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				 Daniel Maxson was barely eight years old when his parents 
				John and Gaye bought the Arlee fourteen years ago. When he 
				wasn’t play-acting on the stage, he pitched in with his parents 
				and three older siblings in the theater’s restoration, running a 
				sander on the stage floor under the supervision of his older 
				brother Dale, or doing odd-jobs assigned by his sisters Mary and 
				Marcia. 
 Even after they married and moved away, the four Maxson 
				offspring would always come home for special Arlee events. But 
				when the family gathered last fall for the Arlee’s 80th birthday 
				celebration, Daniel and his wife Andrea were absent. Working in 
				North Dakota, it just wasn’t possible to make it home. Yearning 
				to contribute, Daniel decided when they did return, he would 
				make it his mission to restore all the brass appointments to 
				their former glory.
 
				 According to local historian Dale Fancher, in the Arlee’s early 
				days retired farmer Walter Huffman polished all the brass kick 
				plates, door pulls and doorstops every day with Brasso, but 
				there’s no telling how long it has been since the tarnished 
				hardware had such pampering.
 The youngest Maxson couple returned to Mason City Christmas Eve 
				and Daniel quickly set to work. Though the project is not 
				completed, Arlee movie-goers are once again greeted by many 
				gleaming brass fixtures. With a lot of elbow grease, some acid, 
				power tools and a lot of time, Daniel was able to make all the 
				kick plates shine like gold again, but after years of exposure 
				to the elements and grime, the exterior door pulls have 
				presented challenges that may have to wait until another day.
 
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“Like any restoration or home project, one improvement leads to another,” said 
John Maxson. “There will always be something to work on. We really appreciate 
our family and all the Arlee friends who have helped us get this far restoring 
the Arlee.”
 The shiny brass is not the only improvement at the Arlee in recent weeks. After 
struggling to keep the auditorium warm during a recent cold snap, Arlee 
management secured local contractor Kevin Koeppen to blow in ten inches of 
insulation in the attic. Combined with new weather stripping on the doors, the 
comfort level is dramatically improved. Just as that project was completed two 
hours before the Friday night show, it was realized the 40-year-old heat blower 
had breathed its last breath. Jim Hernan of Hernan’s Plumbing & Heating came to 
the rescue and as the movie rolled, he worked in the attic, unbeknownst to 
customers. Hernan replaced the relic in short order, surprising customers as he 
emerged from a door by the screen. The moral: support your local businesses and 
they will be there for you when you need them!
 
				 
			[Gaye Maxson] 
			
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