wa, on June 4, 1961. The ceremony took place at the Norwood Evangelical United Brethern (now Methodist) church, the home church of Eva and her family. The couple had no children, but loved their nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews and enjoyed hosting Christmas dinners for extended family members and their children. They saw most frequently Dwaine and Marge Stewart, Ilene Church and Connor Altenhofen, her sister Susie Hayes and her daughter Tracie and granddaughter, Olivia. He was the namesake of his nephew, Andrew Harold Shelton. In l960, Harold became employed by Cargill in Des Moines, working in its soybean-processing mill for the next thirty-five years. When he retired from Cargill in l995, he received an award for working the entire period of his employment without an accident. For twenty-six years, Harold and Eva resided at their West Lake home in Chariton. Both loved to watch the deer, homeless domestic animals, the birds and other wildlife that came from the nearby timber to feed the year around. When the abandoned cats heard his car leave the highway and head for the Stewart home a half-mile way, they gathered for the food he supplied unfailingly. Harold loved cars and kept his Chevrolets spotless. He and Eva were well-known regulars at the LakeSide Casino and Resort and enjoyed the friendships they made with several employees there. He was a long-time member of the Calvin Caviness American Legion Post of Chariton and regularly attended the monthly meetings of the post. Harold was preceded in death by his parents, brothers Roy Frederick "Buster" Stewart and Raymond Stewart, his sister, Alta Marie Everman and her husband, Gerald., his in-laws, Martin and Evelyn Shelton, and his sisters-in-laws, Arlene Burley Stewart, Louise Richards Stewart, and Evelyn Louise Shelton. Survivors include his wife, Eva Mae, sister-in-law Susie Hayes of Clive, Iowa, brothers-in-law Ronald (Clarissa) Shelton of Lacona and Richard (Marilyn) Shelton of Minneapolis, Minnesota, He is survived, too, by many nieces and nephews, a host of cousins, and many friends and neighbors.