ca ss city chronicle - Rawson Memorial Library
Transcription
ca ss city chronicle - Rawson Memorial Library
I CA SS CITY CHRONICLE VOLUME 24, N U M B E R 42. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, F R I D A Y , iCO. TREAS. RECEIVES :~ FUNDS FROM STATE i 35 YUS[ O[ SCHOOLS @[ JANUARY 31, 1930. EIGHT P A G E S . ]D Defiant ~1~ rece~ti2 received gwo nice sized I checks from the State Highway Dept. One for $38,007.04 was for the l a s t :Cost of Big Drain I s Es- quarter's p a y m e n t of the 1929 w e i g h t Will Benefit from Provisions l a n d gas tax while the other amountfor Increased State Aid timated at $476,000 by t~ng to $23,423.50 was for benefits asTo Districtso Engineers. sessed a g a i n s t the state for five , drains, viz.: Cas~, Cheboygan Creek, Special commissioners to deter- i Gibs°n' L e t t e r and Kaven. Thirty-five of the school districts mine the necessity and award dam-~ Mr. McDurmon is sending personal in Tuseola county will benefit from ages to property owners, in the Sebe- letter notifications to property own- the first p a y m e n t under the Turner w a i n g River and Branches Drain ors whose real estate will be offered act. The l a w was passed by the 1929 were appointed this week. The ecru- for sale May 6 f o r the failure to pay legislature to provide increased state missioners will commence their de- the 1927 tax• These are to supple- aid for the so-called poorer school liberations at the village hall a t So- m e n t the newspaper advertising of communities. Districts having a b e w a i n g on Monday morning, Feb. 3, the delinquent t a x sale. Many of these school tax in excess of $10 per $1,000 a t ten o'clock. They are required to t a x claims will be paid by the owners of valuation are eligible to particicomplete their work within 60 days. before May 6. pate in this fund. The amount paid A t a meeting held in Bad Axe on leach eligible district is computed on Monday, Jan. 27, Circuit Judge Boom- ~ T ~ [ [ 'the basis of the number of school i children as compared with the taxahewer named Burr Lincoln of H a r b o r Beach, Thos. McCormick of Bad Axe b l e valuation, the intent being to hetp e q u a l i z e the per capita cost, as ecruand James M a h a r g of Grant townpared with taxable Values, throughship to represent Huron county as out the state. special commissioners. On the followDistricts in Tuscola county where ing (lay, Probate Judge Guy G. Hill of Tuseola county appointed Chas. the school t a x exceeds the $10 rate I Frenzel of Mayville, Albert W. At- Several Cooking Demonstrations are as follows: kins of Vassar and Preston Black of A k r o n - - D i s t r i c t s No. 8, 12, 13, 16. Given at Home of Mrs. Jose Wisher township as commissioners ....A l m e r - - D i s t r i c t No. i. Crawford on Friday. from this county. A r b e l a - - D i s t r i c t s No. 1, 3. The Sebewaing River and BranehColumbia--Districts No. 2, 5. •es Drain is one of the most extensive D a y t o n ~ D i s t r i e t No. 8. The Bethel Nutrition Group held agricultural drain projects attempted E l k l a n d - - D i s t r i e t s No. 1, 5 @1o in Michigan. It will drain approxi- their second r e g u l a r meeting at the ~ - E l l i n g t o n - - D i s t r i c t No. 5. Cass City Property Taken over home of Mrs. Jos. Craw~ord on F r i m a t e l y 66,000 acres in the two coun,. F a i r g r o v e ~ D i s t r i e t No. 8. day, Jan. 24, for the purpose of conby New Firm Some t i e s and the cost has been estimated F r e m o n t - - D i s t r i c t s No• 1, 7. tinuing" the. second year study of nuf r o m $475,000 to $500,000. Time Age~ J u n i a t a - - D i s t r i c t No. 8. T h e following figures, given by Mr. trition. Several cooking demonstraIndianfields--Districts No. 1, 3, 5, 6• tions were given in the morning, and Francis of the F r a n c i s E n g i n e e r i n g G i l f o r d ~ D i s t r i e t No. 4. Co., Saginaw, at a public m e e t i n g a well balanced lunch served at noon. A l t h o u g h the deal wa~ consummatM i l l i n g t o n ~ D i s t r i e t s No. 2, 4, 6, 7. In the afternoon, a short business h e l d at Sebewaing last summer for ed last June, announcement has j u s t N o v e s t a ~ D i s t r i e t No. 2. discussion of matters relative to this session was held, after which the been made t h a t t h e Associated TeleT u s e o l a ~ D i s t r i e t No. 3. drain, show the c o n s t r u c t i o n costs of meeting was t a k e n in charge by the V a s s a r ~ D i s t r i e t s No. 1, 2, 3, 5, 9. phone Utilities of Madison, Wiscont h e various drains in this project: local project leaders, Mrs. John Marsin, has taken over the holdings of W a t e r t o w n ~ D i s t r i e t No. 4. shall a n d Mrs. F r a n k McCauley, asthe Wolverine Home Telephone Co., S e b e w a i n g River, W e l l s ~ D i s t r i e t No. 6 frl. sisted by the president, Mrs. Win. Main drain ...................... $107,714.16 N e a r l y 2,000 of the 7,000 school of w h i c h the Cass City exchange is Profit. Tests, quizzes and reviews preColumbia Drain, sec. 1 ........ 53,643.04 districts in Michigan will benefit from one. ceded the lesson proper. The lesson Headquarters are being moved from C o l u m b i a Drain, sec. 2 ........ 47,031.88 dealt with t h e subject, "General the first p a y m e n t of the T u r n e r act. Columbia Drain, sec. 3 ........ 44,541.00 The apportionment provides for the Milford to Imlay City, from which Principles of Meal Planning," and State Drain, sec. 1 .............. 93,635.88 distribution of $1,976,260 prior to the place the operations of the Michigan was divided into four divisions: will be diState Drain, sec. 2 .............. 43,946.68 close of the fiscal y e a r June 30. The exchanges of the company a. How to plan a meal. Kemp Drain, sec. 1 .............. 36,849.00 act under which the money is ad- rected a f t e r F e b r u a r y 15. Other propb: W h a t to avoid in planning a vanced carries an appropriation from erties affected by the change are Kemp Drain, see. 2 .............. 11,394.50 Kemp Drain, sec. 3 .............. 6,167.00 meal. the general fund of $2,000,000 a year. those at North Branch, Williamston, c. Food for the emergency shelf. This is in addition to the more than Milford, Metamora, Dryden, Almon~ d. A day's meal that satisfies th e $20,000,000 given the school districts and Brown City. Orla Kendall is disT o t a l .................................... $444,923.14 standard. annually from the p r i m a r y school trict manager. The .above figures do not include I n connection with these lessons, fund. An engineer of the company has the estimates on the construction of Tuscola county will receive $13,185, been going over all the lines of the the~ several bridges included ~in the the class is t a k i n g up the study of project. These and incident~I~ will "Food Nutrition and Health!' by M c - S~nilac county $4,947 and Huron various exchanges and extensive iraprovements are 'planned. North increase the cost about $32,000, mak- Collum, a book dealing with the el- county $19,086. Branch, where conditions are said to ing the total cost approximately fects of diet on health. The goal a t - i fixed for the coming" year is " B e t t e r ' be v e r y bad, is to be the first one list$476,000; Planned Meals." ed on the improvement program• i The next m e e t i n g will be held a t Brown City is also said to be somethe home of Mrs. F r a n k McCauley, a t l where n e a r the head of the list and WILL ARRANGE FOR TusCOLA PASTORS ELECTED OFFICERS FIV[ MILES. DDB terial Association held at Care Tuesday, the following officers were elected: President, Rev. Robt. Bryce of Akron; vice president, Rev. W. R. Curtis of Cass City; secretary-treasurer; Rev. D. C. Stubbs of Mayville. RePresentatives were present from Akron, Cass City, Fairgrove, Care, Tuscola, Millington, Kingston, Mayville, V a s s a r and Unionville. Talks were given by pastors and H e r b e r t Leon Cope gave a humorous lecture, Luncheon was served by women of the Care M. E. church, [0 VIStY[USCOLC0 MUSIC NIGHT AT P. To Ao MONDAY Next Monday is "Music N i g h t " of the Parent Teachers Association's program and the evening will be under the leadership of Miss Elynore Bigelow, instructor in music and a r t in the Cass City Schools. The following is the program which has been prepared: Music d e m o n s t r a t i o n ~ n u m b e r s by Sixth Grade Girls' Glee Club. Piano solo Ruth Schenck Piano solo ............ Eleanor McCallum Vocal solo ................ Deloris Sandham Frances Henry, accompanist Delbert H e n r y and his Hotsy-Topsy Orchestra. Three numbers, H. S. Girls' Glee Club FO~!R Y[~S ~[[S ~ 10 14 "" 1~ S T ~ T [ P ~ I S O ~ Care Man Will Commence His Fifth Term in Prisons Michigan. of Scheduled Te Visit Dotard, Mayo ville, Care and Vassar i February 10 and 11. I W h a t child does not enjoy a clean wholesome glass of milk? L a r g e r volumes of milk and other d a i r y products are being" consumed by the Michigan households today t h a m e v e r before. Scientists agree t h a t there is no food more perfect than milk when it is produced from a clean Three Miles Comes from Gage' t O W n ; Two Miies Is New Delivery Territory. ~__~ Rural mail delivery route No. 1, out of Cass City, has been increased five miles, m a k i n g it 38a~ miles in length. Two miles in Grant township which heretofore has not enjoyed r u r a l mail i delivery has been added to the route l which is served by John C. Corkins. I The additional three miles come from a route running out f r o m Gage~ town. ! Residents on these three miles de'sired to secure their• mail from Cass City and petitioned the Post Office Department for the change some time ago. Their petition was granted recently to become effective tomorrow, February Ist. Patrons who will be served on the five miles just added to R. R. No. I, Cass City, include the following: Chas. W. Hartsell, Fred Mitligan, W. J, Moore, Philip Moore, A r t h u r Moore, A. McLachlan, Andrew Morrison, Gee. Jeffrey, D. D. McAlpine, Archie MeAlpine, Enoch W. Turner, H u g h Gray, Dugald Brown, M a r t i n Black, Joseph Fox and George Shiers. healthy C O W . FROM BAD AXE, The cow, recognized as the " f o s t e r WIN mother of the h u m a n race," b y naLOSE TO VASSAR .~ ture gives a clean, wholesome product. How to handle this wholeCass city lost an overtime game at Some product as it is produced by the ~Vassar Friday night and failed once cow is the problem t h a t is not entire- more to conquer in the small Vassar ly solved on all Michigan farms. To gym. The locals led throughout the help solve this problem, othe D a i r y game and started the last period with D e p a r t m e n t with the F a r m Engineer- what looked like a comfortable lead ing Depa~'tment, Michigan State Col- 13,7. Starting a stalling game too lege, have co-operated in a q u a l i t y early in the last period cost the locals dairy truck. This truck shows simple the game, as on the small floor, the procedures of how clean milk should play was uneffective and gave Vasbe handled and y e t no serious expense sar several good shots. In this period, is entailed by the f a r m e r in m e e t i n g the locals caged one from the field these suggested plans for better milk while Vassar was getting four to tie production. the score at 15 all. Ruhl's free toss in Through the County Agricultural the overtime gave the maroon team Extension office, the quality truck is a one point lead but Vassar caged scheduled for Tuscola county a s fol- one from the floor and then two foul lows: Mayville 1:30 p. m. F e b r u a r y tosses to cinch the game 19-16. Det0. Care, 8:00 p. m. F e b r u a r y 10. fensively the team was off, letting Defordl:30 p. m. February 11. Vas-Vassar shoot long- toms t h a t dropped sar:.~:uu, p• m. 2eoruary_ ±±. i in with regularity. Ephraim Westfall, 58, of Care thfpr:furYt~nyh;jo~:c::e~ tP;;d;a~ f e f t ~ n % b a f d k 2f~?dtheiV?:%~ra dreegn p l e a d e d guilty to the charge of for- it plays in the h e a l t h of the nation t . . . . are . possible . Axe in" , urn to . form . . in . defeating . . . Bad . g e r y in the Tuscola county circuit .±z .Improvements .this . product, . Michigan nero t u e s d a y. oy. a lz-~ score . :, r n e court on Monday and was sentenced h a n d h.n g -.11 ,__ , _, ~ . . . . ._,__ ~ _ game was almost an exacz r e p n c a oI ' t o serve a term of 5 to 14 years in ~ - . . . . . b a l a an cthe e d u EnglishmeattypeWillof sing ser-be[I 0 N M ~ , C ~ HONO~ R O L [ thereW°rkas°nsoonthe aslineSweatherWillbeconditionsStarted the state prison at Jackson, by Judge ~a~e:t,~a%t~;~s~e ~'la~ ~ / ; : m o ~ r ~:~; the Care tilt here, with Bad Axe em' EXTENSION COURSE whiChserved,time %, ~ ~ ~+,,~ ~ . . ~ p]oying a zone defense the first h a l f H e n r y H. Smith. WestfaJl forged his . . . . . . . vice, Mrs. John . Marshall acting as I . permit. . . . . . . . el tne -• ,~ , En-I _ and cnanglng I:o a man ~o' mau ~ne ~ B. H. McComb, school commissioner hostess. The subject z~grlcmmrat , "Computing The Associated Telephone Utilities sister's name on three $10 notes. This &. b. ~gar Department will Mve the lSec°n~: of Tuscola county, is a r r a n g i n g for a Calories" will be studied at t h a t time. Vernita Knight and Claude Mit- has also t a k e n over the properties of will be the fifth time Westfall has gineering ' ~ ] In tne first two minutes, the Ionew extension class which will meet the Investors' Telephone Co., with been imprisoned. He served 90 days talks • ~ Icals seized a four point lead on a tipehell among 231 High Mark h e a d q u a r t e r s at Laingsburg. The ex- at Ionia for his first offense. Three at Care each S a t u r d a y afternoon unl in by Crandell and Gowen's "dog "~ der the instruction of representatives JANES-FULCHER. . Pupils. changes in this group are Yale, Ca- terms at Jackson were for 13 months, PAT GETS MANY l a t t e r g e t t i n g loose. Both t e a m s were of the Michiga n State Normal School ~ _ ~pac, Avoca, Richmond, Memphis, 2b~ years and 4 years. The man has breaking slow and the g a m e d r a g g e d CHANCES TO WORK a t Ypsilanti. Teachers interested in A p r e t t y wedding was solemnized Claude Willis Mitchell and Miss Goodells, Emmett, Smith's Creek, Co- not been a vicious character and his from here to h a l f time w i t h Bad Axe such a course are requested to inform a t the home of Rev. Fr. Cotter at lumbiaville, Otisville, Ortonville, Deccriminality has run more to frauds Vernita Knight, both g r a d u a t e s of Mr. McComb the subjects in which Clawson on J a n u a r y 18 when George Reading" an account in the Detroit scoring two points and the locals addthe Cass City H i g h School, are among kerville, Minden City, H a r b o r Beach, and larceny. t h e y prefer instruction and he will Fulcher a n d Miss Hazel M. J a n e s Caseville, Elkton, Kingston, Clifford, The F i r s t National Bank of Bay Free Press of Pat Richards, 19 years ing two to make the score 6-2. the seven students from the T h u m b S t a r t i n g the second half, Bad Axe endeavor to a r r a n g e for subjects t were united in marriage. Ranken, Swartz Creek, De W i t t and City brought suit a g a i n s t three perold, who pulled a fire alarm in Detroit district who are included in the list of came out of t h e i r zone and the g a m e which are most favored. The course I. The bride wore a dress of white Bath. The headquarters for this sons for "recovery on note." As where there was no fire in order to 231 students of Michigan State Colwill be completed before the s u m m e r ] georgette t~immed in orchid. Miss trustee in bankruptcv of Ealy, Camp- get arrested and be assured of a was f a s t and furiou~ from here to lege, who were listed on the honor group will also be a t I m l a y City. the end. Ross caged one to m a k e the vacation period, t Marscilen Fulcher, sister of the The Associated Telephone Utilities bell & Co., the b~nk secured default w a r m bed and food, R. J. Knight roll of the college for tke first semesA n extension course in agriculture ~groom, w a s is said to be the l a r g e s t independent jud£ment for $1,283.27 against O. E. wrote the Free Press offering Pat a score 8-2. Here Bad Axe braced to bridesmaid and was ter. Kil!ingbeck and Nellie M. Killing- job on the Knight farm between Cass score five points and b r i n g t h e m to and English has j u s t been c o m p l e t e d ' d r e s s e d in green silk. Eddie Janes, Mr. Mtichell also received the Al- telephone company in the country. beq~. As trustee in bankruptcy for City and Gagetown. Mr. Knight re- within one point of a tie, 8-7. To rein Tuscola county, l the bride's brother, was best man. pha Zelta scholarship cup, awarded to • ~ .... " Ealy, Stacy & C o . , the; bank was ceived the following letter from H. E. lieve the tension Gowen and E d g e r - - ~ I A f t e r the ceremony, a reception the male sophomore in agriculture ENTERTAINMENT awarded default judgment for Mitchell, managing editor, under date ton dropped in one each to m a k e the A M E R I C A N LEGION i w a s held at the home of the bride's who has made the highest scholastic F R E E locals' total 12, and with about one brother, Roy Janes, at Farmington. F O R LOCAL FARMERS $1,120.76 against Win. Farver. "A~ of Jan. 23: minute to go, Bad Axe scored a g a i n C O N V E N T I O N AT S 0 0 IThe following day the:wedding p a r t y record as a freshman. Miss K n i g h t is trustee in bankruptcy for Ealy, Evans "Through the s t o r y about P a t Richa sophomore honor student in liberal - & Co., the bank secured default ards which appeared in the F r e e for the final cqunt 12-9. Bad Axe, ~ ~camel to Cass City to spend a few arts. Other honor students from the E . Paul & Son haye completed all judgment for $641.40 a g a i n s t Chas. Press last Tuesday morning, those in- with three regulars los~ t o t h e t e a m T h e eleventh annual convention of l d a y s with the groom's parents, Mr. Thumb are: Lorenz Bauer, Unionthrough graduation, played exception~ h e American Legion, D e p a r t m e n t of I and Mrs. Giles Fulcher, on West St. ville, senior applied science; Marjorie a r r a n g e m e n t s for their annual Mc- Reed. In each case, costs were added terested in his p l i g h t received some two huI~dred offers to provide work al ball and will be hard to b e a t by Michigan, will be held a t Sault Ste. l The groom is a well known young- Zemke, Care, senior home economics; Cormick-Deering power f a r m i n g on- to the sums named above. t e r t a i n m e n t to be held at Cass City Claud Andrews, F r a n k A. Beach for the boy, or a home, o r home and tournament time. Marie J u l y 4-6. m a n of Shabbona. ,]Iva Leinbach, Pigeon, and F r a n k on Feb. 14. They h a v e secured the and L. J. Bartholomy, a co-partner- work. Defensively, the local t e a m was Confirmation of this date, previous- 1 I Tr~?e:'u C a r ~ of .the s e m o r hberal speakers and motion pictures, and ar- ship, brought suit a ~ m n s t Thos. add " O u t of these Ralph Doherty of Re- back to standard except f o r P i n n e y Iy tentatively . fixed a t a conference~ DOG TAXES BECOME sar So ; s o ; 2aemmg Dart)our, v a s - r a n g e m e n t s have been made for an Elizabeth Schweigert f o r a s s u m p s i t Turn' to page 8. Turn to page 8. of depm:tment officials with " S e e " i ;, pnomore engmeenng. , appetizing" lunch to be served at noon, and were awarded a judgment Legionaires, was announced Monday D E L I N Q U E N T FEB. 28 ~v~r. ~mtcnen ~s a cnar~er member :without charge amounting to $949.04. b y Raymond J. Kelly, commander. Mr. of the Cass City Livestock C l u b s and ~° " - ' • In chancery, H e n r i e t t a Gulliver seKelly, accompanied by Robert J. ByDog taxes for Tuscola county have 'ne ann. bruce . . . Hoadle were hi h '1 ~ney. nave worKact. OUS a v e r y m~er-. Y g e s t m g p r o g r a m for t h e d a y , which cured the discharge of a mortgage, ors, adjutant, returned recently from been due since the first o f December freshmen in the judging t e a m s at includes instructive talks, and several and in the case of Fra.~k H. Smith et a tour of Upper Peninsula cities, and will become delinquent after Fri- Michigan State College. Both y o u n g al vs. Allen R. Malsbury et al a m e e t i n g there w i t h Legion posts, day, F e b r u a r y 28, and there will be men will be eligible to represent the reels of interesting motion pictures, judgment o f $2.216.21 was rendered A u x i l i a r y units and attending the added a fine of $2 to the tax m a k i n g college at the International Stock Kindergarten. _how difficult to tell about. This m o n t h i which included principal, interest and mid-winter conference of U p p e r a total of $4 f o r t h e dog tax a f t e r the Show. we have catered to R a g g e d y A n n unW e listened in on the London ConMARRIAGE LICENSES. ~taxes in the foreclosure "of real estate Peninsula posts, a t Crystal Falls. delinquent date. ference. We are learning about til our donations have w a r r a n t e d the mortgage• W a s h i n g t o n and L i n c o l n , also to sa- boys m a k i n g her a trunk. F o r you see, CARe HATCHERY PLANS Merrill Shagena, 25, Tyro; B e r t h a lute the flag and sing America and a f t e r one over n i g h t s t a y , or m a y b e FOt~ BIG SEASON VanAllen, 18, Tyro. have decided t h a t J a n u a r y is a won- week-end, she comes back w i t h a new F r a n k Gruber, 25, Ubl~7; Gladys BURGLARs sTEAL CASH derful month and t h a t F e b r u a r y is frill, bunch of flowers, dress l e g g i n g s , i FROM CARe GARAGE cap, bloomers a n & s o m e t i m e s a d i r t y J. A. Davison of Michigan State Darling, 18, Argyle• even better. College, in an inspection of the Care W e have been m a k i n g lace paper face, just a smudge over t h e r i g h t H a t c h e r y Wednesday, declared the ' Burglars attempted to appropriate and experimenting in m a k i n g valen- eye, or an added curve to h e r m o u t h Cicero Ogden and Matt Burgess B a y City which lies some 37 miles t o quality of the flock at t h a t institution D I S T A N T SALE T H R O U G H valuables from two Care g a r a g e s tines. We hope to have some v e r y t h a t savors of mustard. have driven m a n y a f a s t mile behind the west of Cass City, and havigg se- to be above the average of Michigan F o r days we have studied the EsCHRONICLE LINER Tuesday night. E n t r a n c e was forced presentable ones to send out on Valrace horses on the track at the Cass cured the information, they started hatcheries. The Care H a t c h e r y evikimo's llfe, habits, etc., and n o w on to the Oakland-Pontiac Sales through entine's Day. City Fairs in years gone by, but f o r Old Dobbin and continued on dently has a. h i g h reputation in state W e are developing self expression, our border can be seen P o l a r bears, a broken rear window and a sum of t h e i r appearance here Tuesday n i g h t t h e i r journey. In a l e t t e r enclosing copy for a money was taken from the office safe. l i t e r a r y fluency, and i m a g i n a t i o n b y wandering about on the ice. To see circles for thousands of its chicks liner offering horses for sale, E. was decidedly different from the l have been distributed to flocks of A window was broken a t the See!ey telling our dreams each morning. In those icy crags on the blue back days t h e y shook the ribbons over t h e ! A. Rohtfs of Akron, Mich., writes & Asher garage, but the thieves order t h a t our d r e a m s will be pleas- ground, gives us a little A l a s k a n Michigan institutions. speedy pacers. Tuesday's atmos- I M I L L I N G T O N HIGH the Chronicle under date of Jan. " I t is the ambition of this hatch21 as follows: were probably f r i g h t e n e d away be- ant, we have decided to eat plenty of chill. T h e Eskimo b o y s w i t h t h e i r phere was fa)¢ colder t h a n t h e b a l m y l SENDS BOOKS TO P R I S O N ery," Mr. Ayre, the proprietor says, cause no trace was discovered t h a t vegetables, fruit, and healthful foods; dog trains, h a v e n frozen s t a r e i f f a i r days when races are r u n , and "to place Tusc%la county on the m a p "Your p a p e r has some prestige, they had entered the building. but have decided not to eat j u s t be- t h e y ' r e examined cIosely. This week the men were bundled up to meet~ The Milling"con h i g h school sent a as an outstanding county for quality The liner we ran l a s t week -fore retiring• W h e n we follow the we have transformed pickle and f r u i t the exigency of the weather, t box of books to the Michigan State poultry a n d to this end considerable proper schedule, o u r n a r r a t i v e s are jars, and mustard glasses into vases brought results. The n e x t day They had driven a horse and bug- I P r i s o n at Jackson f o r which they had mature stock of known high quality by pasting bits of envelope l i n i n g on a f t e r your paper came out Mr. Sunday afternoon when Abbie Ward pleasant to listen to. g y from Deckerville to Cass City, a no f u r t h e r use. These books had be~n i s imported each year for flock imWe'll have to a d m i t an a r t All of us were v e r y h a p p y to have them. Jacob J. L i n d e r m a n , east of your and Miss Estella Smith of Detroit distance of 28 miles in s i x hours, requested by the Chaplain, Mr. Mc- provement." town, drove out and got one of were returning to D e t r o i t , after a our little Slav boy, S t a n l e y Martinek, shop m i g h t be improved to h a v e some and stopped a t the F o r t confection- L a i n of the prison f o r use in t h e The Care H a t c h e r y is the l a r g e s t W e of these adorning their shelves. Much • those fine bulls. We also got a. visit with relatives in Cass City and teach us to sing "America." e~y store to refresh t h e m ~ l v e s w i t h prison library, who also stated t h a t Michigan accredited h a t c h e r y in the letter f r o m C. F. Shoemaker of Care, their car overturned near Ira- learned it by h e a r i n g Stanley hum it as we have enjoyed this month, we ice cream cones, t h e i r l i b r a r y was woefully in need Thumb and has a capacity of 47,000. Rochester saying he saw our ad lay City on M-53, when t h e y struck at his work. Our Mexican children know F e b r u a r y holds much in s t o r e . H e r e ~hey chanced to meet A n g u s of bo~ks. He says the s t a t e of Michi- E g g s are set every three weeks. One in your paper. We have sold all a snowbank. The car was badly are t a l k i n g and r e a d i n g E n g l i s h v e r y for us. lgcPhail, who has loved horses a h his g a n has no available funds for this hundred fifty thousand chicks will be our cows and bulls, now will you wrecked but f o r t u n a t e l y neither Mr. well now. We are proud of t h e m and Secami Grade. / life and who raced a few f a s t ones in ~eedy purpose. hatched this year, it is estimated, please sell some horses. Run W a r d or Miss Smith were injured. h a p p y to have t h e m w i t h us. A Post Office Project--Th'is m o n t h %earlier days. Greetings exchanged, and 95% of t h e m will be sold in the the horse ad twice." T h e y were taken to Detroit by friends First Grade. we have been busy s t u d y i n g a b o u t the the m e n inquired the best w a y to Advertise it in t h e Chronicle. Thumb district. later in the day. How busy we have been and yet Turn to page six. " BREEZES FROM THE HILL Face Wintry Winds in Horse and Buggy Ride,'Deckerville toBay City 7 Mail CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE TWO. J CASS CITY CHRONICLE [in most of the things t h a t the public Published Weekly. Iu s e s . . . . . . . . . . . .... " "~ • "' " ~ nd Cass ~ r o p u i a d o n is ~ne oas!s i o r ~:ne nor. The i rl-bounl;y bnronlcle a • i . City Enterl~rise consolidated Apr. 20,1 real eonsumptmn of most o}I the .articles of common use. A c r y wnlen 1906. builds beyond its population m u s t exAll S u b s c r i p t i o n s Are PaYable in jeer to have empty homes. Those Advance. who m a k e things in quantities beyond In Michigdn--One year, $1.75; six the normal requirements expect to months, $1.00. have goods on hand. Outside Michigan - - In United W h a t is the cure ? Time. Giye the States, one year, $2.00. In Canada, nation a few months or a f e w years one year, $2.50. and it will grow to the capacity of factories. I t will fill up the homes and buildings. Then everyone, will A~vertis~ng ratez mede k ~ v m o~ work ami ~)¢~DrosDerous. i~n{i out of ~ p p t l C ~ uluii. those good times will come m o n e y for Entered as second class matter Apr. 27, 1906, a t the post office at speculation and the story of t h e Cass City, Michigan, under the Act present will be told again a f e w years from now. "of C o n g r e s s of March 3, 1879. This period of w a i t i n g for demand H. F. Lenzner, Publisher. to meet the supply will be accompanied by some instability. A large ,, ~ number of corporations will n o t make much m o n e y for their common stockholders for a decline in business will bring a decline in profits. In some cases the heavy debt which inflation has put upon industry will not be paid, YOUR HEART. with loss to the investor. These con, , ditions will not last for a long time. Hearts are t r u m p s in the game o f ' B u t there m u s t be reckoning. W h a t 1ire. As the welt-spring from which goes up, must come down. The excess comes the pulsating power that lets! debt of m a n y corporations m u s t be us breathe and gives us life, t h e y are trimmed,, the water must be shaken well worth every protection we ean i out of m a n y a stock issue. When give them. Yet speed of living today, !t%ese things have been accomplished states Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the nation will be more prosperous the Jommal of the American Medical i t h a n ever. Such, we believe are t h e facts by Association, is straining hearts, is causing an unduly large number of which we should be guided in busideaths from heart disease in later ness and personal aetivities.--Grand life, and is therefore responsible ~ in Rapids (Minn.) Herald-Review. good measure for the fact that at present life expectancy after middle TO END ALL WARS. age is a year less than it was a half century ago. I The representatives of five of the Until life has been greatly slowed leading powers of the world, England, down, he' says, h e a r t disease will not France, Italy, J a p a n and the United be prevented. This illness, which su- States, seated themselves around a pereedes tuberculosis as a cause of table in St. James palace, London, death a f t e r age 39, increases as per- last week charged with the m o s t imsons in childhood, adulthood, and ma- portant mission ever entrusted to huf.urity m i s t r e a t their bodies, and de- man b e i n g s - - t h e adoption of a policy creases as tl~ey live well regulated, t h a t will practically assure the end healthful lives. for all time of hostilities between Several m a r k e d similarities exist these g r e a t nations. between tuberculosis and h e a r t disThis would be an easy t a s k if naease, points out the Michigan Tuber- tions actually represented t h e i r own culosis Association. One coincidence is p e o p l e - - f o r the people as a whole &he fact t h a t tuberculosis is the lead- abhor w a r and the suffering and i n g cause of death between the years m i s e r y it entails. In private life we I5 and 39, while heart disease leads may resent an insult, n9 m a t t e r how thereafter. A n o t h e r similarity is the deliberate or studied, yet evade enfact t h a t both diseases are preventa- tering" into a personal conflict. In a ble. Still a third lies in the measur~es national sense insults are wiped out outlined by Dr. Fishbein as necessary by war. for the prevention of heart ailments. Intercourse between nations m u s t tie lists as important "cleaner be reduced to admit of' the personal mouths, f e w e r tonsils, fewer neglect- equation in our dealings w i t h each ed decayed teeth, earlier recognition other. We mu:~t regard each other of sore throats, and repeated exami- more as individuals t h a n as nations. nations of the a f t e r attacks o f any "World powers may reduce theii~ fightacute infectious fever in childhood." ing s t r e n g t h on land and sea, but unThese points in essence are the same til national suspicion is eliminated ~hat are being stressed by tuberculo- the tinder f o r another world conflasis societies in their effort to prevent gration only awaits the torch of the tmberculosis before the disease has fanatic. e~/en a chance to develop. The London m e e t i n g is a good In view of the marked similarities omen. W a r m a y not be entirely banexisting between tuberculosis and ished in our day and generation, but h e a r t disease, but one conclusion can the time is coming when the sword of be drawfi concerning the prevention of conflict will be sheathed for the last h e a r t ailments. It is t h a t the wide- time and nations will wage only wars spread educational, measures which against t h e i r common enemy, disease have m e t vdth such success in the an- and poverty. {i-tuberculosis campaign need to be All t h a t has gone before in world ~pplied with equal thoroughness to h e a r t disease. F i r s t and foremost i s history will seem pitifully insignifi.the need for public realization t h a t cant in comparison when t h a t golden the disease, causing as it does o n e , morning dawns. out of every five deaths, is a problem i of vital c o n c e r n to each and every i person, the sick as well as the appar-I S I X ...... = ently healthy. CYLINDER SENTENCES FACING THE FACTS. ~' By DR. J O H N W. H O L L A N D | ........................................................ The l ig [ daWters way t h r e w a Female Semet e r y or sum thing. N.appenings of a Quarter Century Age I t e m s from the Tri-County Chronicle of Jan. 27, 1905. , ' 1 31, 1930. Mrs. Stanley Fisher, the district school t e a c h e r , is m a k i n g her home with Mr. and Mrs. Barney S h a g e n a for the winter. Charles and Gerald Simkins and J a m e s Lucia of' Ubly were "week-enders" at the Nelson Simkins home. Charles Chamberlain, f o r m e r superintendent of the Nestle's F o o d Co's ptant at Ubly, was suddenly taken ill o n Wednesday about 11:30 and died at noon of cerebral hemorrhage. His remains were taken to Granville, N. Y., for burial on Saturday. Benj. Bailey, who has been t a k i n g t r e a t m e n t s in Detroit, returned to his home on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson were Sunday evening callers at the Nelson S~mkins hem@. Robert Spencer took a big truck load of cattle to Detroit last week. Congratulations to the newly married couples, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Shagena and Mr. and Mrs. F r a n k Gruber, who were married on Monday. Mrs. Gruber was Miss Darling of Cumber and Mr. Gruber is f r o m Ubly. They will make their home n e a r Hale, Mich. Win. Simkins left on Monday f o r Cleveland, Ohio, where he has accepted a position in the state hospital. ~ ' t~¸~.7~. • - o - . . . . . FEL'S N a p t h a Soap DIVISION OF The Manager is F i n a n c i a l l y LARD Interested 2 pounds 2 5 C l pound cartons PENOBSCOT SARDINES 256 .................................... SUPER-SUDS P A C K A G E .................................... 9C FRENCH'S MUSTARD 2 J A R S ......... . ............ ...................... 1~ RALSTON'S W H E A T F O O D ............................ 23e T o i l e t Soap B R E A D F L O U R 241/~ lb. S a c k s R A I S I N S Seeded or Seedless (15 oz. p k g . ) 2 P A C K A G E S ........ 19e Tomatoes NO. M A T C H E S ' Diamond,. L a r g e Box 6 BOXES .1~~ 8e B R E A D ......................................... Life B u o y Flour 49c 10 b a r s A ~ICHIGAN CORPORATION 4 25c - 94c .................... 2 9 e 3 2 CANS 17e 25C J E L L O All F l a v o r s PACKAGE 7e FRUIT SPECIALS HOLBROOK. GRAPEFRUIT ........................................ 25C S U N K I S T O R A N G E S , 176% P E R D O Z E N ............................ 53c HEAD 2 FOR " ÷ ::,. Oleovs. ¢. 4¢. 4 ¢. ¢. & ¢. @ ¢. ¢. 25e 23c LETTUCE ..................................... 2 FOR ..... 6 LBS. F O R ...... ;. ......................... GREENI,EAF. Win. Kind is visiting at the Gordon Jackson home. Win. McKay has moved his family to the C. Tanner farm. Edw. Brenner and family of Flint are moving onto the A. Kittendorf farm. Mr. Brenner will be employed by Loren. Trathen the coming summer. Raymond Jackson is visiting at his parental home here. Of English Derivation Geo. Jackson, formerly'of Cass '['he w-rd debenture is allied to a City but now of this plae@, is very Middle E l l ~ l : * l l d w o r d ( l e h e l l l u r . whi(.tt ill at his home'with typhoid fever. illellIlS a receipt It was S{} (.ailed beLoren Trathen drives a new Chevcause S U c h receipts f~ H ' t l I O I ' I ~ h e g l l l l rolet six sedan. with the Imtin words. "debenture Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Miller of Demihi,' n l e H l l i D ~ "'[hel'e }ll'e owillg t ( troit announce their marriage, which me " took place at Thanksgiving time. The bride was formerly Miss Violet Morrison of this place. A d v e r t i s e it in the Chronicle. ~ ~ , f ~ Friday, January ".I, DEFORD BY ROSS F A R Q U H A R . Cottage prayer m e e t i n g was held F r i d a y - - I seen J a n e a f t e r skool tonite and she was very very nice to at t h e C. a. Maleolm home on Tuesm e and she sed she day. Win. Huff~an is spending the winthor we shud ought to be good frends and she ter months with his cousin, George ast me wood I for give i Taylor. Win. Randall entertained on Monh e r for all the m e a n nasty durty little day his sisters, Mrs. Win. Lamb of things she had dun and Jeddo and Mrs. Elisha' Clark of AlI sed I wood. I dont n o berta. w h y I dun it nnelse it l Mrq A Knnoloh~!r~o~" ~nd d m ~ h is j~2~t ~ :r~re be:.Jty tcrs, Missc~s f~nnetta and Incz, spent in m y nacher I t e s s or Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. ect., cause I expect she Carrie L e w i s . . wants something up Mr. and Mrs. Max A j a r of Care her sleave. called on t h e latter's sister, Mrs. I. R. Sateioday-=I Went to Tedford on Sunday. She accompanied wirk in the Drug store t h e m home for a three days' visit. this a. m. to ern sum Clarence Chadwick spent the l a t t e r X t r y munney. I wood of liked the job all rite part of last week in New York City. Mr. a n d Mrs. Benj, Gage and oney it seams like all the boss does is daughter, BerMce, were supper feller m e round and t h i n k up sum t h i n g for me to do. So I quit. I was guests at the Max A g a r home in Caro on Sunday. worken him to hard. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Gage spent SUnday--Tonite as w e w a s a comeing h o m e frum town I seen a poor Sunday with the former's cousins, kid crying very flewently and I ast Mr. and Mrs. E a r l Hartwick, 5 ~ him what was the matter with him miles east of Cass City. • Mr. and Mrs. Newel Hubbard s p e n t and he sed he lost 2 pennys in the dark. I was feeling Charritabel so I Sunday at the home of John Slack. Revival meetings will close Sunday helped h i m out and give him acupple n i g h t after continuing three weeks. matches. Then w h e n ! was a telling m a about it she got enquisetive and Everyone welcome to h e a r Miss ast m e w h y did I carry matches. Well Grace Wilson of Detroit, an evangeI cuddent of helped the kid if I had- list, who has helped Rev. Carless. Win. Gage expect to move to his dent of. Munday---Today while w e was a n e w home in Kingston next week. Mrs. Gee. Ashcroft of W i l m o t s p e n t studyin) are Joggrafy lesson I was looking up s u m rules in basketball Wednesday evening at the Benj. Gage and the teecher slips around and home. Ben and George spent the evepeaks over m y shoulder. So I mist are n i n g in Akron. pracktise game just on acct. of a / Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Phillips moved last w e e k to the living rooms over womans Curosity. • T e u s d a y - - P a was reeding in the the hardware store. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Charlton are noose paper about a man witch's wife shot h i m and then shot h e r self. He n i c e l y settled in their new home. got well the day of her funeral so I They had an electric radio installed Xpeck she must of felt pritty cheap Friday. Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts celea f t e r all her trubble. W e n s d a y - - M a tuk me to t h e Den- brated their fifty-fifth wedding annitist to fill a tooth witch's nurv got l versary at the home of their son, deccade, and t h e n this evning she I F r a n k Roberts, in Pontiac Jan. 12. w e n t and made Taffie' candy. It seams Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Roberts for m a n y like I am g e t t i n g sum offle poor years resided in Deford and are now living at South Roekwood. The affair brakes h@re of lately. T h i r s d a y - - I helped a o l e lady carry was a complete surprise and all the a basket up the hill and she offered children and their families v/ere presme a dime but I sed No mare I only ent except the youngest son, Seth dun m y duty and cant t a k e no mun- Roberts and family, who could not be hey. Poor w u m a n She is wirking her present because of illness. The election of officers occurred at the m e e t i n g of firemen Tuesday even i n g w i t h the following result: chief, S. G. B e n k e l m a n ; ass't chief, J. S. M c A r t h u r ; secretary, T . H.; Ahr; treasurer, Win. Fleenor; captain of hose company, J. S. McArthur; ass't. capt., A d a m Geitgey. B u r b r i d g e & Ryno disposed of t h e i r livery and feed b a r n on Leach St. to R o b e r t and Isaac A g a r of Evergreen. On W e d n e s d a y afternoon, at two o'clock, occurred the m a r r i a g e of Miss Mary Schwegler and Fred W. Jaus at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Louisa Schewgler. The ceremoney was performed by Rev. L. V. Soldan. L a s t Thursday, the Leach school t a u g h t by Miss Alice Ross and the | Cedar Run school t a u g h t by Miss Bessie Miller enjoyed arithmetic and ,football contests, both of which were won by the Leach school. J o h n MeGrath, who spent a couple I [of m o n t h s with relatives m Belfast, | i Ireland, has returned to his home ! n o r t h w e s t of-town. | D e l m a r H. Dawson of Sanilae Center, Well known in Cass City, was ~ m a r r i e d Jan. 18 to Miss Jennie E. E1tiott of Applegate. Died on Jan. 15, J e n n e t t e Sole, in the 71st year, at Deford. Mrs. G. W. Goff hag leased the A. A. McKenzie Bldg. at the corner of ! Main and Leach streets, into which she will move her stock of goods. 000 Business conditions throughout the Adversity. whe}s the blade o t nation deserve discussion on t h e baability. sis of fact. | ~hose who act uppish prove Irrespective of a natural spirit of , that they are in the lower optimism and o f figures that are alclass. | ways available to prove a ease, t h e r e , The young man who keeps a i~ considerable depression. Some of || s h a r p l o o k o u t will have a ft has led to declining employment much better outlook. arid this in t u r n to lessened business Fathers, mix up with your boys• ~tf all kinds. and they will be less likely There is no pal~ieular reason for to get into "mix ~ps." this condition except t h a t one which Experience, like happiness, is we have artificially created~inflation. | what we stumble upon U n d e r t h e stimulus of profits in inwhile loking for something | v e s t m e n t s and stocks, America has ! else. grown too f a s t in the past year or ~ If God has given you o n e real two. Factories have been able to get True friend. He can scarce. m o n e y for e x t e n s i o n s . Hence ' t h e y ly give to .you a greater have b u i l t beyond the immediate de- a gift. n | ! mand for t h e i r products. There has (~). 1929. Western Newspaper Union.) | | been money available for building and i n the l a r g e r cities there are too m a n y l a r g e buildings and in m o s t places of large population, t o o m a n y i Didn't Apply t o Him homes, j "It"S the lime h,~ ~,.,,~ boys to be Because a l a r g e number of a u t o - . ' mobile~ were sold a year ago, too. in bed," s~id m,nher ~, [lilly. "Bu; m a n y were produced during the l a t t e r mother.", said the chiM. "d,~'* ,you remembe~ tha~ I w:~.~n't ~ood todayT part of 1929. The same thing is true --(q)ildrej~ _f. .... @ SLATS' DIARY. C a s s City, M i c h i g a n , 25c Profit i ii [for D a i r y m e n ] ¢. E v e r y pound of oleo consumed kills the market for about 9 quarts of milk. How can the dairy business remain prosperous if dairy farmers help kill the m a r k e t for their own product? Milk .is the most economical food. The f a r m e r should use it constantly. He buys it from himself a t wholesale instead of paying retail prices for s u b s t i t u t e s . . : . $ It is claimed that the f a r m e r buys one-third of all the oleo produced. In so doing he helps create a surplus of butter and loses more money by lower butter prices than he gains in buying cheaper oleo. What do you thinkof the argument offered by the farmer who buys oleo? He kicks about the low price for milk and butter, no money in the business, etc.; yet, he says butter prices, are too high and buys oleo to save money. In other words too. low to sell, but too high to buy. Not logical, is it? {: ¢. . i} :~ :i: {: g , * ,O . .* g O O ¢o .Io Farm -Produce • TELEPHONE ,,:: Company NUMBER :!: 54 e Advertise your auction in the Chronicle ~____.A_ _ :~-~.~.~t,.~=~-~ ale [S Oe[ill C,0 i n g ' On T.T. i' All Winter Goods Are Sold at Rock Bottom Prices. 1. SCHONYl ULLER, Cass City / : jf / <. Cass City, Michigan, Friday, January 31, 1930. CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE THREE; ..a'i Wesley Webber is confined to his Rev. P. J. Allured was a business Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Striffier were home o n South Seeger street with an caller in Saginaw T u e s d a y . business c~fliers in Saginaw Monday. injured knee. Donald Schell is spending two Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Auten dpent Ivan Niergarth and Miss Ruth Er- weeks with relatives in Detroit. Wednesday and Thursday in Detroit. skine spent the week-end with relaOtto Klinkman left Monday to Peter Pangburn of Frankfort, Inditires in Evart. spend some time with his son in Jackana, spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. John Collon of Bad son. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Reach. Mrs. I. A. Fritz returned Monday Axe visited Mr. and Mrs. E. A. CorJohn 'McGrath visited his daughter, Statuary Hall evening from a few days' visit with pron S a t u r d a y . Miss Lorine McGrath, at Lapeer on t A good number from Cass City atTATUARY HALL, s o called, Is a relatives in Detroit. ) tended the Vassar-Cass City basket The Misses Eleanor and Laura Thursday. great semicircular, high-ceilingsd Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish and Bigelow entertained at dinner Friday John Benkelman l e f t M o n d a y to ball game at Vassar Friday evening. room, with a Grecian theater effect, Mr. and Mrs. John Benkelman in our National Capitol in Washington. family visited at t h e ' J. D. Funk evening in honor of Mrs. James spend two weeks with his son, Alvin Ward. spent Thursday and Friday with their Form~r!y osed by tb~ hon~e of re~r? home near Deford Sunday. Benkelman, in Lansing. daaghter~ Mrs° James Brown; at ze.~,~,.ez~.ts ,,a,~ ,.avu echoed ti:e G. A. Tinda!e was in Detroit Mr. and Mrs. Lcster Bailey and daughters, Catherine and Lueile, were Wednesday and Thursday and at- same Sunday to spend a few days Pigeon. voices of Webster, Clay, Calhoun and tended a Ford dealers' banquet with Mrs. Clark's sister, Mrs. John Mrs. Oscar Oshe and son, Myrl,. of other personages famous in congress Care visitors F r i d a y afternoon. Vassar were callers Tuesday at the in the//" time---it was set aside in 1864 Whale. Mrs. Willis Campbell, Mrs. Andrew Wednesday evening. homes of William Paul and G. A. as a national statuary hall, to which Mr. and Mrs. Willis Campbell, Mr. Bigelow and Mrs. Harold Jackson Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Corpron and each state might contribute a statue a n d Mrs. Andrew Bigelow and Mr. daughter, Elnora, were guests of Mr. Striffier. were Bay City callers Thursday. of two of its most ~distinguished citiand Mrs. Harold Jackson spent SunI Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Turner were and Mrs. Herbert King at Bad Axe George Wilson, who has spent two zerls. day evening in Care. dinner guests .at the home of their Sunday. weeks with friends and relatives Maryland Is typified by Charles CarMr. and Mrs. Glen Wright and here, returned to Pontiac F/4day. Mr. a n d Mrs. F r a n k Ward, William daughter, Mrs. Mack Little, in No- roll, a signer of the Declaration of Investa township, Tuesday. daughter, Marjorie, spent Sunday a n d Abbie Ward and William CampMr. and Mrs. Vern Wright and son, Mrs. G. A. Tindale, Miss Dorothy dependence; Massachusetts by SamCalvin, visited Mr. Wright's brother, with Mrs. Wright's parents, Mr. and bell, all of Detroit, were Sunday Mrs. W. E. Staffo.rd, at Care. Tindale and Mrs. He~man Doerr spent uel Adams who helped promote the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Tyo. Fred Wright, at Fairgrove Sunday. Revolution; New York by G~orge from Friday until Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. Frank Champion and The next meeting of the Cass City Mr. and Mrs. Audley Kinnaird Clinton, its first governor a n d Pennwith relatives in Detroit. ' spent from Tuesday until ~Thursday two children of St. Louis spent Mon- Music Club will be held Wednesday, sylvania by Robert Fulton, the first All the divisions of the Methodist inventor to practically apply steam in Flint on a pleasure and business day with Mr. Champion's parents, February 5, with Mrs. Clarence Bart. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Champion. • The day's study is "China and Japan" Ladies' Aid will meet this afternoon power; Virginia by George Washingtrip. (Friday) at the home of Mrs. George ton, In the military costume of the Announcements have been received with Miss ]Yeach as leader. Miss Bertha VanEldick and Miss Hill for a joint business meeting, of the birth of a baby girl, Dorothy Revolution and Robert E. Lee, who Nick Mellick spent Tuesday and Lavern Lathan of Lapser were weekMr. and Mrs. C. G. Kercher and commanded the army of North Virend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Warren iJean, on J a n u a r y 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Wednesday in Detroit. Mrs. Mellick R a y Rogers o f Gladwin, at a Bay and daughter, Catherine, who had two sons of Owosso and J. H. Kercher ginia during the Civil war, in the uniWood. City Hospital. spent a week there, returned home of Elkton were guests of Mr. and form of the Confederate service. SeThe Evangelical Ladies' Aid will quoia--a Cherokee Indian half-breed~ Mrs. E. W. Kercher Friday evening. Word has been received that Mrs. with him Wednesday evening. meet Wednesday, February 5, with after whom the big trees of California Stanley Schenck, daughter-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Delwin George Ful! Miss Alison Spence left Friday to Mrs. H . F . Lenzner for an all-day are said to have been named, who de~ Mr. and Mrs. Travis Schenck, is a pacher of Auburn Heights spent a few spend the week-end with a friend in session. tient in the Hibbing, Minnesota, hos- Detroit. Monday, she left there to re- days last week with Mr. Fulcher's veloped a written and printed lanMiss Helen Kelley and Miss Vera pital where she underwent an operaguage for his tribe, represents Oklamain indefinitely with her sister, Mrs. parents. Mr. and Mrs. Giles Fulcher. Flint were callers in Care Sunday tion last week. homa, while that great woman, FranR. L. Russell, in Pekin, Illinois. Mrs. D. C. Elliott, Mrs. Leonard evening. ces E. Willard, the founder of the Worn. Members and friends of St. PanThe Presbyterian Missionary Socie- Buehrly, Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Elliott en's Christian Temperance Union, sym. The Past Noble Grands Club will cratius church enjoyed an exception-and Miss Elsie Buehrly visited at the meet Friday, Feb. 7, at the home of a l l y p l e a s a n t evening Thursday, when ty have postponed their February home of C. C. Frye in Saginaw Mon- bolizes Illinois. Robed in the buckskin of pioneer days, Sam Houston, who Mrs. John Caldwell with Mrs. Cald- they, met in the basement of the meeting and it will be held Monday day. was President of the republic of Texas Well and Mrs. L K. Reid as hostesses. church for a social time. Cards were evening, February 10, instead of Febr u a r y 6 as noted in their programs. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cooper and Mr. when annexed by the United States, Mrs. Selina Brown and son, C. U. played, favors going to Mrs. Dan McMr. and Mrs. Morton e r r and chil- and Mrs. George Cooper of Marlette depicts the Lone Star state° Space Brown, spent Sunday in Bad Axe. Clorey, M r s . . Polheber, Mrs. Robert dren spent Sunday with Mrs. Orr's visited at the home of their daughter prohibits mention of all. Suffice to Mrs. Brown remained to spend a few Gallagher and Mr. Shagena. Lunparents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen McQueen, and sister, ,Mrs. Walter Schell, Fri- say the entire ensemble is an imposdays with her sister, Mrs. E. E. Hunt, cheon was served. ipg gathering of images of the nation's at Hay Creek. Mr. McQueen, who day. who is ill. At the annum meeting of Division has been ill for some time, is no betMrs. C. D. Striffler, Mr. and Mrs. S. outstanding characters o~ their day Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carson and Mr. No. 4 of the Methodist Ladies' Aid ter. A. Striffier and daughter, Geraldine, and generation. and" Mrs: Arthur Cooley and two held Wednesday evening, Jan. 2 2 , at (~), 1929.Western Newspaper Union.) Teachers of the Cass City school visited M r s . S. A. Striffler's sister, children of Owendale visited Mr. Coo- the home of Mrs. A. H. Kinnaird, respent Wednesday evening at the Miss Marie Schneider, at Akron on ley's mother, Mrs. Agnes COoley, on ports of the year were given. The home 0f Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Knapp Sunday. Louder ]'hun Any Word Thursday. sum of $635.70 was raised by this land enjoyed a social time in honor of NO speech ever uttered or utterable Mr. and Mrs. James W. Campbell Mrs. John Summerville and son, group. The officers for the coming I Mrs. James Ward, who left Sunday of Caro were callers at the Howard is worth comparison with silenee.~ James, spent from Friday until Sun- year are: Leader, Mrs. A. H. K i n - I f dr Detroit where she expects to Lauderbach home Monday. Mr. and Carlyle. day with relatives in Detroit. Mrs. naird; secretaries, Mrs. Stanley make h e r h o m e . S h e w a s presented Mrs. Lauderbach, who had spent two Summerville remained to spend some Hutchinson and Mrs. Albert Galla- with a gift from the company pres- w e e k s at the Campbell home, retime there. gher; treasurer, Mrs. John West. Jeat. •turned to Cass City with them. ! -/ S Resolve n o w to get y o u r s h a r e d o l l a r s that K r o g e r c u s t o m e r s w i l l save t h i s year. Start now~your budget figures w i l l convince you. Here that • o a Corn t es o 0" C O r ~ Country Gentleman 2 Cans, 2 5 c ~ 1 2 Cans, $1.37 Asparagus Squarecans4 9 c 2 Ibm 3 Large in can cans 3 5 L a r g e Can, 12c--12 C a n s , $1.37 CatsUp ~~ountrYTinyClub Wancy Wisconsin 7 3 bottles $ 0 Bea 3 $ OOGreen , , c C 12 Bottles, $1.9.5 Large Peeled--Cooked cans L a r g e Can, 14c--12 Cans, $1.55 Bread N°'2 cans $ 0¢ 3 NO" 2 5 (2c a n s Country Club Calif.~no grit Bread 2 Can, 13c~12 VegePable Mixed B e e t s 3 cans Cans, $1.37 Avondalo Red $ Large cans $ ,Lima cans NO. 2 Can, 1 4 c - - 1 2 C a n s , $1.55 .~ocoanut flavor--try a po,a..d Macaroon Snaps Cocoanut Bar Cake 2-1ayerspong each Pure and Wondernut Oleo tasty, lb. and ~. lbs. Peanut Brittle Fresh cmsp I{roger's--White " Soap Chips large pkg. A good Goes Luck Oleo Spr~ead. Lb. Jen ati _ ' -- r r - ........................................... - - .................. - - - - - m ~ i l m l E. Fitzgerald, Manager. Cuss City FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JAN. 31 AND FEB. t RICHARD DIX IN THE WHEEL OF LIFE SUNDAY AND MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2 AND 3. THE G m L ON THE BARGE A LAEMMLE SPECIAL--STARRING JEAN HERSHOLT W I T H SALLY O'NEIL AND MALCOLM McGREGOR In ~/he screen version of Rupert Hughes most popular story, with all the added dramatic value that the screen can bring to a story already crowded with excitement. Comedy, "Broadway Ladies." News reel. 15 and 35c. BARGAIN NIGHTS--TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, FEB, 4-5. ALICE WHITE IN BROADWAY BABIES Sensationai entertainment--in the Great (Alice) White Way. 4th chapter "Pirates of Panama." Snaps , "Own a Home." 10 cents ................ m Pound 25 ° 3J5 o a[ Re 35 ( 40¢ 10 * 11/~-1b loaf 11/~-lb loaf 11/~-1b loaf 8= dozen lb 3 cans sin. pkg pkg can The Cleanser That Chases Dirt 4 23c 10c 9c 22c 10c n 2 5 C ca s e¢ R i c e Choice Quality Alaska Red 3 PackagesComet 2 °- 49 " Rice andOne 2 3 " Package Comet Brown Rice Flakes TOMATOES Good Quality 3 No. 2 cans 25c PET or C A R N A T I O N MILK " tall can 8c JELL.O America's Favorite Dessert pkg 7c PUMPKIN For Delicious Pies~ Ige can 10e KARO SYRUP Blue Label 11/~-1b can 10e 3 Lbs., 65c Brand l~. ~g. enemas 2- kg 3 7 c Con Jewel French D Split.Top Loaf Luncheon Loaf Dinner Rolls Old Dnt©h S a l ~ @ ~ uct|ens ! A k i n d to suit e v e r y t a s t e a n d purse. H e r e is one of our g r e a t e s t v a l u e s . Country Clu~ ~ :~c Grandmother's ~4C 3 Lbs., $~.50 .~ u, ,/( / GEAT 1 ' Hordes of frantic native Horsemen sweeping a~ross t h e desert. Trembling women facing a cruel fate at the hands of wild fanatics. Dix, the dashing officer, to the rescue. Featurette, "The Red Rider." Collegians "'On Guard." 10 and 25c. GOOD LUCK OLEO BABBITT'S CLEANSER QUAKER or MOTHER'S OATS RALSTONS CEREAL ~ POPCORN Little Buster $5¢ C@FFEE " = Pastime Theatre Cans, $1.43 Avondale 2 No. 2 Cans, 25c~12 40 c cans 6¢ f~ Jl ...... $ O clock / okar 2 Cans, 25c--12 Cans, $1.37 Ovenpure fresh--made o, the same ingredients you would use. ll/~-lb. 9c; lb. loaf '~I I - \ No, LargeSnider's bottle, 18c Has Youngsters' Indorsement Soap is extremely useful for stop. ping a leak in a gas pipe, we rea~l. Several sniall boys m'e of the opiniOn that it is impossible to Imagine ~a better use for the stuff.~London Ha. morist. Identically the same coffee that sold for 37c a lb in Aug. 1 9 2 9 2 NO. 2 Can, 9c--12 Cans, $1.00 Kraut Potatoes ~No. NO. 2 Can, 18c--12 Cans, $1.90 S q u a r e Cans, 2 5 c ~ 1 2 Cans, $2.85 ) "ack C}:r~s~e:a~;ngSuperstitions There is an o1(I belier thai if a baby cries at his christening, it wards off the devil who is ahvays lurking around• Some people suppose the cry to be the voice of the child's evil spirit driven out by the christening water, and tha! if he does not cry he will grow up wicked and cross-tempered. Some be. lieve that a good cry at christening foretells a long and healthy life. America's Greatest Package Coffee Value Peas cans 2 AvondaleTips S,andard ; " Dark Secret Our memo:'y g()e~ back to the time when, if a nice girl had broken her leg, as tliey very seldom did, however, im d~o,~:~e da',~;, ~i~ed have asked ~i~ doctor not to tell what the matter was. --Ohio State .lournal. These Low Prices/ offers a splen- 3iE i n c e n t i v e to s t a r t today= ~ / The g~,vernment uses three sizes Of flags for its poles and calms them as follows: The storm size, which ls 5 by 9½ f e e t ; the post size, which is 10 by 19 feet, and the garrison size, which is 20 by 38 feet --Spent at A & P stores is made to bring the uttermost in value. For example, figure the saving to be had by taking advantage of of the millions of is a n e v e n t Governmental FIaga Too Dangerous • Betty and Bobble ~ere operating the radio. Suddenly from Betty came a scream of delight. "Listen!" she cried, "I have San Francisco, a n d that's where mother s'~id daddy would be today." Bobble paled a little, but he stood his ground. '"/'urn that dial," he Commanded firmly. "What's t h e matter with you? Don't you know I broke a window pane today?" TEA • II ON REARING cCHILDREN fro= RIB <oca l Happe nzng's Cass City, Michigan, Friday, January 31, 1 9 3 0 , CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE FOUR TO COLLEGE, Compiled by the Editors of . Cass City debaters lost to Bad Axe Mr. and Mrs. Robert Orr of P i g e o n in the last of t h e preliminary debates visited Cuss City relatives Sunday. Saturday n i g h t at B a d Axe. Paul Smarks of Lapeer spent the . J o h n Wooltey of Northeast Elkland week-end with friends in town. sighted two robins :m an apDie ~ree Miss A m y Boone of F l i n t was the Friday. Thank you, John! Spring w e e k - e n d guest of Miss E s t h e r T a r - can't come any too early for most of noski. US. Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y Haist of Bach Floyd Townsend and Homer Cole of were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Flint were week-end guests of Mrs. Martin McKenzie. Floyd Townsend, who is ill at the Miss Martha Clara of G a g e t o w n home of h e r sister, Mrs. Maude was a guest at the h o m e of Mr. and Wayne. Mrs. D. A. K r u g Tuesday. Mrs. J o h n McCallum, who has been Clark Knapp of Alma spent a few a p a t i e n t at the Morris hospital for days the first of the w e e k w i t h his s o m e t i m e with a broken hip, was parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Knapp. t a k e n to h e r home at Old GreenleafMrs. Roy Vance a t t e n d e d the fu- Wednesday. neral of an aunt i n Caro T u e s d a y and Born to Mr. and Mrs. Burton Wayne Wednesday visited relatives in Ponof Kalamazoo a son, Burton Eugene, tint.' on Jan. 18. Mr. Wayne is a son of M r . . a n d Mrs. Geo. ~ u s s e l l . enter- Mrs. Maude Wayne of Cass City and tained the officers o f the Dilman Mrs. W a y n e was f o r m e r l y Miss Anne school a t their h o m e on Monday eve- Vetace of Mancelona. ning. Thirty-five relatives and friends , Mr. and Mrs. W. LI H a r d e r of Bad were e n t e r t a i n e d F r i d a y evening at Axe were guests of Mrs. Jessie Petthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mct i t Monday. Mrs. H a r d e r r e m a i n e d to Comb on Sputh Seeger street. Ca~ts spend a few days w i t h h e r sister. and o t h e r games were played. ReDivision No. 3 of the Methodist freshments were served. Aid will m e e t t o d a y (Frlday) f o r an Earl Heller, who has been employed all-day m e e t i n g Wlth ~ r s . A n n a P a t as t r a v e l l i n g salesman in Michigan terson. A pot-luck dinner will be for the Minneapolis Milling Co. for served at noon. s e v e r a l ° months, has resigned from Mr. a n d Mrs. Ben Kirton, Mr. and t h a t position and will give his entire Mrs. Sheldon P e t e r s . n , Mr. and Mrs. attention to his bakery business here. Guy Reneh and son, Van, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Champion moMrs. j o h n GoodalI spent Sunday aftored to A n n Arbor Sunday, bringing ternoon in Bad Axe. back w i t h t h e m Mr. Champion's faAlex H e n r y received word last ther, Samuel Champion, who has been week of the death of his nephew, in an A n n Arbor hospital for nearly a Floyd Scott, 19, who was accidentally m o n t h t a k i n g treatments. He is much shot while h u n t i n g rabbits by moon- improved. light n e a r his home at Hensall, OnW. O. Stafford, Mrs. Zuleika Staftario. ford and children and Van Rench Mr. and ~ r s . Walter Mark enter- were e n t e r t a i n e d Saturday at a chicktained at dinner Wednesday, Mr. and en dinner in honor of the b i r t h d a y s Mrs. Norman Karl" of Lapeer, Mrs. of Miss Blanch Stafford and Miss John Karr, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Marion Hartsell, at the home of Miss Knight, Mr. and Mrs. F r a n k Reid and Hartsell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Alton Mark. Charles Hartsell, at Beauley. Mr. and Mrs. AIbert G a l l a g h e r enMrs. G r a n t Van Winkle entertained ten,mined a n u m b e r of friends at Mrs. J a m e s W a r d , - V i r g i l Logan and their home F r i d a y evening. Games members of the high school debating were played, favors b e i n g won by t e a m at a chop suey supper ThursStanley ' H u t c h i n s o n and J o h n ~Good- day. The evening was spent in playall. A luncheon was served. ing bridge. The m e m b e r s of the team Mr. and Mrs. John Vance a t t e n d e d are B e r n i t a Taylor, J o h a n n a Sandthe funeral of their g r a n d d a u g h t e r , ham, Horace Pinney and Richard Marion Vance, at Ponti~ac Tuesday. Van Winkle. Marion, five y e a r old d a u g h t e r of Mr. Mrs. J. A. Sandham entertained and iwrs. Earl Vance, died Sunday af- Rev. and Mrs. George Hill and Mrs. ternoon at h e r home in Pontiac and Hill's Sunday- School class of girls at funeral services were h e l d Tuesday. a dinner at her home on West Main Mrs. A. J. Knapp was the s p e a k e r street W e d n e s d a y evening. Mrs. Sandat a m o t h e r and daughter b a n q u e t at ham was a f o r m e r teacher of the Leslie Tuesday evening. F r o m Leslie, class. In the evening, the members Mrs. Knapp visited friends in Detroit. of the boys' class were invited in arid Mr. Knapp and Clark m o t o r e d to De- all enjoyed a taffy pull. troit W e d n e s d a y and Mrs. K n a p p reE. W. Kercher has purchased the turned to Cuss City w i t h t h e m on residence on North Oak St. known as Thursday. the Cridland house f r o m B. W. Klute Mr. and Mrs. •George l~usse]l enter- of Detroit. The Kercher family has tained 21 guests Sunday at a duck been living in the brick residence on dinner in honor of t h e f o i l . w i n g , E a s t Main St. untii recently the whose birth anniversaries oeeur with- property of the J. H. Striffier Estate. in a few days of J a n u a r y 26: Mrs. This has been sold to Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Beeeher of Carp, a n d Mrs. O. W. Nique of Decker. Irene ~ Russell, Mrs. Ernes~t R e a g h , W. R. Trueb, w h o was shot by a and Watson Spaven, all of Cuss City. hold-up m a n near Owosso several Twenty-one neighbors and f r i e n d s weeks ago; has so f a r recovered that of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spaven sur- he started from Cuss City to his prised t h e m at t h e i r h o m e last T h u r s - home n e a r Madison, Wisconsin, on day noon w h e n they came w i t h weIt Thursday, Mr. Trueb lost 20 pounds filled baskets to help t h e m celebrate since he was wounded, but he is haptheir fifty-second wedding anniversa- py in the fact t h a t t h e bullet was ry. The pot luck dinner was enjoyed successfully removed from the bone by all and the honored couple was in his a r m and t h a t it will not be presented with a purse of money. long before the arm will be restored Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Knapp, Mr. and to its f o r m e r usefulness. Mrs. Martin McI~enzie and Mrs. T. Leslie R. Ellis, 38, general merH. Wallace were guests of t h e . w e n - chant at N o r t h Branch, died at his d a l e Woman's Club Monday evening home in t h a t village Sunday. Funeral at the home of Mrs. David Coulter. services were held at the North The m e e t i n g was the fourth anniver- Branch M. E. church on Wednesday sary of the club. A delicious luncheon afternoon and i n t e r m e n t was made in was served. The cake, which held f o u r Carp cemetery. Mr. Ellis was born in candles, was cut by Mrs. Knapp who Cass City and spent his early days in organized the club four years ago. Carp and Detroit. Besides the widow, Frierrds of Conrad Mueller, Tuscola Zena El'Its, he leaves a daughter, county drain commissioner, will be Laura; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank pleased to h e a r of his i m p r o v e m e n t in Ellis of Carp, and one sister, Mrs. health. He has been very seriously ill Gla'dwin J e r o w of Fairgrove. for several months. Win. Kelley, the The Woman's Study Club will meet deputy in charge of Mr. Mueller's of- at the home of Mrs. A. J. Knapp next rice during the commissioner's ill- Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 4, at thr~ee ness, paid Mr. Mueller a visit at his o'clock w h e n the following program home at Richville W e d n e s d a y morn- will be given: President Hoover's ing and found Mr. Mueller m u c h en- Good Will Trip, Mrs. Earle Douglas; couraged in h i s battle to regain English Quiz, Mrs. I. A. Fritz; Rehealth. He was able to sit up eight s p o n s e ~ R u l e s of Etiquette--Mrs. A. hours Tuesday. Atwell and Mrs. Guy Rench. The lunA most delightful evening was held cheon to b~ served by the home ecoz F r i d a y w h e n thirty-five Music Club nomics d e p a r t m e n t of the high school members and friends met~ at t h e h o m e will ~ take place on March 18 when, of Miss J o a n n a McRae. Mrs. I. D. Mc- Mrs. Leon Miner of Owosso wili be a Coy, who was chairman o f t h e eve- guest of the club. n i n g ' s program, gave a v e r y i n t e r e s t Forty-five attended the meeting of ing talk on Russian music and com- the Jolly F a r m e r s ' Club at the home posers and played several selections. of Mrs. A. E. Goodall on Jan. 23 Miss Thelma Allen of Pontiac sang w h e n a chop-suey dinner was served several selections of Russian com- and a p r o g r a m of song's and readings position. Cocoa and w a f e r s were was given in the afternoon. Guests served by the committee, who w e r e of the club at this g a t h e r i n g included Mrs. Douglas, Mrs. Ragan and Miss Rev. and Mrs. P. J. Allured, Mr. and McRae. Mrs. J o h n Go.dull and son, and Miss A t a regular m e e t i n g of t h e Bap- Eva J o h n s o n of Deford. At the busitist Missionary Society held last ness session, Robert McConkey was Tuesday at the home of 5frs. W . Cur- named to select t h r e e others to g(~ tis, the following officers were elect- with him to the F a r m e r Week sesed: President, Mrs.: J a m e s McKenzie; sions at E a s t L a n s i n g to represent first vice president, Mrs. William Cur- the local club at this ~state meet. The tis; second vice president, Mrs. Cath- expenses of the q u a r t e t are to be met erine Yakes; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. by the club. The n e x t m e e t i n g of the Stanley McArthur; chairman of W h i t e Jolly F a r m e r s will be held at the A. Cross work, Mrs. E. A. Livingston. J. Knapp h o m e on Thursday, Feb. 27. A f t e r the b u s i n e s s meeting, a de- Each f a m i l y is to b r i n g a valentine. licious supper was served by t h e hos- The r e a d i n g of the verse on the valtess. The F e b r u a r y m e e t i n g will be entine is to serve for the club roll held with Mrs. Murray. call. THE,PARENTS' MAGAZINE [ The average w e i g h t of stocker and D E C R E A S E IN S H E E P feeder steers shipioed from four leadA N D LAMBS IN STATE ing m a r k e t s was a little heavier this The shortage o f both f o r a g e and f e e d i n g grains appears to be primarily responsible for t h e 12 per cent decrease in the n u m b e r of sheep and lambs on f e e d in Michigan J a n u a r y 1. The estimated n u m b e r s on feed for each ~ of the past three years are: 1928, 243,090; 1929, 294,000; and 1930, 260,000. F o r the w e s t e r n states, the Co~n Belt and tho ~at~l of MI nHncl- year t h a n last, but the proportion of heavy feeders, (over 900 lbs.) was ;muller and t h e r e was a large increase in feede~c calves. Grist Screenings Published Every Fridi~y Vol. 5. No. 25. January 31, 1930. Published in the in- farm. It'll give you the I We've always said terest of the People of best cured m e a t you t t h a t you j u s t had to Cass City and vicinity ever a t e . t r y P u r i n a Calf Chow The personal property of the P e t e r by the to like i t ~ a n d t h a t Doerr E s t a t e will be s o l d a t auction A Scotchman bought w a s conclusively prov4½ miles east and I mile north of E l k l a n d R o l l e r Mills two tickets at a raffle en y e s t e r d a y w h e n a ......... T~.,J~:.v. ~'~" ~ ---'~" l~,~r T ~ y l o r ~ . d ; ~ " and won a $1500 car. fellow came in for his ' t o ~evelol) w~nin ~ne c~i~d a reaii~ A~ he accepted the ' s e c o n d o r d e r of Calf zation oLownership he must not only ber on feed this y e a r is l a r g e r than on g. N. McCuliough as auctioneer. Fuii I§ .......................................................................... car he .broke down and Chow. He said he's alWe all t h i n k our Inown thifigs, but he must ')e genuinely J a n u a r y 1, 1929. The cattle and sl~eep particulaYs are !arinted on page 6. ways thought CMf comes are too low and cried. " W h y did I buy t h a t Chow was foolishness, fond of these things, prize them highly f e e d i n g report issued F r i d a y f r o m the prices of everyother ticket ?" he but he'd tried it now, Wallace Brooks, uncle of Mrs. as possessions. The child must also t h i n g too high. the office of the Michigan Co-opera- Flora Cragg Ostrander of Pontiac, moaned. and h e knows it ifi good be really sure that they are his, that tive Crop R e p o r t i n g Service made the sense. E v e r use Calf passed away at Denver, Colorado, at We are still w r i t i n g ownership is undivided. In this way following s t a t e m e n t r e g a r d i n g the W e don't care w h a t Chow ? it 1929 occasionally. the age of 87 years. the child will learn to respect the k i n d of a furnace you situation on J a n u a r y . 1: How about you ? property of others. have. It m a y be all in, A f e w m o r e loaves of The number of sheep and lambs on for all we k n o w . But b e t t e r bread to every RELIGIOUS CANVASS SUNDAY feed for m a r k e t in the principal feedW i t h all the cars A child n e e d s 7 balanced diet of t h a t are on the road we do know you'll g e t barrel of Cream of ing states on J a n u a r y 1, 1930, was activities for his mental and spiritual The religious canvass of the village isn't ~t a wonder t h a t the most h e a t satisfac- W h e a t flour. about 700,000 or 15 per cent l a r g e r development just as he needs a balwe don't have more ac- t i o n out of it w h e n you t h a n on J a n u a r y 1, 1929. The n u m b e r will be t a k e n n e x t Sunday afternoon B u y i n g E g g Mashes burn Cavalier coal. anced diet for physicql nurture. One cidents t h a n we do ? estimated on feed this y e a r was 5 , - ' a t 2:30. It is hoped as f a r as possible T h e r e ' s a difference. or m i x i n g t h e m on a educator points out that a mother 490,000 head as compared with the re- all will t r y to be at home t h a t this cost per b a g basis is a who would be horrified at the idea of Last w e e k we took vised estimates of 4,792,000 head canvass m i g h t be carried o n success"You w a n t some sta- disastrous practice. The orders for several thousending a child t o a larder stocked J a n u a r y 1, 1929 and 4,463,000 head fully and t h a t no one will take the sand chicks. Let us t i o n e r y for polite cor- value of a b a g of feed With all-assorted food stuffs with gencan be d e t e r m i n e d only J a n u a r y 1, 1928. m a t t e r unkindly, as the p a s t o r s of have your order early. respondence ?" eral instructions to "help himself," "No, I want some by the results it produthe village desire to get such d a t a as The estimated n u m b e r of sheep on thinks nothing of telling him to "run will make the promotion of Christian The cow's daily re- f o r w r i t i n g to m y hus- ces. We sell and recomand play" with a hodge-podge collec- feed in the Corn Belt states, includm e n d the b e t t e r feeds. w a r d is h e r feed. P a y band." service more effectuffl. All churches i n g western Nebraska, was 133,000 tion o~ toys the suitability and adapther as t h e creameryare co-operating in this work and h e a d larger this y e a r t h a n last. The We wilt h a v e a n o t h e r Co-oD~ration. ability of which she does not stop to m a n pays the dairymemof e s t i m a t e d totals w e r e 2,697,000 this the teams will be composed question. There i s not a single car of Cavalier CoaI man. He pays on a bayear, 2,559,000 in 1929, and 2,186,000 bers of different churches. sis of quality a n d one of us in this entire the last of this w e e k or Make the children's table attractive. i n 1928. The l a r g e s t increases this quantity. Cows pro- community but w h a t the first of next. There ducing l a r g e quantities will benefit if each is a lot o f satisfaction Peasant pottery, flowers and decora- y e a r w e r e in N e b r a s k a and Iowa. MRS~ J U L I A GUILDS STREETER; •T h e r e w e r e considerable decreases in of rich milk deserve m e m b e r of the com- to t h e ton of this coal. tive but sturdy linen will help. m u n i t y practices the See our ad on page 4. Missouri and Kansas, as well as in more pay. Mrs. Julia Guilds Streeter passed simple rule of t r a d i n g Michigan, while the other states In order to market economically ~he away at the h o m e of her daughter, w i t h home institutions. A n o t h e r car of Purihousewife must first know how much showed m o d e r a t e increases. Now we ought to Mrs. F r a n k Streeter, in Elkland n a and a car of W a y n e The number of sheep on feed in the have a T w e n t i e t h money she has to spend and what proF u n d s for prohibition township, on Tuesday, J a n u a r y 21, A m e n d m e n t . Congress e n f o r c e m e n t are t h e in- feeds this week. Y o u p o r t i o n o f her family income she may w e s t e r n states of 2,793,009 was about after an illness of several years. ought to pass a law to t a k e for the upkeep of are assured of the best use for food. Twenty-five to thirty- 560,000 head l a r g e r this year t h a n She was 80 years old and is survived these keep people f r o m eat- the downput of the out- w h e n b u y i n g five per cent of the inc,,me is the pro. last. While the g r e a t e r part of the in~ i by two d a u g h t e r s and one son, Mrs. feeds. ing too much, crease was in Colorado, there was put. portion i~ the average family. some increase in nearly every state i Peter Rushlo of Carp, Mrs. F r a n k Streeter of Cuss City, and W a r r e n "Figaro" smoked Well, it won't be E l k l a n d Roller Adolescent boys and girls are apt to in the region, decreases being shown Guilds of Pontiac; also several salt is j u s t one more long now until spring only in W a s h i n g t o n and Oregon. feel tha,t no one understands them. gTandchildren a n d four step-sons. good reason w h y it and young onions come The increase in n u m b e r of sheep on Least of all do they understand themFuneral services were held at the Phone 15 Cass City pays t9 butcher on the along. selves, and the new forces burgeon- feed in the Corn Belt states this house Thursday afternoon, Rev. E. R. ing in them. Their [;ersonalities are y e a r was due both to l a r g e r in-ship- Wilson officiating and burial was actually changing from 5,ear ~o year. m e n t s of f e e d i n g lambs t h a n last made in E l l i n g t o n cemetery. These young people need plenty of y e a r and to proportionately smaller time ~o get acquainted with their .own shipments of fed lambs back to marOnly One Bird Condemned 'ket before J a n u a r y 1. The in-shipdevelopment. Practically" all birds do more good m e n t s inspected t h r o u g h m a r k e t s for @ An automatic fire alarm to discover the 6 months, J u l y to December, were than harm, or no harm at all, but and t~eport any fire in its incipiency about 100,000 head l a r g e r this y e a r according to the United States Dewill go :a long way towards minimiz- t h a n last. While shipments direct to partment of Agriculture there is one ing the dangers of night fires. Fire feed lots and not passing t h r o u g h really bad actor with feathers. This alarm systems may now be installed m a r k e t s were probably smaller t h a n is the bob-tailed grackle of the southin the home at an expense which is last year east of t h e Missouri River, eastern United States. not prohibitive. such shipments into the states west of the river were l a r g e r than last CASS CITY MARKETS. Paradoxical as it may seem, the dis- year. comfort attending teething is frequentThe number of cattle on feed in Jan. 30, 1930. !y lessened by allowing the child to Michigan on J a n u a r y i was 10 per Buying P r i c e ~ chew on .a :piece of hard toast, or dry cent smaller t h a n for J a n u a r y 1, erust. 1929. A decrease of 1 p@ cent was Mixed wheat, bu ............................. 1.07 42 reported for the eleven Corn Belt -Oats .................................................... Scientists are controlling and even states and about the same reduction Rye, bu ............................................... 77 changing the sex of certain animals. in the western states. The m o v e m e n t Corn, shelled, bu. (56 lbs) ............... t.00 Is it possible that tl:is may lead to of stocker and f e e d e r cattle, inspected Peas, bu ........................................... 1.65 methods for controlling the sex of hu- t h r o u g h markets, into the Corn Belt Beans, cwt ....................................... 6.05 man beings? states for the six months, J u l y to De- Dark red kidney beans, cwt .......... 9.50 cember 1929, was about 2 per cent Light red kidney beans, cwt ......... 7.50 1.40 l a r g e r than in 1928, 14 per cent larg- Barley, cwt ..................................... Turquoise Bracelet and er than in 1927, and about the same Buckwheat, cwt ............................. 1.75 N e c k l a c e A r e in F a s h i o n ~s the five-year a v e r a g e movement. Butter, lb ............................................. 32 | H a t c h e r y g u a r a n t e e 100 per cent delivery and we are so Jewelry houses are recognizing the ~he ndovement this y e a r was unusu- Eggs, doz ................... | ~ure of the health of our BABY CHICKS t h a t w h e r e you have :......................... 36 importance of costume jewelry. Of 9 !ly late; 63 per cent of the six Hogs, live weight ................................ | good e q u i p m e n t we will replace all chicks t h a t die in t h e first 10 special significance was a fashion 8 10 aonth's total moved in the last three Cattle ............................................ i days f r o m date of hatch, at one-half price. show given recently under the aus13 ~onths, compared with only 54 per Calves, live weight ............................ pices of one of these houses for the SERVICE POLICY 22 ant last year, and 59 per cent t h e Broilers .............................................. express purpose of showing the effecHens .................................................... 22 0-year average. Always r e a d y to come to y o u r place when called to help you tiveness of bizarre oriental jewelry w i t h your poultry problems. with modern occidental costumes. A child is capable of ligious impressions long fully articulate himself, fore he is capable of ligious instruction. receiving rebefore he is and long bereceiving re- COMING AUCTIONS. J Mills ! F ullry Crop' From Among the mfiny striking effects was one of unusual beauty. With a gown of deep russet was worn a heavy necklace and bracelet of turquoise. All-Black Coat A truly distinctive coat Is the allblack one worn with black ,frock and hat. One of the m o s t distinguished models seen recently was trimmea with black lamb, while another has ~rimming of fox. N N @ Leather Beada They look like miniature footballs, these necklaces of large beads covered with leather, and they are designed to wear with this Season's smart leather pumps and leather bags. FLOCKS A N D H A T C H E R Y ACCREDITED Quality ~ Service ~ We Deliver. Price. INDEPENDENT GROCERY M. D. H A R T T B r o c a d e M a t e r i a l for . T a i l o r e d Screet D r e s s CALIFORNIA SARDINES--1 lb. c a n s PER C A N ................................................ (Tomato Sauce or Mustard Sauce) 10c PORK A N D B E A N S - - 1 8 - o z . c a n PER C A N .................................................... 8c 18c 7c 55c 16c 38c 29c LA C H O Y S P R O U T S No. 2 C a n s - - P E R C A N ........................ SEEDLESS RAISINS PER P A C K A G E .... .................................. FELS N A P T H A 10 B A R S F O R i ...... SOAP ......................... : .................. CLOVE P I N K , A L A s K A SALMON PER C A N ................................................ N N LETTUCE JUMBO CELERY 2 B U N C H E S FOR .................................... 15c 15c ORANGES--Sweet 37c 2 FOR ................................................. PER D O Z E N and Juicy •....... ,T-HUMB HATCItERY, Inc, JOHN D. M A R T I N N N N N N ,. Will be located at Heller Produce Co., E a s t Main St., Cuss City. E i t h e r place your orders w i t h Mr. Heller or send t h e m direct to us a t Sandusky. N N i CUSTOM H A T C H I N G In lots of 120, receive same care as our own. N N N N N N hatchery Over 40 flocks of 5,000 birds h a v e been culled, leg banded, inspected and approved by t h e Michigan Poultry I m p r o v e m e n t Association. N N N N SALADA TEA (black or green) N PER P A C K A G E .................................... N I~ULK COFFEE (extra good) N PER LB ..................................................... N N N @ FRUIT SPECIALS ! N TEXAS SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT g ~ N 3 FOR .............................................................. ~ ~ N HEAD An a t t r a c t i v e new tailored street dress is in brocade m a t e r i a l . It is simple but effective, f e a t u r i n g an uneven hemline. your home Over 95% Pure Combustible *:" "*~ -"Cavalier Coal': o" ..~ e*:" ¢. -:. ":.:. ¢" O SO MUCH H E A T * T h a t y o u u s e m u c h less coal a n d home for less money. actually heat y o u r / ¢* SO P U R E That it does not contain a single visible impurity a s r o c k , s l a t e o r b o n e coal. .:. such SO LITTLE A S H ** ¢" ~'~**** ~, ¢. °*~ ¢. *:" ~ T h a t a b u s h e l b a s k e t will h o l d all t h e r e is in a t o n a n d n o t a clir~ker a l l w i n t e r . **~ ** ~I. . S O E A S Y TO FIRE T h a t it r e s p o n d s q u i c k l y to d r a f t r e g u l a t i o n a n d y e t h o l d s f i r e , o v e r l o n g p e r i o d s d u r i n g the day o r n i g h t . *:" ¢" g* * ¢. S O L A S T I N G THAT IT MEETS A L I K E - T h e d e s i r e o f t h e H o u s e w i f e f o r a clean, h o t k i t c h e n f i r e * * * T h e n e e d s o f a F u r n a c e o r B o i l e r in t h e h o m e * * * The demands of a Great, Apartment or Hotel. ¢" *:" g. ¢" * .:. -:-" :i: :i: :i: g, g* Elkland Roller Mills ' Telephone Number 15 o° * ~.~ ... Cass City, Michigan, Friday, January 31, 1930. CASS TWO-STOVE KITCHEN FOR COLD W E A T H E R The (Prepared by Gas Range Alternates With the United States of Agriculture.) Department A good many kitchens, especially those in detached homes in suburbs or rural districts, now boast two s t o v e s ~ a wood or coal range for use in cold weather, and a gas, oil, or electric ~tove for the warm season. Of course, a kitchen must be somewhat roomy to afford the wall space for two: stoves, but as a table may be dispensed with if necessary, a number of homes might have this arrangement and add to their convenience. There are many advantages in it. The wood or coal range gives considerable heat during those in-between weeks in the ~pring or fall when the mornings a n d evenings are chilly and the middle of the day almost hot. Using it may mean that you can postpone lighting the furnace fire in the fall and let it ~.go out sooner in the spring, saving appreciably on fuel. In climates where furnaces are not used the kitchen range answers the need for sufficient warmth all winter. At the same time, for short, quick PLAYSUIT BEST FOR WINTER USE Loose and Roomy Meet (Prepared With by Garments Most the United States of Agriculture.) F\a v o r . Department "Johnnie! Put your coat right on, or come in this house this miuute!" 5ohnnie's coat is thrown on the ground and Johnnie is playing t$.g with two or three other cgatless youngsters. "BUt, mother," h~ protes~ invariably, "my "coat gets in my way. I'd much rather leave it eft. Tommie's taken his off, too," hopefully. B u , t mother retorts, t"You'll all catch your death of cold," ~t~ Something to that effect, and forces the unwilling child to bundle up again. She is right, of course, and in a me'asure, tbe child is right, too. The coat is in his way. How can he keep safe and warm out-of-doors without impeding his activities? To meet this situation the bureau of home economics has designed a number of winter playsuits especially for the r u n a b o u t or preschoo~ age. who ought to be outside as much as possible to take advantage of the short stretches of sunshine and tl~e crisp. cold air. All of these suits are loose and roomy and made of strong, warm materials, but all unnece'ssary bulk has been eliminated. Some of these suits are intended to be worn in place of an overcoat. Others, of rainproofed fabrics, take the place of a rain coat and may be worn over a sireliar playsuit of light-weight wool or cotton. As it is so important for the child at this age to learn to dress without help, every detail of these playsuits is planned to encourage self-help and independence. Front plackets are "~sed whenever possible, and large; fiat, the Coal Stove. cooking while the range fire is getting under way the other stove may be very useful. There are times when one does not want ~o disturb a banked fire to make a cupful of tea or a piece of toast. And when really warm weather begins, the blessing of a cool kitchen is greatly appreciated. The coal or wood range is cleaned out, given a final polish and covered to make a convenient table surface for setting things down, spreading out plates for filling and serving, and similar uses. The ~"summer" stove, in the coldest weather, is probably used more for a table than as a place to cook, but in the seasons of uncertain weather both stoves are likely to alternate in use. The illustration, taken in New Jersey by the United States Department of Agriculture, shows this two-stove arrangement in a farm kitchen which was improved in various ways after the county home demonstration agent had .discussed the possibilities with the owner. This kitchen was large enough to afford the space for both stoves. least eight different pockets have been designed, but they are all .~like in one respect. The .top edge sl~n~ diagonally outward and downward. Mothers who are called on almost daily to repair outer corners of pockets where they have been torn, will appreciate the value of doing away with that corn e r entirely. On the heaviest mate- Front View of Paper-Mill Felt Suit. / flndable buttons with buttonholes, or heavy cord loops. On the drop seat a r e four buttons instead of one on each side and one in the middle of the back, out of reach of little fingers. Fockets are placed at the waist line, or just below it, after careful tests ~nade with nursery school children, to find the best location for them. At PAGE FIVE i win Good were in Pigeon Wednesday, Besides her husband, she leaves one .Jan. 22, where t h e y received instruc- son about four years old. W o r t h y MaO t i o n s from the Michigan State Col- t r o n Maude Hendershot and Mrs. St. Pancratius Church--- Services ¢~..... Chris Both attended the funeral. are held each S u n d a y m o r n i n g at Mr. and Mrs. P . E m m o n s o f ' E l m - i loRe bureau of sewing. A hard time social at Mr. and Mrs. 11 o'clock. wood are visiting the l a t t e r ' s parents, E a r l e Russell spent the week-end Rev. Fr. Fitzpatrick, Pastor. Mr. and M r s . A r t h u r W h i d d e n . w i t h Mr. and Mrs. P. Sharrock of De- M. Hughes Wednesday. The people enjoyed g e t t i n g t o g e t h e r in their r a g s W i n . . M u l l e n r e t u r n e d to Detroit troit. a n d tatters. Salem Evangelical Church--Charles Monday a f t e r a brief visit a m o n g relMoses Beckett returned f r o m a Mr. and Mrs. Mose Karr, Ada, I r a , W. Lyman, minister. [atives here. week's visit with his daughter, Mrs. Medie and Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. Services for Sunday, F e b r u a r y 2: I J o h n Doerr of Cass City transact- Win. Anker, of Detroit. H u g h Karr, Merrill Karr, Mr. and The Sunny Sunday School m e e t s at ed business h e r e Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beckett are Mrs. Jas. P u r d y and Carolyn sur10:00 a . m . The town basket ball t e a m played m a k i n g their home with the former's prised Mr. and Mrs. A. C r u e g e r on Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Theme ~n~+~ ~÷ ~11,~^, ~ .... ~÷ f ~ e r ~ ~ Bee!rett, '±;iursday evening'. 'li~e g'ues~s ma(te of the Dastor's message: "'~iow a~(ii ~ :~ ' When God Helps." i Score 18-25 in favor 02 Gagetuwn. Miss Mae Toohey of Detroit spent themselves at h o m e and served reN. C. Maynard of Detroit was a the week-end with her mother, Mrs. freshments. Evangelical League of Christian M. Toohey. Endeavor devotionals at 6:45 p. m., caller in town Monday. Mr. and Mrs. E d w a r d Fischer, MeMr. and Mrs. Arthur Whidden spent Seniors and Juniors in their respecBEAULEY. Saturday until Tuesday with tive rooms. Mrs. S. A. Striffier will lain Fischer and Carolyn P u r d y at- from lead the Seniors in the discussion of tended the concert at the Scottish Mr. and Mrs. E. Procure of Vassar. Beautiful w i n t e r days. the topic, "How May Young People Rite Cathedral in Bay .City Monday Basil Blondell is suffering a fracJohn Moore left f o r Ontario MonCrusade with C h r i s t ? " Myrtle Green- evening. tured skull, due to a fall from a load day where he will spend a few w e e k s leaf leads the Juniors. Miss Lorena Wilson of Northville of hay on Wednesday, Jan. 22. visiting relatives. Sunday is designated as " A Day of spent Sunday with Mrs. Ed. Fischer. Miss Edith Miller has returned Mrs. F r a n k Reader returned h o m e P r a y e r for Worldwide Missions." At Mrs. Mildred Helenbolt left Sun-l from a week's visit with her sister, f r o m the hospital Monday where she 7:30 there will be a special mission- d a : / for Oklahoma to be with h e r tlMrs. M. HesS, of Detroit. has been a p a t i e n t the past t h r e e ary service with sermon by the pastor b r o t h e r / E . Clark, who is not expectMrs. George Russell and son, Lee, weeks. Her friends are glad to k n o w and special musical numbers. A ed to live. He is ill with cancer. 1are spending this w e e k in Detroit, t h a t she is improving. free-will offering for missions will be Mrs. A l f r e d Rocheleau and M i s s ! t h e guests of Mrs. Lynton Facer and The Premo S. S. class are p l a n n i n g received. The W. M. S. will be in Catherine recently spent seVeral days Mrs. P. Sharrock. a social at the church Feb. 14. K e e p charge. in Saginaw at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Lowe Ducolon passed the date in mind. P r a y e r m e e t i n g Thursday evening Mrs. Clem L e n h a r d and Mrs. WaN a w a y Saturday at Caro Community The Ladies' Aid m e t w i t h Mrs. at 7:30. cott. Hospital, where she had b e e n since Manley Endersbee Thursday. Choir practice F r i d a y evening, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Martin and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Munro spent Dec. 26, 1929. Funeral from Huston7:30, at the home of Mrs. A. A. RickT h u r s d a y with Mr. and Mrs. Olin A r m s funeral parlors Monday. Mrs. Merrill, and Gerald McDonald of Deor, chorister. Ducolon recently affiliated with Gif- troit were Sunday dinner guests at All are welcome to attend a n y or T h o m p s o n of Owendale. Mrs. F r a n z Chisholm and Mrs. Edford Chapter, O. E. S., a t .Gagetown. C. E. Hartsell's. all of the "above services. A t a recent m e e t i n g of the Evangelical Sunday School Workers' conference t h e chairmen of t h e various committees in charge of t h e year's programs, with power to select assistants, were elected as follows: Easter, Mrs. Louis Krahling; Mothers' Day, Miss Katherine Joos; Children's Day, Mrs. J o h n Bohnsack; picnic, Win. Schwegler; Rally Day, Mrs. Cal. Striffier; Christmas, Mrs. L e s t e r Bailey. i GAGETOWN NOVESTA. i Some of the old timers r e m e m b e r a more steady winter. Chgs. W r i g h t " is driving a new Chevrolet Six. J o h n Woolley gains v e r y slowly in health a n d is still confined to his bed most of the time. Miss Madeline Purse spent the week-end, at her home in Caro. The sale of Berets Bentley was l,~-.,,n, d l w a'l-÷,'~,r.rtart r~,'~;rla'M'r,c.. ÷'lha ,-,,-,1,,I soon where Mr. Bentley has employm e n t a ~ t h e State Home. Mr. and Mrs. George McArthur spent Sunday at the home of~Mr, and Mrs. A n s o n Henderson. Rev. C. M. Ferguson and son, Er-. nest, w e n t to Lapeer on Saturday. Mr. F e r g u s o n preached t h e r e on Sunday. The Bible class of the Church of Christ were losers to the y o u n g people's class in an attendance contest and will serve supper to the young .people in the near future. DEFORD. Mrs. Chas. Kilgore received word Tuesday of the death of an uncle in Chicago. Mrs. B r i g h t of Cass City spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Ben~. Gage. W l; --, Novesta Baptist Church The revival meetings at the Baptist church are still going: on. Great n u m b e r s are coming out, al~though the w e a t h e r has been v e r y stormy. People around Novesta say t h e y have not seen such and creating quite an interest among the children. T h e s e meetings will continue each n i g h t except Saturday. The evangelist conducts a special m e e t i n g for children and young people each Friday night. Everyone welcome. Decker M. t; k, Our Annual 9c Salestarts Saturday and lasts for one week°°° See what. 9c wi]i do at this sale[ a revival for many years. Evangelist Crook, Rev. Frisbey and Bey. Welton, the pastor, are going into the school \ ............................... [ M i x i n g B o w l s ... , Milk Jugs ......... igCEach Enameled Sauce Enameled P a n s ..... Wash Basins.. f9c ' !¸ L a d i e s ' Belts .............. I C h i l d r e n ' s G a r t e r s .... f Turkish Bath Towels 90[ o ~C~ E. Circuit--Shabbana e~dld's constant activity is the use of ]0:00 a. m. Sunday school at 11:00 a. a. little extra fullness .in the back ~em m. ~i~a~'~Y serv!c e On Wednesday at 8:00 p..m. Th~ n~xt meeting of the Sanila(~ County Holines~ Association ~11 be held i n the Marlette Mennonite Church on Friday, Feb. 7. Three services will be held~-i0:00 a. m., 2:00 p. m., a n d 7:30 p. m. Preachers in the order n a m e d , - R e v . Reuben Crosby, Rev. Chas. A. Jacobs, and Roy. Paul S. Rees. All are invited. J. H. James, Pastor. Il P r e s b y t e r i a n Church--Paul J. Allured, minister. Morning service, 10:30. Sermon subject, "Trouble in the Christian Life." The service will be conducted by Rev. Spafford Kelsey. Church school at •noon. Adult lesson: " P u t t i n g God's Kingdom First." Junior Endeavor, 3:00. Christian Endeavor with t h e Epworth League at the Methodist church at 6:30. No evening service this Sunday. tion, on the side seams, 'about 6 inches below the waist line. In wool materials, as in the picture, this fullness is shrunk out as much as possible to avoid bulk; in other fabrics gathers are put in which draw 4 ~ inches of material in a space of 2 ~ inches. The suit illustrated is made of paper-mill felt, a heavy wool fabric. It has all these features and several others. Notice that the ankle placket is around in front where the child can re~ch it, instead of the side seams, and that the leg of the garment is shaped to get rid of bulkiness. The elastic which holds the legs down fits snugly under the instep where it is out of the way and subject to least wear. This eIastic is sewn on inside the leg after t h e edge has been faced, because even with the best of care it will need occasional renewing. The sleeves have plenty of fullness through the elbow and are held at the wrists by a loop and button. The patch pocket is diamond shaped to give a slanting top. Some of the suits have a square pocket with t h e outer corner smartly turned back. The cord which forms the loops for the buttons is ~arried along between the material and the facing and t h u s makes the edge .of the suit firmer. The opening on the fl'ont extends almost the entire length to the crotch and toward the bottom the edge is shaped out slightly to make a more secure closing. Five buttons are sufficient. A matching, close-fitting hood is worn with this suit, CHRONICLE CHURCH CALENDAR. rials, patch pockets are .used; on some C h u r c h - - S u n d a y school at 10:30 a. of the lighter ones a set-in pocket with -m. Morning service at 11:30 a. m. a bound or welt rink@ may be pre- P r a y e r service on Thursday a t 2:30 ferred, or on those intended as rain- p. m sui~s, there may be a protecting flap Decker C h u r c h ~ S u n d a y school at overlapping the pocket. 110:30 a. m. E v e n i n g service at 7:30 Perhaps one of the most important p. m. innovations from the standpoint of the E l m e r Church--Morning service at Back View of Same Suit. CITY Baptist Church William Curtis, Pastor. Preaching Sunday m o r n i n g at 10:30. Theme, " A Great Man on His Knees." Communion will follow preaching. Sunday school at 11:45. Cecil Brown, Supt. B . Y . P . U . a t 6:30 in charge of Service Commission. Preaching at 7:30. Subject, "The Friend t h a t Helps." "Boy Scouts Monday evening. Young People's Bible and Devotional t r a i n i n g course W e d n e s d a y evening at 7:00. P r e a c h i n g service at the Austin church at 2:30. The Brotherhood of the Baptist church m e t at Cecil Brown's Wednesday evening and had a very profitable meeting, considering the Stewardship , of influence. A f t e r the r e a d i n g of the l e s s o n all entered freely into the discussion. Many fine conclusions were ]gained and plans for definite action formed. A fine lunch was served by Mrs. Brown. The C. J. U. m e t at the same time i n the home of Mrs. Geo. Burt. The lesson on the life of Paul w a s given by Mrs. Curtis, a f t e r which g a m e s w e r e enjoyed by all, and a dainty luncheon was. served by the hostess. White Cups and S a u c e r s , c o m p l e t e for.. 9c T o i l e t Soap, 2 b a r s ............ 9c R u b b e r H e e l s , pr ............. 9c Water T u m b l e r s , 3 f o r .... 9c D o o r B o l t s .......................... 9c Men's and Ladies' Handkerchiefs ............. 9e F o o d C o n t a i n e r s ................ 9c E g g S l i c e r s ........................ 9c T o o t h B r u s h e s .................. 9c S a l t a n d P e p p e r S e t s ........ 9c B r e a d P a n s ........................ 9c ToOth P a s t e S a l a d P ! a t e ~ ...................... 9c M o p H a n d l e s .................... 9c T a l c u m P o w d e r ................ 9c H i g h S h e r b e t s .................. 9c W a t e ~ G o b l e t s .................... 9c G l a s s S o a p D i s h e s ............ 9c G l a s s T u m b l e r H o l d e r s .... 9c Sugar and Creamers e a c h ................................ 9c Coin P u r s e s 9c A l u m i n u m P a n s ................ 9c S m a l l T o y s __:..................... 9c S u i t H a n g e r s , 2 f o r ........ __ 9c B u t t o n s , 2 c a r d s ................ 9c H a i r C l a s p s , 2 c a r d s .......... 9c S a f e t y P i n s , 50 f o r ............ 9c Frying Pans 09c B r e a d B o a r d s .................... 9c S m a l l M i r r o r s .................... 9c P a i n t B r u s h e s .................... 9c F a c e P o w d e r ...................... 9c D u s t P a n s .......................... 9c B r e a d K i n v e s ..................... 9c C a k e P a n s : ......................... 9c Muffin P a n s ........................ 9c S c r u b B r u s h e s ...... ,............. 9c F u r n i t u r e P o l i s h ................ 9 c C l o t h e s P i n s , 60 f o r .......... 9c C u r t a i n R o d s .................... 9c S h o e L a c e s , 5 p a i r s f o r ..... 9c Pockets Combs 9c M e n ' s Sox, pr ..................... 9c C h i l d r e n ' s H o s e , pr ........... 9c the same as the Mahican. This was one of the Algonquin tribes, and if any of the Mohicans remain they are inf c6rporated in the Stockbridge tribes. T h e Stockbridge Indians are closely connected with the Delawares, although they are not a branch of this l tribe. Some of the Stockbridge In, dians live in x37isconsin. ....................... 9c B a t h S a l t s .......................... 9c C a n d y , lb ........................... 9c C a n d y E a r s , 5 f o r .............. 9c P e n c i l B o x e s ...................... 9c W a x C r a y o n s .................... 9c S t a t i o n e r y .......................... 9c L o o s e L e a f N o t e B o o k s .... P e n c i l T a b l e t s , 2 f o r ........ C a n v a s G l o v e s , pr ............. S h e l f P a p e r ........................ B o y s ' a n d M e n ' s B e l t s .... B o y s ' a n d M e n ' s Ties.:_i .... C h i l d r e n ' s C a p s .................. =r Other LARGE Items LOT OF LADIES' LARGE AND Cloth and Rubber OVERSHOES $1.25 GREEN • WINDOW 3 ft. wide ~ .--Justin-- SHADES $1 6 ft. long MEN'S 49c Just arrived--Extra $ 2 . 9 5 o HIGH $4 0 0 " VALENTINES goodquality LARGE PAIR PAIR LACED 89 BOOTS PAIR ! I ! ASSORTMENT AT HEAVY FLEECED $1.00 value 49c SILK DRESSES FOR LADIES! New Spring Styles ~ m Just In-- $4.95 ANOTHER LOT OF CHILDREN'S SHOES PAIR MEN'S PAIR $2.95 HEAVY WORK RUBBERS ,ll :t UNDERSKIRTS Just returned from Detroit where I ~ purchased several hundred pairs of Ladies' up-to-the-minute-shoes. $1-00 MEN'S SHOES 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c Prices SLIPPERS $ 1 . 0 0 $1.00 " CHILDREN'S at S p e c i a l LOT OF LADIES' OVERSHOES 500 P A I R S M E N ' S W O R K S H O E S Indian Tribes Related The bureau of Indian affairs says that the Mohican tribe of Indians Is W h i t e E l a s t i c , 4 y d s ......... 9c SPECIAL PRICES ON BED BLANKETS-BUY NOW''. . LARGE SWEATERS LOT OF AND BLAZERS Up to $4.00 values $1.00 MEN'S WOOL SOX 39c Folkert's Bargain Store, Cass City ¢ Cass City, Michigan, Friday, January 31, 1930. CASS CITY CHRONICLE "PAGE SiX BREEZES FROM THE HILL Concluded f r o m first page. post office. We discussed how to send a letter, how we get our mail and how people in l a r g e r towns get their mail. W e then decided to m a k e our room into a town, so we could b e t t e r unders t a n d about sending or receiving letters. F i r s t of all, we had to h a v e a na~nc for uur Lowm. ~iily ~ g ~ e s ~ d Sleepy Town, but we t h o u g h t t h a t w o u l d n ' t be a v e r y good n a m e so t h e n Donald said we m i g h t call it " W a k e U p Town." E v e r y , n o ' l i k e d t h a t so, we are now not second grade, but W a k e Up Town. We have three s t r e e t s in our town, Red Street, Brown Street and Blue Street. The desks are all n u m b e r e d to r e p r e s e n t houses in each s t r e e t so if anyone w a n t s to write a l e t t e r to his friend in W a k e Up Town, he has to put the person's name, s t r e e t and number, and town. This is good practice and we hope it proves valuable. We h a v e y e t to m a k e our Post Office where we can buy our stamps and mail letters. W e are going to keep our Post Office until Valentine's D a y when we will all mail our valentines and have the p o s t m a n deliver them. We are going to t r y to live up to the name of our t o w n this m o n t h and all be wide awake. Third Gi~ade. We are back a t Work a g a i n a f t e r t h e h o l i d a y festivities, but we are s o r r y to have so m a n y e m p t y seats. C h a r l o t t e A u t e n and Donald Allured h a v e both been ill a w e e k and several others have been absent a couple of days. We enjoyed a spell down with t h e second gTade. T h e y upheld the h o n o r of their room very well. A f t e r t h e y left we finished spelling down those who were still standing. Thelma Suprenant finally won. Mr. Campbell presented us with a couple jars of bulbs. F o u r t h Grade. We promised to tell how our automobile race in a r i t h m e t i c ended. The F o r d s were the w i n n i n g cars with 2655 points, the motorcycle was n e x t w i t h 2597 points, Pontiac 2357, Packard 2237 and Lincolns followed with a total of 2059 points. Those who m a d e the h i g h e s t scores in the race w e r e J e a n Corkins, Bernard Kelley, Martha McCoy, I v a n O'Connor, Orville Mallory and Phyllis Koepfgen. We were sorry ~o tose Albert B r e n t h y f r o m our room. He is attendi n g school in Mayville. Mrs. J o h n McLarty .was a caller in our room on Tuesday. We have a new chart in word study. Each s t u d e n t is w o r k i n g hard to win the blue stars. The g e o g r a p h y class is much interested in the F r i d a y afternoon special reports. T h i s ~ w e e k the reports are RESCUE. ] ELKLAND-ELMWOOD TOWN on trade and transportation. The reports are obtained from outside reading and are given orally. Phyllis Koepfgen was the w i n n e r in our last spelling contest. Fifth Grade. This week we have spent reviewing and w r i t i n g semester tests. W e booklets in hygiene to illustrate tooth hygiene. In our spelling contest the following people have the greatest number of gold stars: Enid Barnes, Mary Frank, Myrtle Greenleaf, Shirley Lenzner and T e r r y Schwaderer. We engaged ,in a spelling match with the sixth grade. Of course they won, Mary Frank upholding her side the longest. In E n g l i s h we are learning the poem "School Days" by John Greenleaf Whittier. Last week the class wrote letters to Billy Wilson who was a member of our class. We are now anxious to ,receive his reply. We have been pleased to have such an improvement in attendance but we still have quite a few t a r d y marks. Sixth Grade. The A class in Language is publishing a magazine. The name is "Bits of This and That." P a t t y Pinney and Millicent Graham are editors. Theda Bardwell is designing the cover. Everyone in the class is contributing his best poem or story to the magazine. Two boys, Donald McLachlan and Donald Watson, have received 1 0 0 % in spelling every lesson this month. Cressy Steele won our spell down with the fifth grade last Thursday. The word with which Cressy defeated. her opponents was "foreign." Dan Hennessy, Thomas Hennessey, Frank Morris, Esther Turner, Cressy Steele and Florence Skinner have been neither tardy nor absent. Home Economics~ The seventh grade class has been working on t h e i r same aprons, headbands and holders, textile books; have studied knitted underwear and stockings, care of own room and personal hygiene, and have learned how to make the common seamsi buttonholes and sew on buttons and snap fasteners. The ninth grade Home Economics class has made hot breads, various desserts for lunch as custards, puddings, jell. gelatin dishes, frozen desserts, pastry, studied the school lunch, marketing, the kitchin, cuts of meat and their various uses, anY] served the g r a d e teachers to a luncheon. The advanced class is still serving hot lunches, have been finishing their wool dresses, and have commenced a study of dietetics. The third projects have been handed in and practice work recorded. ston will return to their home near Tyro soon. Mr. P e t e r tdok t r e a t m e n t s Neff and Vera MacCallum visited for a cancer on his ear while in Flint. the week-end with relatives in Ponti- Mr. and Mrs. P e t e r also visited relatives in Detroit and Mt. Clemens. ac. William A s h m o r e and son, William, w e r e business callers in Gagetown GREENLEAF. Saturday. Dennis O ' R o u r k e has returned to Roads are bad again after the big W a s h i n g t o n a f t e r visiting his broth- storm of Friday. ers here a few weeks. Geo. Jackson is reported very ill Mr. and Mrs. Levi Helwig and with typhoid fever. daughter, Lenora, of Elkland visited Mh and Mrs. Bert Girmus of Wahat the Claud Martin home Sunday. jamega were visiting here the first of Miss Dorothea Mellendorf re- the week. t u r n e d home Sunday a f t e r visiting Nelson Robinson and sister, Mrs. t h e past three weeks at the h o m e of Bert Girmus, spent Tuesday in Unionh e r sister, Mrs. Levi Helwig, in Elk- ville. land. Roy Rolston was a business caller Gilbert and Ralph Tebeau, Mrs. in Bad Axe Monday. K a t h r y n Fay, Ralph Britt and Mr, Duncan Rolston buzzed wood Monand Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf w e r e business callers in Cass City F r i d a y . day. Several f r o m ' h e r e were Cass City The m a n y friends of Mrs. Reader will be glad to k n o w t h a t she has business callers Saturday and Monr e t u r n e d home f r o m a Cass City hos- day. Archie Livingston was a cMler at pital. H. D. Livingston's Sunday. A large crowd attended the Ladies' No mail Friday on account of Aid chicken d i n n e r at the A r t h u r E1- drifted roads. licott home last Thursday. Proceeds f o r dinner were $13.23. They will m e e t with Mrs. Manley Endersbe this SHABBONA. w e e k Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Mellendorf and "Safety F i r s t " is the title of a sons, Edward and Milton, Miss Helen farce-comedy in three acts which will Muntz, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph MeN be presented at the Shabbona M. E. l e n d o r f and sons, Stanley, Morris and church F r i d a y evening, Jan. 31, and Perry, and d a u g h t e r , Dorothea, spent at Shover Hall on Tuesday evening, Monday e v e n i n g at the F r e d Mellen- Feb. 4. The cast includes young peodorf Home in South Oliver in honor ple of the Shabbona church who will of t h e i r son, Barton's birthday. use the proceeds for the Young People's Building Fund. The following is the cast of characters: PINGREE. Jack Montgomery .......... Alex Wheeler Some old fashioned winter w e a t h e r Jerry Arnold .............Harry Severance Mr. McNutt ................ Clark Auslander d u r i n g January. Elmer Flannel ................ Ivan Hamilton Chicken thieves relieved J o h n Fox Abou Ben Mocha ........Clarence Bullock of a dozen or m o r e of his Plymouth' Mabel Montgomery....Helen Severance Rock h e n s a f e w n i g h t s ago. Virginia Bridger .......... Mabel Wheeler Harold Guilds of Pontiac is doing Mrs. Barrington-Bridger t h e chores for J o h n Fox and attend.................................. Grace W h e e l e r .ing school for t h e winter. Mr. Fox is Zuleika ............................ Gladys LePla m v e r y poor health and h a s been for Mary Ann O'Finnerty some time past. .................................... E s t h e r Caister Go.. ConneI1 has gone to Detroit t o look for employment, but recent reports indicate 'that his chances are K I N G s T O N - N O V E s T A n o t as good as t h e y m i g h t be TOWN L I N E Report has it t h a t Benj. Crocker h a s sold his f a r m to parties in SagiRev. and Mrs. Wilton and three rtaw. children of Mayville were entertained Mr. and Mrs. J o h n Vance was £t the Montague home Sunday. called to Pontiac Monday to attend Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Parrish and t h e funeral of t h e i r g r a n d d a u g h t e r children of Cass City were,visitors at which took place on Tuesday. She is the J . D. F u n k home on Sunday aftert h e little d a u g h t e r of Mr. and Mrs. noon. E a r l Vance. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis H u n t e r and It is reported t h a t Mr. and Mrs. Ste- children spent Tuesday in Detroit. p h e n Peter, who h a v e been v i s i t i n g Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Martin spent relatives in Plymouth, Flint and King- Tuesday with relatives in Yale. . Order for Publication--Final Ad- L I N E ministration A c c o u n t . ~ S t a t e of Mich~ igan, The Probate Court for the County of Tuscola. A t a session of said Court, held at the Probate Office in t h e Village of Car., in said County, on the 16th day of January, A. D. 1930. P r e s e n t : Hon. Guy G. Hill, J u d g e of Probate. In the Matter of the Mr. and Mrs. Wallace L a u r i e were C a r , callers Wednesday. Byron T u r n e r of F l i n t s p e n t the past week a t the F r a n k B u r g e s s and Chas. Seekings homes. Harley Dean of C a r . spent last week at the T. Lounsbury home. Estate of Isabel Brotherton, Deceased. E l m e r Bearss was a C a r . caller on A. J. Wallace, having filed in said Friday. court his final administration account, spen~ ±wonuay in ~ u ~ . Mr. and Mrs. P. F. L i v i n g s t o n and A r t h u r Livingston spent F r i d a y at the E. A. Livingston home. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Simmons were callers a t t h e Rondo home in Caro one day l a s t week. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Seekings and family spent Sunday a t the F r a n k Burgess home. @ m e n t and distribution of the residue of said estate, It Is Ordered, That the 18th day of February, A. D. 1930, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed for ex-' a m i n i n g and allowing said account and h e a r i n g said petition; It Is F u r t h e r Ordered, That public notice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order, for three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing, in the Cass City Chronicle, ELKLAND. a newspaper printed and circulated in said county. GUY G. HILL, J u d g e of Probate. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Profit have named t h e i r young son, Donald Alex- A true copy. Minta E. Hill, ander. R e g i s t r a r of Probate. The Greenleaf L a d i e s ' Aid m e t with 1-24 -3 Mrs. Glenn Profit on Jan. 22. H e n d e r s o n Shiers still continues in Ordt~r for Publication--Final Administration Account,~State of Michpoor health. J a m e s Profit visited at t h e home igan, The Probate Court for the County of Tuscola. of his d a u g h t e r , Mrs. E d g a r WilA t a session of said Court, held at liams, at H a r b o r Beach, on Sunday. the Probate Office in the Village of Mrs. Merle Wilson of E l k t o n has C a r , in said County, on the 14th day been visiting at the h o m e of Mr. and of J a n u a r y A. D. 1930. P r e s e n t : Hon. Guy G. Hill, J u d g e Mrs. J. E. Crawford f o r t h e past of Probate. week. In the Matter of the The Bethel Ladies' Aid m e t with Estate of Ella E. Gabs, Deceased. Mrs. H e r b e r t Maharg on T h u r s d a y . . Merle Gale Young h a v i n g filed in Mrs. Bo S t r e e t e r passed away at said court her final administration acthe home of h e r d a u g h t e r , Mrs. count, and her petition praying for F r a n k Streeter, on Wednesday. Mrs. the allowance thereof and for the asS'treeter has been in v e r y poor health s i g n m e n t and distribution of the residue of said estate, for the p a s t year. It Is Ordered, That the 7th day of The Bethel Nutrition Club m e t F e b r u a r y A. D. 1930, at ten o'clock in with Mrs. J. E. Crawford on Friday. the forenoon, at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed for examini n g and allowing said account and NOVESTA. h e a r i n g said petition; It Is F u r t h e r Ordered, That public Our s l e i g h i n g is n e a r l y gone in t h e r e o f be giver~ by publication of a some places. copy of this order, for three succesMeetings are still going on at the sive weeks previous to said day of hearing, in the Cass City Chronicle, F. W. B. church. a newspaper printed and circulated T r u m a n Allen and f a m i l y returned in said county. to their h o m e in A r m a d a last ThursGUY G. HILL, J u d g e of Probate. day. A true copy. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. P r e s t o n and A. Minta E. Hill, J. Ferguson, all of S nover and Mr. Registrar of Probate. 1-17-3 and Mrs. E b e r Stewart and children were guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Bridges Sunday. horsepower six-cylinder engine Not Sense of Inferiority Diffidence is not due to an inferior complex any oftener than it is due to an objection to the invasion of personal reticence. Some people who fear others who try to become intimate with them are diffident. Richer by Comparison ° A poor man said to a millionaire, "I am a richer man than you are; I have got as much money as I warn and you haven't."--Related by Lord Grey, in Vallodon Papers. Sore Throats and Coughs Real sEstate and Fire and Automobile Insurance. CASS CITY, MICH. R. N. McCULLOUGH AUCTIONEER AND REAL' E S T A T E DEALER CASS CITY. F a r m sales a specialty. Dates may be arranged with Cass City Chronicle, Office at I. Schonmuller's Store, Cass City. T U R N B u L L BROS. Jim Auctioneers Bill Age, experience -Youth, ability We sell anything anywhere. If you don't employ us, we both lose money. Write for dates and instructions to Deckerville, Mich. Phone 56--15. Quickly Relieved by t h i s Safe S e v e r e C o u g h i n g S p e l l s Quickly Prescription Ended Distressing coughs cannot tire out Here's a doctor's prescription t h a t is really t h r o a t insurance. Sore or ir- and weaken you this w i n t e r if y o u ritated t h r o a t s are relieved and t a k e Foley's Honey and Tar Comsoothed almost i n s t a n t l y w i t h the pound.. Each dose carries the curavery first swallow. About 90% of all tive balsamic virtues of pure pine coughs are caused by an irritated Tar, fresh demulcent Honey, with throat; consequently for m o s t coughs other valuable cough healing ingreditoo t h e r e is n o t h i n g b e t t e r t h a n this ents, into direct contact with the irrifamous p r e s c r i p t i o n ~ i t goes direct to t a t e d t h r o a t surfaces, covering t h e m the internal cause. It is put up under with a healing, soothing coating, endthe n a m e Thoxine and is g u a r a n t e e d ing the distressing cough. Its quick to stop coughs and relieve s o r e medicinal action is not hindered by throats in 15 minutes or your money! opiates nor chloroform., Is mildly will be refunded. Singers and speak-] laxative, quickly effective, dependable era find Thoxine v e r y valuable. ] for coughs, tickling throat, hoarseThe r e m a r k a b l e t h i n g a b o u t Thox-] ness, croupy and bronchial coughs, ine is t h a t while it relieves almost in- troublesome n i g h t coughs. Ask for stantly, it contains n o t h i n g harmful, Foley's Honey and Tar. For sale by is pleasant t a s t i n g and safe for the L. I. Wood & Co. and Burke's .Drug whole family. Ask for Thoxine 35c., Store.--Advertisement. 60c, and $1.00 bottles. Sold b y Burke's and all other good d r u g stores.---AdAdvertise it in the Chronicle. vertisement 1 sustained high speeds. Its power Chevrolet Six c a n y o u appreci- flows e v e n l y a n d s m o o t h l y . ate what a wonderful improve- i t is e x t r e m e l y f l e x i b l e i n traffic. ment has famous been made six-cylinder head engine. in its valve-in- In fact--it does everything you could to has great possibly want a motor reserve energy doo Yet it for economical remarkably in its use of gasoline and oil. for s w i f t a c c e l e r a t i o n - - - a n d demonstration. for ----at G r e a t l y Roadster ............ :......... Sport Roadster ............ P h a e t o n ......................... Coach ............................. is it sweeping up the steepest hills-- The The The The And With its capacity i n c r e a s e d t o 50 h o r s e p o w e r , Come Reduced $495 $525 $495 $565 in today for a Prices T h e S e d a n ............................ $ 6 7 5 T h e S e d a n D e l i v e r y ............ $ 5 9 5 The Light Delivery Chassis $365 The 1 ½ Ton Chassis T h e C o u p e .......................... $ 5 6 5 T h e S p o r t C o u p e ................ $ 6 2 5 T h e C l u b S e d a n .................. $ 6 2 5 ........ $ 5 2 0 The 1 ½ Ton Chassis with C a b ................. ................... $ 6 2 5 All prices f. o. b. factory, Flint, Michigan. The N e w Directory. Mermaid Myth P. A. SCHENCK, D. D. S. Dentist. Sport writers occasionally refer to our women swimming champions as Graduate of the University of Mich"mermaids." Except in this sense, o~ igan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., Cass course, there are no mermaids and City, Mich. there never have been any. The legend of their existencel as half human SHELDON B. YOUNG, M. D. and half fish. is believed to be foundCass City, Mich. ed on sailors' observation of sea aniTelephone No. 80. mals like the seal. manatee, dugong, etc. DENTISTRY I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. Complicated Re|at;,as Office over Burke's D r u g Store. We The marriage of a young man to his grandmother is reported from solicit, your patronage when in need Zwolle, Holland. In a second marriage of work. a man married a girl of twenty whose mother was forty-five. By his first I. D. McCOY, M. D. marriage thi~ man had a son, and this Surgery and Roentgenology. son fell in love with and married the Office in Pleasant Home Hospital. mother of his father's second wife. Phone, Office 96; Residence 47. The son thus act only becomes the husband of his step-grandmother, but also stepf~ther to his own father. K N A P P & DOUGLAS Funeral Directors and Licensed EmArtistic Find balmers. Mrs. Knapp, Lady Assistant Rummaging in a disused press, Roy. with license. Night and day calls reDr. Walsh of St. Mary's Roman Cath- ceive prompt attention. City phone. olic church, Inverness. Scotland, came upon a dirty old slab ~f marble, which, A. McPHAIL on being cleaned, was found to be a Funeral Director, beautiful alabaster bas-relief depictLady Assistant. ing our Lord being lashed by four solPhone No. 182. Cass City. diers in the praetorium. The gurator of the Scottish National museur~ states that it belongs to the Fourteenth E. W. K E A T I N G century. N o t urttil y o u drive t h e - n e w CHEVROLET A. B. C. S a l e s SIX Service Cass City, Michigan Associate Dealer A SIX IN Comment THE Chevrolet Sales, Gagetown, Michigan PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR!! @ [] a[lll lit: ,[OH [I e The following personal property of the Peter Doerr Estate will ' be sold at auction i mile east and 5 miles north of Cass City, or miles east and I mile north of Gagetown, on Tuesday, Feb. 4 C o m m e n c i n g at twelve o'clock • 'HORSES 3 year old mare colt 3 year old horse colt 7 year old mare 7 year old horse 16 year old mare 18 year old mare 14 head 2 year old steers, large 4 heifers 2 years old 3 calves six months old I. H . C. 13-hole drill, new Large weeder Hay loader, nearly new Land roller, good Wagon and rack Miller bean puller Mowing machine About one ton of coal 1/~ interest in silo filler Land roller 35 bus. potatoes 4 bus. apples 3 balls of twine 4 2 one-horse cultivators Fanning mill Corn binder 6 chickens Spring cutter Side delivery rake, nearly new Shovels, hoes and forks I. H. C. manure spreader About 7 tons hay 100 ft. hay rope, good D u m p rake, 12 ft. I. H. C. pump engine . Deering binder, 6 ft. cut New Oliver plow, No. 99 2 sets of heavy work harness Single harness Ladder, about 40 ft. Ford coupe, 1924 Wagonload of j e w e l r y 100-ACRE F A R M W I L L B E O F F E R E D FOR S A L E T H E D A Y OF S A L E T E R M s - - A l l sums of $10 and under, Cash; over t h a t amount 9 months' time on good approved endorsed notes at 7 per cent interest. JOHN DOERR, Administrator R. N. McCullough, Auctioneer Cass City State Bank, Clerk i ? C a s s City, M i c h i g a n , Friday, spoke as if they might h a v e been camping on one of the streams the.~ h)ved, with the sky atove and flowers about them. It was her utter acceptance of their fate as a thing of happiness which transformed what wou!d have been a hell for him into a heaven. She had sat in the soft sand at his feet, a few moments before, with her imad pillowed against his knees, and there she had unbraided her hair for him to caress, as she watched and pointed o u t for him the unusual and beautiful pictures that built them::c'.v;~; "n ""~..~ c'}~2;:g~n~ cc,~D; :in£ ..:qi:i~ biing embers of the t~re. @ @ Now she was a Little distance from him, and no sense (,~ dread or fear By James OHver oppressed him as he f01iowed the Curwood r h y t h m i c movements el her slim white fingers braiding her hair again. Wl~t7 ~ervle~ If it were madness which .possessed ((6), 1929, Doubleday Doran & Co., Inc.) t~im it was a beautiful madness, a sense of joyous living where ti~ere should have been despair. At first the Iigi~ting part of him had instincCHAPTER X tively struggled against it, but now he a c c e p t e d it fully, umJl, seeing Carla During the night following Paul's as she was, d e a t h seemed vague and a c c i d e n t and Carla's leap, m e n were far a w a y and the glory of life very active below the gorge• D e r w e n t lost near. T h e y had made no effort to ,no time in racing back to t h e Mistashide f r o m themselves the coming of sini, and the p r e s e n e e of a hundred the end, and Carla (houglit .of it as men below the chasm before midnight a beautiful thing, a little journey. was the r e s u l t ~ E v e r y deviee of e n which they were making gladly togineering science and unlimited reNever had Paul believed so -source which might be e m p l o y e d came gether. surely in ~ God. He had found himwith them. The big pool at the foQl self fond of telling her how he loved of the gorge was a g~are of illuminaher hair more than any other physical l i o n , and men went down the river thing about her, and she had s a i d : with their flaming torches, afoot along its banks and in canoes b e t w e e n them.. "I am going tO spread it out so you may put your face in it when we lie questing for a s h r e d of something which a few hours b e t o r e might have down to sleep." This was the way she si)oke of what was to c o m e - - a s sleep. been a ~art of Paul o~ Carla. To drift off like this, his arms about Lucy-Belle, shocked into sickness. her, Seemed to Paul the fruition of a was t a k e n to her home. But Claire great privilege and joy, and no~ a remained. Men who saw her in the t r i u m p a of fieshly dissolution. He had weird glow of the t~ghts will never told her little stories about his mothbe able to forget the i m a g e of her er and of the time they had spent f a c e as it was p h o t o g r a p h e d upon their memories. Her blue eyes were se sun-filled hours .in the Indian burial place at Brantford, where the proudw i d e open and staring, so filled with est of her forest ancestors were buried. a n u n w a v e r i n g s a p p h i r e flame that at "I Could not u n d e r s t a n d her then, t i m e s D e r w e n t thou;~ht of her as a when she told me how gladly she spirit-g0ddess instead of a w o m a n would give her life, were it not for Could Paul have seen her he would me, to live for a single y e a r the glorihave known that at last she had con q u e r e d her f e a r and r e p u g n a n c e of ous f r e e d o m of Molly Brant," said Paul, " B u t I do--now. In that one the wilderness. She had come with y e a r She knew she would find some the first men before a trail was cut. Her dress a n d shoes w e r e torn, he~ tiling w h i c h would more than make up soft skin bruised and bleeding. Where for all the other y e a r s she might live, just as every hour here with you is t h e w a t e r crashed and t h u n d e r e d loud. more to me than ten thousand back est out from between the c h a s m walls there." s h e stood unafraid, until Derwent As he said these things, and believed twice d r e w her back from the nearand felt them, t h e r e was in him a ness and d a n g e r of it: She resented his appeal to leave the search to will to live which would not utterIy [t was s c a r c e l y others, and Derwent m a d e it only extinguish itself. more t h a n a spark, a smoldering emonce. A white face, w a t c h i n g for its d e a d - - t h a t was what men would re- ber t h a t was bound to die, for his member. Eyes flamingly blue, hun- eyes, his brain, and every faculty of grily s e a r c h i n g the black s t r e a m a s reason which he possessed told him it c a m e from the mountain. A fragile t h e r e was no hope o2 finding a way form that seemed q t e l e s s , as steel. beyond the walls which shut them A woman, a n d yet more t h a n w o m a n - - in. A few minute~ before, when Carla had sat at his knees, with his fingers an u n f o r g e t t a b l e spirit, a vision that was. like tragic music, a l w a y s to be re- %eling the w a r m t h and sweetness of her hair, this spark had leaped into membered. It still remained as Carla She did not give up with the first flame. h o u r s of evening, but Continued to yielded at last to ~is demand, and watch t h r o u g h the night. She did not gave herself to the bed he had mad~ f o r her, with his cpat for her pillow. move from the foot of the gorge and ... "It s e e m s almost a sin to sleep," the pool, as if she w e r e . s q r e t h a t w h a t e v e r c a m e to her would be found she s a i d ; and if slumber were n e a r , there. D e r w e n t was f r e q u e n t l y with or even the necessity for it, he could her, and tried to talk, but her lips find no shadow of it In her face. She f r a m e d few words. N o t until day might have risen from her bed an c a m e again did s o m e t h i n g give way in hour ago, so freshly clear and lovely her, and hopelessness t a k e its piace. w e r e her eyes, so deep their lustrous T h e n lie took her home to Lucy-Belle. c o n t e n t and happiness when s h e "I waited too long," she said to him, looked a t him. Yet, a f t e r a little, her lashes drooped as if to veil the love a n d a f t e r w a r d , back with the searchbehind them, and lay tn velvet darking men, he w o n d e r e d w h a t she had ness a g a i n s t the whiteness of her meant. cheeks. For a while Paul sat close T h e s e s e a r e h e r s , eould they nave ~ looked t h r o u g h the rock, would have and w a t c h e d her, and with each breath s e e n a fire. It was t h e second night the flame in him grew stronger, t h e that something happen, for Paul a n d Carla in a place w h e r e d e m a n d ;night and day w e r e the same. Paut t h r o u g h force o f God m man, to break had found drifts of wood along the down t h e walls of death which ene d g e of t h e sand, mixed with pitchy v i r o n e d her. Alone, with C a r l a ' s unconscious pine, and a little s p o t in t h e i r world form lending faith and inspiration to w a s illumined by light. In the fire glow sat Carla, combing his thought, he f i x e d his attention, as h e r long, silky hair with her fingers. a dozen times before, on the s m o k e ' P a u l w a t c h e d her as she s m o o t h e d which rose from the burning wood. a n d braided the tresses, employing a s W h e r e did it go? great c a r e as though she w e r e in her H o u r s ago he had asked himself this b e d r o o m a t home. T h i s was t h e third question, and until he had discovered time she had given it such a t t e n t i o n a thin f o g of s m o k e settling over t h e in t h e i r thirty-six h o u r s of entomb- water, and d r i f t i n g away with the ment. At o t h e r t i m e s he had held a rush of it, his blood had run swiftly l i g h t for h e r at t h e e d g e of t h e w a t e r with a thrill of hope. And now, in while she bathed h e r f a c e and han~ds, spite of the fact t h a t he knew w h e r e and once she had said to h i m : "It it went, the question remained, as if is wonderful water, almost as soft as a voice inside his head had been t r a i n e d to ask it, parrot-like, ~and could not be m a d e to stop. He a n d Carla had collected a pile of pitcliwood. As they ha'd found each stick they h a d acclaimed it a t r e a s u r e discovered, until the thrill of a gaine had b e c o m e part of their endeavor. He chose s stick heavily w e i g h t e d with pitch and lighted the end of it in the fire. Then he walked off into the gloom where he and (larla had, gone mahy times before. It was like following the inside of a great rock d r u m which was flat on one side --flat w h e r e the water thundered and raced ~hrough the mountain. When his torch burned slmrt he ret u r n e d for another. Carla had not moved in her sleep, and he buried himselI in blackness again, folh)wing the rock so closely that his body t o u c h e d it, trying at every step to pierce with his vision a little f a r t h e r into the stygian pit over his h e a d It was into this 0it tfmt the smoke went, mounting in drifting spirals, Hke s m o k e in an In(lian lepee. Up there. he thought, it was taken by a slowly d r a g g i n g cm'ren! of mr made by the suction of the stream, and descended t o exit from t h e mountain with it T h e r e was only one break in the eir in the F i r e Glow Sat C a r l a , C o m b i n g c u l a r ,wall of gruesomely black and H e r Long, S i l k y H a i r W i t h Her w a t e r - w o r n rock, against w h i e ~ . I n Fingers. ..... ".i ii~ .... : a g e s past, a subterriinean flo-d had i " that which cpmes w i t h r ~LII. S h e w a s h e d and roared. Thts w a s w h e r e a s m a l l s e c t i o n o_f_~L h_ad g ~ e n w a y The Crippled Lady Peribonka / C A S S CITY CHRONICLE J a n u a r y 31, 1 9 3 0 . f-rom Overhead and had piled up mass of broken s t o n e which he had climbed, with Carla w a t c h i n g from below. H e r e the s m o k e f r o m his torch did not go u p w a r d but settled about his head and d i s a p p e a r e d toward the vent in the m o u n t a i n through which the r i v e r rushed with g r e a t force. He went to this outlet. It was a hole which his eyes w e r e unable to m e a s u r e , choked t o within a foot of its upper j a w by a s e e t h i n g flood of water, and out of w h i c h - though the space for sound w a s small his blood was chilled as he listened to it. Alone, he would have plunged into this. To die fighting, pitting his small s t r e n g t h a g a i n s t ~ill the f o r c e s which might oppose him, was the urge which was refusing to subdue itself within him. EIe flung out his oflaming torch and saw it swallowed in an instant. Like t h a t he would have gone if Carla had not •been t h e r e to gb with him. He turned back to the fire a n d put on a fresh stick of resinous wood before he sat in the sand n e a r e n o u g h to Carla to touch her with his hand. He wondered if f e a r had begun to seize upon him as he looked at ber unconscious f o r m , foreseeing the torment of impending hours when madness would be for him alone. Unless they died together, he must outlive (~arla--to save her from a r e a l i z a t i o n of that which he, in his g r e a t e r ~trength. should bear. To be c o n t i n u e d . - COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS P r o c e e d i n g s of Council m e e t i n g held A u g . 19th, 1929. M e e t i n g called to o r d e r by P r e s i d e n t West, Trustees present w e r e : Bailey, T a y l o r , Auten and A t w e l l . The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. T h e f o l l o w i n g bills w e r e p r e s e n t e d : M a y & D o u g l a s ............................ $ 8.00 C. M. W a l l a c e .............................. 62.75 N. Bigelow & Sons ...................... 160.27 Ed. D r o u i l l a r d .............................. 28.00 J. G r e e n l e a f .................................. 14.00 J. Balkwell .................................... 3.50 G. A c k e r m a n ................................ 31.60 Geo. B u r t ...................................... 4,50 A l f r e d W e s t .................................. 24.59 F r e d B r o w n ............ ]..................... 20.(;5 Ed. F r i t z ...................................... 20.65 Moved b y A u t e n a n d s e c o n d e d b y T a y l o r t h a t t h e bills be a l l o w e d a n d orders drawn for the several amounts. Carried. Moved b y A u t e n , s e c o n d e d b y T a y lor t h a t t h e p u r c h a s i n g of g r a v e l f o r t h e school r o a d s a n d p l a y g r o u n d s be r e f e r r e d to t h e S t r e e t and S i d e w a l k C o m m i t t e e w i t h p o w e r to act. C a r r i e d . Moved b y A u t e n , s e c o n d e d b y T a y lor t h a t t h e meeting" a d j o u r m C a r r i e d . P r o c e e d i n g s o f Council m e e t i n g h e l d Sept. 16th, 1929. M e e t i n g / called t o order by President West. Trustees p r e s e n t w e r e B a i l e y , Atwell, S a n d h a m , Mann. T h e m i n u t e s of t h e p r e v i o u s m e e t ing" w e r e r e a d a n d a p p r o v e d . T h e f o l l o w i n g bills w e r e p r e s e n t e d : R. A f a r , s r ................................. $19.20 Geo. B u r r .................................... 22.00 J. M a l l o r y .................................... 33.00 R. A f a r , .Jr.,, .............................. 27.23 W. H a r m o n ................................ 22.75 R. F l e e n o r ................................... 12.25 G. A e k e r m a n .............................. 46.00 E. D r o w i l l a r d .............................. 27.50 J. G r e e n l e a f ................................ 32.38 C. U. B r o w n ................................ 105.00 J. Balkwell .................................. 8.40 B. J. D a i l e y ...... ]......................... 17.00 T. K e e n o y .................................... 40.00 ' Mich. E l e c t r i c P o w e r ................ 226.70 E. D r o w i l l a r d .............................. 29.75 R. A f a r , s r ................................. 10.31 J. McLellan ................................ 19.95 W. H a r m o n ................................ 13.30 J. M a l l o r y .................................. 35.48 R. A f a r , J r ................................. 39.60 G. W e s t ........................................ 33.75 J. B o h n s a c k ................................ 314.92 T. M u r p h y , ............................... 19.25 G. A c k e r m a n .............................. 47.00 T. K e e n o y ..................................... 90 G. B u r r ........................................ 24,75 J. S. H a g g e r t y .50 C. C. Sand a n d G r a v e l ................ 283.28 C. C. F i r e m e n ..] ......................... 50.00 W. H. Tel. Co. . 12.60 C. C. G r a i n 117.00 J. G r e e n l e a f ................................ 26.25 Moved b y M a n n s e c o n d e d b y A t w e t l t h a t the bills be a l l o w e d a n d o r d e r s drawn for the several amounts. Carried. Moved b y S a n d h a m s e c o n d e d b y A t w e l l t h a t t h e C l e r k be a u t h o r i z e d to i s s u e a n o r d e r to r e f u n d t h e W. R. K a i s e r t a x e s as a s s e s s e d on t h e t a x roll. Carried. Moved b y A t w e l l s e c o n d e d b y S a n d h a m that the m e e t i n g adjourn. Carried. P r o c e e d i n g s of Council m e e t i n g h e l d Oct. 21st, 1929. ' M e e t i n g called to o r d e r b y P r e s i d e n t West. T r u s t e e s p r e s e n t w e r e : Taylor, Sandham, Mann, Auten and Bailey. 1 The minutes of the previous m e e t ing were read and approved. T h e f o l l o w i n g bills w e r e p r e s e n t e d : G. A c k e r m a n ................................ $48.00 C. U. B r o w n .............................. *@6.10 C. C. Sand & Gravel .................... 100.10 T. M u r p h y ................ ]................. 42.00 J. G r e e n l e a f ................................ 28.00 G. B u r r .: ........ :............................. 16.50 R. A f a r , j r ................................. 37.13 J. M a l l o r y .................................... 10.75 I. W . Hall ............................ :.-..... 550.75 Mich. E l e c t r i c P o w e r Co ........... 217.79 , S t a n d a r d Oil Co ...... ........ ....:: ..... 24.06 Bigelow & Sons ........................... 20.16 B. J. D a i l e y ................................ 17.00 R. G a l l a g h e r ................................ 7.50 F . M c C o m b .................................. 16.00 G. W e s t a n d Son ........................ 3.75 K e n d a l l v i l l e B r o o m Co .............. ~2.67 G. A. Strittler .......... :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 G. A. Striffler .............................. 5.25 T. M u r p h y .................................. 28.00 J. G r e e n l e a f ................................ 24.50 G. A c k e r m a n .............................. 69.00 C. C. S a n d a n d Gravel .............. 41.94 F, P r o d u c e Co ............................. 36.71 B. J. D a i l e y ........................... :..... 17.00 J. B a l k w e l l .................................. 78.00 Moved b y R. T a y l o r seconded b y A u t e n t h a t t h e bills as p r e s e n t e d be Moved by M a n n , seconded by A u t e n t h a t t h e S t r e e t and S i d e w a l k Comm i t t e e be a u t h o r i z e d to p u r c h a s e two r u b b e r " s t o p " s i g n s to be placed on h{[ain S t r e e t a t t h e i n t e r s e c t i o n of S e e g e r St. Y e a s ~ a l l . N a y s - - n o n e . Moved b y A u t e n seconded b y B a i l e y t h a t Supt. B r o w n be a u t h o r i z e d to a d j u s t t h e w a t e r bill w i t h R i c k e r & K r a h l i n g n o t to exceed $15.00. Carried. Moved b y T a y l o r , seconded b y Sandham that the meeting adjourn. PAGE SEVEN f o r t h e s u m of m o n e y so t h o u g h t f u l l y C. C. G r a i n Co ..................... ]..... p r o v i d e d i n h e r will f o r t h e e s t a b - G . A c k e r m a n .............................. t i s h m e n t o f a p e r m a n e n t r e s t r o o m W a l t e r HaiTnon .......................... and t h a t a copy of this r e s o l u t i o n be R o y V a n c e .................................. published f o r t h r e e s u c c e s s i v e w e e k s Mich. E l e c t r i c P o w e r Co ........... in t h e Cass City Chronicle." C a r r i e d . T. K e e n o y ..................................... Moved b y M a n n s e c o n d e d b y A u t e n B i g e l o w & Sons .......................... t h a t t h e P r e s i d e n t a p p o i n t a c o m m i t - iS. T. & H. Oil Co ....................... tee to w o r k in c o n j u n c t i o n w i t h h i m - r j . B o h n s a c k ................................ s e l f to p u r c h a s e a f u r n a c e s u i t a b l e to iT. K e e n o y .................. L................. h e a t t h e r e s t room a n d fire hall. C a r - } T . M u r p h y ................ ;................. ried. ]Geo. A c k e r m a n ........................ ~. P r e s i d e n t W e s t a p p o i n t e d A u t e n , I Da've M c C o m b ............................ B a i l e y a n d T a y l o r to a c t on t h i s c o m - G . A. T i n d a l e .............................. !m i l l e t . Rtnnrlnrd Tvnmo Ca Carried. 71.33 e n s u i n g y e a r . Moved b y B a i l e y s e c o n d e d b y T a y 35.40 1.75 l o r t h a t t h e m e e t i n g a d j o u r n , C a r r i e d . 4.20 203.08 40.00 6.15 13.06 194.00 42.10 2.80 You don't have to suffer 28.80 with headaches when you 28.50 read or sew. That is 37.19 i l e y t h a t t h e m e e t i n g a d j o u r n . C a r r i e d . W. H a r m o n .................................. C. M. W A L L A C E . i S t a n d a r d Oil Co ......................... P r o c e e d i n g s of Council m e e t i n g held Nov. 18th, 1929. Meeting" called to o r d e r b y P r e s i dent West. Trustees present were Bailey, M a n n , T a y l o r , S a n d h a m and Auten. T h e m i n u t e s of t h e previous m e e t i n g w e r e r e a d a n d approved. T h e f o l l o w i n g bills w e r e p r e s e n t e d : G. A e k e r m a n .............................. $42.00 J. B a l k w e l l .................................. 23.40 C. U. B r o w n ................................ 105.55 C. C. S t a t e B a n k ........................ 209.46 Bigelow, E l l i o t t , ete ................. 12.00 L. Wood ........................................ 1.65 G. A c k e r m a n .............................. 45.00 T. M u r p h y .................................. 15.05 F. P r o d u c e Co ............................. 3.22 T. K e e n o y .................................... 40.00 B. a. D a i l e y ................................ 22.00 E l l k a n d Oil Co ........................... 38.60 F. P r o d u c e .................................. 30.81 S t a n d a r d Oil Co ......................... 1.26 C. C. Sand & G r a v e l ..: ............... 55.00 M i c h i g a n V a l v e Co ..................... 11.89 Moved b y M a n n seconded b y T a y lor t h a t t h e bills be allowed a n d orders d r a w n f o r t h e s e v e r a l a m o u n t s . Carried. Moved b y A u t e n seconded b y Sandh a m t h a t t h e f o l l o w i n g r e s o l u t i o n be a d o p t e d ~ " R e s o l v e d that a n e x p r e s s i o n of g r a t i t u d e be paid to t h e m e r e o r y of Mrs. F r a n c i s E. P i n n e y b y the Council of t h e Village of Cass City MAKE READING A PLEASURE 15.00 2.80 15.65 t M o v e d b y T a y l o r s e c o n d e d bY A t P r o c e e d i n g s of Council m e e t i n g held i well t h a t t h e b i l l s be a l l o w e d a n d orDec. 16th, 1929. I d e r s d r a w n on t h e t r e a s u r e r f o r t h e Council m e e t i n g ealled to o r d e r by i, s e y e r a l a m o u n t s . C a r r i e d . President West. Trustees present I w e r e : T a y l o r , Bailey, A t w e l l , S a n d - ! Moved by Bailey seconded by Sandh a m t h a t t h e C l e r k a n d P r e s i d e n t be h a m and Mann. l a u t h o r i z e d to p u r c h a s e t w o h u n d r e d T h e m i n u t e s of t h e p r e v i o u s m e e t - t f e e t o f fire hose. C a r r i e d . i n g w e r e r e a d and a p p r o v e d . , Moved by Taylor seconded by AtT h e f o l l o w i n g bills w e r e p r e s e n t e d : wbll t h a t t h e V i l l a g e c a u c u s be held W o l v e r i n e T e l e p h o n e Co ......... 12.00 F e b . 13th, 1930, a t 7:30 p. m. f o r t h e T. K e e n o y .................................... 40.00 p u r p o s e of n o m i n a t i n g officers f o r t h e B. J. D a i l e y ................................ 22.00 M. Orr, S e c ' y .............................. 50.00 G. A c k e r m a n ............................... 28.00 Mich. V a l v e & F o u n d r y ............ 7.00 C. U. B r o w n ................................ 105.99 T. M u r p h y .................................. 6.30 G. A c k e r m a n .............................. 17.60 G. B u r r ........................................ 7.15 B i g e l o w & Sons ........................ 10.40 Mich. E l e c t r i c P o w e r ................ 200.66 Moved b y Atwell, seconded b y M a n n t h a t t h e bills be allowed a n d o r d e r s d r a w n on t h e t r e a s u r e r f o r t h e several a m o u n t s ° Carried. Moved b y Sandh a m , seconded b y T a y l o r t h a t t h e m e e t i n g a d j o u r n . Carried. simply nature's way of letting you. k n o w your eyes are overworked. A pair of correct fitting glasses will make reading, writing or sewing more pleasant. Come in today for an examination. A. H. HIGGLNS Jeweler and Optometrist. Lamb Trouble Chains 4%¢,0/$ MADI N P r o c e e d i n g s of Council meeting held J a n u a r y 20th, 1930. M e e t i n g called to o i l i e r b y P r e s i dent West. Trustees present were: AtwelI, S a n d h a m , B a i l e y a n d T a y l o r . The minutes of the previous meeting w e r e r e a d and a p p r o v e d . The following bills were presented: C. U. B r o w n .............................. $105.60 l£NOX tho h o a r [ o / 7 n o pHb/ie &#/dhtg~de]~rZmozt do ~ In ~n-town d/strict nb~rWl •P g o ~ f l n d / ' h O ~ g ~ g , ~Of~ ~W¢2~/rO~W g,O~9nO/5"(4. Of Y ~ g . R . L A M B CO., 441 M i c h i g a n Ave., B r o o l d y ~ hND UPWgRB ~,~o~,~.~~,~~ Basketball A u n i t C h a i n t h a t c a n be p u t on in a m o m e n t , a n y w h e r e , e v e n in t h e d e e p e s t m u d or snow. T h e y a n c h o r t o t h e spoke, a r e a d j u s t a b l e a n d c a s e - h a r d ened. A w o m a n can p u t t h e m on, a n d t h e y never pound the f e n d e r . W h y drive chains so m u c h w h e n not needed ? If your dealer does not handle t h e m w r i t e us direct. Micho Sold in Cass C i t y b y Elkland Gas & Oil Co. Tonight January 31 In lhe Worlg Gagetown Lady W a s Told She Must Have Operation - - New VS. Medicine Scores Complete Victory. Cass Ci ty H. S. " I n m y e s t i m a t i o n t h e r e i s no m e d icine in t h e w o r l d like K o n j o l a , " said Mrs. F r a n k L e t s o n , 130 S o u t h T h i r d s t r e e t , S a g i n a w . " F o r a long t i m e I ./. at High School Gym at Cass City I I I • NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNSgNINNNNNNNN : ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~ ~4 ~ iii~i~i~i!}!!~ii?i ; ......................... ~ N ~ : : i : i : i............ : ! : ? : iii~iii' ;i~:': ~~..,~i °° N O T I C E N N N M r s . F r a n k Letso.n.- @ N s u f f e r e d t e r r i b l y f r o m i n d i g e s t i o n and e v e n t u a l l y m y h e a r t w a s affected. T h e n o t h e r t r o u b l e s developed, a n d I w a s told t h a t I would h a v e to u n d e r go a n o p e r a t i o n . I suffered such a g o n y t h a t I h a d to w a l k t h e floor. I d r e a d ed t h e o p e r a t i o n and d e t e r m i n e d to k e e p on t a k i n g K o n j o l a . I• " T h i s m e d i c i n e h a d g r e a t l y relieved'my indigestion and I had a w o r l d of f a i t h in it. Well, one day, a f t e r I h a d s u f f e r e d an u n u s u a l l y bad a t t a c k of pain, I noticed a c h a n g e . I t s e e m e d to be t h e t u r n i n g point, a n d t h e r e a f t e r I i m p r o v e d rapidly. D a y b y i d a y I g o t b e t t e r , and t o d a y I a m not l o n l y b l e s s e d w i t h fine d i g e s t i o n b u t t h e o t h e r t r o u b l e h a s d i s a p p e a r e d . Is ii a n y w o n d e r t h a t I p r a i s e K o n j o l a ? " K o n j o l a is sold in Cass C i t y a t B u r k e ' s D r u g S t o r e and b y all t h e b e s t d r u g g i s t s i n all t o w n s t h r o u g h o u t this e n t i r e s e c t i o n . ~ A d v e r t i s e m e n t . G L Y C E R I N MIX R E M O V E S CAUSE OF STOMACH GAS Simple g l y c e r i n , b u c k t h o r n b a r k , saline, etc., a s m i x e d in A d l e r i k a , a c t s on B O T H u p p e r and l o w e r bowel, r e m o v i n g poisons y o u never t h o u g h f were there and which caused g a s a n d o t h e r s t o m a c h trouble. J u s t O N E s p o o n f u l relieves ~ GAS, sour s t o m a c h , sick h e a d a c h e and c o n s t i p a tion. D o n ' t t a k e m e d i c i n e w h i c h cleans only P A R T of bowels, b u t let Adl~rik a g i v e y o u a R E A L c l e a n i n g and see h o w good y o u feel! I t will surprise you! Burke's D r u g Store.--Advertisement 6 I N N TO I NNNNNNNNNNN NI N N THE °o iN ° i I PUBLIC iN N °° N We wish to notify all of our customers who are owing us iN NI on account, that b e g i n n i n g Monday, February 3, we will start a ~I collection campaign and continue until all accounts are settled, iN either by cash or a bankable note. We have e x t e n d e d to our patrons a very liberal time credit, N N and now that tax time is over a n d we will soon be entering into @ iN N iN N1 iN N iN our spring business, we m u s t reduce our accounts receivable as N much as possible during the n e x t 30 days. So please be ready N1 N when our collector calls on you for we cannot wait longer. We pay our bills, so why not you? You will all receive a notice of your iN N account, and please ~co-operate with us and save us the expense of N iN calling upon you if possible. N We will give you two per c e n t discount on all accounts paid iN N iN N iN N N before we call upon you at your house. • iN N Truly Yours, N Ig N iN NI N oNN cY; " • C ass Ci[y Oil and C a s Co. N N NINNNNINNINNINININNNNINNININNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN " @ N N rAthE EIGHT I ~ Arthur / " '~ 'i CASS Jersey Appeals to Girl or Short, Stou~ Woman Brisbane Everybody Happy~ It's Big, and Little • tl lPP[tlll!llO] !11 Ill[ N[iOitiiORIIO iOWltt{l Fit at 50? Why Not at 100? Lindbergh ~Glldes a Little Los Angeles.--The national business ~urvey conference of the United States Chamber of Commerce tells President ~ o o v e r business h a s returned to near esting Exchanges I f Lava Takes L o n g to Coo| Small lava s t r e a m s no more than 15 or 20 feet tbicl¢ are said to require t ~ a year to coal. Jersey is an important material this season both in popularity and style appeal, says the Woman's Home Corn-' panion. Just as important is the vogue for the one-pieced belted dress. W h e n you put the two together you have the beg,nnin~ of a rea~ Paris model. Place the belt at the t p p of the hips and be sure that the skirt ia amply full and considerably longer than ~ast year's, • Then choose two tones of this w i n t e r ' s brown or green or red, use the d a r k e r f o r a deep V in the bodice and for turn-up cuffs, and your Paris dress is complete. A dress which appeals to t h e youn~ girl and which is exeellen~ in line for the short, stout woman, Next, to realize that the world, this country especially, is big, explore the Gloves That Harmonize map on your railroad time table, and I Frock Are look for Tucson, Ariz. You find it a I The Muggy Rouff glove, lhe Worth couple of inches away from Los An- ! glove, the J a n e Regny glove--all these geles, and decide to drive there some a r e eloquent testimonials to the imafternoon to investigate the much portance of accessories in the mode, praised climate. and how far we have progressed since You discover that the distance is the days when designers could afford 700 miles, and decide to take a ti~ain to be concerned with the matter of t h a t makes the trip in a night. frocks alone, observes a fashion w r i t e r in the New York T i m e s . InCalifornia has a "Fit at Fifty" club, -. which politely sends you an honorary creasing formality means more i n t e r membership and says it is indorsed by est in gloves. Where one pair would a n s w e r before, the well-dressed womt h e governor of the state. California and every other state an must now have ha.~lf a dozen, and ~hould have a "Fit at One Hundred" t h e s e in colors, types and fabrics to club. In thts country, fifty should be complement the costume with which they are worn. It is in recognition of ttmse facts only the beginning of fitness and hard t h a t the leading couturiers now prework. sent their own gloves, showing details At San Diego Lindbergh borro@ed characteristic of present-day fashions. With the bridge, matinee or d i n n e r "glider" airplane, with no engine. I t e asked a few questions, went up frock the classic pull-on in suede or alone, flew for half an hour, 500 feet kidskin continues the favored type. ~p, came do/vn and applied for a first- Suede has always appealed to women, class glider pilot license. He got it. but glare kid is rapidly gaining in ~ h e r e is only one Lindbergh, but t h e r e p o p u l a r i t y ~ p e r h a p s because it is far a r e a million young Americans like more practical, but also because it is him. They wiI1 keep aviation going. being presented in new designs and lovely colorings. T h e s e pull-on gloves The distressing accident to a Mad- are much longer than those of last dux airplane returning f r o m the Mexi- season, for the long glove has definitecan horse races at Agua Caliente is ly arrived. Some show the three-butpart of the price of progress. It ton fastening, while others are buttonm e a n s one of the first improvements l e s s ~ t h e latter being newer. Delicate should be to make a plane taking fire, shades of beige are much w o r n , beige with either a gray or a pinky cast, due to collision, impossible. W h e n railroading s t a r t e d in France, according to the color of the frock and an accident between Paris and and the other accessories. Black suede Yersailles killed many, it was thought gloves have enjoyed m, u n p r e c e d e n t e d t h a t Frenchmen would ride no more. popularity, especially with the black A troupe of actors, hired, sat in trains frock. at the wir~dows smiling pretending to White and off-white gloves have like it. Railroading was not aban- also returned to vogue for formal doned. Flying will increase e v e r y afternoon wear, for they are a t r u e year, and become safer than rail or expression of the fashion for elemotor travel. gance. The n e w paie creamy gardenia tint in a six-button glove of This nation needs 250,000,000 more g l a r e kidskin a d d s the final touch of ~eople to eat the food and use the perfection to the ensemble of black automobiles, clothing, houses, and with lavish furs. Gardenia, by the radio sets the country could produce. way, is one of the shades much talked Some day 500,000,000 Americans w i l l of for Southern resort wear. live on the hill tops and mountain tops, and fly down to business or t,~ Waistline Should Not Be work on plains and in valleys. With What ships are to the Clyde, p~cktug houses to Chicago, big banks to New York and fat goose livers to Ntrassburg, moving• pictures are to this Hollywood land. T h e two biggest bilIboards read "Garbo Talks." They don't even menlion the lady's first name, which is Greta. And "At last the voice of voices, Norma Talmadge." Two l a d i e s - - B e r n h a r d t and Dus~e---, might dispute that, but they are d e a d ; N o r m a Talmadg I m u c h alive, l for Chroni. The People's Oil and Gas Co. at P i g e o n has, t h r o u g h its b o a r d o f di- News to worry grain merchants in E u r o p e and interest American farmers : Russia's Soviet s t e a m e r P,-o(etariat arrives in the Baltic with 2,500 tons of grain offered by the "Soviet trade legation" at prices 25 to 35 cents a bushel below world market prices. t Inter- ~..0..~'.0.*@*.0,o0,.~**0..~..0..0..0,.~,.0.,0.,@..@.*0..~,.0.,@,,0,,~,~ Several million Americans, out of work, would enjoy a little stimulation if it got them a job. It is, however, a comfort to know that general busL ~ess, o~ which all jobs depend, is dofrog wetl and that members of na~ionM 'commissions feel o p t i m i s t i c To know that the world Is small, come to the edge of the Pacific and talk to New York friends as easily as though they were in the same room. Or call London, and talk, unconscious e f the fact that your voice, transformed into an electric impulse, flashes across the Atlantic ocean in less than a sixteenth of a second, through the ether. from Stylish Too High; Not Too Tight It is i m p o r t a n t to know a few f u n d a m e n t a l facts before one adopts the waistline in present-fashion. Overexaggeration is easily possible and is not in good taste. Designers have not revived the hour glass silhouette nor do they seem to evidence any intention to do so. T h e waistline ~hould not be placed too high nor should it be confined too tightly. The correct interpretation o f ' t h i s new phase of the mode is a conservative one. Huhter's_ Green Is Used In 1933 Chicago will celebrate in~t grand style the "Century of Progress." [ in Afternoon Ensembles And there is much to celebrate. I H u n t e r ' s green is often mentioned Rufus C. Dawes, brother of our am- 1 this season and it has been used sucbassador to England, president of the cessfully for the fornml afternoon onChicago celebration, s a y s : "Man is semble. Mixed green tones are to be becoming smarter all the time, and be- found in tweeds for sports and infercause of science the world is a much real daytime w e a r and jade, or somebetter place than ever before." i times a greenish blue of the turquoise Most gratifying is the fact that man sort is combined with black or used is becoming less brutal all the time. alone for evening gowns. Now If you want to find m u r d e r in the n a m e of religion, the vilest beliefs or The N e w N e c k w e a r superstitions, you go into the gutters Many of the new silks resemble a f ignorance. You no longer find such things on the throne or in lawmaking woolen fabrics in both w e a v e and color. It is predicted that this innovabodies. tion will bring forth new enthusiasm f o r dainty cuffs and collars. Many Airplane travel rates drop rapidly. n e c k w e a r displays include entire colYou fly from Los Angeles t o San Franlars made of real lace as well as doctsco, 400 air miles, returning in a mestic laces. Batiste is also offering railway sleeper, for $38 round trip. a refreshing note in n e c k w e a r circles. (~), 1950, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.) dividend as on Jan. 1. This is the l a r g e s t s e m i - a n n u a l dividend ever paid by t h e c o m p a n y and m a k e s a n i n e t e e n p e r cent dividend f o r the y e a r 1929. The Stone-Kahn Co. s t o r e at P i g e o n w a s d o s e d last S a t u r d a y evening" and the balance of t h e stock was moved to Detroit the first Of the week. This building which was erected in 1898 up until two years ago housed the Hirshberg store which was Pigeon's l e a d i n g t r a d i n g c e n t e r and one of the b e s t k n o w n m e r c a n t i l e estab!ishments in H u r o n county. i G r e a t L a k e s F o u n d r y Sand Co. has b o u g h t 140 a c r e s of land on section ~6, Juniata township, of James K i r k , and wilt c o m m e n c e to m i n e s a n d f o r s h i p m e n t in t h e s p r i n g ' . The c o m p a n y owns sand pits in V a s s a r t o w n s h i p near Juniata station where they have carried on e x t e n s i v e o p e r a t i o n s f o r several y e a r s . The sand is s h i p p e d to f o u n d r i e s w h e r e it is used in the m a n u f a c t u r e of castings. A n e w firm to be k n o w n as J. W. L e i p p r a n d t & Son have p u r c h a s e d the M c L e a n h a r d w a r e stock a t P i g e o n f r o m W a l t e r M c L e a n and t h e n e w firm will t a k e possession on M a r c h 1st. The b u s i n e s s wilt be c o n t i n u e d in the M c L e a n building. The n e w firm will consist of J. W. L e i p p r a n d t and his son, L e o n a r d . John W. Sims, f o r m e r Tuscola c o u n t y a g r i c u l t u r a l a g e n t , h a s accepted a r e s p o n s i b l e Position w i t h a national fertilizer company with h e a d q u a r t e r s a t N e w A l b a n y , Ind. In 1927 Mr. Sims w e n t to t h e soils dep a r t m e n t of M i c h i g a n S t a t e College, and since t h e n h a s visited m a n y sections of M i c h i g a n as e x t e n s i o n specialist, h e l p i n ~ m a n y f a r m e r s in problems of b u i l d i n g up soils. F r o m 1922 to 1'927 Mr. Sims filled t h e position of c o u n t y a g e n t i n Tuscola county. Cuss City, M i c h i g a n , F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 31, 1930. S I X CYLINDER. . . . . . cle Readers. need for unusual stimulation. Communist Russia promis(:s heavy exports of rye, oats, barley, fodder. ~tnd will, if necessary, cut prices ruthles~ty. Russia's government really interests itself in farmers, buying tractor's for them by the thousands, experimenting Intelligently with wholesale tarming, destined to solve the farm production problem as wholesale manufacturing has solved automobile produeHon. Selected CHRONICLE w a s a r r e s t e d on an a r s o n c h a r g e a n d others a r e b e i n g held c h a r g e d w i t h c a u s i n g t h e p a c k i n g h o u s e fire. I SENTENCES Almost Carefully CITY : g . . ~ _ & B y DR. JOHN W. H O L L A N D An ounce of good action is worth a ton of sickly sentiment. Be a hard master to your own soul; so~t athletes win no races. T h e excuse w!~ich we offer for not doing our duty is always a trifle, Janet Gay~or i~otlon ~ i c t a r e ~%c;ress. ~I~ ~ W~;C ~ ~O r(:~501~ 0~iWS ITi~?p~. Judge not, t h a t ye g ory to forget unpleasant be not j u d g e d . ~ S t , g ] things. M a t t h e w 7: 1, ~ ~ T h e hills of human temptation ? ~ are best traveled on a nonBut seek y e first ?~ ~ skid conscience. the kingdom of God, g ~ Children are sent to adult huand YIis r i g h t e o u s - ~ ~ man beings to keep them hess ; a n d all these things shall " ; ~ from hecoming inhuman. be a d d e d unto y o u . ~ S t . ~ l a t t h e w ~ ! ~ (©. 1929. Western Newspaper Union.) 6:33. g " ~ g F O R S A L E - - T w o R e g i s t e r e d G u e r n - F O R S A L E ~ S o m e of t h o s e fine P e r sey bull calves, a b o u t e i g h t w e e k s c h e r o n w o r k ' h o r s e s ; also some il old; at f a r m , one mile w e s t of S a n R e g i s t e r e d P e r c h e r o n brood m a r e s dusky. L e o n a r d H a s s l e r , S a n d u s k y . I in foal, a n d some y o u n g stallions l| Phone 141-Rll. 1-31-2p ] at t h e r i g h t price. E. A. Rqhlfs, l A k r o n , Mich. 1-31-2p G A G E T O W N has d e f e a t e d C a r e a n d l V a s s a r in t h e p a s t but n e v e r Cass t T H E L A D I E S ' A I D of t h e C h u r c h of City. Can t h e y add C. C. H. S. to [ C h r i s t of N o v e s t a will serve dint h e i r s t r i n g of s c a l p s ? n e r a t t h e c h u r c h at t w e l v e o'clock .~ T h u r s d a y , F e b . 6. u ~ POULTRY BOUGHT every day at Heller's F r u i t Store, opposite Rol- F O R S A L E - - E n t i r e h e r d of d a i r y cattle i n c l u d i n g 4 cows, 6 h e i f e r s and ler Mills; also e v e r y T u e s d a y a t 8 calves, all J e r s e y s , well bred. 50 N e w Greenleaf. Cass City P h o n e u SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY--Leaf lard a t 12c a pound. R i c k e r & K r a h l i n g , Cass~ City. 1-31-1 | I I will lift up m i n e eyes unto, ~ ,~ .~ g the hills, from w h e n c e cometh m y ~ Season of High r i d e s h e l p . ~ P s a l m 121:1. *" T h e [ides of the troy el l,'undy are (Comp,levZ by the B,ble Guild,.) ~g a l w a y s high, but the hi~.q~est tides occur in the sI)riT~7 and .ill.tort lt~ltllttlllltil i i 111111111 i i iilllU I111 iiiiiii I III I I 1III I11111 It I I I I I I II II I I I I II 11I1111 II I I I1 Ill I 1111II I 1111111111111111111I 111111111111tll III 11II 1111111111III I I I 111111111111111111111111III ! t III 111111111i i Chronicle Liners ~1111111111111111111II I I itl II Ill II111111 I11111111111II1 II111 III IIII111111 IIIIII |I11111111111111 i111Itl71i It111 IIIII III II 1,11I1 I111111 IIII II1 II III I111 III II1111 It11111 III 11II llllllllllllllllllll RATES~Liner of 25 w o r d s or less, 25 cents each i n s e r t i o n . Over 25 words, one cent a w o r d for each i n s e r t i o n III IIII 111111111~ l N O T I C E to G r e e n l e a f 1 t i t township reters--I will be a c a n d i d a t e f o r h i g h w a y c o m m i s s i o n e r . Y o u r supp o r t will be g r e a t l y appreciated. A l b e r t Hill. 1-31-1p AM I N T H E M A R K E T f o r a second-I h a n d piano. Send full i n f o r m a t i o n F O R S A L E - - 3 2 % x 4 4 b a r n f r a m e . J. and price a s k e d to Box No. 100 i H. Goodall, R. R. 4, Cass City. c]o Chronicle, Cuss City. 1-31-1 i P h o n e 148 F 5. ~ 1-31-2 Q U I C K S E R V I C E - - F a r m a n i m a l s removed p r o m p t l y , horses, c a t t l e a n d sheep (dead or alive). Call W a l l i e Marshall, Care. 937-R4. Tell o p e r a to r e v e r s e c h a r g e s . 1-31-1 SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY~Leaf l a r d at 12c a peund. R i c k e r & K r a h l i n g , Cass City. 1-31-1 NNNNNNN PAT NNNN NNNN N N J o h n K e n n e d y is n u m b e r e d w i t h the sick. Mr. and .Mrs. Carl T h a n e and little d a u g h t e r of C o l w o o d s p e n t p a r t of last w e e k a t h e r p a r e n t a l h o m e h e r e . J a s o n K i t c h i n and son, Clarence, m a d e a t r i p to S a n d u s k y last S a t u r day. E i d e r Crook, w h o is h o l d i n g r e v i v a l m e e t i n g s a t N o v e s t a , visited t h e McH u g h school on Tuesday. GETS MANY CHANCES TO WORK ~ o n c i u d e d f r o m firs~ page. corder's C o u r t selected a couple livi n g on G l y n n Court, Detroit, as likely to a n s w e r best the needs of the y o u n g man. T h e y test t h e i r son of about the s a m e a g e a y e a r ago. T h e y have p r o m i s e d to take the boy into t h e i r home, and if he displays a n y cap a c i t y .for s a l e s m a n s h i p he will be g~ven a place in his n e w g u a r d i a n ' s office. "We have, h o w e v e r , t u r n e d y o u r l e t t e r over to Mr. D o h e r t y w h o has had official c h a r g e of the Case." COME TO G A G E T O W N h a s been v i c t o r i o u s in 9 s t r a i g h t g a m e s , a m o n g t h e m Vassar. C a n t h e y m a k e it 10 ? ELLIOTT MOTOR Lines Schedule~ Bus leaves Cass City for Pontiac daily at 8:20 a. m. and 5:00 p. Y O U N G m a n a b o u t 30 y e a r s old w i t h m., fast time. Bus leaves Cass City c a r w a n t e d to call on f a r m e r s in for Bad Axe at Ii:40 a. m. and T u s c o l a a n d Sanilac counties. Make 4:45 p. m. On Sunday (one bus $8 to $ 1 5 ' d a i l y . No e x p e r i e n c e or each way), lessees Qass City for c a p i t a l n e e d e d . W r i t e today. McPontiac 4:05 p. m. and leaves N e s s C o m p a n y , Dept. B, F r e e p o r t , Cass City for Bad Axe at I0:45 Illinois. 1-3!-lp ' p.m.* TO EXCHANGE, Cass City property R O U N D OAK soft coal h e a t e r n e a r l y for farm. For Sale~Farms, farms, '~ new, w i t h 16-i.nch fire pot f o r sale farms. E. W. Keating, Cass City., at $12. W a n n e r & M a t t h e w s , Cass 1-31-2p City. 1-31-1 N E W C O P P E R w a s h boilers a t low OLD N E W S P A P E R S 5 cents a bunprice. W a h n e r & M a t t h e w s , Cats. dle at the Chronicle office. 1-10City. 1-31-2 T H E W H O L E t o w n of G a g e t o w n wilI 200_ACRE stock f a r m f o r sate or be h e r e and how! r e n t , equipped w i t h excellent buildt u g s , a l a r g e silo, good orchard, N O T I C E ~ D a n c e a t T o w n Hall F r i day, Feb. 7. Good music will be I B U Y p o u l t r y , e g g s • a n d s ~ a H pigs p l e n t y of e x c e l l e n t w a t e r f r o m furnished. 1-31-1p f r o m 25 to 65 pounds a t Helter's f l o w i n g s p r i n g and f r o m a 300-ft. F r u i t Store. P h o n e 178 R 2. Jos. well. G. L. Hitchcock. 1-31-2 T I M E TO M A T E B a r r e d Rocks a n d Molnar. 1-31-tf Rhode Island Red b r e e d i n g cockerF O R S A L E - - - H b r s e 12 y e a r s old els and pullets. Big h u s k y b i r d s FOR SALE~One new feed grinder, w e i g h i n g 1,300 lbs. Sound and well w e i g h i n g up to 10 pounds. R e m e m one h a n d w a s h i n g m a c h i n e and b r o k e . A l l e n W a n n e r , R 4, Cass ber, t h e s e birds a r e w o n d e r f u l lay-w r i n g e r and t h r e e good secondCity. P h o n e J48 F 1-3. 1-24-2p ers and of exhibition quality. W i n h a n d r a n g e s . G. L. H i t c h c o c k . 1-31n e r s at t h e M i c h i g a n S t a t e F a i r 2 R E G I S T E R E D J e r s e y bull calf f o r t h e past five y e a r s . W r i t e or call sale. J. D. T u r k e y , Cass City. 1E. G. Shepard, K i n g s t o n , Mich., R2. W A N T TO BUY, clover h a y , loose in 31-1p 1-24-2p b a r n n e a r Cass City or e a s t . W r i t e Thos. H a r t w i c k , P i n c o n n i n g , Mich. ABOUT FIFTEEN years ago,. Andy OLD HORSES WANTED for fox 1-10-4p Wilson sold a violin that ~ had been feed. Otto Montei, Fairgrove, R. 2, CARD OF THANKS--I wish to thank a keepsake in my father's family, or Care phone 954-R5, reverse the doctors and nurses at Pleasant I would be pleased to hear from the charges. 12-6-if Home Hospital for their excellent p a r t y who b o u g h t it. Gee. Wilson, E l d e r E. K r a k e is ill w i t h tonsilitis ~. care and treatment while a patient 83 N. F r a n c e s St., Pontiac. 1-31-1 W E W I S H to t h a n k our f r i e n d s f o r Mr. L e p l a a n d d a u g h t e r , Gladys, there; also volleyball team for g i f t s and f o r h e l p i n g and v i s i t i n g a r e s u f f e r i n g w i t h the smallpox. flowers and many friends for calls. E L E C T R I C v a c u u m s w e e p e r f o r sale. " us d u r i n g t h e s e l o n g w e e k s of sufThe revival m e e t i n g s at t h e MizW. R. Trueb. Mrs. Mylo R a g a n , Cass City. 1-31-2 f e t i n g . Mrs. Otis and E v e l y n . pah M. B. C. c h u r c h closed on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y Mitchell are the p a r e n t s of a little d a u g h t e r born Jan. 28. D o n n a M a r g u e r i t e is the name. by ~eb. i. W. A. P a r r o t t , Cass City. 1-24-2p F A R M w a n t e d w i t h or w i t h o u t equipm e n t f o r sale 0r e x c h a n g e f o r city p r o p e r t y . P l e a s e give location and p a r t i c u l a r s as to i m p r o v e m e n t s , e q u i p m e n t a n d e n c u m b r a n c e s in first l e t t e r . M a r b l e & Corse, Mr. B. O. W a t k i n s , 22 W L a w r e n c e St., Pontiac, Michigan. I-I0-4 FOR SALE~Six good Plymouth , Rock r o o s t e r s . A. D. Gillies~ R5, Cass C i t y .... 1-31-tf WANTED~Farms exchanged for city p r o p e r t y . All business t r a n s a c t e d confidential. C h a r l e s T u p p e r , d e a l e r in r e a l e s t a t e , C r o s w e l l , Mich. References~Croswell, Peck.. or S a n d u s k y Bank. 10-11-tf F O R S A L E ~ T e a m of colts c o m i n g g and 4 y e a r s . Well m a t c h e d a n & broke. Also 9 tons of good clover mixed hay. Lynn Fuester. Phone 112 F 5. 1-31-ip RADIO ACCESSORIES--All kinds of radio accessories at the May &, Douglas furniture store, Cass City. 1-17-tf F O R S A L E ~ W h i t e Blossom s w e e t clover seed. N e l s o n R o b e r t s o n . 1~ 24-2" NN NNNNN N NN NN N ÙUR N oOTractor oOO N N N "N N N N ooo eel N N N N N N N oOO and Power Farming Entertainment at our store FROM BAD LOSE AXE, TO VASSAR Concluded f r o m first page. and Crandell, w h o s e m a n a c c o u n t e d f o r all f o u r of Bad Axe's field goals. Gowen led t h e scoring w i t h five points f o r t h e locals, while C r a i g led both t e a m s w i t h e i g h t points. E d g e r ton played a nice defensive g a m e a n d scored t h r e e points w i t h Ross a n d Crandell s c o r i n g two each. G a g e t o w n , u n d e f e a t e d a!~d w a n t i n g to add Cass C i t y to t h e i r s t r i n g of scalps, will be t h e a t t r a c t i o n h e r e ton i g h t ( F r i d a y ) . The whole t o w n is t u r n i n g out to see G a g e t o w n do t h e trick. N e x t h o m e g a m e S e b e w a i n g , Feb. 7. @ ° Frida y, F e b ruar y 14th N N STARTING PROMPTLY AT 10 A . M. oN Seven Reels Motion Pictures N N Operation of Farmall Tractor INTERESTING TALKS Through o N N N N WIN N N N N N N N Factory -'- Comedy N N N N @ N N C A S H PRIZE A R R E S T E D ON A R S O N CHARGES IN BAY CITY ~ a r l Reid, 29, a n d G a r a d u s D i s h a w , 29, of B a y C i t y a r e now a w a i t i n g sent e n c e in the B a y c o u n t y circuit c o u r t on arson c h a r g e s f o l l o w i n g t h e i r admission to officers of s e t t i n g t h e fire a t the f o r m e r h o m e of A r c h i e N o l e t a t B a y City on M a y 14, 1929. D i s h a w Claimed t h a t N o l e t had offered h i m $100 to s t a r t t h e fire in t h e r e s i d e n c e a n d t h a t D i s h a w had asked Reid's aid a n d h a d a g r e e d to give h i m $50. T h e m e n said t h e y did not g e t t h e m o n e y . The a r r e s t of t h e two m e n c a m e in a n , i n v e s t i g a t i o n of the N o l e t P a c k i n g Co. fire a t B a y C i t y of J a n . 13. N o l e t N N N N N HOT LUNCH---F REE The Course will be interesting from start to finish. E. P a u l on, C a s s City NNN NNNINNINN NN]NNN NI N NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN NNN N N N + 2~