1
She gets many of her old-time recipes through research and adapting her grandmother’s long-ago recipes; they go back to the staples of the time period, with flour, sugar, salt, baking powder and yeast. The cabin she works in would be considered small for a family, but as she points out, families would use the space they had to the maximum. A loft above is where the children would sleep; behind them would be where the family would store items such as steam- er trunks. The floor level contains the main living quarters, with a bed, table and cooking equipment near the chimney. The woman of the house would care for the children, cook and preserve the harvest. Meat would be butchered and then preserved in lard. Root vegetables were hung from the rafters. Casinger, formerly of Clinton and now of Byron, Ill., was in the 1860s house, which had been constructed on the Henry Bruebaker farm in Garden Plain and later donated to Wierenga to be set up in the canyon. Casinger was writing let- ters, demonstrating the use of a quill pen, having earlier made her dessert. Vavra is the school- house teacher, and makes sure to talk to the children as they try out the little desks. Her chalkboard is full of instruction in neat- ly printed handwriting. Primers are nearby and she shows how children would have been taught the alphabet and sound out words. She said one-room schools could have included children from age 7 through high school. Younger children would not have been enrolled in school since their little feet could not carry them over the long walks to school; often, children stopped going to school once they graduated from eighth grade. Student attendance also was affected by farmwork for the older boys and childcare and cooking duties for the girls as they grew older. The Crafters showcase their skills on the 12 acres of land that from the mid- 1800s to 1954 housed a limestone quarry where rock was crushed for field fertilizer, road beds, wing dams and levees. Trucks, trains and river barges hauled it away. The quar- ry was abandoned in 1954 because dynamiting was damaging both sides of the river. The area became an eyesore to the commu- nity with its junk and dilapidated shacks, according to the city’s website. In 1967, Harold and Thelma Wierenga bought the quarry. They converted the machine shop into a usable work- shop and then built their home on the site of the old rock crusher. They changed the quarry to pre- serve Midwestern history, emphasizing detail and authenticity; and disturb nature as little as possible as each building is added. Harold Wierenga died in January 1999, his daugh- ter and son-in-law main- tained the canyon for sev- eral years. However, the volunteer task of main- taining the canyon was simply too much for the couple. In October 2005 the city of Fulton was given ownership of Heritage Canyon. The Early American Crafters’ mission is to transport visitors back to the 1800s by setting up in the build- ings that dot the land- scape of the area. On Sunday, woodwork- ers could be found just down the trail from the school. Gene Strohecker of Elroy, Ill., demonstrated how to turn pieces of wood into usable items. On a blanket on the ground nearby, visitors could look at a collection of items he had made, some decorative, others useful for everyday liv- ing. Others are made to make visitors laugh, such as the piece of a tree that he smoothed out and has placed on the corner of the blanket. When people ask him what it is, he tells them it is a skeleton of a foot. He also made a detailed miniature of a shaving horse, saying he is looking for someone small enough use it. “You’ve got to have fun with your craft,” he said. Bob Olesen of Sterling, Ill., was making a bowl in a nearby building, the first time he had made that piece. A large group of tools were assembled nearby, with Olesen detailing the importance of each to the creation of the bowl. Larry Jepsen and his cousin, Daniel, drew quite the crowd as they made brooms at the canyon’s entrance. While not members of the Early American Crafters, they are invited to the canyon a couple times of year to demon- strate broommaking, in which they use corn- broom plants that they trim, layer around a wooden handle, and wire in place before drying and stitching into a variety of brooms. Paper missing? If your newspaper has not arrived by 5 p.m. daily or by 8 a.m. Saturday please contact your carrier. If you cannot reach your carrier, please call the Clinton Herald no later than 6 p.m. daily or 9 a.m. Saturdays. Clinton Herald Main Switchboard (563) 242-7101 or 1-800-729-7101 To leave a message after normal business hours from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Subscriber Services (563) 242-7142 ext. 123 Newsroom (563) 242-7142 Sports (563) 242-7142 ext. 125 Classified Advertising (563) 242-7142 ext. 122 Display Advertising (563) 242-7142 ext. 141 Editor (563) 242-7142 ext. 155 CLINTON HERALD (USPS 118680) Published daily except Sundays By Newspaper Holding Inc. The Clinton Herald, 221 Sixth Ave. South Clinton, Iowa 52732 Vol. 151, No. 235 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier or motor route: $12 per month, $29.50 per three months, $54.50 per six months, $102.50 per year. By mail within Clinton County: $108.50 per year; by mail within Jackson, Whiteside and Carroll counties: $114.50 per year. In all other zones: $150 per year. Periodical postage paid at Clinton, Iowa 52732. Send all address changes to the Clinton Herald, Box 2961, Clinton, Iowa 52733-2961. CREDIT AND RATE POLICY All Classified categories may require prepayment. If in doubt, please call the Classified Department. All classified display ads require prepayment in the absence of established credit terms. Commercial rates apply to commer- cial business and applicable classi- fications, i.e. Help Wanted, Rentals, Real Estate for Sale etc. Classified line rates are discounted by consec- utive insertions. ADJUSTMENT OF ERRORS It is the responsibility of the adver- tiser to check each insertion of an advertisement. On consecutive run advertisements, no adjustments will be made by the Publisher for errors not corrected after the first day. The Publisher accepts no liability or responsibility for failure to insert an advertisement. The Publisher accepts no liability for any error in an advertisement, regardless of course, except for the cost of the space actually occupied by the error. The Publisher reserves the right to revise or reject, at its opinion, any advertisement deemed objection- able by the Publisher in subject matter, phraseology or composi- tion, or to classify any advertisements. All ads subject to credit approval. CMYK Daily Record ET CETERA 2A | MONDAY , OCTOBER 3, 2011 WWW. CLINTONHERALD. COM Area Digest Iowa works to reform mental health care By Ben Jacobson Herald Staff Writer DES MOINES Those directly affected by Iowa’s mental health system are being given an opportunity to influ- ence its redesign. Through a series of pub- lic input meetings, men- tal health officials are collecting ideas and con- cerns from the same people who will benefit in the future. “It’s really an opportu- nity to hear observations and recommendations,” said Rick Shults, admin- istrator for the Division of Mental Health and Disability Services. “...Getting this kind of input is very important in the process.” Four of five scheduled public hearings have wrapped up, with the final meeting scheduled for Oct. 7 in Council Bluffs. Iowans coping with mental health issues or intellectual disabilities were invited to share their views on the redesign, made possible through legislation passed in the most recent congressional session. Shults called the ses- sions “informational” so far, and said that the meetings have been well-attended. He was present at the Waterloo meeting on Sept. 23, which had about 150 attendees. When the meetings have concluded, Shults said that the ideas and information collected will be passed onto workgroups that will analyze what he called the “themes” of the meetings. Then, during the final months of the year, the interim session responsible with over- seeing the redesign will help determine potential legislation. “This will give us our framework that we need to move forward with,” Shults said. He added that officials are dedicated to being aware of consumer con- cerns, and addressing them as well as possible. The mental health and disability services redesign is expected to be ready for the 2013 legislative session. Legislators hope to mod- ify the system from a county based service to a regional service, hope- fully ensuring a consis- tent level of care. As the system stands, some counties are able to pro- vide more funding for services while other have difficulty meeting demands. Shults said that citi- zens need to be aware that having a more regional system does not mean that they will have to travel great distances to address mental health issues. “Services are still going to be delivered at the local level,” he said. “That’s something that families need to hear.” TUESDAY: Sunny. High in the upper 70s. TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the upper 40s. WEDNESDAY: Sunny. High in the upper 70s. WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the lower 50s. Yesterday Official High 69 Official Low 36 Precipitation 0 Today High one year ago 57 Low one year ago 36 All-time high 91, 1922, ‘97, 2006 All-time low 28, 1987 Normal high 71 Normal low 47 Precip. for month 0 Normal precip. for month 2.68 Precip. for year 28.82 Normal precip. for year 30.28 Sunrise: 7:01 Sunset: 6:41 In Clinton Today’s local weather TODAY: Sunny. High in the mid 70s. TONIGHT: Clear. Low in the mid 40s. Around the United States CRAFTERS Story continued from 1A Gene Strohecker of Elroy, Ill., demonstrates how to turn pieces of wood into a spoon at Heritage Canyon on Sunday. CHARLENE BIELEMA/CLINTON HERALD MUSEUM OPENS See photos of the Clinton Sawmill Museum’s grand opening LOCAL, 5A Grains Prices quoted at 8 a.m. today; subject to fluctuation. Prices may vary slightly at county buying stations. • ADM/Growmark: No. 2 yel- low corn Clinton $5.94. • County PIK price: Corn $5.84, beans $11.32, oats $2.58, winter wheat $6.69, and spring wheat $8.50. Lotteries IOWA SATURDAY Evening Pick 3: 2-4-8 Evening Pick 4: 3-9-6-0 $100,000 Cash Game: 3- 11-14-21-30 Hot Lotto: 2-6-8-14-18 Hot Ball: 1 Next Est. Jackpot: $5.52 mil- lion Powerball: 1-12-23-27-43 Power Ball: 31; Power Play: 3. Next est. Powerball jackpot: $58 million SUNDAY Evening Pick 3: 5-9-9 Evening Pick 4: 5-2-6-8 ILLINOIS SATURDAY Midday Pick 3: 5-8-0 Midday Pick 4: 1-0-6-9 Evening Pick 3: 2-4-8 Evening Pick 4: 3-9-6-0 Little Lotto: 1-5-7-10-21 Lotto: 3-16-21-22-36-37 SUNDAY Evening Pick 3: 5-9-9 Evening Pick 4: 5-2-6-8 Little Lotto: 2-22-25-32-37 Next Est. Lotto jackpot: $3 million MEGA MILLIONS The winning numbers select- ed in Friday’s drawing were: 3-19-21-44-45: Mega Ball: 29. Next Est. Mega Millions jack- pot: $12 million Drawing dates: Sept. 30, Oct. 1 & 2, 2011. River Stages MONDAY LaCrosse, Wis. 5.04 up .03 Dubuque Dam 11 5.09 up .01 Dubuque 7.71 up .02 Bellevue 5.24 even Fulton, Ill. 5.13 even Railroad Bridge N/A Camanche 9.58 down .02 LeClaire 4.59 down .07 Rock Island, Ill. 5.07 down .08 Muscatine 6.44 down .07 Keithsburg, Ill. 6.64 down .02 Burlington 7.38 down .12 Keokuk 2.34 up .03 L/D 13 Pool: 14.23 down .01 L/D 13 Tail: 5.13 even Water Temp. 58 L/D 15 Pool: 18.40 down .10 L/D 15 Tail: 5.07 down .08 L/D 16 Pool: 11.14 down .14 L/D 16 Tail: 4.17 down .07 Maquoketa River 11.31 up .07 Wapsipinicon River 5.37 up .04 Rock River, Ill. 6.60 down .36 Hospital MERCY NORTH HOSPITAL No admissions reported. He sends some of the beef through the grinder and into a bowl. He then takes that ground meat and puts it through the machine again. All of Johnson’s Processing’s hamburger is put through the grinder twice. Lou said it gives the meat a better mix and packs it together better. After washing his hands, Lou hops into the assembly line to help with packaging meat. A customer comes in and Lou helps him. Just as the customer is leaving, the staff is preparing to start on a fresh half of beef. Lou said they process approxi- mately six animals a day. “It’s just a revolving process all day long,” said Lou. BEEF Story continued from 1A

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MERCY NORTH HOSPITAL Evening Pick 3: 2-4-8 Evening Pick 4: 3-9-6-0 $100,000 Cash Game: 3- 11-14-21-30 Hot Lotto: 2-6-8-14-18 Hot Ball: 1 Next Est. Jackpot: $5.52 mil- lion Powerball: 1-12-23-27-43 Power Ball: 31; Power Play: 3. Next est. Powerball jackpot: $58 million SUNDAY IOWA Evening Pick 3: 5-9-9 Evening Pick 4: 5-2-6-8 Little Lotto: 2-22-25-32-37 Next Est. Lotto jackpot: $3 million MEGA MILLIONS MONDAY TUESDAY: Sunny. High in the upper 70s. TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the upper

Citation preview

She gets many of herold-time recipes throughresearch and adapting hergrandmother’s long-agorecipes; they go back tothe staples of the timeperiod, with flour, sugar,salt, baking powder andyeast.

The cabin she works inwould be consideredsmall for a family, but asshe points out, familieswould use the space theyhad to the maximum. Aloft above is where thechildren would sleep;behind them would bewhere the family wouldstore items such as steam-er trunks.

The floor level containsthe main living quarters,with a bed, table andcooking equipment nearthe chimney. The womanof the house would carefor the children, cook andpreserve the harvest. Meatwould be butchered andthen preserved in lard.Root vegetables werehung from the rafters.

Casinger, formerly ofClinton and now ofByron, Ill., was in the1860s house, which hadbeen constructed on theHenry Bruebaker farm inGarden Plain and laterdonated to Wierenga to beset up in the canyon.Casinger was writing let-ters, demonstrating theuse of a quill pen, havingearlier made her dessert.

Vavra is the school-house teacher, and makessure to talk to the childrenas they try out the littledesks. Her chalkboard isfull of instruction in neat-ly printed handwriting.Primers are nearby andshe shows how childrenwould have been taught

the alphabet and soundout words.

She said one-roomschools could haveincluded children fromage 7 through high school.Younger children wouldnot have been enrolled inschool since their littlefeet could not carry themover the long walks toschool; often, childrenstopped going to schoolonce they graduated fromeighth grade.

Student attendance alsowas affected by farmworkfor the older boys andchildcare and cookingduties for the girls as theygrew older.

The Crafters showcasetheir skills on the 12 acresof land that from the mid-1800s to 1954 housed alimestone quarry whererock was crushed for fieldfertilizer, road beds, wingdams and levees. Trucks,trains and river bargeshauled it away. The quar-ry was abandoned in 1954because dynamiting wasdamaging both sides ofthe river. The area becamean eyesore to the commu-nity with its junk anddilapidated shacks,

according to the city’swebsite. In 1967, Haroldand Thelma Wierengabought the quarry. Theyconverted the machineshop into a usable work-shop and then built theirhome on the site of the oldrock crusher. Theychanged the quarry to pre-serve Midwestern history,emphasizing detail andauthenticity; and disturbnature as little as possibleas each building is added.Harold Wierenga died inJanuary 1999, his daugh-ter and son-in-law main-tained the canyon for sev-eral years. However, thevolunteer task of main-taining the canyon wassimply too much for thecouple. In October 2005the city of Fulton wasgiven ownership ofHeritage Canyon. TheEarly American Crafters’mission is to transportvisitors back to the 1800sby setting up in the build-ings that dot the land-scape of the area.

On Sunday, woodwork-ers could be found justdown the trail from theschool.

Gene Strohecker of

Elroy, Ill., demonstratedhow to turn pieces ofwood into usable items.On a blanket on theground nearby, visitorscould look at a collectionof items he had made,some decorative, othersuseful for everyday liv-ing. Others are made tomake visitors laugh, suchas the piece of a tree thathe smoothed out and hasplaced on the corner ofthe blanket. When peopleask him what it is, he tellsthem it is a skeleton of afoot. He also made adetailed miniature of ashaving horse, saying heis looking for someonesmall enough use it.

“You’ve got to have funwith your craft,” he said.

Bob Olesen of Sterling,Ill., was making a bowl ina nearby building, thefirst time he had madethat piece.

A large group of toolswere assembled nearby,with Olesen detailing theimportance of each to thecreation of the bowl.

Larry Jepsen and hiscousin, Daniel, drewquite the crowd as theymade brooms at thecanyon’s entrance.

While not members ofthe Early AmericanCrafters, they are invitedto the canyon a coupletimes of year to demon-strate broommaking, inwhich they use corn-broom plants that theytrim, layer around awooden handle, and wirein place before drying andstitching into a variety ofbrooms.

Paper missing?If your newspaper has not arrived by 5 p.m. daily or by 8a.m. Saturday please contact your carrier. If you cannotreach your carrier, please call the Clinton Herald no laterthan 6 p.m. daily or 9 a.m. Saturdays.

Clinton HeraldMain Switchboard(563) 242-7101

or 1-800-729-7101

To leave a message after normal business hours from 8a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Subscriber Services(563) 242-7142 ext. 123Newsroom(563) 242-7142Sports(563) 242-7142 ext. 125Classified Advertising(563) 242-7142 ext. 122Display Advertising (563) 242-7142 ext. 141Editor

(563) 242-7142 ext. 155

CLINTON HERALD(USPS 118680) Published daily exceptSundays ByNewspaper Holding Inc.The Clinton Herald,221 Sixth Ave. SouthClinton, Iowa 52732Vol. 151, No. 235SUBSCRIPTION RATESBy carrier or motor route: $12 per month,$29.50 per three months, $54.50 per sixmonths, $102.50 per year. By mail withinClinton County: $108.50 per year; by mailwithin Jackson, Whiteside and Carrollcounties: $114.50 per year. In all otherzones: $150 per year. Periodical postagepaid at Clinton, Iowa 52732. Send alladdress changes to the Clinton Herald, Box2961, Clinton, Iowa 52733-2961.

CREDIT AND RATE POLICYAll Classified categories mayrequire prepayment. If in doubt, please call theClassified Department. All classified display ads requireprepayment in the absence ofestablished credit terms.Commercial rates apply to commer-cial business and applicable classi-fications, i.e. Help Wanted, Rentals,Real Estate for Sale etc. Classifiedline rates are discounted by consec-utive insertions.

ADJUSTMENT OF ERRORSIt is the responsibility of the adver-tiser to check each insertion of anadvertisement. On consecutive run advertisements,no adjustments will be made by the

Publisher for errors not correctedafter the first day. The Publisher accepts no liability orresponsibility for failure to insertan advertisement. The Publisher accepts no liabilityfor any error in an advertisement,regardless of course, except for thecost of the space actually occupiedby the error. The Publisher reserves the right torevise or reject, at its opinion, anyadvertisement deemed objection-able by the Publisher in subjectmatter, phraseology or composi-tion, or to classify anyadvertisements. All ads subject to credit approval.

CMYK

Daily Record

ET CETERA2A | MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2011 WWW.CLINTONHERALD.COM

Area Digest

Iowa works toreform mentalhealth careBy Ben JacobsonHerald Staff Writer

DESMOINES —Those directly affectedby Iowa’s mental healthsystem are being givenan opportunity to influ-ence its redesign.Through a series of pub-lic input meetings, men-tal health officials arecollecting ideas and con-cerns from the samepeople who will benefitin the future.

“It’s really an opportu-nity to hear observationsand recommendations,”said Rick Shults, admin-istrator for the Divisionof Mental Health andDisability Services.“...Getting this kind ofinput is very importantin the process.”

Four of five scheduledpublic hearings havewrapped up, with thefinal meeting scheduledfor Oct. 7 in CouncilBluffs.

Iowans coping withmental health issues orintellectual disabilitieswere invited to sharetheir views on theredesign, made possiblethrough legislationpassed in the most recentcongressional session.

Shults called the ses-sions “informational” sofar, and said that themeetings have beenwell-attended. He waspresent at the Waterloomeeting on Sept. 23,which had about 150attendees.

When the meetingshave concluded, Shultssaid that the ideas andinformation collectedwill be passed ontoworkgroups that willanalyze what he calledthe “themes” of themeetings. Then, duringthe final months of theyear, the interim sessionresponsible with over-seeing the redesign willhelp determine potentiallegislation.

“This will give us ourframework that we needto move forward with,”Shults said.

He added that officialsare dedicated to beingaware of consumer con-cerns, and addressingthem as well as possible.

The mental health anddisability servicesredesign is expected tobe ready for the 2013legislative session.Legislators hope to mod-ify the system from acounty based service to aregional service, hope-fully ensuring a consis-tent level of care. As thesystem stands, somecounties are able to pro-vide more funding forservices while otherhave difficulty meetingdemands.

Shults said that citi-zens need to be awarethat having a moreregional system does notmean that they will haveto travel great distancesto address mental healthissues.

“Services are stillgoing to be delivered atthe local level,” he said.“That’s something thatfamilies need to hear.”

TUESDAY: Sunny. High in the upper 70s.TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the upper40s.WEDNESDAY: Sunny. High in the upper 70s.WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the lower50s.

YesterdayOfficial High 69Official Low 36Precipitation 0

TodayHigh one year ago 57Low one year ago 36All-time high 91, 1922, ‘97, 2006All-time low 28, 1987

Normal high 71Normal low 47Precip. for month 0Normal precip. for month 2.68Precip. for year 28.82Normal precip. for year 30.28Sunrise: 7:01Sunset: 6:41

In Clinton

Today’s local weather TODAY: Sunny. High in the mid 70s. TONIGHT: Clear. Low in the mid 40s.

Around the United States

CRAFTERSStory continued from 1A

Gene Strohecker of Elroy, Ill., demonstrates how toturn pieces of wood into a spoon at Heritage Canyonon Sunday. CHARLENE BIELEMA/CLINTON HERALD

MUSEUM OPENSSee photos of the Clinton

Sawmill Museum’sgrand opening

LOCAL, 5A

GrainsPrices quoted at 8 a.m.today; subject to fluctuation.Prices may vary slightly atcounty buying stations. • ADM/Growmark: No. 2 yel-low corn Clinton $5.94.• County PIK price: Corn$5.84, beans $11.32, oats$2.58, winter wheat $6.69,and spring wheat $8.50.

LotteriesIOWASATURDAYEvening Pick 3: 2-4-8Evening Pick 4: 3-9-6-0$100,000 Cash Game: 3-11-14-21-30Hot Lotto: 2-6-8-14-18Hot Ball: 1Next Est. Jackpot: $5.52 mil-lionPowerball: 1-12-23-27-43Power Ball: 31; Power Play: 3.Next est. Powerball jackpot:$58 millionSUNDAYEvening Pick 3: 5-9-9Evening Pick 4: 5-2-6-8ILLINOISSATURDAYMidday Pick 3: 5-8-0Midday Pick 4: 1-0-6-9Evening Pick 3: 2-4-8Evening Pick 4: 3-9-6-0Little Lotto: 1-5-7-10-21Lotto: 3-16-21-22-36-37SUNDAYEvening Pick 3: 5-9-9 Evening Pick 4: 5-2-6-8Little Lotto: 2-22-25-32-37Next Est. Lotto jackpot: $3millionMEGA MILLIONSThe winning numbers select-ed in Friday’s drawing were:3-19-21-44-45: Mega Ball:29.Next Est. Mega Millions jack-pot: $12 millionDrawing dates: Sept. 30, Oct. 1 & 2, 2011.

River StagesMONDAYLaCrosse, Wis. 5.04 up .03Dubuque Dam 11 5.09 up .01Dubuque 7.71 up .02Bellevue 5.24 evenFulton, Ill. 5.13 evenRailroad Bridge N/ACamanche 9.58 down .02LeClaire 4.59 down .07Rock Island, Ill. 5.07 down .08Muscatine 6.44 down .07Keithsburg, Ill. 6.64 down .02 Burlington 7.38 down .12Keokuk 2.34 up .03L/D 13 Pool: 14.23 down .01L/D 13 Tail: 5.13 evenWater Temp. 58L/D 15 Pool: 18.40 down .10L/D 15 Tail: 5.07 down .08L/D 16 Pool: 11.14 down .14L/D 16 Tail: 4.17 down .07Maquoketa River 11.31 up .07Wapsipinicon River 5.37 up .04Rock River, Ill. 6.60 down .36

HospitalMERCY NORTH HOSPITALNo admissions reported.

He sends some of the beefthrough the grinder and intoa bowl. He then takes thatground meat and puts itthrough the machine again.All of Johnson’sProcessing’s hamburger isput through the grindertwice. Lou said it gives themeat a better mix and packsit together better.

After washing his hands,Lou hops into the assemblyline to help with packagingmeat. A customer comes inand Lou helps him. Just asthe customer is leaving, thestaff is preparing to start ona fresh half of beef. Lousaid they process approxi-mately six animals a day.

“It’s just a revolvingprocess all day long,” saidLou.

BEEFStory continued from 1A