard, who died the honors with due pomp.  He omitted, however, the ring of the bride.

  The couple has been at Holstein for some time past, the groom working for the paving company at that place.

 

 

Ida County Pioneer Record
Year ?

STOLE SEVERAL MONEY ORDERS

Post Office and Barber Shop at Arthur Are Entered by Thief Last Friday Night
 

A tramp who blew into Arthur a few weeks ago, giving the name of Adrion McDermott, and his home as Nowhere, U.S.A., left town early Saturday morning without leaving a forwarding address.

  The cause of the hurried departure was not discovered until late Saturday morning, however, giving him sufficient time to make good his escape.

  Sometime after two o’clock entrance was gained into the post office through the back door by working out the key from the lock and using a skeleton key.  From the post office eleven money order blanks, money order stamp and pad, 8 registered letters containing insurance assessment notices, and $8.00 in cash were taken. The thief covered his track fairly well, disturbing nothing else and the theft was not discovered until Postmaster Anderson was asked to make out a money order.

  The August Fischer barber shop was also visited.   Entrance was gained through a back window. Here $3.50 belonging to the Tennis Club was taken, also a check given by McDermott to Mr. Fischer for $5.00, two boxes of choice cigars and a large quantity of cigarettes.

  McDermott the night before the robbery was assisting Mr. Fischer in cleaning a quantity of popcorn for shipment.  They were together until past one o’clock and from that time on no trace of him had been seen.

  As soon as the crimes were committed and the local authorities ascertained that McDermott had left town, Sheriff Dahlquist was notified.  From clues gathered by a secret service man, McDermott made his way in the direction of Sioux City, for on Saturday he managed to cash one of the money order for $67.90 at Salix, Iowa, signing the money order payable to one McDermott.

  McDermott came to this vicinity a few weeks ago and was employed a few days with Deloit Bridge Co., east of town.  He is also a piano player of exceptional ability and was employed a few times in that capacity at the Empress Theatre and was also used in the Anderson Orchestra.  His appearance and mode of livelihood worked on the sympathy of a number of business men who advanced him money in order to keep from starving. Since leaving the employ of the bridge company, he has made no effort to work, outside of the few times he played at the theatre.

  McDermott is said to be about 21 years of age, 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs about 145 pounds, light hair and fair complexion.  Any information to his whereabouts will be appreciated by the Postal authorities who are on the look out for him.

   It is said he took the morning local out of Ida Grove, as a man answering to his description was seen hanging around the depot about train time.

  

Ida County Pioneer
Year ??

MORE THAN 50 MEN TAKE PART IN PLOWING BEES

39 Tractors Do Ruser Plowing in Hour and Half
 

  Last Thursday more than 50 farmers in the Ida Grove area proved beyond doubt that the spirit of neighborness is not dead.  These men, 45 in one group and seven in another, congregated at two farms to plow land for the owners who are injured.

  The seven man group finished a 90 acre plowing task Thursday noon at the Myron Segerstrom farm southeast of Ida Grove. They had begun the task the day before.  Those who took part in the plowing bee were Lloyd Lindquist, Dwayne Johnson, Bob Deason, Ward Segerstrom, Dennis Lindberg, Burdell Schultz and Ronald Bloom.

  The plowers did the work for Myron Segerstrom who is still unable to handle hard work due to a back injury.

  Thursday afternoon a group of 45 men with 39 tractors finished plowing work for Herbert Ruser who is in the hospital here as the result of a tractor accident two weeks ago.  The group speedily turned 55 acres, starting about 12:45 p.m. and finishing at 2 p.m.

  Martin Seite, Jr. and Alvin Corbin took the lead in “rounding up” neighbors and other friends to finish work Ruser started before his accident.

  Included among the men who helped were Lambert Weise, Julius Miller, Carsten Godbersen, M. M. Thompson, Laurits Rasmussen, Irie Miller, Milford Denham, W.E. Schmidt, George Hoffman, Jr., John W. Holst, Ralph Finch, Alvin Camarigg, Vern Joy, Forrest Houser, Ross Jensen, Albert Russell, A.N. Grouell, Ward Luscombe, Fred Rathbun, Jim Brown, “Slim” Rubert, Geo. Hoffman, Sr. , Kermit Parker, Ron Ruser, Elmer Sahl, Lee Still, Ernest Swanson, Edwin Ruser, Ben Seite, Harvey Andresen, Glen Still, Carl Boger, LeRoy Dose, Maurice Stewart, Harold Parker.

  

Ida County Pioneer Record
1929

DIES AT SOLDIER’S HOME
 

 Old friends in Ida Grove have learned of the death of C.M. Willey, which occurred at the soldier’s home in Marshalltown, Monday, January 28. He was a civil war veteran and was past 80 years of age.  The family formerly lived in Silver Creek Township for a period of eight years, moving away in the spring of 1895. He is survived by three sons, Harvey and Donald