the wyandotte herald
Transcription
the wyandotte herald
THE WYANDOTTE HERALD BY J. D. HAVEN W Y A N D O T T E , M IC H ., F R ID A Y , M A Y 18, 1928 Imnimal-.' this confinement to continue Hsantil the animals are vaccinated" and licensed to run at large City Attorney Charles II. M an- ask ed the pleasure i)f -tlie .council in re gard to condemnation proceedings- in the probate court: relative to laying drains through Wya mbit re. ■ i '(mu.ciliiiati' J.erew said that lfe ob ject oil -fi o the -plan, oF the comity drain commissioner.. The, final hearing in the probate (•court, 'comes up -on Friday o f next week. The council will .take some aerinii ill the 'matter at its meeting pext Tuesi^tx night. ,Mr.i-Miir.1' suggested-.(h at.. innsmiH'b as all rhe previous work in the.suit; -brought b y . Emmons:.boulevard proper ty ow ners to .restrain:--the c ity from collecting for pavement of the tiios*-; ouglifare. had been done by another ■attorney. - lie be given .assistance in rein*C'(‘iitiiig the city in the .supreme court, when' the m atter 1ms been la 1C cn 1>y the property -owners, on-it ppea 1. Former City Attorney IV. Leo Cahalan was engaged to eo-operate -with. "City At torney M an- in the sn^ppm ecourt proceedings. 1r . ■ ■I The council.* at ns -session •Tuesday, .night, accepti'd an- oiler of Director 1'. B. Ati.in-n of ilic■ ■Uoosevelf. liiirii scliool baiid.- to give one free and four paid couceris or Bishop 'parK. during .May and .Iiiue. fur-‘the sum of 82IMI. President. F. W. I-.iddie. of tlie MeKiriley i’a tent-Teachers Association, -explainer! tlwt- tlie money- would lx* user! in . purchasing instruments like tilt; ohoe ami bassoon, which could not ■he used in the home, or for solo; play ing, and which-involved an outlay tha* parents could not he expected to as:s-time. ■ ■ After some discussion, it was decided to have the -concerts on’ Friday, even lugs, in a report by Councilman Smith,, who said that Sunday nightconcerts would interfere with church services. The Mid dim it Pnlilic Utilities Com-; mission - sent a copy of an order l:or -fite replacing liy flashlights the.present safety devices at the Yinewood -.si venue, railroad crossing. Councilman Clements, thought tile change ought; ' to he postponed until other c r o s s i n g s were -taken .care of. . ' The Del roil: Wyandotte & Trento.) T ransit Co. gave mitice that it was re moving its headquarters to it point at the city limits. 7’he annual Wyandotte.: public school The Ford City.-Community .oluli,. an ■organization witli .201), members.. organ health exhibition will he held on the ized especially to fight the granting of Boosevefl- high school athletic field, a junk yard license tor the corner of Monday. May 21. from 6:80 to 8:00. Ford avenue -and .Fifth street, was' represented by members anil its attor Grades 1 to 10 inclusive will partici ne.v, Frank P. Darin of -River Rouge. pate. Attorney Ari Ii. Woodruff appeared Among the events will be the follow for the junk dealer, , ing : •After hot lrsides laid spoken, it was Cnlesihenic drill by 1.000 boys under, decided to leave the m atter with Mayor Kregt-r. who is the c o n stitu te d au the direction of Jack Henderson, and thority in granting licenses. The mayor from grades 5 to lO iucIusivd; and: train and the opposing attorneys will hold ed by Mr. Henderson and Frank Sim a meeting to discuss the matter, n mons; Gymnastic exercises by: 400 girls Mu.vor Kroger,^ in accordance with under direction, of Miss Helen Glad the charter protishm. named himself, ding. and from the same grades as City Assessor Joseph Cramer, City AD boys. torney C. H. ,rMarr, Public Welfare Dances and exercises ’by kiddies of Commissioner Theodore Meyyes, and first fou r grades, and under direction City Clerk-Ktlward C. Bryan to repre of Miss Helen . Perrin. sent Wyandotte on the county hoard Marching by 5th and 6th grade girls of sui»ei visors. The appointments were under direction of Miss Aria Pangborn. confirmed unanimously. . May lKiledances with five poles sim-. City Engineer D. C. Conway sub ultaneousfy. mitted a report on the condition of Group dances under direction, of Miss certain sidewalks, as-requested hy the. Helen Gladding. I>efroit City Gas Co. Pyramid building and tumbling with Building Inspector . William Rouse five teams of 15 boys each and four recommended a change in the building teams of 10 hoys each, a total of 115 code, as it affects the building of g a r boys, performing-simultaneously, under ages. direction of Jack Henderson, City Engineer C’onway recommended Over 2,500--people- saw the exhibition the reappointment of Mr. Rouse as last year, -'and..many were .turned- away 'hitllding inspector.. and John C. Oco- -because o f hick,of room. .More children foock-as sanitary inspector. The appoint will participate this year than last. m ents were referred to the council. .Money made will be used to defray Engineer Conway advised against the expenses of tlie all-city public building a iiermanent .-bridge-- across school track meet to be held J u n e .l. Mouguagou creek at Thirteenth street. A king and; queen of the exhibition A temporary bridge, lie -said, would will he chosen: They are-to be the most cost $1,200. • healthy boy and girl in the city public City Clerk Brytui recommended the. schools. Tlieir attendants will be tlie purchase of 'fire-proof safes to contain runners up. valuable city records.,as follows: One The,‘king and queen of the Health for the treasurer, to cost. $570: for the Exhibition werb chosen on a point sys assessor, • to cost $421): and for the tem through the use of personal health. clerk, to cost $496. On account of the condition of the Charts. Tlie boy w ith the highest num city funds, Councilman Joseph A. Smith ber of points is fo be king. He is W il liam McGunagle ; of ■McKinley .school. in a resolution reporting the request The queen is Mildred Maurltho of Wood out. recommended the purchase of one ru ff school. The health fairy, who is steel container for-the clerk, at a cost to crown the king and queen, is Dor of $4tm. othy Fairchild of Garfield: school. The ■Councilman. Wnt. F. Engfehr object crown bearer is William Sanders of ed to t he expenditure-at the present time, suggesting th at storage space -Lincoln, whool. The queen’s attendants Xellie De.Tack (J. B. Ford), Joyce could be secured in local bank vaults. are Gee (Garfield.). and Jean Jewell (Lin After Clerk Bryan had explained coln)", The king's -attendants are Wil th at many of the records were used liam Orth (Lincoln), Howard Gerth almost daily, and th at it would he itn- (McKinley), and Jack Bence (Labapractible to make a trip to the bank die). whenever a particular paper was need ed. the council voted five to 'one to purchase one safe. Councilman Eng fehr furnished the negative vote. A resident of Lindbergh avenue ask: ed-the council to order the paving of that street by resolution,M ayor Kre UhS ger’ail vised the petitioner to place his request-.in writing.Another citizen wanted to know On their way ea st to take p a rt in w hat had been done about the Lincoln the Poughkeepsie regatta, the Univer Park-sewage being.emptied into-Ecorse sity of Washington (state) creek. oarsmen may* stop off at Detroit and. “ Clerk Bryan said th at the state of: engage in a trial of speed with the ficials at i.ansiuy had promised to send Wyandotte and D etroit crews. I t is a field man to investigate the situation, proposed to hold races .here-on June hut th at nothing had been done. 1 and 2, Washifigton state lias several A. Aivari. sewer contractor, was al times, won the intercollegiate champion lowed a final estimate of $1,000, less ship.. Its crew will take p a rt in the $40 to repair broken sidewalks.Olympic -tryouts a t Philadelphia. June 5 was set as the date for the hearing of objections to the paving of Superior street and Goddard road and Harrison boulevard. Plans were ordered prepared for .the paving of Central avenue. X. C.-Thompson and others asked th at cows-he restrained from running a t large. Last Saturday, police received a Mayor Kroger referred to an out break of rallies in dogs, affecting De .telephone message, from a woman, say troit and some other cities, and sug ing “My husband is dead in a machine." The officers, responding to (lie u r gested th at the usual license tags he issued at present, but that in case of gent call, found the husband dead, ail ■emergency. :vaccination, of all . dogs right—dead drunk! running at large la* ordered. Councilman Lerew said it would he BOARD CO-OPERATES IN STRAIGHTENING OF STREET a good idea if dog owners would re sort to vaccination for tlieir own pro tection. The school board at. the meeting In harmony with the sentiment ex Wednesday night took action to dedi pressed Tuesday night. Dr. A. P. cate six ty . feet on Chestnut s tre e t: to Schulz, commissioner of health and the public for the purpose of straight sanitation, has issued a warning, or ening out the street from Thirteenth dering citizens to confine and’ closely to Fourteenth. observe their dogs and other domestic ANNUAL HEALTH Washington M ay Row H ere in J Her Spouse W as Dead te the World VOL. L NO. 20 NEW SHELL IS 24 MILLION At ten o'clock I,t<t Sunday morning the Wy.mdoite Boat club christened and launched the new eight..'-our- shelf which the city council have purchased, and doirired to tin* chili for the use' of tlie senior eight which brought tlie championship of the. . .United chutes and Canada to thi* city. :.*- Tlie boat was lmilt for the exclusive If you had twenty-four million thousand-dollar, use of the seniors*, in their endeavor to win the supreme test of oarsmanship bills, you could place them end to end, and make the right to represent the ■United them reach from New York to the Rocky Moun :States in the. Olympic ga mes a t •.Am tains— and still have a good big stack of them left. sterdam. II was tconstructed by tlie I’ocoek They’d stretch out to a distance of something like Boat Company of Seattle." Wash.. 2762 miles! * ' ■ .which firm built the boat used in win ning the 1!)27 victories. The: new shell is it beautiful- specimen - of the boat* Yes, 24 million thousand-dollar bills is a huge builder's art. As compared with the' li)27 boat it.......embodies, numerous re-! amount of money. It’s $24,000,000,000! tinemeids of construction. The iinprovement in the outriggers and tfie But it’s not an impossibly huge sum. American cit bracing is outstanding: in tlie --mutter ofd e s ig n the. builders-- have produced izens, have more than that saved up. There are act-! a -flutter and shallower boat.-with tlie ually more than 24 billions of dollars in Savings seating lowered. This will , result in increased- sta bilit y: and ■a ■lessened w ind; Accounts deposited with National banks, State resistance. *iIso in somewhat liglitenBanks and Trust Companies. ing the boat. ■: The -.dedication ceremonies - opened with -several selections by tlie Kniglits All that money was saved by people like*yourself of .Columbus band, which generously donated tlieir services. 1— people with average incomes. Just shows what As the band played a st'Tring pa-' thrift can do L „ , triotic aii*, the active members of the club appeiirefl in rowing uniforms and carrying tlie rowing sweeps, with ’Come to this strong bank and let us help you to be t liese they formed tin avenue under the come a financial success. It’s easy to get the habit meeting blades, of which the , senior' champions bore the: new shell, bring of saving—once you get started. ing it to rest liefore tlie car con taining the christening, party. In the car Wits seated J. Ii. Bishop, ex-mayor -of Wyandotte, a ljfe-loiig supporter and follower of the Wyan dotte Boa t club and. its racing crews. In tlie car with Mr. Bishop were his two daughters, Missi Della Bishop and Mrs. Albert H, Gilmer, and his; son. Clark W; Bishop.: . . The assembled citizens broke into enthusiastic applause when they discov ered th at the bow of the new racer bore in gold letters the name, “J. H. Bishop.’’ THE HOME OF TEE PROVIDENT CLUB Mayor Kreger, mounting the plat form, delivered an earnest and eloquent"Branch, Oak and Tenth Sts. tHlaite to the energy and ability of the Wyandotte Boat club auid to the life work and character of^Air. Bishop He declared th at the boat club laid brought- honor and publicity to tlieir The ceremonies being over,: the shell home city which:no other community enjoyed, th a t the representatives of was- quickly lifted by its crew and great cities like Philadelphia, New; launched from the float. At the first York, Chicago and the whole Dominion dip of tlie oars, the crowd gave them of Canada had tried in vain to acquire,' a ringing cheer. The senior four quickly followed th at they richly' deserved a recogn’i: lion from tlieir own people, which with their craft and,in rapid succession tribute- the city council in whose.naiiic the intermediate and junior eights and lie: spoke, and the people whose rep*', the single of Lee McGleuahen were ' resentatives they were, glad Iy joineil afloat. X moving picture machine wgs plac in presenting the shell,: He -expressed confidence th at the victories of 1026 ed in the coaching launch and a series and 1027 would be -repeated in 1028 of motion pictures made of the seniors and th at the crew would w in new hon while . photographers made.: numerous ors for themselves and for Wyrtndotte snapshote of the a q u a tic .spectacle. , The -splendid physiques of the men in Amsterdam. (Time will discover any man’s weakness or who are taking their places in the IIs was*followed by Edward C. Bry racing craft was frequently commented strength; the years will disclose merits or defects an. city clerk and vice president of the upon, and the rapidity with which 6f Ionian institutions. lioat dub. Mr, Bryan as an enthusiastic they are rounding into form is most follower ‘..of aquatte- tftiorts. and father gratifying. of Lynn Bryan, the senior coxswain. Tlie Peoples State -Bank of Wyandotte is an Wyandotte lias good cause for con He referred to Dr. R. M. Ashley's fidence in the hoys of the boat chili. “ ohl reliable Bank and has stolid the rigid test of absence on a visit to-.-.ilia m other:and. declared tluifc this being “Mother's time. I ts record is unimpeachable and it holds the Day.’’ th at it was the place for every confidence of. tlie people of the community. : ■young- man and woman to be jvith their ■mother if. possible. As a depository for fuqds this institution is un •Sir:- Bryan paid a . high tribute to Mayor Kreger arid the city council for questionably safe and strong. tlieir generosity and advanced concep tion - of their duties as civic officials. Open a Savings Account or a Checking Account He said th at conception of the func with us. We will always gladly give ydu every tions of municipal governing bodies had" long been: that if they supervised^ information wanted in the line of hanking-Ltusiness. . and-.-maintained- tlie-..ortlinary.- and usiiaF departments, of an organized'.: commun ity lliat- they had done tlieir whole doty. but tliu t in recent years: bad put forward new thought and given birth to higher ideals, and th at it was her : (Flip Kunsky Theatrical Enterprises xmiing increasingly recognized- th at the promotion of enterprises which liaVeJ added tlie Rialto theater in Wy C O R N E R B ID D L E A N D O A K , developed the physical, social and mor andotte, to tlieir long list of playhouses. For some time past. Kunsky interests Wyandotte. Michigan al character of tlie, city is a proper, service for the legislative body. lie have been looking jfor a site in this struck a popular chord and was ap city, for a *theater. This week negotiplauded when lie -declared, th at .super >iitions. were completed wifli Manager vised playgrounds, recognition of. sitU-: Ilenry. Haag of the Rialto whereby letics and municipal: music- should be this playhouse was added to the Kuu. .; developed aud encouraged. Mr. Bryan sky circuit. -Tliis affiliation with tlie Co-operative; spoke feelingly of Mr. Bishop’s long and useful life, stating, th at ou accepting: Booking off ice, a Kunsky theater en the shell for the boat club, liis pleas terprise. fissures the patrons.- of, the fo rd ; Tuxedo, D etro it: Regent. Der PIETTE SAYE HE D etro it; Lincoln ure was increased .to itccept-it with the Rialto of seeing the screen’s late.-t tr o it; Kramer, WAS TAKEN FOR RID! Square, D etroit; - S tra n d ,D e tro it: Del name of Mr. Bishop upon it, and that pictures. ‘ Through the efforts of the Co-opera lie asked no higher success for the tive Booking office the" Rialto theater The, D etroit; M artha Washington, Paul Piette, 38,' who was report crew titan that they should 'reach as will have the services of an organiza Detroit. high a position-in oarsmanship as Mr. tion that; is thoVouglily capable to as Wyandotte movie patrons are to be missing, after lie had gone to the Fo Bishop had in citizenship. Turning to, congratulated on the bringing of these plant a t River Rouge to draw his pt Miss Bishop lie said, “Miss Bishop, it sist the management in selecting the facilities for first class entertainment On May 10, reported later that-he hi better and more entertaining motion had lieen picked up by two men in is my honor and pleasure to ask you pictures. W ith every available bit of to tlie city. 9a r and taken for a ride to Chicag to christen this shell with crystal wat information concerning the entertaining He claims th at th e'p air took $04 fro er from the most beautiful river in the value of every motion picture produced; him and gave him 'back $15 to ta, world, I am $ure that no m atter wliat. BOYOLOGY" BANQUET" HELD the Co-operative Booking office is; him home. joys may come to yon th at this will IN SCHOOL LAST NIGHT -qualified to select the most appealing be remembered as the happiest moment features and short, subjects assuring, DOGS, CHILDREN, DRINKS in your life, to christen this beautiful a program of properly balanced dit In connection with the series of lec boat in the name of YYyandotte’s grand ‘ DRIVE ENNUI AW.vertisements. old man. your father." tures to fathers; being delivered in the Other theaters hooked by, this or Miss Bishop, stepping to the bow of Most of the complaints received ganization a r e : Grand Riveria, De Knights of Columbus auditorium by tlie graceful hull, \ioured upon, it the tro it: Hollywood,. D etro it; La Salle the police' station during this we Joseph A. Becker of New Haven, first drop of the w ater upon which it D etroit; Alhambra, D etroit; Conn., a “boyology" banquet was were about dogs, children and drunl was soon to float, accompanying th e ac Gardens, The dogs lead by a score of ,24, drun Riveria Annex. D etro it: Kunsky Royal tion with tlie words, “I christen thee Oak. Royal Oak: Kunsky Birmingham, held in the Theodore Roosevelt high next with. 15 and complaints abd J. H. Bishop." children'7. Birm ingham ; Kunsky Redford, Red- school last evening. thousand dollar bills! SAFETY SERVICE Wyandotte Savings Bank Wyandotte, Michigan The Only True Test RIALTO JOINS THE KlINSKY SHOW CIRCUIT The Peoples State Bank ft It. R. H arrison —— g_— Bros, Co.— g— —gr T h e G ty Council Melody A. Loeffler & .t’o;, Official Proceedings Wyandotte, Mich., May 13,1928. Regular session of the City Council of th e City of Wyandotte, Michigan, th e Honorable Mayor, Ira J: Kroger, presiding. Roll Call.. Present—Councilmen Clements, Eng fehr, Lerew, Moilno, S m ith,. Yops—6. Absent—None. Minutes. Moved by Councilman Yops. .sup*; ported by Councilman Lerew th at the reading of the minutes of the. last regular session Ike dispensed with an-l the same stand approved as, recorded. sYeas—Councilmen Clements, Eng-.;. fehr. I;erew. Moilno, Smith, Yops—6. Nays—None, :.• New business. From the 1>.. W. & T. Transit Co-v a notification of a change in location of the jitney stand. . . Referred to1The Council., . . . From C. i t Andrews offering to turnM> th e I A) band Concerts for the sum. Of $gbtM«>. ■'C. ■■■'■ '' Referred to the Council. ■. From Jo s . C aiizzi, a p rop osal to con stru ct s e w e rs i'ii S t. Jo h n , S tre e t. R e fe rre d to the. <MunciL Fi-om Jo h n A. Yvdlnu'vhaxiseii. .■ ,», c la im a g a in st the city «;t. " >".nd»t P for, personal damages to hi* soli, John Jki.. of St'l.fHlO.tMi. Referred to the City Attorney. From 1he Ford . .City. Club by their attorney, IIoiu 1-rantv 1*. Darin, a -protest, against thegnuuof u juulv--y;inl. ..... KotVrrtMl to Frimi X. t \ Thoini>M>H inul ihuiioj,-: ous other citizens, ask in g . tlail W r.-straiued from running at tat-.Referred to the City At.t'»vi‘e-',. . .. ■ Communications from V tty ‘Jftu a ■y From the City (Uerh recmnna d . the purchase of fireproof writ* 4»i- i j e •City Treasurer. City Assessor and City Clerk. .■ ■- . .. Referred to the Coun<-d. From the Department of e port' for the month of April. 1J-N Read aud placed om filej,.; Reports from City Officials. From HubbeU. H ungering & , W . . estim ate on S. A. D. No. o , balance due A. Arcari. m tin <am M $1,(K>IMK1 less ,"<40.00 U>v d.imai. . " ''K m f u - C.: Fomvay. City Fa.gi.uH>.-. report on the petition for a 1,1^ over Moiiguagoii Creek a t Thirteeiiti Street. ■ , ■■ ■ ■ Rbail and- placed on. tile. From the sam e. ;.i rep ort ini th e con d itio n o f sid e w a lk s nil H igh lan d A v e nue. -• .:--v 7 .. Read- and -placed otl tile” ; From the saint*: Recom m ending appoint incut o f \\ illia m L o u se a-s B u ild in g In sp ector am i the appoiii-m enf: o f Jo h n O c o tlo c k as S an ita ry * In sp ector. R e fe rre d to the Council. F ro m M a y o r K r o g e r : ,■ .. T o the M eudiers o f the C ity Council,: ■ ui) "0.70 JiS.pO 17. ti) -25.65 Economy B lue P rin t Company Dept.. Streets an<l:.Sewers—F. -M. Congdon M’elding ShopWhi. M. Smith — : S3.60 II. 10. Schwartz — ———— 109.44 Resolution liyy C'ouneiliuan Jos. A. Smith. ■'fC-'v'1./' V-'- v5-, .. Nays—None. IRA J. KREGER1 Mayor. Wyandotte, Mich., May 15, 1928. Resolution by Councilman Jos. A. Smith. Resolved by the City Council of tlie City of Wyandotte, th at linal' esti mate on S. A. D. No. 7+ in tlie sum of $1000.00 vine A. Arcari lie allowed, jirovided: That the. City Clerk with holds issuing a w arrant for the same .until A. A rcari, lias paid ■to the City; Treasurer the sum of $40.00 in com-: pensatiou- for damages to sidewalk. I move the adoption of the forego ing resolution. Councilman JOS, A. SMITH. . Supported by CouncRman Engfehr,; FA SH IO N SM ILES A PPR O V A L ON USE OLD A U m Tlf?ES T H E TA ILO RED GING H AM ENSEM BLE TO MAKE NEW SHOES Saloniki Peasants Use 50,0C0 Casing* a Year. | - Resolved-: That the City Clovk .he and is hereby authorized and directed to <lraw his Avarrjmt on the -pepper funds in payment o f the list- of ap proved accounts- as submitted at this session. A '■ . Kuiqiorted by Conncilmaii Clements, Yoji s—F ouncilnien Clements, Eng* fehr, Lerew. Moilno, Smith. Tops—6, Y e a s — Coiincilnien Clem ents. Eng-, ■Nays—N one., . ..: . j,----- y. fe lir, L e re w . M oilno Sm ith, Y o p s —0. ' Wyandotte; Micln, May 15, l.LS, N a y s— Ximo : Resolution by ( ’ouncilmau Jos. A, Smith..-..--. V:Resolved by tl«> Council of the < lty of Wvandotte. that it is hereby deter mined -that the, owners of sixjy,Tadcentum t i . o f the 7la nils.: ti’pn ting hud abutting , upon ,<Ant till, Avenue from, the westerly line of Bn idle Ave nue to the right of way of the I K-troiL Toledo-'A [ronton Railroad < ompany, in fa id city luiyc pciitioucd the Coun cil of 'sa id c h y to . cause said portion of Central Avenue to he graded, curbed: and -pavefl yvifii^ crnmriuo- / : 7, Rc-'olved fiirtlier. that it.' i> lu-relo detenaiiied- that said public ment he made and that the City Lu•■-incer lie and la* hereby is directed to ihake estimates d f Hie expense ot said pnhlie improvement.and the imi'S and diagrams for :sa;id work and of ti'i localttC"ticdie improved and that said W yandotte.* Mich.. M ay 15 . 1928. , .Resolution by Councilman Jos. A,Smith. R esolved by too C i'y C mncll of. the C ily : o f W yandotte, that the appoint ment of I r a J . K ro g er. Jo se p h C ram er; C h a rle s II. M a m . Theodore MeggeS and E d w a rd C. B ry a n lie approved. 1 m ove file adoption o f the forego ing resolution. Councilman JOS. A. SMITH. Supported by Councilm an Yops. Y e a s—-('(niiiciliiiea Clem ents. Er.;rl'elir. L erew . .Moilno, Sm ith, Yops-- 6 N a y s — None. W.vandoUe. Mich., M a y 15 , 1928 , R esolution h.v Councilm an Jo s . A; Sm ith. • R esolved by the C ity Council o f the (T ty o f W.vandotte. th a t the proposal o f lhe W yan d otte H igh School to g ivt estim ates, p la ts a n d . d ia g ra m s when f< inr pa i«l . ci uiccrts and one fre e con made he deposited with the City < l(,i k cert fo r th e sum 'o f $200.00 he accep t ed a ml t-Iia t t he F rid a y even in g o f each for public examination. Resolved fu rth e r.-th a t the estim at wind; lie designated a s the tim e of ed period o f usefulness of said,-.public such concerts. improvement hereby is determined 1 0 . 1 m ove t h e adopt ion o f the forego ing resolution. la* twenty 2(11 years. : .....Resolved-further, that the property Councilm an JO S . A . S M IT H . In the liereimffter described jisscssmeut district is specially henefited by. said public improvement and that tlie whole of the costs and expenses there of except. t he - costs and. .ex p en ses thereof in front of puldic grounds nOt taSalde and in street and; alley inteiv s e c tio n s lie defrayed liy .,. special assessmeiit 0 1 1 all of the lots, parts of lots and parcels of land fronting and ahuC ting upon said portion of Central : Supported by. Councilman Clements. Yens—Coiuicilmen - Clements, lOngfehr; Lerew, Moilno, Smith; -Yops-M>, Nays—None. 'W yandotte,( M ich.. M ay 15 . 1928. R esolution hy C ouncilm an Jo s . A Smith. R esolved liy the (T ty Council o f (lie C ity o f W yandotte, That the (T ty Puts. ch asin g Agent he and lie hereby is auth orized 1 o p u rch ase one lire-prooE Aventie' 'in said: city pro.,rata.:accoi^c con tain er— size 3 0 x 5 7 x 18 "for tlie pres-, ii>g to their feet : fiHkntage ; upon ,faui e rvatio n o f v a lu a b le reco rd s a t a cost; inildic fniprovemcnt -.ind timt : ..saut not to exceed $496.00. parts of lots and: latrcels ..pt:. laud I m o v e th e adoption: o f the fo re g o b e- and they .hereby are dosigiiaB>d ing resolution. .uid con-t.tutcd .1 special assessment Councilm an JO S . A. S M IT H . Supported by Councilm an (T e m o n R d'-.ti-ict for the purpose of such as Y e a s —-Councilm en Clements,, L e re w ,' sessment and that s.iid special distnel M oilno, Sm ith. Y op s— 5. : ■ be numbered N o .----• : Resolred inr 1her.tb at tin* costs avid cxiH-nses of . said public improvement Nays—Councilman Engfehr—1. Moved by ('ou ncilm au Y ops. supiurted hy Councilm an L erew that the, signs a t P e n n sy lva n ia A voim e and Fo rd A venue lie changed to announce that. \\ yan d otte • is the home o f th e eight o a f crew holding the cham pion ship o f d ie C nited S la te s and Canada.,| Councilman J(>8. A. SMITH. Yeas — Coiuicilm en Clem ents. EneSeconded by Councilman Clements; Yea ^ C o u n c il men, Clements. Eng- 1.ehr, Lerevv, - YLillno, Sm ith, Y op s— 6. Xnys_-N Tone. fctvr. -L etew .: Alolluo,:: B in ith i ■■■■■y?Ps”7 Moved hy Councilm an Clem ents, Gentlemen: ’, . , , ■ N a y s— none. -. --- .v I ■suhint for yniii- approvat t lie loi'iippo'-tod h r Conncilm aii Y op s th a t IV yiliidoCc. M idi.. M ay 15 . B 'V S.; Jnwing named persons to n-prescilt llw ;utiu-iie,v s- representing- the- partii's R esolurion l y ('oiiiicrim an h n a'!}-. th e City >>f Wyamlotie on tlie Board --vfO dispute over a ju n k y a rd license a f R cs.dvcd In live Council Hie 1 Supervisors .of May n e t entity . . . ■ iith S tre e t and F o rd A venue hi1 dio f \V\ liiuli tte that t)ic- estim ates ot Ira J. -'Kroger.' Joseph A. Kramert: the e v ie iis e d grad in g e c u 'm u a id reefed io confer w ith M ayo r K re g e v Charles 11. M art, Theodore Megges, ; ii!iv:i-'ng:-- cjif* . ' > ’ in relatio n thereto. . Edward C. Bryan, .... Cvi B o u le va rd from -.Eighth, S treet: beThc\ y e a< —-Councilm en -Clem ents. E iw vUe>itec! fully, ... I’c'Iir. L e re w , M oilno. Sm ith , Yoji^— q. w e ste rly lim its .o f the C ity ,ol " IRA .7. KREGER. N a y s— None. d o n e, i'11 sa id city, and tin* p la t ' a m i Mayor. . d eco -tin s o f said w ork and mo lo cality Moved hy Councilm an L e re w . sup Referred do'the--.Council. to 'b e im proved h avin g been m ade ami ported hy Councilm an Clem ents th a t ’ Bills and A ccounts.• re a r e d bv -he City Etuiimcv idtder. the C om m issioner o f H ealth am i Sail-: Bills and Accounts were then .refer autiiojitv of ,1 lesohdioii ql the Conn b a llo n he d irected to g ive public no red to the Council. . VVi b e Sitid city ntu.iV.haying l-cen depose tice th a t there is d an ger o f an e p i - Recess.^ •tod with the City Clerk f-u pual‘(- dem ic o f ra b ies in dogs and th a t a ll Reconvening. examinatiou. said Cournal moot at the citizen s ow ning dogs h ave them v a -cinated.: o r -confined.' : . R ollC all. c T-V C<iunci'l ('Ihimbers; in .-.the . Cay Hd!* Present—Councilmen Clements. Le- r-ud eity on Tuesday, the 5(h day <4 Y e a s — Couueilm en Clem ents. Kngrew. Engfehr, Moilno. Smith','Tops—-6. iuoe 1928. at 8 -(H) o'clock p. ill. Lasf- feh r. L erew . M oilno, Sm ith , Y o p s Absent—-None,, • N a y s— None, cni Standard time, to consider any iii-;\'r<iht----'c'f-'litdd-ie.:gn-)-uncls-4-u-|t;---ta.>-iihle and in street.an d alley, intersections la* paid from the general street inmi. L move the adoption of the forego ing resolution. s Resolutions and Motions. , (,iljf‘Ctioiis thereto and tin t the C'ty To the, Hon. Mayor and Councilmen: Cletk he and he m heieln duet ted to Gentlem en: - . ■ give notice of such public improve The following claims- have been ex ment and work and that said «>”!*amined. audited and found to he cor mates, plats and. diagrams have been rect. ■.-■ . ■ deposited with him for puldic exainiie I therefore recommend th at they be ■ition ami to give notij-e of the district approved and payment nmde. to be assessed and o f the time am Respectfully -submitted, ' place of the meeting of the » onmal o f EDW; C. BRYAN, ; 1 ,5,1 citv to consider any objections . City Clerk. riierefo bv publication mice ;y c each. so.00. Gardner ---------------------- $ Moilno H arilw are Co. .-------- , ■r>S.35 the newspapers* of said t ity ■ . 2.r>o Bam . Wr.iglit.-_,— I move the iidoptimi of the forego15.24 Peck Electric Co. - - - - - ----SMITH. ■ 4.75 ing resolution.: -^ Carney Tire Repair — ,03 Am. Ry. Express Co, ;: Seconded by t ’o.inmbnai. y<»ps, 2.25 E lliott's Kodak Service Yeas—('em mil men (•lein»-ut>. 157.27 Standard Oil -■ . ,r s... -\.(,ai,-,;. Smith, Yops—4'27.0') Engfehr, Moilno United Motor S a le s ------— Nays—None. 1.3) Mellin & Moran A. IRA .T. KREGER. W yandotte <‘oal &. Blilrs. - - - ^ 44.40 Ala.VOlV'' ' l.f.O Movers Auto Supply Co■Wyandotte. Mi'll., May 15. 1928. Eng., and Bldg, pay roll — - 1S5.2 )■ Resolution by Councilman Jos. A. 140.10 Sewer District I-Tind 145.20 Smith. Tirade Separation Fund Resolved by the Council of the City, Sr. Comm, pay -roll —------r—1.403.20 of Wyandotte, that the estimates of 502.SO P ark pay roil •— 5.00 the expense of grading, curbing and John IV. Nagle - - - - t.-—• p a v i n g o f Superior Street from . the; 21.! The John Johnson Co. -------easterly line of Ninth. S treet-to the 0.50 The Richmond A Baekus Co,—. 50.00 right of way of the Detroit and Tole B. B. Babcock —— — •20.7 do Shore Line Railroad Company in liow n B iver Motor Sales 2.01 said eity, and the plats and diagrams Wvandorto Lumber Co. __1— 3'2.1v) of said work and of tlie locality to be A.' M cIIattie —-T-29.7ci improved having been made and lire C. E. Kreger's Sous - . —- 4 - . \ , 3.35 pared by tlie (Tty Engineer under au The Somheil Studio . 16.10 thority of a resolution of the; Council: Eastm an-M otor Sales 4.05 of said eity and liaving been depQsit D etroit Towel Supply Co. 2.00. ed w itb tlie City Flerk for public ex J . T. y icW a d e---25.00 amination; said Council meet at the Am. Steam Pump Co. — 16.79 Council Chambers in the City H all in The W vandotte Laundry Co, said city on Tuesday, the 5th day of E ver Reaily Coat & Towel June. 1928.: at: 8:00 o'clock p. ni. East’ Supply ------ -----------------era Standard time to consider any ob D orrance & Garrison — — jections thereto and. th at the City Jager-Asmus H ardw are Co.— Clerk be and he is hereby directed F ederal Motor Truck Co. — C ontractor's Equipment Co.— JO.db to give notice of such public improve ment and w ork and that, said esti T. C. Gray ——r Volk Stamp & Stencil Co. — ° p mates. plats and diagrams have been Goodfeilow & Hic-klin— -g— : 3,-o deposited with him for public exam ination and to give.notice of the dis W illiam Hogan. Sr. — trict to he assessed and of- the time E ureka G as & Oil Station— P ardo Auto S ales— - - , — B19.0J and place of the meeting of the Council of said -city to .consider any Run Oil C o m p an y -------------E berts Bros. Co, _— ----------L* J objections thereto by publication once D etex AVatchclox Corp. — . 2.SS in each week for two successive weeks Gregory. M ayer & Thom Co.‘-88 in one of the newstvapers of said city. I move the adoption of the forego M. C. R. R. C o . ---------------10-48 ing resolution. 1 Wm. B eattie & S o n ----------- . . PWCouncilman JOS. A. SMITH. G artn er H ardw are C o . ------- 144»‘o Seconded by Councilman Clements, The Superior Seal & Stamp ^ __ Yeas—Councilmen Clements, Eng Co. ----------9 ™ M unicipal Service Commission 291.46 Lerew,' Moilno, Smith, Yops—6. | II T H A T next in the style parade? v V; Why gingham, if you please^ just simple ordinary gingham made up into as cliic and, charming a tailored street ensem ble: as one would wish. Quite a new turn to affairs, this of style creators endorsing cotton, ma terials as proper 7and modish media for street and sportswear: costumes. This idea of wearing gingham, pique, washabl^ voile, and other: equally as attractive cotton, fabrics where once ’twas thought that only silk or satin • might grace; the day, is making “a hit” with the fashionable world. -At . first one dons gingham for the social event because of the novelty of the thing and because fashion so dic tates. However, given a “tryout,” the gingham ensemble wins out as a most practical and pleasing proposition. For informal daytime wear, ' there's everything in its favoix The home dressmaker, need, have no hesitancy in undertaking to make a costume' like the one in the picture. Such attractive monotone ginghams '•ari being displayed for spring: and summer wear and they are the very thing- for the tailored ensemble, The gingham for this model was;-a gray ish violet sliade,, though one could just as well have selected beige, ox-ford gray or dull green. The dress itself is a simple one-piece model, with a group of tucks at one side extending from neck to hem. Any simple coat pattern could be followed to get the lines as : here shown. So there you a r e !: - A bandsottie, washab'e, 1ikahlo. practical ensemble, at trilling cost and easy to make even if one only has a. slight knowledge of the sowing art. : The most popular frbgk for tennis is the sleeveless one.. Stylists are fash" ioning such of gay patterned gingham, complementing them with a plain,; three-quarter length coat or a short jacket of monotone gingham. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. ■ .<■©. 19-2S; Western Newsuaaer Union,) . FINE FUR MAKES FINE GOATS ; ; IF USED DISCRIMINATINGLY Moved by ('ouncilmau Ihigfelir, sup ported by Councilman Clements, that Attorney W. Leo Cahulan be retained to assist ('ity Attorney C.. H. Man- in the case of certain citizens claiming exeniption from liaving,'tax on Em mons Boulevard, said case ' beingappealed to the Michigan SiTpieme ( ourt, the City of Wjsandolto having been previously represented in the Circuit Court by Mr. .(’Altaian. Yens—Conm-ilmen Clements, Lerew Engfehr. Moilno, Smith. Yops—6.: N a y s— None. Adjournment. Moved -Moved by Councilman Moilno. sup poi ported by Councilman Yops that the ( "u n cil do now ad jo u rn . Yeas—Coniicilmen.' Clements. En»-fehr, Lerew, Moilno, Smith, Tons—6 ' Nays—None. > E D W . C. B R Y A N . 0 C ity C lerk . ' In Turn A hero w orked h im self to deatli, Th e public was quite vexed.. ,, Fam e - for a mom ent held her breath;. The n ,sim ply hollered. “N e xt!"- -. I f f “COMPETITION Is the life of * trade,” It is also the inspiration to Lady (in theater, to man in seat be creative “ imagination. Now titere’s hind)—I hope my liat is not. worrying the case of ensembles versus separate you. coats. • With the ensemble costume .The Man—*It is worrying me a lot— about to capture the .fashion world my wife wants one like- it.-—Baris with its endearing charms, it brings journal Amusant. die mattfer up to the coat stylist to meet the challenge. T hat’s why the . An Ideal State separate topcoat this season is a Wliite—-They say th at broadcasting thing of such beguiling, beauty, women has now passed th e infant stage. of fashion simply cannot resist them. Black—If my neighbor’s infant For th at matter, it would be about as would - pass the broadcasting stage unwise a thing as one could do to everything would be perfect eliminate the separate coat from one’s spring , and summer wardrobe. To worry along without a modish top-, G ettin g Even ' “I don’t understand: your! letting coat? Never 1 v-And about th at question of “to be young Perkins marry your daughter. or not to be furred.” It seems that I thought you were enemies.” “Yes. And now he will have my a fte r all; there are some stylists who, hold the opinion th at a bit of choice wife as liis niotlier-ln-Iaw." fur makes even the handsomest coat look handsomer. So with the convic Slap! Slap! tion th at fine fur makes fine coats, if Mae—I like the way you dance. My used discriminatingly, mgny of the boy friend is so jealous I have, to world’s leading coat designers are fur dance - with only plain-looking boys. ring-" their most stunjaing models ei John—I follow the same plan. ther at the neck or the sleeves, but sel dom If ever at both places at once,. S h at is If a coat has a fq r Cidter, , Loomed Large the sleeves are devoid the1 fur cuff, And vice versa, when the sleeve is fur cuffed, the collar resorts to the self-fabric scarf for its detailing, or to some other intriguing manipulation. The ‘ models In the picture illus trate the p oint Both of these ador able spring coats are posed by Laura La Plante, for somehow newest* fash ions have taken to arriving via film land these days, For the coat to the left, novelty patterned beige kasha is the favored medium. A beige fox fur collar tunes in with the color scheme (ind as if that is not enough to fill the cup of beauty full to over flowing the designer adds a graceful scarf of the fabric. Washington. •^ Discarded American automobile tires -thut once were d l s - '; patched to rubber salvaging pianist now are being made .into shoes fo r peasants of Saloniki, Greece. It., i s . reported that 50,000 casings are in i- '. ported annually to meet tlie demand. Each; tire makes three shoes, ’‘.Saloniki is- ianious as. a city of ‘ vefuge,” says a ' bulletin from the Washington (D. C.) headquarters of the National Geographic society. “T hat fact accounts for its enormous peasant population to: whom the new- foot-. gear is a luxury. ■’ “WIkhi tlie Spaniards persetfited the Jews ip tl.s Fifteenth century, some uf them (led a s fa r east as , Saloniki cud their descendants now, li.'ip make up- the city’s large J.euisb .. rinpulatiori, which numbers ngarly, tliift .of the Greeks.,- And. in recent,. yet rs a human deluge of Greeks who ; \)e;f* driven out of Turkey swelled tire census figures from- about 150,001) to more than 200,000. “The original ‘Salonikans’ -ay® -. in the shuffle of nationalities repre■sented lumcva the inhabitants, continues the.i)UlIetin. :‘'On aiiy husy. corU(-r one ..will see nearly as many dif ferent races as sit in a session of ‘ the League of Nations. There .are ; Greeks from all parts of. the peninsula, • Albanians. Italians. Russians, Germans' and natives of every Balkan state; Some of their families are among the oldest- inhabitants, liq.man remnants of the early occupation of the city, when it was a football in the , hands of empires, including, tlie Mace donians. Saracens. Normans, Romans, Venetians, Bulgarians and Turks.C t: Rival of Constantinople. , “Even w ith such a. mixture, Saloniki hits maintained: its prestige as one of the most important ports of l southeast Europe, When tlie . Balkan states are at peace and the port, is used as an outlet to the sea, it rivals Constantinople. ‘•The fine buildings which form a solid ,Wall on the . land -side;. of the qua'y, pierced only, by streets leading, up .into ;tlVo city,- give Saloniki a- mod ern appearance. H ere and in the com- ■ mercial district there are shops, cof- C fee houses and’ a few tine old res'- , donees. Tii-e--westerner.at -once, ubtices-’; it lack of .parks and other open spaces; but a peep through an open door to a Courtyard in a narrow side street reveals that most of Saloniki sc beauty- is hidden behind high walls. -■ . “On the hills beyond new cottages;' of former refugees indicate that Ba- joniki has assimilated many of her newcomers from ot her lands, hut tiiottsands of them still-live in the* squalor of the Saloitikj slums. , “1j) Rie dirty' streets barefoot worn- ; ea idotV H'he-rough .cohlile with loads of Vood' tied, to their hacks that one might hesitate packing on. a , donjbey.. '•Sfnllipgy■■-rigged :dy?i:rer.---b.pys;-;-aii(^ in- tattete; carry thetr heavy iugs. . Milkmen, too poor to own carts, are weighted down by two five-gallon cans resting upon .Their backs upfil their bodies are at-rig h t angles wiUi their legs . Use American Street Cars. , “But with all- its squalor and pov erty Saloniki can boast Of a glorious ■ past.' Several - cities, have been built . on the site since it■:was founded more than 2,000 years :ago. The present- one ; 7 is named for Thessalonike, a half sister, of Alexander the Great. Cicero . lived there for a tim e;,Nero and T ra jan decorated the city; It was once tlie temporary home of threb. em perors and it became famous in Hie Christian world as. the place to; which.:; S t Paul addressed two of his letters,. ;. - “Successive fires and pilfering* have destroyed. historic landmarks. . One of its oldest existing antiquities . is Vnrder street, which cuts ‘across the city. It w a s 'a *pa,rt of the old , Ildinan highway from the Adrintic to the Bosporus, which earlier still was the Royal way of the Macedonia- . kinds! Where the Roman legions,.the phalanxes of Alexander and the: Tmifioftal-s of Xerxes tx^F its surface, a h ; : American street car rumbles, d ' iven by «• modern Greek, or Spaniard. In ! ■ its .course it ’runs: under an old Roman; arch; ’ : ■■ ■■■■’, - . “Some.-j.of i the Saloniki churchds survived the fury of the Middle ages ' and are the finest remains of the p a s t “ The Greeks have suffered, by re-; maining in Saloniki under foreign regime, but one source of inspiration to them has been the sight of Mount Olympus towering am ong-the hills to ,, the soutliwest.” Find Way to Unroll . Brittle Manuscript London.—The aid of ultra-modern chemistry has been invoked to sal vage another relic of the remote p a s t An ancient leather roll of Egyptian writing liad lain unopened for 50 years in the: British museum because it was so brittle that no one dared unroll i t Experiments with a brok en fragment of the leather in the mu seum's* laboratory, .however, ‘ finally gave scientists a clew as to how to handle the mysterious manuscript. Several thin coatings of- celluloid were soaked into the pores of the leather, after which it was cemented with strong celluloid on to a piece of celluloid-treated cheesecloth, in' this way it was unrolled without a break and pressed flat between two glass plates* to dry. It remained perfectly K asha cloth, but this time a very pale beige, is also used 'o r the coat to the rig h t F ur on the cuffs alone is a mark of styje distinction, and this model stresses the fa c t A riot of tucks also, adds charm to its styl ing. A most interesting detail is th at of the self-colored yarn embroidery which elaborates both' sleeves and the long pointed collar. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. flat after drying and can not® be read ____ ^ __ (ft, J|J8. Newenftpw - ii jh ease. S Octopus Drags G irl 1 | Bather Under Water S Auckland, New Zealand.—A fourteen-year-old girl who was bathing at North shore, was at tacked by an' octopus, vwhich dragged her tinder the water in the grfy of its tentacles. An elder '.brother, who went to her assistance, was also seized ■by-the leg by one tentacle. He tore 'himself- away and by a great, effort rescued his sister.:Both • brother and sister emerged, swollen and bleeding" about the legs, but suffered no seriotis effects. This is the first occasion knojvn locally <of hn octopus g having, attacked bather. a 50-YEAR HUNT FOR SISTER REWARDED Eastern W om an - Finds K in in Chicago. Lost New York.—Fifty years of search for a younger sister who laid been placed d n tin orphan asylum brought unexpected results recently for i-Mrs, Mary Neumann o f- Brooklyn, who, re joicing on her seventy.-tirst ■ ‘birthday, anniversary, spoke to her long lost sister for. the first dime over the long distance telephone from Chicago. The sister, Mrs. Catherine Knerr of TIBS South Hermitage avenue, Chica go. „yvas : located by: Mrs. -Neumann when Mrs. Knerr placed an advertiser' intuit in a Brooklyn newspaper. Mrs. Neumann is looking forward: eagerly to the reunion which will be arranged at an early date, when Mrs. Knerr will probably come to New .York. . ’■1-■ : ' This little introduction is merely the culmination of an intensely dramatic story spread over a'/half century of .family-.life—of a family, spiit up by misfortune. Now the last remaining ag'mg tlireads' are being brought to gether again.. . ■■; • The .father was George Neisotn who had 'gained wide prominence as a building contractor and owned blocks of buildings surrounding his palatial home a t 3a0 East Thirty-second ■street, N ew York city. There were four daughters, and three sons in the family. When Mary, now Airs! Neumann, was, fourteen, her mother died. Not long after, Mrs. Neumann tells, her father, wiio was^-tfre Beau Brummel of his time, became infatuated with a woman and moved to New Jersey to live with her. Catherine, who was then five, was placed in 'a n orphan home along with her two sisters, Mamie and Louise, who were mere, babies. Mrs. Neu mann was married shortly afterward and she reared her brothers. From the orphan asylum the three girls were adopted into different fam ilies and they eventually lost trace of each other. Mrs. Neumann fo r years wrote to ail the asylums around New York, but she only succeeded in locating Louise, . who has since-died. ■ Mrs. Neumann celebrated her birth-’ day in happiness in her cozy little. Brooklyn home at 2815 Atlantic ave nue, surrounded by her children and grandchildren. All are familiar y t h her unflagging se a rc h : for her sister and are looking forward to her hap piness when the. reunion takes place. Steal Bathtubs, Sinks and Even Radiators Cleveland, Ohio.—That a number of Cleveland thieves believe in the old adage “Cleanliness is next to Godli ness," is evidenced by the number of bathtubs, sinks and symbols of house hold cleanness in general, stolen from empty apartm ents in . th e course of a year. ■ The Cleveland Owners and Tenants' association, meeting here, revealed: ■that the combined losses in plumbing fixtures of 1,000 members totaled thou sands of dollars; “Even radiators are taken along by apartm ent riders," said J. E. Yelsky, president of the association. “Evi dently the t i d i e s have a desire to keep warm as vgell as clean." Steps to license all dealers In sec ond-hand plumbing .goods are expect ed to be taken to improve these con ditions, Yclsky said. Dying Woman Nailed in Closet at Home Chief Executive Saw TRIBE’S REFUSE j Point of Good Joke ONLY MONUMENT One of the first things Washington ascended to the Presidency upon the death of Zachary Taylor, in 1850, was that Fillmore possessed a keen sense of humor.. Shortly after taking the oath of of fice it became necessary that the President purchase a new coach. Be cause of the dignity of his position,Fillmore thought the coach should be somewhat out of the ordinary, apd sent an old: White House servant, Ed ward Moran by iiauio, to shop about. Moran eventually learned tlmt-J a wealthy citizen of Washington was about to leave- the city and wished to dispose of his elegant equipage,-which seemed to him quite, th eth ih g he was seeking. The President viewed, the .coach and liked it Immensely, but “ Hew will it do for a President of the United Slates to tie riding around in a second-hand carriage?” he asked Moran. Moran could not resist the oppor tunity. “Sure,” he replied, “you’re only a second-hand President.”^ Fillmore thought■■:tills remark was one of the wittiest he had ever heard, and told it on himself so often that be- became known among his friends as the “ second-hand President.’’ in cidentally, he bought the coach and used it during his three-year tenure of office.—Brooklyn Eagle. F in d K itc h en M id d en s L eft by C alu sa Indians. Washington.—When the Calusa In dians, wiio, dominated southern Flor ida when the Spaniards landed,: and who were reported to have grown rich on tlie 'shipwrecked: gold' of the Conquistadores, became extinct; they left behind them as almost their, sole mon ument the refuse of tlie food they ate. Their principal diet was shellfish and the . shells they threw out . piled up into heaps thirty, feet high and hun dreds of feet long. ••• • Tlie Smithsonian Institution’s re cent expedition under Henry B. Col lins, Jr:, determined the point about which there had boon some uncertain ty, that these shell heaps were really kitchen middens and not artificial -.structures- witli s-mne other signifi cance. Tlie proof is that all the shell heaps .■invest igated . were stratified with ashes, .small -animal- bones and other refuse from the kitchen. : The langunge of the Calusa, except fo r: a fqw isolated words and place names, is lost; little, or nothing is known’of their beliefs, customs or ma terial culture. Some mounds of soft beach material and loose sand do ex ist, some of which were foundations for:-houses,: and others burial mounds. Mr. Collins excavated several of these. His most- important find was of: twen ty-five well preserved skeletons iu a single mound. -Good Friday Beliefs , .Most of the bodies h a d .b,een folded in1Parts of England with the knees -to the chin and burial How Good Friday got its name Is a was very close together. The skele m atter that is often discussed. The tons were excellently preserved. The word Friday is really ' the strangest burials probably took place before the part of the name of so solemn, a date coming of the white man, since only: in the Christian calendar.. Few realize one bone was “found with any evi that in saying Friday, they -are com dence of disease and tlie artifacts as memorating a pagan deity, F reyii,.the sociated with the. burials were purely of native origin. . The only objects Scandinavian Venus. In France Good Friday is called in the way of mortuary offerings vyere Passion F riday; in Germany, Quiet p ieces; of broken pottery placed Friday; and in Italy, the Blessed Fri around: the heads, an arrangement not known among other Indians. The. day. Good Friday in former days enabled mound contained no other, artifacts. the careful citizen to save his fire in surance policy, for.it was believed that Motor Police Seen an egg laid on that day would extin as Most Efficient guish any fire on which it was thrown. Swampscott, Mass.—The way to ef Bread- baked on Good Friday was supposed to have its protective value, ficiency in the small town police de for it was believed th at three loaves partment lies through a completely put in a heap of corn would prevent motorized force, says Walter Fran the latter from-being devoured by rats cis Reeves, chief of th n Rwampscott ^ and mice. An infant born on Good police. Chief Reeves Is trying to put his Friday was supposed to possess the Idea into practice-here and points out power of curing fevers. There are some things- to be avoided that the town’s force has shrunk on Good Friday. West-country peo from twenty-one patrolmen and offi ple consider it a sin to wash any cers to fifteen men. With the de Clothes on that day. They declare crease and diminished expenses have that should you do so you are likely come motor equipment, and, the chief to lose your most valued possession be asserts, a fa r more efficient police fore the year is out.—London Answers. service. Reeves bejievies th at every town In th e United States should motorize its We Are All Bores force. His plan would banish the oldAn outstanding fact in life is that time “sidewalk pounder” and would we bore each .o th er: the habits and, put all policemen* except traffic men notions of many worthy people drive In well equipped vehicles, automobiles other fairly worthy people to distrac or motorcycles with sidecars. tion. M o st books, most plays, most A criminal, he said, can keep tab events public and private, bore us. on the old-time patrolman, but be Popularity is to be fairly agreeable cannot tell when the motor-mounted to a few, and unknown to the many. policeman may show up a t any given, - The old are tiresome to the young. spot. In suburban and thickly setf I doubt if they realize it, but* the tied town districts alike, he says, pfti young are tiresome to the old. lice are needed who can be sum The time men and women do not moned at top speed. devote to denouncing each other, they devote to seeking and boring each other. Always remember that what D R . O. S. G R O F I ever you do, and wherever you go, you are a pest to many. Therefore- be DENTIST have as well as possible.—E. . W. IU Biddl* Arana, B. Howe’s Monthly. Phan# * j-J A n Old Map g1 N A M S T E R D A | Thi STRAW HAT SEASON .................. W- ■Tj.'t , The Smart New STRAWS of 1928 R eady To d a y ! For Summer 1928 w e have provided more ex tensive and more diversified assortm ents of M en’s Fine Straw H ats thafi ever before. Our offerings include everything of accepted smartness, quality and value that the markets of the world afford SENNIT-Plain or Fancy Bands $2.45 $2.95 $3.45 China Split Braids $3.45 sj '1 $4.95 Italian Milans $3.95 to , $5.00 LEGHORNS— Natural and Tinted Colors $4.00 $5.00 $6.00 All Kinds of PANAMAS $5 to ' $10 Our Showing of Two-Trouser Suits T H I S W E E K IS F U L L O F T H R I L L S , W h at a surprise is in store for the man who has never worn Silverstrype Suiis at $ 4 5 , or the Devonshire, $35, the Nottingham at $39.50. Others at $25 and $29.50. Featured in m odels of every type to fit the Banker or U niver sity M an, B usiness and Professional M an, the man o f advanced or conservative ta ste s SPECIAL for SATURDAY ONLY ' 75 F in e Junior Prep S u its w ith tw o pairs long pants. S ize s 15 to 19. R egular $17.50 to $ 29.50 values for H. A. French Tho-faniil.v was enjoying a delicious pineapple dessert for dinner. A young e r member of the circle inquired of his wise father where most of. the pine apple came from. The father ex plained that most of It came from the Cinders, Sidewalks, Base Hawaiian islands in the “Atlantic” ments, Sewers ocean. An older daughter told bflfr 23 Van Alstync Boulevard father he. was mistaken about their location. -A fter a’ -heated argument an PHONE- 787 old geography was found in-theTittic. W YANDOTTE, M IC R The daughter soon found the Hawaiian ;,'/■ •' >. ■ t ; .‘rv'1' ' Islands in the Pacific ocean. >. “Now, daddy, what you got to say? DR. A. M. BOYAJAN Who was right?” said, the counterpart of father. DENTIST “That’s an old ■■'geography.-:. W ell have to buy us a new map,’’ replied X -R A Y D IA G N O SIS, the Invincible father. Cahalan Building; 2966 Biddle A»«, Talapbona 130 TO Cement Contractor Believe It or Not! After a great deal of patient effort the rooster rolled an ostrich egg into' llte chicken run. > Coughing slightly and throwing his head back in the ■manner of a man about to utter a platitude, he said : “Hens! F ar be it from me to re proach you or to cast aspersions on any one of you. Bu>t,in the interests of the country generally and our own little community in particular, I should like to- show you what can be done in other parts of the world by -enterpris ing birds imbued with the true spirit O f unselfish loyalty.” DR. A. L. MARTIN F. ARMSTRONG & CO. Wyandotte’s Finest Store For Men Biddle at Oak St. ~r- ? ECK ELECTRIC CO*. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL WIRING, FIXTURES, REPAIRS Wyandotte,, 65 Elm S t H id Phone 283. Wyandotte JOHN F. McINERNEY R E A L ™«?aatnece S E R V IC E Phone 241-J N otary Public 44 ELM ST., CAH/u-AN BLDG. Columbus, Ohio—Fatally beaten on Office Practice Only ■the head with a hammer .and nailed OFFICE OVER in a closet at her home here, Mrs. WYANDOTTE SAVINGS BANK A rthur Battelle was found near death recently by. canvassers and a neigh M. C.CONNORS, .HI S. 0.0.S bor who were told of her plight by the CHARLES H. MARR DENTIST woman’s " two small children. Mrs; Attomey-at-Law and CAHALAN BLDG. Battelle died before she had reached Solicitor in. Chancery Office H o u rs: tlie hospital. LOA NS AND COiAADCTIOJ*- ; 9-12 A. M. . ^ ' Police are seeking the husband, Ar Phone, 5 M Over Wyandotte Sav. Bank 1- 6 P . M. th u r Battelle, forty-one, a salesman. 7- 9 P. M. Four-year-old twins, Nettie and Jim, told the two house-to-house canvas W . E. W I L S O N RALPH W . RIDGE, M. D sers who came to-the door that “moth Large Hall and Small Hall General Contractor er is dead and nailed in a closet" In E y e , E ar, Nose and: ThroM Phrase Long in Use Estim ates furnished on all eiass* Can be rented for occasions. / For Reservation vestigation revealed the body. . Office H onrs: 9 to 12, 1:30 to 4:30 of work. “Full as a tick” refers to the habits 7:00 to 8:00, e x c e p t Thursday after Blood-covered trousers of the hus See AUGUST HOCHBAUM, Prop., Telephone 673 GENERAL INSURANCE noon and evening. • band were found behind a davenport of tlie creatures called ticks, which Phone 729 • 105 Sycamore i are biologically degraded speeies of Dietiker Bldg., 60 N. Biddle Arena* Masquerade Costumes to Rent, call at 118 Elm St., Tel. 532-W in the room.' ■the same family as spiders. They at tach themselves to persons and ani DR. N. G. BOWBEER F. P. SPRAGUE, M. D. 4«« “Sender” Collects mals to sdek blood; when they are Office Practice Only Kansas City, Mo.—A Western Union full they dijo'p off. The phrase has'no DENTIST erk automatically started to count reference to a bed tick, as often er •old Iftedallst In Porcelain Work; UaT. Offices W yandotte Saving* Bk. BU Honrs 2 to 6 p. m., 7 to 8:30 p. m e words in a message a man handed roneously supposed. “Full as a tick" ■■■■.•'.■Md*'-' B U IL D IN G C O N T R A C T O R Sundays, by appoinjtment only m. He read: "I am holding this is very old in the English language. OFFICE 115 BIDDLE AVXNUV r Telephones—Office, 159. Residence, No. 236 King's H ighw ay, W yandotte * ace up.” The n^ssage was con- Ju^t when it originated and under HOURS: l a. as. to * » sa g truOQC Phc 1302-J -med when he looked up to gaze intc what circumstances are not known.— OFFICE WYANDOTTE. MIGB. Telephone 860 e muzzle of a revolver. . Pathfinder Magazine. ............. ..I I I M M 111 I H H W t M M W W W M t t m HALL I lO to I 18 ELM S T. W Y A N D O TTE Remodeled and Re-Decorated, New Floor, Modern Improvements. All up-to-date. F R E D W . C L A SSO N i The W yandotte Herald BY J. D. HAVEN every Friday a t Wyandotte, Mich. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT E S T A B L IS H E D 1879 Owinjr to the recent affiliation with; the’ Co-Operative Booking Office, a Kuniky Theatre Enterprise, patrons of this theatre will be assured of seeing the screens greatest pictures. ■Subscription Price, $1.50 Per Year ■ntered at the Wyandotte, Mich., postoffice as second class matter. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF Rbliert La Rue is recovering fro m a n Oi<eration for. appendicitis. .performed at the Wyandotte General hospitijl l:,ist Saturday. ; Mrs. Frank Caspers- and: Miss An toinette : Kiley are leaving Saturday fo r New York city -and .Washington, It. (\. to siiend several days. The Brotherhood of- Emmanuel Lutheran clnirch will hold a lawn so cial on. the elnirch grounds. Sycamore and Fifth streets, on Tuesday evening, J-uue 12. . • Mr. and Mrs. It. N.-Anthony of 18413 W indward road; .Cleveland, Ohio, form e r residents of Wyandotte, wrilt cele brate their golden wedding anniver sa ry , on May 111.Rev. ami Mrs. II. Norman Jackson and Mr. and .Mrs. Earl .M,iller motored ■to Alpena on Tuesday- to attend the Michigan state conference annual meet ing held in the Congregational church in that city. ■ V Jle m a rd Mahalak. A rthur Drouilliird ill-71 the Misses Florence Milkins and ..Nathalie I.aHue motored to- O.wosso. last Sin-day and spent the- da,'. as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo J. Mahalak and family. ■ • Since •-Governor Green 1ms decided to hold a state-wide safety campaign, . th e Det ro it.Automobile club has decid ed to■.-postpone its annual brake tests, so that there may he no duplication of endeavor. '“ ' A W yandotte Laundry, -Co. -truck driven by Al. Mauren of..-3()34: Fourth street,.w as iiit by a Detroit-W yandotte street car at the corner of .Riddle aven ue and Chestnut street on the morning of May 1<>. No one reported hurt.. The police were called to a-joint in the south end -the.other day. wlieil a man is said-.to-have lost all tiis money in a ipiarter machine. The uwchine was put in a hiding place while tin* officers were on. their way. and .with -it went the evidence... The government wants a director-<>f WYANDOTTE, MICH. Sun day, M onday, T uesday, M ay 2 0 - 2 1 - 2 2 T he S c r e e n ’ s B e s t C o m e d i a n in t h e B i g g e s t L a v g h - G e t t e r o f H is C a r e e r — Reginald DENNY “T H A T 'S MY DADDY” Supported by the most lovable child star of filmdom—JA N E LA V E R N E —w ith Barbara K ent, Lillian; Rich, T om O ’Brien Mote complications than a Peace Conference—more laughs than, an Irish . picnic—more fun than a buggv ride SPECIAL COMEDY________________________'__________________ W ed n esd ay and T hursday, M ay 2 3 - 2 4 MATINEE WEDNESDAY 2:15 CONEY ISLAND w ith LOIS W ILSO N ACTION! THRILLS! And Romance among the teeming millions of , Coney’s thrill-mad throngs ALSO COMEDY and M. G. NEWS __________________________ F rid ay, M ay 2 5 “A Light in the W indow ” with H E N R Y B. W A L T H A L L an d ’ P A T R IC IA A V ERY ‘ Also Bob Cunvood in ' Payroll Rounduw,’1 Comedy and Kinograms . S a tu rd a y , M ay 2 6 Greatest Melodrama of All Time! M atinee 2 P. M. “ AFLAME IN THE SKY" also Comedy, Felix and “The Vanishing Rider” PUNE 13 FATAL TO TWO FLYERS The Date and the Weather Challenge ' Your Appearance ' Several Mihor Auto Mishaps Dress up - spruce up - you’ll look better, feel better, work better, Y oil’ll command more respect from your associates - and yourself. Everything’s here. Lively Springlike furnishings, colorful tweed topcoats, youthful styles in suits of rugged twists'and staunch worsteds. W alter .Knack': of ,1500 Chestnut street, reported to' the poliee that Urn ear he was driving hit Stanley Wttoba g ric u ltu re in tho Im iiiin st»rv ic(? iii lewski of 12 55 Dak street when .the th e wosi. ii t an onti-:uii‘(* sn-la ry of 82.lat ter ran in fi'Ont <tf his iiiuclihie,,last:' A lso as;sistiiiit chief uc7(H) a .Will Sunday. Mrr K qack: took.Wnihleyvski' edi-couttrnnt :i ml- a u d ito r . p rin cip a l to' the W yandotte General / hospital, eluef lilu-i tria n. tu ria l clor!k . liosiiital where’ Dr. Cameron attended liim. H e; i Full steiim-oloot i-icr <>iurim>umn.. etc. ’Y Cay.:- When a F ord, airplane era.-shod jus.L was mot. badly -hurt. . ■ p iirtic u liirs iit* t he pos■tolfii e. * Miss Evelyn Thomas of 224 S k ill av 1101‘ih of the Ford airport, last. Satur 2 PANT SUITS $29.50, $35, $40,' $45 M ich iiol .M ille r e!ie( i <>r pneiiinoiiia day morning, two airmen. William enue I'etioi'ts that tlie c/ii: .she was at his -Inuiit*. N25 Ash- street, last Sun Muini.; o f Farmington, rite, pilot, and driving liit a; 12iyear ohl hoy at Fovirlh TROJAN WEAVE SUITS, Models for Everyman, $60 day. at the age of. 4s years. Ilis w ile Earl K. Parker of Dearborn, the mech and Film streets, m i Monday afternoon STRAW HATS — FUR HATS — DE^BYS and several children--survive. The fun anic, were burned to death, Mmni. the and took him home where-Dr. Mel’oil. eral was from St. Joseph's church at. pilot', is.said, to have, taken .the. plane who attended him, found a.’bniised bin ■Quality throughout ,| 0 o 'c lo c k Wednesday niorning wild off.-the ground before it:H:id attained and knee. . - , ■ interm ent in: Ait. .Carmel cemetery. Sim Davidson of the Gould road "re -ufi'icient speed to gain altitude. In . Josephine Geudron. ' 75 years old, order to avoid striking wires miming ports tliat liis ear ran down a little died at 'Providence. hospital; .Detroit, along the Michigan C e n tra l railroad girl at,. Eureka avenue iiiid Eleventh last Saturday. She was the w ife of tracks, the plane :jva> swi’uig lo one \ street <111 May 9. Dr. McDoll found the late Joseph. Gelidroii. and "the.moth side, slipped and descended to. - the j:jha 1 he. was not: seriously injured. er of Mrs. I,t;o-Shaw.;.George Gendi-ou, ground, one of the wings being foned.j Mrs. E. • I- Brandt. ills . A. V. Nid.\, into the gasoline tank. An explosion j WARNING OF MAD DOGS the late William and Henry Gendron;. followed, and- the plane caught .iire. j and Mrs.. Julia Duggan. The funeral The two men in. the crew were .either ! , Notice is hereby given that an epi To Stimulate Interest was from the. residence of her daugh killed by the explosion or burned (,o demic o f ra hies in (logs and other do in Vegetable Garden ter. Mrs. E. L. Rrandr. 5912 Lafayette death in the blaze. mestic: animals exists in n e a r by coni; boulevard at W o'clock .and from St. Two workmen, employed by t in* numifies, and that, iliero is danger of . One thousand dollars in prizes forAnne's church at 9 :5U Wednesday W ayne .County Rond.Commission. At-' this: disease appearing :in. Wyandotte ; the best ornamental ahd kitchen- g a r morning.-'Burial was in Alt. Olivet cem lan Dingwell and AYiliiam Brussel!, a t several: eases have, already, appeared dens will be awarded in 192S by the etery. ■ " tempted to rescue tile flyers from the and •more -than the usual number of Woman’s Home Companion in con Reginald Denny will lie seen m eSun plane's cabin, .hut were unsuccessful. persons are being latten. junction’ with local chambers of com-; day. Monday 7and Tuesday in1.one of Tire ship had previously flown over .C itiz e n s are directed to confine and nierce and other civic bodies. th e most liilaricms comedies of his lOO.OOH mile.s without aeeident. closely observe, their (logs a”nd other Last , year prizes were, offered by Long Distance Rates Are screen career, "T hat’s My Daddy,” at Munn. the pilot, was known to nianv domestic animals.. t-he Rialto theater, a comedy you should: AVyandotte people, having formerly ' In the event of lieing liitten. (he; the magazine,. for the first time, .for Surpfisingly Low not miss. It is very breezy. and full been a pilot, for the H ess A ircraftCo.. wound, should have” the immediate at • both ornamental and vegetable gar of infections laughter.. He. is supported while the latter was operating in (his tent ion of a physician and the animal dens and the judges were keenly dis-. For Instance: appointed when the ornamental va by Jane LaVerne, and in the cast are city. FJe was married.ami leaves a wife placed under observation. B arbara Kent, Lillian Rich and Tom and on£ child. Vaccination of animals will prevent' riety of entries outnumbered vege # O'Brien. The picture for Wednesday The i ’nited States department, of the disease and all owners of dogs table gardens 25 to .l. Prizes are there^ and Thursday is"C oney Island,*’- star commerce is to conduct an investiga a re directed .to confine them, to the iore reoffered this year in the hope ring Lois Wilson, and is full of action.- tion. premises until vaccinated and licensed that interest .in growing vegetables th rills and romance. It; shows Conetv to run at .large. will be stimulated. Island at its busiest time. On Friday, 2()\v2 A. IV SCHULZ,' M. I). "This lack of interest in gardening BOIS BLANC EXCURSION “The, Light /in the Window," w ill he was the more regrettable,!’ says -the o f m c k in l e y f . t . A, shown and lias a great cast, headed,by. magazine, ‘.(since la s t summer green Henry; It. W althall and P atricia Avery. corn on the cob was $1,25 a d<)zen ears, Saturday .will see the melodrama, The second annual Bois Blanc excur in New York. Another instance of the ‘‘Aflame in the Sky.’’ . sion sponsored by the McKinley' B. T. growing indifference to raising food-: A, will he held on Saturday, .Time 9. stuffs is sh0wn in the fact th at an or less, between 4:30 a. m. and 7:00 p. m. The-boat will leave the municipal authoritative; report cites such in dock at, 9:40 in the niorning and res -You can call the following points and talk for THREE MINUTES stances as one agricultural high/ turn at. It p, m. The fare will: be 75 for the rates shown. Rates to other points are proportionately school with 1,150 students, only .eight cents ,f«r adults and 40 cents for low. of whom had chosen -.agricu-ljpfe as children,: , Arrangements have been • ■ . ■ .:■ D ay -' made with the owners so that, two a vocation.” Frpm Wyandotte to: boats will be sent if needed. It is ex Communities Do Well Rev. A. Schmidt, 78, died a t his home pected that either the steamer St. AKRON, OHIO —'___________ .85 ’ to Beautify Highways in Mansfield, Ohio, last.w eek Wednes Claire or the Columbia will he the hoar ' ALBION, M lC II._______1______ .65 used. This editorial,' from the Grants BAI) AXE, M IC H .______________.75 day, He is survived by his wife. Mr. Schmid was pastor .of.'St.- John's BATTLE (-R E E K _______________.75 ' Pass (Ore.) Courier, has a universal BAY (TTY _________ •„___ -------- .75 . church on Chestnut street, this city, application: for 37 years, up to four years-ago, CANTON, OHIO ________________.90 •Southern Oregon is the garden spot when, .because of advancing years, Jje CLEVELAND. OHIO ___________ .70 of the Pacific coast. Here nature has resigned his imstorate. and moved to, , FORT 1VAY;NE. IN D ._____ ______.85 done her utmost In . providing beauty GRAND RAPIDS _______________.90 Ohio. for all of. us to appreciate. - Unfor MEETINGS Th6. funeral took place in Mansfield tunately tliere1have been many in the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ’ SERVICE last Saturday afternoon. Eight auto The rate! quoted above are Sfafidn- fo-S(« tiort Day rate*, eSecti ve from past-who have been unable to appre held a t n ew .K . of P. Hall, First 430 a. m. to 7 M p, m. Bvenmg S ta tio n -to -S ta tio n rates are effective mobile .loads.of friends from this city from 7:00 p. m. to 8JO p. arid Night S ta tio n -to -S ta tio n rates, 6:30 ciate sthese natural advantages, just St„ Sunday 10:30 a. m .; Wednes attended the funeral. p. m. to 4-30 a. m. as there are-- people today who can day,- testimonial meeting, at 8 p. m. - A S ta tio n -to -S ta tio n call it one that it mad? to a certain telephone ratber Reading- room open Wednesdays not s«?e the beauty of tlieir surround :-than to acme person In particular. r - . CUSTOMS PATROL AGENTS ings. 2-5 p, m. Subject -May20, “ Soul -If yon-do not loans the number of the distant telephone, ■sive the -operator SEIZE CARS AND BEER -the name and address and specify: that you will talk with “anyone” who and Body.” Native trees and. shrubs which once' anawere a t the called telephone. ^ ' lined the highways of southern Ore A Paraon-to-Paraon call, becauae. more work is involved, costs mare than a Monday night and early -Tuesday S t a t i o n t o S t a t i o n can. The rate on a P erson-to-Paraon call is the same gon-: have been removed in .many WYANDOTTE. CHAPTER, NO. 870, ,u\'X at aD.hours..-.-, . ■T ■■. -. morning, customs border patrol agents . Order of thp Eastern Star. Regular places. In their place can be found ’ made several seizures'of beer and au meeting on the second Friday of old stumps and fallen trees. Old1cans, A d d itio n a l rate information ccCn be secured tomobiles ■in the down river section, ... each- inonrii, and. special meetings bottles and other rubbish left by un A car and 20 cases of beer w e re by galling the Long Diitance operator ONLY PART OF IT on the fourth Friday 6f the month. thinking campers are seen-from the found a t the foot of south Gibraltar highway where there ‘might he beau . Secretary. . . ■ road. A t the fo o t.o f a street in Fred, six, in school his first day tiful natural parks- to delight 'every Trenton.-/25 cases of beer and an au tomobiles w e re taken. Several auto was asked by his teacher w hat his visitor. SEWING MACHINE R EPA IR 8 mobiles containing lieer were seized in fa th e r’s occupation was. Fred did not Cities ’ of southern' Oregon have SEWING MACHINES REPAIRE1 Wyandotte. No arrests w ere made. know, so the teacher told him to find.- awakened t o ” the need for improve at. your home by F. Sanger, 25 Bid out and tell, her next day. Thaf night ment of the scenery along the main die, 'Needles,: oil, bets* p arts for •£ F red’s mother explained to him that arteries of travel. A concerted plan ♦■lei"!1'>-H**X-*I-S-> machines. Phone 792. his daddy was a telegrapher. is now being developed by which it Js Next day Fred told liis teacher his hoped th e re . will be a full- co-opera- • TRUCKING daddy was some kind of “grafter,” tion in making these highways roads FOR LOCAL AND LONG D is He couldn’t remembet the wholeWord.- through giant parks. . tance heavy trucking phone 92. —Capper’s Weekly. 1 D R IN K One way this can be accomplished is through the plan ting of trees and ' Shrewd MANUFACTURERS OF shrubs along the high'ways. Another Householder (to persistent sales is the removal of unsightly- deposits PURE LIQUID MALT m an)—This is the third time you have of cans and other rubbish. Highways IN 5 GAL. CANS ~* J From H ot Springs, Ark. called about an electric washing ma lined with beautiful shade trees o f; chine. How may times do you want varieties best, suited for the, yariousv in the M ARX BREWING PLANT C. me to refuse you? localities would certainly prove a 614 HUDSON ST., WYANDOTTE T ry th is once and see if you lik e it. Salesman—Well, madam, I think wonderful attraction in years to come. Phones 50 — 449 Phone Wyan. 1249-J I8w l3twice is. sufficient , TELEPHONE 16 » »■ ! ' 1 I 'I1’H 1 4»'!■ 'I; 'I1 '! ■ <l< ■I"M | KUPPENHEIMER FAM OUS FIFTIES SUITS AND TOPCOATS ROEHRIG BROS. M ICH IGAN BELL TELEPH O N E CO. Rsv. A. Schmid Dead in Ohio Jl Few , Little * CUSSIFIED w fiN Doq’t Be Sick Mountain Valley Water E. K REGER’S Sons W yandotte P ro d u cts Co. BEULAH B. ENGELMAN TEACHER OF PIANOFORTE ing -sessions.; of ■the. city council first obtain ? The Herald files show th at on May 20; 1003. after a lot of horse-play, the council solemnly adopted a-resolu tion offered by Alderman Joseph Cram er. which read -“Inasmuch as other Official bodies are permitted to smoke while in session, resolved that hereaf In .May, l!l()3, the-'Wyandotte hoard j ter this council have the sti me privil .of review was haying its: trouhles.The j ege.” The live aldermen present voted state tax commission; made an arid-j yes, , ami the resolution went, on the n ary demand that the valuation of the ■record. First, and Second, wards lie increased by about 75 per cent, and the Third i ward by about 20 per Cent. Ward supervisors declared that tliey would , have::to assess'. property-at.m ore than ! it w as worth; in order -tp meet the de mand, and City Attorney George W. ■Coome-r gave a n o p in io n -that t-lie-. tint commission possessed no authority to make the demand in the way that It The final chapter in the tragedy which involved the killing of William did. A. Niedermeier, South Rockwood mail After being deadlocked for weeks, carrier, by prohibition agents, comes ■the botml of education engaged: Frank With a decision by the .United' States On IE -Sooy of MHaa as superintendent of Cour}: of Appeals at' Cincinnati. April 23. 1027, Ernest L. Renway, aschools, oil the eleventh ballot. former federal prohibition officer, was. Arrangements: for the observance of convicted of. felonious assault in con Memoria 1 day in .May. I POT resulted nection with the kiliiitg. andj.wtts sen in engaging two bne-s bands to head tenced :hy Judge Charles O. Simons it,i the street parade. federal court at Detroit to serve from six'...mouths'"to three years in -the .Mich Samuel Barkley. superintendent el igan state prison -at. Jackson. The jury the eaustif depa rttneut at the Michigan before whom the case was tried, deAlkali ’works, had a narrow escape- lilterated mine hours -before bringing front death. He left a bottle of distilled in a verdict. water under a faucet-of.running w ater iBenwiiy ’appealed... to the higher to cool. A few minutes later a elieniNt court. A, companion officer who was left a sim ilar shaped bottle of caustic.- with Bcnway tit the time of the shoo:soda solution' near (he other bottle. ing wtis acquitted. Mr. Barkley, desiring a drink, picked At the trial Benwa.v Testified that up Hie uj-ong bottle. The services of he and his partner Thouglit that XeidI)r. X. T. Langlois were m>ce--sary to ermeier' and itnother hunter. Floyd get; him <mt. of (htnger from the caus Crooks, wljb was with Neidermeir. tic draught. were rum runners. In passing sentence on Bemvayv Wyandotte UongregatkmaHsts: invite Ju<ige Simons’ recommended that, the Rev. Guy II. Lemon, a student a t Ober- minimum teria be served.lin college, to become their pastor. 25 Years Ago in Wyandotte WITH TREES . D etroit*motorists will soon he riding almm.. the smoorh: even concrete' of Wayne county tietween shady rows of tall trees. ■ They will take pleasure in the beauty of'roadside foliage and .ap preciate the comfort that trees give, to highway travel by fending off the glare of the sun in summer and acting as a.-.windbreak at other, seasons. Great progress is. being' made . in tree-planting along th e■■highways, and particularly in soutnwest Detroit. Hiir roil river alrive. Fort street. Eureka road. Allen-road. Goddard road. Tele graph road.'lYaliz road. Sumpter road. River road. Wi - i road. .'Wayne South. Ecorse. and inau.v- other highways south .of .Michigan avenue are listed in the Iteyuiitication program, -of the County Road* commission. - Many thou sands of trees Stave already been plant ed along their mutes; hi addition., to the trees, much shpldiery is also being set out, especially tit .curves and in Places w here pbols • of rain water would colleet in formimudhoies if the roadside were hot protected by tie* growths. Miinl in.'iplt's. ’American elms,, syca mores, red. oaks.' pin oaks, oriental planes it ml white pines a re .included' in the varieties' of trees selected. Good sized forests of rlte-e- trees..will have been planted along the southwest's network of highways hv the rime (lie tree-planting ..program is■■eonipleteih ... "Tree planting .and roadside decora tion are an. integral, part of road building and furnishing complete road service.' said- <'ouimissioner: . Edward N, Hines to ' a representative of .the, Souths Wesf District, association, •...‘■■in. our beautifying program we take ("ire of the sides Of the road, :1ml trim and nra in tain the ",trees .already growing, as it is just as . im p o rtan t-'to keep these in good condition :is it is to plant new ones. ’ "We are .phnitlng shrubbery, also, at-'points where there is a widened ••ami '.hi the road built ■to..ease off a sharp ■curve. The shrubs ...keep :*■tin1 roadside in ■■satisfactory..condition at these points; , “The Atncriean eim. bard maple.and red maple are preferred .for. roadside planting, in- our program., because they tire indigenous.-to this part-., of the, country, arc free...from .'.insect, pests, a n d have Jong life. However, ill the southwest district, where the soil is sandy, it is Thought th a tw e .will have some of the'Toads planted in w h ite pines, as these trees will stay, green, all the year round. ' • *T. have, just completed- a long trip through a dozen -.states ami have found ve ry little effort put forth, to. do; whirl we are doing, here' in The wav( of tree planting, roitdside decoration, .parks, and-."things- of that so rt;. We lire, proceeding under it definite plan and from year to-.year we are. making, progress.'on-that- plan. We have plant ed a bout.'CM l<to trees thus fa it It takes .about two yettrs fo r the young trees to he.'able to get along'.without initcn attention, and the cost is about $5 per • tree. ■ ■ ' " O u t tree .planting, o p e ra tio n s w ill g iv e these fu n d s both b e a u ty'a n d -.co m fo rt. A bare. ■bleak ■■■■landscape is.not, desirable front tiny angle; a n d , besides, tliis w o rk sets better standards of liv in g f o r -t h e people." - ■Considerable' progress bits . been ..made, by the commission in procuringproper lighting-for- the main highways. Commissioner Hines said. This is fm im portant factor in '.making, the. roads safe for travel by night. ;v -Pin iny opinion.” CommissionerM ines saii. "the time is coming when the main travelled roads:.will all be light ed. Much- of the transportation of freight and heavy goods w ill he done at night. Persons- operating motor trucks will have day d riv e rs and night drivers. At the present time the laws are.such th at the county, as a county, cannot legally light the roads. ' This the duty of the townships, villages and cities. Therefore, we are attempt-, ing. and successfully, too, to have the townships and villages . light *these •■•roads. • and that' is the reason *th at sometimes .one road is lighted quicker than another. Wo can say to a ‘township, 'If this road is finished by a certain rime through your territory, how about lighting i f f In m ostcases the town is glad to do this to provide its '-people and travellers , generally w i t h lietter and safer travel.” . Although a ll of the county roads ■■have a p lace in . the- tree-planting' pro gram. the road commission has taken much pride in beautifying the Huron River- drive. Tliis drive connects-Vic tory park. Huron Elver park and the State park a t Rockwood. .■offering : a. 'picturesque, tour for motorists. 35 Mile Limit in Certain Sections The Trenton village 'council lias in creased tlu* itermissalile speed for auto mobiles on certain streets and p arts of streets. < Fort street and West road hereafter will he patrolled■■■for. reckless driving hut speed limits have been taken from these streets. A speed limit of So miles an hour on North Washington avenue, from Helen avenue to Klin street: 25 miles an hour from Elm to Slocum streets, and .‘Id miles an hour from Slocum street, to the Detroit Edison Co. plant, has lieen provided by the council. • On Other streets the limit has been raised to 25 miles an hour. Take Advantage Of TH ESE Ernest L. Dsnway Goes to Prison Will of the late ('apt. John H. Ford leaves his estate to his son, Edward Etml. and his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Emory I,. Forth and children. Edward Ford of Toledo was named its executor. During the hist, ten years of his life, (’apt. Ford made gifts to churches ah<l educational- institutions totalling :$50(>,01«l. i When did", the h ab it.of smoking dm- MRS. EISELE DIES AT HOSPITAL OF PNEUMONIA Mrs. Susanna Eisele, 24 yettrs old. wife of Anthony Ejsele, .died of pneu m onia,at -the! Wyandotte -General hos pital last Saturday. She is survived by her husband -and '■■infant' child. H e r funeral was from the home. 824 Pine street, at 8 :30 and from St. Joseph's church at 9-: <^'elock Tuesdaym orning. Buriitl wtis in Mi. Ctirtmd cemeterv. 4 llt'C K TO W ELS................— ....................... $1.00 17x32. all linen, hemstitched woven borders. MEN’S BALBRIGAN UNDERWEAR. 3 Garments ____________________________________$1.00 4 TURKISH TOWELS ______________ ____ $1.00 20x44; colored border and fancy. ■ Men’s Munsing W ear U S u its _____________ $1.00 - -Dropped numbers; values-uip- to 82,00 BEDSIIEETS. FRUIT COTTON-------- $1.00 each run of mill size.' 81x00 BROADCLOTH SMOCKS, Sale P rice’___ $1.00 Reg. $1.30, sizes small, medium and large. IRONING BOARD COVER AND P A D ----- $1.00. ■quilted pad cover with eyelets and Tord for lacing, CHENILLE R E G ____________$1.00 each lSxfii;, Blue, fluid, Ro.-c. Orchid. Green ENGLISH PRINTS. 3 Y a rd s ---------------------$1.00 Fast colors. 32 inch wide . PERCALE. BEST GRADE. 5 Y a rd s_______ $1.00, 30 inch wide, gobd selection' TOWELING 7 yards. ITneii welt, 17 in. vide —s------------ $1.00’ 5 yards, all linen. If! in. wide ------ ._$I,00; MEN'S NIGHT SHIRTS, M u slin __________ $1.00 BROADCLOTH HOOVERS. Sale Price___ $1.00 -Reg, $11,45. of genuine Loomtox Broadcloth. (\flor. White only.. LADIES' PORTO RICAN HAND MADE FINE MUSLIN NIGHT GOWNS, specially priced_$l.0() RAYON UNDERWEAR ________________ $1.00 Combinations. Step-ins. Panties. • Bloomers, Night Gowns,, values up to $L(i5 TAFFETA PILLOWS “Quilled" _____ 1-----$1.00 Square and oblong shapes GIRL'S WASHABLE DRESSES. Specially priced $1.00 ...Colors tiiiit are sparkling and bright, styles that speak-the-newest vogue-iii Prints uml-iiunitieK. CORSELETTE __________________________ $1.00 Silk '.stripe coutil. 4 hose supporters, hoped dia. phram. Flesh color, 32 to 42 BOY S B L O U SE S_________ ______ J 2 ;fo r $1.00 Percale sport: ttud- hbick- sateenx’lilouses, Reg. price , 78c. Sizes are broken MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS _______ $1.00 .. All sizes, lirtattlchah,: cullars1 it-tliichetl LADIES SILK H O S E _______________$1.00 pair Square or pointed heel, chiffon or service weight, ■ 12 WASH C L O T H S _____________________ $1.00 Heavy grade ferry, fancy. CHILDREN'S HOSE. Ribbed ___________ $1,00 10 pair for, w hite'and cordova-h only. CHILDREN'S SOCKS. 3 P a i r ____________ $‘1.00 ■awg.' AN UNUSUAL PURCHASE-OF FROCKS! Beautiful ncyv prints in till the latest spring shades Very specially p ric e d -------------------------------- $1.00 " Sizes 1(1 to 40 LADIES' CIIAMOISETT GLOVES___ $1.00 pair, CRETONNE. 5 Yards for _______________ $1.00 12 p attern s to select from . •. . MEN'S ATHLETIC U’ SUIT. 2 For $1.00 BOY'S IMPORTED ENGLISH BROADCLOTH BLOUSES. Stile Price ^ ______________$1.00 - Reg; .--priTte. $1.50. Color wliite and tan. BOY S WASHABLE SUITS. Specially priced. $1.00 Sizes 3 to 8: yettrs.: tilln e w ptit ternA an d summer Sb.'tdes. GIRL'S SLEEPING GARMENTS _______ $1.00 Reg. price $1.25, Fancy Krinkle cloth size 2 to <i \ eti rs. GIRL'S SATEEN BLOOMERS 4i)c quality. Sizes J to 11 year'-, 3 for $1.00 while, flesh, hlk., MIDDIES. White Lonsdale J e a n _____ _ $1.00'= Reg. price $1.25. All sizes, S to 20 and 3(1 1o- 44 Long and short sleeves. Above S u s o id o n In an e le c tric r e fr ig e r a to r , milk and cream keep sweet and pure, and foods are safe relievin g your mind and safe guarding your health. frozen desserts, frozen salads, chilled bever ages —electric re frig ' eration multiplies the menu to suit a variety of tastes. The DETROIT EDISON Com pany Bell Company to Spend $5,000,000 Directors of the Michigan Beil Tel ephone- Company, tit their regular monthly meeting Thursday, approved .estimates' -for the extension of plant in; the amount -of. .$5,074,000. . This amount is divided approximately $2:370.000 for Detroit and I$2-.704,(K10 for the balance of the state. Including estimates approved a t pre At the Michigan high school baud vious meetings, total, approval has contest held' tit East Lansing hist Sat been given so fa r this year .to the ex unlay, Wyandotte's Roosevelt.; school penditure of $l:l,577.(M)t); for pliint, ex band to,ok fifth position in Class A. tensions', divided ''approximately'-. $-i.r 411.000 for Detroit and $7; 103,000 for and third place in Class I).. the balance of the state. Due tic a niisunderstundiiigy Hie “ Growth of D etroit,and of the other Roosevelt band had been practising communities of the stale makes new; music with the idea that, they would essii ry these exp.endit tires for iii-t be a contestant in Class B.' A short creased telephone fipalities, according tipie' before t lie state contest;, word to information given out following was received f-litit they, would coniitOie (he meeting of the board. - Some of the, in Class A. This ..meant Jin, entire change larger projects covered by these esti of music. None of the 'music, 'was on mates tire: sal® in tlie state,'.and the needful sheetD etro it: Inter-central office trunk telegraphed for. They ar-; line equipment. $80,500-; additional rived- in time to permit, only, live prac equipment preparatory to placing in tices for tin* Saturday contest. As a service Hie new Columbia- centra I of-.result Wyandotte was outclassed b.y (ice,. on Seldeii, near -.-Woodward; $97.Flint, and Grand Rapids who tied foi -LJIOO: Hogarth,Central office district:eafirst , place; Lansing, second , North ■blest,- --,$33.600; E m pire' central office Branch, third and Jackson fourth. district, for building and feeder cablese Saginaw was sixth. for the new Fislier bhijding, $04,000; I t is the testimony of all those pre Lincoln central' officej district, cables sent at the contest that no hand made $120,500; Cadillac cejitral office-*, di^:' a better appearance than did the Roose trict. for building aiul ifeeder cables fof velt musicians, who wore, the htlnd- Union T rust building. $42,000. soine new uniforms presented, by the • Rttite exchanges: Reed City-Pel osExchange club. key long, distance Circuits. $23,501):; The results in classes other, th an Howell, new central'-office building. Class A w ere: $44.000: Manistee-Traverse City, re Class B—First. State 'Vocational building long distance circuits, $23.School of Lansing; second. Oxford: OOO; I >.etroit:-Ahn Arbor long distance third, St. Joseph: fourth; Three R ivets; circuits, additional, equipment, $22.fifth. Fordson: six-tli, Ypsilanti; sev 000;, Rochester;»improving ami build enth, l ’.ort Huron. ing additional plant, $33,000; Detroit-;• ' Class: C—F irst, Lansing F ettiiigill; Mt. Clemens long distance Circuits, second, - Lansing .West- J u n i o r t h i r d . additional equipment, $20,500; (ireetiFlint W hittier: fourth, Grand Rapid*. ville. inqiroving and adding to plant. Technical; fifth. Alma; sixth, Holy $45,000:. Bad Axe. new central office Redeemer, Detroit. equipment, to be installed in a new Class D—First. Brown C ity; second. building. $22.800; .Battle Creek, new T rentoii; third, W yandotte; fourth. cables. ’840.775. ■ North Branch. Wyandotte' and North Branch had CANADIAN BRIDGE BILL twd bands each in the contests. OKEHED BY SENATE WYANDOTTE PEOPLE SAW PYLE’S HIKERS Sergeant Collard of the Wyandot! * police and <'ommodore: Collard motor ed to Cleveland on Monday and stay ed until Tuesday - night visiting rela tives. Tuesday they witnessed several of the runners in C. O. Pyle's “bunion •derby" from California to New York pans- through Lakewood avenue on their way. The sergeant says that, peo ple showered money upon them all along the .street: th at there was one Cleveland boy in the race and his whiskers,* were a foot long, but th at most of the runners ‘looked prettygood. On M onday the:, senate at Washing ton passed a lu ll authorizing the con struction o f the proposed bridge across die Detroit river connecting the Am erican tint! Canadian shores across-the lower end of Grosse lie. . The senate hill was introduced by Senator Arthur II. Vandenberg at the request of members of the Michigan, delegation in the house.,A. similar bit!; introduced in the house .'by Rep. (Clar ence J. MeIieod: has heen,repdrted ftivovtibly from committee. o m sK iw w C D P ' Malt®? kidney* n H Klwtdw tiiaK . 7**. ^ - S V K ^^Y ANDO ftOAl^BuaO^S SUPPLY CO !i f S S 5 » F IG U R E it out and you'll figure it pays to buy your winter coal now and get bet ter service and a better price. Pack your coal bin N O W . WYANDOTTE COAL U BUILDER’S SUPPLY C O THE HOME OF "RED HOT COLES"Ci DEPENDABLE BUILDER'S SUPPLIES OFFICE C - Y A R D AT SHORE p h o n e 2 48 D A N S T : LINE R. R -i ♦ W W W t H 1 1 1 #♦ » » » » 1 1 M * C. J . Warmbier, Jr., L. M. Teacher of Plano and Theory “Progreasive Series Graduate” —Leopold Godowskj All Grades—Beginners, Interm o diaite, Normal,' Graduate. • Special rates t? Beginners and In* tennediates. ROEHRIG BLDG. Phone 84-R. Jfruoils m ay e n ter an] tima. . WYANDOTTE. MICH. NOTICE' TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: ■On account of the .death of Joseph S. Lapezyuski, tlie Steamship and Foreign Exchange hu-dnoss heretofore conducted at 997 Oak Street, Wyan dotte. Michigan, has been discontinued. Ail ix'rsons having "claims Against raid Agency must present them on or liefore-lfitli of June,. 1928, to the State Administrative Board, a t Lan sing. Michigan. . Signed: CATHERINE E LAPCZYNSKI. IS wG * NOTICE OF A PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given that default having, been -made in the payment of the balance due to the Bryan -Boat Works on launch No. 1323A. The same w ill he sold , a t public sale o il; Saturday. May 20th, 1928, a t Boat House No. 1 foot- of W alnut Street, a t 8 o’clock a. m. THE BRYAN BOAT WORKS. 18w4 Wm. F. Bryan. .; WHY= : Woodruff & Woodruff and feet to a p o in t; thence ..North- no de W oodruff $ Woodruff, Attorneys 1 i Woodruff & Woodruf, Attorneys, Frank W. Atkinson, 2836 Biddle Ave., W y a n d o t M i c h ; 28146 Biddle Ave., Wyandotte, Mich. grees twelve minutes. AV>s; 3*25,45 feel Attorneys, 526 Dime: Bank Building -to th e p o in t.of- liegiumng.,eontaining • Default liaving been made in the MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE 22.574 acres.1 Periods of Rest, With Music Detroit, Michigan conditions of a certain 'mortgage bear I AA'hereas default has lieen made in Behe Daniels, vivacious us ever, GEORGE AV. PKRK'Y. iDefault having been made in the ing dafe_ the ninth day of January, A. the conditions of a certain mortgage A re Beneficial i comes to the Capitol-: screen next S at conditions of «• certain land contract bearing date -the eighteenth day of . I). 1926. made by Paterson-Development . Alnrtgagee. Music twice a clay, lias proved a urday - in her latest starring vehicle, made by John F. Cameron as Vendee, ,Company, a Michigan ,Corporation, of March. A. D., 1!)26, made h.v Frank A. 1 D ated: AVyandotte, -Alii-ui^,, m IV remedy for "that tired feeling” in "The Fifty-Fifty Girl,"assisted by witli Andrew Sowicka and Mary So- Detroit, Micliigun, to William Sharlow Gordon-, of the City of Detroit. ■Wayne 11th, A. D. 1928. * v .hunts Iiail and William Austin. cotton mills. wicka, his wife,: as Vendors, which and M argaret Sharlow , (his wife), of ...County, Michigan, <io Edith -Miller.: of AA’oodniff & .Woodruff. Afteiv three months’' eipcci-vieot, a ■■.-..The story is- typically. Behe D a niels, said land contract was (lilted the J4tli t h e . C’i-fy . of W y a n d o t t e , the City of AA'yaiiilotte. AA’ayne County, Attorneys for mortgagee. textile company finds that fatigue is who is never better than in a Story day of July, A, 1). 1925: on which a y n e. C o u n t y, M i c h-iga n, IMichigan, said iiiortgage being recoi'd- 2830 Biddle Avenue, 19h 13 reduced among its machine operatives wherein: the beautiful American girl land contract 'tiiere is claimed to be w h ich m o rtg ag e is recorded in: the [ eil in .-.the-■■Register of D ikhIs office for AVyandotte, Michigan. t-.innot keep lierseif out of a jam. “The by stopping all work for 12 minutes Fiftv-Fiftj G irl"'d ea ls with such a clue and unpaid at the date of this o' f:ce of -the Register of Deeds for the Ith e .County of AVayne, on the eighteenth at mid-morning and again for 12 min girl, one who is firm in the belief that notice, for principal, interest and County of AVayne, Michigan, on the day of January, A. I). 1927. in li-1 STATE GE MICHIGAN. c„ ,l!v ,r utes a t mid-afternoon, and listening to she c a n make a m an look silly under. (axes, us of the 10th day of March, 28th day of June, A. I). 1926, in Liber her 1844 of mortgages on page 479: AVayue—-s. At a se-.-ipu or ;n,. I'l-oioi. ; A; I ) , 1928:, the sum of Nineteen -Thou rlOOl of Jlortgilges on page 387. . and whereas- default lias been made Court for said .County.-of. AA'avu hi-M. music duripg these rest periods. I any .-c: of circumstances. sand Three Hundred Fifty-eight and I Whereas defau.l; has been made , of ill the payment of the, seniiiiiuiiual iul at the Prol ate Court room in ;h,, ,.i,y The music treatment has toned up Along comes .James Hall, her leading 47-100 ($19,358.47,) D ollars, and no the operatives so that the same num- > m a i l . and. in Ihe story, her partner in suit or proceedings at law or in equity prirmipal and interest and w h e re a s terest oil -aid mortgage, and -aid pay of Detroit, on rhe tw* u:y-fon'-;ii <(-i. i tiie it- .is now due anil, payable on -said ment has been in arrears for the,.peri.>U . her of. employees produce as much, -a mining venture, who accepts her pro having been instituted to recover the mortgage at this date the sum of $5.- of thirty (30) days, for which default of April in tiie year one tlum* n.d hundred and twenty-eight Pie- , with two hours; a week of time out ; posal to lake the part of the woman moneys, or any p art'.th ereo f: iO'lO.OO Dollars principal and ,$375.00 .said mortgagee hereby exerei-e- It w for musical numbers, as they did for- j •if she-wiil run tilings like a man: She :, NOW, THEREFORE, by. virtue of Dollars interest and, an attorney fee '.option- granted uv said mortgage, and George M, Read; Judge of Proban'. T11 the matter of the estate o f AVTI,. goes ahead and gets into the most merly when they worked 'w ithout rest < tilt* pun lsions of rile de lei entered of 83,-).00 Dollars- jirovided for in said lieelnres the principal -um o r -aid LIAM S. JONES- deceased. On iv.tiih,.. amusing circumstances, at least as far on tuo 10th day of March. 1928. in periods. .The.music periods amount to 1 inortgage, and. no 'suit, or .-proceedings mortgage, anil all arrearage- of inte;-- and filing- the- petition o f Everett a . il per c e n t of tire working time of the j as t in' audience i s :concerned. Behe is •wljfioli .John F. Camei-on appears as .at law. liav-ing been instituted to re e-: tliercon. and all ait.lrAey fee of. .Tone- praying that' adnFiii-tnrim i (,f the boss and cocky Jam es Hall as the "Plaintiff,, and . Andrew Sowicka; and cover the money:.-secured by said mort Mlirry-five (835.09), dollars provided; employees. I denim;e girl do make real comedy sic-. .Mary Sowicka appeal-' as defendants, gage or any part thereof. Now there ■for by statute of the State of Aliehig ui. said e-tate lie granted to him or -nr. ■ Detailed studies had shown that nations. other suitnhie person. It -i-...order. ;| weariness' resulting frum concentra- i Oil the stage, there, is ail unusual being cie-e number 142.333. nolice is fore by virtue of. the power of sale to be now due and payable; and where tinir tiie ;w.enr,y-T(iird day of May ■.next, hereby given, that on MONDAY. THE ,contained in 'said mortgage anil the as tiiere is now c.aiined to be due. in- at ten o'clock in the forenoon at *a i tion at the machines showed most con- j I’lililix production. "The. Jazz Town," spicuously about two-thirds through ' v. Iiieh avails itself of the services of THIRTEENTH DAY OF Al'GFST. t-fatute in such-case made and proviiB i-lud.iig principal anil intcre-t, the suni -court room,, be apiiointed for liea tine the afternoon. The- music program - Harry .MacDonald and the Merry t'ap- 1928, at twelve ■o'clock noon ( Eastern til, notice ,is hereby given 'th a t oil of twenty-s-?ven thousand three hun -aid pet .tion. And it i- fu r.her order,-J Standard.Tim e), we will sell ai public was inaugurated to offset this fatigue. itolians; Mirth Mack: Toots Novel- auction to the highest bidder, at (lie TueMlay, the 3rd day of July. A. L>, dred. ten aud twenly-two jjpho linn*; that a copy of thi- ord -r be publish,’1 1928. at twelve o’clock noon- (Eastern ilredths dollars ($27,310 22Trand an a 1. three successive weeks previous to saal ■■ At ten o’clock and at three o’clock lo; I lea ly and Clifford: Crandall and somberly or ('ongress Street entrylice Standard tinm) at. the southerly or Turney fee of rliirt.v-five ($35.00) dol work stops for twelve minutes. The Alarloj : and the lovely Capitol girls. to t lie Wayne County .Btiililing, in: I lie Congress street entrance to the IVayne lar- provided for by statute, of the; time of hen riiur jn the .AA'.yMiido'te- Her. power is completely s'hut off. In place This production features: a -spectacular City of Detroit. AVayne .County. Midi' (loiiiit.y Building -in th e City of De State of Mii-higan, and no suit or pro-. aid. a newspaper* printed and i-in-’ilof the whirring of machinery, the har finale, in .which- the lamp-posts dunce igan (that being the building where troit. _ County of Wayne and* State of Teedhigs at. Law, .-having- been, taken to atiiig in said- county of -AV-ayne.' GEORGE M. READ. mony .of lively airs pervades the plant to the "blues" of the Capitoliuns. (lie Cireuil Court for the 'County of | Michigan, that, being the build ing. of the recover said sum or any part t-hereof Judge of Probate. Samuel Beimvie. and. the Capitol for the rest periods. Any form-.of. re Wayne is held t . the interest of the ICircuit Court for t h e County o'f now, therefore, uotiee is hereby given (A true copy.) Symphony -orchestra will be seen in a said John F. (’aineroii in said land laxation is permitted; to. the tune: of Wayne is held-, I shall sell -at •public' that by virtue of, the power, of sale in THEODORE J. BROAVX. the latest song hit. The music is sup oharacteristio: ■--orchestral production, rout met. and in the premises described vendue to the .highest bidder .the -aid' mortgage contained, and of tile Deputy Probate Regi-rei-. 17w3 while th-c Vitaphono will .offer-a novelty: therein as corrected h.v the decree of premises described in said- mortgage -ratutes of the State of Michigan, the plied by *i reproducirfSj phonograph, and -Internafional Newsreel w ill illussaid ■.'.■Circuit Court, for the County of or so-much thereof as may be neces- undersigned will sell at .public auction/ amplified and disti-ibiffM through all tr.-iie on the screen the headlines of ■Wayne.’- in Chancery, or ,so inucn sqry to .pay the amount due on said to the highest bidder, on Tuesday, til1 STATE OF MICHIGAN. County of; the floors of tlie plant by loud speak the day. Ihereof as may be necessary to-realize mortgage and all legal costs anil for’ seven;li day of August, A. I) ,1928 tit AVayne— <•*. Af a -ession of the Pro ers in each department. the amount due. as'Yiforesaid. on said' money pa id. out for ta xes and ineludijig 12 o’clock . noon (Eastern Standard bate Court for said County of AA'a.vtie, ’HAROLD TEEN” SET FOR land eontriict .togeilier with seven per an attorney fee of thirty-five ($35.00) time) at the southerly or. Congress held at rite Probate Court, room in M10 NEXT ADAMS FEATURE cent ( 7 j. interest and all lega 1costs Dollars! proyideil for in said mortgage street entrance of flic Wa.vne County City of Detroit, on the t wen ty—event h W hy Person Can Seem allowed by law, including mi a tto r and including interest thereon, said Building (th at being’‘ Hie building in flay of Ain-1 in tin* year one thousand-. to Be Reliving Past ney’s fee, the following described' premises are described as follows:•which the Circuit C o u rt for said Couu-. nine hundred and/, rwmity-eiglit; 'Pre One of the m ost uproarious come Dr. W. A. White, superintendent of dies of modern, high school youth comes premises situated,in Die--Township- 'f ■ All that certain tract or parcel of ty of AVayne is held), the premi-,*s sent. George M. Re-d Judge of P ro S t Elizabeth's hospital, Washington, to; (Ire Adams Saturday (May It).), fol Krbwnst.own. County of .Wayne. State land in section 33 town 3,S. R, 10 E., described in -saiiL mortgage; or- suffir bate. -In tiie m atter of tin* estate of says th at for one to feel suddenly lowing rlieicurreut, engagement of “Old of .Michigan,' described as follows,^to-- described as' c.-ommencitig a t a south eient thereof- to satisfy sti id indebtetl- EDWARD EPPI.EY., diseased. K ath th at he has been in exactly the same Ironsides."- Wliaf "Seventeen” was to w it: erly line of Eureka Road, with east lie--. costs and expenses of sale, anil erine :Delio.: adm inistratrix de bonis situation before, with identical sur-; J he book world, “Harold Teen” is to . The east bne-lialf of the Northwest erly line of T erritorial Road, thence also any sum or sums' that, shall-.: lie mm of -aid estate having renflered to roundings and people, is a. common .the screem -.With a cast o f promising one-quarter, of Section nine - ( 9 1. south along easterly line of T erritorial pa-iil?a-t or before said sale bv tin* uii- /this, (ourt her filial account anfl filed experience and is technically known '.viMtu-g-- stars,;Mary Brian.:1Arthur'Bake, Town nine (9), South Range ten (10) Rond 19 rods, 2 feet. 11 inches, thence dei'signi'il,- for tiixes tnid insurancei to: tliert-wi-th her petition praying that as “paramnesia.” Briefly ■explained, Alice While, and others, the tilm takes East,. Brownstown Township. Wayne east -and parallel with southerly line protect, her interest in Hie premi-es the residue of said estate be assigned jto the persons entitled thereto; It is the reaction depends upon a little the characters from the Detroit News County. .Michigan, containing 83.9 of Eureka Road 10 rods, 13 feet and described in s-tud mortgage tis tlm laiuis;. ordered, that tiie fifth .day of June, acres, more or less. , premi-os tinil jn-oia'i-ty situated* in the; 10. inches, thence north and parallel trick of the mind manifested by a mo comic pages a'nd takes (hem through .Dated; Wyandotte, Michigan, Mav with easterly line of. Territorial Road; Township of Ttiylor, AVayne County, next at ten o’clock in the forenoon at m entary loss of a sense of time and a toimrtdie semester at school. said court room b? appointed for ex is. 1928. 19 rods, 2 feet, 11 inches, to southerly Michigan, described as follows: Tin' love affairs of Harold are any space. The individual enters into an amining and al1owing said account am! SAM FEB B. MAY. Beginning at a point said point lie-: line of Eureka Road, thence west experience or a situation, obtains a: thing hut smooth.- pursued liy tlie in- ’ Circuit Court Commissioner. along southerly line of Eureka Road. ing the North quarter po-t of Seolbni hen-ring, sa id-petition. And it: is furl her trigtling “Giggles” whose kiss is fatal, fleeting in6ju?«ssion of this situation, ANDREW SOWICKA and Iff rods,. 13 feet, 10 inches to, begin thirty-four (34), Taylor Township: ordered, th at a copy of this order be then the attenfion is momentarily at and devoted to ••Billums," his heart MARY SOWICKA. ning, i he :above described lands - being running thence -North 89 degrees East ■pul-dished three successive weeks p re is in a ooirsfant state of upheaval. tracted to something else. The period The p ranks and exploits of tiie high Vendors. recorded in Eiber 1727. page 227, 247.12 feet to a p o in t: thence South vious to said time of hearing in The of time m ay .be almost infinitesimal. school fraternity, and the big football WOODRUFF & WOODRUFF and” Wayne County-Records, in -the Town-: no degrees twelve minutes Ea'st 325.45 AVyandotteHerald, a newspaper -printr FRANK W. ATKINSON. T ie n upon the return of the attention game are high points in the story. ship of . Taylor, Wayne. County,' Mich, feet to a point: tlienee North 89 de eil- and circulating ,iu said county of » ,20wl3 igan. grees six minutes East 431 53 feet to! AA’a.vne. to the original situation this lapse 1Iiu-old also Introduces a trick. Ford, Attorneys .for Vendors. GEORGE AI. READ. a p o in t; thence South no degrees eight , AVIBBIAM SHARLOW'. of time is lost"to the individual and and a ‘■slicker" which will be the:en Judge of Probate. Woodruff & Woodruff, Attorneys minutes East: 978.58 feet to a point : MARGARET SHARBOAV, the period between t i e two experi vy. o f ,every Detroit hoy and girl, and (A true copy.) COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE - - 'i l l thence South 89 degrees twenty-six, Mortgagees. ences seems occasionally to expand provide lots of merriment f o r ' their the m atter of the estate of ANNA B. D ated : Wyandotte, Michigan,- ■ minutes a. West. 656 85 feet to a. iKiint THEODORE J. BROWN. into a long period, even into the re parents. Deputy Probate Register, 18w3 in North1 and South quarter .line -if A rthur White and Alice Bake, inci BONG, deceased. I, the undersigned, April Otli, 1928. • mote past. Another explanation, which having been .appointed by the Probate AVOODRIJFF & AVOODRUFF, said section.; thence North nodegrees is based on more recent psychological dentally have..-been elevated to the Court for the county of' Wayne: state Attorneys for Mortgagees, : STATE OF MICHIGAN, County of eightpen ininutes AVest -thirteen hmiinvestigations, holds th at one's uncon ranks of stardom as the.result, of then- of Michigan.: commissioner to re 2836 Biddle Avenue. d reil (1300) feet, to the point of, begin/ Wayne=-^ss. At a session of the Probate work in this picture mid are now scious mind sees much more than: the Court for said County of AA'ayne,. heldceive. examine and adjust all claims Wyandotte, Michigan. 14wl3 iiing, containing 16.591 acres. attentive conscious one and that a working in their new starring -vehicle. and demands of all persons against, a t the.Proliate Court room in the City EDITH MILLER. The .Adams symphony orchestra' un of Detroit, on the first day of situation, even to its details, may be Mortgagee. der Emil Hollander's direction has said , deceased, do hereby give: notice MORTGAGE SALE M ay in the year one thousand ’ hiiio taken in without paying direct con th at I will meet a t the office of D ated : Wyandotte; Michigan, May caught the exuberant: youthful spirit W oodruff & Woodruff. Attorneys’ . hundred and twenty-eight. Present, scious .attention to it. Then a moment of the picture and promises a musical Woodruff & . Woodruff, 2836 Biddle 2836 Biddle Ave,, Wyandotte. Mich. 11th. A.-D. 1928. George M. Read. Judge of Probate. In Avenue. Wyandotte; Michigan, in said later when the faculties of the con score of appropriate school songs. AA'oodruff & A V ’oodruff. . , Default ha'ving been made in the the m a tte r of th e estate of JOHN county: on Wednesday, the 11th day scious mind are at work on the situa conditions of a -«erta-in mortgage hear- Attorneys for mortgagee, RAKOCY (REKOSKE) (RAKOCZY), of J uiy, A. D. 1928, and on Tuesday,: R836 Biddle Avenue. tion, the experience seems to have ing date the second day of September. On reading, and filing the thi' 11th day of September, A. D: A. D.. 1.924, made by Adam Borkoweki AA’.vandotte. Michigan. 19wt3 deceased. been experienced before) Here again -petition--.:, of L eo. Spitek 1 praying th at 1928. a t ten o’clock a. in. of each of the lapse1of time between the two im administration de; bonis non- with the said days, for the purpose of exam a nil Anna Borkow.ski, his wife of the pressions may be greatry ’overestimat t Warns Against Buying of.,-Wyandotte," Wa.vne County,Woodruff & Woodruff, Attorneys will annexed of said, estate be granted ining anil allowing said claims, and City Michigan, to Joseph Grant and JMary 2836 Biddle Avenue* Wyandotte, Mich. to-; him or some other suitable person. ed and expanded. | Seed Corn Carelessly | that four months from the 11th day of Grant, his wife. of. the City of Wyan-. MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE It is ordered, th at the fifth day of May; A. 1). 1928, were allowed by said *'■ Washington.:—Unless.. tiie"'buy'va* clotte. Wayne County. Michigan.wffiieli1 W hereas default has been made ill W h y M o th ’s O d d T o n g u e | | er knows that the seller is re- £ court for creditors ■to present their mortgage is recorded in the office of the conditions of a certain mortgage June next, at ten o’clock in the fore The moth has a most peculiar <f> liable and can supply the kind * claims to me for examination and al the Register of Deeds for. the County hearing date the eighteenth day of noon at said court room be appointed-! for, hearing said petition. And. i t is >ngue. It is rolled up in a tiny coil ^ of seed lie offers, extreme care | | lowance. of AVayne.: and State of Michigan, on: March. A. I). 1926, made by f r a n k A, further ordered, th at a: copy of this or Dated May 11th, 1928. " hieh looks like the hairspring of a * should be exercised in purchas- * the fifth day. of 'September,','A; D; 1924, (Jordon, of the City of D etroit. AA’ayne, der lie published -three successive . ARI M. BEGOBE. atch, and this is on the under side of |I ing seed corn, the Department ^ in liber 1332 of mortgages on page County, Michigan, to George AV. Perr.v, weeks previous to said time of hear Commissioner. le insect’s hetid. 50S, 4* of Agriculture warns.*f 20w3 of the City of AVyandotte. Wayne Coun ing. in the AVyandotte Herald, a news It looks quite small when rolled up. 2 AA’liereas default has been made of ty, Michigan, said mortgage, being re paper printed aiiil circulating,in said “Unfortunately,” it says, “tiiere 2 Woodruff & Woodruff, Attorneys i t i t can be uncoiled in a flash into | are likely to be many individ- T COMMISSIONER’S NOTICE. — In .principal- and interest: anil1, .whereas corded in the Register of Deeds’ office county of AA’ayne. straight tube an inch or more in * uals who will offer to sell <{» the m atter ;of the: estate of AUGUST; there:is-...now .due and payable on said for the County of Wayne, on the nine-j GEORGE M. READ, teentli day o f March, A. D, 1926, ■iii ^ crossed seed at a high price j STERNS, deceased. I. . Judge of Probate. the under mortgage a t this date the sum of. two lilier;1687 of mortgages on page 156: Watch a moth visiting flowers, and 4> when the.seed is little more pro(A true copy.) signed, liaving been appointed by the thousand two. hundred ($2,200.00) principal, and thirty-three and Whereas default has b een m ad e THEODORE J. BROAVX, m will see how it is used. The in- 21 ductive, if any, than ordinary Probate Court for the county of dollars ($33.00) dollars interest and, an atto r in. the payment of the semi-annual in ct either remains hovering in the air 2 seed corn.” Deputy Probate Register. 1Sw3 Wa.vne. state of Michigan; commis ney fee of thirty-five ($35,0(J) dollars terest on said mortgage, and said pay alights' upon a petal ; then -, the J sioner to< receive, examine and adjust The supply of superior crossed provided for In sa id ■mortgage, and no ment has been- in arrears for the per W. Hugli Williams, Attorney, ngue straightens out suddenly, and seed, the department advises, Is 4* all claims and demands of ,all persons suit or proceedings at. law Jiaving iod of thirty (30) days, for which de Calialan Building th ru st into the innermost recesses comparatively small, ':.■. |* against said deceased, do- hereby give been instituted to recover the money fault said m ortgagee hereby exercises STATE OF AflCIIIGAN—County Jif notice that I w ill meet a t the office the flower to obtain the honey which ♦ ' 4 >i his: option granted in said m o rtg ag e/ Wayne—ss;■;A t.a session; of the Pro of Woodruff & Wood ruff, 2836 Biddle Secured by said mortgage.-or any part hidden there.. Avenue. (Wyandotte. Michigan, in said- thereof. Now ' therefore hy virtue of and dcclarees tile principal sum: of bate Court for said County of AA’ayne, A few moments are spent in sipping, county, on Wednesday, tiie 11th day the power of sale contained, in said said mortgage, anil ail arrearages of lieid at-.the Probate Court room in. the id then the tongue springs back.into-j of .July. A. I). 1928, and on Tuesday, niorlgage anil the statute in such case, interest thereon, and. an attorney fe() City of Detroit, on the fifth day of i coil and away goes the moth to ’ \Y. Hugh Willianis, Attorney. -the 11th, day of .--September, A. I). 1928, made and iproviileil ■■noticev is hereby' of thirty-five ($35.00) dollars provided ABiy in the year one -thousand-.nine'.’ Cahalan Block . ek another flower. ' given that oil Tuesday .the 31st day for li.v statute of tiie State of Michi hundred and twenty-eight. P resent: COMAIISKIONEIUS NOTICE. — In ■at ten o'clock a. m; of each .of' said of July. A. D; 1928. at twelve o'clock gan, to be’ now due and payable; and George AI. Rend. Judge of Probate. In The length of the tongue depends (lays, for the purpose of examining >on the flower visited by the partie-, tiie imitter of the estate of. AUGUST anil allowing said- claims, and - th at noon (Eastern Standard time) a t the whereas there is now ’'claimed to lie due the matter of the estate of AIARY" ar kind of m oth. Those which feed GOGOBIX. deceased. I. the under four months from the 11th day of jsoutherly , or Congress Street entrance including pi-ifitpal iind interest.(lie sum DIEB, deceased. An instrum ent in i the honey of sweet williams or signed, having been appointed by the May. A. I). 1928. were allowed by said to the AATayne 'County Building in the iif thirty-seven 'thousand,, one hundred writing purporting to lie, the last wi-l . oebs require .only a short one t but a Probate Court for the county of court -for creditors to present their City of Detroit, AVayne County. .Mich eighty-two and thirty-two one hun and testament of said deceased having ng tongue is needed by the species ■Wayne, state of Michigan, commis claims to me for examination and al igan, that , being the building o f the dredths ($37,182,32) dollars and an been delivered into this court for pro- , Circuit: Court . for the .County, .of attorney fee of -thirty.-five ($35.00) bate. It is ordered.: th at th e thirteenth iich visit Canterbury bells, lilies, op sioner to receive, examine and adjust lowance. all claims anil demands of all persons AATayne is held.I shall sell a t public ven dollars provided for by statu te of tiie. day of June next at ten o’clock in, the*, ly other deep-pctalcd (lower. Dated May lftli. 1928. against said deceased; do hereby, give due to the highest bidder the premises: 'State -of'1Michigan.- and no suit or pro forenoon. at said court room beV ap ARI M. BEGOBE. notice that l will "meet at. the Wynns * described in said mortgage or so. .much ceedings a t law having lieen tak en to pointed for proving said instrum ent. ” \ Commissioner. Vhy C a t Is C a lle d “ T a b b y ” do;te Savings Bank, in said county, 20w3 thereof as' may he necessary to pay recover said sum or any part thereof: And it is further ordered, th a t a copy V tabby was originally a .brindled on Monday, the Dili day of July, A. tiie amount due on said mo.rtirnge anil now, therefore notite is hereby given of tills; order be jiublished three suc DWIGHT L. STRONG, Attorney all legal costs and .for money paid out th at by virtue of the power of-sale in cessive weeks previous to said time of ; striped cat. The word is derived 1>. 1t)2S, and on Saturday, the 8th STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the for. taxes- and. including an attorney said m ortgage contained, and of tbe hearing, in the AVyandotte Herald, a m Attabieh. a section of Bagdad day of .-'September. A. 1). 1028. a t 30 merly noted for the manufacture o’clock a. m. of -oach ..of said days, for Circuit.Court for the County of Wayne,- fee of thirty-five ($35.00) dollars pro-' statutes of the State of Michigan, the newspaper printed. And circulating in videil for in said-mortgage and includ undersigned will sell a t public- auction, said County of AA’ayne. wntorpd’or moire silk. This silk has,. ihe purpose of examining anil allow in chancery. FRANK POBBY, Plaintiff, ing interest thereon; said premises are to tiie highest- bidder; on Tuesday, the undulating or wavy surface, pro ing sa id chijms. and that four months GEORGE AI. READ. . vs. seventh-, day- of August:,. A. D- 1028, at described as follows: » ved by pressure, after damping and from tin* Dili'day of May. A. I). 1928, Judge of Probate. were allowed by said, court, for cred CARMIE B. TOBLY, Defendant, -All those certain pieces or parcels 32 o’clock noon (E astern standard (A (rue copy.) ' iting. In England such .silk, was itors to present their claims to me At a session of said court held at' of land situated and being in the pity tim e), a t tile southerly or Congress THEODORE J. BROWN. led “attabi,” of which “tabby” is a for. examination and allowance: • the court house in the city of Detroit, of Wyandotte, Wa.vne County, Mi.chB Street entrance of the AA’ayne County Deputy Probate Register, 19w3 ruption. ■ Certain striped cats were Dated May 9rh. 192S. , said county, on the 29flrday of March, gan,.- and described as lots numbered Building (th at being the building in led tabbies from .their supposed reCHARLES IT. BLOCK. A. I ).. 1928. Present, lloq. Arthur sixteen (16) anil seventeen (17) wliieli the Circuit Court for tiie Coun STATE OF AIICHIOAX—County of nblance to attabi silk. .Strictly 20\v3 Commissioner. Webster,■ ■Circuit, Judge. I t appearing Moore’s subdivision- of part of. the .Eu ty. o f -.-Wayne is lielcl). the premises AA’nyni'-—ss. At a session of ^the Pro •aking, “tabby” has no reference to '■---2-~■' •••- *• •' ~~C ' ' . ''' ’ fi-om the affidavit on file th a t rhe reka: Iron ’and Steel AA'orks Subdivision .described iff said mortgage: or suffi bate Court for said county of .Wayne, ■ sex of the r.njnud. In -.modem defendant, Carinie L. P o lly ,. is not a of part of section 20. Town 3. South cient thereof to satisfy said indebted held .at the- Probate Court room im the \ \ . Hugh Williams. Attorney ige, however, the term is applied to resident ’of this statQs bu t that she re Raiise 11 East.- lying, north of A'ine ness, co-ts and expen-es of ,?ale, and city of Detroit, on the first day of Cahalan Block einale c a t Sometimes it is .applied sides at R. No.: 1; City of Huntington; Street. City of AA’yandottc. according; also any sum or sums, that-shalL be Alay in the year one thousand nine COMMISSinXEU’S NOTICE. — In cats in general, just as Dobbin is Die m atter of tiie estate of AlARY state of West V irginia,1therefofeAon to- the pint- theraeof as .recorded in the paid a t or liefOre said sale by the un hundred-and twenty-eight. Present. dersigned, for1taxes and insurance, to motion of Dwight B. ;Strong, plaintiff’s died to horse?.—Exchange. KAXIH. deceased. I. tli^.undersign attorney, it is ordered th at the said office of the Register of Deeds for the protect his interest in tiie premises George AI, Read, Judge of Pyobate. I n ' County: of. -Wayne. November 23rd, the matter of tiie estate of REGINA ed. having been appointed by the Pro described in said mortgage as the lands, RAKOCY. deceased. On reading and bate Court for the comity of Wayne, defendant: cause. her appearance to be 1900,' in- liber 25.. page 9 .plats. ■ W h y L y ric W a s R e je c te d premises and property situated in the filing the petition of Rosalya Bolek JOSEPH GRANT, entered in this cause on or beforeJthree in Australian poetess has decided state of Michigan, commissioner to months;from- the: dat.e of this order-, anil:, Township of Taylor, AA’ayne C-ounty, praying that adm inistration of said MARY GRANT. it it is a tough trick to write for a receive, examine and adjust - all that within twenty- days plaintiff, Mortgagees. Michigan; described as follows: estate tie granted to Leo Spitek or claims and demands -of all persons ictical; minded government. A Beginning a t a point nt the North some other suitable person. I t is or cause this order to bo published in D ated: AA'ynniTotte. Michigan. against said deceased, do hereby1 give line of- section ‘-thirty-four (34). said dered, th a t the .fifth day of June n ox\ ool teacher, she w rotesom e verses. notice that I will meet a t the 'Wyan The --.Wyandotte H erald, said publica M ar 2nd. 1928. point being distant north 89 ^degrees a t ten o'clock in the: forenoon a t said >ut various native birds, and for- dotte Savings ..Bank, in said county, tion to lie continued once each week AVOODRUFF & WOODRUFF, E ast .247.12.feet from tiie North Quar I rded them to the education depart- on Monday, the 9th day of July. A for six weelts in succession, anil that, Attorneys for Mortgagees, ter post of section thirty-four (34); court rpom lie . appointed for hearing nt in the hope that they would be. I). 1.928.- and on Saturday, the ,8th a copy of said order he sent by regis 2830 Biddle Avenue. said petition. And it t? fa rth er oi> running thence North 89 degrees Blast dered. tiiat n copy of this order he . . 18wl3. luded in some of the elementary day of September. A. 1). 1928, a t 10 tered mail to said defendant a t her Wyandotte.. Michigan,.... along said North line 1062.69 feet to iool readers. One of her character?, o'clock a. in, of each of said days, last known address. tiie AA’est line of the Detroit, Toledo published three successive weeks pre ' ARTHUR WEBSTER. :row, w as made to say, “This lamb for t h0: purpose of examining and al a \* < % * k m m m f* * * ‘ *AH+>+***i-*y & Ironton Railroad right of w ay; vious to said time of bearing, in the Circuit Judge. , ks w eak ,T il whet my beak.” After, lowing said claims, and th at four Herald, a newspaper print-thence South no degrees two minutes Wyandotte (A true copy.)' ed and circulating, in said county of ■ee months’ wait this.particular lyric months from the 9th day of May, A. A A ’est 13095: feet t$ a point; "thence • Wayne. ne back with the following official D. 1928. were allowed by said court FBOYD REMINGTON, South 89 degrees. twenty-six minutes Deputy Clerk. GEORGE AB READ. ation : “Statement regarding crows for ..-creditors to present their o’.adms Dwight B. Strong, Attorney for West 648.5 feet to a point; thence Judge of Probate. ; approved. Suggest lines be altered to me for examination and allowa.ice. N. A. Mann & Sons. Trenton, deni* North no degrees eight minutes West Plaintiff. (A true copy.) Dated May 9th. 1928. sh ow value of cro w .as check- % Wyandotte, Michigan. : 14W7 era In coal,. Inmber rand all building 978.58 feet to a point; thence South THEODORE J. BROWN, CHARLES H. BLOCK. wfly pests.” . .- / tnaterlaL 89 degrees six minutes West 411.53 Deputy Probate Register. 18w3 2Qw3 Commissioner. 4 BEBE DANIELS AT THE CAPITOL SATURDAY : ueTRENTON ar*: -'vA^jt ■.~j*rr».'-V*‘-*^>^w*'y™^jJH|Jf *¥*pT!~$£ DUST CLOUDS ENDANGER FLYING MEN . UNTIL CITY OFFICIALS SOLVE PROBLEM ii ' — : Takes Life Seeking Burial With Husband ------------ - Spectators Can See Takeoffs Without Peril and Authorities Radio Shrieks, Howls Breathe Easier—In Every Sense—Since Experts About to Be Banished Come to Aid of Aviators at Boston. « ^ ju £ f » 4 Q w ' J* * b f *"''■. The Spirit of St. Lou;s -Landing-at.-Boston Airport, South Boston, Mass. Insert Shows “Lincly” and H>s Famous Smile. T T T KILE Col. Carries-i; -A. Lind\A / h-rg; - f: > ■from.' his;- tri* w UXllpI;s ' in ntr:; i America and the Wes-t. !iuiiosj,is:.-n(]:W' looking ■for .new wornas to - cpfifjc'e.:.■ a; ronautically, city ai::’tl aviation ‘iicials. are planning new- way.-, to imfi,:e -airportssafer. Flyers are in teres ted / in. Hie dust problem ro t 1;• i-r.'/se they :meet: dust alo ft.. but- b- ; an",-- tiicy ■:r./ ist’■'reek'oii .• with the prolii ( ;ii wh'eu tiie;v melanding. Officials are:/intfcr.e.;te d. beCausie. they are hfill’ over Ji-.e :safety of; thousands i;i spectfitefs fit!od v.'ith a new zeal for ;i.vi'at ion . b'eer.H1 e ot CoI. Lintibervh's pi-:.-.ve--s. •' So soriousiy the olii- iais cf the Bostoii Airpor i'-fit .SoiUi'i.: Bi;ston real-; ized that, qnes!::-ja th at /they tiave ;cpn- ducted special .experiments-- with .uustlayia'g,apparauis ami- chemicals taAde-: termine- which are most effective.-;The problem. has"arisen-, only: in. re cent, yearts—one- might say mouths— with the increase in’ “gaiierie.s:” at 'the big aviation fields. Pubiic. -Interesthas become so-.aroused to . flying jdiai it is no uncommon sight to seoi.iiundreds and., even thousands' of / pqmffis.' t—--- :----- ' ;■ ': gathered on the more popular fields to see the ’takeoff in any one of the big races. Men; -women and children trample over the fields before the start, of the liters, tearing up the turf and earth so -th a t it-m ay become quite dusty. When the pilots are ready to take off and .the crowds pushed back be hind the ropes, the aviators mqy find the field covered with fine dust. As the plane starts down the. run way, the propeller, whirring, great c !ouds i of dust arise / getting in to the eyes of airmen and spectators alike, and creating a dangerous situation. To reduce that danger So far as may be humanly possible,-officials;-Of the South Boston Airport are- using calcium chloride, a.chem ical that be cause of its affinity f5 r:moisture acts as a perfect dust layer; much, in the same' manner of a moist blanket over Since that, action was .taken some months ago the officials have breathed easi.tr—in every sense.of that expres-. sion—and have made; it possible for spectators, to observe takeoffs without peril to. themselves or-to. the fliers-. Lust Ox Power Great Peril That Faces Stability of the .American Nation ■ By REV. DR. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK, New York. ■ - '* 'ANY «ins tome out of. weakness, hut all the great./tragedies; of history "have come f rom the Pilates who could say, “Knowest thou- not that. i have power r” .Look at our nation today. Where is-tiie real .peril of the republic;? To be sure,, we are faemg a dangc rous situation from the kind of crime that is bred in city -slums, that rises in. gangs of youth* often-degenerate,- who commit murder and spend mo-t of tlieir lives intermittently in prison. But the republic will not ultimately go to pieces over that situation. There are, however, men of ability—they, might even hold positions- in the Presidjtmfs cabiliet, they ..might even rise to the highest places in America's industrial life where, at the top,, the competition is terrific and sieves out '.all but the ablest. ' • r‘They are not feeble-minded, but like Pilate in the magnificent ad ministrative system of Borne, have risen.to the top because -strong; and such men in the last few years* defying the courts, despising the govern ment, con temp ting the people, have presented t o ;the ■world one of the most devastating spectacles of political corruption in the history of govr emment. And as they propose to get away with it you can hear the echo of the old words* “Knowest tlioii not that we have power?” There are two kinds of disaster—one caused' by destitution and weakness, the other- by;misused wealth- and power. And- sometimes it is hard to say which Is worse. But there is always hope in power. Think of "the opportunity, some of you business men have in an industrial situa tion whose.,.crucial difficulties come not from feebleness,but from tremen dous strength: to stand in your influential .place and say*- “I , have power to release Christ.” Think of the opportunity that we as a nation have in working for peace-against war. That goal never,can be reached wifiiout, us. (Sod further to tlieir favorable end the present, program of multilat eral treaties outlawing war. for we as a nation have power to release Christ. Old Time Distinctions Between Right and Wrong Becoming Sadly Confused*'. By BISHOP MANNING (Episcopal), New York. The old sanctions have'iost their meaning for great numbers, who are today adrift .both spiritually and morally; Once they knew what was right and what was .wrong ; now they .are confused. They see-things: tol erated, excused,-defended bv those in hiuh places, by some even calling themselves Christians! which a short, time: ago would have been con demned. We see such things, as free love, companionate marriage 60•called, easy divorce discussed, presented in reputable papers;and mag azines, as though there were two sides to those things.We need a clear call to the standard's: of Jesus Christ. He. leaves us in no doubt as to where we stand on those questions and others, like them. Christ himself is our moral standardPeople cannot advocate, defend and practice such things as compan ionate marriage and easy divorce and still be respectable members of society. . , . ^ A SUIT OF STRIPED TUB SILK i 1 IS AS CHIC AS IT IS PRACTICAL! Budapest.r^So that she might, be buried with her husband, Mine. Beatrice Kern, one of Hungary's most beautiful wom en, committed suicide a few hours after her husband’s, death. Mrs. Kern was the daughter of Doctor Hampel, an archeolo gist, and a niece of Frank Puiszky, .-art-...-historian; Her husband was a professor of music and critic-composer. Professor Ivern died of apo plexy while working at his desk one evening. In She early hours 'if the morning V.Mme; Kern turned on a gas jet and took her own life. The two bodies w e r e bu.ried side by side. Scientific achievement will banish heterodyne shrieks and howls -from the radio broadcast band and event ually permit the smooth operation of hundreds of broadcasting stations without interference. Tiiis forecast was made recently by O. 11. Caldwell, acting head ot the federal radio commission, who de clared that for 1928 many, interesting . possibilities present ■themselves. “One of the solutions of the chaos -problem-will.'come-through -single side band transmission; reducing by, one.-., half Hie necessary 10 kilocycle separa: tion of stations and permitting efi.ee- MAN KILLS WIFE ti\e operation of practically twice as IN JEALOUS RAGE many, stations,’-.Caldwell said. “To. exi)lain ; The: wave wliiclt car-, riea tiie music from a broadcasting _ T h en In flic ts F a ta l W oands station vibrates- like a tuning fork upon H im self. prox.imately 4,000 cycles- on each side of the zero oi the frequency—it takes St. Louis.—Samuel Butin, seventy up a channel space of 8,000 cycles. years old, died at City hospital h e re When the channels overlap there is of wounds which liu indicted witli a / interference. “Single side-band transmission- knife after stabbing Ids fifty-eight means a red act ion of the vibration'-on. year old wife* 1‘nsie, to death at. the hut one side of tlie zero of tiie fre -Jewish Orthodox , Old Folks’ home,: whore botli lived.. , quency.” : I hi Iin, a retired merchant, and his C’dldweil: ytid that: progress in the study of practical use of this form of wife had resided at the. home for eight transmission brings cite possibility . of months. Recently he became -angry - when he saw his wife in friendly con-:: its use by broadcasting stations. This does not meaiVoihat twice the: versa! ion with another resident, Mi-; present GOtf stations could operate chit AVuisinu-n, in (tie corridors of tiie without interference, l)Ut tlmt double home. For two days ire quarreled-with tiie: number could operate effectively,, his wife and then he was observed" 'T^O BE froeked just right for the or probably 800 might be aceonwno-. walking nervously back and forth in -*■ occasion, w luitnn iqiiilti-d reeling, dated in trie,.broadcast:- hand between front of the door of the third floor what poise this gives. And that is ■-500 and. I.fiOP kilocycles with proper room which.he-occupied with his wife. why it is not too early to begin tiiis t.... Several minut&s later screams were; very mfiment to plan .one’s .-wardrobe* lime division, Caldwell sees possibilities- in tiie ili'ard in the room, Mrs. / Lena Gill-- for vacation, days which tire .so near broadcasting, of chain programs on m’iin, . tiie superintendent, and occu- at band. Well, let’s see—yes, therethree or dour frequencies - instead of ■punts- of rooms- in the- same corridor will tie -countless,-■'■■.informal, country club ’affairs to attend and one "ill be 20 to 80 that are used now. This is a ran to: the Baiin room. Mrs. Baiin was dead on the floor5 .■wanting- to take little excursions Here technical- problem, involving building ■several of broadcasting equipment in which :with a knife \votind in the neclc. Her •and.'-•there- tind; oil! for o n e :«t■ the transmitting frequency 'may be ■■■husband; unconscious and with his practical dresses vvliicti liave the -elite Shifted with facility. The radio coni- throat slashed, was a few feet away, of a town frock, yet somiMbing (bar will tamider to the point of always be ’-mission will n o t limit chain broadcast A large knife was foynd near him. ing refreshingly spick-and-span. Removed to the hospital, Baiin was ing. hut Caldwell believes, broadcast It’s here jtist such a costume in tiiis ers may them sehes become cominced unable to make a statement; — A. coroner’s ‘verdict of suicide and v ery 'p ictu re! It's made of wash silk of its pi acticahiljty-. The advertising' value oi radio time homicide was returned a t the .inquest, a n d , it’s, striped and if there .is .any would not be reduced by chain broad following testimony by police, resi thing. smarter -t|i'is; sea s c - m - ■' casting, on a .limited number ot clmn- dents of the home and attendants. the book of fii-;nion .fails to icronl it, nels,.according io^ Caldwell.: This fats -Baiin-. was extremely jealous and be unless possility • polka dots. Indeed tor will time a conclusive bearing upon came frantic when his wife was out of there is quite a rivalry lietween dots his. sight fo r half-an hour, it-,was'.tea# and stripes aud oil yes’, there is the adoption ol the new system: tified, /.He made ffwo visits to. tiie new star prints. Have you seen kitchen of tiie home the day before them? Perfect live-pointed stars, scat N e w M e th o d for C u ttin g the ■murder,, explaining once that lie tered all over just like polka dots. So C ry sta ls; M a y C le ar A ir *was looking for Ins wife and again as far as. wash silks are concerned Tiie iederal radio commission lias that - he was : seeking, a knife with all fnshinndoin is flaunting Hie slurs heard tlmt a new method lias been which to “cut hu!tons.” He -stabbed and stripes. And 'now about - tiiis: attractive twofound for cutting crystals.wiiicJt gives his ..wife and himself with his pocket piece suit of washable silk here plcl hem greater act liracy in keeping sta knife. The BalinS; .married. 40■ -years-,■are turecl. Tc is really made oi a very un tions on their assigned withes. If the report is true, it is believed that, a lot survived by three .-daughters; two sons, usual silk, for instead of the stripes of interference to -broadcast reception sixteen grandchildren and two great- being printed they are -actually -woven;grandchildren;- Balin' laid been mar Hie silk threads fast-dyed beforehand. may lie [p-evenled. Here is a letter from Commissioner ried twice, - Iris first wife dying of . x : O- LL Ca Idu el 1 to Con itun ntlcr.- G’-Berli n, natural causes. of the Natal Research laboratory, asking lor information. Bandits Are Sentenced “Indirectly i have learned of some to Learn Commandments very significant discoveries which have Lincoln,-: Neb.—Learn th e , ten ■combeen made in youreradio laboratories on met hods* of preparing '-piezo-electric, niandments, go ;to no shows- for, a crystals, by grinding them with respect year, drive no cars.^stay away from each other, get into no trouble, and to .’t heir molecular axes* so th at: “I. Resulting piezo-electrical crys learn tiie oath o f ’citizenship, was the tals have definite and uniform tem sentence handed down to three young hoys,: Edward Studnicka, seventeen.; perature coefficient. “2. .-comparatively- large amounts of David’ Butler, fifteen; and Charles Mcenergy can lie taken -directly from the Lees; fourteen, by. Judge Shepherd in crystal so prepn red (power up to 50 Juvenile court here. The youths had previously pleaded guilty to 20 car watts direct). “If-1 am as above correctly informed thefts,- one burglary and a dozen pet about these (levelopinents they wilt, he ty robberies. Tiie boys, who declared they “did of the greatest Importance in Solving the present- problem of frequency sta it - just fo r, fun,” were . .captured ■through.-the efforts of a,Suburban vig bilization in the broadcasting field. “On behalf of the radio commission ilance committee, organized to comb -and in the interest of the millions of tiie territory after tiie thefts ’had be listeners -whose- -. reception is now come too numerous for the police to spoiled chiefly by the wandering of handle. stations- from tlieir channels I am ask , The trio /\vere paroled to- therr. par ing If it will not he possible to make ents but, failure to obey any of the available‘without delay full informa drastic provisions listed means a pro tion as to tiie methods of preparing longed sentence in the state industrial . V these crystals, so that., the-.radio in school at Kearney. dustry and broadcasters maj’: prompt ly, take advantage of. these improved Teeth Marks in Neck . methods.” Of course- th at makes it a very . su perior material. - -White the .stripes; are multi-color, tiie leading shade is navy, and so what, with the broad suede belt being. bright navy, and also the silk tie* the • ensemble as a whole gi^es the impres sion of being; a navy blue- outfit. Which is -right in line with the call of the ihode Tiiis is really going to prove very much of a navy season. Navy straw hats, navy felt hats, navy shoes, -navy -pocket-books,--.to accom pany the silk or woolen navy suit or ensemble, .are to be seen everywhere on avenue and boulevard,-, with the coining of these spuing days. Speaking about tiie vogue f o r stripes, their effectiveness is largely due to artful manner of styling. They are nibnipuiated -in pH sorts of Star tling ways, horizontally, vertically, diagonally, sometimes all three ways for tiie same garment. We haven’t-, been seeing- blazer-striped short jack ets for many ii season, hut they have returned in full force, thus emphas-izina Hie importance of stripes in the field of design. ' i The separate blmisb of striped sjlk or slider "woolen with the stripes run ning around and around,is one of the outstanding manifestations of tiie favor for stripe?. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. . ((c), 1U2S.-: W estcrp. N cw sp an er U nion.) SHEER WASHABLE VOILE WITH YARN EMBROIDERY “CLASSY” FOR SUMMER . Convict Man of Holdup Very Simple Matter to Build Receiving Set 'Any amateur who knows how to handle a screw driver-.and how to bend a piece wire with a pair of pliers can build a receiving set. The: sol dering of the connections is reduced to its simplest expression because tiie wires used and tiie terminals on all the apparatus are tinned and the sol dering, if required, is no difficulty worth mentioning. It Is not necessary to have a knowledge to: read diagrams of hook-ups. To-build any standard circuit, full size drawings are fur nished showing plainly -the place each part occupies in the-assembly and tlie various wires connected to each one. Tuning Out Station to Get More Distant One When it is. found impossible to tune out a near-by broadcasting station to get others farther away, try turning the antenna’ at right angles, to the aerial of the broadcaster and use a wave trap between the lead-in and the receiver. If this doe^ not' help try a vertical antenna. It i(my tfe necessary completely to shield the receiver, bat teries and ail wires leading to the set except the antenna wire in order to Stop the picknp of . energy except .where it is desired in the antenna. New York.-—Teeth marks in his neck, Which were identified by the victim who put them there,■caused -the-.con viction of Bedford Wiljiams, Fortyfive, West Indian negro, who is al leged to have several other convic tions against him which, according to the district attorney; will mean , his going to prison for life. Williams was charged with holding up Louis •Davidson, a salesman, last November in a hallway and taking a watch, ring and’ $8. “I was able to Identify Williams positively by the teeth marks I made in the back of his neck,” Davidson said on the witness stand. “We had quite a struggle in the hallway. I ICTORIOUS days these for tine cot ton weaves 1 Today they are be grabbed Williams, although lie had ■shot me through, the hand and.'through.- ing accorded ajs-fbftter^ng and pains taking, a styling as has.; hitherto been the abdomen.” reserved for the more formal silks, satins and velvets. Steals Jail Lock It is not only in the m atter of their Buffalo, N. Y.—Apparently wishing fashioning th at cottons are scoring to have some souvenir, of bis residence high. The materials themselves are in the ja il here, a prisoner stole the th at lovely they seem almost “too good lock off his cell door just before he to be true." By that we mean that was freed. they are that “classy,” one would never suspect them “as having come from the Teacher Saves Twelve washgoods section. Their beauty, their Mount Vernon, lit,—Seeing a severe texture, their coloring and patterning windstorm approaching, Gole Shelton, compare favorably with the most ex a teacher here; inarched his 1 2 - pu pensive genuine silks and the like. pils out of the -schoolhooBe: Ju st before F o r this reason dressmakers and cou turiers do uot hesitate to make them' it collapsed. ! a 4 -*. V .1-v ,i-1/up for the: dressiest of wear. This . element of- loveliness which hits entered Into the realm of cotton materials is re dounding to the benefit of the woman, of moderate ■ means. Witli such exquisite materials available at little- outlay of money there is no reason why one should not . have a host of pretty frocks, without, being a t all extravagant, . Especially fortunate is the woman who does fine needle work; for most of tiie Paris lin gerie frocks this season, espe cially those of voile in plain pastel colorings, are either em broidered or fagoted or smocked to distinction. Fascinating effects are a t tained by embroidering tiie thinnest and. sheerest of or gandies or voiles' with gay woolen yarn : Could anything be prettier in the way of a simple summer frock than the one/ in the picture? The pat tern is of the simplest - possi ble lines—so easy, to make, any home dressmaker no m atter how unskilled in ' the art, of sewing can put it together. The seams can be sewed-'u p in a jiffy and the sleeves easily put in while the making of the cuffs and collar presents no intricacies. Of course, preliminary; to the sewing up of tiie dress there is the embroidery to be done, but to work with these gay flower colorings^is really more “a labor of love” than a. .tedious task. Whether one chooses a peach-col ored voile or organdie for the making of this dress, or aquamarine blue, or an almond greeh shade, or perhaps maize or orchid the embroidery should be done in realistic floyver colorings. To be sure, if one prefers, a modern istic motif may be substituted for the design of quaint garden posies. JULIA BOTTOMLEY: MQ, 1828, WeaUm New»paper Unlog,) j j Ia ■% Amateur Tksspians to Preseht^Motk?r A Rug For Every Room Carey s Chickens’ The ihree-act comedy. "Motliei C areys (’hickeiis.' I>y Kate Doughc^ Wiggin and Rachel Crorhers.will be pi scored -in the Roosevelt high scimo i t t i diWiritim this f Friday ) evemm. llj tiie Amatetir Thespians. ■■■This -is tie Thespians' seventh annual play, '1 he scene ot the comedy is laid i Ktnlah, New Hampshire, and the Inn scintillate with wit and hiintoi 1 lie production: staff tor fins picscntation includes: ■•.Director.' Miss I'atisy V. Blake: . business manager. < liitord .lainbeau: pro^’-arn. Ralph Wagner. Helen. Taulson ■■publicity. Amos Thill; Alle.ene Browne; tickets.; l ’ant (iiatiolla. Helen Vila A u k c i . U s h ers. Florence W arshelski; costumes. A crda .Kuiinell: static managers. At cry Cunlitle, Dorothy •Krxleben . stage C.1.1-. p en ter.. H arold ltiedel: electrn ian. Tlieou iiursey:- properties, Dwight, ('liureh. Dorothy ltlom shield: ptmup'■ter. Robin Walker, . Mi F o llo w in g is tiie c a s t : s u m \\ imbus Ossian L’ophain J f t i R D ’S ^ Disinfect your seed this new. way T mm'i '.our -ei‘d pm.1to<*s as f,i-t as you 'can s«oop litem up. 1hem in P1P1H ST-solmton and out again—all ready to plum. DEFY W ATER A N D W E A R Thi> new -eed potato di^infecianl is much mme effective than Ute aid fashioiKsl "two hour soak” 11eatment—besides there is not the slightest danger of injuring the spiout- m e\en cut sped. This season bite blight attack in many seed prodm mg area-, makes iteatm ent with DIPDUST necessary to pi event seed decay After one tiial of DIPDl ST, you will never again waste two hours treating X;i rcy l 'an*y ..., __ Alteent;. Brown seed potatoes or spend two weeks w orrying about, your stand. DIPDFST Helen Paul in it other Farcy ..... PROTECTS THE SEED ANI,) IXSCUES' STURDY, PROFITABLE PLANTS. K athleen Carey .... ■Dorothy P.lc-ai'shief William Walter P eter -Carey . .T-. . . .................. ..; ■ski.- ■ ■ .Mrs Popli’am ........... Dorothy KrxK-heii Lallie Jov- I’o p lia m ......... . Vcr.fla itunnel. B atch T h u r s t o n ........Ma reds . Bet wee Cvril Lord.-.. L - '■-..... .Alexander Nellis -.Torn ■H a m il to n ..... .. • .......... . - • • - • • D °n Dice H D irv Lord, t i l , D . . . . . . . ........'Jim Moon; Bird’s C o m p a r e th i s New T i e a t m e u t point by p o in t w itii t h e o ld e r o n e s : . ■■■■•.■ •hdia (’a n y : : ____.... H e le n Van. Auk-er In a Large Variety of Patterns and Sizes. .Tust dip (J it mart 1'arc v ........ .......... Mntoii I •■•rv I’l.usm Ann Chadwick:..Florence Warsbet- N e p p n s ET k UGS 'the IirstihlaQ^ Potato Dip THE N EW W AY T H E OLD W A Y Dipdust Organic Mercury Disinfectant Formaldehyde or Corrosive Sublimate Sini Berry.. . . . . . , . ; . . . ■.-.•..•Harold;. Lange 1. Requires less' than 1 ntnufte. One mint can easily treat from 200 to 400 bushels of potatoes per day. 2, Can he use.'l^'oii cut or sprouted' seed'w ithout the .slightest injury. After cut ting, protects the’ cut stirMces ftom -red-rotting organisms in tiie soil. This insures'a lietter stand of T h e a n n u a t M a y f e s t i v a l o f SI. stronger plants. l ’a t r i b k scho ol w ill be_ h e ld o n S u n d a y 4. C-ontrols surface borne diseases, a n d M o n d a y ■■next. M a y 2 d a n d 2 1 . in such 'a s Uhiz'ictonia. scab and black th e-scho ol au d ito riu m on S u p e rio r, leg. b o u le v a r d . T h e S u n d a y e v e n in g p r o Improves the si and' and irow ih of g r a m w il l 'l i e a s fo l lo w s : the'plants, and thus increases tlte yioklla,m l L i l i e s . -........ ...... . • Chor us Sw eet R ev erie s,.......................... AI n h c s ’i >t 10 to 20Cr. M ay Festival ef St. Patrick School 1. Require from 1%, to 2 -hours. One man can treat only, from 50 to 75 bush els per day. ; 2. Cannot he used on- cut or sprouted seed without injury. ' , 2. Before cutting,- give an protection to the cut surfaces. The. seed frequent ly -decays in tlte ground before the young plants get starteji. '4, Although effective against Rhjzoefoiiia anil scab, do not .control hlaekleg. 5. Frequently decrease the stand, and therefore -the yield, to a serious extent.. .c w ' ■./v J'.d 'v : W histlers ■■■■■..., c•■..■■.. ._■■■■■■■ Tli« S uiiom an................ . . . . . . D e l l a R ivett One, pound treats 1 5 to 20 bushels oj seed potatoes. F a llin g U m v e s . ........... ...:. .-.Joyce B u h r S 11 r*111l; G re e ti n g ...........,. - •Liltran .Dollns.ki B u tterfly W a l t z . . . . . . . . . . ' . .H e n rie tta Than. Golden Star- W a ltz .....B ern ad ette Alexia P lant a few acres Barcarolle.'.C . Melody, J. -C orrigan; L. rtf OIPOUST treated Ui nautl .■•■ ■■■ ■.• You m 11 now ulso disinfect your seed corn and seed in alternate Goodnight Silvery M o o n ,...F r a n c is Reno rows with untreated vegetable seeds with DIPDFST ami increase .vour j l v Secret . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kllen R ife n b u is Jo'lly D a rk ie s .............. . Dorothy Garrison seed. If, a t digging yield by preventing many-Of the diseases which S u n lig h t on th e W a v e s ...... . . . K R a ; K a n e timet you are not cause poor germination, weak, spindly plants, and May h e lls. ........ .. N leholas Peters satisfied, return the poor quality crop. Simply use as a dust treatment. M inuet in G .............................. M ary Marx B u t t e r c u p ........ ....E v ely n M im naugh empty DIPDUST can I t is easily .-and quickly* applied and costs hut a few . T w ilig h t M o o d . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . .H e l e n . Thill ■to.'us and we will re c e n ts per acre. One pound of DIPDUST will treat Love D r e a m s . . __ F. Moore, J . Milne, W, fund price paid. six bushels of seed <sun, or from six to eight bush Con wav, L. B o u rassa M ay P a r t y . . . : . . H . McGee, A. Sevenski, els of vegetable seed. . . : ; '.yi. c ' A, B aler, A. M, C ah alan , H. Trudell, El. D eLeat, V. D em arais. ■••■.■ The: Bayer Company, Inc., Agricultural Dept., 117 Hudson Street, New York, N. ¥, O rien tal M a r c h . . . . . . . . . . . . .........O r c h e s t r a J a p a n e s e Drill. . ' C a n z c n e t t a . . . . , . J . C ah alan, L. Assenmach er, B, C adaret., A pril Show e r s .......... . . . ........ .R o b ert Lind To a H u m m in g B ird ....V e lm a F re ita g .M arch of the Circus C low ns..C h arles Marrow. R u s ti c D a n c e . . . . . . . . ..L u cille C a ssa v a n t L ucy L ocket....-..V. Schweiss, G. P a r k s Sea N y m p h s ...............R. Buck, M. C adaret Song o f th e M erm ,lids;.V irginia T au ren ce D r i f t i n g . . .. . , . . . . . . . . , . > . . . A .-;.H ejen Alnose S ad S t o r y . . ............. .. . .D o r o th y LaCo_ur.se C h erry ' B l o s s o m s . . . . D o r o t h y K r a f t R osy C h e e k s . .__ . . . . . . . . M a r y A n n N esto r S p rip g Coming...__ • ....C ath erin e Corrigan Village- Belle.. R. R iv ett, M. L ark in, C, Knopes, J Rue. Long, Long A g o ,__ . . . B e r n i c e ‘Trombley J u n e R o s e s ........ . . . . . . . . J o h a n n a M ahaiak In a n A la b a m a C ab in ...T — Floyd Rue Valse. B r u n e tt e ............H . Thill. D. Thill S p rin g 1 D a n c e ... .. . ..: /Elsie A n n a Clarke G av o tte . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jo sep h . Rushlow will take place on ■live-afternoons- dur Im p r o v is a ti o n , . . . . . ; . . . .-.Catherine P etrie ing the fair, from Monday. to Friday B a s k e t of R oses.___:•.■...F ra n c e s TJiomas inclusive, tire being rapidly closed. ' M oonbeam s an d S h a d o w s ..! ... C atherine Schloff. ■Tlitf: large number, of entrants" indicates Tweedle d u m ,.■ .;....;.Mary: J a n e Conway th at the harness racing events will be A Song a t D u s k . - H e l e n e Hoersch one of the most popular'features for Day- D r e a m s o f Y o u . . M . Sullivan, M. tiie general public. ’ . Corrigan, K. Buchias. Kilties* Dance ’• . . . ....■ ' • A: large n u m b er of con[tnierciiil ex Foil Drill : ■ hibits, housed in- three'- separate build t R o s e m a r y . ,..<. • : . . . . . a ... O rc h e s tra ings. a Ready iiicludp many Detroit and Tlris is t h e p r o g r a m f o r M o n d a y nationally': known- firms. ■ n ig h t: ■ The.,: Canadian: Government Conser ( thorns.-.. . . . . . ......................... .Pond; vLilies Sweet R e v e r i e s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tschaikowskyvation Department w ill have an : im O rc h e s tra pressive exhibit am i the U. N. Shipping W h is tlers ........................................... ........ — , Board w ill.c a ll .'attention; by graphic Boy's Drill . W h a t A lary ........ ... . . . . . . . .. displays, t o . its: world-wide travel and Prizes totalling more th a n .$125,1)00 G ondoliers .. . . ..... ........................ . N et in shipping facilities. will he awarded at the Michigan state Lillian K n ig h t V e n e tia n Love Song Kevin •■•fair,"September 2-8. the. most, impres?' . Iiieut.-CoimnaiKler .Tolin Philip Sousa; 'M a e , M ah aiak ami bis internationally famous, band B u tte rflie s lllie rte r -sive:preud0m-.list in ’tlie h isto ry o f the, .of 70. musicians stud soloists, will open fair, according to state fa ir officials.; M agdalen Melody Juba. . • . . . . . . . Do.tt, L ast‘.year prizes were ..approximately'; the la ir on Sunday afternoon. Sept. 2! ‘With in sacred concert in J:lie Coliseum. M. Corrigan. C. Melody Pixies Gooil-night S o n g ,.;.A . L. Bioyvn $107,000. Awards fot live stock, pet stock and "A, N ight. in .Bagdad”—it spectacular Sophia -Janik • Mighty L a k 'a Rose -. . . Ke vi n poultry;-.'amounting' :to ■844.115 arc. in-, iirew.or ks tiud d raniatic present a tion-^ K. Garrison.. F>. Sullivan.. J, M cW ade ' eluded in the .largest general- appropri and 21 acts of ‘'big-time" vaudeville L. K r a f t . in front of flu* capacious, grand stand,, PathetKiue Up; H ............... Beethoven ation. A'prize list of $50,250 for racing; will lie the major attractions in the. and hiouded horses, will attract some' Cecilia Melody 1 Meainland ..; . . ....__ v ..-.. ,,..■ G arland of the m od noted horsemen and racing evening, from-Monday.to. Saturday iit' elusive. Mercedes A ssenm aclier . : 1 )i len ta P ila rc lv .......................... Cl... Bandix -tables in the country. Draft and stand-' a rd bred ■ horses a re ,, included in: t his •■ . O rch estra . Japanese; Drill ....... total. * .MOTHER SEEKS WHEREABOUTS J u s t a Little C o ttag e .Lee In order to tlo justice to tiie variety . Saxophone—M. Melody OF 18-YEAR-OLI) DAUGHTER of exhibit-, at tiie" fair, -a visitor should! The Gazelle Kreut.zlin devote at least one whqlcVday and two -Marion Blame . ■' .Summer Daw.11 . . . . . . . . . . __ .... W illiams nights to seeing .the"faif. Mrs. Cziroks, mol her of Ethel ... ■Madeline Ososkie One entire afternoon alone would-: Czlroks.’ Who resides tit 020- Pine F b r s e n m e - n e t -Waltz.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . It owe ■be:; necessary*, lief ore and after .th e street, is endeavoring to locate her Ann -Kano, Dorothy Wilkins ; '' T u n e from County Derrv H a r t, vaitdeviye program and harness races daughter. The latter, who is 18 years M arshall .McGraw . >■„ S p a rk le ts .............• . . ! . ■ ■ . Mlle.s in"front- of the grandstand, to properly’ old,, left home la,st, November. In re inspect tlte live stock, hortieiiltnral. sponse to tt newspaper advertisement, • M-'ig g a rc t (’unw av JIiinYoresqu.e __ ; a . Ilvorak !toriciil,tur;il.. agricultural, dairy and notes' front: the, missing' girl were left ■ D. • Stiiilvan. D. La Point comniercial di-plttys. Due evening^ near the- home, but the girl herself “ Sole Alio. . . . i . . : . P i Capua cotitjl he devoted profitably to attend-; did not,■..■enter,, being “afraid to .come . 4 Cji;i!ia Melody . C haconne ' .1 . . . . . . . . . ' D urrow •iniectit the horsesjioyy in the Golisenm. i n .', us site said in one of her missives. D. l'onivavi.T;A'. R o eh rh f . where.not only Detroit society will, dis ; : Since, leaving home', the. gild" has Mai d i e .\Iibt;iire'’.'v.5i-__ _....... Englemannplay the cleverness and hoauf.v.of.their been employed a s -maid in Detroit. F. Baker, L. Desana , Melody o f ...L o v e ........ .v E n g lf ma.rm -imported saddle mounts, tint where : • R ay Cain . other state-twill send their best horses. .Just, . a L i t t F Smile ......... . . . . Fiihrmaiv The 21.acts of vaudeville.till'd the fire LINCOLN PARK CITIZENS «■■■■; C. Cole. M. Melody K ilties ....... .. . . . ; ............................... . . A . ' . . . . works spectacle. "A Night in Bagdad.” SEEK DETROIT ANNEXATION Foil . I.iriU • . ............ ..... in front of the grandstand, would oc R osenia ry __ . . . . . ; . cupy a sc'ojnl evening. ■ ■ O rch estra Desirous of being taken into the big Guarantee The essential features that ha.ve made Bird’s Neponset Rugs so popular with the housewife are price, durability and pattern. They measure up both to the shape of the room and expectation of the purchaser. Buy your first Bird’s Rug and you’ll buy ;ot‘hers. The trim, colorful, neat-fitting rug for your kitchen will tempt you to. buy > for the sun-room, living-room, bed-room or bath. * 4 ‘ , When buying^BMl’s Neponset Rugs or floor coverings, look for file “waxed b ack ” Besides identifying Bird’s it makes the pro duct thoroughly waterproof underneath and prevents floor stains. 6x9, $6 Treat your Corn and -Vegetable seeds too 9x9, $9 9x12, $12 and other sizes. Gartner Hardware Go. 1882—-46 Years of Service—1928 WYANDOTTE, MICHIGAN DIPDUSI 4 ounces - 50 cents 1 pound - $1.75 Bennett Seed Co,, Inc. 243 E. GRAND AVE. DETROIT, MICH. POLICE RECOVER SEVERAL STOLEN CARS Police officers .found a Chevrolet roadster a t Goddard and ..Fifteenth streets early last Friday morning. The ea r was stripped . T t'w a s stolen at F lint and the license was issued to Lawrence Parsons of Flint. Another ear. an Essex coach, was fonnd- on Goddard road minus the li cense plates on the afternoon of the 10th. I t was stolen a t Fordson. Horticultural, tloricultuml niid-ngricuhuvat displays—one (if : the most beautiful' ain l. im pressive^attractions at tiie fair, will lie housed in the $100,utMls building,set .aside fo r these th ree exitiliifs,, \y(ierecolor and profuslotn: of flowers will run riot. The 1028 official premium list! the catalog which designates prizes for en tries in every department at the fair,, will lie ready for distribution between Slay 15 and 20. and will lie mailed free to anyone addressing the state fa ir offices a t the fa ir grounds. Entries for the harness racing, which Do Not Delay- 5 pounds - $8.00 city, certain .citizens of -Lincoln Park have tiled with County Clerk Farrell a petition asking, for. annexation to Detroit. The m atter will go before the county supervisors at their .Tune meeting, and may go on tiie ballot tit the .September primary. Should Lin coln P ark be taken into Detroit, a portion of W yandotte's city limits would adjoin the metropolis. tJU ldnnt •«*•> TRACK MEET JUKE FIRST •The- firs t annual all-eity public School truck m eetw ill be held on Friday, Juue 1,-on the Roosevelt, high school athletic held. A point system will be used for r.the purpose of having inter-school con test. Every student who participates will .get a t least one point for his school. In addition, points will be given for places i n . the various events, with 8 for iirst, 7 fo r second, etc. Girls’ ••and-.' hoys’ ...points will he scored- separ ately. In the elementary competition, there will he three divisions of five sections each, so arranged th at’each child will compete only in his own: age group. The juvenile, division will consist of tiie boys and girls in the 3rd and 4t;.lr grades, with tiie sections being the 8 years old, U19 5), tliailO, and the 11, and the T2 yetif olds. in these grades. The ju n ta ' division Will consist of the 5th and (itli graders who will’ hed i vided into 5 age groups, one elicit for the 1(), 11, 12, 13, and 14 year olds. The senior division Will consist of the 7th and 8th graders, who iip turn will he divided into the 5 groups.:'12, 13, 14. 15, and .10 year . olds. E vents: . Juvenile D ivision—-Boys and- g irls; 25 yard dash: standing broad jum p; 25 yard shuttle relay. Junior Division—-Boys: .100 yard d a sh ;.running broad jum p; high jum p; 8 pound shot put; relay race; Girls: 50 yard d a s h r u n n in g broad jum ps■dash and throw.; baseball throw and obstacle race. .Senior Division—Boys :• Same events as junior division plus hurdle race. Girls : - Same events a s junior division,: :: In the ..high ischool or intermedintc division, the meet will bo conducted as an. in.terelass competition. In all di visions, ribbons ".will be awarded for first place ami .point for all places, hut no. other awards. • , , GET IT TODAY F ull coverag e on your autom oble, including ■F ree R oad Service. The Auto Owners Insurance Company L A N S IN G 1 M IC H IG A N A SSE T S $1,250,000 Losses P ro m p tly Paid—L o w est Prem ium R ates. E. W. SMITH, Local Agent Phone 2 3 7 • W y a n d o tte , M Hub—So you’ve flnfshed, the: story? Did it end to suit you? Wife fdisgustedly)—I don’t know. The reading time is given as 18 min utes and 10 seconds, and • my time was up before I could find out whether they married -or not. * *Call the Bouncer “At. last Jim has been able to put a stop to his wife’s extravagance?” : “How did lie manage It?” “He warned h er, that if she .didn’t let up tliere’d be nothing left for ali mony." ' • 2 4 7 P o p lar S t . ’~ M ichigan Phbne 560 85 M ulberry, Cor. Seeoi Always on the Job Building Contractor No job too large—no job too sm s My tElectric SSSS1Floor Sitention given to ML S n rfa d n e mv Specialty. SATISFIED Fiiremsn Answer Several Calls The firemen were called to Henry Finley’s home at 139 Clinton street early Tuesday morning to extinguish a blaze in the basement caused by a gas heater blowing itp. $200 damage. At 12 o’clock the same day, a rubbish fire called them to St. John street, and a t 6 :15 p. m,; they were called to the .• He-rrHow about you and me getting foot of George street where a launch married? . lielonging to Golmus Labadie had , She—No, I. think I’ll make my $re>* caught fire from back-fire from the en ent husbaa^do for anotljgr year. ■ j gine. No damage. 1 ; ■ DWIGHT L STRONG Attorney and Counsellor' at Law Over New Poatofftee Open" Bw ntnp JAMES C HEADMAN Fire* Tornado an<L , Elate Glaal D^SURANCE UO Chestnut St. Phone Ilf- WILLIAM GLENETSKE Painting and Decorating Onr personal attention given to job whether large or analL 85 Alta St WYANDOTTE, JCOH.