Some 10,000 Empty Sandbags . . . are stored at city hall. Looking over bags are Patrolman C.J. Turpen and Maurice Katelman. A total of 210,000 bags will be on hand for emergency use.
Start To Raise Levees . . . on North Eighth street at Big Lake. The large machines must plow through gummy mud to dump their loads. This picture was taken from the bluff east of the levee. In the distance, water is pushing against the level from the…
Building Railroad Roadbed . . . is this train and crew on the Illinois Central track near Pigeon Creek. Ballast is in end car. Center cars in worktrain are just "couplings" to keep heavy locomotive from flood-weakened roadbed.
Last Missouri River Devastation in Southwest Iowa is at Hamburg. Water rushed onto the town from a break in the Plum Creek levee 15 miles to the north. Here residents keep just ahead of the creeping water as they place last-minute bulwarks against…
All's Quiet And The Levees Hold but the raging Missouri has driven some machinery to high ground. Ralph Den of Bellevue looks over some stranded equipment as he goes by boat to a Northern Natural Gas Company station south of Iowa School for the Deaf.
Kelly Steskal and borther Stezie Steskal, of Carter Lake, with Kelly holding rooster. On back of photo: File--Carter Lake
Stezie Steskal
Rooster complaint
Twenty-Two Dozen Doughnuts are fried in deep fat every hour for levee workers at Dodge school. Workers are Mrs. Ralph C. Russell and Mrs. Frances Lewis.
Theater Closes . . . Manager Allan Schrimpf hangs a closed sign on the Broadway theater Saturday evening. The theater and other business places termed non-essential to the Missouri River flood fight were ordered closed by proclamation of Mayor James…