If you lived in Davenport in 1905, the Oldsmobile Touring Car might have been the automobile for you. This advertisement for Mason's Carriage Works was published in The Daily Times on April 8, 1905.
If you lived in Davenport in 1905, the Oldsmobile Touring Car might have been the automobile for you. This advertisement for Mason's Carriage Works was published in The Daily Times on April 8, 1905.
This letter from an unnnamed captain of the 4th Iowa Cavalry dated Fort Scott, October 26, 1864, was published in the Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye on November 12, 1864.
| Dawn attack at Trading Post on the Marais Des Cygnes River |
Two miles from Mound City and fourteen from Trading Post, Marmaduke’s division made a stand. Phillips’ First Brigade M. S. M. came up on the right and formed first. Then our command came up on the left and formed a column of regiments, the 10th Minnesota in advance, the 4th Iowa next, and the 3rd Iowa in the rear of our 21st Brigade.
This letter from the 6th Iowa Infantry at Oak Ridge, Miss., dated August 24, 1863, was printed in the Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye on September 12, 1863.
| 6th Iowa Infantry on a scouting expedition |
And first, allow me to say that the hospitals at Paducah are just what they ought to be. Those who have friends there may rest assured that everything possible is being done to make them comfortable, and if they do not recover, it will not be because they are beyond the reach of medical skill and the equally important attention of the kindest and best nurses.
On May 8, 1863, The Muscatine Journal printed this letter from an unnamed member of the 2nd Iowa Cavalry.
| 2nd Iowa Cavalry setting off on a scouting expedition |
Cyril Charles Slapnicka was born in Cedar Rapids in 1886.
Farm country. Immigrant parents. Baseball was the quickest way out of town and
the surest way back in.
He pitched forever in the minors. Iowa. Illinois.
Anywhere they’d pay him. In 1911 he won 26 games in Rockford and forced the
Chicago Cubs to notice. September call-up. Big league clubhouse. A few
appearances. Then, back on the train.
He resurfaced with Pittsburgh in 1918. Ten major
league games total. Record: 1–6. He wasn’t a star. Not even close.
A lot of men would’ve faded right there.
Slapnicka didn’t.
In 1921, he signed on with Cleveland as a scout.
That’s where the story actually starts. He had an eye, and knew what a
big-league arm looked like before it knew itself. He drove Iowa’s back roads.
Watched high school kids throw in half-empty parks. Talked to parents. Took
notes. Made bets with other scouts and usually won.
In 1936, he found Bob Feller, an Iowa farm kid
throwing gas past grown men. Slapnicka signed him. That changed Cleveland for a
decade. Later came Bob Lemon and a pipeline of players who filled out rosters
that could actually win.
For a stretch in the mid-1930s, he ran the club.
General manager. Contracts, salaries, egos. No draft system back then. You
wanted a player; you found him first and signed him fast. Slapnicka operated
like a man who understood scarcity. Talent was gold. Hesitation was death.
He stayed with Cleveland over forty years,
scouting into his seventies because he trusted his judgment more than anyone
else’s reports.
He died in 1979 at 93, back in Cedar Rapids.
Here’s the clean version: He had a short,
forgettable pitching career and a long, consequential second act.
He didn’t conquer the mound. He built the roster.
And in baseball, that can matter more.
On September 30, 1906, the Des Moines Register ran a pictorial on the historic old building of Des Moines. I picked two of them to feature hereL a look at Des Moines in 1858, and the Des Moine Hotel in 1855. Some of the other pictures not shown here included the Old Congregational Church in 1858, the first bridge on Walnut Street in 1866, and the D. F. C. Grunell House, built in 1848.