THE COLOMA COURIER
Transcription
THE COLOMA COURIER
THE COLOMA COURIER WHOLE NO. 1410 m m n n m COLOMA, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1919 THANKROIVINfi SKRVICRS DUTH OF MRS. WILLIAM GRAfff , " , , i o n 8 w » l w " w n i be I W d in C o l M M COVEiOR ASKS All TO GIVE THAHKS ON M f f M B 11 nnd W u t m l i d . A I'ERSONAL WORD TO DELINQl ENT SI BSCRIHERS It a g a i n liecomes n eces s ary f o r T h e A nnion ThankiiglvInK s m l c c will h»' belli in Colnma, Tlinrsdny evening, Away Wednesday Morning. N o r e m h e r -'Tth. nt o'clock. TLIC T h e residents of Coiuma a n d Tlcinlty KOirlce will Iw hold In the First Methare g r i e m g this week over t h e passing IMIIS! K | i l . s c o | m l chnri-h nnd the ThunkH a w a y of Mrs. Mary B. G r a n t , w i f e of g i v i n g Konnon will lie d e l i v e m l by Hev. W. II. F u l l e r , p a s t o r of t h e Cnngregn P u s t m u t e r W m . G r a n t , a n d o n e of C o l o m a ' s e s t i m a b l e society nnd c l n h wom- tlonnl chtiit'li. At the evening h o u r "A y e a r a g o we rejoiced that a f t e r en, w h o s e d o a l b o c c u r r e d Wednosduy the dlnnen* nnd o t h e r sm-liil feMtlvltles the cruelties a n d h o r r o r s of w a r peace m o r n i n g , N o v e m b e r 19, 1919, a f t e r of the d n y will Ite over nnd the e n t i r e henediclloii f a m i l y c a n g a t h e r f o r IIiIk service of had s p r e a d Its blessed prolonged miffering f r o m c a n c e r . over nil t h e e a r t h . We h a v e had a M r t . G r a n t was b o r n in this vicinity p r a i s e . A slmllnr c e r v i i v will Ik> held at the y e a r of peace. O u r gallant soldier and f o r t y - s i x ' ^ y e a n a g o a n d h a s s p e n t her e n t i r e life here. S h e was a n a c t i v e ('oiicn-gulloniil e h i m h In Wiitervliel s a i l o r l a d s h a v e come Iwick to us. s a v e c l u b w o m a n , heing a p r o m i n e n t w o r k e r on W e d n e s d a y evening, Novcmlier -il. those who g a v e up t h e i r lives In o u r a n d p a s t president of t h e Self C u l t u r # Hev. Geo. A. I l r o w n , p a s t o r of t h e cause. T h e lllierlles of t h e world have C l u b . S h e was also i n t e r e s t e d in lodxe .Methisllst l i m r e h . will pn-nrh the ser- lieen m a d e s e c u r e , and t h e f o u n d a t i o n s w o r k , b e i n g u m e m b e r of the O r d e r of mon t h e r e . KverylsMly Is Invited to at- of this repuhllc have r e m a i n e d un- He Had Lived in TTiis Vicinity f o r O v e r F i f t y Years. J a m e s Hodges w a s b o r n In New York s t a t e on October 20, 18S7, ami passed a w a y a t his home In Colonm t o w n s h i p on F r i d a y . Novemiier 14,1011). H e w a s u n i t e d in m a r r i a g e to M a r y A . Wilkinson August 12. 18(10, a t Tlogn county. Notice to Trappers As we have made contracts with the largest fur houses in this country, we are in position to handle your f u r s at a good advantage. As the season is open get busy and bring in your furs, or call f o r information, Phone 384 or 89. For large quantities we will send our representative. Also we are in the market for all kinds of HIDES and SHEEP PELTS. We guarantee satisfaction. INDEPENDENT IRON METAL COMPANY SODTB HAVEN s e n t them a s t a t e m e n t of t h e i r account they would IN* glad to m a k e 1m m e d i a t e settlement, but t h i s Is lm|Kis- b e r 10, 1010, A d a u g h t e r w a s b o r n on W e d n e s d a y morning to Mr. ami Mrs. C u n n l n g h a n i of S t J o s e p h . Mrs. Cunnlnghuiu m a d e h e r home w i t h Mrs. W. T . Itertrand f o r almut a y e a r . Mr. a n d Mrs. F r a n k Selwista a r e the p a r e n t s of a six pound d a u g h t e r , lioni on Monday, November 17, 1010. Having ready cash for y o u r salary o r w a g e s . Start with a small deposit if n e c e s s a r y . I n c r e a s e it as you can and soon you will have a substantial interest-bearing account, and a feeling of safety, contentment, pride and independence. Safety—Honesty-Courtesy Service S T A T E BANK OF COLOMA COLOMA, MICH and + Bibie, so w e t a k e this m e a n s to ask them to please come a c r o s s as soon as T h e work w i t h soldiers nnd s a i l o r s a t home, a b r o a d a n d enroule, r e m a i n s In c h a r a c t e r w h a t II w a s d u r i n g tin w a r , reduced In volnme. b u t still extensive. T h e end of foreign obllKnllons Is In sight, n n d It Is M l e v e d t h a t till! O n * million v o l o n t e e r a t o enlist w i t h the A m e r i c a n R e d C r o s s f o r the T h i r d Roll Coll, N o v e m b e r 2-11, a n d e n r o l l annnal members. T h e R e d Cross n e e d s 115,000,' 000 t o complete Its remalnlnK w a r w o r k and f o r a comprehensive p e a c e p r o g r a m . T h e R e d C r o s s n e e d s 20,000,000 m e m b e n t o m a i n t a i n Ita p r e s e n t high s t a n d a r d of organization. T h e R e d Cross n e e d s YOU. ENLIST. T o u r c h s p t e r Is y o u r r e c r u i t ing s t a t i o n . : I-ast • F r i d a y . lug .Movement. T h e blue nnd w h i t e s q u a d of t h e CoLansing, Nov. I l l - T h r e e Red Or..-1 lonm high school had little t r o u b l e In Seal d a y s h a v e lieen designated by t h e d e f e a t i n g t h e H a r t f o r d high school Michigan A n t l - t u b e r c u l o s U Association h e r e on F r i d a y , Novemiier H t h . hy a a m i they a r e backed by a "pris?hinins c o r e of 45 to 0. Not once did the H a r t - Hon" by S l a t e H e a l t h Commiaaloncr ford I toys even t h r e a t e n the blue nnd Olln. w h i t e goal, d e s p i t e the f a c t t h a t t h e Coloma lioys hardly wurmed up. Some of the plays t a u g h t the hoys by Decemlier 5 will be R e d Croon Christmas Seal D a y In t h e schools of Michigan. • 'oach Miller and the s e n s a t i o n a l passDecember 0 will b e R e d Cross Christ^ '-s a n d end r u n s of t h e blue and w h i t e accounted f o r the big score. T h e g a m e inns Sen I Day In t h e s y n a g o g u e s . Decemlier 7 will lie Bed Cross w a s called a t .'^."lO a n d t h r e e m i n u t e s a f t e r t h e whistle blew the Colonm l a d s C h r i s t m a s Seal Day in the churches. T h e school s u p e r i n t e n d e n t a of t h e s t a t e will be nsked t h a t on December 5 t h e prlnel|ials of the schools give t a l k s on the s u b j e c t of Bed C r o s i C h r i s t m a s Seals nnd In r e g a r d to t h e i r licarlng on the tuberculosis campaign. I n this w a y It Is hoped to c a r r y the message home to thousands of p a r e n t s who w o u l d o t h e r w i s e not IsT h e seal s a l e Is p u t on a s At t h e end of the first h a l f . Corrlgnn reached. w a s t a k e n out on a c c o u n t of a s t r a i n e d much f o r Its e d u c a t i o n a l effect as f o r leg a n d Leonard w a s p u t In nt l e f t h a l f , the f u n d s t h n t a r e raised In this w a y . nnd P i n y a r d at l e f t end. and t h e schools will be a s k e d to help this educntlonnl w o r k along. Coloma Hunters Kill a Rear is the last a p p e a l necessary f o r foreign needs r e s u l t i n g f r o m the g r e a t w a r , A l b e r t Kibier, F r a n k B a l d , J a m e s hut llfleen million d o l l a r s more than K. Guy, A. Welter nnd Reuben M a t r n n the present e n r o l l m e n t of m e m b e r s will n r e the memliers of t h e P o l m a n t e e r be needed to complete the a r n i u g i c a m p which Is h u n t i n g big g a m e In t h e m e n t s a l r e a d y m a d e and c a r r y out n o r t h e r n p a r t of Michigan. A l e t t e r to c o n s t r u c t i v e p l a n s to e n a b l e the people of some of t h e e a s t e r u c o u n t ri e s to get firmly p l a n t e d on t h e i r feet a n d to s h o u l d e r t h e i r o w n h e a l t h a n d welfare problems. CROSS C H R I S T M A S SEALS I n t e r e s t i n g Football G a m e W a s P l a y e d A n l l - T u b m u l o s i s Association U R a r l : - T h e Bed Cross C h r i s t m a s Seal i s l e will lie held this y e a r d u r i n g the first ten d a y s In December, w h e n it Is hoped to sell 15,000,000 s e a l s In Michigan. MRS. C H A R L E S S P 1 E L M A N DIED VERY SUDDENLY T h e C o u r i e r conveys the I n f o r m a t i o n thnt memliers of t h e p a r t y rfVe all fine nnd n r e e n j o y i n g plenty of nice Juicy Deceased W a s a Resident of Coloma ;i venison nnd h a v e f a n s l espeeially well. D e c a d e Ago. J a m e s Guy nnd A. WHier succeeded In Here, in t h i s Red Cross c a m p a i g n , killing a line black lienr and the story w e may m a k e a t h a n k o f f e r i n g for they told In the evening when they remonth a n d w e must get o u r money to victory and r e d e d l c a t e o u r s e l v e s to the t u r n e d to enmp fiiriilshed e n t e r t n l n principles f o r which o u r men a t a r m s nient f o r the hunch. T h e boys Imd a p a y bills f r o m those w h o owe us. laid down t h e i r lives, thnt people ev- lively b a t t l e a n d w h e n t h e b e a r wns F. W. C O C H R U N . P u b l i s h e r of T h e Courier e r y w h e r e , first n t home a m i then o v e r c o m e s h e fell w i t h i n two paces of m u s t imy c a s h to settle o u r bills every Mrs. C h a r l e s S p l e l m n n of Bentim H a r b o r died very s u d d e n l y Wednesd a y evening, Novemiier 12. 1010. a t t h e h o m e of a nelghlHir. Mrs. J o h u J . S t i f ling. w h e r e s h e w a s colling. A n at- tack of heart t r o u b l e w n s aunouucc'l Mr. Guy, h e Is-lng the closest to B r n l n . us the cause of the s u d d e n d e a t h . A f t e r n thorough c h a n g e of n l t l r e , Mr and Mrs. S p l e l m n n w e r e f o r f a e r R e s i d e n t s of Coloma a n d vicinity quiet w a s restored In the c a m p . residents of Colnma. moving f r o m h e r e n r e nsked to cnll nt the S t a t e Itank of to Chicago, a n d locatlug in Benton Colonm, w h e r e , o n p a y m e n t of their A company w a s organized in Benton IlarlMir a b o u t t w o y e a r s ago. w h e n $1.00 f o r Hie n n n u a l memliership fee, " D o e , " as Mr. S p i e l m a n Is fnniillarly they will receive t h e i r w i n d o w card H a r b o r Inst week w i t h 1075,000 c n p l t a l stock to t a k e over t h e Muucie ( i n d . ) known here, p u r c h a s e d t h e K i n n e y a n d their Ited Cross b u t t o n f o r 1010. Mniienble Iron plnnt. J . N. Klock, C i d e r 4 Vinegar W o r k s . B e s i d m t h e g e n e r a l m a n a g e r of the B e n t o n Hnr- husliaud. Mrs. Splelmnn Is s u r v i v e d by T H E REAL MENACE bor Mniienble plant, w a s i n s t r u m e n t a l | n son nnd a numlier of o t h e r relatnves. a b r o a d , m i g h t IK> given an o p p o r t u n i t y to live and Is- h a p p y . IIKill SCHOOL NOTES In p u t t i n g over the big denl. T h e cnpl j tal stock w a s subacribed by CIHZCMS of Benton Hnrlior, L a n s i n g a n d Munclc. P A V I N G T A X I S N O W D U E ; G o v e r n o r Slee|ier a n d S t a t e I n s u r a n c e j Commissioner E l l s w o r t h a r e a m o n g the heavy stockholders. T h e G. B. O. W. class will h a v e t h e i r b a z a a r a t 1. O. O. F. hall. S a t u r d a y . December 0 t h . T h e l a d l e s ' will s e r v e t h e i r a n n u a l d i n n e r . come.—Adv. Self C u l t u r e Club. presiding. T h e lesson w a s conducted by Mrs. C l a y mid w a s very Interesting. tions by Mrs. Maggie W o o d w a r d w e r e enjoyed by all. T h e d a t e of this m e e t i n g being Mrs. Kelly's b i r t h d a y , p a y m e n t M U S T B E M A D E a t the oflkv aid of the Village t r e a s u r e r a t Guy & Ail H o c k e r ' s feed mill. J A M E S K . GUY. T r e a s u r e r . W e h a v e s o m e very a t t r a c t i v e , u s e f u l c o o k i n g u t e n s i l s in Aluminum, Gray Granite and Tinware. Let us show you o u r a l u m i n u m P e r c o l a t o r s , R o a s t e r s , K e t t l e s a n d Pudding Pans and our Granite Roasters and other G r a n i t e w a r e . W e c a r r y a nice line o f P y r o x C o o k i n g D i s h e s d i s h e s y o u c a n c o o k in a n d u s e in s e r v i n g , a l s o a full l i n e o f S i l v e r w a r e t h a t w e w o u l d be p l e a s e d l o s h o w y o u , W e h a v e a c h o i c e lot c f C a s s e r o l e s , A l a r m C l o c k s , P a r i n g , B u t c h e r a n d Steel K n i v e s , C u t l e r y , Scissors a n d S h e a r s , h a n d and crosscut Saws, G u n s , A m m u n i t i o n , Shells and Cartridges. R e p a i r y o u r b a r n — W e h a v e t h e best h a n g e r a n d t r i c k o n t h e m a r k e t , r u n s e a s y a n d d o e s n o t get o u t o f o r d e r . N o w is a g o o d t i m e to b u y a m a n u r e s p r e a d e r , a w a g o n , a b u / z saw, a gasoline engine or washing machine. G e t a litter c a r r i e r a n d t a k e it easy i n s t e a d o f w e a r i n g y o u r s e l f out pushing a wheelbarrow. S e e us b e f o r e y o u b u y s p r a y i n g m a . e r i a l . W e will sell a s c h e a p as a n y r e s p o n s i b l e d e a l e r . T h e t i m e Is a t b a u d f o r the government, the law abiding d e m e n t of or- V o u r s for trade gnnlzed labor a n d the public to kick these m a l c o n t e n t s o u t of the c o u n t r y or place them w h e r e they c a n no longer Coloma Hardware Co. agitato and destroy. T h e IKIISOIIOUS siftike Is a source of constant d a n g e r a n d Is p r o m p t l y crush ed. T h e a l i e n p a r a s i t e who Is sucking the blood of honest labor a n d preach lug sedition n m o n g o u r citizens is n she w a s p r e s e n t e d w i t h n b e a u t i f u l national |ierll and should lie cxtermlii bouquet. A light lunch wns served, the hostess lH-ing assisted hy Mrs. l i r a n t a ted. and Mrs. i t u n k e r . Twelve memliers ami t h r e e v i s i t o r s w e r e p r e s e n t , t h e visitors being MesdHuies Kraut, i l a l d nnd Mnr- W n r n l n g Is hereby given h u n t e r s and Tin. T h e Indies all left goml w i s h e s w i t h Mrs. Kelly. T h e n e x t meeting o t h e r s not to t r e s p a s s upon a n y of the lands o w n e d by the iniderslgned, un I THE COLOMA THEATRE Starting at 7:00 p. m. NO T R E S P A S S I N G Saturday, Nov. 22nd—Fox feature. "Married in Haste." Admission—Adults, 15c; w a r tax 'Jc. will lie w i t h Mrs. Ilrown at llentoii d e r p e n a l t y of lllieml prosecution. l l a r l m r . L a d l e s will go on the 0 : 4 5 a . T h i s pro|)erly Includes the e n t i r e south m. l u t o r u r b a n , Inking a potluck iliimer w i t h them. T h e special a s s e s s m e n t f o r the paving t a x e s In Coloma a r e now d u e n n d Thanksgiving of their possibilities in t h e i r caiiipalgn of lirufallty a n d liitimldatlou. They a r e s h r e w d ciiough, however, will be In f n v o r of cooiieratlve studylug. to see t h n t the responsibility f o r t h e i r devlllshness Is laid a t t h e door of o r H o w a r d M a r t i n , C l a r e n c e Morlock ganlzcd l a b o r , a n d by this m e n u s esa n d Vernon J o h n s o n of t h e eighth cape the individual p u n i s h m e n t which g r a d e had to remain a f t e r school every Is their J u s t due. night Inst week f o r shooting pn|icr T h e A m e r i c a n people h a v e lieen wads. bully ragged by these a l i e n s until |iatlenco Is no longer u v i r t u e . On N o v emb er H t h the Indies of t h e Self C u l t u r e Club met a t the home of Mrs. J o h n J . Kelly, w i t h Mrs. Frit* PAY T O T R E A S U R E R GUY Now is a good time to m a k e your aelection f o r K l l m a r k can s t u d p b e t t e r t o g e t h e r or alone. I t Is ho|ied t h a t t h e decision T h e c u r r e n t events conducted by the hostess a n d the r e a d i n g s a n d recita- WANTED ] H I L L PUSH SALE OF R E D WON O V E R H A R T F O R D T h e Coloma c h a p t e r of t h e American had scored a t o u c h d o w n . T h e lineup INissible. A n u m b e r of subscrlliers h a v e paid w i t h i n the past t w o weeks Red Cross will c o n t i n u e lis meinlier of Conch Miller's sqimd w a s as f o l l o w s : L e f t end, Leonnrd a n d G. P i n y a r d ; n n d it Is IIOINMI t h a t maiiy more will s h i p drive j i n l l l D i r e m l s - r 1st. This m a k e seltlement In-fore Decemlier 1st. cnnipalgii is mi a n n u a l event, t h e Hid l e f t tackle, H a r t n m n ; l e f t g u a r d , HronT h e cost of p u b l i s h i n g n newapa|ier Cross lloll Cnll, In which the American s o n ; centre, W o o l e y ; right g u a r d . H i l l ; right end. Is f a r g r e a t e r now t h a n It h a s lieen, Ited Cross s u b m i t s Its record to the right tackle, IL L o r e n s ; e v e n higher t h a n d u r i n g t h e period of people nnd s e e k s f r o m the people n n- M a r v i n : q u a r t e r b a c k . K l l m a r k ; l e f t the w a r . P a | i e r prices a r e consianll.v newal of t h e i r nllegiance a n d n m a n half, C o r r l g a n ; right h a l f , G. L o r e n i : full b a c k , S l l h a n e k . R e f e r e e . Cook. a d v a n c i n g a n d It Is w i t h dHliculty t h a t d a t e f o r f u t u r e a c t i v i t y . m i t t e e took c h a r g e a n d istpcom a n d It is not organized lalHir which Knneral services w e r e held on Wed- apples w e r e served. E v e r y b o d y (Innesday a f t e r n o o n f r o m the late home, cluding t h e f r e s h m e n ) reimrted a very t h r e a t e n s t h e f u t u r e of t h i s c o u n t r y . N e i t h e r Is it t h e I n s a t i a t e greed of conducted by Elder M a s t e r s . I n t e r - e n j o y a b l e time. capitalism. ment in Coloma cemetery. Gladys R y n o l e f t school l a s t F r i d a y W i t h o u t orgnnlHitlon labor would lie a m i will a t t e n d school In W a t e r r l i e t . u n d e n m l d nnd u n d e r f e d . COPY M I S T R E IN E A R L Y Miss Sinlth, high school principal, Without t h e cnpltnllst t h e r e would b e no n d e q u a l e a v e n u e s f o r t h e emF O R N E X T W E E K ' S P A P E R spent the week-end nt E d w a r d s b u r g . ployment of Inlior. Bernadlne Foster was entertained at Both must survive. the Ijirseii home over S u n d a y . TTie Courier Will be Published Day But the t n e n n c e w i t h which w e must T h e Colonm high school will have a cope is the a l i e n p a r a s i t e w h o h a s E a r l i e r T h a n Usual. basket ball t e a m a g a i n tills y e a r If they f a s t e n e d himself on organized lalior A s T h u r s d a y , Novemiier 27th. Is c a n s e c u r e t h e hull. T h e h i g h school n n d Is daily e a t i n g o u t the h e a r t of the T h a n k s g i v i n g Day, T h e C o u r i e r will t e a m h a s h e r e t o f o r e a l w a y s gone In g r e a t A m e r i c a n repuhllc. go to press n e x t week one day e a r l i e r debt w h e n they bnd to h i r e a hall for These r a d i c a l s f r o m o t h e r Inmls a r e t h a n u s u a l . I t Is t h e r e f o r e necessary practice a n d f o r their games, a n d the In a m a j o r i t y of cases not even citizens t h a t all copy for a d v e r t i s e m e n t s a n d public s h o u l d a w a k e n to the f a c t that of o u r c o u n t r y . T h e y a r e n o t loyal to local Items should lie In this ofllce a s the school, ns well ns t h e o t h e r young o u r Institiitions nor to the t r u e Intcrearly In t h e week us possible. T h e labpeople of t h e town, a r e m u c h In need i-sts of the o r g a n i z a t i o n s to w h i c h they or conditions under which The Courier of a g y m n a s i u m . h a v e a t t a c h e d themselves. < h a s been issued d u r i n g the past f e w They a r e a l i e n a g i t u t o r s a n d destroyScott H a r t n m i i is going to h a v e his m o n t h s h a v e m a d e It n dlllicult Job f o r e r s — n o t h i n g more. They p r e a c h their us to h a n d l e t h e r e a d i n g m a t t e r a s w e Maxwell o v e r h a u l e d so Hint h e will not pernicious d o c t r i n e s a n d p r e y upon the would like, and on t h a t account we a s k have to c r a n k all night w h e n he w a n t s suscvpllbilltles of o t h e r s w i t h t h e sole co-operation of our r e a d e r s by getting to t a k e " h e r " home. idea 111 view o f ' c r e a t i n g discord nnd t h e i r copy of local n e w s to us a s soon T h e t r o u b l e w i t h t h e Colonm high disruption f o r t h e i r own liidlvhlunl ada f t e r the n e w s h a p p e n s a s possible. school girls a t the fixitball g a m e s Is v a n t a g e . T h e y w o u l d displace t h e InAlmost e v e r y week it is necessary f o r t h a t they a r e a l w a y s nvgiiing who will tclllgenl l e a d e r s h i p of lalsir organizaus to leave o u t some Items becanse they a t t r n c t the most n t t e n t l o n f r o m the tions and u s u r p the seat of a u t h o r l t y w e r e received too late f o r use. Copy boys of the o p p o i i n g t e a m s , Instead of f o r themselves. And they a r e sucn-cdf o r next w e e k ' s p a p e r should be In t h i s rooting f o r the home t e a m . lug In these n e f a r i o u s u u d e r t u k l n g s to Office on T u e s d a y , if possible. T h e f n c u l t y of t h e high school is go- a n a l a r m i n g l y w o n d e r f u l degree. Violence is t h e i r only effective weaping to call a s|sH'lal m e e l i n g to decide F o r the Next Census w h e t h e r H a r r y L eo n ard a m i Harold on, a m i tills they employ to the limit a t t h e h o m e of Mrs. P i t c h e r ' s p a r e n t s , Mr. a n d Mrs. C. E . Crispen, a t Benton H a r b o r , W e d n e s d a y morning, Novem- only w h e n you h a v e saved a p a r t of ' / • « $ COLOMA H I G H S C H O O L (he war. e n t s of ii live and one-half p o u n d d a u g h t e r who flrst s a w the light of d a y sudden emergencies is possible Ii a ^ If w e could pay all t h e s e deliniptenl subscrlliers a p e r s o n a l visit nnd pre- The f r e s h m a n initlatioii whicli w a s I'a., a n d c a m e to Michigan In 1S(I2. settling on a f a r m In Coloma township, h e h l last F r i d a y e v e n i n g at the school w h e r e h e h a s since lived. T w o chil- house w a s a complete success. AIMIIII d r e n w e r e Isirn to Mr. nnd Mrs. s i x t y w e r e In a t t e n d a n c e . A f t e r the H o d g e s — P h i l i p Hodges of Colonm and f r e s h m e n had f u r n i s h e d a v e r y delightMrs. J e n n i e Reau of Bendon, Michigan. f u l entertalnuieiit f o r t h e o t h e r memDeceased , w a s a v e t e r a n of the civil b e r s of t h e p a r t y , the refreshment com- Mr. and Mrs. Henry P i t c h e r of N o r t h Colonm a r e the proud nnd happy p a r - Protect Your Earnings for All Y o u N e e d tend liolh thcHi' servlecN. Who Is then* s h a k e n . T r u e , w e still h a v e our prohIn o u r nildst hut w h a t h a s inuch to he lems to solve, f o r peace h a s its d a n g e r s t h u n k f u l f o r t h i s y e a r ? W h a t Is-tter no less than w a r , hut t h e good sense of 1 Betides t h e grief s t r i c k e n h u s b a n d , o l w r v n u i i of t h e T h a n k s g i v i n g IIMV the Ainericnu people h a s nlwnys Is-en i b e is s u r v i v e d by o n e son, L i e u t . C a r r o l l iiiii Is- s h o w n t h a n to g a t h e r In t h e «liial to the task which h a s confronted t h e m : a n d . Inspired nnd cheered hy B. G r a n t , o n e d a u g h t e r , Doris G r a n t , l / i n l ' s h o u s e f u r a n h o u r of l h a n k s 1 her m o t h e r , Mrs. A g n e s D u V a l l of Oo- giving a n d prnlse? You a n ' welcome. a c h i e v e m e n t s of the past, may we not n e w s print Is to IK secured, even at a hsik h o p e f u l l y to the f u t u r e , conlldent p r i c e Several times h i g h e r b a n It w a s lotna, f w o s U t e r a - M n i . H . E. S t e a r n s t h a t n o emergency c a n a r i s e w i t h t h r e e y e a r s ago. E v e r y o t h e r Itim of of K a l a m a z o o a n d Miss N e v a D u V a l l of J e s s e Hronson D l s r h a r g e d . which we shnll Is' u n a h l e to co|ie? I.el exis-nse I m i increased nt a l m u t the Coloma, a n d o n e b r o t h e r . W m . Dnvull IjihI rammer J e s s e Branson, w h o us give o u r s e l v e s In e a r n e s t to the task s a m e ratio, unlll It Is n eces s ary that of F e n n y l l l e , Mich. F u n e r a l servicea will be held f r o m lives on a f a r m on the Berrlen-Van of hiilldlng n b e t t e r s t a t e and a b e t t e r p u b l i s h e r s M U S T collect t h e i r f u l l subr o a d , w a s a r n s t c d . nation. scription p r i c e f o r every p a p e r printed. t h e l a t e borne a t 8 o'clock F r i d a y a f t e r - B u r e n enmity " T h e r e f o r e , I, A l b e r t E. Sleeper, T h e d n l e of the exp!ni!lon of your noon, o b n d n c t e d by Rev. W . H . F u l l e r . elmrgi'd with eoninilttlng n s t a t u t o r y olTense on Helle l l l n d c i . T h e eom- governor of the s t a t e of Michigan, d o subscription Is a l w a y s f o u n d on your plalnt w a s m a d e hy the f a t h e r of t h e hereby Join the president of the Unit- pn|ier f o l l o w i n g y o u r n a m e . If t h e d a l e A n d e r s o n Bros, of H a r t f o r d will congirl, T h e o d o r e N. I l l n d e s . Mr. Hronsou ed S t a t i c In d e s i g n a t i n g T h u r s d a y . Is November 1010. It m e a n s t h a t y o u r s t r u c t a new clei-lric lighting plant nnd w a s held f o r t r i a l nt the Octolier t e r m Novemiier 27, a s a day t f Thanksgiv- s u b s cri p t i o n e x p i r e d the first of this the citizens of t h a t village will pay a t l j ing a n d p r a y e r . " month, a n d so a l o n g t h e line. If May inctvam-d r a t e f o r light and power to | of court and w a s discharged ns t h e n w a s no evidence a g a i n s t him. the 1010, you o w e us f o r six m o n t h s s u b help p a y f o r the p l a n t . c h a r g e iH'ing a " f r a m e - u p . " T h e girl scrlptlon a n d you should Is- paid for a J A M E S H O D G E S W A S AN O L D n d m i t t e d t h a t h e w a s innocent hut had y e a r in Advance. P i c n i c hams, 22c pound a t the 1'nders been c h a r g e d w i t h the c r i m e to shield RESIDENT OF TOWNSHIP Kindly p a y ns n visit a n d see that Cash store.—Adv. another party. y o u r a c c o u n t Is. settled a t once ns we E a s t e r n S t a r and the R o y a l N e l g b b o r a , and h a v i n g passed t h r o u g h t h e c h u i r a to the h i g h e s t oflices in ho' h o r d n n . W . H. BALL. Cashier RED CROSS DRIVE IS EKTDM UNUl DECEMBER C o u r i e r to call otteiition of t h o s e of Its A n n u a l P r o r i a m a t l n n by S t a t e Fx- s u l i s c r l b e n w h o a r e in a r r e a r s on t h e i r M a n y .Members A r e Needed s u b s cri p t i o n t o the f a c t t h a t all arerutlve Names Holiday. Coloma C h a p t e r . rearages should Is- paid a t once. O u r Oovernor Sleei>er Issued the follow- subscription r a t e s a r e $I..'HI p e r y e a r ing T h a n k s g i v i n g day p r o e l n m n l l u n : IN ADVANCE. A very l a r g e percent ' " O give t h n n k s u n t o the i^inl, f o r a g e of o u r i m t r o n s a r e a l r e a d y paid In l i e Is g o o d ; f o r Ills mercy e n d u r e t h a d v a n c e , but t h e r e a r e a r e f u r touman.v forever.' w h o a r e delimiueut. Society and Club Woman Pasaed River Bridge and Dyckman Ave. V O L 2 5 , N O 17 Sunday, Nov. 23rd—A Special Fox Feature. Williaoj Farnum in "The Man Hunter." hnlf mile a c r o s s the Monroe p a s t u r e . Adv. 14tf L. 11. M O N T G O M E R Y . A d m u s i o n — A d u l t s , 20c; w a r t a x 2c. T h e P o p e urges women to light im modesty i n dress. T h a t , however, Is some rough on the men. H a r o l d Foster, w h o Is w o r k i n g In t h e K i n g jiaper mill nt K a l a n m n s i , c a m e h o m e F r i d a y evening to visit his C m n b e r r l e s n t 10c |ier pound a t the p a r e n t s , Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s F o s t e r , E n d e r a Cash Store.—Adv. r e t u r n i n g to work on Monday. H e a r t h e new O. K. records n t HlllSs. All Ibe bile reeorda. P r i c e 85 cents.— Children, 6c, w a r t a x 1c. i Adv. It Is none too e a r l y f o r you to lie admonished to do y o u r C h r i s t m n s shop1 ping e a r l y . Children 5c; w a r tax l a Wednesday, Nov. 26th—Kittie Gordon in "The Scar" Admission—Adults, 15c; w a r tax 2c. Children, 6c; w a r tax lc. ^ Thanksgiving, Nov. 27th—"The Rough Neck." A d m i a s l o n - A d u l t s , 20c: w a r t a x Sc. C h i l d r e n , 5c, w a r t a x 1c. THE THE COLOMA COURIER. COLOMA. Many School Children are Sickly SHQST PUTS CIIIIBCHJBSAN L furious Sights and and take cold easily, aia (weiUh owl cuullpated, bsve bcsdaches, stomach or bowel trouble. Sounds Frighten People in English ivHi Village. n u o s maiix Qiifox-r oOO 1CAR HEARS MUSIC 0 0 nmm. rza&zrs fivoiv or nnw*souM*n HE symbol of Thanksgiving t Why. turkey, of course. Thanksgiving means plenty and goodness. So does turkey—plenty of white rural and plenty of dark for everybody. And as for the goodness—just remember how, your mouth when a slow and awkward carver was on the job, you sat and felt. water! And the stuffing—that's piece. Lots of stuffing. A f t e r studying t h e wild turkey for BO years, hunting It for 00 years nnd photographing It for ten years. Charles L. Jordan, an Alabama gentleman, thouglit with nenjnmln Frnnklln, thnt the eagle hnsn't nn honest leg to stand on as the real bird of freedom. "Though n little vain nnd silly," the turkey. Franklin said. Is n n a t i v e Amerlcnn "and n bird of courage." Had lie known more on t h e subject he would have added that the turkey Is both wise and cleanly nnd Is never vain or silly except during the gobbling season. Cnu as much be said of any other biped? . T h e gobbling season—aiming turkeys, of course —opens nnd ends with spring. It Is then that the n a l o s t r u t s and culls nnd reveals l i b whereabouts to h u n t e n nnd their dogs. ! During the rest of the year, however, he f r u s t r a t e s mnn nnd mucks at all his plans, l i e Is In t h e woods, but Invisible to enemies armed with guns. Hrnvr, silent, dlgnllled nnd capable, he Is unconquerable until hn bncomes elocutlvu and loTe-iorn and begins to make a huge fun of his tall. Wild turkeys have hnd their hlstorlnns, blogrnphcrs and nntlqimrinns. says Jumes It. Morrow lo the lioston Globe. Scientists have written about them In n lingo that nobody can unders U n d . There are enough turkey books here nnd in France, Spain and Great lirltaln to make a large library In themselves. T h e department of agriculture In Washington employs a Held expert who spends a larger part of tho year with Hocks of domesticated turkeys t h a t he may learn their habits and search out nil t h e secrets of their lives. T h e turkey Industry touches almost every fnmi. Tralnloads of live and dressed turkeys a r e shipped from large nnd small towns In tho South. T h e r e are turkey f a r m s In the West, with herders f o r the flocks, nnd turkeys In droves, like cattle and sheep, can be seen In Tennessee, California and elsewhere. Just before Thanksgiving and Christmns, on the way to market. Also there a r e turkey doctors. Dut Mr. Jordan, living out of doors from childhood to old age, and meeling his death nt last f r o m a poacher's shot, knew more about turkeys t h a a anyone who h a s ever lived. l i e began studying them, hidden behind fallen trees nnd In the brush, while still too young to enrry n rifle. Chief nmong the pupils of this flue old mnster w a s Edvvnrd A. Mclllienny, u business mun of Avery Island. Louisiana, at whose suggestion renerves for birds h a v e been estobllshed In different p a r t s of the United States. T h e Mcllhenney family owns Avery Island, some 3,000 acres In ext e n t , where the fust vanishing white heron finds r e f u g e during the breeding season, nnd where ducks by the thousand live throughout the winter. Among the turkey hunters of todny Mr. Mcllhenny Is prominent. Hut for his fidelity nnd cnthuslnsm and his skill as n writer, Mr. Jord a n ' s pracllcnl nnd fascinating knowledge of tho wild turkey would have been lost to sportsmen and nntornllsts. So, too. would iufve been lost Mr. Jordan'# method of cooking, whether tho turkey Is shot In t h e woods or. less dramatically, is taken from a tree near the house or from a coop. A turkey having been obtained, the next tmnsaction la to prepare It for the table. T h e second AN INVETERATE SMOKER. A Uberty p o p e r tells this story on • m of Its "best c i t l z e m " who Is nn In'vcterate smoker. H e was to be married recently nnd asked his bosom f n e n d to be his b e s t man. The friend went to the p r e s c h e r for Instructions aboot Just what to do. "Oh." said the preacher, "the l a s t thing before i b - l n the m a r r i a g e ceremony, you just take his pipe f r o m his mouth and see that It U all filled and ready to light agal* Just the m i n u t e the ceremony is aaded/—Kansa# City Times. proceeding Is a s Important economically as the llrst. And under that bending the nrt of Mr. Jordnn Is llmil, though French chefs, amid their smears nnd cococtlons, mny voice (exclamations and denials. "If the turkey Is young," Mr. Mclllienny says, quoting Mr. Jordan, "cook If In the way usual to stove baking, a f t e r flrst filling Its cavity with a suitable dressing of bread crumbs, pepper sal* and onions chopped fine, moistened with fresh country butter. This Is Is the best dressing that can be made, nnd It will detract nothing from the llavor of the bird nor add to It." Oysters or chestnuts. If put Into the dressing, a r e a profanation, and shrimps an abomination. In the view of Mr. Jordan. Wine and celery dty stroy tho rich turkey flavor. Originally the wild turkey was found In most parts of the United Slates—from the forests of Maine nnd westward as f a r as Nebraska and southward to the lower parts of Mexico. Gonuilo Fernandex do Oviedo, the Spanish historian, who wrote many books aboyt the West Indies, printed 41 description of the wild turkey a t Toledo In the year 1527. He had seen the males in the gobbling senson and supposed they wore peacocks. Thus Oviedo brought the turkey into literature. But if the records a r c reliable^ It w a s Alejandro Geraldlnl, an Italian and t h e Botnan Cuthollc bishop of Santo Domingo, who Introduced the turkey Into Europe. A letter he wrote In ViUS mentions that he had sent n' p a i r of turkeys to a friend In Home. The domestication of the bird, however, wns brought about by 1 the Spunlunls. whose navigators took it home In their queer little ships and localised it in "European barnyards," ns John Flske states the case. Tills hiippened In IKK). Eighty j e n r s later Christopher Newport, the leader of the expedition that founded Jamestown. In Virginia, sailed back to England. With him lie took n large quantity of yellow sand thnt he thought wns gold, nnd several coops of wild turkeys, "the first," ngnln to quote John Flske, "that ever graced an English bill of fare." Tho sand was found to be valueless, but the turkeys lived nnd multiplied nnd became a source of large profit to British f a n n e r s . During t h e reign of Charles I, king of England, the prices of many things w e r e regulated by law. Hume, the historian, says a turkey cock brought four shillings and six pence, f l . 1 2 : a turkey hen three shilling, or 75 cents, and a goose two shllllugs, or 50 cents. A pheasant cock sold for $1.50. n pheasailt hen for 11.25 and a partridge for 25 cents. Turkeys then were n novelty In Great Britain. • Almut 7.000.000 turkeys nre grown yearly In this country. Texas produces more 'than any other state. Missouri Is second, Illinois third. Iowa fourth, Ohio fifth and Indiana sixth. An ordinary • e s t e m tnrkey weighing 12 pounds used to sell for about 13.30 at retail In the eastern markets. As to its cost this Thanksgiving—your guess Is ns good a s anybody's. Mr. Ilhcnny will tell you that wild turkeys live in the regions where they a r e born. If they go away, it is for the reason thnt there is a shortage of food In t h e territory constituting their natural range. After feeding they will return to their old homes. During the 00 years that Mr. Jordan spent In hunting nnd studying wild turkeys, he never saw or henrd of one thnt filed a natural denth. "Nor," lie said, "bnve I heard of any disease or epidemic among them." Binckhend, n common distemper nmong domestic turkeys, hns bnflled the doctors, so fnr. nnd In regions has m a d e t h e production of turkeys not only unprofltnble but practically out of the question. v Dayton, O.—Declaring that people gained nothing from their experience with tho ailment In 1918 and 18ttl, Dr. W. A. Evans, prominent health aulhorlty and writer of Chicago, today predicted t h a t the world would again be swept by an epidemic of Influenza f a r more severe and disastrous than last year, when thousands of lives were lost." Tho only way it can ever be alleviated o r exterminated Is by following the advice of the medical world. Influenza con ho prevented; Inst year's results prove thnt. As a preventive f o r flu. Turpo has been a pronounced success. T u r p o Is an effective germicide, combining the oldfashioned remedies of turpentine (which h a s always been known ns t h e "Mysterious wlll-o'-the-wisp lights a r e also snld to have been seen, and u volunteer baud which was march- The mother turkey of the woods keeps hei children u n d e r control and at her side until mid winter. By thnt time tiie brood is full grown. The young gobblers, Mr. Mclllienny says, then leiive their mothers nnd sisters nnd form bachelor clubs among themselves. Tnrkey society In the forests, from December until early In the spring. Is made up of three dl visions—the obi hens and young h e n s ; the young gobblers, and tho old gobblers. At mating time. In March, there Is n reunion. It Is then thnt the old gobblers s t m t nnd gobble nnd cnll to their plural wives a s well ns to tho hunters. At the moment the liens begin to set, the old gobblers, In couples nnd groups tip to 20. again sequester themselves f r o m nil but their own society. So they live, summer, nulumn and win ter. They never light except when they ure show ing off to the indies and then their combats are not mortal. The rules of their contests of strength permit shoving, pulling, pecking and wing g a t i n g . They a r e brave birds, ns the Mcllhennys, nil famous h u n t e r s , will testify. Furthermore, they are wise birds. It is the exceptional hunter w h ^ gets n sight of them In summer. They nro not afraid, however, of the f a r m e r who Is plowing husking c o m or reaping. Notwithstanding the spectaculnr enterprise of turkey ranching In Texas nnd Cnilfornla on n grand scale, tho old f a r m must still be relied npori for most of, our Thanksgiving and Christmas turkeys, snys James Hamilton Byrd In Grit. On thousands upon thousands of famis. as a side ' Issue to h e r regular work, it is common practice for the f a r m wife to keep a half a rtoxen or p e r Imp# a dozen turkey hens and a gobbler from which to raise a flock of 40 to 50 turkeys. Early in t h e spring the turkey hens begin lay Ing. Then comes the brooding senson. By October 1. the young turkeys have grown to be big, rangy birds, so now the fattening or finishing process Is begun. Little do they know as they are being fed more and more of the farmer's corn every night of the diabolical Intentions of their master's b e t t e r half. Ten days or two weeks liefore marketing they a r e literally feasted on grain —stuffed t h r e e or four times u day—until Just before the enactment of the tragedy of their young careers they should be as f a t as butter balls. ning of April, when the skins become badly marked nnd the f u r of poor ouailty. Fehrunry nnd March nre the best traliplng m o n t h s ; then the moles run well nnd nre easily caught. An iron mole trap consists of two curved Jaws, forced together hy a p o w e r f u l spring; to set the trap nn iron trigger Is lodged between t h e Jaws, holding them a p a r t . The Mt trap Is Inserted In a mole run, found between two mounds of earth by the nlr' «f a pointed stick, and Is placed so as to bring the trigger In the way of any passing mole. T h e trap Is t h n . covered with eartli and moss to exclude light from the run. A mole meeting the trlitger of trnii •* forced either to burrow round Ii or to knock It aside. The latter n.urse Is usually chosen, the trap s| r t n g and the mole held in the Iron Jnws, from Which escape la practically Inposslble. best homo germicide), camphor nnd menthol In a p u r e mineral base. Theae Ingredients have long been recognised a s effective germicides, as well as having really wonderful qualities in relieving colds and congestions. Snuff a little T u r p o up t h e nostrils several times a day and t h e flu germs will have little chance of getting a lodging and breeding place. Many physicians nnd hospitnls use nnd recommend T u n po. Huy a thirty cent Jar of Turpo, while your druggist h a s a supply on hand, nnd use a s directed. Last year druggists could not supply the demand, llememher that T u r p o Is a preventive, not a cure f o r Influenza. T a k e care of yourself ami If, In spite of your precautions, you think you h a v e t h e tlu, go to bed a t once and call a doctor.—Adv. INFLUENZA'« " ' EpIZOOtlC And all diseases of the horse alTectlnir his throat speedily curcd; colts and horse* In tho same stable kept from havIntc them by uslnx s r o i i v s COMi'otNDt 3 to ( doies often cure. Safe for brood marcx, baby colts, stallions, at! airea and conditions. Moat ikllirul sdentltlc compound. SPOII.VS Is sold by your drugitlnt. KPOIIN HBDICAL CO., Mfra., Goihen, Ind. An Eastern F l i g h t A British airman recently flew In one day from Mosul, on the upper Tlgrl.", over t h e Syrian desert, to Cairo on tye Nile, making three stops on the Jnuhiey of 1,100 miles, reports Popular Mechanics Magazine. Wasn't It an Undertaker? " W h o originated football?" "I can't recall the surgeon's nnme," -Dostoii Transcript. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Nams " B a y e r " Is on Genuine ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Aspirin—say Bayer AppOcaots for Insurance Often Rejected. Judgini from reports from dnjggiits who sre consUntlT in direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and haaling influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swsmp-Root is toon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An exsmining physician for one of the prominent Life Insnrance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the astonishing sUtement thst one resson why so many spplicants for iniurance are rejected is because" kidney trouble it so common to the Americsn people, and the large majority of those whose spplications are declined do not even suipect thst they have the disease. It is on sale at all drug itores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention thia paper.—Adv. Heard the Music Himself. Ing by tbe churchyard was badly frightened In tills way. Avenbury churcli has always had a ghost. A certain Nicholas Vaughan burnt down a palace of the Bishop of Hereford in the Middle Ages. His ghost was 'laid' by twelve clergymen with twelve candles. A small piece of the twelfth candle was burnt and the remainder put in a silver casket under a stone, which s t a n d s ten yards above the church footbridge over the Illver Frome. They put a spell on the Although turkey ranching In Texas and Cal • ghost not to r e t u r n until the candle fornla h a s almost reached the proportions of was buimt out and t b e casket carried new and spectacular Industry, by f a r tiie greater Into the ited Sea." number of turkeys are raised on the farms of the middle West—Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky GOES TO JAIL TO AID FATHEP Missouri and Iowa. New England, long famous for lis turkeys, raises comparatively few. al Parent Needs the $200 Cash He Put though Its reputation still lingers. Some of the Up for Son's Ball In big turkey ranches have a thousand or more turNew York. keys. nnd some of the turkey drives to mnrket nre most extraordinary sights. The flocks of the Sllddletown. N. Y.—After Frank middle West nre usually less than a hundred Fredayoster of New York had escaped Still 50 to 75 fine gobblers and hens weighing from Hampton f a n u s , near here, he from 15 to 25 pounds each Is not a mean sight was raptured, served the remainder of nnd represents Indeed no small value. his term, then was r e a r r e i t t d and There a r e still millions of acres in Texas. Okln homa ami New Mexico where tho wild turkey locked up In the Orange county Jail at Goshen to await action of the grand breeds- plentifully, and where turkey hunting groat sport. But of f n r more importnnce to the Jury which Is expected to Indict him for escaping. turkey mnrket is the "still hunting" which Several weeks ago the young man carried on in the spring In many places to secure eggs or possibly the very young birds In order to was balled out by his father, who deraise t h e pure wild-blood turkey and Introduce It posited 1200 cash. Later Fredayoster walked Into the Into UUOe flocks. The lame turkey lias degenerated until It Is no longer the virile bird It was In office of Sheriff Leonard and nsked to the days of our pilgrim fathers, but the wild be locked up again in order thnt his turkey Is subject lo no known disease. On some f a t h e r might have the 1200, which lie of the forest reserves tho government Is protect greatly needed. His request was com ing the wild turkey for this Imporiaut purpose piled with and the father had the money returned to him at once. of using it ns a breeding stock. PROFIT I N MOLE SKINS Owing to the Indefatigable advertising methods of many molesWn Arms, the humble mole Is now recognixed as the foremost British furbearing animal. Its trapping, therefore. ptovjdes very, lucrative eioplnymunt for many people In agricultural d-strlcts. The mole-catching season begins In November and ends about the begin- Warns Influenza Will Come Back in More Dangerous Form Mysterious Lights. • >S ^ ' j u i S plenty and goodness, too. Down with the fellow who says turkey-stuffing lessens the sweet flavor and delicious atoma of the bird! That fellow never tasted real turkey-stuffing in all his bom days. Why, it's the soul of the turkey. You just swell that heavenly smell and then you take all the carver will give you—for a first helping. What'll I have? Imparticular. Big Used by Mothers lor over 30 years n o r c f o r d . Eng.—The llitle village of Avenbury. which lies In a secluded volley of Uerefordahire, hns a h a n n y ed church. The church Is of t h e Norman period and tales concerning Its ghost have become like household w6rd*. T h e r e ure ninny stories of different ghosts •n various forms, but the most astonishing visitant is one which plays the church organ. - I h a v e heard the ghoat play twice myself," sold the Hev. Archer Sbeppard. the vicar. "Some neighbors brought the m a t t e r to my notice flrst. They heard the sounds when they were walking by the church one afternoon, nnd thought thnt It wns my organist practicing. They found, however, that the church was locked up. "The flrst time I heard the ghostly playing wns while I was gardening. I believed thftt the woman who denned out the church wns allowing her child to use the orgnn. nnd I went to see Into the matter. T h e music stopped when I was a few yards from the church, and 1 found t h a t the building was locked and empty." "This ghost was a t Avenbury before Mr. Sbeppard became vicar," said Col. Purser of Bromyard. "I told him the story, but he did not believe It until he heard the music himself- My p M " dren and I have heard It, and It sounds like a voluntary. Once my children were In t h e church when there wns a groan. They rushed out Into the chancel whence the sound appeared to come, but there wns nothing to be seen. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN Are pleasant to t a k e a n d a certain relief. T h e y t e n d to b r e a k u p a c o l d i a 24 h o u r s , a c t o n t h e S t o m a c h , L i v e r a n d B o w e l a a n d tend to correct Intestinal disorders a n d destroy worms. 10,000 t e s t i m o n i a l s l i k e t h e f o l l o w i n g f r o t u m o t h e r s a n d f r i e n d s of c h i l d r e n t e l l i n g of r e l i e f . O r i g i n a l s a r e o n h i e i n o u r o f f i c e s : "I think MOTHER OR ATS 8 W KKT POWI We h.T« Q^d MOTH Kit GRAra s w n r POWDEIW Km MR CUILDBKN UtilLDHKN M •( dlS* dlfltrMt DKR8 FOB CUILDttEN Ttirr POWDEUtt • ere rrcommeoded to a y Staler by s doctor. llince for put nine ysin, trnlslwij* fooud I «m ri»ln» tbrtn to my llitle thwe yeer old them i perfect chlMrtn"* nedlclJM ssd Ttrj rtrt who wae very puny, ted tUe ti plcllsg up SftUiftctory lo erer/ciee." fooderfully." Get a p a c k a g e f r o m y o u r druggist for use w h e n needed. Do Not Aceept Any Sabttllate lor MOTHEH HAY'S SWOT POWDKHS. Mytterloui Will-o'-th»-Wlsp Light* Frighten Volunteer Band March. Ing By—Church fa of th# Norman Period. Hears Ghost Play, WLD COLOMA COURIER. COLOMA. MICH. MICH. Too Conscientious Dog. Slsson. Cul —That even n watchdog mny bo too conscientious In his work Is tbe advice of Fores' llnnger Rons McCloud nnd Game Warden J. White, who w e f t stopping for a few minutes at the home of W. J . Moffett In t h e mountain district and were attracted by the visit of Moffett'* dog to tho brush every few minutes. They Investigated, found deer which hnd heon killed out of season and took Moffett before court where a <25 fine was Inflicted. Merely Broke. She—They say Mr. Destyle Is financially e m b a r r u s e d . H e - W e l l , he's horribly In debt, hut It would take more than that to embarrass him.—Boston Post. Insist on "Boyer Tablets of Aspirin" In a "Bayer package." containing prope r directions f o r Headache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toxes.of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin Is trade mark of Boyer M a n u f a c t u r e of Monoa c e t l c a d d e s t e r of Sallcyllcadd.—Adv. India Needs American Goods. The fact that tbe Bombay Electric Tramway company, Bombay, India, recently placed an order for1 130 tramt r u c k s In America on account of the advantageous prices quoted. Indicates t h a t there Is f u r t h e r opportunity for the marketing la India of this and kindred lines. An Artisan. "That fellow yonder Is a sharper." "A crook?" " N o ; a scissors grinder." i B.A.THOMAS' a / =n s 1 POULTRY • V ^ ) ) * m REMEDY T Healthy Chicks, More Eggs Assists Moulting—Good for Bowel Tronble and Other Diseases in Yonng Fowls RESULTS GREAT COST S M A L L I purchased a bo* oi B. A. THOMAS' POULTRY REMEDY and began feeding according to directions. At that lime my flock ol 4 2 hens were only laving live to ten eggs per day. Today, one week from date ol purchase, 1 am getting eighteen eggs per day. MRS. FANNY MOORE. Alaa. Nsb. B. A. THOMAS' STOCK REMEDY. Makes healthy, thoftv stock. Keeps them free ol worms. A medicine, not a food. Very economical B. A. Thomas' Hog Powder" Saves the Bacon" FAHBIS' COUC REMEDY. For horse colic The easy way. ing. A child can give i t OLD KENTUCKY MANUrACTURING CO. • No drench- PADUCAH. K Y . Abortion Own Herd for Stop Losing Calvetl You can wipe abortion out of your herd and k**p it oat _ ^ Send for Free copy of the Cattle Specialist with questions and answers pertaining to Abortion in Cows. Answers every question. Telia how to treat your own cattle at small expense. Write Dr. David Reberts VeteriMm Co. FROM GIRLHOOD TO MIDDLE LIFE South Frecport, 111.—"When I reached Diddle life I became run down and in need of a tcnic. D r Pierce's Favorite Pre script i o n s u r e l y proved lo be all that is claimed for it am I came through thi critical t i m e will none of tho diitres« ing ailiii.nts whicl r affect to many worn | cn, such as 'hca flashct' and dixay upells, but waa «• atrong and well that I could scarcely be lieve it myself. I ccrtainly would rccom mend Dr. Pierce'a Favorite Prrtcriplioi to all women of middle age."—Mrs. L Kitchen. TO PREVENT DETERIORATION EVERY FARM BOND THEFTS LAID IMPLEMENT IS ENTITLED TO PROTECTION TO MASTER ROBBER Trusted Messenqer Boys in New York Lured to Life of Crime. New Yorl;.—The sinister hand of a mnster robber has been directing the serins of bond tfleJ'.s. which has resulted In the loss, ihrouK>> '.rusted employees of bnnklug nnd brok'M'ige houses in the tlnnnclnl district of New York city, of m-nrly Jl.notl.ow. nccordIng to the belief of the police. In no other monner enn the nuthorl ties octount for the fact thnt Inexpert enced boys, some of them Just out of school, bnve been able to plnn nnd ex ecute successfully thefts of securities ou n glgnntlc scule. No boy's brnln, It Rock Island, IH.—"In my girlhood dayi I suffered from irregularity and would be come run-down in health, and my mothe would give me 'Favorite Prescription whenever she mw that I needed a specia tonic. At one time when I was sufferini during development the gave me a com plete course of treatmen^with Dr. Pierce'i Favorite Prescription, 'Golden Medical Diacovery* and 'Pleasant Pellets,' and 1 still remember that these medicines restored me to perfcct lealth, making mi feel better in every vay. I have since married and am mother of three children." —Mrs. E. L. Martin, <327 Seventh Ave. 48,000 Stores CASCARAt^QUININI •PS GRACE HOTEL lect an expensive harvesting machine, say the experts, are careless as to :CNICAGO: harrows and other Implements of this l B o u l m r d u d CUrfc S t r e e t with dtucbed bath 11.00 and 11J0 per type. But these, also, represent capital da;- Room* with prltkte bath ftiO and B.00. Invested and a larger return Is poiOateille Pail Oflce — Near All Tkealne end tterei slble If they a r e properly cared for Stock yarde ears nm direct h) the door. A clean, romfortable. De»ly drearattd hotel. at the end of the season. A aafe place tor your wife, mothrr or aUltr. Support Harrow's Teeth. If harrows ore stored under a shed, Putting Him R i g h t ''Among the poasesilons of every the teeth should b ^ supported by poor mun In this region can be found blocka and boards so that they will a t least one worthless dog," severely said the spectacled tourlet. Us« Simple Remedies. • T h e r e hain't no such thing us a It Is a great mistake to purebnse worthless dog, podner!" returned (lap expensive remedies for roup. The simJohnson of Rumpus Ridge. "And no ple home remedies, such ns would he man t h a t owns a good dog Is plumb used In flrst aid for the family hepoor."—Ksnsas City Star. fore the doctor la called, are better and f a r cheaper than patent nostrums. N l f t t a n d HorataJ. Strong, H^th Eyti. II they Tire, Itch, Smart or Bum, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated, uae Muiine Often. S o o t h M , R a f r a a h a a . Safe for Infant or A d u l t At a U D n n l s t a . Write for FtaafiyflBook. i a * CMMai "It Seems as Though my Back Would Break/' This is a common expression among women, yet they toil on day after day heedless of the significance of this distress' ing symptom. Backache is often a warning of some inward trouble that requires attention, and which unless relieved will sooner or later declare itself in more serious ailments. Elgin, 111.—"As a household remedy lot sluggish liver, sick headaches and consti The Broad Road That Leads to Poverty. pation, I have found Dr. I'ierce'a Plearajit Pellets to give the utmoit satisfsction. I IPrepared hy the United Statea Departnot become embedded In the ground. All ment of Agrlmllure.) could scarcely Tiecp liousc' without them. nccumulntlons of e a r t h nnd tmsh Probably you do not believe that I believe they have saved me msny s should bo removed. This Is especially doctor bill snd serious illness."—Mrs. Cora 'the sins of the f a t h e r s nre visited appllcnhlo to wooden f r a m e harrows. upon tho sons, even to the third and M. Peck. "05 Ludlow Place. T h e earthly accumulations retain molsfourth generatlous." lure nnd accelerate decay. When the Chin Vsrae, You wouldn't believe, perhaps, t h a t "You used to write verses to my leaving your plows nnd- barrows In wooden p a r t s have dried out suOIdently, they should he imlnted to prevent dainty chin," sighed Mr*. Addy-Poae. fence corners this winter without even "Well, now I must write couplets.' greasing them may be a sign that senson checking nnd splitting. As the harrow works In wet e a r t h und close be said. spells poverty liiNtead of prosperity to the ground, deterioration Is rapid for your grandson. It mny not, b u t once checking hns sturted. well. listen to a story. HEADACHES If the disk barrow Is stored in n Two young men, brothers-in-law, shed or other floorless building, the Headache Is a symptom which took their wives, cows, horses, and disk gangs should he run upon iHiards shows t h a t some organ does not func- plows Into a new land In 1840. As so the disks will not become embedded pioneer farmers, they begun with tion nonnally. The head aches, but equnl opportunities. Sixty-seven years In the ground. Whether housed or net, some other organ Is sick. Mostly tbe later the writer had occasion to go the Implement should be carefully stomach Is the sick or^an. Mnny over the two farms. The grandsons of cleaned of all accumulations of soli forms of headaches ore caused by nnd the disks should be greased with the pioneer* were operating them. Om stomach disturbances. An abnormal a heavy grease to prevent ust. The farm wns n good one nnd the men who quantity of poisons Is produced In operated It, while not rich, were com paint, particularly on the wooden the Intestines and absorbed lato the fortable nnd contented. The other was parts, should be renewed frequently. blood stream. If you will take Trl- a run-down, poor farm and Its owners Care of Mowers. Mowers, more generally than plows n e r ' s Amerlcnn Elixir of Bitter Wine, were constantly hard put to make ends nnd harrows, are put under shelter, which cleans the Intestines nnd re- meet. moves all offending substances, the The original owner of tho run-down but mnny of them spend the winter headache will cease. Trlner's remedy farm hod been dead n great mnny yenrs, nt the edge of the meadow where the will restore your appetite and help but the man who pioneered nn t h e last cutting of hay wns made, and In the digestion In such way that you prosperous farm was alive, 03 y e a r s most cases they a r e not properly greased even when sheltered. Oct the will gladly agree with Mrs. J. A. old, physically active, mentally s h a r p mower under shelter. If possible. In Qralshe who wrote us two months ngo a s a briar. T h e writer, unable to see any ense, d e n n the knife bar, wipe It from Parkin, A r k : "We are certnlnl} why there should be so much differwith a greasy rag. nnd store In a dry more than pleased with this wonderfu ence between two farms thnt w e r e place. Place n block of wood or other Trlner's Amerlcnn Elixir of Itlttei equally fertile to begin with, asked support under the mld-polnt of the Wine." Yon will get It nt your drug- the old man how It enme about. tongue, so thnt It will not acquire n Jlmmie W a s Careless. gist who has also other excellent TrlI don't know—well, I reckon I do pennnnent sag. If the mower Is stored ner's remedies (Trlner's Angelica Bitwith the cutter bnr In a vertical posit e r Tonic, Trlner's Liniment, Trlner's too," he began. "Jlmmie wns n goo4 tion, place a block of wood under the Red Pills, etc.) In stock.—Joseph Trl- mnn, but he wns v mighty coreles* shoe to take the weight off the frame. ner Company, 1888-48 8. Aahlnnd Ava, When he finished Inylng hy his corn, he left his plow In tho furrow nnd All accumulations of vegetable mntter Chicago, III. Adv. hung his genr on the beam or leaned and dirt should he removed and all them against n stump. When he start- hearings and other bright parts of the Mean Comment Belle—I have been told my c y w are ed plowing the next spring, he hnd to mnchlne oiled or grensed. Much the like jewels. dig his collar nnd kames out of the same rules apply to reapers and Nell—So they a r e ; like cat's eyes. dirt, all muddy nnd rotten, nnd his binders. The time to care f o r each Implement plow was rusty nnd wouldn't scour." Now, of course, this old gentleman Is when Its work Is finished. Pressure Cutlcura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retltiog In the bot s o d s wns wrong In thinking that lack of of other work, however, frequently of Cutlcura Soap, dry and rub In Cn- shelter for his Implements was t h e makes this Inconvenient, but nothing tlcnra Ointment. Remove surplus cause of his brother's failure, but he should be allowed to interfere with Ointment with tissue paper. This la had pointed out an effect that wns getting nil mnchlnery grensed. anil. • only one of the thlnga Cutlcura will do [ Indicative of the cause. Just as his If possible, under cover before the If Soap, Ointment and Talcum a r e tued own well-kept Implement sheds w e r e beginning of winter. Then, us early for all toilet p u r p o s e s . - A d v . Indicative of the cause of his own In the winter as you can find time for success. The brother's rust-pitted mold it. go over every piece nnd see whal Unusual. board merely went to show that be repairs a r e n e e d f d ; If new parts have "There's Just one thing I want to wns a poor f a r m e r all around. to he ordered, order them at once. A ask you, John." "Only one, Uenrlettut The United S t a t e s department of great deal of vnlunble time Is lost Ain't you feelln" well?" agriculture corroborates the testimony every spring waiting for repair parts of the old gentleman In Its general to arrive from the city. Cost of Machine Shed. application. Good fanners, snys the It should be borne In mind thnt t h e department, tnke enre of their Implements. They mny not always find It proper enre of Implements does not Drns ScHIC convenient o r profitable to build ex- neivcsarily entail the expense of buildF i v e million people pensive sheds for their tools, but they ing costly Implement sheds. The overuse it t e K I L L COLDS will manage t o protect them from bend cost of such structure often f n r exceeds any possible depreciation of immoisture In one way or nnother. HILLS plements through exposure to the Plow Is Neglected. In this dny of compllcnted mnchln- weather. But such housing spnee ns Is ery most f a r m e r s probably give little a'vnllable, and grease and paint should thought to the cure of so simple an be used without stint. Any fnrm ImImplement ns a plow. But, snys the plement, with bearings nnd bright department, more effort hns been ex- pnrts well protected with henvy grease. Sltadard cold remKljr for 70 y.an liended In the slow process of develop- Is better off out in the weather than -to tablet form—u(t. lute, ao ing this seemingly simple tool thnn standing In a shed without protection k opiate*—bmk» op • told in 24 hour*—felitYte crip In S dirt. In thnt of a n y other Implement on the by grease or oil. Monty back If it faili. The The Uplted Statefi department of f n m i . It Is the basic tillage tool, the ftaulne bo* tui Red top w i t h Mr ftindamental f a r m Implement, It l« agriculture has two bulletins—Fnniipicture. richly entitled to be properly cared ers' Bulletin Old nnd Formers' Bulletin At All Drag Slant 047—devoted to the repair nnd adjustfor when not In use. When laid by, sny the Implement ment of fnrm Implements. With nil experts, the plow should. If possible, Implements safely sheltered for the be stored In n dry place, away f r o m winter, you have time to write for contact with the ground. In any ense these bulletins and to use the InfonnaSIN CI the bright p a r t s should always be tlon they contain in putting your Imcoated with grease to prevent rust. plements nnd machines In tbe bert posOnce the mold board nnd share bnve sible condition for next crop season. became pitted with rust, un elllclent 3 0 stops C O U G H S Job of plowing cannot •he done until the corroded p a r t s again bnve ncquired n polish hy use. The department of agriculture, of course, does not stop with the plow BOU In Its admonition In this regard. Hnre Every short cut In one's work that rows, also relatively simple but tremendously Important Implements, are. lessens man or team lubor is a direct /v«# n—iUi next to plow's, most generally neglect- maker of preflts. • • • ed. Many f a n n e r s who would not neg- Hov Backache only a Symptom Winter Care of Sheep. The winter care of the flock Is Just as Important as the careful cultivation of a corn crop. The winter months are the growing season of the lamb crop to be harvested In the spring. The best time to sow sweet clover is in the enrly spring, any time from Judunry to Mny. e • • Almost every f a r m e r can plnnt nnd cultivnte a lurger acreage than be can harvest. • e • Rainy days are excellent times to put tho tractor In shape for the next season. « • • Farm manure Is n sourcc of soli fertility t h a t every f a r m e r should save nnd apply to his laud. This ia a good way to build up the soil, • • • There Is somewhat more prejudice against the uso of fresh mnnure than is warranted. • e • Don't worry about the price of manure ; grow a covering crop. • • • Karly and ample preparation of the soli for all kinds of row crops to be planted next spring will be esscntlaL Open Before Them the Easy Rewards of a Life of Crime. Is contended, could plan some of the robberies which have startled Wall street, Mnny of the best trained minds of New York city's detective force, hesides scores of private detectives lo the employ of tiuunclal Institutions and bonding companies which havo lost heavily, nre seeking the criminal whose master uiltul directs tbe work of the actual operatives. They are working on the theory that the archcrimlnnl Is a man of unusual nlilllty with nn Intlmnte knowledge of the habits of flnnnclnl houses, nnd the apparently loose methods In which they send securities about the Wall street district In the poskets or satchels carried by young clerks. It Is believed agents o f ' t h e master criminal scrape acquaintance with banking and brokerage bouse messengers, mannge to Involve them In small debts, lure them to Increase the debts In the hope of "getting even" nnd then, when they a r e hopelessly entangled, open before them tbe glittering and easy rewards of n life of crime. If it is caused by female derangement Lydia E. Pinkham 8 Vegetable Compound is what you need. It quickly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. For more than thirty years this eood old fashioned root and herb medicine has been restoring American women to health. The Splendid Recovery of Mrs. Coventry N e w a r k , N . J . — " T h e doctor said I had organic trouble and treated me for several weeks. A t times 1 could not walk at all and I suffered with my back and legs so i often had to stay in bed. I suffered off and on for eight years. Finally I heard that Lydia E . rinkham'sVegetable Compound wat a good medicine, and 1 tried it with splendid effect 1 can now do my housework and my washing, i have recommended your Vegetable Compound and Blood Medicine and three of my friends are taking it to their • advantage. Y o u may use my name for a testimonial."—-Mrs. THERESA COVENTRY, 75 Burnett St, Newark, N.J. Mrs. Hunt tellt how it helped her Detroit, Mick—"I wasin a general run-down condition, was very nervous a n d tired, h a d backache and other troubles. 1 suffered for several years, was not able to work at times and tried doctor's medicine with no results. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised, and after taking it a short time 1 was much better. 1 am sdll taking it myself and giving it to my daughter, and a o glad to recommend Vegetable Compotmdit anytime."—Mrs.M£iiunt, l7IDaik»Ayt. Man Fell Eight Stories, Landed in Rocking Chair J a m e s Hamilton, 35 yeai% old. a telegraph operator, of Kingston Springs, Tenn., fell or was pushed—he doesn't recall which —from an eight-story window of a St. Louis hotel. He landed In a sitting posture In a rocking chair on the sidewnlk, esctiplng with slight I n j u r les due to his full being broken by two electric wire cables at the height of the second story. He Is being treated nt the hospital for a cut head and splinter wound In the right side. Lydia E.Pmkham's Vegetable Compound LYDIA C.PINKHAM MASS MEDICINE 5»Ki UNDER WATER 18 MINUTES Man la Reicued and Reauacltated by Crew of Patrol Boat—May Recover. Philadelphia.—After being under water In the Delnwnre for eighteen minutes Frank Burke wns rescued und resuscitated by the crew of the patrol boat. Burke, an employe of the Cramp shipyards, fell into the water from a bull on which he wns working nnd dlMippenrcd beneath the surface, a f t e r struggling for n few minutes. Fellow workmen made several attempts to rescue him, hut were unsuccessful until the nrrlvnl of the patrol boat; Burke wns located with grappling hooks nnd rushed to the emergency hospltnl lit the ahlplynrd. Here the pulmotor wns npplled. I'hyslclnna lay Burke mny recover. Must Build Jail for Youth. Walla Wnlla, Wash.—Penitentiary authorllles here must build a sepiirnte prison cell and ynrd for the confinercent of one prisoner. Frank Sowders, sixteen years old. By n decision of the stale supreme court the youth must be Imprisoned for manslaughter, but a state law hnrs offenders of tender nge from ndulf crlmlnnls' nssoclatlon. Under conviction for mnnKlnughter n prisoner cannot be sent to the state reform school. Monkey Poisons Dogs. Bridgeport, Conn.—Hercules, a trained monkey, oWlied by Dr. Robert Marion, a veterlnnry. slipped out of his cnge nnd found a bottle of pills, the content* of which hi* fod to two bulldogs, one valued at 1500 and the other 1250. The dogs died. A police sergeant cnught Hercules. Number, Pleaie. Bern—Were they married In haste? J u n e - G o o d n e s s , no; why. they were married hy telephone. WORSE THAN DEADLY POISON GAS Y o u can't feel s o g o o d •K b u t w h a t K ? ^ I w i l l malre y o u feel b e t t e r . of tbe aiiproachlDf danger. Ni»;uro ficbta back, lleadacbe, indigestion, lu.tomnla, lame back, lumbago, aclatlca. rheumatism, pain in the loins ami lower abdomen, difficulty in urinating, aU aro indication of trouble brewing In your kldneya. When such armptoma appear yon will almoft certainly find quick relief iu (JULD MEDAL Ilaarlem Oil Capiules. This famous old remedy has sUiod the teit for two hundred yeara in kliplog mankind to fight off disease. It Is Imported direct from the bomi laboratories In Holluud. where it baa helped to develop the Dutch Into ono of the aturdiest and healthiest racea in the world, and it may be bad a t almost every drug atore. Your money promptly refunded if It doea not relieve you. He aure to get the genuine GOLD MEDAL Drand. In sealed packagea, three alsea.—Adv. Tight Rop» Bridge. A bridge over the StrlnnKitr river. Indln, Is made of only three ropes. Ono la the footpath, while the other two arc rnllH. I m p o r t a n t to M o t h o r a Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOIUA, that famous old remery for lofaots and children, and aee that it Bears the SlgDature In Use for Over 80 Years. It Is dlllicult to realize that the { sweet cirl Kruduate wns once u short haired baby with a red aoae. OLD SORES, PILES AND ECZEMA V A I R I Good, Old, Reliable Petcnon'i Ointment a Favorit# Remedy. "find M ulrers on my legs. Doctors wanle.1 lo cut off lee. I M . r w n ' s Ointment cured m e . ' - W m . J. Mcto* w Wft. der Street. Uochoster. N. Y. det a lurge box for C centa at aar druggist, snys Petcr*nn, of Duffalo, N. T , nnil money hark If It Isn't the best torn E l d c r y d i i e n e I i d o r e i p c c t o r of p e r o n s . I t n t t a c k t y o u u g a n d old alike. I n m o i l c a a e a t h e v i c t i m la w a r n e d Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria He Took the Pot. p e e M o i n e s . - " T h r e e bulls." a-ld Nushkle Allber. "Full bouse." said U>vey Selcar. "Two sixes," said tbe robber as he scooped up the $(U5 p o t Beiiei-Than Pilli For Liyur ills. ever used. Always keep IVterson'a Olnt- mcnt In Hie house. Klne for burm sralda. bruises, sunburn, and the irurat remedy for llcblnic erx.-ma a n d has ever known. piles th« worUt School of Nnrsing Stove Polish Mmv»m Elbow O i w m o IRON ENAMEL _ MakaiRmt? PipaSmaotfr 1 1 Metal Polish fnr Nir.kol Part-- Cuticura Stops Itching ana Saves the Hair FRECKLES S S S s s i I O K HAt.K BY O t V N K K . I.B00 A C K E 8 I U i'HOVED BOTTOM LAND., BAROAtN. C l y d e H i l l . N e w A l b a n y . Mtaa. PersistentCoughs a r e d a n g e r o u s . O e t p r o m p t relief f r o m Piio'i. Stops Irritation: aoothing. Effective i n d safe f o r y o u n g a n d o l d . N o o p i a t e , In PI S O S T h e Children's Memorial Homital ' T r a W a g School offers a t h r e e y e a r coune i u y o o u wxatm of n i n e t e e n y e a n o r o v e r a n d w h o h a v e S a d U a k •cbool e d u c i l i o n . Eight h o u r d a y . T f e o n t k j J c o u n e g u e n s t t h e U m v e n i t v of C h k a a o . A M I n u r s i n u in s g e n e r a l hospital. E i t e n n * c a n * u t . M i d e r n n u n e a ' h o m e s e p a r a t e (rom t h * h c » pitAl. For f u r t h e r I n f o r m a t i o n a d d r c a a f r i a i h s l ol T r a i n i n g S c h o o l . T S S F u l U r t o a An^OUmm Norgan's Market Letter Onr s n t l p l t of Um U< h n l r a l pa market n i p c r t oplulun u a a l i i to reach J u o M ' h M-ndajr u o n IXUtt—qoarurlrllOta-aui S nun WKITU TODAY f O H I N r o a i U T K W HOUUAN INVESTMENT BEUVICI IGWaUHUevl New Vork City YOU T E L L ' E M , B U D D Y « V r » loo buay m a k i n g T U B BTAKfl A N D S T p i P K S t h a b a a t v e t c r a n a * iie« Hams all*; b . a u c o u p newa s a d fa T d u c a n t a l l ' a m a n d e a a h l a your bih l i m a aa local a s e n t aelllng a a b a o r i p t k • nd b o o k s like " H e n r y ' s P a l t o H e r . r y " t h a s l d s . Band a d o l l a r f o r y o a r a s b a c t l y t l o n . S p e c i a l r a t a w i t h coplea ^ a n d p s r t l c u l s r a a g e n c y prnpnaJtlaii. T I I E BTAKS A N D b T R t m 701-7 M u i n e y B n l l d l a g , W u h l a g t M . Dl a AUfeNia WAMkil—l-arlacl V«.i b u r s t o r ; alsaa f o r s a y f u r n b a s t * . r a d u c a s soot, a s h . l a b o r a a d ( M l : M t p r o B t a Waat P u r n a o a Carb. On.. U a a n r . O a t a . B i r E R m o i B IIAIU KKMOVKO U r a n c . 11.00 Ilald heaila c u r s d M M . I M k aaara o t a e d or m u n a y b a e k . K n a p p Tito. 1st W. t t h HI 81 Tsui. M l n n e a o t a W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 47-1911, T H I OOLOMA COURIER, OOLOMA, — K I O H . OOLOMA THI OOURIEB, COLOMA, MTOH. •aa" S E E N AROUND R w n f l y tho wllfor TOWN wn« strolline aniiind town mi (lie Inint f o r Rome IIIMII of n e w s worth p a c i n g on to our rcudcrs. \ddrMi (11 C c a a a n l u t l o n i U W e f o u u d It. In a certain homo t h e m o t h e r w a s tolling diligently—waihlng dishes, pots, BELL PHONE SU. p a n s ami kettles, s w e e p i n g the floor. C o l o m a , B e r r i e n Co., n i c h l g a n diiNtlng the f u r n i t u r e nnd tidying u p generally. F . W. C O C H R U N Hut t h a t was nothing new. T h a t m o t h e r In always doing t h e same. She Ls a wonder. On t h e f r o n t d o o r s t e p reclined a i y o u n g lady, a d a u g h t e r of the house, i S h e w a s persuing the l a t e s t novel. Secret Leaked O u t • T h a t , also, w a s nothing new. B e M r . and Mrs. J a c o b S m i t h of C o l o m a ' c l l n l n g and p e r s u i n g Is h e r f a v o r i t e a n n o u n c e tho m a r r i a g e of t h e i r d a o g h t - : pastime. Courier. Coloma, Mich. Friday, Nov. 21,1919 1 "son • ^ofuMr. ' "h « " " " S C , "1" !ixbtrr a n d Mrs. M. L u n d g r e n o H I u > i D g : ' Buchanan. T h o w e d d i n g took place ut S o m e d a y t h a t d a u g h t e r mny In St. ' J o s e p h . J u l y 10th. Mrs. Charles t u r n liecome a m o t h e r herself. Lyddick of B n c h a n a n a t t e n d e d the Hh." may even w r fry when . •. i i » c. t u ^ecoMlty will force h e r lo | i e r f o r m b r i d e , a n d Ira W a g n e r of St. Joseph household d u t i e s e a r l y nnd late, w h i l e w a s t h e g r o o m ' i I)e8t m a n . I IKK d a u g h t e r ldh>s a w a y h e r time. „ T h a t dreaded "tired feeling" may become h e r c o n s t a n t companion In life. Meeting Ib Postponed, T h e n , iierhaps, s h e m a y think w i t h ... a n n\ i r e g r e t of the time w h e n she, a s t r u n g T h e mooting of the Self C u l t u r e C l u b , u , ) l l l h y g i ^ 1(1 i|,. (1 , i i n h o u r H a w a y announced elsewhere in t h i s issue to Iw while h e r owu m o t h e r tolled t h a t o t h is might be content with their lot in heid on F r i d a y of t h i s week a t t h e home me. of Mrs. Brown in Benton H a r b o r has T h e lemon may lie slow In coming, been Indefinitely postponed on a c c o u n t h u t It will lie bitter w h e n II a r r i v e s . of the d e a t h of Mrs. M a r y B. O r a n t . When you want a thing a n d haven't got It, t h e obvious thing Is to go out a n d get IL It will not come to | o u . Penny a n t e Is out of the r u n n i n g . No self respecting perron w a n t s to demean himself hy flipping mieh small change. Life, to m a n y of us. Is Just one harrowing d r e a m of w h a t Is going to bat us n e x t Card of T h a a k s Philip Hodges nnd Mrs. J e n n i e Hean wish through t h e eolumns of T h e Courier to express their sincere t h n n k s to all f r i e n d s and nelghboni w h o w e r e so kind to them a n d anNisted them In the Illness and death of t h e i r f a t h e r . J a m e s Hodges, They wish especially to t h a n k t h e singers, those w h o sent flowers a n d those who generously f u r n i s h e d t h e i r automobiles f o r the b u r i a l services.— Adv. T a k i n g It Up Direct^ D e a l e r — T h a t old woman b r o u g h t I n this c o u n t r y w e have millions of more eggs t o m a r k e t t o d a y a n d I told f o r e i g n e r s — E n g l i s h . F r e n c h . O e m i a n , h e r t h e ones she brought l a s t week A u s t r i a n , Ihillan, itdgiiUi, Svm'dlMi, were bad. Norwegian, Greek, T u r k i s h , J a p a n e s e , C l e r k — W h a t did she sa y? Chinese, a n d every o t h e r naUonallty. Dealer—Said next S a t u r d a y s h e T h e g r e a t m a j o r i t y of these foreigners u r e comiclcntluus a n d law abiding would bring h e r hens and I could s p e a k to them a b o u t It personally. citizens. They w o r k . T h e r e Ls also In t h i s country a n o t h e r Reform. class of foreigners. They c o n s t i t u t e "He's a modern reformer." t h e m i n o r i t y . They u r e not law abiding, " T h a t soT" a n d they a r e not citizens. "Yes, he's o u t to r e f o r m t h e r e f o r m THHV AGITATE. ers." And because of t h e wild eyed bolshe"In w h a t w a y ? " vistic v a p o r i n g s of these a n a r c h l s t l e wind J a m m e r s and d e s t r o y e r s o u r coun" H e ' s t r y i n g to educate t h e m to try of l a t e has lieen in a c o n s t a n t s t a t e discover t h a t not everything t h e o t h e r of turmoil. fellow gets s o m e f u n o u t of Is wholly This continual u n r e s t and uncertain- wrong." ty a r e c u r t a l l i u g production, underm i n i n g efflclency a n d a l i e n a t i n g the Explanation. loyalty of mnny good men. "How do you account f o r c o m e t s a n d I t m u s t cease. I^ibor a n d c a p i t a l m u s t get together m e t e o r s ) " Inquired the girl w h o wanton a s a n e nnd r e a s o n a b l e working bas- ed to seem scientific. is, w h e r e Uie division of prollts will be "Now a n d then," replied Uie prof a i r to both sides. f e s s o r who wanted to seem frivolous, B u t t h i s will never lie accomplished by a l l o w i n g a b r a v i n g m i n o r i t y to " t h e m u s i c of t h e spheres a t t e m p t s a u s u r p the n u t h o r l t y which lielongs to n littlo Jazz." sane majority. Men of Intelligence and Integrity do P u t t i n g It Plainly. not euro to take o r d e r s f r o m Illiterate A Judge, whoso personal a p p e a r a n c e nnd irresponsible f o r e i g n e r s whose only claims to leadership n r e a misguided w a s a s u n p r e p o s s e s s i n g a s h i s legal conscience and n p a i r of leather lungs. knowledge w a s p r o f o u n d . I n t e r r u p t e d lira Ins, not noise, m u s t prevail if w e a f e m a l e witness. " H u m b u g g e d you. n r e t o live In iieace und plenty in this my good w o m a n I" snld he. " W h a t do country. • you m e a n b y t h a t ? " "Well, my lord," snld t h e witness, "I c a n ' t e x p l a i n P exactly, b u t If a girl called y o u r lordP h l l a t h e a Class T h e P h l l a t h e a c l a s s met with t h e ship a h a n d s o m e man s h e w o u l d be hostesses—Mesdames H a w k s , F u l l e r h u m b u g g i n g you 1" a n d Hutherhind—at the home of Mrs. Ilnwks, F r i d a y evening, Nov. H t h . T h e meeting w a s called to o r d e r by the vice Children's Logic. p r e s i d e n t , Miss C a r t e r . Devotlonals "Do you know," snld a l i t t l e fellow w e r e led by Mrs. F u l l e r und Mrs. Hewitt. Mrs. Fuller t h e n gave the class a of f o u r y e a r s of age, " w h a t I t h o u g h t talk on its duty a s a S u n d a y school d a r k w n s ? A great, h u g e live thing, class a n d its relation to t h e c h u r c h . t h e color of black, with m o u t h a n d Mrs. Fuller resigned a s president, o t h e r e y e s . " A n o t h e r a s s u r e d h i s t e a c h e r duties preventing h e r f r o m accepting. t h a t t h e wind w a s nlive, f o r h e henrd Mrs. H e w i t t w a s t h e n elected presi- It whlstUng In t h e n i g h t dent. F o u r t e e n memliers and t h r e e guests responded to roll call. One new member, Mrs. Husxey, Joined the class. D a i n t y r e f r e s h m e n t s w e r e served by the hostesses. FOREIGNERS—GOOD AND BAD Wednesday's News-Palladium — T h o Mrs. J . L . S c o t t r e t u r n e d last week q u i e t m a r r i a g e of Miss E d n a U m p h r e y , f r o m Rochester, M i n n . , w h e r e sho un* d a u g h t o r of M r . a u d Mrs. Louis Urn d e r w e u t a s u c c c a s f u l operation a t M«yo phroy of Coloma, a n d Wm. McKinley Bros, for t h e r e m o v a l of a goiter. of t h i s c i t y o c c n r r e d T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n at 8:80o'clock a t t h e C h r i s t i a n c h i n c h Light flurries of snow fell on Wedparsonage, Rev. T . W . Bellingham ofllnesday—not e n o u g h to cover t h e clating. Miss F l o r e n c e Nickles a n d ground, but enough to remind the R a y m o n d Nickles accompanied t b e citizens t h a t w i n t e r Is here. couple. T b e b r i d e w a s dressed very pretUly in t a u p e colored satin. Mr. a n d Mrs. McKinley l e f t immediately on a t r i p to* n o r t h e r n Michigan points a n d will be a t homo a f t e r Decemlier 1st a t 747 C o l u m b u s a v e n u e . Rahn Bros. 156 E. Main St. Benton H a r b o r , M i c h . Please donk judge a shoe WATCH T H E DATE O F YOUR SUBSCRIPTION Tliis is t h e time — by one cr two characteristics; for example, appearance and fit. A shoe made of inferior leather can be made tojook almost as well as the better grades. And it may even be made to fit. But to hold its shape and give you a reasonable amount of service, it must be built from solid leather, over proper lasts. of year w h e n a large numlier of subscriptions to T h e Courier f a l l due. T h e d a t e on t h e label of each subscriber's paper shows when t h e i r subscription expired. W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n a n d is reported to be in a v e r y critical conditien t h i s ( T h u r s d a y ) m o r n i n g . H e r son, Bon F . U m p h r e y , a r r i v e d from C h i c a g o on t h e e a r l y train to lie a t her bedside. Hla T r i b u t e . H a n s w n s on n visit to his g r a n d f a t h e r ' s f a r m , nnd f n r the flrst t i m e s a w a lot of b e e s making honey. A f t e r looking a t t h e m with deep Interest f o r a f e w m o m e n t s he s n l d : "Well, I m u s t s a y t h e y Is c e r t a i n l y a w o n d e r f u l lot of l i t t l e a n i m a l s . " and Big values in Coats, Suits and Dresses and Big Reductions on ail Furs. II.SO Large Ail-Over Kimona Aprons, special at Good Slip-Over Aprons, special at Good Fleeced Hose at Good Lisle Hose at Good assortment of Gloves at Good Corsets at 18 25 IS 25 1.50 Hottl Benton . Block, Binlon Enders Cash Store Harbor CLYDE OLDS, Manager Give the Turkey a Treat Fashions Footwear . . . for the season . . . ance this Thanksgiving, surprise him by having your table glistening with a brand new set of . ( . . SILVER . . Dress Boots Patent Vamp, Black Kid or Gray Colored Tops. Complete set of 26 pieces, W m . Rogers & Son QCHERER&PR1C£ BOOT SHOP BEACONS-T.SHOES Oenton Harbor Tablet given away with each package of Calumet Baking Powder sold at our store. Wentworth pattern in velvet lined chest $ 4 . 0 0 D o w n - - Sl.OO a W e e k / W V W W w ^ w w w w v w w w w w w w w w v ^ / w s ^ v ^ Christmas good* now on display. Ender's Cash Store Coloma, M i c h . ryww%Awvvwwvfwww^ piscn All Sizes-AAA to E t h e w a r a n d It is very Importa n t t h a t subscriptions be p a i d In advance. . Special at $20.00 Gray and Black Suede Boots with covered Louis heels, also Fieldmouse, Bronzei Gray, Black Kid Boots for afternoon or evening wear. all One 5c Ruled Paper School W h e n the " National Bird" makes his appear- If you have not already replenished your wardrobe, •come to us for the proper footwear PEP COMMOH t M I R ' O M / iumfr5.>a Amt a o t VN 'IWV, « 0 T H t V u . NVfcK* \Nt6S.UTUtf -mtM s o v l v t RUN A U . OMER T O ^ H A P T t R >4E\N6 S* y f l U t t U K COtNUrAfi OP afUFF.fOLKS'Ll.lMROYJ f H f t PfcPBR. OOVNN Vi t K i f X H l U A \ N t NOTMVN' IN iW P A P t t t l V Every one donle* a n y resiMimdhlllty Of course, everybody longs for iieaiv for the IiIrIi cost of IIvIuk. Of eounte. a n d Iramiulllty In the II. S. A. And N 6 one Is guilty. Prices Just mitunil- likewise, cvcrylxKly w a n t s t h e other ly Jumped of their own accord. feliow to In* t h e one who is tiattened out by t h e s t e a m roller of Individual I t la never wise to begin that which prosperity. you caiinot tlnlsh. YOUIIK men w h o iteek to climb the l a d d e r f r o m t h e top So person e v e r really proflta f r o m a generally hit the hottom with a t h u d . g i f t unless he makes a n effort to des e r v e It. T o accept und forget Is but T h e man who keeps o t h e r s at a re- lo f o r c e a n o t h e r link in t h e f e t t e r s apectfol dlatance more often dmnlnatm which chain you lo a f u t u r e without those with whom he comes In c o n t a c t . ho|N> a n d without r e w a r d . T o o great f a m i l i a r i t y breeds IndltTerence, and often contempt. Hefore a t t e m p t i n g to overcome nn obstacle It Is liest to c a r e f u l l y gauge M a r r i a g e Is a lottery only when one Its height. Many of the w r e c k s of life or both of the c o n t r a c t l u g p a r t i e s ln-{ a r e the direct result of a f a i l u r e to slst nn making It such. One inu^t not give reasonable consideration lo obexpect perfection In his or h e r m a t e ! s t r u c t i o n s which seem sllcht but a r c unless willing lo accord the s a m e In r e - ' in reality m n m e n t o n s In their itossihii 1 turn. It les for u l t i m a l e disaster. 'Ebann] 2 0 9 East Main Street See us for Furniture ! BENTON HARBOR T. L HOLTON, Local Manafer We'll save you money! Leave orders for Special Holiday INDIRECT TESTIMONY. J u d g e — W h a t ' s <ho chargoT O f f l c e r — l o c k i n g hla wlf« to aleap, y s r honor. T h a t ' a no c o m . Oh, b u t y e r h o n o r , y e r i h o u l d h s r • e e n t h e solze of t h e rock. Soft for Knocker. The knocker hae It pretty toft. For almoit any ilamroer Can land hla blows both hard and soft. And never use the hammer. has made more money for more people in less time than any other industry in the'world. It is the one industry in which fortunes are frequently realized in the twinkle of the eye. OIU W e all w a n t to m a k e m o n e y a n d w a n t lo m a k e it f a s t W e a r e all f a m i l i a r , w i t h t h e possibilities offered by t h e Oil Industry; b u t of t h e m a n y oil o p p o r t u n i t i e s p r e s e n t e d to us, Limited—Lst us Reach Out and Secure While There is Yet Time. H e r e a r e t h e m e n I h a v e described: E A T E 5 3 £ £ TIRES REGISTERED U. S. PAT. OFF. C u B i * i n t » d P u n c t u r e P r o o f Take No Chances ...with Old Tires... If you drive an automobile you know the "joy" of stopping in the hot sun to change tires. All this trouble can be eliminated if you have your old tire? put in good condition at our shop. W e do all kinds of Vulcanizing and Tire Repair Work To get the best value out of your tires try the Gates Half Soles Guaranteed Puncture Proof I Different Then. " P . T. B a r u u m snld the public liked to b e humbugged." j "Quite t r u e , " a d m i t t e d the man who w n s doing s u m s In arithmetic. " B u t It cost so m u c h less to be humbugged when B a r n n m w a s alive I" The Uiual Way. "Hello, kids, w h e r e a r e t h e m o t h e r a n d MaheU" " M a ' s In t h e kitchen m a k i n g u p h e r b r e a d and Mabel's u p s t a i r s m a k i n g up h e r face." Cheerful News. E d i t o r — T h a t dog of mine Is something of a literary critic. A u t h o r — H o w Js t h a t ? E d i t o r — H e con tell a poet a s f a r as n e can see him. Off Duty. T h e Civilian—Pm surprised thnt yoo, n police oftlcer, should allow yourself to b e held up nnd robbed. T h e Cop—But, you see, sir, w e w e r e on s t r i k e w h e n It happened. Still a s Foollih a s Ever. " I see n d i s p a t c h which s a y s the ex-knlser hns l e f t Holland and gone bnck to Gel-many. " T h a t bird seems to have a mania f o r not knowing when he Is well off." Impossible. "Mr. Griggs, before I begin to paint t h i s portrait, I would like to m a k e a s t u d y of y o u r w i f e ' s f a c e In repose." "Then, my d e a r sir, you will never get a speaking likeness." LOWELL S. GUY & SON Kind Conjecture. Belle — All Maude's f a m i l y a r e blondes. W h e r e did she get such black eyes? Nell—I g u e s s h e r h u s b a n d g a ? i t h e m to her. I m . • • strangers. Now, s h o u l d s o m e big oil o p p o r t u n i t y b e p r e s e n t e d to u s F r a n k N. W i l k i n s o n Russell W. McGuire Dan Cunningham C o r a M. A n d e r s o n BENTON HARBOR cccd in all of t h e i r o w n u n d e r t a k i n g s , t h e n , a n d t h e n only, would w e all a c c l a i m — T T w * is Our Opportunity—It This c r o w d a n d their f r i e n d s a r e t h e p r i n c i p a l o w n e r s of t h e public and p r i v a t e lives a r e a n o p e n book to us; m e n w h o m we love, h o n o r a n d respect; m e n of b r a i n s a n d g o o d h o n e s t , practical b u s i n e s s e x p e r i e n c e t h a t h a s enabled t h e m to sucis Stoves, Aluminum Ware Johnson }s Freeze Proof for, Radiators also Alcohol at $1.25 per gallon F r e d A. P o t t e r L. Mollhagen Mrs. J . L. S t e v e n s o n S t u a r t Barlow Ed B u r t o n • Chester O ' H a r a W. F . Freitag Olive A. F r e l t a g • A r t h u r A. B a u s h k e George L a r k w o r t h y E d w a r d P . B a r r y H a r r y S. H i n k l e Floyd D a i g n e a u J o h n H. B r e n n a n Charles Cherry Helen Barry H . B. H u m m e l D a n J . Riley Philip Lynch a n d o t h e r s in Niles, W a t e r v l i e t , G a l i e n r St, J o s e p h a n d all p a r t s of B e r r i e n C o u n t y , by m e n w h o w e h a v e k n o w n all of o u r lives, m e n whose W e have installed a plant for half-soling tires on t h e Gates plan and will be pleased to have you call on us a n d let u s tell you how we can save you a big part of your tire bifl. Church Street, Coloma, Mich we h a v e facilities for investigating, i n t h e e n d it r e m a i n s with u s to b e g u i d e d by t h e a d v i c e of practically disinterested Hoosier Cabinets, Round Oak ST. JOSEPH how d o w e k n o w w h e n to c h o o s e t h e right one? E v e n t h o u g h A Luxury. " T h a n k s , " said the J u d g e ; "a sweeter d r a u g h t f r o m f a i r e r b a u d — " "Yes," I n t e r r u p t e d Maud Muller, fixing him with o cold loolf; "but b e f o r e you ride away remember t h e r e ' s a onecent w a r t a x on t h a t drink." Our Portion Pieces of Furniture COLOMAMICH- Hardware Coloma Furniture WORKMAN OIL AND GAS COMPANY of O k l a h o m a City. Mr. F r a n k N. Wilkinson is president of t h e c o m p a n y a n d Mr. A r t h u r A. B a u s h k e is a director. T h e y h a v e c o m m i s s i o n e d m e to i n v i t e you to join t h e m in w h a t webeliev&'a wonderful money-making opportunity, which is t h e d e v e l o p m e n t of t h e following p r o v e n oil leases belonging to t h e c o m p a n y : T h e c o m p a n y h a s paid m a n y d i v i d e n d s d u r i n g t h e past five years. T h e capitalization h a s j u s t beem i n c r e a s e d to t h e low s u m of $250,000.00, a n d t h e y offer t h e u n s o l d portion of $200,000.00 ($50,000.00 to r e m a i n u n s o l d a n d in t h e t r e a s u r y for t h e f u t u r e ) a t $10.00 per s h a r e w h i l e t h e y last ( P a r value, $10.00.) 320 acres in t h e Osage N a t i o n , O k l a h o m a , on which t h e c o m p a n y h a s S I X producing wells, residence, barn, m o d e r n p u m p ing "tation a n d all o t h e r m o d e r n e q u i p m e n t , including a C o m m o n C a r r i e r Pipe L i n e r u n n i n g w i t h i n a few feet of their s t o r a g e t a n k s . T h e c o m p a n y h a s n e v e r h a d a dollar's w o r t h of i n d e b t e d n e s s and does not expect to have. T h e m a n a g e m e n t is efficient a n d h o n e s t — 1 0 0 per cent plus, in b o t h i t e m s . T h e s h a r e s a r e $10.00 each, fully paid a n d n o n - a s s e s s a b l e , m e a n ing t h a t s h a r e h o l d e r s a r e not liable f o r a n y d e b t s should t h e r e b e a n y , and t h e i n t e r e s t s of s h a r e h o l d e r s a r e a l w a y s g u a r d e d b y c o n s e r v a t i v e policies. T h e c o m p a n y proposes to begin drilling a series of wells right a w a y , a n d Invites you to s e n d in y o u r s u b s c r i p t i o n for a s m a n y s h a r e s a s you c a n afford, w i t h o u t delay, in o r d e r t h a t we m a y keep selling e x p e n s e s d o w n t o a m i n i m u m . If you c a n n o t m a i l your chedk t o d a y , w r i t e m e a n d n a m e d a t e w h e n y o u will mail t h e m o n e y , T h e s h a r e s will b e reserved for you if t h e r e a r e a n y l e f t 40 a c r e a n d a half interest in a n o t h e r 40 acres n e a r h e a v y production in Greenwood C o u n t y , K a n s a s . 40 acres in C o m a n c h e C o u n t y , O k l a h o m a , just n o r t h of t h e great Burkhurnett, Texas, field, a n d 20 acres i n A r c h e r County, T e x a s , j u s t south of B u r k h u r n e t t field. 5 0 acres in H a m i l t o n C o u n t y , T e x a s , a d j o i n i n g t h e g r e a t C o m a n c h e C o u n t y , Texas, field, s o u t h e a s t of Ranger, T e x a s . JAMES T. CAWTHORN, licensed Fiscal Agent JameaT. Cawtborn, Llfenied fUeal Aitem, W o r k m a n Oil * O a a Co., M l P l c a a a o l S t . , S t . J o t e p h , M i c h i g a n . W i t h o u t obligation or e i p r n M WORKMAN OIL A OAS CO. from to me, ptriooal pleaae n a i l mf o b a m a l l o n i of Harlow, a m b a t a n t l a l a h a n h o l d e r . , report Mr. of Stuart W O R K M A N OIL & G A S CO. 5 1 3 PlMaant S t , S t J e t e p b , rillch. Nan Addreai. Offie# Hour*: 8 a. to 5 p. m., 7 to 9 p. m. Telephone 958 THE U N I V E R S A L CAR T h e r e a r e m o r e t h a n 3,000,000 F o r d c a r s in daily service t h r o u g h o u t t h e w o f l d , a n d fully e i g h t y p e r c e n t of these a r c F o r d T o u r i n g C a r s . T h e r e a r e m a n y reasons for this, n o t t h e least of which is t h e simplicity in t h e design of t h e c a r , s o easy t o u n d e r s t a n d ; likewise i t is easy t o o p e r a t e ; a n d m i g h t y inexpensive c o m p a r e d t o o t h e r m o t o r cars. O n t h e f a r m , in t h e city, for business a n d for family p l e a s u r e , i t is t h e c a r of t h e people, a n d t h e d e m a n d is increasing e v e r y d a y . L e t u s h a v e y o u r o r d e r p r o m p d y if you w a n t one. tete & May Coloma, H i . Is your subscription paidf T r r a Courier " w a n t a d . " your Send or b r i n g y o u r newa i t e m ' io T h e Courier ofllce. Itacoa, M c pound, at E n d e r s Cash Store.—Adv. Buy y o u r ImiuIIIoii cubes at E n d e r s Cash Store.—Adv. B o o l e Is still easy lo dreams. get—In Carpenter & Son's Bargains C. Klows will p a y the higheat price H i g h e s t prico paid for veal a t t h e C. Kloeaa grocery.—Ady. for your veal.—Adv. Coin a n o t h e r word. "Strike" i s e n worn to a fraxzle. Lyie Molt t r a n s a c t e d business Chicago the last of last week. T h e most f o r t u n a t e man In all t h e T h e p r e a c h e r ties tiie knot, thf world la he w h o has achieved the (jreat- Judge unties It, a n d between tiie two W e do c u i t o m feed grindiuKest aucceaa throiiKh his own honorahle It's a ^continuous merry-go-round |>er& Hooker. Coloma.—Adv. a n d unaided efTortH. formunce f r o m one act to the o t h e r . The World BOOT SHOP 170 Pipttw St Benton Harbor PHONE1395 printing materials arc higher now t h a n a t a n y time d u r i n g It is economy to come here for your footwear. There's not a pair in the shop that you would object to wearing or hesitate about buying. Big Discounts in onr Millinery Department SCHERER S PRICE t h e work a n d expense of sending out s t a t e m e n t s . paper TIip wine man permltn olliow lo F o r t u n e h a s deserted m a n y a man j u d c o i k to lilx w o r t h . T h e fool ap- because he l e f t It to Its own device. prnlwM IiIh own. (iood resolutions a r e all right, proIf you would Bt-rvc hh a n e x a m p l e to vided the resoluter resolutes as he othern, yon luunt nee that no one force* solves. a h e a d of the example. "TIs said that the glory of o u r naB e of good cheer. * litter. Never al- tion lies Iu the fact that all men a n low t h e other Rlrl'it dlxposltlou t o he born f r e e and equal. T h e slianie Is that they do not remain so. i w e e t e r t h a n y o u r own. K LADIES' S T O R E If y o u r subscription of Van B u r e n county Jail, charged w i t h s c a l i n g h a r d cider f r o m a cider mill und f r o m a f a r m e r ' s ccllar. T h o m imv lieen considerable s t e a l i n g of elder In d i f f e r e n t p a r t s of t h e s t a t e this f a l l , due to the f a c t t h a t o t h e r hard d r i n k s cannot be procured, a n d the oBlclals of Van B u r e n a n d B e r r i e n counties a r e determined to m a k e a n e x a m p l e of all those w h o a r e c a u g h t In t h e act. i J. K. SCHERER Is due, we a s k t h a t it be renewed p r o m p t l y to save u s Prices Macaroni, 10c pound, a l E n d c n Cnuli Sweet potatoes Be per pound a t the Bloro.—Adv. x Endera ("ash Store.-—Adv. 10 to 25 per cent disconnt on all hats Mrs. Caroline U m p h r e y suffered a s t r o k e of paralyals a b o u t 4 o'clock on P W t R M H t 5 0 1K5H M « U X * 5 , l i U . 1 l U . t H ' V N O a a * NUW OOITA VCNOV* r«3VJ T* 6 P t U . V l COTArOSt N Q\t f i c f f t f O t T K t a . 'M ^ LOOK *1* HOI (VNNTHINO THKAA. KAMCt POOCi SORE N N* a o r r * t>xyr A I A E i g h t young men of H a r t f o r d a n d South H a v e n a r c languishing In t h e r Mrs. Umphrey Stricken MICKIE SAYS T h o m a s Campbell and f a m i l y ret u r n e d home T u e s d n y evening f r o m a d e l i g h t f u l visit of several weeks . i n Pennsylvania. Mrs. S c o t t B a c k H o m e McKinley-Umphrey Buy y o u r llmberger chccne at E n d e r s Cash Store.—Adv. Hoosier Kitcheu Kablneta miles of Htcjis. I l i i r s . —Adv. has Tomorrow is the lucky day of some people. It n e v e r comes. In Berrien county's potato yield for lOID h a s lieen e s t i m a t e d at (15 bushels p e r aero. Guy Honest lalHir Is a n alioiiiliiatloii to the bum. T h a t , however, is the reason tbe he is a bum. save T a k e life a s It comes nnd keep moving. It will n o t hustle for you. Fostorla electric light bnlba for aalo ut Coloma H a r d w a r e Co.—adv.Btf L a u g h , nnd t h e world laughs with you. Weep, a n d It kicks you out. Many u s e f u l a r t i c l e s at the (!. It. O. W. bazaar. I. 0 . O. F . huildlng. Decemlier (lib.—Adv. F o r liody vermin or head lice, use U r k s p u r lotion. 'J.'i and .'I'ic nt Scott's.—Adv. New line of U, S. m b b e r boots, overshoes and r u b b e r s nt S w i f t ' s Shoe a n d I In m e s s Shop.—Adv. T a k e Nux a n d I r o n for tliat runW h e n husband and wife disagree the down condition. (>ct It at Scott's a l l a w y e r begins to flgtire his dividends. $1.00 a iMittie.—Adv. L i v e m a r k e t price paid for w h e a t a t t h e W a t e r v l i e t Milling C o . - A d v . 4atf T h e wise m a n greets his f r i e n d s w i t h a smile. T h e ' f o o l gives him a g r u n t . Mrs. Wm. L b o t k e a n d d a u g h t e r MarJorle left Monday f o r Muskegon to visit relatives for a m o n t h . H a v e b u y e r for 5 or lO-acro f r u i t f a r m n e a r Coloma W h a t have you? E d . ' / . B r i n g your veal to C. Kloeaa' grocery S t e w a r t . Courier oflico. a n d m a r k e t for t h e highest p r i c e . - Adv. (let a bottle of o u r W h i t e Pino K \ Almut the liest way lo rid yourself tract nnd m a k e a pint of the liest cough of a n unwelcome income tax Is to pay lyrup—at Scott's.—Adv. It. T h e O. E. S. Initiation which w a s to H a v e your aatomobllo c u r t a i n s re- have Is-en held on Novemiier '-'lst has paired a n d new g l a w p u t in at S w i f t ' s . lieen |Mist|ione u n l l l f u r t l i e r notice. —Adv. T h e Willing W o r k e r s of North ColoBuild yourself up with Bexall Wine ma will meet w i t h Mrs. I'liilip W a r m a n of Cod L i v e r E x t r a c t $1.00 a t Scott's the llrst T h u r s d a y a f t e r Thankaglvlng. —Adv. \ P r e s e n t conditions indicate t h a t InSjieak gently, think sweetly, and d u s t r i a l chaos Is headed our way. a n d y o u r home town will rejoice in your the fellow w h o c a n ' t get from u n d e r presence. may go under. Buy y o u r C h r i s t m a s presents e a r l y Floyd D u n b a r Is the llrst of t h e Coat the (J. II. O. W. b a u m r , December loma hiinlera to r e t u r n f r o m the n o r t h 6th.—Adv. woods, ami he did not r e t u r n empty A r i s t o c r a t i c bootleggers object to t h e handed, either, f o r he brought liome a name. They p r e f e r not to lie recog- line deer. nixed al all. Mr. nnd Mrs. S u r c h nnd f a m i l y of T o m a k e y o u r face soft and white, Hollywood a n d Mr. nnd Mrs. J o h n use Bexall C r e a m of Almonds. 35 Smitii of St. J o s e p h were e n t e r t a i n e d a t t h e . C . F. Besacmer home f o r d i n n e r cents nt Scotfa.—Adv. last S u n d a y . Another n a t i o n a l calamity threatens. Max Slock of St. Joseph h a s lieen T h e T h a n k s g i v i n g turkey Is liecomlng a w a r d e d t h e c o n t r a c t for the construerestless a n d mny go on strike. lion of Benton Harlior's new hicli T h e next r e g u l a r meeting of t h e I,. scIiiniI buiidiut;. a t a n estiniated cost of 0 . T. M. will lie held T u e s d a y evening. alMiut |878,000. Novemiier 25th, at 7:30 s h a r p . It Is no longer stylish for a rich (Jlrls, If you want a face p o w d e r that American girl to m a r r y a foreign slicks, use Armand's—All shades—GO'- nobleman. Knro|iean titles a r e uIniiii a n d $1.00 sixes ut Scolt'a.—Adv. tho only IhliigH on e a r t h that h a v e not advanced in price. Cabbage, 4c pound, at E n d e r s Cash Professional a g i t a t o r s a r e a menace Store.—Adv. foundation stone of every f r e e a n d selfB4K)ie Is nosing around nt $40.00 a governed people. Tiie remedy is obgallon, with millions of seekers and vious, if we wonld preserve i b i s counmighty few tinders. Some lid, t h a t ! try f r o m t h e f a t e of lliissia. Mrs. S. E. Miller r e t u r n e d home Monday f r o m Benton Hnrlsir w h e r e she had lieen spending a week with friends. Wilsco ahorleiiing, .'lOc pound, the E n d e r s Cash Store.—Adv. al Let us Help You Rcducc Living Costs For Maid-Wife-Mother If you suffer from troubles peculiar to your sex, w e r c c o m m e n d The big business we done in meats alone last Saturday shows us that our efforts to reduce the high cost of living is certainly appreciate!!. W e expect next Saturday will be another big day for us, so we have marked low prices on everything in our three departments—Groceries, Meats and Dry Goods. Here are Meat Prices for Saturday, Nov. 22 Vegetable C o m p o u n d a scientific c o m b i n a t i o n of purely v e g e t a b l e drugs, t h a t h a v e proven their worth at all l i m e s in alleviating t h e conditions for which t h e y a r e designed. T h e d r u g s used yi this combination a r e k n o w n to a n d used by the m e d i c a l profession a n d bear t h e seal of their a p p r o v a l . They a r e a s follows; Black Haw, C r a m p Bark, Unicorn Root, Blue Cohosh, S q u a w Vine, Golden Seul. AUspice a n d C i n n a m o n Bark. W e g u a r a n t e e Rexall Vegeta ble Compound to give absolute satisfaction or m o n e y back. Sold only a t t h e Rexall Store. scom Coloma Meat Bargains for Saturday Only .22c .20c .15c 23c .21c .24c .20c Sirloin S t e a k , lb R o u n d S t e a k , Ib P o t R o a s t , lb C h u n k P o r k , ib S i d e P o r k , Ib F r a n k f u r t s , Ib B o l o g n a , ib G R O C E R I E S and D R Y G O O D S 6 bars good laundry soap 3 packages any 10c tobacco Worsted Dress Plaids, 39c value Plaid Dress Goods, 75c values at Novelty Check Dress Goods, 95c values at 25 25 .27 55 80 Michigan CARPENTER & SON C U O T D "WANT" ADS Phon« 11J Coloma, Mich. LOST AND FOUND L O S T — P a t e n t leather hand purse containing money, a key a n d t o m t receipts. I.navr at T h e Courier office or telehone I8P23, Colonm. I6t2 L O S T — C r a n k f o r Chevrolel automobile. Finder please notify W. F. Enders, Coloma, or leave at T h e Courier olllee. I7tf WANTED W A N T E D — R e l i a b l e p a r t i e s for c u r e t a k e r on my f a r m d u r i n g the winter F r e e rent to p a r t i e s w h o will wire for horse, pig and chickens. Address A. E, Nichols, Colonm, Mich., or phone 0S3. Lllf W A N T E D — T o Isirrow $1,000 to $LBOO on llrst mortgage on f a r m property, at 11 jM-r cent I n t e r e s t Address "Borrow." c a r e T h e Courier. 17tlx Mr. and Mrs. J o h n Potter of South H a v e n sjient S u n d a y at the O l a Beck$28 weekly. Men—women, adverSee Rorlck Cornwell before you buy e r home. T h e t w o families d r o v e to y o u r w i n t e r supply of cotton seed meal. Benton IlnrlMir for a visit at tiie home tise. S t a r t candy f a c t o r y a t home, C a r due to a r r i v e thla week, /^et a s of Mr. a n d Mrs. Willis Peacock, f o r m e r small room, a n y w h e r e . We tell how nnd f u r n i s h everything. SPECIALTY hook y o u r o r d e r . 10tf Colonm residents. CANDYMAKING H O D 8 E , 5 South Clarence Leonard, who hns been em- 18th S t , Philadelphia, I'a. T h e r e ' s at least one consolation In 15110 these d a y s of sky prices. When y o u r ployed ut t b e F r i d a y Bros, c u n n i n g W A N T E D — W o m e n lictween '-'1 and money gives o u t the profiteer Is too f a c t o r y since his service in t b e u r m y . l e f t on Wednesday for Kaliimaxoo a n d 4fi yenrs of age to w o r k In packing, proud to w e a r y o u r s h i r t . may decide to remain in t h e Celery shipping nnd n m n i i f a c t u r l n g departP a p e r H a n g i n h — W h e n you w a n t City f o r Uie w i n t e r . ments. P l e a s n n t nnd jicrmaneut empaper h a n g i n g or p a i n t i n g d o n e call ployment Experience unnecessary Mr. a n d Mrs. P. I*. Banslike a u d chilC. Holmberg. Addreaa Ft. K. D. 8. Coand work not dilllcult b u t applicant loma. P h o n e 784 F . 21, Benton H a r b o r . dren r e t u r n e d S u n d a y evening f r o m a must lie in good health a n d willing lo two weeks' visit with the l a t t e r ' s broth- learn. Give helglit, weight and nge In —Adv. er, A. L. lie Fields and family, a t Wel- y o u r application. I'ay lieglnnera $13.50 T h e B a n g o r electric llghllng plant lington, Ohio. They made the t r i p in per week. Work 50 hours jier week. has lieen t a k e n over hy the Benton a a i r a n d visited several o t h e r places Also have p e r m a n e n t places for exH a r h o r - 8 t . J o e Electric Railway & while gone. perienced men In machine and cabinet h l c h t Co. a n d day a n d night service rooms nt good wages. Sllgh F u r n i t u r e wiH lie given. T h e list of j u r o r s d r a w n f o r t h e No- Company, New PreMOtt S t Building, vemiier term of the Berrien circuit Grand Itaplds, Mich. Having saved E u r o p e f r o m Itself, F. D. America will a c a l n come to t h e f r o n t c o u r t c o n t a i n s tin' f o l l o w l n f : FOR S A L E W a l r a t h of C o l o m a ; H. M. W i s e of a n d save It f r o m s t a r v a t i o n . They alB a l n b r l d g e ; Joseph lluyck of I l a g a r ways come lo t h e fellow who h a s und F O R S A L E — L i g h t double driving t o w n s h i p a n d Silas Tooley of Water- h a r n e s s , band-made, for sale cheap If Is willing to give. vliet township. taken w i t h i n a week. Inquire at T h e Apparently, however, t h a t much 17tl T h e H. E. L. P. class met T u e s d a y Courier ofllce. heralded d r i v e against the high cost of a f t e r n o o n at t h e home of Mrs. Oeorge S T O V E F O R S A L E — H a r d coal base living Is still In the h e r a l d i n g stage. Dedrlck a n d tied off n m i f o r t e r s f o r the Mure action and less bluffing would ladles' aid society. T h e n ' w e r e eight- b u r n e r , a Iwraaiu at $12.00. nearly new be welcomeed by the man who pays t h e een nicmbcrs u n d four guests present. a n d g u a r a n t e e d lu jierfecl order. Gofreight T h e hostess served delicious r e f r e s h - ing a w a y , I m p d r e of Coloma H a r d w a r e Co. l"i-x ments, asaUled by Mrs. Metcaif. Sixteen divorces have been g r a n t e d R a n g e for aale. Telephone 37F2, CoIn the B e r r i e n County circuit u p to the Mr. a n d Mrs. I^iuls Muth l e f t on l o m a . mix middle of Novemiier. T h e list of mar- T h u r s d a y for .lacksonvllle. Flu., w h e r e riage licenses haued for t h e m o n t h they e x p e c t to sjiend the w i n t e r . Mrs. F O R SALE—Itoiind Oak heater, ahows only six more t h a n the n u m b e r Muth re|K>rted to The Courier t h a t her b u r n s h a r d or s o f t coal. Address L, of divorces g r a n t e d for tbe s a m e length d a u g h t e r , Mrs. O. I!. Cuerry, recently c a r e Courier olllee. 1712 of time. imd h e r tonsils anil adenoids removed F O R SALE—A No. H range, one und Is m u c h ' I m p r o v e d in h e a l t h . T h e r e g u l a r W . C. T. U. m e e t i n g will table, one kitchen cabinet, six chairs, Ik- held Wednesday, Novemiier 'JOth, a t T h e Courier w a s m i s i n f o r m e d a n d live-piece parlor set and one center tathe liome of Mrs. W. II. Ball. T h i s m a d e a m i s t a k e last week iu s t a l i n g ble. Mrs. N. Fletcher. It. F, 1). 1, Cowill lie a Jubilee and t h a n k offering that the Uermaii Baptists had purchas- loma. 1712 meeting, w i t h special music ami a gixsi ed the St. Cloud hotel pro|ierty for a program. Every member Is expected site f o r a new church. II Is t h e (lorF O R S A L E — F i n e liuby c a r r i a g e , io bring a f r i e n d . man L u t h e r a n society which h a s pur- pnictlcally new, v e r y cheap. Mrs. W. chased t h e property. II Is n-iiorled that N. Beverley. B. F. D. 2, Imix 127, phone H a v e y o u r sale bills printed nt T h e I7llx no work will Is- done ou t h e s i t e this 3 5 F I 3 . Coloma. Courier ofllce. We f u r n i s h c u t s for the fall, b u t t h a t the new c h u r c h will lie bills If you w a n t t h e m ; we get the House and Lot for sale. Inquire of erected n e x t y e a r . work o u t promptly and a t very reasonMrs. L. Knowlton. lSt3z able prices. If you nre going to h a v e J o h n A. C a v a n a u g b , superintendent P U L L E T S — G o i n g Into other busia sale, a d v e r t i s e It through tbe columns of the light nnd power d e | m r t m e n t s of of T h e C o u r i e r w h e t h e r you have y o u r the B. H . St. J o e By. A L t Co,, for the ness. H a v e for sale alsmt 40 line W h i t e Leghorus, will Iny In few weeks, bills p r i n t e d here or n o t l u s t llfleeu years, died a l his home In also a b o n t s a m e iiiimher of my best American cheese. Site pound, a t En S t J o s e p h , S a t u r d a y , November l."5, laying hens kept for breeders. C. L. HMD. H e h a d Ihsii ailllctcd w i t h d e r s Cash Store.—Adv. W a r r l n e r , It. F. D. 2. Ikix 127, pliune n e u r i t i s f o r several weeks a n d t h e dis17tlx Mrs. A. E. Sleeper, w i f e of Oovernor ease affected his heart. T h e deceased 35F13, Coloma. Sleeper, f o u n d It necessary while t h e w a s 58 y e a r s of age. H e Is survived F O R S A L E — A t n b a r g a i n , a one ton guest of f r i e n d s In Benton H a r b o r hy a widow a n d one son. R e o truck In good running order. A. last week lo w e a r a borrowed coat, f o r W. B a k e r . Coloma, Htf Mr. nnd Mrs. G. F a r m e r a n d daiighh e r mink coat w a s stolen f r o m the din F O R S A L E — L a r g e und small wood Ing room of the Hotel Benton on T u e s ter F a i t h , a n d L i e u t F o s t e r K r a k e day while Mrs. Sleeper w a s dining d r o v e d o w n f r o m (Irand B a p l d s last b u n i e r a and one coal stove. Mrs. A. C. with f r i e n d s . T h e coat w a s valued ut week for a short visit at t b e IL Q. Drummond, ut the Philip Friday bun K r a k e home. Lleiitenunt K r u k e Is no<v galow on E a s t Center St., Colonm. about $1,000. 1-ltf 1 oca led in G r a n d Itapldn a n d Is devotT h e W . C. T. U. home In Benton H a r ing his time lo Ibe "Community SerHEAVY P A l ' E R , s u i t a b l e for u n d e r bor, a n Institution which m e a n s much vice" w o r k which is spreading so raplo all B e r r i e n county, h a s not a supply Idly t h r o u g h o u t the country, and In c a r p e t s or for lining oiitliiiiidings a of f r u i t a n d vegltallica for t h e coming which Michigan is taking a g r e a t lead. small q u a n t i t y f o r sale ut T h e Courier olllee. w a t e r ' s needs and nnyone who can contriliute a n d who doo. not Hnd It Lord, 32c pound at Endera Cash First C l a . s convenient to deliver the s a m e to the Store.—Adv. Horses, Marhome can leave their contribution In es and Mules B u r g l a r s operated In SI. J o s e p h Satcare of Mrs. W. H. Ball. urday night or enrly S u n d a y morning for sale at ill times and sold as repreT h e Courier Is In receipt of a l e t t e r a n d w e r e siiccessfni in m a k i n g their sented, by J o s , A. LITOWICB, one block f r o m Mrs. Donna Carney-Marshall, re g e t a w a y w i t h $7(»ii wortii of watches, east of Fair avenue on Territorial road, cently of Uaklnnd. California, in which d i a m o n d s nnd Jewelry f r o m t h e (!llls*ri Renion Harbor. I'hone 304. 7lf she w r i t e s t h a t h e r huflband, A. J . Jewelry s t o r e and a i|nilntlty of gold MISCELLANEOUS .Marshall, who has been a n ofllcer In f r o m several dentists' olllces. T h e a r the n a v y for many y e a r s , hns lieen ticles of Jewelry were obtained by t utMoney to loan on real estate security. t r a n s f e r r e d to Cavlle In the I'blllppine ting a hole throiiKli a window und Islands, a n d Mrs. Marshall, accom reaching In nnd taking the a r l i c l e s thai Favorable terms and ratea. A. N. Woodruff, Watendiet. aj-tl ponied by h e r sons, and h e r mother, w e r e ou display there. Mrs. 1)! J . Carney, have gone to t h e is F A R S E R V I C E — R e g i s t e r e d Poland lands to Join him. China Btmr No. I2IIHI!I. Fee $1.50. Al% so Guernsey bull, fee $1.00. W. E a r l . Mr. nnd Mrs. F. W. Cochrun w e r e iu Coloma. Uitf Chicago f o r the week end, going there to call upon Mr. Cochrun's brother-lu taw, w h o lutd undergone a n operation W e h a v e f o r sale a n u m b e r of IiIrIi at the P r e s b y t e r i a n hospital. Tin patient s u f f e r e d a very Imdly f r a c t u r e d g r a d e InveMniciils netting fi anil 7 per cent semi a n n u a l l y . Come a n d aee us, a r m which did not knit a f t e r being set Your trade solicited Puritan Flour makes the most and Best Bread. Try a Sack. FOR THIS WEEK W E Q U O T E Y O U A S F O L L O W S Special Santos Coffee, a repeater -45c Nut Brand Oleo - M e Swift's Premium Brand Oleo -42c Sugar Peas, extra good, per can - I S i 5 Ibsaclc King Bee Buckwheat Flour 45® Wilsco, the best shortening, try it, per pound -80c American Family Soap, per bar Quaker Flour for Bread, 2$ pounds $1.85 Olives, the best and largest package for the money. No. 2 can Hart Pork and Beans 15e Swift's Arrow Soap, per bar... 5c Pure Cane Syrup for cooking, per Ib QSc Puffed Wheat, i^c pkg. Saturday 2 for 25c COBURN, The Grocer WHAT Do You Wish for Breakfast, D i n n e r or Supper Perhaps it is a nice juicy steak—creamy potatoes with brown gravy just oozing like a spring in Yellowstone Park all over the plate. Whatever it is you want for that certain meal, we have it in its best form. Your Groceries are 100 per cent perfect if they come from c. KLOESS GROCERY and MARKET. COLOMA The only store that has the interest of an energetic proprietor in the store •and at your table. IS YOUR HOUSE W M ? Horses and Mules 7 Investments MONEY TO LOAN ON FARMS SIX PER CENT by t h e physicians and it w a s neceaaary Michigan S t a t e Investment Compiuiy, for Dr. Lewia, an over seas surgeon who p e r f o r m e d the operation, lo take 1 0 M M Water Street, Call Tuesday and W e d n e s d a y . a piece of the iialient's shin bone a n d Bentou H a r b o r , Mith. Arthur B. Iligmau.Uenton Harbor, Mich g r a f t I H u t o Uie bouu of the a r m . How will you pump? By Hand—Maybe your wife will object By Wind—It does not always blow. BY ELECTRICITY—It never gets tired or stops ASK THE MAN THE COLOMA COURIER, COLOMA. MICH. TTIE COLOMA C O C R I E R . SIR THOMAS UPTON HOUSE AMENDS ESCHJAIL BILL Labor Wins in Contest on Wage Dispute Vote; Arbitration Provided. Wnhslngtnn, Nov. 15.—OrcnnUwl labor won In tho IIOURU when IU supporters (uircecdtMl In ntuemllnR the Esch railroad bill by tho adoption of a substitute plan for urbltrntlon of wage dlMputos. T h e HUbHtllute as Incorporntod In nn aniondniont d r a f t e d by Hopresentatlve Bweet of Iowa and presented by Heprcsentatlve Anderson of Minnesota was approved by a vote of 101 to 108 In commltteo of tht> whole. The Anderenn-Swevt amendment flrst was adopted as a substitute for the Webster aniendment, which problblted strikes nnd provided for compulsory arbitration. 110 to 75, and then i s a substitute for tho original prorlslons In the bill, 101 to 108. A flnal test of strength on a roll cnll will come when the amendinent Is reported from the committee of the whole to the house a f t e r consideration it nil sections of the measure have been completed. In brief, the fcoet-Anderson amend» e u t divides tbe railroad workers Into Ihreo classes, and for each It estahJshes an a d j u s t m e n t board and an appeal commission. No penalty against ttrlko o r lockout Is Imposed, nnd memserehlp on nil six of the boards would >e restricted to t h e workers and their jmployors, and divided equally between them. Both the roads and the omployeoB would be directed by tho plan "to ox»rt every rcasonnble effort and adopt •very available means to avoid nn Interruption" of trnfflc, and to this end the three boards of adjustment would be created, these being substantially the same as those existing under the railroad a d m l u s t r a t l o n . T h e three adjustment boards would each deal with disputes of certain classes of the 14 railway unions. One hoard would Include represenfatlvea of tho f o u r big brotherhoods— the engineers, the firemen, the conductors. nnd the trnlnmen; another would Include tho machinists, the bollennakers, the blacksmiths, the carmen. the sheet metal workers, nnd tho electrical workers, and the third would Include the telegraphers, t h e switchmen, the railway clerks, and tho way and sh( laborers. Hallway executives would nnme four, six, ami four representatives. recpoctlvely, as members of these boards. Corresponding to each board there also wonld be set up a commission to consider appeals, wheh could be sent to them by hnlf the members of a board. These commissions would he of the same size as t h e boards, with tho select method of choosing members obtaining. but with duality of memberahlp between boards and commissions prohibited. H e a d q n a r t e n of all six tribunals would be In Washington. T h e Esch bill plan, rejected by the house, created one adjustment board nnd one appeal board. Its provisions have been denounced by organised labor as "more vicious" than the nntlstrike proposal In tho Cummins bill before the sonaten FIND SEVEN FROZEN BO IES Believed a Whole Austrian Battery Perished in Alpine Trench In Stevio Pass. Geneva. Nov. 15.—The frozen bodies of several Austrian artillerymen, perfectly preserved, have been discovered by St. Bernard tlogs in an Alpine trench near t h e summit of Sterio pass, about 10.000 feel above sea level. It Is believed that a whole battery was buried In the deep snow. Searching parties already have uncovered seven bodies. GERMANY IS ON VERGEOFREVOLT Pour Lead Into Ex-Overseas Men on Armistice Day March, 1 rf!. I Sir Thomas i.lpton, phoiogmphed on his nrrlvnl In New York lo got his Shamrock IV In shape to race fur the America's cup. The yacht has been In Erie basin, Brooklyn, since the war DRYS ARE HIT AGAIN PEDERAL JUDGE GRANTS OND INJUNCTION. SEC- Bars Interference With Disposal of Liquor on Ground War-Time Act is Unconstitutional. Louisville. Ky., Nov. 14.—Judge Walter Evans in federal district court, in effect for tiie second time held wartime prohibition unconstitutional, sustained nn attack upon the constitutionality of the Volstead enforcement act and grnnted nn injunction restraining El wood Ilnmllton. collector of internni revenue for Kentucky and District Attorney W. V. Gregory from Interfering with the sale by two Louisville distillers of their "iloor stock" of tax paid whisky. Tho government Immediately took an uppenl to the United States circuit court a t Cincinnati and announced its intention of n k l n g tbe higher court for a writ of supersedeas, which would h a v e the effect of slaying tho injunction. In the i n l e n n i the wny wns open, it wns said, for tho plaintiffs In the action to dispose of their floor stocks of whisky without interference by the federal nuthorlties In Kentucky. They were quoted as hnvlng admitted. however, they were undecided on the course to pursue in view of the fact that the constitutionality of war time prohibition hod not yet been decided by the Supreme court of the United Stales. Washington. Nov. 14.—Enforcement of war-time prohibition will not be Interfered with by Injunctions against the act, granted by -courts in Rhode Island and Kentucky, it was stated at the Internal revenue ofllce today. Appeal of the government to Ihe Su preme court makes tho injunctions Ineffective, it was held. "Our plans a r e to go ahead and see that ihu law Is enforced, and we are going lo stand pat," declared Deputy Commissioner Uaylord. "Conflicting decisions a r e nlwnys Issued by courts, nnd. until the Supreme court rules t h a t the law is not vnild, wo will continue to m a k e arrests." The Supreme court next Thursday will begin hearing arguments as to the coustilutionnlity of the war-time act. VOTES WET ON AMENDMENT New York. Nov. 13.—Lieut. Relvin W. Maynard. "the flying parson." won the recent army transcontinenial airplane race with the shortest elapsed time—nine days four hours twenty-six Columbus, O., Nov. 14.—Ohio vot- minutes ami five seconds—according to an official decision of the war deers last Tuesday defeated ratlllcutloD of t h e federal prohibition amendmenl partment. nnnounced here hy MnJ. by a majority of 5-12 votes. They al- Maurice Connolly at the American Flyso defeated t h e proposal ponnlttlrif ing club's "Armistice d a y " dinner. On the sole of 1!% per cent beer, defeated actual flying lime, however, Lieut. the repeal of the rtnle-wldo prohlhl Maynard was flflh lo Lieut. Alextlon law, nnd defeated indortemenl ander Pearson, who spent fortyof the Crabbe act lor the enforcemeni eight hours fifty-seven minutes and of the state-wide prohibition low. Tlu sixteen seconds In the nlr. T h e order official vole as given out by Ihe s e c of finish, allowing handicaps, w a s : rotary of stale's ofllce wns: Itaiillra- Pearson. Maynard. Harliiey, Smith, linn of federal a m e n d m e n t : Ves. 41K),- Worihington, Donaldson, Manzelman 888; no. 600.480. Two and three nnd Reynolds. fourths per cent b e e r : Yes. 474.903, no. 504,570. Repeal of state prohlhl TRY TO KILL CLEMENCEAU AID t l o n : Yes. 454,083; no. 406,782. Crab be enforcement n e t : Yes, 474,030; no Political Enemies of Georges Mandel Make it Merry for Him at Bor. 500,874. deaux, Frflnce. Ohio Defeats Ratification of Pederal Prohibition by Majority of 542— Enforcement Act Also Beaten. Helfferich Refuses to Answer Questions of Investigating Committee —is Fined 300 Marks, Whereupon He Leaves the Room. Miss Marguerite Smith, a t the age of 25, becomes ihe only woman Ilepublican t o sit in the Now Vork s l a t e assembly. She was elected from Ihe Nineteenth Manhattan district, defeating Martin J. Healy, Democratic incumbent, ami also a Socialist candidate. Miss Smith is the daughter of Dr. J. Gnrdnor Smith, president of Ibe Harlem Board of Commerce, aud Is well known as an athletic and social worker. She is a teacher of hygiene and physical training nnd supervisor of club work a t tho Horace Mann school, Columbia. MODIFY ARTICLE 10 SENATE VOTES RESERVATION T O VITAL SECTION OF TREATY. P a r a g r a p h Was Specially Urged by President as Heart of the Peace Pact. Washington. Nov. 15.—The reservalion to article 10 of the League of Nations covenani; drafted hy Ihe foreign relations coinmlllee. wns adopted by the s e n a t e a f t e r all a l t e m p t s to amend it had been defeated. Tho reservalion voted Is the ono President Wilson said would "cut tho heart of the treaty." T h e vote on Ihe reservation was 40 lo 83. All of the negative votes were by Democrats, Four Democrats —Gore. Reed. Smith of Georgia. Wal«h of MassachusetIs—voted with tiie Hepublicans for adoption. T h e text of t h e reservation Is as follows: "The United Slates assumes no obligation lo present- the territorial integrity or political independence of any oilier country or to Interfere In controversies between nations—whether members of the league or not—under t h e provisions of article 10, or to employ the military or naval forces of the United Slates under nay article of the treaty for any purpose, unless in nny particular case Ihe congress, which, under the Constitution, h a s the sole power to declare war or authorize tho employment of Ihe mUitary or naval forces of Ihe United States, shall by act or Joint resolutlou so provide." WILSON RECEIVES THE PRINCE President, Propped Up in Bed, Heara Stories of Briton's Experiences Sinca His Arrival In America. Washington. Nov. 15.—President Wilson, propped up in the great mahogany bed In which Baron Renfrew, l a t e r King Edward VH. slept when he visited Washinglort in 1800, greeted the grandson of HihI Urllish king In Allien Edward, prince of Wales. The prince wns taken lo the presldeni's sickroom a f t e r he had hnd ten with Mrs. Wilson, Miss Margaret Wilson nnd Mr?. Francis 11. Sayre. Tiie president laughed heartily at t h e vivid and humorous nccount ihe prince gave of his experiences since his arrival on the Amerlcnn continent. 11 NEGROES DOOMED TO DIE Five to Be Electrocuted December 27 and the Remaining Six on J a n u a r y 2. Berlin. Nov. 18.—Immediate danger of a nnilomillsllc reaction In Germany, nnd probable bloodshed, hns been precipitated by Field Marshal von Hlndonhorg's arrival in Berlin. Barbed w i r e barricades thrown across the Wilbclmstrasse nnd other important thoroughfares prevent f u r t h e r deroonslrntlons aroused by Field Marshal von Hindenburg's presence lu Berlin. This is the first lime litis step, which frequently hnd been taken ngnlnst Spartacists. has been taken against monarchists. , The aged f o n n e r wnr leader's presence here hns strengthened Immeasurably the puiitlcal backbone of ihe natlonnllsls and mililnrlsis, nnd one of the results hns been the sensational breakup of Ihe hearing of Ihe parliamentary suhcommlllee investigating peace possibilities during t h e wnr. Former Vice Chancellor Helfferich. who hns been the nationalists' spoarpolnt ngainst the investigating committee. refused lo answer certain questions from Deputy Cohn. soylng he insisted on availing himself of ids legal rghls as a potential accused and that he would r e f u s e lo answer any questions put to him. The committee look a recess lo deliberate the matter. On reconvening. It ordered H e r r Helfferich to nnswer. He refused again, and w a s lined 300 marks ($75), whereupon H e r r Wermulh. nnlionallst, arose and announced his resignation as a protest against the committee's action. He left t h e table and Vice Chnlrmnn Golheln took charge In the midst of a heoted squabble. Deputy Cohn s h o u t e d : "For me. Helfferich Is not a witness. hut an accused." Herr Helfferich Jumped up and cried: "Then I cease to he a witness and will leave t h e room." Suiting action lo words, h e picked up his papers and Started out. Voices of approval broke forth from t h e speclators. es|)eclnlty Ihe newspaper men. Herr Golheln threatened to throw out the newspaper men and clear the room of nil spectators, and finally he shouted: ' T h e hearing has a d j o u r n e d . " He did not llx a date f o r reconvening. Count von Bernstorff and others counseled the commiltee to break off the hearings at this time and get General Hindenburg out of town first. They warned that otherwise there was great danger of a nationalistic coup which would he answered hy the left with n general strike and would result in "civil war. a new revolution. II is understood Hie committee will not attempt lo resume Its hearings for a fortnight a l least. Maximilian Harden denounced Ihe government's tactics as playing directly into the hands of Ihe nationalists. "I warned the members of ihe committee repeatedly not lo call Ludendorff or bring Hindeiihurg lo Berlin at this time, but my warnings were not beetled." said Ihe famous editor. "I also suggested that it was poor loctlcs lo challenge the natlonalisls, at a time when anti-Semitism Is strong, by letting Jewish members of the commiltee t a k e such prominent and aggressive p a r t in the interrogation of witnesses. This breakup of the hearings Is n sensational success for the nationalists and uugura 111 f o r the government." D'ANNUNZIO BACK IN FIUME Declares His Occupation of Zara and Expects to Seize Other Cities. Chicago. Nov. 17.—The constitution of the Notional Federation of Farm Bureaus—the "farmers' u n i o n " - t h e strongest union on earth. Ihe members sny, wns ndopted wiiii amendments by the federation and. according to tho members "the constitution leaves no room for radicals such as a r e found in some of t h e labor unions " Helena, Ark.. Nov. 13.—Judge J. M. Jackson of Ihe Phillips county circuit SUGAR LID OFF; PRICE UP Bordenux. Nov. 15.—An attempt court sentenced to electrocution nt wns made to nssnssinalo Georges Little Rock 11 negroea recently conRetail Dealers in Chicago Boost Cost Mandel. Premier Ciemenceau's chief victed of murder in Ihe first degree and Limit Amount to confidential secretary, who is n candi- in connection with the insurrection of Customers. date on the nationalist ticket for Ihe October. Chicago. Nov. 15.—The sky's tlu department of Qlronde. Al two o'clock T h o flrvl five. Frank Moore, Ed limit on sugar prices! Following Ibe as he was entering his automobile al Hicks, J. E. Knox. Ed Colemnn nnd lifting of the local federal lair prlcf Ihe conclusion of a public meeting his Pnul Hull, were sentenced to d i e De"lid" on sugar conditions relnlleri car wns surrounded nnd he and his cember 27. The remaining s i x - A l throughout Ihe city Jumped the prlc» friends were assaulted with canes nnd bert Giles Joe Fox. John Mnrlin. Alf per pound anywhere from 2 lo 7 cent* slicks. A pistol shot shattered Ihe Banks. Jr., Will Wordlow nnd Frank over Ihe 1 3 ^ cents set by Ihe com door of t h e automobile. Mandel es- H i c k s - w r e sentenced lo die J a n u a r y caped unhurt. 2, 1920. mlltee earlier in Ihe month. Washington, Nov. i a — I n f o r m a t i o n was received at Ihe s t a t e d e p a n m e n t that Gabrlele d'Annunzlo. a f t e r declaring Ids occupation of Zara In Dulmalln, where he landed on Friday with 1,200 troops, returned to Flume and wns receive^ Willi an enthusiastic demonstration. D'Annnnsio, according to the s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t ' s news, has declared his purpose lo occupy other terrilory under discussion. Including p a r t of 1sIria, which, in his opinion, should be created un Independent stale, which would relieve Italy of responslhllliy to the allies. D'Annunzio left an officer In command of the troops he took lo Zara and regards t h e city us In his possession. Picture Sells for $161,500. London. Nov, 17.—Thirty-two thousand guineas (IICI.OOO) were paid nt nn auction sale for a picture of SI. Eustace by Viltore Carpaccio. tho famous flfteenth ctfntury Venetian painter. Labor Wins In Nous*. Washington, Nov, 17—Organlzec labor won in the house when its sup porters succeeded in amending thi Fsch railroad hill by the adoption ol a substitute plan for arbitration ol wage disputes. Fail to Form Coalition Cabinet. Vienna, Nov. 17.—Efforts by Premier Friedrlch lo form a coalition cabinet In Hungnry have failed. Count Albert Apponyl, n former Hungarian premier, has been summoned lo attempt to bring t h e parties together. 113 Ships October O u t p u t Washington. Nov. '5.—Sixteen ships, totaling 92,075 deadweight Ions, were delivered lo the shipping board h y i h e Emergency Fleet corporation during the first ten days of November. Construction for October was 113 ships. T e a r Irish Flags From Autos. Portland, Ore., Nov. 18.—Three flags of the so-called "Irish republic'* were torn f r o m uutomoblles In which Eatnonn do Valera and membera of his reception committee were riding hero by members of the American Legion. Saves 38 of U. S. Crew. The Hague, Nov. 17.—Two boats containing 88 members of Ibe crew of the American steamer Council Bluffs have been picked up by a mine sweeper n e a r Terschaiiing. according to a navnl dispatch. Influenza Among Steel Workers. Youngstown, O.. Nov. 17.—Spanist influenza has broken out among work men living in steel mills here, on ac count of the steel strike, nccording t( announcements by Youngstown hos pltal officials. W a r r a n t s Served on Aliens. Detroit, Mich., Nov, 17.—Six of twenty-nine federal wnrrants. issued for al leged radicals rounded up In raids hei-0 last week, were served. Those named In the w a r r a n t s a r e all said lo be aliens. Mine Turned Over to State. Bismarck, N. D., Nov. 15.—The first mine to bo turned over to the stale for operation under Gov. Lynn J. Frazler's proclamation declaring m a r tisi law in the mine areas, Is the Washburn Lignlto company's mine. Use American Gartera. Wnshlnglon, Nov. 18. — American men's garters are In big demand In China, according lo advices to Ihe department of commerce. Chinese Women wear them Willi short stockings. They a r e worn where they show. Wsil Crushes Firemen. Cannon a Great-Qrandfather. Two Killed In Georgia Auto Race. Phones Cost U. 8. $14,418,237. Philadelphia. Nov. 14.—The GllllnWashington. Nov. 14. — Former Augusta, Ga., Nov. 16.—8. W. Jef Washfngton, Nov. 15.—Wartime opder & Sons Glass works at Tacony. a Speaker Cannon of Illinois became a eration of the telephone and telegraph fries of Pittsburgh was killed and E. The announcegystems of the country cost the fed- M. H a r t of Augusta was Injured n b u r b of Philadelphia, were partial- grent-grandfalher. eral government $14,418,237, according fatally In on automobile race at tlu ly destroyed by fire. Six firemen were ment mn'le In the house by Repret o a Report of Postmaster General Southern Exposition fair. The ma- Injured by a falling wall. Tho loss la •entative Madden was greeted with applause from tlio members. estimated at $400,000. chine turned turtle. Bnrloson, transmitted to congress. Little Hope for Stesmer. Cleveland, O., Nov. 18.—Ownprs of the steamer John Owen, several days overdue al Sault Sle. Marie, Mich., from Dululh. with n crew of 22, hold llitle hope for the missing vessel caught In a terrific storm. D'Oller Heads Legion. 300 Studenta Expelled. Waco, Tot., Nov. 14.—Three hunMinneapolis, Minn., Nov. 14.—Frankdred Waco high echool students, boys lin D'Oller of Philadelphia was electnnd girls, were suspended Indefinitely ed first national commander of tho for quilting school Tuesday because American Legion a l Its flrst national they were not allowed an "Armislie# . convention. D'Oller wns nominated I by the Arkansaa delegation. day" holiday. Idaho to Arrest All I. W. W. Boise, Idaho, Nov. 18.—Orders were Issued Saturday by Robert O. Jones, s t a l e commissioner of law enforcemeni, for Immediate a r r e s t of nil members of " t h a t outlaw organlzallon," the I. W. W., found In Idaho. NO ROOM FOR RADICALS Constitution of New Partners' Organization Adopted—Members Call It Strongest Union on Earth. .Firm Buys Camp Mills. New York, Nov. 15.—Camp Mills, on Long Island, was sold to Ihe Chicago fWrecklng company for $281,000. Work M i l begin immediately on Ihe diaBinnlllng of the cantonment, which was p i e of the llrst In tbe country. Sociailita Name Berger. Milwaukee, Nov. 15.—Socialists oi tho Fifth Wisconsin congressional d l » trlct nominated Victor L. Ilerger as the party candidate a t tho special electloo December 19, lo fill the vacancy caused by bis rejection. ^APPV'0RAC£S,''d' RTypical Englishman of Serious Mind WanU Friendship of United Slates E V E R Y G A R H E N T GUARANTEED TBtiTTifton Ocb Gb. CttKinnaii Fabrics for Paper. For a long time we have derived many of our most Interesting fatirlcs from Jnpnn, nnd It would be h a m lo find a woman's wardrobe that did not contain some fabric Ibnl was of Jnpanoso design or ihal was actually made Isi that bind of chrysatiihemums and geisha girls. Hut il is only in Hie immedlnle presoni ibnl Ihe propo-Hlion of gelling doilies already made from J a p a n has presented Itself. No. they would nol be kimonos or obis or anything of thai s o r t : they would be made according lo ihe litlesl occidental s l a n d a r d s nnd would fie especially designed and executed for the American taste. But why nol 7 Wouldn't you he Interested lo see a blouse made of georgette in J a p a n e s e design, as dainty and well finished as your Amerlcnn Insle would demand, but disllnctivc with thai dlsllncllon Hint comes along lu oriental woikmansblp? Growing Suspicious. If anybody tells yon that someone else said so. the betting is 50 lo 1 t h a t someone else never m i d nny such a thing.—Clncinnall Enquirer. Taxing the Mill onaires. Under Ihe new scalo of Income f a x imposed by tbe recent United States revenue bill every citizen in receipt of $150,000 or more a year must pay nt least hnlf of It lo the slnle. Mr. Henry Ford, for example. Is snld lot have an Income of $25,000,000 a year, of which ihe revenue nulhoritles will claim between $15,000,000 and $20.000.000—« sum sufficient lo keep 1,000 families in modest comfort forever. Hut even Mr. Ford gels off lighter lhati Mr. John D. Rockefeller, who Is reputed lo have an Income of $100,000.000 a year. Mr. Rockefeller's conlrlbullon lo Ihe Irensury, it is snld, will not fail short of $80,000,000 for the current yenr—n sum which represents 2.000 times his weight in gold. Maybe He Will. "Madam, t h e feather of your hat !s In my eye." "Well, why don't you wenr glasses?" HIS SCHEME DIDN'T WORK Thla Colonel Evidently Was Wise aa to the Foxy Waya of His Junior Officers. In the regular army It is one of Ihe customs of Ihe sendee, when at a regular army post, for the Junior olllceni io call upon Ibe senior officers. To comply with this custom without making Ihe culls, ihe Junior officer frequenily walls unlll he knows the senior ofllcer Is away nnd then calls at his l.ome and leaves a card. Oni? night when I was stationed a t a post in Texas. I saw Ihe colonol down town ami on my way home slopped at the colonel's quarlers and put my card under t h e door, i was Just leaving the porch when I noticed n car at the gale, nnd on closer Inspection I noted that t h e colonol was In the car nnd was awaiting me at the gate. He laughingly s a i d : "Kind of Into lo moke a call. Isn't it. L i e u l - T This bfecame one of the colonel's best stories, and lo say that I was more than once embarrassed would be pulling it mild. —Exchange. = T h o typical E n g l i s h m a n of serious and informed m i n d believes very profoundly in Anglo-Americau friendship. Many men, such as Mr. Fisher, the president of t h e English board of education, have been ready to express their belief that i t is t h e hope of t h e world. T h e r e is widespread anxiety about the economic situation. W i t h a great debt to America and the balance of trade the wrong way, m a n y Englishmen are very ^ grave as they speak of t h e outcome. I n E n g l a n d , with ! V . > a population of more t h a n 40,000,000, there is the possibility of producing food f o r something like 13,000,000. T h e rest of Uie food must, in the long r u n , come f r o m exchange f o r E n g l i s h products which o t h e r countries desire. And a wrong balance of trade in this situation is a serious m a t t e r . Somp m e n with a dash of adventure in their estimate of t h e situation t a k e t h e view t h a t t h e dangers a r e overestimated and t h a t E n g l a n d will quickly recuperate. I t is probable t h a t a m a t t e r about which little has been said will influence the actual outcome. E n g l a n d has had a long and successful experience in international banking, and before even resourceful Americans learn tho psychological trick of it B r i t a i n will probably be competing w i t h America ou more even terms. A n d this is to tho advantage of America. N o business m a n able to look into t h e f u t u r e would w a n t to break down E n g l a n d ' s f u n d a m e n t a l economic s t r e n g t h , even if such a t h i n g were possible. C a t a r r h a l Deafness Cannot Be C u r e d by local applU-atlons a i they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, and that Is by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acta Ihrough the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces The Real Difficulty. of lh< System. Catarrhal Deafness Is "Jy an Inflamed condition of the "Don't you havo tf lot of trouble caused mucous llnln* of the Eustachian Tuba. keeping down expenses?" When Ihls tube Is Inflamed you have k "Nol so much ns I havo keeping up rumbllnir aound or impi-rfect hearlnir, and when It Is entirely dosed. Deafness Is the Ihe revenue."—Boston Evening Tran- result Unless th* Inflammation con be reduced and thla tube restored to Ita norscript. mal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which la an Inflamed BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. condition of the Mucous flurfacea. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhsl IVnfnfss that cannot In those dsys of unsettled weather be cured by HALL'S CATARRH look out for colds. Take every pre- MEDICINE. All DrugRlsIs TSr, Circulars free. caution against the dreaded influenza F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. and al t h e first sneeze remember t h a t Boschoe's Syrup h a s been used for LISTEN TO AMBITION'S VOICE fifty-three years in all p a r t s of the United Slates for coughs, bronchitis Desirable Companion May Fall tb Call and colds, throat irrltalion and espeAgain If She la Not Accorded cially f o r lung tronbles, giving the Recognition. patient a good night's rest, f r e e f r o m coughing, with easy expeclorallon In Most young people seem lo Ihlnk tb(.- morning. Made in America and that ambition is a quality t h a t is born kept a s a household remedy in t h e In one and which cannot be malerially homes of thousands of families all changed, but the grenlesl aniblllon may over t h e civilized world. T r y one bottle bo materially Injured In many differ* and accept no substitutes.—Adv. cat ways. Tho habit of prr.crasdnnHon. of postponing, ibe habit of picking nut the easier tasks and pulling off the difficult ones, for example, will very seriously impair the ambition. Whatever affects the Ideals affects the aniblllon. Anibltlon often begins verv early lo knock for recognition. If we do not heed Us voice, if 11 gels no enconragenienl a f t e r appealing to us for year*. It gradually ceases lo trouble us, because, like any other unused qimlllv or function, it delerlorales or disappears when unused. lie careful how you discourage or refuse to heed that inner voice which commands you to go forward, for If you do it will become loss nnd less insistent until finally It will cease to prod you and when ambition Is dead deterioration has set In.—From "Ambition and Success." by Orison Swclt Mardon. France Seeks Auto Travelers. France is making systematic plans to attract the uulomoblle lonrlst. National roods will have red palnted mile stones nnd largo blue enameled plates, with Ihe direction of the next town and Us dislance displayed in big while letters. Conditional. But we simply timsl have a cook!" walled Mrs. Newlywed tearfully. "I've never lived in a house wilhout one." "Well, If it's a s bud as thnt. mum, I'll come." replied the hesltallng candidate. "1 don't mind staying so long as I don't have to do any of Ihe looking." A Strategist "Aren't you a f r a i d somebody will Istca! ihal flivver of yours?" ] "No." said Mr. Chugglns, "I'm leav! Ing it nroond In t h a t apparently careless manner as n trap. Some automobile robber Is going lo drive off with It, not knowing its w a y s : and the flrst lime It strikes a street ear track or You can always tell when a city Is a railroad crossing It's going lo stop out of debt. Il looks like a mini who short nnd render tho entire' crew liable lo capture." isn't. Jumpy, Irritable, Frazzled Nerves— when caused by coffee—are helped to become normal, healthy nerves, when a change is made to Instant Postum This wholesome table beverage with a rich aromatic, coffeelike flavor is deliciously satisfying, economical, and respects both health and pocketbook. Made by Postum Cereal Company Battle Creek, Midiigan Sold by Grocers and Genera! Stores E By Lynn Harold Hough, President of Northwestern U n i v e r i t y i HEARING FORCED TO ADJOURN MAYNARD OFFICIALLY WINNER "Flying Parson" Has Shortest Elapsed Time in Transcontinental Air Race. ' W«kfi Popular Price/ Shooting Flashed From Roofs of Buildings Near I. W. W. Headquarters in Centralia. Wash.— Crowds Storm Jail. Ceniraila, Wash., Nov. 13.—Arrival of n company of s t a t e guardsmen here Wednesday assured ihls city of quiet a f t e r nearly 12 hours of disorder, in which five men lost their lives. Three of them, meinhors of the American Legion, wore shot down yesterday aflenioon as nn armislico day parade, of which they were part, passed in front of ihe Industrial Workers of the World headquarters. Another. also a member of the Legion, suffered fatal wounds in atleinpiing lo apprehend one of those said to have done the flring. while the fifth. Brllt Smith, secretary of the local branch of the Industrial "Workers, w a s hanged by n mob. Men came running from the d i f f e r ent exits of the I. W. W. hall. Brill Smith started out of the rear of the building, firing an automniic pistol, which Jammed, witnesses said. He ran through a yard, with a crowd following. Crist Coleman, one of those wounded, was in the lond. Smith tired several times, his weapon having been restored to working order, l i e appeared to have plenty of ammunition. Coleman dropped with a shot through Ihe leg. Tho fleeing I. W. W. secretary wns chased to the Skookumchuck river.,where he leaped down Ihe bank, with Dale Hubbard close behind. Sefr ing lie could not swim tbe siream, Smiih turned bnck and dashed up Ihe bnnk, where he was confronted by Hubbard. Then Smith fired three limes Into Hubbard's body, onlookers said. A moment Inter Smith was overpowered by Howard Bnrner. Bob Burrows, n f a n n e r living near the bridge, told this of Ihe hnnglng: "The man was struggling between the men who hold him. They worked without a word. 1 saw them stop not f n r from the end of Ihe bridge nearest the city and throw n rope ovei Ihe cross beam. The body went over with n thud and then a shot was tired. Then more shots. I stood n dlstanc* away while perlm|M 30 shots in all were flred close to tho body." The reason for Ihe firing on the parade has not lieen developed fully, but Herman Allen, nn ntlorney nnd member of a commiltee of fonnei service men nnd others co-operatlns with ll)e authorllles in invesiigatlng the affair, snld that evidence had been secured Hint It wns premeditated. From Seattle came informullon thnt it wns believed, largely as a result of on article printed in n Seattle labor organ, that Ihe nltack on the parade was a result of a campaign inaugurated by Centralia business men to rid the city of radicals. 0 Danger of a Nationalistic Reaction Precipitated by Marshal Von Hindenburg. L W. W. OFFICIAL IS HANGED NAME 3 AD1IISTMENT BOARDS Railroad Workers Are Divided Into Three Classes, Each of Which Would Have an Appeal Commission—Headquarters in Washington, REDS KILL THREE PARADINGHEROES MISS MARGUERITE SMITH Physical and Mental Condition of O u r > Soldiers W a s the Deciding Factor By L I E U T . COL. T. L. HUSTON W a r as a general proposition is all t h a t General S h e r m a n said it was, b u t like everything else in t h i s world i t has a better side. And t h e brighter aide in the recent world-wide conflict was t h e general boom in all f o r m s of athletics f o r which it was responsible and which in the years to come, p a r ticularly in America and t h e nations allied with her, will insure a m a n hood more fit physically a n d mentally to carry on with t h e world's work t h a n ever before. T h e r e is no question t h a t t h e physical and mental condition of t h e American troops was the deciding f a c t o r in the w a r a n d t h a t our boys were able to throw into t h e balance t h e fighting power which broke the deadlock, sent tho H u n s reeling back and ultimately b r o u g h t about their complete defeat. A n d t h e reason t h a t t h o Americans, m a n y of t h e m but hastily t r a i n e d troops, were able to make such a splendid showing was because of their athletic b r i n g i n g u p — t h e i r physical fitness, their ability t o t h i n k quickly and to act individually in emergencies. And these qualities they acquired on t h e ball lots, the gridiron and i t h e r fields where b r a i n , muscle and brawn were p u t to t h e test. I n a way, before we w e n t "over t h e r e " we realized w h a t American aports, particularly baseball, had done for the youth of t h e U n i t e d States. T o d a y wo appreciate fully t h a t i t supplied most of our fighters with t h e physical asset which enabled t h e m to d o those things which caused the G e r m a n m i l i t a r y machine to gasp in amazement f r o m t h e outset. T h e American a r m y heads a n d t h e directors of Y . M . C. A. a n d other agencies which operated f o r the welfare of the m e n in the camps here and abroad thoroughly appreciated t h e value of outdoor games, boxing a n d general athletic stunts, a n d f r o m t h e m o m e n t t h e m e n began t h e i r military t r a i n i n g athletics was made a p a r t of t h e r e g u l a r routine. More Foreign Trade, More Home-Owned Ships, Better-Run Home Industry By A L. FERGUSON, U. S. Chamber of Commerce E u r o p e is clamoring f o r America's aid in her rehabilitation, and until her demands a r e satisfied we cannot look f o r lower prices in t h i s country. W e — t h e c h a m b e r — a r e n o w going a f t e r foreign trade in e a r n e s t We have appointed a special m e r c h a n t m a r i n e committee to see to i t t h a t G e r m a n liners a r e r u n to Davy J o n e s ' locker a n d t h a t the S t a r s a n d S t r i p e s wave f r o m t h e mnsts of the world's m e r c h a n t marine—likewise we are concerni n g ourselves in the r e a d j u s t m e n t of public utilities—the street car, the electric light situation a n d t h e railroads. Wo a r e going to e n t e r t a i n the representatives of E n g l a n d , Belgium, P r a n c e a n d I t a l y here, a n d foreign t r a d e questions will be thrashed out w i t h t h e m . We w a n t t o see ai. American fleet on every side. W h y , the Pacific today is merely a J a p a n e s e l a k e ! And as for tho Atlantic, look a t t h e OeoTff) Washington, t h e M a r t h a Washington, tho P r e s i d e n t G r a n t , t h e P r e s i d e n t Linccln, all G e r m a n ships, so G e r m a n t h a t you've got to, have an i n t e r p r e t e r to get a stateroom. T h a t is tho situation t h a t t h e n a t i o n a l chamber of commerce is out t o rectify—wo w a n t m o r e foreign trade, more home-owned ships, betterr u n home industries. "SERVICE CLUBS" HAVE TAKEN OVER ALL EDUCATIONAL AND RECREATION ACTIVITIES. WAR DEPARTMENT WILL PAY In Each Post, Camp and Station the Duties of Organization Workers Will Be Performed by Soldiers and a Few Civilians. By JAMES P. HORNADAY. Washington.—An educational and recreation branch of the army has been oslabllstaod. On November 1 Ibe war department look over the acllvitios of Ihe seven religious und recreational organizations that were so helpful during tho war. In tho f u t u r e all tho religious work In tho army will bo done by the regularly commissioned chaplains. It Is proposed to give every denomination a fair representation. Kecrention will bo an army activity. All club fealures, for both ofllcers and enlisted men, heretofore supplied by the afllllated organizations become the respontUblllly of the "service clubs." Dulles of the various secretaries and their assistants will now— under direction of tho post, camp o r station commander—be dono by ofll cors, eniislod men nnd such civilian porsonnel as is deemed necessary and funds available will provide. In posts, camps and slntlons and working with the service clubs (taking tho place of tho hostess houses) there will he a certain number of women, who will act a s hostesses for such clubs. A further responslhllliy is Ihelre In thnt they must create and carry out wol fare work for all women personnel in the camp. War Department Will Pay. Tho expenses of tho clubs, upkeep, personnel, repair, etc., will be met fro/n funds which will bo provided by Ihe war department, and ailotted by the war department to commanding ofllcers for that purpose, apportioned according lo the needs in each case. Cafeterias that were-operated by the various welfare organizations within each post, camp or station will now be run by Ihe exchange. Certain of the Rod Cross activities will bo main lalnod. This will includo "home s e n ice. recreational and enterlainmont program for sick, wounded and con valescenl in army hospllalH, and comnlunlcallnn sen-Ice in army bospilals." the last Iwo being f o r patients only. Of lite buildings taken over, post, camp and siatloa commanders aro lo reserve an adequate number lo meet the needs of service clubs within their command. Their number, size, suit ability and location aro left lo the discretion of Ihe various commanding ofllcers. A good many men and women who were with Ihe welfare organizations have been retained, and will bo allachod lo the army as civilian om ployeos. The following decision as to salaries lo be paid lo representatives will govern: Men of little or no experience, but who bnve potonllal ability will be employed on the basis of a second lieutenant's pay. Men who havo demonstrated their ability but need f u r t h e r training to make them expert will bo employed on the basis of a flrst lleulcnant> pay. Men who a r e expert In their work will bo employed on tbe basis of a captain's pay. Two or three men having extraordinary quallflcatlons, will be employed on the basis of a major's pay. Quarters May Be Provided. If q u a r t e r s a r e available, and It is p o n i b l e for post, camp or stalion rotnmanders to give employees q u a r t e r s on Ihe reservalion. this will bo done, otherwise thoy will receive commitlallon for q u a r t e n . light and heat in accordance with amount given lo ofllcers of corresponding pay. Women of llitle experience, but who give promise of f u t u r e abllliy, will bo employed a t Ibe rale of $1,200 per yoar with an allowance, if commuted, of quarters, heal and light, equal to that of a second lieutenant. Women with somo experience will bo employed at the rate of 11.300 per year with an allowance, if commuted, of quarters, heat and light equnl lo that of a first lieutenant. Women with exceptional ability will bo employed at tbe rale of $1,400 per year with an allowance, if commuied. of quarlerH, heat und light equal lo that of a captain. Comparatively few women of extraordinary abllliy will be hired a t the rate of $1,500 per annum nnd an allowiinee of quarlers, heat and light. If commuied, equal lo that of n major. T h e r e m u s t be a feeling of brotherhood between America a n d Great B r i t a i n ; a m o n g all the allies. Commercial leaders of E n g l a n d must come Waihington's Housing Problem. here and o u r big business m e n m u s t go there. I n t h a t way a n u n d e r s t a n d The housing shorlago In Washi n g will be reached t h a t will mean m u c h f o r both nations. Peace has ington h a s not diminished perceplibrought its g r e a t problems of r e a d j u s t m e n t , a n d tho situation m u s t be met hly since the signing of Ihe armistice. by t h e nations for the good of the nations. There Is sllll a long list of apRepresentative M a r t i n Dies of T e x a s — I wish t h o f a r m e r s of this country and t h o taxpayers of our land m i g h t havo a r e t u r n of tho old Democratic a n d IlopubHcan theory t h a t government is n o t created to supp o r t t h e people, b u t t h a t i t is a creature to be supported by the people. W e a r e leading t h e m to believe t h a t t h e government can s u p p o r t t h e m and l i f t t h e m by their boot straps o u t of their financial difficulties when, as honest men, we should say to them t h a t all that the government can do is to protect their life and their liberty and tax t h e m to support t h e g o v emment L i e u t Coningsby Dawson.—Nevertheless, though we don civilian dress, w e have n o t done with fighting y e t We aro c o m i n g back to m a n t h e trenches of a k i n d e r social order a n d to follow t h e barrage across No H a n ' s L a n d i n p u r s u i t of a new heaven and a new earth. O t t o H . K a h n — T h e b u i l d i n g m u s t bo rendered more habitable and attractive to those whose claims f o r adequate house room c a n n o t be left unheeded. H e r b e r t Hoover.-—I a m not a presidential candidate. I am n o t in politics. plicants walling f o r rooms nt the government dormitories. Ilenlal agencies also have long walling lists. There Is no indication of n decline in rents In the district, and real eastate prices continue at the s a m e high level. The clly Is underbuilt, due lo a marked cessation of operallotis for Ihree years. After enacting a measure empowering t h e Emergency Fleet corporation to construct houses f o r Us workers, congress turned Us attention to the bousing of industrial workers In CAUSE OF RAIN A MYSTERY. Tbe mysteries of rain are not yet cleared nwny. The forces of electricity, of mngnellsm, of radio aclivlly, of uilrn violet |lghl and all the other agencies which may collaborate in the production of a downpour of rain are very obscure. Wind and rain come together, and the changes of lemporalure make what wo call weather. In Ihe South Sea Islands ihe|nallvea have do word which means wentber, a s the •tmospberlc conditions never change. COLOMA, MICH. mnnlllon esirrillxhmenls. and of the clvlllnn employees of Ihe government in ihe District of Columbin. In the housing hill pnssed In May. 1018. pro vision wns made for the District of Columbia nnd un approprlnllon "f ? i n 000.000 wns set asble on J u n e 4. 101#. Work wns proceeded with ami contracts let for fnmlly bouses nnd reslJence balls for woman war workers. Innsniuch ns the erecllon of living quarters for woman war workers by 1 Ihe government wns looked upon ns a I temporary expedient, Ibe residence | balls were located on governmentowned land nnd within the reach of nil slreW Improvements. Tho sites • chosen consist of land which hnd been set nsldo nnd clenred ns n public park nnd which lies between the union slaj Hon nnd the capllol. Halls for Women Workers. The tract occupies four blocks, two i blocks on each side of North Capitol ; street. There aro two prlncipnl j groups of halls, each being an inde! pendent unit with scpnralo dining j room. Ono group is located linmedlnlely facing tho union stalion; the other group Is In Ihe angle formed by Ihe sennle ofllce building and capllol ! grounds. Tho two groups nro sprved by a comnlon healing ami power plnnt, a laundry, cold-storage building and nn Inflmtary. • Each hall consists of two parallel wings or dormitories, connected at one end hy n one-story building, which Is divided into a reception lobby, a writing room, nnd several smnll pnrlors. These smaller rooms can be shut off, if desired, so thnt if a guest wishes lo give a Utile party she can do so in privacy. All a r e comfortably furnished. The reception lobby has rending Inbles supplied with papers nnd ma ga sines, and the eiTecl. ns one enters Ihe bnll, is pleasnnl and inviting. Tbe two wings a r e three stories high, nnd combined contain 142 rooms. Most of Ihe rooms a r e single, but at Ihe end of ench corridor aro Iwo double rooms Inrger limn tho others nnd having windows on Iwo sides. Altogether about 1,800 giiesls now occupy tho balls in addillon to 120-odd employees. Getting Crop Statistics. Tho United Slates maintains n crop-reporting organization that utlll*es the services of more than IM),000 persons. Distributed over Ihe country a r e ' 4 2 salaried Hold agents, one In ench slnle or group of small stales. These field agents are In the classified civil son-ice nnd nre appointed only nflor passing a civil servico exnmlnnllon lo test their educallonni and slnllsllcol qunlificalions. Hefore Ihey a r e permllled to inke Ihe civil service exnmlnnllon they must show Ihul Ihey bnve bad at least five years' practical experience in farming, nnd educnlion equivalent to n fouryear course in an agricultural college, or at lenst Ihree-yenrs' responsible, pracllcnl experience in work involving slnllsllcnl methods or slallstlcnl Inquiry. Each agent enlists Ibe voluntary services of several thousand selected correspondents In his slate, who report lo him every month regarding the crops grown In the stale. At Ibe close of each month tho agent makes up n detailed estimate on the crops in his terrilory nnd f o n v a r d s it lo the Washington ofllce. In nddlllon lo Ibe field agents, the bureau employs Ion crop speclallsls for particular crops and truck and frull. These crop speclallsls are of Ihe same high character, experience and educational qualificnlions as the field agents and each devotes his entire lime to invesligaling Ihe single crop for which be is responsible. Wolverine News Brevities Albion—II coal Mrs. Stella Skyoika 1400 for violation of the liquor law to n h f t h she pleaded guilty. rp S a r a n a c - M r s . Henrietta Atwood, 80 years old. mother of W- L. and Guy W Aiwood. Grand Baplds lumbermon. la dead. Nasty Colds Grand Ilnplds—The 1165.000 drive Big Bnplds—According to Big Baplds' for the St. Joseph's Seminary fund religious canvas, this city has 2,033 has gone over the top. churchgoers. There aro 14 bouses ol Mllllngton—D. 8. Woodman, of worship. Mililngton. claims he has a bean Big Baplds—The thlrty-flfth annual stalk that has 123 pods which contain meeling ol Iho Michigan Conference 768 beans. of Woman's Home Missionary Society H a r t — H a r t has been bonded for of the M. E Church was concluded ia 112,000 to build a shirt factory. When Big Baplds Nov. 6. this plant Is tlniihod it will employ Lansing—Tho cornerstone of the about 40 persons. new slate olfice building under con* Big Rapids—Patrick Mnnahan, who slruction here will bo laid on Novemclaimed ho never had a hoadache, ber 25, with the Michigan grand lodge toothache or doctor's attention, is dead. of Ihe Masons in charge. He was 77 years old. Bay C i t y - C a r o l i n e Nunn, 70 years Orant—Fire of unknown orgin left old, is dead at her homo hero. She Samuel Wildsomo and bis five children waa a member of tho Nunn Family homeless when their farm homo, four Concort Company, which years ago, milos northwest of here, was destroy was well known In theatrical circles. ed. Boscommon—Becauso younger resiCadillac — Charles Hardy, Cadillac dents made disparaging comment on moonshiner caught by the state olll theli- dancing, married people of tho clals, got one year and one day a t clly will hold exclusive dances at Leavenworth in Federal court. Grand which tho younger people will be llapldsbarred. Bay C i t y - A p p r o p r i a t i o n s for new L a n s i n g - D u r i n g October employers structures are so small t h a t Michigan of labor bad more places open than Central oliicials have for tho present, the freo employment burenus of tho abandoned lenlative plans for new cor s t a l e labor department could fill. The shops. same conditions has existed for sevSaranac—Tho Rev. Mr. W. 8. Boss, pastor of tho Congregational Church, has tendered his resignation, elfectivo Jan. 1. He came to Saranac three years ago. Don't slay sluffed-upl Quit blowinc and snufliing 1 A dose of " P a p e ' s Cold Compound" taken every two hours unlll three doses a r e taken usually breaks up a cold and ends all grippe misery. Tho very first dose opens your clogged-up nostrils nnd tho a i r passages of t h e h e a d ; slops nose r u n n i n g ; relieves the hoadache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. "Pape's Cold Compound" Is the quickest, surest relief known and costa only a few cents a t drug stores. It acta without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. Insist on P a p e ' s I Ad. No mnn should wnnt bis w i f e to act ns do some women lo whom be makes eyes. eral months. F l i n t - B e s o l u t l o n a presented by employes of Flint retail stores that business places close at 6 o'clock Saturday nights and 5:30 other evenings, havo Grand B a p l d s - A f t e r 35 years of been tabled by the Board of Commerce service as a passenger conductor for retailers' division. Iho Grand Baplds & Indiana Ballroad, Ludlngton—Fred Knowles, of ScottWilliam A. Wolf, a resident of this vllle, was convicted by a jury and city, is dead. fined $46 in justice court on the charge I o n i a - G e o r g e Pratt, Saranac, re- of having In his posesslon 35 m u s k r a t ported to tho sheriff that some one skins from rats caught before tho seahad entered his house and taken tho son lawfully opened. Interest coupons from three $100 F l i n t - W h i l e wrestling In the s t r e e t Liberty Bonds. with a n o t h e r boy, Emil Llndslorm, 10 Cadillac—H. E. Blue, G. B. & 1. years old, was pushed beneath the ofllclal who made a coal survey of thla whoelos of a motor truck Ho was city for the railroad admlnibtratlon, badly crushed about the hips and was reports Cadillac In good shape to removed to Hurley Hospital. withstand a fuel famine. Port Huron—Arthur lioylhaler, 29, Big Baplds—E. J. Doyle, collector of St. Clair, was instantly killed when Internal revenue, has announced t h a t an automobile In which he was riding owners of buildings in which viola- went Into a ditch, railing ou him. Actions of prohibition enforcement acts companying Heythaler were Alderman aro found will bo prosecuted. Schlappacasse, St. Clair, and TheoBay City—Elemar E. Bradley, 61 dore Goulall, Detroit. years old, for a long time engaged In Bay City—Circuit Judge Howard the lumber business hero with hla Wiesl of Lansing, hns granted a temfather and later with his brothers porary Injunction restraining Bay under the name of N. B. Bradley & county supervlgors from including In Sons, is dead. this year's tax budget an Item of $20,Rogers City—Presquo Isle, Cheboygan, Otsego and Montmorency counties aro closed to trapping of beaver by nn order of tho public domain commission. T h e department reports there la danger of completo extermination of tho beaver In thoso counties. Get Instant relief with | "Pape's Cold Compound' RASCALS Biliousness, Headache, Colds, Constipation, driven out with " C a s a r e t i " Why take nasty cathartics, sickening salts, o r stomach-turning oils to drive these rascals o u t ? Let gentle, harmless Cascarels remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your bead' dizzy, your tongue coated, your skin sallow, your breath offensive, nnd your stomach sour. Get a box of Cascarels al the drag more nnd rid your liver, stomach nnd bowels of tbe excess bile, poisons, nnd waste which a r e keeping you miserable. Cnscnrels never gripe, never sicken, never Inconvenience. They cost so little nnd work while you sleep.—Adv. It's n sbtimo Ihe wny some young widows break into Ihe gnme ngnln and don't give Ihe mnlds n chnnce. 000 to provide a tract index for tho ollico of the registor of deeds. ST. C H A R L E S W O M A N W A S FORTUNATE Grand Baplds—A woman about 46 yenrs old, who gave her nnme as Clara 1. Horlen, failed lo leavo an Interurban car as It arrived from Allegan. Sho was questioned by the conductor and It wns found sho had Buttle C r e e k - H a r r y Hovey, first lost her memory. Sho is said to bo burglar suspect to be arrested In Bat- <i nurse. tle Creek lu months, although there Manistee—In the death of Adelbort havo been a number of burglaries, filed Todd, Victory lost ono of its best his way out of the city jail and escap- know charters. Totally blind, he ed. In 1914, Hovey waa arrested and managed lo exist by raising vegotables on trial in Justice court ho Jumped out and soiling them from houses lo of tho second story window and es- house. Last fall ho suffered a stroke caped. of apoplexy and lay for two daya with- Bay C i t y - T h o Good Government League, which recently made charges t h a t Mayor B. V. Mundy waa not trying to eradicato v^ce here, has adopted resolutions condemning tbe uso of punch boards and other gambling Uevlces and calling upon the mayor to Volunteer Crop Reporters. enforce the law regarding vice and A third class of reporters a r e the liquor. voluntary county crop reporters, apCadillac — Circuit Court Steno. proximately 2.800 in number, each of grapher Henderson h a s been ordered whom reports for his county each to hasten the transcript of the month on prinled schedules directly to testimony in the trial of Mrs. Stanthe bureau. Tho county reporters base islawa Lypcrynaska. recently convicttheir estimates upon personal ohser- ed a t Leland tor Ihe murder 12 years vatlon nnd inquiry nnd upon written ago of Sister Mary Janlna. It is bennd telephonic reports lo them from lieved the woman's attorneys plan lo aids in different portions of Ihe coun- appeal the verdict. Mrs. Lypcrynska ty. A fourth source of Informullon is has begun her sentence in the Detroit the voluntary township reporters, one bouse of correction. for each ngricullural township in the Battle Creek—Louis E. Stewart, United Stales, approximately 30.220 promlneni attorney, Botarlan, and in number. Additlonni sources of informntion viceprcsident of the Union Steam exist in the bureau's special lists of Pump company, waa fatally hurt; his growers of particular crops, nnd in law partner, Henry F. Jacobs serother llsls of buyers, dealers, mills and iously Injured, and Frank Brockett, elevators, producers and shipping as- senior member of the hardware firm sociations. nnd other agencies engaged of k B Brockett & Sons, badly cut In handling, manufacturing, transport- and bruised when Stewart drove his ing. storing and dlslrihullng crops. The automobile into the path of a Michigan Ballway Interurban limited at returns from ench class of reporters nro tabulated nnd averaged separate- Level park. ly ns n check, ono ngainst Ihe other. L a n s i n g , - U n i o n i z i n g railroad staThe county totals aro weighted; Ihal tion agents la increasing work of the Is, n county which produces five times public ulllllles commission. The union ns much of n pnrtlcular crop ns nn- has boosted wages . As a result railother receives live limes the imporl- roads seek lo discontinue numerous nnce of "weight" of the other county small stations in tho state. Before in determining the average for that this can bo legally dono companies particular crop. must secure permission from the Every possible precaulioh is mken commission. So numerous havo thoso lo p r e v e n t . I h e lotnis for nny of the a t t e m p t s lo abandon Rtationa beso-called speculative crops, such ns come that the commission has com. cotton, wheat, oals. etc.. from betaken the stan dthat service is to bo coming known to nny Individual prior abandoned only where really warrantto Ihe dnle fixed in advance by the secretary of agriculture for the issu- ed. Three Blvers—Arson and conspiracy ance of the crop report. Even Ibe tabulators and computers who make up cases against Arthur Potter, Three tho totals do nol know the slates lo Rivers, und S- Summerfleid and Bert which Ihe totals pertain, and Ihe finnl Arden, Detroit, resulting from the fire telegraphic reports nnd comments of at Arthur Potter mill and elevator the field agents relating to the specu- a yoar ago. will bo beard a t the preslative crops nre kept locked in Ihe of- ent term of court. Potter Is accused fice of Ihe secretary unlll crop-report- of arson and conspiracy and the Doing dny, when ihey aro turned over lo trolt men, who aro Insurance adjustcrop reporting board, and the en- ers, face charges of conspiracy in con. tire board is iminedlalely locked in un- necllon with the settlement of lll Ihe minute that the report is Issued tho insurance claims on the lo the public, gunrds being stationed building. Tbe loss, a t first reat Ihe doors and all telephones dis- presented as $40,000, was later connected. placed at $13,000. Battle Creek—Michigan Rotary clubs are to be ofllclaliy notified that the FOOLISH TO TRUST TO LUCK. dates lor the 1920 district conlerence It's no uso tackling big propositions here have been set (or April 13 and 14, blindly. Dumb luck may bring you out in -leference to the wishes of inloron the right side. It may also bring natlonal Rotary oliicials who wlbh lo you out on tbe short side. And if li atiend. Michigan hns clubs eligible lo does you a r e bound for defeal. Blind send delegations as follows; Detroit, good f o r t u n e has brought men Ihrough Grand Baplds, Saginaw. Bay Clly, Flint, Kalamazoo. Jackson, Sttrials, but ihey nre nol stronger for It. Lansing, It's Ibe mnn who sees the trials and Josepb, Sturgls, Ypsllnntl. Muskegon, marshals bis forces so ns to bring ev- guult Sle. Mario and Battle Creek. On. ery ounce of energy Into control ihal lurlo will bo represented by Windsor, wins honors on Ibe up-grudes.—Ex- London and 'ho Canadian Soo. No I o s j change. than 1.000 delegates are looked (or. It W a s a Lucky Day (or Mrs. Wieiboeltef W h e n She R e i d About D o i n ' s "I had such awful cutting pains in the small of my back and hips, I often had lo cry out." snys Mrs. Ernest Wletboelter, 550 Madison 8L. St. Charles, Mo. '-Tiie pain was knife-like and I couldn't t u r n In bed, in f a c t I was almost helpless. My feet and ankles swelled badly, my bands were puSed up and there were swellings under my eyes. I often got so dizzy I had to sit down to keep from falling and my health wns completely broken down. T h e kidney secretions pained terribly in passage and in spile of all tbe medicine 1 look, I kept gelling worse unlll I was a wreck. "By chance I read nbout Doan's out care until found by neighbors. Flint—The council chamber of Flint's city hall waa to be turned into a store for the sale of Army food and clothing. Sales of food havo previously been held a t the clly market. While supervising sales a t the market Mayor Kellar was struck on the wrist by a caso and suffered a fracture of a small bone. Kidnev Pillt nnd bought some. After I had used hnlf n box there was a change and I continued to Improve; the pains, aches und swellings l e f t and my health returned." Benton Harbor—Officials of t b e Superior Slell company havo announced that a $200,000 addition to their plant will bo undertaken a t once. The step was made possible through t h e activities of Ihe local bousing corporation, which h a s undertaken tbe construction ol a number of new homes. Saginaw—L. F. WUf, of ML Clemens, secretary gf the Michigan Implement Dealers has announced the program for the convention which meets here December 2-5. Tuesday there will bo n t h e a t e r party and Thursday night tho annual banquet will be held a t which C. L. Gloscaw will be chairman. Thursday afternoon will bo f a r m e r s ' day nnd farmers will bo invited (rom Saginaw and eastern and northarn Michigan. Cadillac—Joseph Clark, of Yama, who pleaded guilty to whipping Russell Walker, 9 years old, ward Irom tho Slate Public School a t Coldwater, was sentenced to (rom six months to five years iu tho Michigan Beformatory at Ionia. Judge Lamb, in imposing sentence, called tho crime ono of tho worst in the history of Wexford County. The boy was slrippeJ, tied to a barn post with a halter around bis neck. Ho had t e e n adopted by an Owosso man. L a n s i n g - T h a t 40 per cent of tho school children of Lansing nre affected with cervical gland trouble as a result of absence of milk from their regular diet, is indicated by a report on t h e physical condition of school children by Dr. H. L. Wright, city health director. The condition is so torlous that a commltteo of the board 01 health Is endeavoring to make arrangements for supplying milk to tho h o m e s of school children nt tho city expense. Either this plan or ostabllshment of a milk lunch lu the schools will bo undertaken. Grand Baplds—Tho Grand Baplds Citizens' league has announced that It will petition for submlsaion to a popular vote in November, 1920, of a constitutional amendment permitting counties with a population of more than 150.000 to aflopt the county commlsaiou form o( government. The commission, Ihe league suggests, would consist o( live, seven or nine members, elected by the entire county. T h i s body would do all the work o( tho supervisors, assess property and appoint and fix tha salurloa o( competent dopartmenta. Sicorn lo before me, WM. F. WOLTEB. Kolarv Puhlto. ALMOST TWO YEABS L A T E R , Mrs. Wletboelter s a i d : " I think as highly of Doan's as ever. Whenever I have used them, they have benefited mo." (Ut Dew'* at Aay Sler*, 60e • Bos D O A N ' S WViV FOSTER-MILE URN CO, BUFFALO, N. Y. HEADACHE Acid-Stomach Often Caused by T e t . I n i S t t d . m o r t o f u n t h a n xou t h i n k . D t c t t m ACIO-STOUACH. a u r t l a c with In. dlgtitlon. h»«rtburn. bftchlai, food-reptatI n t . b l o a l a n d c a a . If not c h a c k t d . will a n a t u a l t y i R « c i tvery vital o r c a n of lh« b o d y . Saver*, bllndln*. apllltlnc h r a d a c b a i ata. t h e r a f o r * . of f r t q u a n t o c e u r r a a c a aa a r a a u l t of t h l a u p a a t r o n d l l l o a . T a k a i ; A T O N I C . It q u i c k l y b a n l a h a a a c i d a t n m a c h w i t ) . Ita anur b l o a t , p a i n a n d ( a s . It a l d a d l c a a t l o n — h t l p a t h a a l o m a c h t a l f u l l a l r a n c t h f r o n t a vary m o u t h r u t of f o o d you a a t . Mltttona of paopla a r a m l a a r a b t * . w a a k . alck a n d a l l l n i b r r a u i a of A C I D S T O M A C H . I'olaona, c r a a t a d by p a r t l y d l • a a t a d food c h a n a d with acid, ara abaorbad Into I h e blood and dlatrlbutad t h r o u c h o u t tha anttrs ayatam. Thla o f t e n rauaaa r h a u m a t l a m . blllouaneaa. c l r r h o a l a of t h a llvar. h e a r t t r o u b l e , utcera a n d e v e n c a n e a r of tha stomach It roba Its v i c t i m s of t h e i r h e a l t h , u m t a r m l n a a t h e a l r a n c t h of l b s moat vlcoroua. If y o u w a n t to ( e t b a c k y o n r p h y s i c a l a n d m e n t a l a t r e n i t h — b a f u l l of vim a n d v i g o r — e n j o y Ufa a n d be h a p p y , you m u s t ( a t r i d of y o u r a c l d - a t o m a c h . I n K A T O N I C you will n n d I h a v a r y h a l p ou n e e d a n d ll'a ( u a r a n t e e d . So c a t a b i t Oc b o s f r o m your d r u c c t a t t o d a y . If II f a l l a l o p l e a s e vou. r e t u r n It a n d h a w i l l r«fuB>i y o u r m o n e y . i TRY THIS FOR LIVER AND BOWELS Brew It at home yourself, money and feel better right away. If you wanl a aplcndld, economical remedy for conatlpallon, alck headache, dlnlneia and lorpld liver, (et a small packaga of Dr. Carter's K. and B. Tea today and drink a cup of your own brewing whenever you need It Thla old rrllahla veKetable remedy haa alood the teal of time and U now mora popular than ever. Keep a package In the house all tha time and brew a cupful when you feel out of aorts, feverish or bllloua. It alwaya h e l p * - p r o m p t l y - a n d being mild and (entle, la just aa good for children aa for grownupa. OOLOMA OOUBIEB, OOLOKA, MIOIL PAST0R3' ANNOUNCEMENTS Congrrgatlonsl O i n r r h W . II. F u l l e r , P a s t o r . A C o l o m a Lodg;e No. 162 F. AND A. M. MEETS SATURDAY EVENING O n o r B e f o r e t h e F u l l of t h e M o o n - V U t t l n g f r f l l i r e n ronllallr Waleomad. L . D . S T O U T . W . M. S I M H A W K S . BBC'T. WARN WEARABLES FOR MEN . . . fiundny, Nov. 28. 1 0 a . m. T h e C h u r c h school f o r Bihle ntudy a n d reIIRIOIIH etiuenllon. 7 p. in. S e r v i c e of p u b l i c w o r e h i p w i t h w r m o n by Uie pantor. I. O. O. F. T h e r e will lie no m i d w e e k nervlee M E E T S B V K R Y W E D N E S D A Y K V B , n e x t W e d n e s d a y ulRht. On T h u r w l a y Cordial W e l c o m e to Visiting Brothers nlRht. Nov. 27. t h e ConRreRntlonallidx C. E . P o t t e r , Arthur Swift, will u n i t e w i t h t h e MetiuKliNlM in « Noble G r a n d Vice G r a n d ThiinksRivluic .Sen-Ice a l t h e Metltodtat Elmer Kremer, Rec Secretary Wm. Vanderveer. financial Secretary churcta. See ppeclnl a n n o u n c e m e n t o n f n m t |niRe. T h e r e will Iw nn IlluHtruted L e c t u r e nt t h e c h u r c h W e d n e s d a y nlRht. Dec. 3. n n d o n e n t t h e W a t e r v l i e t .church on T l i n r s d n y nlRht. Dee. 11. On b o t h these occasions w e plnu to h a v e I h e STATE BANK BUILDING ('onRreRHllonnllstH of Colonm and W a I ' h o n e Oflico 58 F-2. R e s . 89-J. t e r v l i e t In a t t e n d a n e e . More d e f i n i t e n n n o u n c e m e n t n e x t week. Coloma Lodge No. 140 Men who are in need of good Warm Flannel Shirts, Linwl Duck Coats, Unionalls, Trousers, Underwear, Gloves, Mittens or Caps, or Boy8 2-piece Suits, will find a very good selection of these garments in our Men's Furnishing Department. These goods are of fine quality and reasonably priced. SPENCER D. GUY PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Modern Barns and Cribs Mrthoilisl There's style to barn building as well as to home building. T h e modem, up-to-date bam provides many conveniences and Improvements that make your work easier and your crops and Uve stock safer. A M Poultry Houses—Sheds VETERINARIAN Cash and Carry Store. Residence, Coloma, Mich. Ladies- You can give thanks Ladies who visit SIEGAN'S UP-TO-DATE LADIES' STORE durinjg the next week and purchase Coats, Pttr, lirtJ, achingfinfind immdiau nliej by •wtariui Dr.MtiriFmEaurl Order for Publication. our advicc is free. W. H. BALL. Coal, Lumber and Farming Implements. COLOMA INTERURBAN LINE FALL AND WINTER SCHEDULE " f t l a t r of U l o h l a a a . T i i e P r o l i n e C o u r i f o r t b r C o u n t y of U f r r l r n . A t a k v u I u u of M i l l c o u r t , b r l d a t t b r p r o b o l e o l l l c f Id t b e C i t y of S t . J o w p b . In M i d r o u t t y . o n t b e Sd d n y of N o r e u b e r , A.U, IIII9 I ' r e t e u t ; l i o n . r r » n k L. H a m m o n d , J u d f f e ef P r o b a t e . In tbe m a t t e r of t b e t t t a t e of N o a b n e t o b e r . deeeaned. P b o e l H - J a n e F l r t c b e r b n r l u K flletl In a a l d c o u r t h e r p v l l t l o n H i n t I b e a d m l n l i t r a t l o n of M i d e m a i e be irranled t o A r T l n e S. Miller o r wime o t h e r iiultable penton. I t Is o r d e m l I b a t t b e U t d a y of D e c e m b e r A. 1). IDIV. e t t e n o ' c l o c k l a t b e f o r e n o o n a t aa'.d r o b a l e o B l c e . b e a n d Is h e r e b y a p p o i n t e d f o r e a r i n g aald petition. I t la f u r t h e r o r d e r e d ; t h a t p n b l l c n o t i c e t h e r e o f b e g l r e n by p u b l i c a t i o n of a c o p r of thla o r d e r foe three aucceaalTe weeka p r e v l o u a l o M i d d a y of h e a r l n i r , l o T h e C o l o m a C o u r i e r a n e w a p a f e r p r l n u s l a n d c i r c u l a t e d In a a l d county. (Seal | F i u r k L. t U a a o N D . A irnej-opy. J u d g e of P r o b a t e . _ — H e x K.n L 1 * i » b, ,Rr e g l a t e r of P r o b a t e . ISIS COLOMA-WATRBVLIET DIVISION E f f e c t i v e S e p t e m b e r 3, 1011). S u b j e c t t o c h a n g e w i t h o u t notice. W. E. W E L C H E B . S u p e r i n t e n d e n t J . II. P O U N D . Oen. P a r a . Act. C a r e l e a v e B e n t o n H a r b o r f o r Colonm. MillburR a n d W a t e r r l i e t n t 0:00, £:40. 10:40 a. m., 12:40, 2 : 4 0 . 4 : 4 0 . 6 : 4 0 , 8 : 4 0 a n d 10:40 p. m . C a r e l e a v e Coloma f o r W a t e r r l i e t a t 0:33, 0:13, 1 1 : 1 3 a . in., 1:13, 3 : 1 3 Q ;13, 7:13, 0 : 1 3 a n d 1 1 : 1 3 p. in. . . , ^ C a r e l e a v e W a t e r v l i e t f o r Coloma. MillburR a n d Benton l l a r l m r a t 7 : 0 0 0 : 3 8 , 1 1 : 8 3 a. m., 1 : 3 3 . 3 :33, 5 : 3 3 , 7 : 3 3 , 0 : 3 3 a n d 1 1 : 3 3 p. m. C a r e leave Coloma f o r MillburR n n d Benton I l n r l w r a t i :12, 0:4.», 1 1 . 4 5 a. m., 1:45, 3 : 4 5 : 5:4P, 7:45, 0 : 4 5 n n d 11:45 p. m . C a r e leave B e n t o n I l a r b o r f o r D o w a g l a c a t 5:40, 0 : 0 0 , 1 0 : 4 0 , 1 1 : 5 8 a. m 1:28, 8 : 1 0 . 4 : 2 i 0:10, 7 : 4 0 a nd 1 0 : 4 0 p. m . BLOUSES Now showing in suit shades and pastel tints a very choice selection of Crepe de Chene and Georgette Crepe. Fortunate purchasers make possible very reasonable prices A Glean-up Lot.... choice $4.98 This lot is mostly Georgette Crepes in light shades. See them. It will be worth while. Chancery Notice. Skirts... With the new Blouse you will need a new Skirt. A clever plaid model with two pockets $ 4.85 Other models in Serge, Panama or Poplin $5.75 to $10.75 RAFF & PR1DEAUX A store for ail the people. S t a t e of M i c h i g a n . C i r c u i t C o u r t f o r t h e C o u n ty of B e r r i e n . In C h a n c e r y . H a r r i e t B r l g g a m a n , plaintiff, ra. C a r l Briggaman. dafandant. S u i t p e n d i n g In c i r c u i t c o u r t f o r t h e C o u n t y of B e r r i e n . In C h a n c e r y , a t t h e c o u r t h o u a e l o t h e C i t y of S t . J o a e p h I n a a l d c o u n t y o n t h e 13th d a y of N o v e m b e r A . D K i t I n t b l i c a u i e It a p p e a r i n g f r o m a f f i d a T l t o n (He. t h a t t h e d e f e n d a n t . C a r l B r l g tggii a m a n , la n o t a ^ r e a l d e n t of t h e S t a l e of M i c h i g a n , b u t la a r e * l d e « n t of C h i c a g o , l a t h e S t a l e of I l l l n o l a , a a p l a i n t i f f la I n f o r m e d a u d b e l l e t e a . O n m o t i o n of H . 8 . W h i t n e y , a t t o r n e y f o r t b * p l a li n t li f f , II l a o r ud eerreedd tt h na t t b e Nald d e f e n d a n t . C a r l B r l g g a m a n . MUM b U a p p e a r a n c e t o b e entered bereln>ltbln three lonlba from t b e d a t e of t h l a o r d e r ; a n d In c a a e of hla a n p e a r • n c e t h a t he r a u a e hla a n s w e r to the p l a i n t l f T a b i l l of c o m p l a i n t t o b e f i l e d , a n d b c o p y t h e r e o f l o b e a e r v e d on a a l d p l a i n t i f f ' * a t t o r n e y w i t h i n ( U l e e n d a y a a f t e r a e r r l c e o n h i m ef a c o p y of a a l d bill a n d n o t i c e of t h l a o r d e r ; a n d t h a t I n d e f a u l t thereof aald bill be t a k e n a a c o n f e a a e d by a a l d n o n - r e a l d e n t d e f e n d a n t . A n d It la f u r t h e r o r d e r e d , t h a t w i t h i n t w e n t y d a y s i h e p l a i n t i f f c a u a e a i-opy of t h l a o r d e r t o b e p u b l l l a h e d In T b e C o l o m a C o u r i e r , a n e w a p a p a r p r i n t e d , p u b l l a b e d a n d e l r r u l a t l D g In aald c o u n t y , a n d t h a t auch publlcnllon be cont i n n e d t h e r e i n a t l e a a t o n c n In e a c h w e e k f a r l l x w e e k " In i n c o e a a l i i a , o r t h a t a h e c a n a e a c o p y of t h i n o r d e r t o b e p e r a o n a l l y a e r v e d o n aald non-realdent d e f e n d a n t at leaat t w e a t y d a y a b e f o r e I h e t i m e a b o v e pre-x-rllieil f o r h i appearance. C B A R L H B. W H I T E , H . S. W a i r s i r , Circuit J u d g e . Attorney for Plaintiff. Benton Harbor, Mich. N o v . 31 t o D e c 'Jrt WWWWWVSrfVWWV # real reason to be thankful, for they can find the style they want, the fabric they desire, the fit that does f i t all combined at the most reasonable prices. A n y foot trouble that you have can be relieved and correcrtd by one of Dr. Scholl'i Foot Comfort Appliancei. And during the week hare • ofif November 17-22, you'll11 hi chance tto o find out, nere in our store, J M which one of these scientific appliances JM need far - f » r particular foot trouble. S I E C A N ' S Up-to-date l_<adie'a S t o r e A/rn Jtrnttulrariinby a Practipcdiit—a foot elipert trained ia D r . Scholl'i methooi—will explain to you the came and the correction of any foot trouble. Come in I D o n ' t mill thii big opportunity! 112 W e s t M a i n S t . DENTIST November 17-22 t i p e d i i t , in a t t e n d a n c e . a . P. CADT W. U. A N U H E W 8 CADY & A N D R E W S ATTORNEYS VrtS&L J o n e e St B o n n e r Block, B e n t o n H a r b o r y " CMAJKIt L VOV«l« 4 M OKC.AN1ZK1) u ivtr\ihlHg U Wmt" TKE Store TLUL K o o w i W I i i I Y m W u I And Has it Berrien Gounlii Abstrac! Go. E*TABl-l»HEO t a e o ST. JOSEPH. MICHIGAN T. L 4 J. F. WILKINSON. M<is. An Abstract of Title Is r e q u i r e d on e v e r y sale or m o r t g a g e of real e s t a t e . Send t o u s a n d w e will fnrnL'.h p r o m p t l y a n d a t s m a l l oost a c o m p l e t e a b s t r a c t of a n y lot o r f a r m In Berrien county. IHOO Benton Transit Go. DOCKS F O O T OF 10th STREET Printed Cambric Ginghams, very good assortment of colors of pink, blue, gold, etc. Special / OC price The Benton Harbor Chicago Route Across Lake Michigan. THE FOLLOWING THREE ITEMS WILL BE FOUND IN OUR ECONOMY BASEMENT. Direct service between Benton Harbor and Chicago, connecting with Interurban Line. Fine Weave Outings in stripes and checks. A very good quality, now offered at per yd Patronage ol Fruit Growers solicited. Good quality bed blankets, 54x74 size, colors of 0 Cfl gray, white and tan with pretty borders aiUU Dallu Trips During Frull season. W E LOAN MONEY ou real estate, b u y a n d sell m o r t g a g e s . FREDft.HOBBS Main St., $13.75 Berrien County Fruit Ass n. Coloma, Mich. Phone 69. (8.75 23.75 23.75 15.00 3.98 |.88 2.38 98 38 38 7.88 3.88 1,38 3.88 3.88 A r e y o u r teeth sore, broken off a n d W h y not h a v e t h e m e x t r a c t e d t h e modern way? LOG CABIN SCRATCH Berrien County Fruit Assn. W. F. ENDERS, Manager. Good teeth moan good beuitb. Save your S. & H. Green Stamps - C h r i s t m a s is Commg I •VWWWWWWVSA^WWWWW./WV^/WVWWVWWVWWN^^ HAY, STRAW, OATS, FLOUR, BRAN, Talks on Teeth m a k i n g younorvoua and irritiabie? The Store That Knows What You Want . and Has It. 1 FEED, and CHICKEN CHOWDER. 134 Territorial SL, BENTON HARBOR, MICH. ALL ROADS LEAD TO Benton Harbor ft^VWV^WVWWAW^VWWWWWVWWWVWWWWWWW AQ Swansdowne Fluff Bed Blankets, handsome large plaids, size of blankets 68x80, colors of gray, pink, c cn blue, tan, gold and heliotrope. Per p a i r . . . * " 3 " For Rates cal on or addreis SURETY BONDS for administrators, guardians, township offloers a n d positions r e q u i r i n g bonds. W e w i l l sign y o n r b o n d s . DAIRY FEED, Friedman's Dept. Store We are closing out a lot of 56-inch wool coatings of dark shades. Former price $7.60 the yard. Special Price Owiwu Mnltted to Practlca Id all (onrt / ^ O H nAIIBO«.Mlcir MIDDLINGS, and a full line of LARRO S p e c i a l s at Velour Coatings Printed Ginghams Outing Flannels Bed Blankets Office State Bank of Coloma Bldg. Phone 19-F-3 COLOMA • - • M I C H I G A N Our Mr' Winegarden, G r a d u a t e Prac- M BENTON HARBOR Dr. P. E. DouglasL Dr. Scholl's Demonstration Week Hearing of Claims S t a t e of M l c b l u a o . T h e p r o b a t e c o u r t f o r t b e C o u n t y of U e r r l e n . I n t b e m a i l e r of t b e e a l a t e of I V a u c e a Hnpelje. dereaaed. Notice U hereby given t h a t f o u r monlba f r o m t h e I 6 t b d a y of N o r e m b e r A. D. 1818. h a v e b e e n allowed forcredltora to preaent their clalma agalnat M i d deceaaed to aald c o n n for e xamInatlon a n d a d j u a t m e n t . a n d t h a t all c r e d l t o r a of M i d d e c e a a e d a r e r e q u i r e d t o p r e a e n t t h e i r i-lalma to a a l d c o u r t , a t t h e p m b a l e office. In t h e C i t y of S t . J o a e p h . In M i d c o u n t y , o n o r b e f o r e t b e 1Mb - a y of M a r c h . A . D . IWO. a n d t h a t a a l d c l a l m a will b e h e a r d by M i d c o n r t o n U o n d a r t h e 1Mb d a y of M a r c h . A. D. IWO. a t t e n o ' c l o c k In t h e f o r e n o o n . D a t e d N o v e m b e r IMh A . D . I»l». f R A N K L. H A M M O N D . Atruecopr. J n d g e of P r o b a t e . I t x K . L i a i . Probate BeglaUr. ITU. of our superb line of Ready-to-wear Garments will have I I your snklei are wesk ind give you pain, if you have p»in» under your initep, and c r a m w d t o e i t h a t ache—you can get relief 1 Order for Publication S t a t e of M i c h i g a n . T h e P r o b a t e C o u r t f o r C o u n t y of B e r r i e n . A t a n e m l o n of M i d c o u r t , h e l d a t t h e p r o b a t e o f f i c e . I n I b e c l l y of S t . J o a e p h . In M i d c o n n t y . o n t b e (lib d a y of N o r e m b e r A. D. I9I», P r e n e n l . H u n . f r a n k L. H a m m o n d , J u d g e of Probate. I n t b e m a t t e r of t h e e a t a t e of S a r a h MuDjoy.deeeaaed. K u b e K . M u n j o y h a r l n g Bled In M i d c o u r t b i n p e t i t i o n , p r a y i n g f o r l l c e i m e t o aell t h e i n t e r e a t of a a l d m t a t e In c e r t a i n r e a l e n t a i e therein deacrlbid. It U o r d e r e d , t h a t t h e Bib d n y of D e c e m b e r A. D. IVIS. a t t e n o ' c l o c k In t b e f o r e n o o n a t M i d p r o b a t e o f l c e b e a n d la h e r e b y a p p o i n t e d for e x a m i n i n g a n d allowing aald a c c o u n t a n d bearing on M i d petition. I t la f u r t h e r o r d e r e d , t h a t p u b l i c n o t i c e t h e r e o f b e g U e n b y p u b l i c a t i o n of a c o p y of thla order, f o r three aucceaalre weeka prevloua t o M i d d a y of b e a r i n g . In T h e C o l o m a C o u r i e r , a n e w a p a p e r p r i n t e d n n d c i r c u l a t e d In M i d county. [tBALJ KMNK L H i M H o a n . A true copy. J u d g e of P r o b a t e . R l i K. U n a . P r o b a t e H e g l a t e r . I M Suits, Dresses, Waists, Skirts, Furs, Corsets or any other Rest your tired, aching feet! E B.H.ST.J0ERY.<.C0. Men's $25 Overcoats Men's $27.50 Overcoats Men's J37.50 Overcoats Men's Blue Serge Suits One Lot of Men's Suits One Lot of Men's Slip-On Rain Coats Men's Gray Sweater Coats Men's Gray Flannel Dress Shirts Men's Lined Dress Gloves Men's Lined Mittens Men's Wool Hose Boys' Blue Velvet Corduroy Suits One Lot Ladies' Tan Slip-On Rain Coats Ladiec' Fall Weight Union Suits One Lot of Fancy Plaid Blankets, 64x80 One Lot of High Grade Quilts, large size Coloma, Mich, P h o n e Watervliet 63 r i n ^ j P r a y e r meeting every Wednesday nlRht a t 7 A Rood p l a c e t o get blessed. S a b b a l b school a t 10 a. m.. followed by clasji ineelliiR. Come in ami w o r s h i p with us. EvaiiRellstle s e r v i c e s in t h e e v e n i n g a t 7 o'clock, c o n d u c t e d h y the p a s t o r , W . F. A b b o t t . Our prices are the lowest and Benton Harbor. P r a y e r meotinR T h u r s d a y eveninR. Topic: " T h e Tie That Binds." T h e Q . B. 0 . W. class will meet Frid a y e v e n i n g a t t h e home of t h e i r teache r . Mrs. B l a k e . T h i s is t o Ite a b i r t h d a y p a r t y , each memlter to c o n t r i b u t e a p e n n y f o r each y e a r , t o a p p l y on t h e carpet fund. H e l p Ihe Hunday school Rrow by lie Iiir t h e r e y o u r s e l f . T h e lesson topic next S u n d a y is " J e s u s B e b u k e s .1 dim's Narrowness." PreachhiR nervlee n e x t Hunday nt 11 a. in. George W. Grant & Sons Sr. Leo Hosbein F r e e Methodist C h u r r h N o m a t t e r w h a t k i n d of a building you need—or whether it's for farm or town—we can be of service to you. W e have building plans for all kinds of buildings and all the necessary material to make them. W m . Hocker, Mgr. Kpisropnl Churrh. Oeo. A. B r o w n . P a s t o r . We still have a good line of Groceries and Dry Goods, which we are closing out at very liberally reduced prices, to clear out these two departments. TRANSFER LINE PHONE 4 6 0. COLOMA FOR DRAYING, 'EXPRESSING AND GENERAL TRANSFER WORK MOTTS TRANSFER LINE W h y have a thick Office at Pitcher Hotel cumbereome plate which extends COLOMA, MICH w a y b a c k in t h e roof of t h o m o u t h , causing a nauseating and gagging tendency. I n v e s t i g a t e My M e t h o d of teeth w i t h o n t a p l a t e c o v e r i n g roof of m o u t h , w h i c h e l i m i n a t e e ail n a u s e a t i n g a n d g a g g i n g tendencies and has many vantages such room; sense of weight, etc. o t h e r ad- as more t o n g u e taste increased, leas H u n d r e d s of satisfied patients wearing them. DR. J. A, JARV1S DENTIST Uolrf «m Tricfc'i Stan. U ff«l Mtis Sind PksM 1498. BENTON HARBOR Ford Tires and Tote Tube Vulcanizing Men's and Boys' Worii Shots, Leather Gloves and Harness Accessories Special a t t e n t i o n t o H a r n e s s a n d S h o e Repairing. Arthur Swift Coloma . . . . Michigan SMOKERS' HEADQUARTERS Users of cigars, smoking tobacco or chewing tobacco will find the most complete line in Coloma -at our store. Our cigars arc all proven brands and popular sellers that will give you satisfaction, and our other tobacco is equally as good. HARRY DE FIELDS Cigar Store Lunch Room Barber Shop Ooloma, Michigan