Under the Water Tower Lovilia News

June 5, 2012

Jack Force , Lovilia Businessman Dies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 3:36 pm

Jack Force , age 77, of Hamilton died June 1, 2012. His parents were John Wade Force and Velda (Wellman) Force.  His birth date was Sept. 22, 1934.
On the 4th of July in 1954 he married Phyllis Trinkle. They had one son, Dan, and two daughters, Sandra and Kathy.
Jack ran a business in Lovilia, Iowa for 28 years located on Hwy 5. It was named Lovilia Bait and Tire.
Survivors include his wife, three children, seven grandchildren, six great grandchildren and three step-great-grandchildren .
Funeral was Monday, June 4, 2012 at the Bussey United Methodist Church. Burial was at Greenlawn Cemetery in Bussey, Iowa.
Memorials may be directed to Knoxville’s Hospice of central Iowa.
United Methodist Church Lovilia Bible School

School will be June 11-15th.  Hours are 10am-1pm.  Classes are at the church on E Avenue South. Lessons, crafts, music, and snacks.  All children are welcome.

Primary Election Voting today, June 5th, at Lovilia Community Building

I voted and I hope you do too.  A new wrinkle is they scan your driver’s license to speed up the identification process.  However, you can still fill out a hand written sheet to identify your self and vote as in the past. Voting is a privilege so take advantage and let your voice be heard.

 

May 31, 2012

Lois Walter died May 15, 2012

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 8:35 pm

Lois was born August 24, 1926 to Fred H. and Clara Ellen (Cook) Clark. She received all her schooling in Lovilia and graduated from the high school in the class of 1944.

Oct. 30, 1944 she married Roscoe Wayne Walter. They were married 56 years when Roscoe died in 2001.

Lois was active in the United Methodist church and their women’s group, American Legion Auxiliary, and the Order of Eastern Star. The last six years she was in a care unit in Pella.

She and Roscoe had four children: Dennis and (Sue) Walter of Knoxville; Harry and (Jane) Walter of Newton; Connie Lane and (Mark) of Knoxville; and Kevin and (Toni) Walter of Albia, Iowa.
They were blessed with ten grandchildren and twenty-one great grandchildren.

Funeral services were May 19, 2012 at the Lovilia United Methodist Church and burial was at the Lovilia Woodlawn Cemetery.

Memorials were established for the Lovilia Woodlawn Cemetery Association or the Lovilia United Methodist Church.

 

Celebration Breakfast at St. Peter’s Hall on Sunday May 20,2012

Guests ate pancakes, sausage, fresh fruit salad, coffee, milk, juice, and the fixings prepared by the women of the church.   Logan Stalzer was celebrating his first communion.  Aaron Kurimski (Albia Comm. H.S.) and Laura Davis ( Twin Cedars H.S.) were celebrating their high school graduations.  Congratulations to all of you!  Aaron will study mechanical engineering at Iowa State University this fall.  Laura will attend Truman State University and start pre-law studies.

Also honored at the feast were the boys and girls who help the church as altar servers.  This includes:  Aaron Kurimski, Marty Beary, Brett Nace, Hunter McAninch, Cole Kurimski, Daniel Beary, Kade Dunkin, Hailey Kurimski, Jer McAninch, Savannah Stalzer and Nathaniel Wynn.

Memorial Day Observances in Lovilia

The Veterans Honor Guard held services in memory of our service men and women at both St. Peter’s and Woodlawn cemeteries on Monday.  Merrill Baker spoke of their service and sacrifice for our country.  Gerald Sofranko led attendees in prayer.  Frank Massick was commander of the gun salute.  Riflemen were Jim Toopes, Lenny Toopes, Jr. Blomgren, Bill McCombs, and Charger Ross.  Playing a recording of taps was John Duprey.  We thank them for their military service and for coming  to honor the other servicemen and women who have served in the past and are serving today to protect our freedoms.

An appropriate poem written by Major Kelly  Strong and shared to us by Jerry Ethell follows:

Freedom is not Free

I watched the flag pass by one day, it fluttered in the breeze,

A young man in uniform saluted it, and then he stood at ease.

I looked at him in uniform—so young, so tall, so proud,

With hair cut square and eyes alert, he’d stand out in the crowd.

I thought how many men like him had fallen through the years?

How many died in foreign soil?

How many mother’s tears?

How many pilots’ planes shot down?

How many died at sea?

How many foxholes were soldiers’ graves?

No, freedom is not free.

I heard the sound of taps one night, when everything was still.

I listened to the bugler play and felt a sudden chill.

I wondered just how many times that taps had meant “Amen”

When a flag had draped a coffin of a brother or a friend.

I thought of all the children, of mothers and the wives

Of fathers, sons, and husbands, with interrupted lives.

I thought about a graveyard at the bottom of the sea,

Of unmarked graves in Arlington.

No, freedom is not free.

These are sentiments we should recall everyday of the year.  May these unselfish men and women now rest in peace.

Remember the barber, Jim Cummings?

Jerry Ethell heard from his grandson after Marlene Papich, his sister-in-law, told him about this blog site.

Chuck Terrell lived in Lovilia until he was four years old.  His family then moved to Chariton, Iowa where he attended grade school.  Next the family went to Peoria, Illinois where his father worked at the Caterpillar plant.  Chuck finished high school there and joined the Air Force.  Following his service he worked for Caterpillar and joined the Illinois National Air Guard.  He has been retired since 1991. Once married he has now been divorced for 40 years.

As a youngster he spent a lot of the summer days at his grandparents and knew all the town boys who were in Jerry Ethell’s class.  He currently lives in Bartonville, Illinois.  He says when he dies he will return to Lovilia and be buried next to his parents in St. Peter’s Cemetery.

Smokey Smith Book is a Great Read

On an earlier post I mentioned this book about the famous country music promoter and DJ for KRNT radio and TV in DesMoines in the 1960 time period.  I had a chance to read the book and it is a very fun read.  If you like the performers from that time he tells great personal stories of Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, June Cash, Minnie Pearl, etc. that he knew and worked with himself.  Also, the chapter about the Ponderosa Club in Lovilia where Smokey’s own band played as well as national performers that he brought there like Carl Perkins alone is worth the book .

These Lovilia people are quoted in the book:  George Gilbert, Merrill Baker, Pauline Welsh, Junior Blomgren, Rowena Shelford, Donna Shelford, Bonnie Gilbert, Doran Haywood, and Bill McCombs (Milo’s son).

These Country performers played in Lovilia at the Ponderosa:

Carl Perkins, Marvin Rainwater, Dave Dudley, Little Jimmy Dickens, Mac Wiseman, Justin Tubb, James O’Gwynn, Leroy Van Dyke, Merle Kilgore, Webb Pierce, Red Sovine, Marion Worth, Del Reeves, and Johnny Western.

You can go to my earlier blog and read how to order the book or the CD recorded live at the Ponderosa.  If you like country this stuff is all gold!

Classof 1962 will Celebrate their 50th Class Reunion in June

Lovilia  had 20 students in that graduating class. The superintendent was O. T. Huffman and the class sponsor was Opal Huffman.

Class officers were:  Pres. Don Etcher, V-pres. Bill Ballalatak, Sec. Judy Weldon (Conner now), and Treasurer Elaine Plum. There is one deceased class member, Ronnie Jones.   Judy Weldon was the last member of the class to receive her diploma and the last student to graduate from Lovilia High School.

We will write a follow up story about the reunion.

 

May 5, 2012

Lucile Mae Flahive October 18, 1927-April 30, 2012

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 10:00 pm

Lucile’s funeral was at St. Peter’s church on May 4th and burial was at St. Peter’s cemetery in Lovilia, Iowa.

Lucile was the daughter of Matthew C. Wright and Evangeline L. Johnson Wright.  She graduated from Lovilia High School where she had been a star basketball player.

May 1946 she married Edward Joseph Flahive.  She was a secretary for the school system and worked many years there at the Lovilia elementary building  where she enjoyed the children very much.

She has one son, Joe and his wife ,Wanda, of Lovilia.  She has two daughters:  Denise and husband Larry Blunt of Waco, Texas; and Deana and her husband David Mahedy of West Des Moines.  She has ten grandchildren and nineteen great grandchildren.  Also surviving are her brother, Harold Wright and sister Lillian Lennie.

Lucile is preceded in death by her parents, husband, daughters (Diane and Donna), her sisters Arlene and Dorothy, her brother Virgil and her special friend Byron VerSteegh.

All City Yard Sales Today and St. Peter’s Bake Sale

The town was hopping with yard sale shoppers from opening at 8 a.m. until noonish.  I tried to shop them all and spent $5.55 of my $6 allowance.  I was pleased with my finds and more so the fun of chatting with all the Lovilia folks and out of town shoppers.  I met some neighbors who moved away and came back to help family members with the sales and caught up on family news.  Also found several items to repurpose into new items by way of my sewing machine.  It is a fun time.  Every year it is the first Saturday of May.  Come join the fun next year!

New House placed for Larry and Beth Shelford

It was placed directly behind their old house.  Future plans are to remove the older structure at  2302 E Avenue North.

Town is Deluged in Roofing Contractors and Insurance Adjusters.

Due to the mighty hail storm that blew and battered us three weekends ago, we are seeing many insurance fellas and then following them roofers to redo many roofs in town.  Also as the West wind drove the hail it damaged a lot of siding on the west side of houses and that is being replaced.  Many cars sitting in driveways were dented too and I know of one who had their windshield broken as well.  Even with all the damage we were spared the tornado devastation of counties west of us.

New store front down town

Bricks were falling out of the face of the old store just north of today’s city hall.  Owners Ken and Brenda Chilton put a metal siding facing over the brick this week.  That should stop the “sky from falling” of any loose bricks on walkers below.  That is one thing Lovilians are good at-walking.  We have many faithful walkers each day who go to get the mail or just amble about the town.

April 30, 2012

Donnie Dwayne Tucker dies April 28,2012

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 9:26 pm

Donnie was born Nov. 2, 1942 to Stanley and Loretta (Chance) Tucker. Donnie went to school in Lovilia and graduated from high school there.
He married Jeanette Reed and they were the parents of Randy and Linda. Later in life they divorced and then he married Kay Kendall.
Donnie was a welder at John Deere in Ottumwa until his retirement.
He has five grandchildren and two great grandchildren. He is survived by two sisters, Janette (Bill) Flahive of Albia and Beverly Sampson of Alexandria, Virginia.
Preceded in death by wife-Kay, his parents, and his sister Rowena Shelford as well as an infant sister.
Funeral services will be 10:30a.m. Tuesday, May 1st at Lovilia Funeral home. Burial following at Liberty Cemetery near Bussey
Memorials can be designated for Alcoholics Anonymous. We extend our sympathy and prayers to the family.

 

Julia Gullion Retires

Julia Gullion retired from Cargill Meat Solutions in Ottumwa on April 16, 2012.  Her employment began in June 1996 and continued until she had labored for them for 16 years.  She worked in the area Cargill calls the Harvest Team.  She is married to Tom Gullion and they live on his homeplace west of Lovilia.  Julia will enjoy the extra time to do gardening and traveling with Tom around the country.  Congratulations and enjoy those golden years, Julia!

April 22, 2012

Lovilia’s Ponderosa Club is now in a book and CD!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 7:59 pm

Recently an ad appeared in the Knoxville shopper. It said an entire chapter of a book was devoted to the nightclub. You can read about it at this web site: smokeysmith.webs. com. The book has 320 pages and lots of photos it says. Book cost is $30 and it is autographed. When at the website click on Smokey’s general store and scroll down . You will find a 2CD set of live music recorded at the Ponderosa Club in Lovilia. Cost is $20 plus $3 for shipping. Smokey’s biography is on the site too. He booked famous performers at the club including Carl Perkins, Marty Robbins, and Little Jimmy Dickens. Remember them from grand ole opry fame? If anyone saw them at the Ponderosa I would love to have you email me about the show.
The State Historical Society presented a pubic exhibit in 2011 about Smokey’s career as a musician, radio DJ, recording artist, and tour promoter.

He is known to have booked Elvis Presley’s first Iowa concert in 1956. Did any of my reader’s get a ticket for that one? That was not in Lovilia but in Iowa just the same.  I am sure that means he was in Iowa before he appeared on TV’s Ed Sullivan show.  Hoorah Iowa and good for you Smokey!

If you get the CDs or book let me know what you think of them. I think I want both. What a great snippet of history and it happened in Lovilia.

 

WWII Cannon Restoration at Gibson Park

Gerald Sofranko and Billy Barnes have been working through government red tape for a year to get permission and help to restore the cannon.  They hope soon to sandblast it.   Have paint supplied by military to paint it and have the painting done to restore it.
Gerald is also trying to get new guns for the legion men who fire the gun salutes at funerals, etc.  They are quite old and updates would help the salutes go more smoothly without reloading.

We appreciate these men’s volunteer efforts to honor our veterans.  If you see them downtown, I hope you will thank them too.

First Communion at St. Peter’s April 14, 2012

We had one first communion celebrant this year. Logan Stalzer.  He is the son of Brad and Mindy Stalzer and grandson of Joe and Kathy Welsh of rural Lovilia.  Congratulations Logan, may you always stay close to God and may he always hold you in the Palm of His Hand.

Morning Coffee at Community Building-all welcome!

Community Betterment committee is sponsoring coffee at 8:30am every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.  They will do this through Memorial Day weekend too so visitors to the cemetery can use the rest rooms in the building and sit and rest with a hot cup of coffee.  It is free and all are welcome.

St. Peter’s Bulletin news

Starting May 6 mass will be on Sunday at 8:30 a.m.  This schedule will continue through September.

May crowning will be May 6th sponsored by Altar and Rosary Society who will provide the flowers.

Annual Bake Sale Saturday, May 5

Bake sale will be held during the Lovilia city wide Garage sale. Ladies will bake and donate items for the sale which will be at the usual location north of the post office in front of the Geno building. Sales will be from 8am-10am.  Don’t miss a chance to get these homemade treats!

May 5 Lovilia Community Wide Yard Sales

Come shop for fun and bargains and get treats at the bake sale.  See you there!

 

 

March 26, 2012

March 28, Wednesday, Chicken noodle supper at Lovilia Community Building

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 7:57 pm

Supper starts at 5pm served by the United Methodist church and they will accept free will donations as payment for the home cooked meal. The food is always good so I hope you go and enjoy it! Always great visiting with the other town and rural guests at the meal is a bonus.  See you at the Lovilia Community building!

St. Peter’s Catholic Church Releases new photo directory

Pictures were taken of 41 households of members last Oct.  Pam Kurimski volunteered to take indoor and outdoor photos of all the stain glass windows, the bell, the grotto, etc.  Church secretary, Alina McIntyre, helped with bulletin notices and printing our mailing labels for the photographer.  Susan Beary, Sharon Stoffer, and Nancy Franzen helped on photo day with record keeping and set up for the workers.  Father Pat Lumsden gave moral support for the project.  Now we have a beautiful color photo book of members and a historical record of the church as it is today in 2012.  Thanks to everyone who came to be included in the book and helped in anyway. Also in the book are the photos of St. Pat’s Georgetown and St. Pat’s Melrose our sister parishes as Father serves all three.

 

Monroe County Democrats meet Congressman

Saturday March 24 at the Albia Chamber of Commerce meeting room, local democrats heard his words and got to speak with Congressman Loebsack and his wife.  We could ask him questions and hear  his thoughtful replies.  From Lovilia was county chairman, Deb Ballalatak, Fred and Goldie Kraber, Doran and Jane Haywood, and Susan Beary.  We plan to help him in his bid for congress this fall.  Whether you are Rep., Dem., Independent, or go the direction of the wind, be sure to vote in primary and Nov. elections.  It is your privilege in a democracy that many have fought and died for-don’t let them down by being indifferent to this right they shed blood for.

Two Building updates

The house on 504 E Avenue South was totally rehabbed by Mike Ogle of Albia and his crew.  They recently held an open house.  I was fortunate to take the tour.  All new kitchen, two new baths, all new paint, and all new carpet.  They finished the basement and painted exterior and laid new sidewalk.  It is an asset that we are happy to see renewed and hope a family will soon buy and settle in.  Great job Mike and crew!

Downtown next door to the bank a face lift to the apt. there was done with blue metal siding.  It looks very nice and blends well with the adjacent buildings.  Landlord for the apt . is Brenda Chilton. Thanks for the upgrade on main street, Brenda.

Wedding Announcement

Nate Chamberlain, son of Calvin and Pam Chamberlain, announces his plans to marry William Ottens June 9, 2012. The wedding will be at Pioneer Park in Des Moines.   They will be making their home in Lawrence, Kansas.  Best wishes to the couple!

Juvenile Diabetes Benefit, Saturday, March 31st

Doors open at 5pm at the American Legion building in Albia.  Dinner of prime rib or chicken is served 5:30-7pm.  Entertainment by ventriloquist Gary Wick. Also there will be a auction and raffle to benefit diabetes research.  Tickets can be purchased from Mindy Stalzer or her daughter Savannah.  Savannah is living with juvenile diabetes herself.  Their phone number is 641-751-2828.

 

 

February 28, 2012

Sister Mary Lou Durbala Dies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 9:40 pm

Sister Mary Lou Durbala died February 18, 2012 at the age of 82.

She was buried in Glendale Cemetery, Des Moines, Iowa.

She was born to Elmer and Alice (Martin) Durbala on March 10, 1929 in Lovilia, Ia. She was fourth in a family of 12 children. Their family home in Lovilia burned down and they lost everything. The family then moved to Albia where Sister graduated from high school in the class of 1947. She entered the religious order, Congregation of the Humility of Mary, and professed her vows in 1950. After obtaining her college degree she taught school. Later retiring in 1980 and spent the rest of her life in the Des Moines area.

Locally she has two first cousins. Gerald Sofranko ,whose mother was a Durbala, and Jean Hollinrake (Joe’s wife) whose maiden name was Durbala.

May Sister Mary Lou rest in eternal peace.

New Baby:Blake Richard Keegal

Born February 24, 2012 to Joe and Lindsey Keegal was a baby boy, Blake Richard Keegal.

Grandparents are Jake and Karen Keegal and the late Kendra (Pettyjohn) Pearson.

Greatgrandparents are Ben and Charlotte Pettyjohn of Lovilia.

Congratulations and enjoy your new bundle of joy!

Fifty Years in Banking

February marks the 50th year in banking for Bob O’Donnell.   There will be an open house at the bank he now works in on March 7th hosted by the bank owners the Dentels.

If you would like to surprise him and congratulate him with a card for his many years of service, here is his current address:

Robert O’Donnell, 4903 430th Avenue, Curlew, IA 50527-8531.

Bob and his wife, Sharon,  moved to Lovilia and farmed east of town. He enjoyed his horses and raising sheep.  He still does.  He first was working at People’s Bank in Albia and later at Bussey Bank in Bussey. Then he accepted the position he now has.

Enjoy your open house and the rest of your work in banking, Bob!

February 23, 2012

New Baby : Noah Wade Force

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 7:39 pm

Jake and Nikki Force of Norwalk are the proud parents of a son, Noah Wade. He was born Thursday, February 9, 2012 at Methodist West Hospital in West Des Moines. He weighed 8 pounds 8 ounces and was 20 inches long.

Grandparents are Mitch and Angie McCombs of Lovilia, Dan Force of Hamilton, and Gail Force of Pella.

Great Grandparents are Bonnie and the late George Gilbert of Lovilia, the late Phillip and Patricia McCombs of Hamilton and Jack and Phyllis Force of Hamilton.

February 13, 2012

Ruth A. Beary Dies Feb 5, 2012

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 12:24 am

Ruth Beary died at Ottumwa hospital Feb. 5, 2012. She was born Oct. 19,1922 in Albia to Glenn and Arminta Maddison Stewart. She married Daniel Raphael “Ray” Beary on Sept. 6, 1947. He preceded her in death in 1987.

A resident of Ottumwa since 1970, she had taught in Monroe Co. schools for 6 years, had been employed at Spurgeon’s in Ottumwa, and had worked in the State Homemaker Program and at the Crisis Center.

She was a member of St. Patrick Catholic Church, Altar and Rosary Society, and Catholic Daughters of the Americas.

Surviving are her five children: Dan Beary Jr. and his wife Ann of Ottumwa. They have three children: Joey, Scott, and Samantha; David Beary and his wife Susan of Lovilia. They have three children: Morgan, Wesley, and Teresa; Donna Beary of Des Moines; and the twins Mary “Patty” Beary and Margaret “Peggy” Beary of Ottumwa. Ruth also has one sister, Marcella “Sally” Simpson of Albia.

She was preceded in death by two brothers, Edward and Glenn.

Funeral Mass was at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Ottumwa and burial was at St. Mary’s Cemetery in Albia next to her husband.

Family History which is also community history was talked over at the funeral visitation for Ruth Beary.

Daniel Beary was married to Anna McDonald. They had seven children: Helen (married a Plum), M. Leo, Kathryn (Kate-married a Glenn), Mary (married a Hindman), Edward (Ed), Anna Ruth (married a Crall), and Daniel “Ray” Beary.

Anna McDonald had two brothers, Ed and James, and three sisters. Two were twins and the third was the mother of Marie Kasper.

Anna’s brother Ed was an engineer who lived in Ottumwa and he was the lead engineer on the project to build Highway 60 (now Hwy 5) between Lovilia and Albia. M. Leo and Ed Beary were hired to bring hay to the site for the horses. Harold Waters was hired to bring water to the workers and horses.

Anna’s brother James was a veterinarian and was sent by the government to California to work on a cure for hoof and mouth disease.

Grandma’s twin sisters were teachers and the two of them along with one of their husbands were in a bad car accident close to Centerville, Iowa one night. The twins were killed in the accident and the husband was badly injured but recovered.

Does Our Past Influence our opinion in the Future: by Jerry Ethell

I was so fortunate to have grown up near the coal mining community of Lovilia, Iowa.  I was born right after the depression and right before World War II.  My family was a regular farm family “Walton” clan; father, mother, me a middle child of 3, paternal grandmother and grandfather, maternal grandmother and a maternal uncle.  I therefore hard plenty of opinions to chew up and spit out; such as all Jews are crooked, all blacks live off welfare, all Catholics do is have kids, and all coal miner’s sons will grow up to be coal miners, so stay away from them.  From a dry Methodist family, I knew I would ignore them all and form my own opinions.

I first began to think for myself when I went to school at a one room country school, where I and one other boy were the only 2 protestant children in school.  The Catholic children were just like me.  They liked the same food, the same Roy Rogers movies, and the same games of softball and etc.  None of the families had more than 4 or 5 children.

I then entered high school where I had been going to Lovilia and seeing colored people everywhere.  I talked to them and they had talked to me since I was 3 years old.  We had a black cheerleader, and star basketball players, both boys and girls.  I had written to a white guy in the army during his deployment to the Korean War.  He had worked for my father since age 10, and had graduated in the spring before I started high school in the fall.  It was natural when I asked our black star basketball player for his senior picture that he would ask me if I would write to him.  He was getting drafted, and would probably be going to Korea.  I said yes I would.  In July of 1957 I was walking with my girlfriend Mary Ann on our lunch hour under the Younkers awning in Des Moines, going to the local Woolworth lunch counter for our usual cup of soup and glass of ice tea.  I heard someone calling my name.  I turned around and there was our star basketball player.  He grabbed me up and swung me around telling me it was so good to see me.  He told me he was so glad I had written to him while he was in Korea my letters were the only ones he had received from home.  Mary Ann continued on down the sidewalk and acted as if she were window shopping.  She was thinking I am going to pretend I don’t know her, and I am not with her.  When I caught up with her she asked my why I did what I did?  Did I want everyone around me thinking I was a dumb blond who dated colored guys?

It is now 1956 with the civil rights problems in the south.  Larry and I were married on Thanksgiving, and could not take a honeymoon since he had started a new job.  He promised to take me on a honeymoon in the summer of 1957.  He kept his promise and in September 1957 he bought a 1955 blue and white Ford convertible and asked me where I wanted to go.  New Orleans  I said.  So we started off.

We were breezing along with the top down.  We were outside Shreveport, hot, sweaty, and thirsty.  We came into Shreveport with a municipal courthouse with a street running around all 4 sides.  We pulled into a parking place and jumped out.  We went in the municipal building and I saw a new refrigerated water fountain.  I ran over and pushed the button down and drank ravenously.  I felt a peck on my shoulder, and I looked up to see a Shreveport policeman standing there.  He said, “You’alls drinking from a colored fountain” as he pointed to the sign.  I looked up and sure enough on the wall was a sing in small black block letters that read “COLORED’.  I looked at the policeman and said as I pushed down the button, “Well I’m thirsty, and it sure doesn’t look colored to me” as the pure clear water poured out.

I had run smack dab into racist crap.  He said,”You’alls from up north, and you’alls are always coming down here riling up our niggers”.  He said, “You better watch out young lady, or you will find yourself in jail”.  I took one last drink of water, and told him, “I’m not staying in your town long; all I wanted was a drink of water.  I will invite you if you’all ever gets up north, come and visit us in Iowa, get that IOWA, but I will guarantee you won’t like it”.  He said, “Why is that?”  I told him, “Up north we all drink out of the same water fountains and we don’t have any niggers, only people who are colored different colors.”  I scampered out of the building, but as I looked back, the cop was standing there with his mouth wide open.

We continued on our way spending a splendid honey moon in New Orleans.  At 20 years old, we could go in bars, but could not order drinks.  The most fun we had was visiting a bar where we discovered the bar was a transvestite bar.  All the men were dressed as women and the women were dressed as men.   They had a colored jazz band that could really play the jazz music of New Orleans.  The food in the south was fabulous.  Every restaurant we went into had a colored cook.  Breakfast was out of this world.  My fondest memories of the south were the food.

Coming home in Mississippi we stopped at an outdoor Dairy Queen and walked up towards the window.  The lady running the Dairy Queen was waiting on a man and his little girl.  Standing behind him was a man of color, waiting.  As we walked up he stepped aside.  We said no you go ahead you were here first.  He got his malt and sat down at a cement table with an umbrella.  While we waited we noticed his semi truck with a load of steel re bar.  His truck had a Mississippi Steel Company address on the side.

We obtained our malts and sat down at the table with the colored man.  The lady in the Dairy Queen just glared at us like she did when we told him to go ahead and order before us.

The man said,”You guys are from up north aren’t you?”  When Larry started talking steel companies with the man, he found out Larry worked for a steel company too.  Larry was an electrician.  The man asked Larry how much his steel company paid their drivers.  Larry told him $3.18 an hour.  The man could not believe that any men of color got $3.18 an hour anywhere.  He said he only made $.65 an hour.

The man asked Larry how much he got paid an hour as an electrician.  Larry told him the same as the truck drivers.  The man said he thought about moving up north if he could make that kind of money. He would then make enough to support his family.

To the chagrin of my parents while in high school I dated a coal miner’s son for three years before he went in the Marines.  He was of the Catholic faith and had the same hopes and dreams as I did.  When I married, I married a coal miner’s son from neighboring Marion County who was an electrician all of his working life.

I had dis-proven all of my “Walton” families theories except the one about Jews  since I had no Jewish friends, or any contact with Jewish people.  At age 22, I asked my father and mother how they know all Jewish people were crooked.  They said it was because Jews did not believe in Jesus Christ.  I thought what does that have to do with anything:  I think they finally gave up on me and decided I was just strange.

Then at age 26, I announced I was going to be a charter member of the new Holy Cross Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) that was being built in Carlisle.  My mother told me, “You can’t do that, why that is just out the backdoor from the Catholic church and the Pope”.

For years I think their thoughts were, “If we pretend we don’t know her maybe people won’t blame us for how she turned out”.  The old saying is, “the apples don’t fall far from the tree”.  However, I think that a squirrel came under the apple tree and hauled me miles down the road and hid me in a hole he dug and patted the leaves over me.

Why I say that today I am glad I grew up near Lovilia, is because I was able to form my own opinions for use in later life.  I hear things like Iowa is a racist state, and the Tea Party is full of racist bigots.  I dislike comments people make that disrespect the President of the United States because he is black.  When I look at the President of the United States I do not see him as black or white, I see him as just the President of the United States.

If Iowa is a racist state, how did Obama carry the state in the last election:  Aren’t the Tea Party people just frustrated with the conditions in the economy and need someone to blame it on?  There will always be people who are racists and bigots, but when 9-11 happened, America came together like never before.  We are all one people, Americans, and we are in this boat together.  Let us reach a consensus regardless of party and not sink this boat.

Thank you Lovilia, Iowa for giving me the events that formed my opinions I have used all my life.

February 2, 2012

Time Marches On, Only the Memories Remain by Jerry Martin Ethell

Filed under: Uncategorized — Susan Beary @ 5:46 am

I moved to a dairy farm northwest of Lovilia with my parents and sister when I was six months old. My father’s farm backed up to the Blackstone Coal mine on the north. I grew up going to a one room school for my education. I entered high school in the fall of 1950 and graduated with the Lovilia class of 1954.

My earlier memories of Lovilia were when I was about three years old. I would go with my father to the Cummings barbershop and while he was getting a haircut and shave, the barber would ask me if I could sing a song for him. I would sing “You Are My Sunshine” and when I was finished singing; he would give me a shiny new buffalo nickel. He asked me what I was going to do with my nickel. I told him I was going to see Mr. Dave and get me a strawberry ice cream cone.

While sitting and waiting for my father I would look out the window to the activity on Main Street. An old white haired gentleman asked me, “Little lady, what do you think of the big town of Lovilia?” I told him I thought Lovilia was a small town. I liked to go to big towns like Ottumwa, especially at night. They had big street lights that looked like five big vanilla ice cream cones. He said,”My, little lady, you sure like your ice cream. Lovilia was a big town once, why when I was your age before the turn of the century I bet 1200 people lived in Lovilia. Back then the Buxton, Miami, and Lovilia coal mines were all running full bore.  Why at one time there were 9 churches and 13 saloons in this town”. I have never been able to substantiate his word on this.

When my father was finished, we would go to Mr. Dave’s Drug Store and get the supplies we needed for the various things we needed on the farm. We would need gauze, tape, and various antiseptics (because there were no band-aids at that time in history). I would stand on tiptoe and slip my nickel up on the soda fountain counter. Mr. Dave would say, “What flavor are you having today?”, as he reached behind him and pulled a cone from the cone holder, nestled between the two mirrors behind the soda fountain. I would proudly say, “Strawberry”. Other times when I would go in the drugstore Mr. Dave would say,”Strawberry? I would say,” Yes”. Mr. Dave would say, “Do you have a nickel?”. I would say, “No”. He would tell me,”Crawl up on the stool at the end of the counter then and sing me a song”. I would sing for him and he would hand me my luscious strawberry cone. Mr. Dave would then collect up the supplies my father wanted and ring him up. Mr. Dave would then open a drawer and take out a clean wash cloth, wet it, and wipe my face and hands clean. Mr. Dave would then pick me up in his arm and ask if I had a hug and a kiss for him today, which I gave him gladly.

One of my friends in high school told me, “Jerry you eat more strawberry ice cream than anyone I know”. I told him, “Where do you think all my auburn hair comes from”.

My father told me years later that he would slide a nickel across the counter to pay for my cone as I was crawling up on the stool to sing my song. He told me Mr. Dave would push the nickel back at him and tell my father that he got more out of this than a little ice cream would ever cost him. Oh, how I loved Mr. Dave, not because he had an unlimited supply of strawberry ice cream, but because of the goodness of his heart. Everyone who was ever around the Lovilia area knows by now I am talking about Dave Papich’s Drug Store.

This drugstore held fond memories for me. The drugstore always seemed to have what you needed.  School supplies, medicines, strawberry ice cream. The grocery store and the drugstore were the only places in the early 50’s the girls could hang out since they were not allowed in the pool hall.

Now Lovilia houses hold the farmers who have retired to town or the off spring of previous Lovilia residents who choose to commute to work to surrounding big towns. They choose to stay in Lovilia and raise their children far from big city life. Should anyone from another area of the United States drive through the town of Lovilia, they would view Lovilia as just another sleepy Iowa town gasping for its last breath. I did not view Lovilia this way. It may not be the roaring town it was before the turn of the century the old man described to me; nor the busy town of the Korean War days of the early 50’s, but it was a viable town, nevertheless. If the streets of Lovilia and the halls of the high school could talk, they would be able to tell grand tales about the ancestors who lived there who are now in the cemeteries.  Also, tales of the present population, as well as tales of those like me who grew up and moved away.

I feel badly that I will never again be able to experience the feeling on a hot July day of walking into that drugstore on Main street Lovilia. Of plunking down my nickel and sinking my lips into the creamy texture of a strawberry ice cream cone, and with my teeth, pulling out a ripe red strawberry. From now on when I eat a strawberry ice cream cone, I will have to plunk down 2 bucks, but a beautiful memory from the past will come floating back to me as I devour its creamy goodness. Yes, time marches on, but for people like me who grew up around the Lovilia area, we have been left with a bazillion beautiful memories.

Editors note:
Jerry is a free lance writer who writes under the pen name of Jerry Martin Ethell. Jerry is a 1954 graduate of Lovilia High School, a 1977 graduate of Des Moines Area CommunityCollege, and a 1981 Graduate of Drake University. She and her husband, Larry, are retired and live on their 200 acre grain farm southwest of Sandyville in east central Warren County. They retired at age 70 in 2008 and like to travel around in their Ford truck and Lance pick-up camper.

Jerry is the only living survivor of the original Verla and Hazel Martin family who resided 6 miles NW of Lovilia. Her older sister was Gwen who married Bob Sims. Gwen and Bob were both in the Lovilia graduating class of 1948. Her other sister was Arlene who was married to John Wilson. Living in John and Arlene’s house at the farm is their son Marty and his wife and children.

If you would like to contact Jerry she can be reached at:
jerryethell@yahoo.com
or
20554 Kirkwood Street, Milo, Iowa 50166-6667
Phone: 641-942-6296

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