McCurdy Park Scene - Community District Library
Transcription
McCurdy Park Scene - Community District Library
THE CORUNNA NEWS A C o n s o l i d a t i o n of T h e Corur.r.-z I n d e p e n d e n t a n d C o r u n n a J o u r n a l CORUNNA, MICHIGAN ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR New RegulationIS for Hunting Dogs PROSECUTOR B R A l F MAKES REPORTS a V O L U M E L, N U M B E R 3 1 T H U R S D A Y , A U G U S T 1, 1 9 3 5 Thresher's Harvest n "9*7 HOME COMING AND HARVEST FESTIVAL Young Lad Loses Life Friday Night One hundred and twelve cohvic- \ Arrangements are about completed (ions out of a total of 128 cases for the annual hewe-coming &rx.\ harprosecuted, art' shown by the report vest festival which will h£ Held at of Prosecutor V. O. Braun, for the | Lennon on•Saturday, August r7, and first six months, of "the. year, which it is expected that a bumper'crowd. : A L V I N B E R R Y K I L L E D W H I L E CONSERVATION AMENDMENT •he has juwt filed with the attorney will be on hand for the f cstiv e oc- , general.. There were four acquitals, ON RUNNiiSC BOARD FOR TRAINING DOGS casion. j two cases dismissed on payment of There will be something doing every, cost*, and 10 escapes, settlements, minute of t h e whole day. A splendid! etc. concert band has been engaged to Hand]* Ear of C"r Penatrate? B°dy The prosecutor's report declared Additional Time i« Now Permitted provide out door music, and there ( that drunk driving cases were on the And Lad Die* in Hospital tar Trailing Dog» Before will b a base ball game in the aft-; e increase .there having been 12 durSoon After 5ea«on Open* ernoon, between Lennon and New j ' ing the six months. Plain drunk cases Lothrop, and a complete program of j Michigan sportsmen with hunting j are also increasing, the prosecutor athletic events of every sort for!" A most distressing fatality occured dogs were given a "break' in the asserted, there having been 26 outmen, women and boys. ' o n Friday evening, last, when Calvin game bill passed by the 1935 ;*gi*La-jside of Owosso. These cases in OwosAn address will be delivered by Berry, the 11-year-old son of Mr. and ture ana now i n effect. I «* a r e brought under the city ordiJudge Joseph H. Collins, of Corunna, Mrs. Frank Berry, of east Williams Th e law was amended so as to nance instead of the state law, and early in the afternoon. At the speak- street, Corunna, met death as the allow hunters to train their riogs on{4<> not show in the prosecutor's reing program, Attorney Peter B. result of an injury sustained when game for 60 days previous to theiport. Lenr.on will be master of ceremonies, the little feilow was riding on the opening of the respective hunting | Many of the other law violations A special feature of the evening running board of the Berry automoseasons on game. It also permits them j are attributable to liquor, the proseprogram, to take place a t eight Wle. Calvin died in 'Memorial hosto train their dogs throughout the j cutor asserted, and to the fact thai o'clock will be -the marriage of a ?»tal at 10:30 o'clock the same night. winter and up to and including the j beer,parlors are permitted to remain • Mr. and Mrs. Beny, with three cf j young couple. This will take place 15th day of March of the following i opeu until 2 o'clock in the morning, their five children, had been for an on t h speaker's platform. e under the law. The prosecutor ber auto ride during t h e eariy evening, j To round out a day of real pleaThis means that sportsmen in the lieves that an earlier closing hoar sure, there v ill be a. free pavement and &t eight-thirty were returning, Upper Peninsula of Michigan can b e - > c u l d be an improvement over presI dance, with excellent music. Make As they turned to drive into theirgin-to train their^dogs on rabbits, i ent conditions. ' i your plans to be a t Lennon al! day,garage, Wauheta and Calvin stepped squirrels, ruffed grouse, pairiechic-i Braun declared that several beer out to open the garage doors. Mrs. j Saturday, August IT; ken and sharptailed grouse August | Parlors are being watched closely beBerry went at once to the home. 2, while sportsmen in the lower pen- cause of complaints that they are serAs the little f oiksopened the doors insula must wait until August 16 to ™ g beer t o intoxjcated persons. The of the garage, both jumped on the . . . . . • "• . I train their dogs on the respective j law forbids this, and they may lose running boards, Wauneita on the left, their license, he said. species of game mentioned. McCurdy Park was the scene of: of workers upon tjhe county fair' and Mr. .Berry'did not notice that Dogs may be trained only between many activities last week end and \ barns. Here a group of Toyai helpers, j Many friends extend congratula- Calvin was On the opposite running the hours of .sunrise and sunset, and several fine house trailers were sta- headed by that indomitable hustler, and good wishes to Mr. and Mrs. board. While the car was passing the law forbids any hunter to posses tioned in the shad e of the beautiful "Hank" Hancock, county agricultural tions " r I „ ;newly X ^weds i Iof f Vw« . ,. . . j ,, .Walter •u Kann, this into the building, Calvin became firearms while training a dog. trees there. Residents of the northwedged oeiween between in* ih»> car car ana and uthe agent, plied hammer and saw m the . weugea » M H w a g formerly Miss Field dog trials may be held beA very pleasant and profitable west corner of the first ward were a UrS V r<Mluced l I . L ^ * P .j Genevieve SchulU, daughter of Mr. • J J W doorframe, and^heju^ndk of tween the hours of sunrise and sun- meeting of St. Paul's Guild was that more than delighted with the thrilling wonders. _ t the car "was forced into his groin. The " " " **" and Mrs. Fred Shultz, of Owosso. " " set at any time and under such rules of Tuesday afternoon of this week, I strains "of bag pipes, played in the In the past many citizens have lent The marriage ceremony took place lad'gave, a scream, which was the first and regulations as the director of when Mrs. W. R. Chapell and Mrs. j park by some unknown musician on a hand in the beautifieation of Ms* 9:30 o'clock in the Baptist p a r ntimation of Mr. Berry that the little the dor-iirimeivt of conservation may j Alice Knoll were hostesses in their j Sunday morning. All in all, MeCurdy ! Curdy park, and its going to be a at sonage, of Owosso, the Rev Floyd [ 'ellow wa, riding o f , the board. He prescribe, 'home. Thirty-five ladies from Owos-jpark is a very colorful summer spot • long time before they are through, Norton officiating in the presence c a r ™ ° th« _:njuwd lad into t h . home 1 he amendments to the hunting &v o r .d Corunna gathered for the;and deserving of the best care and j and can say the park* needs nothing and a physician was summond. of Mr. and Mrs. George Chaney. '.laws give (he sportsmen a longer . meeting, over which Mrs. Glen D. [ upkeep that the city of Corunna, and I further. Time is going to add attracAfter administering first aid, Cal, period in which to train his dog. i V; ung, summer president, presided.-the county, can give it. It is enjoyed'tion after attraction there, from vin was rushed to Memorial hospital. Under the old law the hunter Following: singing, Mrs, Knoll con- ; by hundreds every Sunday an<j by j which future generations shall reap When they reached the hospital he could not begin until 30 days pre- ducted the prayer service and during j many thousands during the summer i enjoyment and benefit. was, suffering greatly from loss of vious to th^ open bunting season on the business transactions, Miss Jen- season. ' nient and benefit. ! blood, and passed away within a few the'"respective species of gauie and \-n[e fjoilt invited the Guild to meet in A very large family re-union of I ^_ ^ ^ [minutes. A regular meeting of the Townfield dog trials could not be held ex-j n e r home in August. 'last Saturday in McCurdy park was j art especially pleasant senn Club will be twld on Friday' C&jvin , .was , , , , ^ . cept for a 15 day period set by the j 'fne program presented was most t h e Thomas Samuel and William at,d evenin* of this week, August 2, in agreable young lad, of a wmnmg director of conservation previous to J delightful,' the chapter in the study Young family gathering, -76 being the I. O. O. F. hall. All members P«*onauty and a great favorite athe 15th of March of each year. book, Patterson - Smythe's "Life of ; present. Excessive rains and high humidity and friends are urged to be present mong the boys. Christ,", being beautifully read by} Following dinner there was a busi t Funeral services were conducted park Sundav Aug^ f r o m t b e h o m e - Tuesdav afternoon, a t tw th bring GrandyourTriends. Rapid*, will ^ ' °"- ^' r i^y o'clock, Reverend Wro. ;•, i tj :A- „.:II Schlitts, of the Methodist Episal hpastor urch °^lil'B iMoon" and "The Goddess of Life," k i r J s ; vic^ prC5 ident.Mrs.'Mina Young threshing, according to the farm"; speak The program begins at 3:30 ; f°P, ^ Interment A meeting of the W. C. T. U. was' b>' Sara Teasdale, and Mrs. Charles Secretary '- treasurer, Mrs. Nettie crops department at Michigan State o'clock AH will be mad e welcome.. took plac,i in Hi]] Crest cemetery. College. . Pall boas ers were Jack Palmer, RoweH held last Friday in the home of Mrs. Cat land reciting in delightful man Newell. The losses will be in two classes, j IK>, several potms from Browning, Leader, Joseph Colby, Jack McKay, George Warner on South ShiawasThe personnel of the committees reduced prices due to excessive mois-{ Shakespeare and Sara Teasdale. Jack Murdock and Robert Schlitts. see avenue. At this tim e with Mrs. is: Flower, Mrs. Ruby Spaulding, Following the program, delicious t u r content in threshed grain or; e Flower bearers were Mrs. Harold J. B. Harding, presiding, the meeting Owosso; Mrs. Alma Young, Flint; refreshments were served. The house . .. _ ,, . , ., losses of grain from sprouting in j x c + [•Telfer, John the Misses was opened with the singing of Spore Eloise Spore,Allan, , CoraandBelle „ . . „ • . „ • shocks in the field. A bushel of wheat , , J J •,! ». v„*„ Mi-s. Vern Parhn,?, North Star; proAccording to reports collected thru Gladys EJkins. Betty Leader and "Where He Leads Me, I Will Follow." gram, Miss Ruth _ ... „ . _ ^ Currier* „ . . . ^._ Owosso; ^ t e a t i n ( f 6 8 pounds mus t contain not the co-operation of t h Mrs. Ethel Norcross had charge of was lovely indeed with many baskets ,Miss e rural mail Dorothy Schlitts. Amta Young, Owosso. ! ccnt mo}sture to gr&te carriers of the post of f ice depart-j The sympathy of the entire comthe devotional period, reading the and vases of garden flowers for the! The afternoon's program of enter- o y < ?^r 1 4 as 2 D i _ s c o u n t s from prevailing ment, 1935 spring farrowings in. munity is extended to the sorrowing 11th chapter of Hebrews for the occasion. itamment was in charg e of Mrs. El- , i c e s ^ a R m u c h a s s e v e n e c n t s a Michigan were 24 per cent iess than parents in the death of this splendid Scripture l e s s o n . Mrs. William iwin Hitter and included recitations b u s h e ] h a v e b e e r i m a d e on wheat conin 1934, but with an intended in- young con. Schlitts led i n P r a y e r which was foly r e SeW ar a C E 8 ^ ^ H? _ u t . ? ? ! ? ' ™l u taining 17 per cent moisture. lowed by the Lord's Prayer in unit-rease of 30 per cent in fall litters, J ^ Coad, Jtenneth Foster and Edith Grain which contains too much total farrowings for the year are j ison. Nettie A very delightful meeting of the Young, a reading by Mrs. to bring top prices if threshA communication from the county Modern Priscillas was that of last Newell and remarks by Mrs. Flavia moisture ^ | ^ w c a i > ^ g t ^ j j ^ o r placed in expected to be only about fiv e perj W ft f METtTC president, Mrs. Ellis Wilson, announc Friday night in the ho»e of Mrs. Wal- Hoenshell whose home is in Arizona. t h b a r n a n d a i i o w e d t 0 c u r e before ; c e n t smaller than a year ago. The ing August 7th as the date of the) t e r T Parker, when 14 members The balance of the afternoon was j t | s t n r e s n e d . Sweating in the stack;^Michigan spring pig crop for 1935, At the last meeting of the W. S . H county picnic to be held in McCurdy j w e r e p r e s e n t for dinner and contract socially spent ' "1, * " ' " ^to June * ^ ^ C, held in the battaiio rooms at the December 1934, 1,- -1935, or mow will bring the moisture con- ~ n park was read. Other business was bridge. The 1936 meeting will be held the j Unt o f t h e , ^ , , down to permissible' '* estimated at 346,000 head which court house, plans were made for the reception of Mrs. Schlitts as a The dinner hour was spent out of last Saturday in July in McCurdy ^ , - ^ ^ a n d the grain can be threshed ; is 103,000 head or 23 per cent less he annual picnic of the Shiawassee member. doors, where a long picnic table had park. during dry weather later. | than the number of pigs saved in the Battalion, which will be held on The program of the afternoon, un- beeri spread on the spacious lawn a t The only treatment possible for spring of 1934 and 240,000 head or Wednesday, August 2 1 , at McCurdy der the direction of Mrs. Norcross, the rear of the house. gmin already threshed is to use plentv | 4 1 P e r c e n t »elow the average spnng park. Mrs. Allie Kr.oll will be in was initiated with a reading, "You" Plans were afterwards made for A large gathering on Sunday was! o f bin s p a c e ^ t n a t the grain is n e t j ' * * 1 " ' 0 * " ^ f o r t h e Shears 1932 and charg e of the program, which is to by Miss Ida Serr. She was followed the next gathering in three weeks, the annual Coe family reunion, 9 5 ; p {j e d deeply, and to ventilate it by | 1933. The number of sows farrowed be given at this time in the afterby Mrs. Gertrude Ree G who gave a the place of meeting to be a t the being present. They came from f e - i shoveling from one bin to another, j t m s P a s t spring is estimated at 52,- noon, following a picnic dinner, which recitation entitled, "Show t h e Dear ' home of Mrs. John Robertson. troit, Flint, Saginaw, Bay City, Q n e mi\\ has already reported the 00<J n e a d which compares with 69,- will be served at half past twelve. Savior Your Hands," Other numbers! Contract bridg e was the evening's Laingsburg, Dearborn and Owosso i offering of grain for sale which con- ° 0 ° n * a d f o r 1 9 3 4 a n d 89,000 head; On last Thursday t h e routine busiwere an instrumental solo by Miss { d i v e r s i o n , t h r e e ^^^ playing. The for the event. Stained so much moisture that it coula I the number farrowing during the n e g s o f t h f i lar meetina. w a s d:. s Amella Warner; a reading, "Morals j . n i g n a n d ] 0 w score awards went to A business meeting immediately | n o t ^ handled in the mill. Jirt,, spring months of both 1932 and 1933.! ^.^^j „^ „ ,.* ..,, : ; L . president, v * • 1- i posed of in charge .^ of i the of t h e Picture Show," by Mrs. Nor- j Mi ' 8S T j0U i se p e a c o c k and Mrs. W. A. followed the elaborate picnic dinner , The average number of pigs per hi- j M r g ^ ^ ^ cross; and the concluding song, "Take McMullen. J and the officers chosen for the comter this sprmg was 6.8o as against j • afternoon conthe Name of Josu.s With You." T h e p ! ing year nre: President, George Coe, The meeting was closed with the 6.&1 a year ago. Reports from pro-1. . . ^ , ,. * ,. , ^^11^11^^ (Owosso; secretary, Miss Isabelie Coe, ; W. C. T. U. benediction. I i V J *t. i. *i ±u • listed ot a reading bv Mrs. Marv mui Mrs. Harding will be hostess for T A P H O U S E R E U N I O N H E L D FfintTmUemberS of' t h e social commit- cal No. 20, was showed that there was a raths held on Thursday ducers of April an d May farrowings com- c i ^^0 „ . ^ ^ „ ^ , S u T T•-.' ^ ^ ^ ,^ ^ * I the August meeting. i ^ . remarks ^ - by % - Mrs. . ^ ^ tee Mrs. Lowell Coe, Flint, William evening, at the city .Ity hail, - .O w^o . 0 , with -, ;' paredv with other recenti.uy e a r , 4.- , fSloan, Florence The fifth annual reunion of the Sinnott, Owosso, and Mr. and Mrs.. a ^, T h e y i l v i«n|cbr « e a sof e , sows n good attendance ' n « expected to / The last meeting of the Owosso lo- er sharp the proportion L o t t i e G o o d a l l Taphouse family was held on SunThe meeting was called to order ' farrow during the six months period, Robert Coe, Laingsburg. day in Kosevear park, Owosso, when The meeting was concluded with The afternoon was devoted to a by the president, Arthur Galloway, June 1 1935, to December 1, 1935, f fche s j n „ j n '^ 41 relatives gathered a t one o'clock; r 52 00 head ball game between the Breaughs and followed by the secretary, Mrs. Cora k estimated at > » which is j ' fi* —America" '"™^"** "and " " the furl f th for a pot luck dinner. I e 0UTteen m< memthe Coes, which was won by the lat- Sherrard reading the minutes of the 30 per cent more than the 40,000 bu'Jjl?™ -+ * e r s a n d OTle v l a i t o r The afternoon session was featured ; ter team by a score of 11 to 7. The i j head farrowed in the fall of 1934. j were.pwsent. a s t meeting. bv the election of the following ofbe held-at; During the businees meeting plans but approximately 20,000 head less Mrs. Henry Dummcr, whose home T^ • i ^ Russell T. ii Taphouse; m i_ ^ reunion , same next , \Jyear jwere made for the state convention ' than the average for 1932 and 1933., is in Vernon, was hostess on Friday ficeiv.: President, •, * T ^ u the place. L \, vice pvesmtnt, Mrs. Cora Lumbyj: ! to be held some time in September, : This estimate is based upon breeding j evening, entertaining 25 guests at secretary - treasurer, Mrs. Bruce j _ _ _ , | a t which time the Owosso local will intentions as reported on June 1 and; a kitchen shower in honor of Mr. Whitesell, all of Owosso. Clarence j j act as hosts. [ assumes that the relationship between and Mrs. Ehvin Ritter newlyweds. Mrs. Lulu Hooker, editor and pubGeeck, of OwoSvSO, is the retiring' Mrs. Ritter was formerly Miss Lucille Eighty-eight members and guests' Plans were also made for the coun-' breeding intentions and subsequent Usher of the Bancroft Commercial president. Young. were also present for the Luft famty picnic to be held on Labor D^y farrowings will he similar to that, for the past several years, was united The afternoon was spent socially iiy reunion held in McCurdy park at McCurdy p»»-k Corunna. Mr., for other recent years excepting in marriage The hou.se was prettily decorated to the Rev. Joseph Chap: with garden flowers, the gift of Mrs. Members were present from Detroit, Sunday. During the business meeting Baldwin, of Bennington, is chair-j 1934. If the number of sows that man, pastor of the Methodist churcnCharlotte, Owosso and Corunna. Earl Baumgardner. that followed dinner, reports were man of t h e picnic. ; farrow during thefall season of t h i s e s in Bancroft, Pittsburg, an^ NicholThe social evening was made read which showed that there had: C. H. Albaugh, of Edmorc, was in- ! year is in lin e with present indica-,son, at the conclusion of the m o n r doubly enjoyable by the presentation i been fi" ? deaths and two births dur- troduced as the speaker of the eve-'tions, the total number of litters far- ing service, Sunday. of many useful articles which were Altho Shiawassee county was al-j ing thi past year. The officers for ning, choosing as his subject, "Know rowed for 1935 will be 104,000 which I The Rev. James Chapman, of Deunwrapped a n ( l displayed by the hon- lotted a total of 60 for Federal CCC j the cot .ing year a r e : President, Fred the Truth." H e handled the subject; is about five per cent less than in'troit, brother of the groom, read the ored couple. camps, only 27 applicants were ac-jLuft; vice president, Gilbert Wilder- very wisely, bringing out many good • 1934 and approximately 36 per cent'service, and the bridal attendants smaller than the average for 1932 , wove Miss Fern Hooker, daughter Ice cream and cake were after- cepted last Thursday. The balance of j muth; secretary and treasurer, Doro- thoughts. wards served by the hostess, who was the quota, 33, will be accepted up j thy Hayes. The 1936 reunion will be ! Bert Gurney, Fred Hays and Clyde and 1933. Survey reports indicated of the bride, and Gordon Chapman, Rev. and Mrs. assisted by Mrs. Hazel Waller and to August 31, 1935, and will be sent j held at the same plac e and at the Norton were appointed as a com-j that the number of hogs over six son_of the groom. to CCC camps in U>ls of 10 or 12. i same time. , mittee for the program for the next months of ag e on farms June 1, 1935, Chapman are spending the next few Mrs. Alma Kirkman. Guests were present from Owos- Among the boys accepted was Au-j Last, but not least in the Sunday meeting to be held the last Thursday, was approximately 27 per cent ^ 3 3 days a t Eaton Rapids attending the so, Vernon and Kerhy. activities at the park va* tbe "bee" in August, s.t the city hall, Owosco. j than for the same date i n 1934. I camp meeting. gust D. Muzzy, of Corunna. McCurdy Park Scene of Many Gatherings HANN-SHULTZ NUPTIALS ST. PAUL'S GIHLD TOWNSENDCLUB TO MUCH MOISTURE MEETING OF W C T . U . PIG REPORT MODERN PRISCILLAS SHIAWASSEE GLEANERS NEWLYWEDS HONORED WOMAN EDITOR WEDS , '3^? r * « V * v*>^>yg."#ftfci?. be of direct advantage to many farm ff«jraraiOTzizraiafEfcTCra^ communities. Statisticians of the National Grange, !. jar. organization that has been one of { t the leaders in t h e appeal for farm-tot i market rokds, have pointed out t h a t ; * •"*4» | those soealled back-district roads, J John Forro and Steve Yakulitz a r e j n o t " " " i t i n g those partially improved j guests of Steve Kiay this week. j a r e m o r e t h a n 2,000,000 miles long. | ,,. „., o - J ! „ W L i i And on those dust and mud thorough-! Miss Aiu-a Swerden spent the week i ~ ,. . . . J>/lA rtl,A .• \ • * ' . t a r e s live about 4,000,000 farm l a m - ! er.d in Durand the guest of Miss i iiies.—Detroit News. Rhoda Reiley. .Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller and i Miss Gertrude Brandt spent Thursday! evening in Saginaw, with Mr. a n d ! COHUNNA Mrs. Win. Gatz. j Kodak*, P i d w « * Fmvaed Fil m i . Mr. and Mrs... Bruce Miller have J returned to their home, in' Durand,} after spending the p a s t week with t h e ' tetter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd j By FRED KEISTER Smith. i Another dancing party will be giv- j YOUR P E N N I E S W O R T H en at the Rex Post- hall o n S a t u r d a y ; S O. H. G E I B Livening of *hfs week, August 3. T h e !• The Michigan Tuberculosis Associ public is extended a cordial invitation !; alien has announced that during th<> j Doctor of Veterinary Mediciae to be present. !| school year just ended, considerably j I Phone 1325 C o r a n a a , Mich, j :• oyer 8,000 Michigan persons w e r e ! T h New Lothrop team failed to e 1 g» » •• show up for the baseball game o n ;; x-rayed and many more t h o u s a n d s ' ! tuberculin tested in the tubereuloSunday-, last. Gaines will'be the op-!, ! ponents of t h e Lennon boys on S u n - !sis examination clinics made possible < day afternoon next. i! throughout the state by tuberculosis j Christmas Seal funds. Almost a t t h e ! C. A. CRANE* M. D. j j same time, a large life insurance j ! company which keeps its fingers o n ! Office in Old Coruxraa Bank Bldf. j j the nation's health pulse points o u t Phone 144T- Red *r Greea that tuberculosis deaths in t h e UnjCoraaaa Michigan i Harold Woollev, who has been ! tsd States have dropped off over five wfil twmm teacher and director in the schools! P*r ^rX during the first five months a t Sandusky, Mich., during the past 1 <>* 1&3& as compared with t h e first year, has received a n appointment in five of 1934. The two go together — the Bureau of Standards, Washing- j « » u « » " d effect — discovery a n d PULVER & BUSH ton, D. C , and lef t on J«*y 17th for j prevention — Christmas Seal penWashington. Harold was gradu&V^ nies a n d results. ATTORNEY5-AT-LAW from t h e University of Michigan in CituKns Saving* B a n k Bid*. 1931, with t h e degree of Bachelor o f OWOSSO MICHIGAN Science, i n 1932 with the Master of PAY A N D SAVE Science degree, and in 1933 he completed t h e course of study for t h e i T a x experst recently made t h e degree of Doctor of Science. He startling announcement t h a t t h e h u g e ' ——+ then did experimental work in t h e sum of $260,000,000 in taxes a r e d e physics laboratory a t t h e University H. B. MOORE, D. O. S. linquent in t h e various u n i t s of g o v - ' of Michigan for a year a n d t w o sumOffice in M a t A a w * Bide. e m i n e n t in Michigan. If p r o p e r t y mers. owners avail themselves of t h e o p - ; MSducaaf portun'tty t 6 tr.ke advantage of t h e i Moore-Holbeck Act a large saving; in t h e payment of delinquent taxes can bg made. The Act provides a d e - j ferred p a y m e n t pla n f o r t h e p a y - ! «• "The Vagabond King." most stir- me.nt of taxes of 1932 and p r e v i o u s ' HOMER M. BUSH ring of operettas, will come to life years, a n d taxes for 1933 a n d 1934} in a blaze of glory and splendor on m ^ be paid without? interest or ATTORNEY A T L A W the mammoth stage a t Naviri Field. penalities, b u t only a collection Coraaaa Opera Under the Stare has selected charge of four per cent, if lite pay418 W . Mack St. this ever popular musical success as ment is made before November of this its next week attraction to open on year. Without dcubt this is t h e final Monday, August 5. The current pro- gesture t h a t will be made to delinduction of " T h e Countess Maritza" quent taxpayers. The measure was will have its last performance on this enacted into law only after long a n d j careful consideration, and over t h e | Sunday evening. HICKS ft DES JARDINS The leading role in "The Vagabond emphatic protests of thousands of ATTORNEYS A T L A W King," t h a t of Francis Villon, will taxpayers who had paid their taxes promptly and felt that such a conMattk«w. BMf. Qvrawa. Mick. be played by one of t h e country's cession w a s unfair to " t h e m . With outstanding tenors, Paul Keast. Mr, Keast took Dennis King's place in the general public in this frame of +• mind, t h e property owner who wishes the original company and has playto keep his property from being sold ed this famous role over one thouunder a t a x warrant, will clean u p sand times. In fact the opening perhis indebtedness before t h e deadline - * rormahce will be the 1006th time h e is reached next fall. It is his ophas sung the famous Frim! songs PETER B. LENNON portunity to " P a v and Save!" from behind t h e footlights. ATTORNEY A T L A W "The Vagabond King," as most LENNON, M I C H , know, is based on the story, " I f I Were a King." by Justin McCarthy. FAR FROM F E A S I B L E Again this year t h e Butterfield Rudolph Friml, composer of "Rose theatres in Owosso, namely, t h e CapiFor several months government tol &nd Strand, will celebrate great.Marie" and many other successes, igents have been making a house to er movie season from August 4th to wrote some of his greatest melodies i*' • Pr—^fja™^*.. - » — » foi this production. Among the fav- j house survey in a number of Miehi- the 31st. The list of t h e new season i ! orito .songs a r e "Song of the Vaga- gan counties leading the f a n n e r s to pictures is an imposing one and gives { ELLIS F. WILSON b o n d s , " "Only a Rose," "Some Day,"! believe t h a t rural electrification was" definite assurance to theatre goers \ ATTORNEY A T L A W | "Love for Sale" and "Tomorrow." j but a m a t t e r of a few months away. that the 1935-30 product will add to I This show will be staged'on a m o r e ! According to their story, t h e gov- t h e screen's already growing'achieve- j 114H N. Ball St. OwHte ! (elaborate scale than it has ever been! ernment wa.s launching a . gigantic merit. Some of the attractions you * project that may look forward to seeing at the ' 'presented before. The large outdoor 1 rural electrification would bring them light and power at .singe will give ample opportunity to J Capitol a r e as follows: j practically no cost, even in t h e thincreate beautiful settings of spectacu-I August 4, 5, and i>, Clark Gable i lar proportions. There will be a j ly settled districts. Ho persistent and in. "Call of the Wild," t h e g r e a t I so plausible were the stories told that greatly augmented chorus singing t h e ! novel by Jack London, Loretta Y o u n g ! stirring songs, antf a large and brilli-; it finally became necessary to call is in t h e supporting role. j a rural electrification conference at ant cast .will all combine to make this • Lansing to clarify the atmosphere. August 7 and S. Bette Davis in ! ATTORNEY A T L A W I production of t h e "Vagabond K i n g " \ ''•'Front Page. W o m a n . " j At t h e conference, which was at* f the greatest in . its many years of i tended by several hundred farmers, A u g u s t 9 a n d 10. Guy Kibbee i n ! '"j | Agnew Block Coruana, Mich.' popularity. *j The story is of Villon who is a h I s 0 ™e p e r t i n e n t facts were. diselosde: "Going Highbrow." Also "Smart' educated and gay devil-may-care .Michigan's share of t h e $100,000.- Girl" with A'rline Judge, j 00 sct leader of a band of" thieves in the | ° -side by the . . government August 1 1 , 12 a n d 13. J a n e t G a y - ! days of Louis IV. He falls in love I would be between three a n d four nor in ''The F a r m e r Takes a Wife. 7 '; with Lady Katherine, a beautiful a t - million, dollars; furthermore the picture J a n e t Gaynor has made i n ! *—— -* ter.daht a t the King's court. As a g r a n t would be a loan, not. a gift as This is being hailed as the finest \ result, he finds himself in a r a t h e r ; t h e farmers supposed; it cos t private many months. ) embarrassing position. Circumstances i utility companies between thirty and August 14 and 15. " M a n h a t t a n j solve and he finally finds himself forty million dollars to extend power Moon," starring Ricardo Cortez, also rewarded with t h e kingship for a lines to 45,000 farms and t h a t they "Mad Love" starring P e t e r L o r r e . day, so much for the story which is would be glad to enlarge this field August 16 and 17. J o e E, Brown in itself a most intriguing and thrill- of service wherever t h e de.sity of in "Alibi I k e . " I ir.g romance. farm population warranted. August 18, 19 and 20. Grace SATISFACTION Thus t h e farmer's vision of an Moore in h e r new triumph "Love Paul Keast will be supported by such favorite stars as Gladys Bax- electric light in every pigsty has Me F o r e v e r / ' This is one of t h e rts IS OUR SOLE AIM ter, Leonard Ceeiley, Hope Emersorc, vanished like a bad dream, j u s t month's big events. B a r l e t t Simmons and Barnett Park- other projects of a similar n a t u r e August 21 and 22. " S h a n g h a i , " | have failed to meet the claims of er. Near Strand T h e a t r e , O W M U starring Loretta Young, also "Age of i The Opera Under the Stars per- the braintrusters down Washington Indescription/ with Madge Evans. formances a r e given nightly, rain or way. In t h e meantime manufacturers PHONE 29 August 23and 24. " W e ' r e in t h e shine, a t 8:30 a t Navin Field, and of farm lighting plants have found Money," starring Joan Blondell and all of the seats a r e reserved. T h e ex- their business a t a standstill until Glenda Farrell. tremely low admission prices enable this phantom of something for nothAugust 25 and 28. Another t r e all to have an opportunity to see t h e ing could be explained away. We hold mendous hit, "China Seas," starring great musical productions which a r e no grief f o r these manufacturers, Clark Gable, J e a n Harlow and Walbeing presented this summer. There but we do have sympathy for their lace Beery. **. «* are over fifteen hundred seats as low employees who have been thrown out At the S t r a n d : of work because of government inas 25 cents. August 4, 5 and 6 George O'terference in the affairs of private Brien in " T h e Cowboy Millionaire." industry. Eventually when Mr. FarmAugust 11, 12 and 13. Richard er learns he has been made the vicDix in " T h e Arizonian.' tim of another impractical scheme he BACK DISTRICT ROADS August 16 an f i 17. W a r n e r Baxter is going to voice his resentment in Announcement of the Works Progin "Under the Pampas Moon." no uncertain way. res .^Administration that $20,000,000 August 18, 19 and 20. " S h e , " a will be used to improve lesser roads big spectacle by the makers of "King W E S T EXCHANGE S T R E E T will afford satisfaction to a substanKong." The s t a r is Randolph Scott tial part of the population. For a August 23 and 24. Al .Tolson and The Richmond man who drove a Ph«*e 6 5 3 OWOSSO long time t h e farmers' organizations car 500,000 miles without a single Ruby Keeler in "Go Into Your have been pleading for a farm to accident, probably had pensc enough Dance." market road building program. to refrain from 'sassing the motorAugust 25, 16 and 27. George O'imCertainly such a development will cycle cop in the midst of a traffic Brien in " H a r d Rock H a r r i g a n . " prove much more beneficial as a farm jam. The movies are n o t luxuries - n o t aid, than many other more costly by a long shot. They pay big dividgovernment enterprises. The creaA western broker is reported to ends in mental health and happiness. tion of the great trunk line road sys- hav vanished in a dazzling ca. That When you feel tired, fagged out and tem, while of great worth to the is wfh a t causes most of the mto vanish overworked, a good movie will snap commonwealth as a whole, failed to in the first place. you out of it in a jiffy. sss PROFESSIONAL CARDS LENNON L. E. SMITH Groceries and Meats jPkotographs that Please 1 i MOORE'S GAIlffiT t KEISTER'S KOLUM I VHIS IS A "HOME OWNED STORE >» Lennon, Mich. Phone 24 Friday and Saturday Specials i New Potatoes, peck 23 cts. U. 5. No. 1, Home Grown, Ripe, GOES TO WASHINGTON i a»sa CIRCLE C COFFEE fresh ground, 3 11M* CORN FLAKES, e . . ICC American Beauty Bread Flour, 8 9 c PEACHES, Fancy 6 lb*. 25c Fancy BACON, Sliced, per package . . . BEEF ROAST, per pound • *• 15c APPLES, cooking or eating, 6 pounds . • LUNCHEON MEAT, Sliced, per pound • 15c ONIONS, Texas Dry, 3 pounds for . . . OPERA UNDER THE STARS 14c 25c ... ..i Highest Quality Meats at Popular Prices COMPLETE LINE OF FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES WE INVITE YOU TO BRING IN YOUR CREAM AND EGGS IN THE THEATRES j THERE'S A REAL TREAT AWAITING YOU— JAMES A. QUAYLE j OWOSSO DRY CLEANERS i MADISON GILBERT I Optometrist printing by the News is Always Right. I '4 Iff You Haven't Seen These Two New John Deere General Purpose Tractors • • * •» Model B General We know what you'll say when you see them— just what everybody else gays—that John Deere has set an entirely new standard for row-crop tractors with these outstanding new models. The Model A General Purpose is a two-plow tractor for handling all types of work on the «4 • V » d a ^ w - g i ^ v u *«***»• A a, 4 9 A light-weight tractor with adjustable wheel tread; centered hitch in plowing; Purpme full-view, effortless vision in cultivating; easy, positive steering; platform and seat for standing or sitting; and four forward speeds. The Model B General Purpose is for the lighter farm jobs. It is a smaller brother of the Model A— pulls a one-bottom plow, a two-row cultivator—tht latest addition to the John D e e f c q u a l i t y l i n e of money-saving, two-cylinder, d i s t i l l a t e - b u r n i n g tractors. Com* in mnd • • • for your**!! wK*t r i m a t k . «M* v*lu*a thaw* n*w tractors otfar y o u . On* of tbm two ataa* will fit jreur n i t d i . REX POST .^. . « LENNON, MICHIGAN dr"'"-—?"! «1 >M*a - * - * » - ^ , ^£^&^j^4i$^^^^^$$^$^^£$4^ rttrzraiararararafSaFi •!• A Savings Account for You We again remind t h e people of Lennon a n d the community that the Lennon State Bank is a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Guarantee, and ail deposits tre guaranteed up to $5-,000. This is a guarantee that we an* pleased to pass on to our patrons. We offer you every facility for safe, conservative and careful B a n k i n g and will Welcome your account—large or small. .X Lennon State Bank C. N. TALBOT, Coshier LENNON, MICHIGAN F LENNON T Y LENNON LOCALS T •T T T T T T tTT T ? T T T T T ••• Auto and Tractor Repairing ! KING'S DAUGHTERS MEET T h e Wvllinjr Henri's chci,' . v . j y':.y;'s Dtuighiers tro:.^ 1.-:-:.^:: I. :.: I am fully prepared and eqwipped to day. .Jthcii' July mooting ;tt th£ ' DM ;r:t:: handle garage work cf every *ort, and wiM calling on; Home in Owosrso, brhifdiiic a hoiwui-. .>;:•«. J. A. St. John w £ui dir.uer 'oi" the v:h:lihv::. a:::; ^ . ; h \ u!'.! IVKMHU HI Flushing Monday.. appreciate your business. We do work satLean Wrieht was. the guest 01 elders. ,Mrs. E. H. Wate'Sx:-:.-.-: -.:::¾' isfactorily on every make of car. friends ,in Flint -for the week-end. I uiao a gue:it. After ' dinner tVie i^.ual moi: hiy Mrs, Grcetham w a s . ivi Flushing Let me handle your Tractor trouble*. business meeting w:-«* held Each cirWednesday, on a business erra::d, ; cle >n the county •will be a: kod .to I know the business thoroughly, and guarMr, and Mrs. J.-A. St. Joh». were contribute ' ^omeihing tow^i\j a hea antee to please you in every ease. in Corii'..na and Owosso-Saturday. I i'ur.d so that some oi.' the Svoi'jy o u t ' Mr. and Mrs. Geo. 0 ; H a : a were.in [ beds a t the Home may bo replaced, Oorumia on a business e n a u d Satui Lennon circle headed this fund with day. $20. Each leader will also be asked Richard Miller was confined to his appoint a member of her eircU to home with an attack of tor.filitis l a s t ' s e r v e on the county health committee In Old Creamery Bldg. Phone 18-3, Lenno* to work with the county nurse and week. Mrs. L 6 n Tyler, of Detroit, is Mrs. Kuth Martin, county 1st vice jHmnuziffismnjmnivttruvzni&Tds&HWJi spending t h 0 week here with Mr. 'president. Tfie--annual county convention held Tyler. in Lennon i n May ordered ¢75 paid Mr, a n d Mrs, Lyle E . Smith are out from t h e health'fund to the conenjoying a week's vacation at Sebevalescent fund at Ani^ Arbor. A citawaing. tion is given 'for each $5 received by Mrs. Beatrice Miller has accepted j t h e UtUt f u n d s o e a c h circle i n th'e a position in t h e office of t h e Lennon county will be entitled to one citation F a r m e r ' s Elevator. to be given if possible as a memorial Mrs. Patchell and daughter, Miss to some outstanding deceased mem. Beatrice, have returned from a few | ber. Lennon circle will thus honor days stay a t Muskegon. Mrs. E m m a Perry, Plans were made for t h e dinner Mrs. A, -J. "Anthony,. Mrs. Beatrice and supper which the circle will serve Miller a n d Ford Anthony were in jointly with t h e Ladies' Aid a t t h e Flushing Tuesday afternoon. annual home coming in Lennon AugMiss M a r g a r e t Hill is, Philip Coiuins ust 17. Miss Derrova Post and H a r r y Comins Meeting adjourned until September spent Sunday a^ Bronson Lake. when Mrs. May Brooks will he hosP r . and Mrs. Gleason and Mr. and t e d . —Mabel McMichael, S e c Mrs. Geo. Stevens, of Flint, were guests i n t h e Cozad^ home Sunday afternoon. We sure completely equipped for Mrs. Beulah Dunckel, Mrs. Ethel Tfcie ftvesage farm la Idaho has 21 Conley a n d Mrs. Vae Burt were in general business* and ore buying Howell Tuesday afternoon, o n a bus- acres, e r &2 per cent of Its area, l a woodland. iness errand. and «11 train crops, and paying the highest • * • , Alfred DurJing has returned to his Bad crops m Egyyt forced the gorhome in Toronto, Can., a f t e r visiting market prices at all times. er&meat to iznpon 34,000 loos of wheat his sister, Mrs. Floyd Smith, and other from AtreSrla. relatives here. * • • Mrs. Mary Smith a n j grand-child; We are handling all kinds of Feed* A t«tal of 5^,000 v « e r « of winter ren, Flora Vargo a n d Julian Smith, wheat for h«rre«t la ia35 has beeu of Cleveland, were visitors of Steve planted In Idaho. f and Coal, and assure yon a square deal Kiacy, last week. f always* Mrs. Minnie L. Adams, of Lansing, Most of tb« brealmge h» the leather Deputy Great Commander of the Mac- parts of haraoas starts; from cracks. cabees, was calling on members here Well ofled leatlwr w!H not crack. < uesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs, J . A. St. J o h n and Mr. arrii Mrs, H a r r y Holder have returned from a few days stay in t h e Holder cottage, in . northern Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Henry-. Miller and 'M>ss Gertrude Brandt spent Sunday Phone 21F3 CULL BEANS with M i s . Emma K u m e y a n d Mr. Hav e t h r e e tons of Cull Beans for and Mrs. Chas. Wurney, of Judd\iRfc. quick sale. F a r m e r s ' Elevator a t LENNON, MICHIGAN •• Mrs. ./. A. St. John, Mr. a n d Mrs. Lennon. $ Aneel St. John, and Mrs. Eddie St. John and daughter, Patrieia, motored P A S T U R E FOR R E N T \f to .Corunrta and Ow;o^so Wednesday, on a shopping trip. Five acres of sweet clover pas- * % . - + " • ^ > W Mr, and Mrs, Guy Dunckel, Mr. ar.d ture tfsr rent< Mrs. Laura Fro*t. Mrs. Roy.. Dunckel and Mr. ami Mrs. Max Pust, and Mr. a n d Mrs.' Earl Dunekel, of Battle Creek, were a t the cottage at Lobdeli lake Sunday. The annual reunion of the St. John family will be held on Friday of this week a t the home of Smith St. John, in Mt. Morris. The members of the family a r e looking forward to a fine time. j s: f '••.'•'•" JACK MCDOWELL f J 7 " Wen^dB.ansi \ and Wheat f T I Bean market, the lame old story. Up one day, and down the next two. If you want some extra money, better see us right away. ? T T Now is the tinae to clean op your old Wheat. The new crop will be lower in price. • X • • • • T T • tT ' T T Now is the time to get your Binder ••• Twine. The price is very reasonable % right now, and indications are that it V will be higher very soon. «?• f — Michael Smith, Manager Lennon, Mich. T T T tT T T T T T T T T T •T Hardware tT Needs Farm Tools, Repairs and Hardware needs, and we can take care of your needs promptly and correctly. It's a good time now to look over the tools and implements and see just what needs replacing or «*pair. W e have it—or will get it for *»* v% promptly. Our line of Hardware is complete in -V* every detail, and every article sold by us is backed by the guarantee of the manufacture! as well as ourselves. You will find our prices down to the lowest level. i T T T • • tT T T T T J T T We have a good supply of fresh Fruit and Vegetables at low prices. Mrs. F . W',, Hall, who h a s been r e - ! siding in California for t h e past five years, is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. M. Woolley. Mr. Hall, who had been in po&r health for some time, died on May 26, in California. Mr. and Mrs. Russe} Burpee and sons, Gerald and R. J., Mr. and,.Mrs. Byron Ruby, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ganssley a n d sons, Wayne a n d Donald, Mr. asvd Mrs. Rex "Post and daughter, . Wihna, and Lucile Tyler spent Sunday s i Miller's Lake, north of Lapeer. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller and j son, Harold, of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, j Mr. and i l r s . William Miller a n d ! grandson. Billy Miller, of Saginaw, I and Mrs. Beatrice Miller a n d son, • Richard, o f Lennon, were dinner J guests Monday evening of Mrs. and j Mrs. H e n r v MlJer.. * D • Do I * * Soybean flour Is being used mor& and more in manufactured products to add to their smoothness, taste, and keeping qualities. Hardware and Implements (»»* LENNON, MICHIGAN WW- T T i PEA BEANS J u s t received a truck of A No. 1 Pea Beans. On account of too much rain these must be moved quick. Lennon F a r m e r s ' Elevator. ALFALFA FOR SALE Thirty-five acres of splendid alfalfa for sale. Will sell by t h e acre, in t e n acre lots. l o c a t e d near Venice Center. Fred Bvirleson, Lennon, CERTO bottle 25c D 22c Butter Milk Soap 6 bars for 25c BEEF STEAK, per pound r. 18c MATCHES 6 boxes 21c BEEF ROAST per pound 15c CREAM CHEESE per pound 17c CORN FLAKES package 10c POST TOASTIES per package 10c TOMATO JUICE 3 cans for 25c HAMBURGER, 2 pounds for . • PEANUT BUTTER, large size can . . *• FELS NAPTHA SOAP 5 bars for . . . . South Africa's 1-034-35 wheat crop Is expected to be 36 per cent greater than that of last season. * 17© TEAPOT TEA one-half pound 17c Plant diseases, called rusts, are ratted because their color suggests iron r u s t • GOOD COFFEE, per pound . . BULK TEA pound 17c OLEO 2 pounds 25c LEMONS dozen 29c T Haffner & Lytle ,•t J o o 0 Friday and Saturday Specials jj ? f xo 1 f •S i I F. S. CHAPMAN 1 . Farmers Elevator Company Phone 16 General Elevator Business IVORY SOAP, 5 bars for . So e ^^w^jfHF^P GOLD DUST package 15c LARGE LUX package 22c LUX SOAP 3 bars for 19c P & G SOAP 3 bars for 10c Grape Nut Flakes per package 9c LARD 2 pounds 33c WE.NEED YOUR CREAM AND EGGS, AT TOP PRICES O Do 0 BURPEE'S FOOD MARKET OI 10 LENNON, MICHIGAN O I — i O r j O H O 0 •J • ••• " "' i'vqr in the pinto bean producing Olin* Lewis, J a n i t o r 20.00 states and Li California. Mildred Miller Inst, * ft 35.00 POTATOES f Marie Swtith, Teaching 30.00 The 1935 acreage of potatoes in E. Beardsley, Teacher 30.00 Michigan has been estimated to b e ; Meeting called to order by the K. Wickham, Teacher 37,50 LOUIS N. SHEARDY, PitbluWr t h e same a s the area harvested l a s t l president. Then the secretary read C. E. Waite, Supt 83.00 , ,,. „„__• . . f c i fail. Reports from growers indicate t h N. Lothrop Elevator, Coal ....... 12.16 Er.t^r e minutes an dreport of last year. ' . . . Test O :fif'i ss di'«.-ond v lass gutter at th* K. Wickham, Gas & F r e i g h t .... 5.29 Motion made and supported t h a t the ::t Oorur.na. Micfci«aa. under that there is s o m e reduction in acrethe A;l Allyn-Bacon, Books ... 92.68 ••ji.rch s, i.*7*. age, compared with last year in the • report be 'accepted. Motion carried. Southwestern P u b . Co., Books 3.08 — centra] and northern carlot shipping Harry Colby and Edwin Reiser were National Schools, Books 2.00 : Wr.virn A-'viTtironp Representative areas, hut that growers near cities appointed tellers. The result of the 20.00 ! YKli. AMKi;i(;AN I'KfSS A S S O C I A T I O N in the southern part or* the state have ; first ballot for trustee . w a s : Total Olin Lewis, Janitor B. II. B a r e t t received ; Marie Smith, Teaching ...... 30.00 !W mfids slight increases. Planting this ! votes cast, 40. E. Beardsley, Teacher 30.00 year was delayed and, in sonie sec- i 18-1 black. For second t r u s t e e : Total 35.00 j r!ors, considerable replanting' had to ' volt--- ea.^t, ."B. Homer Jacobs receiv- Mildred Miller, Teaching K. Wickham, Teacher 37.50 . be done. The J u l y 1 condition indi- ed ;">l-4 scattering. Motion made and 83.00 cates a crop approximately 26 per supported' that officers salary remain C. E. Waite, Supt ....: : N. Lothrop Elevator, Coal .... 18.00 eon'-' smaller ihar< bust year, when $60,00. . .Motion carried. Motion to luiu iy 2.32 :son 'crop prospects in • Michigan's . production was the larg- adjourn t-arried. —-Roy Conklin, s e c V Lew Campbell, Supplies ..„. ichii a $ 40.09 | Consumers, Lights :„. 15.05 uuirkcdlv better than ar. est since 1922, but 10 per cent more Hai-ance on Hand 3,230.00 i'Van Derwoort Hdwe. Co., Sup. 33.23 a J i, and also somewhat above than the 1928-32 avt-rage crop.; The Tuition .V'1-' vo-ordhig to .July 1 reports actual harvest may be either larger Voted Tax 1,133,63 : So Voraway Type. Co., Typers. 92.50 ., >on<U'nis, the composite or smaller than this figure depending Prim uv,d Sup an,] Equ 1,482.75,| Olin Lewis, J a n i t o r ' . . o C ' l ' M p < •o ; ' i ' < . . . 20.00 CO'.T.iiliO-i <', (32b.OO Marie Smith, Teaching .....:. .... 30.00 the sixteen i;u'»jor field largely upon late season weather. F o r ; , States, t h c total 1935 p o - ; / , , "«,,'„ cilill i i ' U U C' ops- on that date was "S the United 282.75 [ E: Beardsley, Teaching _...;. .... 30.00 > ^ L . .i > • • T>'.M. i ax , eag i o r harvest this vear i>" Insurance - 164.75 Mildred Miller, Teaching . - 35.00 \oi mal which is 19 points •tato. acreage •'iH-5.tO 61.66, K.' Wickham, Teaching ...... —. 37.50 ',!;•;• n for July 1, 1U.U, a~;d estimated to be two per cent less j Sale of Books tha'r, in 1934, but two per cent larger 3 4 . 4 4 1 C E. Waite, Supt . - ....- . . . 83.00 three ])6Ji.'.ts.above ihe 10 year avevI Library ..'. fVr than in 1933. The J u l y I forecast of Victoria B a r r e t t , Note & Coal 223.76 •^(ire. iirow.ng conditions" have Grand Centra) Hotel Block CoruDna, Michigan been ^•en-iri'uiiy favorable for small •nodaction is for a crop five per cent 20.00 $7,035.27 Olin Lewis, Janitor . . . . grain. , bay. and pastures. Corn pros- smaller than last y e a r but about one Expenditures ., 30.00 . 7,021.22 Marie Smith, Teaching 'o\v average, E. Beardsley, Teaching . . . . . . . . . 30.00 ]:et-U' :-uv> . . however, as per cent more t h a n the five year 35.00 $14.05 Mildred Miller, Teaching a result "of cold wet weather during average, 1928-32. The 17,832,000 K. Wickham, Teaching 37.50 J u n e . Potatoes, field beans, ar.d su- bushel decrease in indicated total p r o . EXPENSES C. E. Waite, S u p t 83.00 i f t ^ ¾ ^ * t fft. jiTii ^ ¾ jj*^ ^*- -^k J h * i* * a * > f^ i i • » * fc > * > * rik * ifc iftfc <ftt Jrifc ^ifc iftfc i?i' gar beets, t h r e e of the state's prin- duotion compared with 1934 reflects mainly an 18,628,000 bushei de- Emma Conklin, Cleaning School 25.00 Consumers, Lights 14.99 cipai cash c-ops, had also made less Consumers Power Co., Lights .... 2.54 j 0 l i n Lewis, J a n i t o r than the u^ua lprogress up to July crease for the 18 surplus states. 30.00 C. E. Waite, Supt. 1 0 0 . 0 0 " Marie -1, because of unfavorable growing Smith, Teaching , 19.20 H A Y 37.50 E. Peardsley, Teaching |K. Wickham Prin ... conditions. W a r m e r weather during 19.20 35.00 Much of the hay, especially alfalfa, \ Mildred' Miller Inst. the first ten days of July since the Mildred' Miller Teaching 22.40 30.00.j Kermit Wickham, Teaching _.. 30.75 reports were collected has been more is very heavy this year, and some of E. Beardsley, Teacher . quite badly. Cutting dur- M. Smith, Teacher 30.00 j N > Lothrop Elevator Co., Coal 15.48 favorable for spring crops. The irit lodged J u n e was delayed by frequent G Horton, J a n i t o r .......... 20.00 j A r t h u r Ward & Co^ Supplies fruit crop outlook declined r a t h e r -£ 2.00 6 6 . 0 0 ;; Ginn and Co., Books sharply during J u n e b u t was still rains and there was some weather C, E. W a i t e , Supt. , 1.38 _.... 37.50 ( W t M W e l ( ; h & C a j Diplomas 33.42 a b o v e average for Juiv l. The acre- damage to the crop. The acreage of K. Wickham, Prin age of the principal field crops for *» clover an <* timothy has been esU- Mildred Miller, Inst H'2n 1 F r a n k E - Robinson, Speaker .. 15.00 S harvest in 1935 is estimated to be mated at 1,228.000 a c r e s o r four per i E . B e a r d s l e y , Teacher - .°-°V j D. A. Confer, Roses .2X0 M i l d r e d Miller TpraoticaMr the same as Che a r e a ^ n t elss than in 1 9 3 4 , this decrease \ M S m i t h > T e a c h e r ..... 2.04 2S*221 ' Supplies v planted in t h e spring of 1934, b u t being nearly -offset ._: '—*" - - * ,by ~ *a.-fiv *"' e ..p«r — G . Horton, Janitor...... . _ . 3.00 25.00 Corunna News, P r o g r a m s about 2,5 per cent more than the c e n t increase in *lfa!fa acreage. The C. EL Waite, Supt 83.00 B. H. B a r r e t t , Gas A Supplies .... 7.56 S7.50 Michigan School Service, S u p . 44.06 acreage harvested last fall when » r e a devoted to o t h e r t a m e hay, m- K. Wickham, Prin eluding sweet clover, annual legumes 35.00 t'C. E . Waite, Expenses M. Miller, Inst ..'.. abandonment w a s above average be7.03 an< an grain hay * miscellaneous kinds E. Beardsley, Teacher cause of the drought. ??*?? * Mich. Teach. Retire. F u n d s . . . 60.95 is estimated a t 207,000 aftre* or M. Smith, T e a c h e r ^ ^ 0 ¾ I Roy Conklin, Salaries _ . 60.00 practically the same a s in 1934. The Consumers, Lig*t-Power ....... 11.2sO jt Consumers, Lights .,. ..... 15 29 GRAIN CROPS forecast of production for all clover G. Horton, J a n i t o r . 20.00 L. D. Sieferlein, Coal .... 94.30 Small grains have made a very i\^l timothy hay is 1,343,000 tons as C. E, W a i t e , Supt 86.00 i _ _ ^Sieferlein, Coal L. D. 95.45 heavy growth of straw and there w a i «g .ir.*t 700,000 tons in 1934 and a K. Wickham, Prin f J J J t O l i n Lewis, Labor .__ . 4.00 some lodging in spots following the five year average of 1.764,000 tons. Marie Miller, Inst . 35.00 T e d A y e r S T Labor _ _. . . 2.00 . J u n ^ rains. Red r u s t was also begin- T h c tot*d production of all t a m e h a y Elizabeth Beardsley Teacher 30.0CL Bank of N. L., Rep. furnace. 10.75 ning to show up in a good many in t h e s t a t e will probably be about Marie Smith 30.00 Roy Conklin, Taking Census . . 8.10 wheat fields at t h e time of the re- two-thirds larger than last year,when G . Horton, J a n i t o r 20.00 We, t h e undersigned school officers, port. TKe condition of winter and th? drought reduce^ t h e crop to the C. E. Waite, Supt 83.00 t h e r e b y certify t h a t this information spring grains in this state improved smallest since. 1896 a n d a b o u t nine Elmer Sanborn, Labor 9.00 \ in this report is correct to t h e best during J u n e and prospects a r e for per cent more than the five year K. Wickham, Prin 37.50 of our knowledge and belief. above average r e t u r n s per acre on average production. II. E. Needham, Safe 20,00 HOMER J A C O B S , President the basis of J u l y 1 conditions re"B Randolph & Co., Roof ._. 53.29 ROY CONKLIN, S e c r e t a r y ports. The winter wheat forecast is U N I T E D S T A T E S PIG CROP Mildred Miller. Inst 35.00 JL F. GONANT, Mmtmgvr for a crop not only 8,000,000 bus-,. For t h e country as a whole, the Consumers, Lights —, 9.05 T hels larger than the small harvest J u n e 1 pig survey indicates a de- Elizabeth Beardsley, Teacher... 30.00 of 1934, but also nearly 4,000,000 crease of 20 per cent in t h e 1935 Marie Smith, Teacher . . . . . . 30.00 Manganese Is a Poison, 5.23 bushels or 25 per cent g r e a t e r than s p r i n g pig crop compared with the S t a t e Bank of N. L., Checks Also Tonic for Plants 20.00 the iHve year average production, very small spring farrbwings of 1934, G. Horton, J a n i t o r A substance that has been generally 40,00 1928-32. Following two years of a prospective increase of 19 per cent Guy Horton; J a n i t o r . . _ . . . . accepted as a poison to plant life- has 60.00 yottspiiistiveiy srtiiiH oats acreages, in number of sows t o farrow during Marie Smith, Teacher _ been shown by later, experiments t» Michigan growers increased their the fall season of. 1935 compared Elizabeth Beardsley, Teacher... 60.00 be a valuable tonic. The substance is 1935 ••acreage for harvest five per with the small n u m b e r farrowed in Mildred Miller, Teacher ':___ 70.00 manganese, a chemical element somecent over that harvested alst year, the fall of 1934, arid a reduction of Kermit Wickham, T e a c h e r .......... 75.00 what resembling Iron. When lacking The July I indicated prorii:ctio n on a b o u t 10 per cent in total farrowings C. E. Waite, Teacher 166.00 or present in too small an amount to this crop is four per cent greater for 1935. compared with the total Guy Ilorton, J a n i t o r 10.00 the soil, plants have a sickly yellowihar. the average for the five years of last year. The United States pig Consumers, Lights . 14.57 green color. When such plants are preceding 1933. Production of all crop of 30,402,000 head for 1935 C'."E. Waite, Teach, - 1 wk. J a n . 93.00 fed with mnnpanese sulphate In water wheat in. the United .States for 1935 represents a decrease of 40 per cent I Kermit Wickham, Teaching ..... 37.50 to.the fxient of e^lit parts In a milis 'forecast at 731,045,000 bushels, o r 20,814,000 head from the aver- Mildred Miller, Teaching i 35.00 lion they become vigorous and healtbf. which compares with 496,939,000 age, number saved d u r i n g the spring j Elizabeth Beardsley, Teaching 30.00 TheSr yield has been Increased *» bushil harvested last yo-ir and a months of 1932 and 1933. A study | Marie Smith, Teaching 30.00 much as 215 per cent. If the man192K-;;2 average of 860,570,000 bus- of the reports shows t h a t there is j C. E. Waite, Teaching 83.00 ganese Is increase*! slightly above tikis hels. Prospective production of soft a wide variation in the changes from j Olin Lewis, J a n i t o r 20.00 amount It becomes toxie and the plants red winter wheat is estimated to be last year between areas. These chang-j Marie Smith, Teaching 30.00 become unhealthy. Within this nanwir 188,458,000 bushels as against 168,- *\s"rang e 'fr'o.m an increase of two perj Elizabeth Beardsley, Teaching. 30.00 margin mangan^s^ t i a tonic for plant PHONE 37 240,000 bushels a year ago and 147,- cent in the South Atlantic States j Mildred Miller, Teaching ....... 35.00 life and outside It becomes a poison. NEW LOTHROP, MICHIGAN 689,0t:0 bushels in 19.53. The nation's to a decrease of 27 per cent in t h e ! Kermit Wickham, Teaching ... 37.50 "Manganese is not a panacea for T h.e r e !, C, E. Waite, Teaching production of white wheat is fore- W r s , North Central States. ... 83.00 any and nil cases of plant starvation cast ::•: 77,530,000 bushels compaivd w;. •no change in .1935 spring f a r - j w _ M Welch, Diplomas 33.24 which the usual ration of nitrogen, Earazgraaragraiaraareraiaziziafa^^ with f5,585,000 bushels in 1934. 1'0 ir.gs compared with those for i C o n s u m e r s L i g h t s ; ;. 15.20 phosphorus and "potassium plant foods Coj.r. made poor jyivV^r'ess during V.Ki in the North Atlantic States, j 0 j J n L e w j ^ J a n i t o r 20.00 will not cure. The crop may be in • • ! » • • • . L Juno r<ru\ many fields were yellow as a decrease of 13 per cent in the E a s t | ^ a r i e S m i t h > T e a c n j n g 30.00 need of minute traces of soluble comNorth Central States, a reduction of a rt-iuili: of t h e cold vr'ot weather, and Elizabeth Be&rdsley, Teaching. .30.00 pounds of boroD, copper, zinc and pos10 per cent in the South Central lack of sunshine. Michigan's 1935 35.00 sibly of other elements not yet defMildred Miller, Teaching <:creii;.v.i of this crop is estimated to States. The largest reductions were Kermit Wickhani, Teaching .. 37.50 initely known as required elements In plane nutrition," says an official of the ,':?: two per cent larger than that in the states where the 1934 drought C. E. Waite, Teaching . „ : . 83.00 office of experimental stations of the. h a r w s i e d in 1934, but t h e July 1 was most severe. As in Michigan, the L. N. Sheardy, Printing 32.00 United States Department of Agricul''indicated production is 1° per cent reports on farrowings showed t h a t B. H. B a n e t , Sup. .1900 more than a y e a r ago, when drought ; lie percentage of litters farrowed in Mich. Crippled Child. Corn. .... .. 5.11 ture. We've got lot. of friend*, and getting more SU we reduced yields per a c r e to the third M: ;: was much larger than usual with New Lothrop Hdwe. Co. ....:..... 25.00 S ! ^ 7 J ^ f * f» ^ W*ndly P*OBle~«n of us. • - ¾ lowest since 1866. F o r the country c: r e s p o n d i n g reductions for Febru E. Jacobs, Labor 71.50 Black Rot Canker Common We like Use folk« we do business with and tfaev like T! .as ^a.whole, the 1935 corn acreage is a r y and March. T h e shift, to May far- IB. H. Barrett, adv. on wire Black rot canker in some form is of 14.48 I was partcularly large in t h e | c ] E " Waite, Teaching 6.6 per cent more t h a n t h a t harvest- OWivingrs 83.00 common occurrence, says the Itnral k „ i . F ? ' r '"Y1? " » " " « • have paid them the «• ••.tern Corn Belt ed hist fall, b u t about two per cent I Kermit Wickham, Teaching .... 37.50 New Yorker. It may be seen in the highest market price for GOOD CLEAN CREAM A fall in the black decay of apples. And less than the 1934 planted acreage. Elizabeth Beardsley, T e a c h i n g - . 3 0 . 0 0 in the spring and summer it shows as and Clean FRESH EGGS. We have « £ £ ^ h e ^ £ J J X Corn planting was delayed by wet, Mildred Miller, Teaching 35.00 service humanly possible and tried to help them with weather this spring over most of the Marie Smith, Teaching 30.00 spots on the leaves, and all the year, Corn i'kdt area. . their P«blem* » much as we could. We will conOlin Lewis, J a n i t o r 20.00 unless cut out, it may manifest itself tinue to do this. We think that we have a reputation Consumers, Lights .....' 13.47 as rough growth on limbs, as cankerF I E L D BEANS ous eruptions on the branches. Canker for being a friendly reliable sort of company, with a Bank of N. L., Notes & Int.... 513.70 0¾ the limbs has been recognized for 1 friendly reliable personnel of men and women Planting oi this crop in Michigan j Mill Mutual Agencv, Insurance 43.03 many years as an. undesired growth; Frank Strauch is ill at his home in J. B. Lippincott Co., Supplies was delayed by rains particularly on 1.57 cut It out when doing the pruning TV R ^ T - J ? £ ^ y i n 5 "WHfEK'S AMERICAN BEAUj A. N. Palmer Co., Supplies ... TY BUTTER?" and strictly FRESH EGGS? hoaey land, and in s o m e sections, Shiawassee. 6.52 work. This limb eruption can be con.. 40.27 nected with the black fruit and leaf there has been considerable replantMr. and Mrs. Glen Hartwell spent! Ginn and Co.^ Books . .... 9.65 spots, to 3how how one follows the Mr- and i Wagenwood Co., Supplies C R E A M / n d U E G ^ f M i , f e r *""<*** <"AK ing b, cause of seed rotting in the t ) , e w e e k end a t Portland ground. T h t r e t a r d i n g effect of the Mrs. Hartwell have been entertaining I n t e r School Map Co., Maps .. 20.26 other. All are due to a parasite called If you can't answer one of these questions Manual A r t Press, Supplies 6.31 black rot canker, and known, to orchcold v.ct weather during J u n e is re- company from Grand Ledge. w w v * b J £ i o S d Y E S ' w e w * » * V*»T much to know flected in the relatively low July 1 Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lak£, and Norman C. Harper Co., Supplies 6.25 ard doctors as Phvsalosporn cydonlae. WHY. Wont you please tell us if our service or condition of only 67 per cent. Acre- father Georg e Walker a n ^ | Mrs. Webb Book Pub. Co., Supplies 21.81 products have been unsatisfactory in any way? a g e for harvest in 1935 is"estimated Jennie Ritter were in Bennington Combasco Scientific Co., Supplies 8.40 1certain, How Milk Is Used „ , . ^Y*'* y I i k * *o «o business with you . 4.16 at 547.000 acres which compares with Sunday the guests of Mrs Mable Laurel Book Co., Supplies Of the twelve billion gallons of milk Why don t you try us just once? We will try to nleafe S t u r t e v a n t & Blood, Supplies 27.17 revised estimates of 054,000 acres Gould. ! produced In the United States annualyou with our products and service and really believe 13.29 Scott-Foresman & Co., Sup. planted and 536,000 acres harvested 1 Iy, according to a correspondent la Col* Arnold Saska of Dayton, Ohio is that you will come again. 20.00 Olin Lewis, Janitor in 1934. I t is too early to secure any j lier's Weekly, 40 per cent is consumed enjoying a weeks vacation from his j ^ . T e a c h i n g definite indications as to the size of . 30.00 S as a beverage, 36 per cent is made into 1S t n e this year's jroduction. Thc usual in- work in Dayton, Ohio, and 35.00 i butter, 4 per cent is made into con* Mildred Millei;, Teaching terpretation of the Julu 1 conditions guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elizabeth Beardsley, Teaching 30.00 1 densed, powdered and evaporated milk, as to the size of this year's produc- Henry Saska, Kermit Wickham, Teaching ... 37.50 4 per cent is made into cheese, 4 per Mrs. Derby has returned to her C. E. Waite, Supt. ...... 83.00 cent is made into ice cream. 3 per cent tion. The usual interpretation of the July 1 condition figure suggests a h o m e in Detroit after several days F. A. F i n n a n . W e a t h e r Strip . 7.50 is ?>H to calves and the other 3 per prospective crop about four per cent as guest spent in the home of her Russe] Confer, Play G. Rent ... . 35.00 cent is wasted. Thii Adv. Dated July 25, 1935 20.00 less than the average for the 5-year daughters, the Messers Henry and Olin Lewis, J a n i t r r period ..1928-32. The acreage of beans H e r b e r t Saska. 30.00 Marie Smith, Teaching Agricultural Notes for hsrves* in the United States in Mr. and Mrs. Orville Grant, son I". Beardsley, Teacher 30.00 There are more than 50 kind3 of bnt> .1935 has been estimated a t 2.047,- Max and daughter, U u r a I/on. Phillip' Mildred Miller, Teaching 35.00 «-• tor rind cheese. 000 as against 1,399,000 harvested McCall, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Ralleigh Kermit Wickham, Teaching 37.50 • * • last >var and 1.760,000 the average and daughter Joan spent the week C. E. Waite, Supt 83.00 Plan to save some of this summer's for the five years preceding 1933. end at Dickem;<n I^ake. Consumers Power, Lights . 15.99 •econd cutting of timothy and clover Abandonment of acreage was heavy Flushing Oil & Gas. Gas ... 4.84 for the calves. in 1934 when the planted area was Mrs. Frank Maloney and son Frank W. Thompson, Supplies . .. Corner of Water and Main Street* 2.26 * * # estimated at 1.889",000. The July 1 Maloney and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Mich. School Service, Supplies 200.00 There are only 32,000,000 horses on indicated Unites States crop of 13,- Lanson hfive r e t u r n e d to their homes N. Lothrop Hdwe Co. 57.69 farms and ranches of the United 119,00 bags is approximately 11 per nfter visiting over the week end m F a t h e r Bosler, Hall Rent 100.00 States. This Is the lowest number tn Telephone 752 211 W«»t Main Street cent more than the five year average the lorn,, of Messers Henry and Her- Hyball, Land 282.23 40 years. produciion, the largest increases be- bert Saska and their families. r< :| NEW LOTHROP SCHOOL REPORT The Coruuna News Summer Footwear We arc inviting: an inspection of our line of Footwear for summer. We are showing some very attractive styles for ladies and men, and the prices are much lower than you would expect for these exceptionally good Oxfords. IMH CROP REPORT Albert Bowersmith i If you want a Coal with lots of Heat, low ash. and long burning, try our COAL Ask those who have used i t We have Ohio Lump, Kentucky Egg, Crapo lump and egg. Try our Coke* Coke for Clean Fuel If it's Coal or Lumber, 96 is die Number Corunna Lumber and Coal Co. Phone 96 Prompt Delivery Corunna KRIBS & 0'HARE Funeral Directors f WHY DON'T YOU LIKE US? ORDOYOU? t T" T SHIAWASSEE t T f "*• ' r T •t T T TT ? • tT f Payine Today For BUTTERFAT - - - 2 3 EGGS 22c ? ? T T T T T T ? T 9„. v: T T T T T T T T T T T % ' .$ owosso T T T T T T T t MOT fiaaraianaaaiEBraigflfuaiBfi^^ With This Knowledge You may deposit your Money in this Bank with the knowledge tkat it's assets are carried at their pieseat day values, and that any loans which a»e made at this time are well secraed and self liquidating. With a strong cash position asd an unimpaired capital, the Old Cotttana State Bank offers you unquestioned safety for your funds. ou) conunrtA m M Corunna, Michigan Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Butterfield and Mr. and Mrs. Lou Sheardy onjo.v M) a picnic supper at Bronson lake Sunday. About 80 men will be called back to work at the Ann Arbor car shops on Monday, August 5, for what is expected to be work of 15 -days duration. Recent visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cooper were Mr. , and Mrs. Jack Hunter and children, Francis, Jean and Eva, of Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Frank Bartell, Mrs. Harold MeCullough, Charles McCullough and James Voltz motored to McKane lake Tuesday evening to visit the Fred Hitter family. Mr. .-.rid Mrs. Thornton, pf Detroit, wore .recent visitors in the Roy Colby horne, Mrs. Thornton spending a week and her husband joining" her for. the week end. Mr. and Mrs. E. 0. Street and daughter, Miss Helen Kimble, are enjoying a delightful trip in Northern Michigan, and' Wisconsin, and will go to Chicago. Judge an dMrs. Joseph Collins and their daughter, Margaret Elizabeth, and young guest, Betty Hasselback, arrived home Saturday from a delightful two weeks spent at Buelah. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sworthwood, Mrs. Rebecca Sworthwood and the Misses Velma and Bessie Sworthwood left Sunday for Paulding, Ohio, to spend two weeks with relatives. After a 15-day field training period which came to an end Tuesday morning, members of Co. G., 125 Infantry, Michigan National Guard, arrived in Owosso Tuesday afternoon by truck. The Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal church met today (Thursday) afternoon in the home of Mrs. Bert Hiler. Members are asked to bring their Home Missions copies for July. Visitors for a week at Crystal lake are Mrs. Joseph Boursmith, her daughter, Mildred, Miss Edith Buckley and Mrs. Pauline Hein. Mr. Boursmith and Dale Zimmerman expect to join them for the coming week end. Sheriff and Mrs. W. S. Chapman and son are at home this week, after having a two week's trip to the Upper Peninsula. While they were gone from home, they attended the Sheriff's Convention at Benton Harbor. Miss lone Fink, is in the home of her parents, ex-Sheriff and Mrs. J. A. Fink, having completed her secretarial course at the Saginaw Business Institute, Miss lone took a 60 weeks course, specializing in stenotype, Mrs. W, R. Chapell, Mrs. Charles Carland, Mrs. Et T. Sidney an<j Miss Edith Newell spent Wednesday in Detroit, where they shopped and attended a ball game. The ladies were guests of Mrs. Barbara Avery for luncheon. IN THE CHURCHES CORUNNA M. £ . CHURCH WiiXIAM SCHLITTS, Pa«t«>r Sunday Services :-^10:30—Morning worship. 10:30—Junior Church. 11:45—Sunday School. 6:45—Epworth League. 7:30—Evening service. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH W. D. DAViS, R^tor. 12:00—Church Service, 10:30—Sunday school. LENNON M. E. CHURCH Sunday Services:— Morning worship at 10:30 o'clock Sunday School at 11 o'clock. Epworth l e a g u e at '7 o'clock. Evening worship at S o'clock. Bible Study Wednesday € vening : at 8 o'clock. N. W. VENICE M. E. CHURCH Sunday Services:— 1*0:30—Sunday School. 11:45—Preaching Service. "Come thou with us and we will do thee good." CORUNNA FREE METHODIST CHURCH REV. H. HOSMER, Pastor 10:00—Sunday School. 11:0"—Morning worship. 7:00—Song and praise service. 8:00—Sermon by Pastor. Blind Hens Blindness may be caused by several diseases of chronic nature and by affections of the nerve structure o£ the eye, the nature of which ts not known, says the Rural New-Yorker. It is not possible to say, from the blindness alone, what disorder Is present but it is not probable that the male bird In the Sock is ID any way responsible. Chronic coceidlosis may bring about lameness and blindness in mature birds. Any males or hens In the flocks that have shown evidences of blindness ;or other lack of 'neaHh and vigor should be excluded from the breeding flock as a precaution against deterioration in that vigor that Is so necessary if continued health is to be maintained in future generations. Misses Roselia Spore and Margaret Carmody were week end motorists to Northern Michigan. Visitors in Detroit and Ann Arbor last Sunday were Postmaster and Mrs. Charles Carland, E. T. Sidney spent Tuesday in DeMrs. Evlyis Shawman and son, John troit, Thomas will return Sunday from a Miss Lillian Haun visited last ^eek two weeks stay at Lexington on Lake in Ami Arbor. Huron. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lawcock have Miss Louise Witt, who has been returned from a few days outing at ill the past three weeks, is again at Tawas City. her desk in the county school comMrs. Matthew Bush is here from missioner's office. Detroit this week in the home of her Mrs. Gerald Riley and Mrs. WenGather Eggs Often son, Homer. dell Bush, of Detroit, returned home Hatching eggs should be gathered Mrs. Anna Dyer, who has been en- last Sunday after a week spent in often, ifcree times per day af least and joying a vacation in Buelah, has re- the James RUey farm home. oftener if the weather is cold so at to turned home. The Rev. and Mrs. William Davis, prevent chilling. Frequent gathering Misses Mary Ann and Betty Has- of St, Paul's Episcopal church, and will also prevent them from becoming selback are in Lansing this week, ! sons, left Tuesday for Kincardine, dirty. They should be placed at once guests of friends. J O n t , to spend the month of August in the basement or cellar, or other Mr. and Mrs. Charles Butterfield in their cottage. room where the temperature ranges and daughter went to Ann Arbor between 45 and 65 decrees. They Mrs. George Allen and Miss Mary should not be kept, long before setting for the day on Tuesday. Margaret Burnett motored to Ann —should be delivered twice per week Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Requa and Arbor last mid-week to visit Miss to a hatchery If they are sold to one. daughter, Amy, have returned from Jacquelyn N. Allen, student nurse at If properly cared for, eggs will batch Mr. and Mrs. Dana Cornell, of a two weeks stay at Beulah. the U. of M. hospital. SUCCESSOR TO O'NEILL'S East Chicago, Ind., wore guests for with fair, success at home if 10 to 12 Mrs. Clarence Barrett and her Mr. and Mrs. F. Wm. Notnagel last week end in the C. M. Bilhimer days old and one can take a chance granddaughter, pf Flint, were guests are again at home after a delightful home. John, Robert and Susanne Cor^ on them that old or even older, if one of Mrs. Hattie Haughton on Tuesday. vacation spent in the summer home | n e u w n o n a v e been spending The is hatching his own eggs for himself, William Cassidy, of Detroit, for- of their daughter, Mrs. Elwyr. Davies, j p a s t two weeks here, returned home but each Jay they are held tends to A Completely equipped Funer*4 mer Corunna citizen, has been a re-j a n d f a m ii V j on Lake Erie curtail hstchablllty,—Missouri Farmer. "~ with their parents. cent guest of his daughter in OwosHome. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Hoisingtoru Following a brief business sesso. entertained their sons, Clossen and* sion of the Townsend club, ^held in Grade A and B Eggs Miss Mary Tiedt, of St. Charles, Ernest, and their families, of De-1 Owosso last Friday, plans were disThe chief difference between Graile was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold troit, on Sunday. The occasion was | cussed for a picnic which the club A eggs and Grade 15 eggs is in the Serr and children for the last week Mr. Hoisington's birthday. j will hold at McCurdy park on August firmness of their whites, according to Corunna Avenue Corunna, Mich. <?nd. Among those from Corunna and 4. The Rev. Hailwood, of Grand Ra- a recent statement issued by Charles Mrs, Homer Bush is in Memorial vicinity absen t on'vacation trips av'e ; pids, will be the principal speaker H. Baldwin, \e\v Vork commiss.'oner Hospital, where she submitted to a Mrs. Charles Crane and daughter, j of agriculture and markets. In addia n c i nii,ri«{ejs of Shiawassee county tonsilectomy operation on Wednes- Lois, who are in North Dakota, for are invited to attend the affair to tion to having less firm whites, the &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& day. Grade B eggs have less water In them, two weeks. They made the trip by hear Mr. Hailwood. the> commissioner said. The decrease Miss Doris Olds, of Leslie, spent motor. A new ambulance, one of the fin- in water Is caused by evaporation. a short time here the first of the Mrs. Walter M. Bush, Mrs. H a t t i e j e s t to be "found'on the market any week, en route to visit relatives in Forester, Miss Jenni e Holt and Mrs. j where in the country, was pu t into Food values of Grade A eggs are but slifbtly higher than those classed as Flint. Marian Young, who spent a week in service at Memorial hospital last Grade B. Harold Higgine, of Paris, Ont., the James Bush Cottage at Lake- Friday. The ambulance combines all • nephew of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Water- port on Lake Huron, returned last the necessary qualities of such a s man, is a guest in the Waterman Saturday. vehicle in the way of comfort, con- j borne. A fine young son was welcomed venience, speed and sanitation. The! Week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. last Thursday morning by Mr. and ! body of the ambulance is light gray in Charles Taphouse were Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Elwyn Cooper, R. F.' D., No. 3, color, gracefully stream lined and is j Ward Taphouse and children, of De The babe was born at Memorial hos- J mounted on a Packard Eight chasis. j troit. j.pital. Mrs. Cooper was formerly j The ambulance will be available for i OVER PRICES quick service at any hour of the day ; Mrs. Walter T. Parker, of Owos-; Miss Elna Walters. so. is hostess today for bridge, a; M r ^ W m a W einkauf motored, or night. . , , GIVES YOU iAia. BIGGER number of Corunna ladies being j 1 0 T o l e d 0 j Wednesday to meet her \ Announcement is maoe that the present. a o n > W a v n e > who returned hom e from | *«">""»• PJlRrimage of the base ball FINER 4 . - ^ SEDAN , Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kay and! Florida, where he has been visiting i J a n s , ° . f t h « ? u o r u ^ n ? civic^ league to the lair of the Detroit. Tigers will Mrs. Earl Ka y went to Detroi t the j his grandmother, Mrs. Wm.' Wilson, ^' ^ "' " " " " " take place on Monday, August 19. last of the week, Mr. and Mrs, Kay j s i n C e school closed, At that time the New York-Yankees to spend Friday. t i ••) Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ritter have pur- j The purchase of the former Jerry will be the visiting team at Navir. chased a cottage at McKane lake, j Potter house on State street, east, Field. President C. L. Butterfield j where the family have been vaca- j is reported as having been made by wishes the News to make the an- j tioning this summer. j Mrs. Bess Lindsay Patrick, of East nouncement that' all fans are urged ; to join the bunch for the outing, \ Mrs. C. M. Bilhimer is hostess on Cleveland Mrs. Patrick is a former and all are also asked to see Albeit j Thursday (today) to her bridge club r * s l d e n t o f Corunna Boursmith as early as possible. A j Help can be summoned composed of Owosso ladies. Several large block of seats v,ill be reserv j Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Raymond are Corunna ladies are present as guests. spending a week's vacation in the ed, but it is necessary that all who j instantly, amd family wish to make the trip make a de-; and property safeguardThe meeting of th^ Woman's Home northern part of the state. Mr. Rayposit with Mr. Boursmith, that the! ed. Just one eueb call Missionary Society of th e Methodist I mond attended the state convention seats may be paid for when the resj may be worth more Episcopal church scheduled for Tues- of the rural mail carrier's associaervation is asked. ! day has been postponed indefinitely. tion, and they are now at Glennie. than the cost of tele- WUJuyutUicAecue. J934 PLYMOUTH With a TELEPHONE at Hand • • • -•* One new project under the P.W.A. i Sumner Hawkins, a former resident of the Hawkins neighborhood, program, ha? been submitted dur- i oast of Corunna, recently under- , ir.g the past weok t'- E. M. Stevens,; went a major operation in Hurley [ relief administrator and project e:ijginoer. h 0 said Saturday morning, hospital, Flint. ' It is the construction of 2l blocks Dr. and Mrs. O. H. Geib and Mau- of r.ew sidewalk in Corunna, at an rice and Madeline, arc at home this i estimated cost of $5500, of which the week, after a delightful vacation city will pay $820. spent at Mullett lake and other northMrs. James Koehler and daughter, ern points in Michigan. j Miss Nina Frances and Miss Dorothy Misses Carmen and Janette Barnes Fernette, all of Saginaw, have been and Mr. and Mrs. William Gordon,' recent guests of Mrs. Koehler's fathaU of Toledo, were guests last mid- or, Arthur W. Green, Mrs. Koehler week in the home of Mr. and Mrs.' and Miss Fernette were en route Frank McDannell. The Misses Barnes home after visiting Charles Koehler j are nieces of Mr. McDannell. at Culver Military Academy, ' White-Crested Black Polish Ail Pols**1 fowls nave a common origin. The White-Crested Klncl; Polish was originally more common than any of the other varieties. They had but little crest. Those with beards might be described us having'"a few! feathers growing the wrong way" be- \ neutii the beak. The recent develop- | ment in the White-Crested ttiack Polish j began about 1S80. at which time fully •: one-fifth of the crest was composed of j black feathers and most of them gaew in front. Since that time, improvement has been made in form and plumage 0'olor7'arnd their crests are more than -^),^ ;h former size.—Montreal Her phone service for a lifetime. C A GLAD^PN lnr /nil**™ The Union Telephone Ct DODGE AND PLYMOUTH CARS ^ Phone 522 jJP South Water Street ? ! :£ *A.. ] OWOSSO, MICH, P ryretnrum Is Regarded as Reliable Insecticide MORTGAGE S A L E HICKS and De*JARDINS, Attorneys NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Default having been made f o r Owotio, Miehig*n Whereas, Evah L. Crosby made 1 more than t h i r t y days in the condiand executed a certain mortgage tions of a certain m o r t g a g e made by MORTGAGE SALE Wider use of pyrethruru and derris bearing date t h e 27th day oi' AuAlfred G. Fosket and Mildred Fosseems to be the answer to the grower's gust, A. i). it)] 9, to the Citizens' Default having been ma,];, in t h eket, his wife, m o r t g a g o r s , t o Linneed for keeping his leafy vegetables Savings Bank of Owosso, Michiga c o n d i t i ^ 0 l -u cenaill naeus C. Fosket, mortgagee, d a t e d mortgage, ^ he free from residues of the more to^lc winch u a s recorded in the Office of j h o f ^ co,lained M;ty 23, 1922, and recorded in the J l the j U Deeds tor 1 u l c CouuUl insecticides, according to W. II. While, t h e Ke^is-le* •office of the Register of Deeds f o r <•>•• , ^ v r v ' ^ V " ! therein" has become operative, given in charge of truck crop and garden iy o i a i u a u a ^ c e . Michigan, on the < b y F r a n k P . L e w i s a n ^ L i n a M . "Lew- .Shiawassee County, Michigan, on Auinsect investigations, United States De- 28th day.of .August, 1919, in Liber its, husband and wife, of Shiawassee gust 2d, 1922, in Liber 161 of MortHi) oI -Vicrtgages on ; page 216; | Town, Shiawasse e County, Michigan, gages, on page 1 1 , on which mortBy TV C,M. Woodworth, Chlrt tn Plant partment of Agriculture. And wnorens, a i t e r w a r d s , on t h e : to F r a n k S. Ketchum, of the same gage there is claimed to be due and O*? net Ira, University of Illinois — WNU By Dr. 0 . M, Wood worth, Oilef In Plant Chemists and entomologists of the S'i?rvle<s Breeding-, University of Illinois.—WNV sought sub- ;lls.\ day of May, A. D. 1985, for a place, on J u n e 24, 1914, and record- unpaid a t the date -of this notice, for Servicfc. ' • • . . . What was once the principal and de-pa rimenr have long valuably censideration, the said Citi; Illinois'' rapid rise to the national about the <>nly legume' crop in Illinois stances that could be' depended on to zens' Savings Bank, of Owosso, Mich- ed in t h e office of the Register of principal a n d interest t h e sum of Deeds of Shiawassee County on -July leadership in soy bean production and may be hended for a comeback as a protect growing crops against destruc- jig:;;!}, -.'lily ass:>!ied said mortgage to 6", 1914, in Liber 135 of Mortgages, $2440.88 (the whole of said prin the prospects for a still further In- result.of new experiments being con- tive''-insect, "pests.'aiid still leave nothing the Citi'/ejiii' Depositors Corporation, on pages 276 a n d 277, which siaici c-ipal sum being now due and paya n d n o. s u i t o r procrease in acreage during the coming ducted by plant "breeders of the Col- harmful'.-t'o human beings on ihe prod-, of Owosso, Michigan; said assignment mortgage has been assigned by F r a n k able) ceeding a t l a w o r in equity uct to be 'marketed, he said. oi' said mortgage being recorded in S. Ketchum t o t h e Owosso Savings year are drawing attention of farmers lege of Agriculture, University of Illithe Oi'fie,. oi' the Register of Deeds having been h a d -or instituted Although this diftieult problem Is" and plant breeders to marked difler- nois, lied clover is the crop. The .. _ - . , . . , , Batik, by assignment, b e a r i n g , c a t e to recover the debt b y said not' yet 'completely solved, the, scl'ences, between varieties of this crop. tor said County on the 10th day t h e 2 4 t h day of J u n e , 1914, and re- , . secured L u plant breeders i\re uncovering'new pos« ( i i Jui A D : : entists working-on it have found ;.hat. i i'> - - W»ih- i " -Liber I b o , C O rded in the .office of the Register mortgage, or any p a r t , thereof; The record crop of nine and a half sibiUtiea for improving it so llnit It , ! of "Deeds for Shiawassee County, in j Now, therefore, b y virtue cf t h e million bushels In Illinois in 1034 was can withstand.the .hazards which have minute quantities' of two plant products joi .Mortgages, on p a g e ,-JoO; : i And whereas, afterwards, on the Liber 100, page 36'8, which said snort-! power of sale, contained in said —derris and pyrethnini—kill many, Invalued at more than eight million dol- slowly been killing it out. \:\}<l day of M^y, A. D. 1&35, for a gage has been assigned by the Owos-! mortgage, -and p u r s u a n t to the sects feeding on trncfc crop:"-,and. are lars and represented 54 per cent .of the Illinois was once oh?'of the greatest less likely than most 'iuorg.inlc in.st.c-!i- \ voidable consideration, the said Citi- s o Savings Bank to F r a n k S. Ket-1 s t a t u t e in such cases made and pronational production. states in the production of red clover, ixc'n-s Depositors Corporation,- of chum, by assignment bearing date t h e ' vided, notice is h e r e b y v g i v e n , t h a t Soy bean varieties have been found but plant diseases, insects and adverse rides now. in common use to leave | Owosso, Michigan, duly assigned said 7th dav of July, 1915, and r e c o r d e d ' on October 4, 1935, a t eleven o'clock to vary not only In seed color but also .weather have cut production so'severe- harmful residues. j mortgage t o t h 0 Reconstruction F i - i n the off ice of the Register of Deeds > in t h e forenoon, E a s t e r n Standard in many other characters affecting ly-..that the state hardly ever has even j.-nance Corporation, a corporation; f 0 r Shiawassee County, in Liber 100 : Time, .said m o r t g a g e will be forej .said assignment-of said mortgage be- p a g e 3 0 ^ w h i c h said mortgage h a s ' c l o s e d by a s a l e - a t public vendue t o their commercial production. These dif- enough seed to meet its own needs. ferences will become increasingly im- Red clover failures also have brought portant as the production of the crop on feed shortages with subsequent Wild garlic and wild onion are two expands. pests that cause a lot of trouble in the j losses to dairymen and stockmen. One of the important characters In field. Not only do they reduce yields j bo0 Preliminary work, by plant breeders ' I t h e Register of Deeds for Shiawas- the Circuit Court for the County of which varieties differ is in the number has revealed that there are extreme but are objectionable in crops and pasAnd whereas, afterwards, on t h e ' see County in Liber 100, page 398, i Shiawassee is held, of the premises of seeds to a pod. There are some pods differences among red clover plants In tures because of the odor, according 19th day of June, A. D. 1935, for a which said m o r t g a g e h a s been as-j described in said m o r t g a g e , o r so with only one seed, some with two characters that are Important from the to Purdue University Es^erlment sta- valuable consideration, the said Re- signed, by William T . E a g a n t o T h e ; much thereof as m a y be necessary t o seeds, others with three, and still standpoint of successful production of tion. Garlicky milk is rarely market- construction Finance Corporation, a Owosso Savings Bank, by a s s i g n m e n t ' pay the a m o u n t due on said mortothers with four. Usually there are the crop. Hardly any two plants have able, *nd wheat infested with the ilt- corporation, duly assigned said mort- bearing date the 23rd day of -Auril. gage a s aforesaid, with six per cent very few one-seeded and four-seeded been found to be alike. Also the diffi- emelUug pest Is graded garlicky and gage to the Citizens' Depositors Cor- 1919, and recorded in the office of interest thereon a n d all legal cost, pods in a given variety. Varieties also culties in red clover improvement work does not demand the top market price. poration, of Owosso, Michigan; said the Register of Deeds f o r Shiawas- i charges, and expenses including the assignment of said mortgage being e e County in Liber 100, page 5 4 4 , ! a t t o r n e y fees allowed b y law, and differ in the proportion of the differhave been more clearly recognized. The best way to reduce such losses,lies recorded in t h Office of t h e Regis- swhich said m o r t g a g e has been assign- j a n y sum or sums which may be paid ent-sized pods. The Ito Sao Is predome r of However, It is believed that plants can In eradicating the weed. *« Deeds for said County, on t h e e d b y The Owosso Savings Bank t o by the undersigned mortgagee a t o r inantly a two-seeded type and the IUibe selected and new strains built up 10th day of July; A . D. 1935, in Louise Kramp, b y assignment b e a r - j before said sale, necessary t o proni, a three-seeded type. that will be superior and useful in Liber 172 of Mortgages, o n page .,% d a t e t h e 12th d a y of August, j t e c t its interest i n t h e premises. In experiments on breeding soy overcoming present hazards. 605, and whereas, the said Citizens' 1925, and recorded in the office of : Which premises ar f t located in t h e beans a type was found with a very Irish hogs, from which come Irish Depositors Corporation, of Owosso, Register of Deeds f o r Shiawassee Township of B u m s , Shiawassee In the past plant breeders have high percentage of one-seeded pods. bacon and hams, are fed en native po- Michigan, is now t h e assignee, holder County in _Liber 166 of M o r t g a g e s , t County, Michigan, described a s : avoided the red clover crop because Two or three newly introduced Tarie' page 416, "which saW mortgage h a s ! West half of S o u t h e a s t qu-vrter, It is so hard to propagate under eon- tatoes, meal, pollard and skim milk. and owner of said m o r t g a g e ; ties from the United States DepartAnd whereas, th^ a m o u n t claimed been assigned b y Louise K r a m p t o Section Twenty-one. Township 5 The Irish potato is t h e one factor dttioas of controlled pollination. T h e ment of Agriculture snow a higher pro-' to be due on said mortgage on t h e Mary C. Fess a n d Fannie A. Schis- North Range 4 E a s t , containingin the feeding of the Irish hog which plants are almost entirely self-sterile. date hereof for principal a n d i n t e r ler; by assignment bearing date t h e eighty acres of l a n d , mor* or less, portion of four-seeded pods than any makes their quality unrivalled for * commercial varieties now being grown. Insects being depended upon for polli- curing purposes. The turf smoking est is the sum of Two thousand 22nd d a y of April, 1 9 3 3 , a n d recordSaid sale will b e made subject t o Tests prove that these varieties breed nation under field conditions. Hand and old-fashiooed, unhurried method eighty-three dollars and twelve cents, ed in t h e office of th w Register of a prior m o r t g a g e given by said m o r t pollination can be done*on a small and also t h e additional sum of ThirtyDeeds for Shiawassee County in Litrue for the particular proportions of curing gives flavor. Irish turf ts five dollars attorneys fees, a s p r o - b e r 185 of Mortgages on page 500, gagors t o said m o r t g a g e e on J a n u found; indicating that the character Is scale, however. native to Irish soH and that turf smok- vided f o r in said mortgage, and n o upon which said m o r t g a g e ther<, is a r y 8, 1920, and recorded on said Evidence of neglect of this crop by inherited. — — ing gives a savor not produced outside suit or proceeding having been insti- claimed to be due a t the d a t e hereof day in Liber 148 o f Mortgages a t plant breeders Is seen In the few dis- Contrary to what might be expected, page 394 in th^ office of the Regisof Ireland. tuted a t law o r in equity t o recover f o r principal a n d interest t h e sum t e T o f ^ K e ^ ^ ^ i a w s ^ ^ r m M S v " the varieties having a high proportion tinct strains now existing. Bed clover r f e w * ^ 1 1 ^ t h 6 r e b T ° r ^ P - U t ? M'213-25 a n d no action a t law 5 ¾ ¾ * £ the s^m o f l s S O O 0 ¾ Of four-seeded pods are not a s goog seed Is a conglomerate mixture a s to to thereof; recover said Dated J u l y 1 1 9 3 5 . yielders a s many varieties with a color, and^ will Pjodjoq^ all types of ( h a v i n g been b r o u g h t And whereas, default h a s been mortgage debt o r a n y p a r t thereof, L I N N A E U S C. F O S K E T , majority of two-seeded pods. The four- plants. When the plants are spaced made in th«, p a y m e n t of the money | . - ^ ° ^ therefore, b v virtue of *.he so that their distinguishing characters CMANCERY SALE Mortgagee seeded types usually produce small secured by said mortgage, whereby *j*'d power of sale a n d p u r s u a n t to S H I E L D S & S M I T H can be observed, they are seen to differ plants bearing a much smaller numS T A T E OF MICHIGAN — I n the the power of sale contained therein t h e s t a t u t e in such case made and Attorneys for M o r t r a e e e ber of pods than t h e taller-growing, in leaf markings, flower color, growth Circuit Court f o r t h e County of j ^as has becom ee operative; operative; .provided notice " h e r e b y given t h a t B u s i n e s a A d d r e s s : Howell, Mich. habits, winter hardiness, resistance t o Shiawassee, In Chancery. higher-yielding two-seeded varieties. Now, therefore, notice is hereby ° n ^ " J y t h e 28th day cf Qcto disease and persistency. ber 1936 at te e e Furthermore, tt is difficult t o comiven t h a t by virtue of said power of * \ J n n ^L^ The Northwestern Mutual Life In- giv~ - , . - ^ ..»—* ~ ^ ^ ^v^^* Vx „Aj%„ .. „ „ ^". „ ot tci ^l o„ c k,. ^ *J o„r M d bine the four-seeded character of a surance Company, a corporation au- « £ and in pursuance thereof and of ..^¾ J« ™?*t^b??wi^tl variety with the good character of an- ; MORTGAGE SALE thorized t o do business in t h e State t h f e s t a t u t « i n «uch case made a n d c - , o s * d ?y * .^!« a t P u b - J c * » a - v « t J other variety. This is only one of the of Michigan, Plaintiff, v s . Default having been made in t h e complications In improving soy beans s , conditions of a certain real e s t a t e MoMy sflage may oectiir around the Fred B . Brooks a n d Addie B . for a still more important place in mortgage made by Willi&ra B. P e t e r s Bides of a silo where the silo is not Brooks, his wife, C. H. Ladd a n d Con— . e , . . ^ , ~ . ~ . » „..^ , . i > , . . . .» . , • ¢ . ^ . lv t UVU 4 v ^ T» >..<«<u « . J . C « I : > American agriculture. a n d E d n a C Peters tight, and the only remedy Is t o use sumers Power Company, a Maine) of the Court House in th« City of ^^J^^JtJ^Si il J*!S l^rV ' ' husband a n d a tight slkv says Prof. E. Van Alsttne coi-poration Defendants I Corunna, Shiawassee County, Michi- a n d P r e n » s c s tombed tn said mort- w i f e t<J t h e S t a t e S a v i n g s B a n k o f of the department of agronomy at Cor- corporation, u e i e n a a n t s . j that being the place of holding ^ ^ o r so much thereof a-? may be t.Elai Michigan, dated J u n e 16, 1924, nell. In pursuance of a oecree of t h e t h e c i r c u i t C o u r t within said County* n « c « ; " » r J *°- P«y t h e . amount «»« and recorded in t h e offie- of t h e Moidlnes throughout the silage, he Circuit Court f o r the County of! on th^ 11th d*y of October, A . r>M a s aforesaid o n said mortgage, with R a s t e r 0 f Deeds f o r Shiawassee . Seeds of many unwelcome weeds ore said, com*« from poor packing. Finer Shiawassee, made and e n t e r e d on the 1935, a t ten o'clock in the forenoon, i n t e r c » t thereon a t the r a t e of six County, Michigan, J u n e 17 1924; in arriving on farms in the drouth states cutting, packing, and adding water are 18th day of May, A. D. 1935, in the of said d a y ; th^ descrtptio t In hay and other shlpped-ln roughage. way* to remedy the situation another above entitled cause, I, the subscrib- said premises contained in These seeds, say forage specialists of year. Moldy silage at the surface oc- er, a circuit court commissioner for ^ ¾ % ¾ ¾ ^ ^ a s follows: 5« ' , o . j 4 t o F k i „ t , ^ - ; . ^ , ^ , r the United States Department of Agri- curs when air seeps In. If silage is re- the county of Shiawassee, Michigan, ^ 1S t 0 . ¾ f o l , 0 w s : , .^; . . _ T Th ft lands, premises and: p r o p e r t y • ^ ¾ 1 l^f.^P^.ton Corculture, present a pruiiloui that' suvuid moved fast enough, the mold win not put a farmer on guard. have time to develop. If It cannot be Most of these "Imported" seeds wMl removed fast enough, it may be covbe deposited aronnd barnyards or in ered with matched boards or with can* feedlors. They will be carried to other ras pressed closely to the sflage to exparts of the farm by animals, mostly clude air. R an Eastern Standard Time, all those in manure. The longer barnyard o r . ee Three ( 3 ) East, containing ] ; ) : i i , t o the Reconstruction Finance' He said that hot silage Is traced to CITIZENS' DEPOSITORS certain pieces and parcels of land sixty (60) a c r e s of land more o r Corporation, a Federal Corporation, feedlot manure Is kept fromfields,t h e normal fermentation which produces CORPORATION, greater the probability that weed seeds heat, or to the growth of mold which situate in the County of Shiawassee a Michigan Corporation, of ^ * * J T 1 0« ••ftoe ! a r < i which said a s s i g n m e n t ' w a s dulv D a t e d : July 29, 1935 recorded in ' said Registers' office, Owosso, Michigan. will not germinate. One precaution is also produces h e a t In neither Instance and State of Michigan, to-wit: MARY C. F E S S , J u n e 26", 19:55, in Liber 1S5 of MortAssignee of Mortirae-ee to put manure—from horse barns espe- does the heat Itself, do any harm. The north half of t h e n o r t h e a s t F A N N I E A. SCHISLER, i eaires on page 3 4 9 ; nn.l which said .XKTH Q. PULVER & cially—into piles 6 or more feet In The freezing of silage docs no harm quarter and the northeast q u a r t e r of .MICHAEL CARLAND, Mortgagees mortgage was duly, assigned by said depth and allow St to remain there for other than interference In the removal the northwest"'quarter of section HICKS & DES J A R D I N S , Attorneys for Assignee, I Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 60 days or more. Farmers should be o.f silage from the silo, Professor Van thirty-three in township seven north A t t o r n e y s for Mortgagees, Business Address: Owosso, Mich. a Federal Corporation, on J u n e U), particularly alert to make sure that Alstine pointed out, and added that an of range three e a s t ; subject t o the 11*35, to t h e Ef.-si* Depositors 'Corthe few new weeds that do grow either Insulated silo avoids this difficulty. easement of t h 0 Consumers Power poration, of E l « e , Michigan, a Miohiaround the barnyard or in fields are deCompany t o maintain electric lines MORTGAGE S A L E gan Corporation, a n d which said asstroyed before they have a chance to consisting of poles and wires over Default having been m a d e for j signment was duly recorded in said propagate further. a n j across said premises. more than t h i r t y days in the condi-! Registers' office J u n e 26, 1935, in Every dairyman who has his cows unoTCAcr « i M . tions of a certain mortgage made ; Liber 172 of Mortgages on pages 601 Dated J u l y 12, 1935. tested regularly—and that should inn u K i b A u t ~ A L t 602, on which said m o r t g a g e . b y Byron S. Fosket and Ellen Fos-j and G. F . F R I E G E L , clude all dairymen who a r e In the Default having been made in the k e t » h i i wl^'. mortgagors, to J U n - ; a t the date hereof, ther,» is claimed Circuit Court Commissioner conditions of a certa The Pennsylvania experiment station business for a livins—should know the Shiawassee County, Mich. whereby the power weight of each cow under t e s t For recently announced that i t s agronofarms with wagon scales, this is easy. therein has become v t ^ . « v . > K , B i » t „ • — - - — — -«- ___„. mists have developed a high yielding bv Catherine Flood, widow of Pat- for Shiawassee County, Michigan, on f n d ' n o .suit o r o t h e r proceedings a t variety of wheat and oats which are But other dairymen may use the methrick Flood, of the township of B u r n s April-4, 1912, in Liber 121 cf Mort-! I a w having b e e n instituted to recover resistant to both loose and covered od of estimating the weight according Shiawassee County, Michigan, to B e r t i ^ s . <>" P**« 554, 0 * which mort- ' ^ l d d ^ or a n y - p a r t thereof. Notice smuts. Sixty-seven strains of these to t h e heart-Birth—a well-estahlished W. Parkhurst, of th^ same place, on gage t h e r e is claimed t o b e due and j f J^Te^,^n' J h a t ° n T « . d a y , O*NOTICE OF CHANCERY S A L E grains were grown last year by the and sufficiently reliable system. The r s 19 J a n u a r y 17, 1920, and recorded in j unpaid a t the date of this notice, f o r ! * ™ « > 3 S , a t two 0 clock in t h e station which have shown no smut in- bureau of dairy Industry has recently the Office of the Register of Deeds j principal and interest, t h e sum of, afternoon o f said day, a t the front completed a new table of weights, fection for three generations, although j State of Michigan — In t h e Cir- of Shiawassee County on J a n u a r y 19, j $4,027.26 the whole of the seed was Inoculated every year hased on American-type Oolsteins and with mixtures of loose and cov- Jerseys. By this table and a good j cuit Court, for the County of Shia- 1920, in Liber 148 of Mortgages,! sum being now due and on page 420, upon which said mort- j no suit or proceeding a t law or m ;-, ». c-u" ' ::~~" ered s m u t Several of the more prom- tape-line you can come within a few I wassee, in Chancery, ! n of niawa gage there is claimed t o be due a t ' e q u i t y having been had o r instituted ^ ? . . ^ ! f f e , said under ising strains, the station reports, are pounds of the true weight of any cow, j T h e Owosso Savings Bank, a b U Micni !an Ban kin the date hereof for principal and in-; to recover the debt secured by s a i d ¾ ^ 1 ^ 1 5 ^ ^ 1 ' * ? V* * ?£ being multiplied, and if they turn out from a p e e w e e " o f ' " i w " * l n c h e » % T r t h i « . * Corporation, of terest the sum of $1588.92, and n o mortgage, or a n y p a r t thereof. * t h e power of sale contained in 0 w o s s o mortgage, and i n p u r s u a n c e of said the a s well as they promise, a real con- wetghirig'304 pounds to a monster"of ' , Michigan, Plaintiff, vs action a t law having been brought j N o w ^ therefore, b T virtue of t h e s t a t u t e in such case made and protribution will have l>eeii made to agri- 92 inches weighing 3,075.—Farm Jour- j Herbert H. Allen and Grace M. t 0 m M 5 I l ? ° r a f f C d e b t o r a n y , Power of sale contained in said mort-1 vided, and a resolution authorizing culture.—Missouri Parmer. nal. Allen, Defendants. pair, tncreoi. I gage, and p u r s u a n t t o the s t a t u t e in . the foreclosure of said m ort^ace 0rTgage Now Therefore b y virtue of t h e s u c h c a s e m o d e a n d p r o v i d e d , notice j regularly v adopted o r the m 20th In pursuance of a decree of the day said power of sale and p u r s u a n t t o - • • • -' - - * Circuit Court, for the County o f ShiaTU l 0T1" Locust trees have been a satisfactory awassee, In Chancery, made The danger of wide spread of seed- species for reforestation on abandoned tered on the 6th day of April, 1935, bome diseases and noxious weeds will coal stripping land in eastern Ohio, re- in t h e above entitled cause, I , t h e be greater in the spring of 1035 than ports the county agent m Muskingum subscriber, a Circuit Court Commisusual, according to United States De- county. He has under supervision nine sioner, of th c . County of Shiawassee, a sale a t public auction t o the high the Court House in t h City of Co- J thereof as shall be necessary t o sate partment of Agriculture. At least sis farm woodlot demonstrations several Michigan, shall sell a t public auction o-if, bidder a t the west front door of r u n n a , Shiawassee County, Michigan, | isfy the a m o u n t due thereon, a t t h e states will have to use seed from out- years old where pine and locusts hare or vendue t o the highest bidder a t i'-c Court Hou.se in the City of Co- t h a t being the place where the C i r - j t i m e of sale, t o g e t h e r with interest side sources for most of their plant- been planted, These trees have crowd- t h e front door of the Court House runna, that being t h e place where. cuit Court for the County of Shia- j at_ seven per cent from t h e datp. of ^.* ^, ^, t h e Circut Court f o r Shiawassee ing. In some cases seed will be ed out weeds and briers and are now wassee is held, of thc premises do-1 this notice, and a n A t t o r n e y fee a s in the City of Corunna in. said Counc o u n t y is held, of tsaid h e lands aang d brought in from a distance, and unless ty, on thc 3rd day of August, A. D. premises described in m o r t g e , ' ^ r i b e d . i n M i d " £ * « * * * , o r s ° f " » * " < Vs authorized by law and provided f o r tnkinp on the appearance of a real foreroof a sm T b e «are is used in selection, losses of con^ » « M S i r I t o W ' " ! " , d ™ ' t g a g e , « " * «» other legal e s t Some 4-11 club members in the1935, . t t c „ o'clock in t h e forenoon j 11 so much thereof as may be n e c l , J siderable volirme may follow, both in county have taken forestry projects. of t h a t dav, all t h a t certain land and essary to p a y t h e amount due a* the amount du ft on said mortgage as .-cost*. 1935 and in future years, Treating Thc lands are described in said mortWhile a number of farmers set outpremises situated in t h e City of aforesaid On said mortgage, with in- aforesaid, with six per cent interest seed grain for disease with a good comterest thereon a 6 p e~r . thereon and alllegal costs.chargcs .and . g a g e as follows: The N o r t h half {%> t the- rat„ of „ _ -.,.,— . . , . r J trees in K»34s the season was too dry Owosso, Shiawassee County, Michimercial preparation will aid in keepcent, and all legal costs, charges and expenses, including the a t t o r n e y lees j 0 f the south half ( V*.) of the southfor most of them to survive.—Ohio gan, and desci"ibet{ a s follows: ing down diseases and te a precaution expenses, including an a t t o r n e y f e e allowed by law, and any sum or sums east quarter (¾) of section two ( 2 ) Farmer. Commencing eighty-fiv e f e e t north allowed by law of Twenty-five Dol- which may be paid by th* undersign-, m township eight (8) north of rang© that should be taken. of the southeast corner of l o t one. 1,'srr-. raid premises bointr described ed mortgagee a t or before said sale, one ( 1 ) east, Michigan, Block seven of A. L. and B. O. Wil- as follows: Dated Julv 11, 1935. \ necessary to protect his interest in liams' Addition t o the City of OwosELSIE DEPOSITORS' The lands, premises and property the premises. Which premises are loIn selecting cows for baby beef pro- so, Shiawassee CORPORATION Breeders of dairy cattle, and espeCounty, Michigan, situated in t h e Township of B u r n s . ! cated in t h e Township of Burns, Elsie, Michigan, cially breeders of purebreds, are fre- duction, the compact, beefy sort is pre- thence north forty feet, west eighty- County of Shiawassee and State of Shiawassee County, Michigan, d e ferable. It is important that the cows a Michigan Comoration, Michigan, described a s follows, t o scribed a s : quently interested to know If certain two feet, south forty feet and east show evidence of being good milkers, wit: The south p a r t of the E a s t one-j ftast half of Northwest quarter, _ Assignee of their young or'mature animals are eighty-two feet to place of b e g i n n i n g ^ says Wallaces' Farmer. A good milklalf ( % ) of thc Northeast one quarSection Twenty-one, Township 5 ° G. T U T T L E , u p to standard in size tor the breed. according to thc recorded plat there ter (M) Section t h i r t y (30) town North Range 4 East, Michigan, con-' Attorney f o r said Assignee. While there are no set standards to ing dam will produce, as a rule, the of. five (5) North range four (4) East, taining eighty acres of land accord-. Business Address. Ithaca, Mich, which cattle have to conform, yet there best and growthlest calf. I t is well to Dated J u n e 18, 1935. containing t h i r t y acres more o r less,-n,f>t o the United States survev t h e r e keep Jn mind that there is no real subU a certain symmetry in body confortogether with th,> hereditaments and of. * """*" HOMER M. B U S H mation that breeders commonly look stitute for milk as food for a growing appurtenances thereof. j Dated J u l v 1. 1935. Circuit Court Commissioner for. Circumference of chest, height of calf. A cow that Is a liberal producer BERT W. PARKHURST, j L I N N A E U S C. F O S K E T . Shiawassee County, Michigan withers, width of hips, and total body of milk i s sometimes worth two of SETH Q. PULVER, Mortgagee Mortgagee weight are characteristics, which bear the kind that fails to milk In sufficient Attorney f o r Plaintiff, HICKS & D E S J A R D I N S , S H I E L D S & SMITH, « certain relationship to each other. quantity to properly raise her calf. Attorneys f o r Mortgagee, Attorneys for mortsragw. Business Address: Owosso, Mich. Business Address: Owosso,'Mich. ' Business A d d r e s s : Howell, Mich. * B 7 mm mmmm Soy Beans Differ I f* J W °^ \ in Various Ways to Make Comeback Pods With One Seed, Some With Two, Three and Others Four* Plant Breeders Developing New Possibilities for Improvement. ^ Wild Garlic Irish Bacon Asserts Poor Packing Is Cause for Mold in Silos Weed Seeds in Roughage, New Problem for Farmers * *. ^ ^-*taK ' i- • • I " ™ * - i -• - - - 1 . - ) «tii^t ' i 1111 u ,^%* 1 > 1 Heart-Girth and Weight. Resistant to Smut Kill Seed Diseases Growth Standards Locusts for Reforestation Choose Compact, Beefy Cows Let The News handle that Printing. '1 4 2P""S ROBERT E. FINCH, A t t o r n „ claims to said commissioners for adROBERT E. FINCH, Attorney NOTICE OF CHANCERY SALE Owoito, Michigan justment and allowance State of Michigan — In the CirDated the 19th day of June A, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE cuit Court for the County of ShiaWhereas, Ira B. Warner and D. 1935. Whereas, Timothy B. McCaffrey wassee, In Chancery. JAY RICHMOND, J u h a A. Warner, his wife, made and and Mary McCaffrey, his wife, made The Owosso Savings Bank, a executed a certain mortgage bearing WAYNE JACOBS, and executed a certain mortgage Michigan Banking Corporation, of < » t a t h € 23rd day of January, 1929, Commissioners bearing date the 20th day of April, Ovvoseo, Michigan, Plaintiff, vs. to The State Savings Bank, a Michi1927, to The State Savings Bank, a Harvey A. Waite and Ida A. Waite, gan Banking Corporation, of OwcsMichigan Banking Corporation, of so, Michigan, which was recorded in Owosso, Michigan, which was record- Defendants. the Office of the Register of Deeds In pursuance of a decree of the ed in the Office of the Register of ROBERT E. FINCH, Attorney of the County of Shiawassee, MichiDeeds of the County of Shiawassee, Circuit Court for the County of ShiaOwo**p, Michigan gan, on the 27th day February, 1929, Michigan, on the 27th day of April, wassee, i n Chancery, made and en. in Liber 180 of Mortgages, on page 1927, in Liber 164 of Mortimees, on tored on th^ 1st day of June, 1935, 1 o o J ., NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE page 277; in the above entitled cause, I, the Whereas, Matthew Shea arid Tena Ar:d whereas, afterwards, on Feb- subscriber, a Circuit Court CommisAnd whereas, afterwards, on September 14, 1934, for a valuable con- Shea, his wife, made and executed a ruary 29, 1932, for a valuable consideration, said The State Savings certain mortgage bearing date the sideration, said The State •Savings sioner, of the County of Shiawassee, Bank sold and assigned said mort- 27th day of March, A. D. 1020, to Bank sold and assigned said mort- Michigan, shall sell at public auction gage to Owosso Depositors Corpora- The State Savings Bank, a Michigan gage to the Reconstruction Finance or vendue to the highest bidder at tion, a Michigan Corporation, said Banking Corporation, of Owosso, Corporation, a Federal Corporation,n the front door of th e Court House assignment being recorded in said Michigan, which was recorded in the said assignment being recorded } in the City of Corunna, in said CounRegister of Deeds Office on the 5th office of the Register of Deeds, of aaid Register of Deeds Office,'on the ty, on thelOth day of August, A. D. County of Shiawassee. Michigan, 7th. day of May, 1935, in "Liber 185 1935, at ten o'clock :n the forenoon dfcy of October, in Liber 172 of the on the 29th day of March, A. D. of Mortgages, on page 345; Mortgages on page 451; of that day, all those certain lands' 1920, in Liber 152 of Mortgages, on And whereas, afterwards, on Sep- and premises situated in the Cijy of A n d whereas, afterwards, o n nage 7 8 : . tember 14, 1934, for a valuably .con- Owosso, Shiawassee County,. MiehiMarch 23, 1935, for a valuable conAnd whereas, afterwards, on Feb sideration,, said The — State. Savings „ , sideration, said Owcsso Depositors Corporation sold and assigned said ruary 29, 1932, for a valuable con- Bank sold and assigned said moil-! gan, and village of Crystal City, Benas "**• County, ^ » « f « Michigan, M^kio*.™ described .i*>o™h«/i a« mortgage to the Reconstruction Fi- sideration, the said The State Sav-'gage to Owosso Depositors Corpora-- zie nance Corporation, a Federal Cor- ings Bank. sold . and assigned said tion, a Michigan Corporation, said follows: _ poration, said assignment, being re mortgage to the Reconstruction Fi- assignment being recorded in said PARCEL No. 1. The east half cf lots corded in said Register of Deeds Of- !'•nance Corporation, a Federal Cor- j Register of Deeds Office on the 5th threfe and four of Block Six, in S. K. fice on the 17th day of May 1935 .Pf»ration, said assignment being re- day of October, 1934, in Liber 172 Barnes Addition to the City of Owosin Liber 185 of Mortgages on page C 0 l d e d in said Register of Deeds Of- of Mortgages, on page 451; so, Shiawassee County, Michigan. 346: i fice on the 7th day of May, 1935, in And w h e r e a s , afterwards, on, And whereas, afterwards, on April' Liber 185 of Mortgages, on page March 23, 1935, for a valuable con-! PARCEL No. 2. Lot Seven, Block 22, 1935, for a valuable consldera" 3 4 4 5 sideration, said Owosso Depositors Four, according to the recorded plat tion, said Reconstruction Finance' And whereas, afterwards, on Sep-'Corporation sold and assigned said of said village of Crystal City, Ben Corporation sold and assigned said tember 14, 1934, for a valuable con-imortfiae? to said Reconstruction *i- 2½ County, Michigan. mortgage to said Owosso Depositors sideration, said The State Savings nance Corporation, said assignment PARCEL No 3. Part of Lots Two Corporation, said assignment being Bank sold and assigned said mort- »fing recorded in said Register of and three, of Block Seventeen of the recorded i n said Register of Deeds *ag« to Owosso Depositors Corpora-1 g ^ s Off ice on the 21st day of original plat of the village (now •V.M... on the .. 17th .-., day . * of. May, *~ •>-«*jtion, ^ , _ a. Michigan »^-<.!— Corporation, ^. *-•_-_ -said ~ : J jfcay, 1935, HI Laber 185 of MortOffice 1935~ city) of Owosso, Shiawassee County, itt Liber 172 of Mortgages, en pages assignment being recorded in said gages, on page 347; Michigan, commencing on the North 560 and 5 8 1 ; Register of Deeds Office on the - And whereas, afterwards, on April line of said Lot Two, thirty-three feet 26, 1936, for a valuable consideraAnd whereas, the amount claimed 5th day of October, 1934, in Liber tion, said Reconstruction Finance Eait of the Northwest corner of said te be due on said mortgage on the 172 of Mortgages, o n page 4 5 1 ; Corporation and assigned said lot, thence South seventy feet, thence date heisof for principal and interAnd w h e r e a s, afterwards, o » mortgage to sold said Owosso Depositors East thirty-three feet, thence North est, and interest upon taxes and in- March 23, 1935, said Owosso De- Corporation, said assignment being «irance premiums paid is the sum! positors Corporation, for a valuable recorded in said Register of Deeds seventy feet, thence West thirtyof Thirteen Hundred twenty-three! consideration, sold and assignee said Office on the 7th day of May, 1935, three feet to beginning; also interest dollars forty-five cents ($1323.45) 1 mortgage to said Reconstruction Fr- in Liber 172 of Mortgages, on page in party wall referred to in agreement recorded in Liber N, Miscelaud also the additional sum of Sev- nance Corporation, said assignment 575; celaneous, October 10, 1924. -eoty-seven dollars ($77.00) for taxes] being recorded in said Register of And whereas, the amount claimed for the year 1930 assessed upon the Deeds Office on the 21st day of Said premises will be sold in parpremises covered by said mortgage May, 1935, in Liber 185 of Mort- to be due on said mortgage on the cels in the order above set forth. date hereof for principal and interJ A M E S A. Q U A Y L E , A t t o r a e y and paid by said The State Savings gages, on page 346; June Dated 25, 1935. est is Seventeen Hundred seventyBatik on June 22, 1931; and also the C ^ i i m , M3du«*ft And w h ' e r e a s, afterwards, on HOMER M. BUSH, additional sum of Nine dollars fifty April 29, 1935, for a valuable con- nine dollars forty cents ($1779.40); MORTGAGE SALE Circuit Court Commissioner, aents ($9,50) for fire insurance sideration, said Reconstruction Fi- and also the additional sum of Thirty premium upon policy protecting the nance Corporation sold and assigned five dollars ($35.00) attorneys fees Shiawasse e County, Michigan Default having been made in the premises covered by said mortgage, said mortgage to said Owosso De- provided for in said mortgage, and SETH Q. PULVER, conditions of a certain mortgage, by the statute in such case made and £ * \ 5½.8¾¾ ^ * S t e t ^ ? i n ^ B a i ! , k i positors Corporation, said assign- provided, and no suit or proceeding Attorney for Plaintiff, whereby the power of sale contained e e April 29, 1933; and also the ad- m e n t ^ ^ ^corded in said Regis- at law, or in equity, having been Business Address: Owosso, Mich. therein has becom p operative, given * 5 ? H « € j f * »0 ) <rf.TourlT dollars fifty t e r c f D e e d s office, on the 7th day instituted to recover the debt securby Mark Gradick and Maggie Gradick 22-..2 I * * insurance o f M a 1 9 3 5 i n . L i b e r 172 of Morthis wife, to Julia Barkway, on Deced by said mortgage, or any part ember 12, 1928, and recorded in the EZSSZ TFZJK*?7 P™****1"* t h e gages, on page 574; thereof; officR of the Register of Deeds of premises covered by said mortgage,! » *, L ^ * i • J And whereas, default has been Shiawassee County on December 13, paid by said The State Savings Bank L And whereas, the amount cUimed ORDER OF PUBLICATION made in the payment of the money b d u e W 0 h 1928, in Liber 181 of Mortgages, on oo Way 25? 1934; the total amount ? . h\ e ^ n0T l l : ^ I1 ^ ^ ? n i t ! secured by said mortgage, whereby State of Michigan — In the Cir- page 94, upon which mortgage there upon insurance due upon said mortgage on the d a t eest! ^ a n d J ^interest ? ?™*£* ™jL~*L the power of sale contained therein paid, is theupon sum of cuit Court for the County of Shia- is claimed to be due a t the date herehereof forpremiums said taxes paid, > Merest — Sixteen has become operative; insurance so so paid, and said for premiums of $761.02; to w i t : for principal and Hundred six dollars and thirty-nine wassee, in Chancery. principal and interest, and interest cents ($1606.39) and also the adinterest the sum of $714.73 and for Now, therefore, notice is hereby np*n said taxes and said insurance ditional sum of ten dollars fifty given that by virtue of said power of Owosso Depositors Corporation, a taxes paid by Mortgagee t h e sum of premiums so paid, being the sum of ($10.50) for fire insurance sale, and in pursuance thereof and of corporation, of Owosso, Michigan, $46.29 and no action a t law having Fourteen hundred fourteen dollars cents been brought to recover said mortgage on policy protecting the the statute in such case made and Plaintiff, vs. forty-five cents $1414.45); and also (premium provided, the said mortgage will be premises covered by said mortgage, the additional sum of Thirty-five paid by said The State Savings Bank foreclosed by a sale of the mortgagRoy L. Hobart, and Mary M. Kob- debt or a n y part thereof. Now therefore, by virtue of the said dollars ($35.00) attorn evs fees pro- on September 23, 1933; and also ed premises at public vendue to the art, his wife; J. A, Nyiand and Mrs. power of sale and p e r s u a n t to the vided for in said mortgage, and by additional sum of Six dollars highest bidder at the front door of J- A. Nyiand, his wife, and Nick De- s t a t u t e in such cases made and providthe statute in1 such case made and the $6.00) tornado insurance prem- the Court House in the City of Co- Santis, and Rose DeSantis, his wife, ed, notice is hereby given that on provided, and no suit or proceeding ium on for policy protecting the prem runna, Shiawassee County, Michigan, Defendants. Saturday, October 26th, 1936, at ten having been instituted at law or in that being the place of holding the Suit pending in the above entitled o'clock in the forenoon, said mortCircuit Court within said County, on gage will be foreclosed by a sale at by_said mortgage, or any p a r t t h e r e - j ^ - J * ^ ^ ^ t Z v t t Z the 24th day of AuffK.t, A. D. 1935, cause before the above Court at the public vendue to th«, highest bidder at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said City of Corunna, Shiawassee County, at the front door of the Court House And whereas, default has b e e n ' <*«« u P ° , n said mortgaire on t h e d a t e day; the description of which said Michigan. in the City of Corunna, t h a t being the made in t h e p a y m e n t of the m o n e y , hereof for said insurance premiums place where t h P Circuit Court for the secured by said m o r t g a g e , whereby *<> ,P*>d,-and for principal and inter-premises contained in said mortgage In this cause, it appearing by af- County «••?'...' d interest upon said insurance of Shiawassee is held, of 1;he OWOMO, Michigan fT tT T T T t * AUCTION BILLS HANDLED PROMPTLY AND CORRECTLY, ON SHORT NOTICE BY THE NEWS Phone 1373 V € eTity* sTrVssrs ;:b secures r« - ^ s r * *he p o w e r of sale contained therein has become o p e r a t i v e ; Now, therefore, notice is hereby given that by virtue of said power of sale, and in pursuance thereof a n d of the s t a t u t e in "such case made and provided, the said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortrsiged premises a t public vendue to the highest bidder a t the front door of the Court House in t h e City of C o r u n n a , Shiawassee Countv, Michigan, t h a t being the place of holding t h e Circuit Court within said County, on t h e 24th day of A u g u t t , A. D. 1935, a t terv o'clock in the forenoon of said d a y ; the description of which .said premises contained in said mortgage and which will be sol^ as aforesaid is as follows: f estf mort *Kn an and which will be sold as aforesaid j f • j Q v { t __ -., , D t a r t „„ *„ L i s ' a s follows: j fidavit on file, sworn to by one of All t h a t certain piece or parcel of j the attorneys for said plaintiff, t h a t land situated in the City of Owosso. j the said defendants, Roy L. Hobart County of Shiawassee, and State o f j a n d Mary M. Hobart, are not resiMichigan, described as. follows: The d e n t g o f a r j d d o n o t r e s i d e i n t h e Corunna, Mich. COMMISSIONERS' NOTICE In the Matter of the Estate of E. H. Bailey, Deceased. We, t h e undersigned having been appointed by the Hon. Roy D. Mat* thews, Judge of Probate, in and for the County of Shiawassee, State of Michigan, Commissioners to receive, examine and adjust all claims and demands of all persons against said estate, do hereby give notice that we will meet at the Old Corunna State Bank iii the City of Corunna, in said county, on Wednesday, the 21st day of August A. D. 1935, and on Monday, the 21st day of October, A. D. 1935, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each of said days, for t h e purpose of receiving and adjusting all claims against said estate, and that four months from the 21st day of June A. D. 1935, a r e allowed to creditors to present their claims to said Commissioners for adjustment and allowance. Dated, th e 21st day of June, A. D. 1935. J. H. COLLINS, F. Wm, NOTNAGEL, Commissioners lands and premises described in said mortgage, or so much thereof as may I be necessary to pay the amount due fts aforesaid on said mortgage, with interest thereon a t t h P rate of G per cent, and all legal costs, charges, and < rt I y < 40> M S w ° i v J S f °L™t ^ K i State of M i c h i g a n / b u t are residents expenses, including a n a t t o r n e y fee (1), Block Nine (9) except the ! f, . J* o ^u allowed by law of Thirty-five Dollars, | South Three (3) feet thereof, of A . ^ and are now res.dmg a t South COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE L. and B. O. Williams' Addition te! 9 a . t e * ' . L o s A n ^ e , e s . i n t h e S t a l e of said premises b e i h g described as ; follow*: j California. the City of Owosso, Michigan. In the- m a t t e r of the estate of Commencing a^ a point where the \ Dated May 28, 1935. On motion of Michael Garland, one East line of Comstock Street in the i Fre ( ) Brown, Deceased. OWOSSO DEPOSITORS And whereas, default hr\s been of the attorneys for plaintiff, It Is ' City of Corunna intersects the south CORPORATION, We, t h e undersigned, having been made if\ the payment of the mo:.-ey Ordered, t h a t the appearance of the line of the Detroit, Grand Haven arid appointed by the Hon. Roy D. Mat* A Michigan Corporation, of secured by said mortgage, whereby said defendants, Roy" L. H o b a r t a n d Milwaukee Railroad r i g h t of way, j • Pw»h*t* in -»nd for Owosso, Michigan the power, of sale contained therein Marv M Hobert be entered in thU ! thence, running north-easterly t h e ^ s , Judge ol Piob^te, in and for aiong has become operative; Mortgagee and Assignee ,ia,> M. liobert, be ente.cd in t n , . , ^ . < { ^ ^ ^z ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ g ^ | t h e C o u n t y o f Shiawassee, State of cause within three months from the Now, therefore, notice is hereby -ROBERT E. FINCH, tion twenty-eight (2.8),' Town seven f Michigan, • Commissioners to receive, given t h a t by virtue "of said power of Attorney for Mortgagee and As- (iate of this order, and t h a t in ease f 7-^ North, Rangf, three (3) East, examine and adjust all claims and f sale, "and in pursuance thereof and signee, their avwearance appearance that that thev they cause ' t hence-south thirty" (SO) minutes East demands of all persons against said oi the statute rn< such cases made ami Business Address: Owosso, Mich. t h e n - a n s w e r to the bill of complaint j flve hundred nine (509) feet along estate, do hereby give notice t h a t All that certain piece or parcel of provided, the said mortgage will be to be filed and a copy thereof served said east Section line, thence south \v- will meet a t the Old Corunna e land1 situated in the City of Owosso, foreclosed by a sale of the mortgage upo n the a t t o r n e y for plaintiff with- eighty-eight (88),, degrees V/est to S t a t e Bank in the City of Corunna, County of Shiawasese, and State of e<} premises at public vendue to the CHANCERY SALE in fifteen days after service upon east h'ne of said Comstock Street, in said county, on Friday, the 27th Michigan, described as follows: Comhighest bidder at the front door of thence north along said ea.st line to mencing a t the Northwest corner of t h e Court House in the Citv of Co In pursuance and by virtue of a them, or their attorneys, of a copy place of beginning. Being a p a r t of day of September A. D. 1935, and ou the East one-half (Y s ) of Lot Nine- r U n n a > Shiawassee County, Michigan decree' of t h e Circuit Court for the of said bill, and in default thereof, t e e n (19) of M. L. S t e w a r t and t h a t being the place of holding the County of Shiawassee, State of Mich that said bill be tak^n as confessed the Northeast quarter (¼ ) of South-i Wednesday, the 27th day of Novemeast quarter ( V*) of section twenty' Company Addition to t h e City of Circuit Court-within said County, o n ' i g a n , i n Chancery, made a n a e n t e r e d ! bv paid defendants, Roy L. Hobart eight (28) Town seven (7) North, ber A. D. 1935, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each of said days, for Owosso, Michigan thence South on t h e 2 4 t h , d a y of A u g u t t , A. D. 1935, [on the 13th d a v of July, A. D. 1935, | a n d M a r v M R o b e r t Range three (3) East, containing the purpose of receiving and adjustc e n t e r line of said lot, ten (10) roos, a t t e H 0 ' C i 0 c k i n the forenoon of saM i in a certain case therein pending • J • • It Ts Further Ordered, that the twelve (12) acres more or less. t h e n c e W e s t Fifty-two (52) f c e t , ; d a y . t h e description of which said wherein the Virginian J o i n t Stock ing all claims against said estate, Dated: Julv 31st, 1935. t h e n c e N o r t h ten (10) r o d s to N o r t h j premises contained iri said mortgage | Land Bank of Cnarleston, **est Vir- said plaintiff cause a copy of this and that four months from the 27th JULIA BARKWAY, line of said lot, thence E a s t fifty- ^and which will be sold as aforesaid |ginia, a corporation, is plaintiff, and order to be published in the Corunna day of July A. D. 1935, are allowed Mortgagee two (52) feet to place of beginning. is a s follows: Frank E. Foster, Tryphenia A. Fos- News, a newspaper printed, publish- JAMES A. QUAYLE, to creditors to present their claims All t h a t certain piece or parcel of ter, Lola M. Burgess, Nelson Carpen- ed and circulating in said County, Attorney for Mortgagee, Dated May 28, 1935. to said Commissioners for adjustland situated in the City of Owosso,' ter and Pauline Carpenter, are de- and that such publication be com- Business Address: Corunna. Michigan OWOSSO DEPOSITORS ment and allowance. County of Shiawassee, and State of fendants.^notice is hereby giveni that ( CORPORATION, ed w i t h i n f .^ J j f th Dated the 27th day of July A. I shall sell at public auction to the , . . . . , , •' '" Michigan, described as follows: L o t ! a Michigan Corporation, of 0I t h d r s h D. 1935. highest bidder at the west fron door i ?.**« « ** * .> ™* ^ ^ vubt One (1) of Block Three ( 3 ) of K. Owosso, Michigan. of the Court House in the City of j Nation be continued therein once STERUNG NEWELL, L Williams' Addition to the Village Mortgagee and Assignee p r e m i u m s so paid, being the sum of Sixteen Hundred twenty-four dollars thirty-two cents ($1624.32) and also the additional sum of Thirty-five doJlars ($35.00) s t a t u t o r y a t t o r n e y s fees, as provided for in said mortgage, and no suit or proceeding having been instituted a t law or in equity to recover the debt secured bv said mortgage, or any p a r t there:. ROBERT E, FINCH, { (now city) of Owosso, Michigan, exAttorney for Mortgagee and As- 'cept the east sixty-four (64) feet, and the use and benefit in common signee, adjacent property owners of the Business Address: Owosso, Mich. nine (9) feet adjoining this prop ertv on the east side. Dated May 28, 1935. OWOSSO DEPOSITORS CORPORATION, COMMISSIONERS' NOTICE A Michigan Corporation of Owosso, Michigan In the Matter of t h e Estate of. Mortgagee and Assignee Lomie J. Veale, Deceased. j ROBERT E. FINCH, "We, the undersigned, having been ] Attorney for Mortgagee and Asappointed by the Hon. Roy D. Matsignee, thews, Judge of Probate in and for Business Address Owosso, Mich. the County of Shiawassee, State of Michigan, Commissioners to receive, examine and adjust all claims and demands of all persons against «aid estate, do hereby give notice that we will meet at the residence of It appears that Michigan is going Mrs. Oti e Veale in the Township of to continue leading the nation in Hazelton, in said county on Monday,! the 19th day of August A. D. 1935, and on Monday, the 21st day of October, A. D. 1935, at ten o'clock in t h e forenoon of each of said days, for t h e p u r p o s c o<" receiving and adj u s t i n g all claims against said est a t e , and t h a t four months from the 19th day of J u n e A. D. 1935, are allowed to creditors to present their recovery and reach t h e goal without having a burden of debt to be carried alor.£ for years. — Grand Rapids Press. Corunna, County of Shiawassee, and j in each week for six weeks in sue State of Michigan, (that being the; cession, and that a copy of this placg of holding th e Circuit Court for order be mailed to each of said desaid county) on Saturday, the 7th fendants, Roy L. Hob&rt and Mary day of September, A. D. 1935 a t M. Hobart, at their last known post ten^ o'clock in the ^rmoon^.^e^tol-1 office address by registered mail, and lowng described propert-" namely; ! FIRST TRACT: The Westerly 27 a return receipt shall be demanded acres of the West Half of the North- j therefor, and if a return receipt shall east Quarter of Section No. 23. j be received therefore, then this order SECOND TRACT: The East Half of j need not be published. the East Half of the Northwest Quar- I Dated June 1, 1935. ter of Section No. 23, containing 40 ! JOSEPH H. COLLINS, acres. ! Circuit Judge THIRD TRACT: The West Half of the West Half of the Southeast Quar- Countersigned. LLOYD H. YEITER, Clerk ter of Section No. 23, containing 40 i S. Q. PULVER, f»CW>S FOURTH T R A C T : The East Half of i Attorney for plaintiff, Lhe Southwest Q u a r t e r of Section No. Business Address: Owosso, Mich >° containing 80 acres. F I F T H T R A C T : The Easterly 13 i acres of the West Half of the South- j west Q u a r t e r of Section No. 23. Senator Couzen's says he is in favAll of the above described land or of Roosevelt's "share the wealth" lying in Township 5 North of Range 2 East, and containing in the aggre- program. You wil] notice the senagate 200 acres of land, according to tor witheld judgment until it -vas learned tax exempt bonds wouldn't the Governmental Survcv thereof. be molested. Dated: July 22, 1935. GUSTAV F . F R I E G E L , The fisherman found dead standCircuit Court Commissioner,; i n R } t h e w a t e r w j t h a f i g h t u R j f i n g Shiawassee C o u n t " Michigan.; „,, ^a „line „was „ r t k - K 1 „ „a *tourist .-.* M 0i. ^ ovi tthe probably HICKS & DES J A R D I N S , who died from th^ .shock of getting The Hoolywood actress who sued for divorce because he was cruel to her goldfish, never thought to mention the ti emshe spilled cigarette Attorneys for Plaintiff, ashes in the baby's milk. Business Address: Owosso, Mich. a bite in a summer resort lake. Let The News Handle that Printing. E. J. HERRICK, Commissioners - U :~K^~X^~K^~>*K^"K"K"K»«~K***^ t T T tT Only the best Quality of Material* and the finest Workmanship used by THE CORUNNA NEWS T PHONE 1373 T TVTVT^^T^'TVIVTVT^T^^ CORUNNA, MICH. SBC Inspect Machines f>4*lfcfc^ for Spring Work T Guests in the Albert Huntley hom e |! over Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pereell and family, of Lansing, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foster, of Shiawassee, Mr. and Mrs, William Parr, of Owosso, and Mrs. William Make Inventory of Repairs Parker. Needed and Parts to Mrs. Joseph Suyrn and son, Frank, | left for Chicago, Monday morning to Be Replaced. .*§ nic Sunday nt Edgewood park, held remain several days as guests of relHAVE EXCELLENT EQUIPSeveral farmers in this vicinity under the auspices of St. Joseph'^ atives. Mr. Suryn will leave the last By IHirtd Weaver, Agricultural Knijtne**, North Oa.roliua. Stat a Colioge.—W N'J Service. have threshed their wheat. church. J of the week and the three will witGet your farm machinery ready for The Ladies' Aid held a meeting on Word" has been received here of jness the marriag e of their son, Joe, work before the spring rush starts. The I „. MENT FOR HANDLING •T Wednesday at the hom e of Mrs. the serious illness of Barbara, older. on Saturday. ilret step is to inspect all machinery j Frances Conklin. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Everett carefully and make an inventory of ^ •T Miss Evlyn Wager has returned to .Sheldon. Dr. Sheldon, with his parrepairs needed and the parts to be reCALL US BFFORE SELLING Pontiac, after spending: several day.s ents, Mr. and. Mrs, Walter Sheldon, . placed, with her parents here. The parts should be ordered, as early were former residents here, But now SHIAWASSEE as possible so they will arrive before Mr. and Mrs. John Wajjer and reside at Loma Linda, California. j the machines must be ysed, and the MAPLE RIVER CHURCH family attended the Wager reunion |, repair.-wwk scheduled' so that the maat McCurdy park Sunday. Social services were held on Sun- I chiiiery to be used, first, will be repaired •T Hubert Porterfield, of Detroit., was day evening at the Maple . River first CALEDONIA ; T> •a .Sunday .guest of his? parents, ii'r. church, when the young people of I Look Into the disk barrow bearings, and Mrs. Wesley Porterfield. the Owosso Baptist church took Mr. and M.r.4. Alton Wren'..are in j examine the plow points, handles, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fairbanks Pontiac for a few days as guests of charge'of th e services," $ .braces, ascertain tl>e number of new Harold Sch'ultz and Miss Ruth Wal ! parts and son, wer e over-night guests of her sister, Mrs. F. Converse. CORUNNA ELEVATOR needed, note the parts that need relatives in Corunna Saturday. Miss Frances Cook, of Detroit, lace wore the speakers of the eve- ; resharpening, •tightening, or cleaning. Mrs. Wiliard Snyder and daughter, formerly of Corunna, is visiting in ning. ! AIL harness gear should be gone over We Deliver Mary Grace, of Benton Harbor, arc the home of Mr. and Mrj. Oliver ' Miss Lorrain e Washburn pleased thoroughly, cleaned and oiled when Phone 20 j the congregation with an accordian McKay. guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Fair. necessary.' See that there are enough ! solo. Ned Root gave several selections seed plates to.handle all-types' of seeds Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Crowe and child. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dall, of Sagi- ;On the saw and violin. •I* I to be sown with the planter. ren, and Mrs. Frances Conklin and naw, have returned home afte ~ j . Next Sunday will be thp last SunCultivators, mowing machines, and son were Sunday callers of Mr. and visit in the home of Mr, arid Mrs . day services until some time in Sep- binders should be gone over carefully, Mrs. W. S. Eveleth and family. Joseph Sen*. t e m b e r , as Rev. E. Norton, is taking Miss Kathryn Bower, cf Brent , Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Sparks and cnil- a vacation. Sunday school will be Xew blades, bearings, sickles, rollers, gears, or chains may be needed. These JUJWJ Creek, has returned home a f t e r jdren, of Owosso, visited in the home h e M a s u s u a l u n l e s s otherwise decid- machines should be so repaired and spendmg several days with her grandr ( o t j j r > and Mrs. E. A. Dibble, Sun- e d n e x t Sunday ; lubricated that they will operate parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Fair, j day evening. I T h e r e w e r e 2'o guests from Owos- smoothly and efficiently. Mr. arid Mrs. Andrew Wirostek and j Mrs. Ralph Crosby and two daugh- so at the Sunday evening services. Binders should receive special attenfamily and Mr. and Mrs. Vincent ters, of Battle Creek, are visiting i n ' tion, for they are complicated and a Feminec and family attended the pic- t h e home of her parents, Mr. and slight defect may give pleaty*of trouble in the midst of the harvest season. Mrs. John Tobey, of Venice. Rollers slightly out of line may tear Mr. and Mrs, Archie Sherrard mo| the canvas. Rusted bill hooks or Imtored to Greenville Sunday to be Drouth-Resistant Plants guests I proper tension on the twine may throw for a couple of days of their 'After searching the deceits and foot- sisteHn-law, Mrs, Etta Sherrard. j the tying apparatus out of order. .hlll* of ftotttaa Turkestan and a*M* of j This Is only a brief outline of the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lak e and Turkey for plants to control sofl-eroj things to be checked, but tha fanner slon, E. i* Restorer and 0. i t finlow, three children, of Lansing, wer% Sun* | who operates the machines should hot plant explorers of toe United Sate* clay guests in the home of his par| have trouble in locating the defects If Department of Agriculture, bare re- ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Lake. be gives them a careful inspection. CHICKS NEED ROOM, turned after ser*n months with nearly The Merry Circle class of the 1,800 seedlings. Among them te a Northwest Venice church will meet GOOD, CLEAN FEED Barrel Seed Scarifier <Jesert grass which, uprooted by the on Friday evening, August second, a t wind, grabs hold again when it lands. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Tobey. Simple, Easy to Make Another, a kind of sedge, is nropaA homemade barrel seed scarifier, op- r^k < r r ^ ¾ ^**- -^™- - ^ - - ^ - - ^ - ^ - -^-. -^*- - ^ - ^ - -^- ^^ ^ ^ - -*-^ ^ J U ^ ^ j j ^ L A k . j i B t ^ A t , J ^ . J ^ . J ^ *9 Mr. and Mrs. William Young and Simple Flat Trough Provides , gated only from root-eottings.—Literary son, Walter, were entertained on Sunerated either by band or by mechanical Ample Space 'Digest power, with gravel as an abrasive, can day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. be made frota a design developed by By Crt*a E. Cook, ExtcmioA Poultry Specialist, _- : j Bert Young. William and Bert Young Vaiversity Farm. St. Paul.—WNU Service. engineers and forage crops men in the jare brothers. Every one will agree that a good ra- United States Department of AgxicttV T Chicago man stole his wife's j G u e s t a i n the home of Mrs. Chas. tion Is essential to raising good chicks, ture. If c small concrete mixer Is false teeth just as she was about | Ritter for Sunday dinner were Mr, but not every one recognizes the im- available it will do the work well withto attend a club meeting and the and Mrs. Elwin Ritter and Mr. and portant part feeders play in raisins poor thing couldn't say a word. Some- Mrs. Henry Dummer and son, Don- these pood chicks efficiently and eco- out requiring any alterations. Breaking or rupturing the coats of thing should b e done to a fellow with ald, of near Vernon. nomically. such seeds as crotalaria, tespedeza and a perverted sense of humor of that Enough feeder space should be pro- sweet clover permits ready absorption The Ladies Aid of the Northwest sort. v!ded so that all chicks can eat at one moisture and Induces quick germiA New York judge admonished a Venice church will meet on Wed- time. Lack of space causes slow and of Lation. When hard seed is planted prisoner to be kind to his wife, and nesday in the home of their pastor, uneven growth and, frequently, trou- without being scariSed, only a small Your attention is called to the fact that the next day the fellow was back, Rev. and Mrs. John Austin, at Ver- bles \yith . cnnniimiti<m," for an idle perceiitage—Often as low as C to 10 Returned Delinquent taxes and Special charged with petting her to death non, for the afternoon and evening; chick gets Into mischief. A four-foot per cent—will germinate., In a reasonMr. and Mrs. Ben Johnson have feeder, feeding from both sides, will able ti:;e. Scarifying such seed greatwith a bed slat. Assessments for nineteen hundred thirtyreturned to their home in Flint aft- take care of 100 chicks up to about ly luji>r«vea its germination. two and prior years are due and payable er a vw\% over Saturday and Sunday three Weeks. Then more space must An ordinary barrel of heavy conwith his father, James Johnson in be provided. It taken two feeders' for at the office of the County Treasurer or Is mounted in a rectangular the home of Mr. and Mrs. Archie 100 chicks during most of the grow- struction .K ., er fr < frame and Is pivoted to make tfliiug Auditor General on or before September Sherrard. ing period. and emptying easy. The speed at Feeders that get filled with litter I which the barrel or concrete mixer Mrs. Glen Bossardet, of New Havfirst, 1935, and if such taxes and special en,"who,suffered a heat stroke while iwitl filth discourage eating. Set feed- bhoiild be tttmed will depend on its assessments are not paid, they will be re* canning cherries the last of the week ers up on stands and clean out any 6ize, The smaller the, barrel tlte faster It in;iy IK; operated without causing the is convalescing at the home of her litter that does accumulate. turned to the Auditor General and sold as Feeders that are too expensive disseed «jiu ^.^wi to whirl. K they, do brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard delinquent taxes, Act No. 126, P. A. 1933 couraire providing as many as are whirl with the barrel, there will be Tobey this week. needed* A simple flat trouph made of little or no scarifying action,. and Act No. 1 l f P. A. Extra Session 1934. Guests in the Frank Mutiger fam- lath, a four-Inch board and a revolving The time required varies with the 1933, provides payment in ten < 10) equal ily over Saturday and Sunday were reel 'lengthwise" of the feeder to keep kind oi seed mul the toughnesa of the Mr.'Harry Youngs, a brother-in-law, chicks out of the feed, nre easy to seed it at, with the proportions of seed installments, provided said installments ami gravel in the charge, uud with the the latter's daughter, Mrs. Ray rn;ike and entirely satisfactory. are paid on or before September first, of Fran? and Mr. Franz, and their daug- j As chicks grow ttie feeders can be jsii'e ot the gravel. The type of gravel raised higher from rh» floor nnd thus and moisture content of seed may also ir-rvum OCAICR CANNOT SUPPLY YOU WHITE lor, Wiimifred, of Detroit. each year. •AU3WIN LABORATORIES, INC. , « i i » : j w ( , , * t use floor space to beuer advantage. cause ^arlaSIous, C O V n i G M T I t H . . . . f * L S W N CA»0«ATCKIC», ' ) „ ( . Paragraph No. 3, of Act No. 126, P. A. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Floors can be kept much cleaner A d v . S-3—1 col. x 2 I n r h e * 'Parker over the week end were her and chicks protected against disease While full tax is due a* above stated, Fertilizer for Orchards niece, Mrs. Orvill e and Mr. Rice, of If feeders are placed on shallow platIn considering, a fertiliser program Milford, and Mrs. Parker's sister, forms, covered with three-quarter-Inch for tha orchard, the fact must not be • + MvC.s aorJ tuf.g mesh hardware cloth. These should he iefIB erlgoaohSa overlooked that the orgauic matter Just big enough for the feeder and to Mrs. Cora Jenkins, of Corunna. collect the droppings and waste feed content of the soil must be increased, or at least maintained. An annual Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Ritter were and water. cover crop or au annual application of again honored on Friday evening, manure will accomplish ilus in most, when Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dummer, w f/*?^'!Sftil3i»S3* ''* orchards. Orchards are frequently ferof Vernon, entertained at a kitchen tilized indirectly by means of a cover shower on Friday evening. Mr. and Prompt *tux Efficient crop and a Judicious use of fertiliser Mrs. Ritter received many nice gifts. Service applied not directly to the trees but to the cover crop itself. This practice Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lemon, of AMBULANCE | is especially desirable with a young Burton, were Sunday guests of her I orchard that has been planted on TO OWOSSO sister, Mrs. Frank Thompson, and Lady Assistant rather thin, poor soiL The fertiliser son, Donald. Mr. and Mrs. Thomp' to be used in this case Is not just Phone 182 — VERNON son were in Lansing the last of the nitrogen but rather a complete fertiliweek as guests of their sister, Mrs. Successor to Disbrow j ter containing phosphorus and potasRichard Hewitt. AT OWOSSO HOTEL [ Eium as well as nitrogen.—Missouri Tanner. Wedne s day, Auguvt 7th h5"S3955l JUDD'S CORNERS t WHEAT ?•. T •T ? r ? t t T J •t •tT ALBERT TODD CO •T T •t WMTOY " ' " "*t*t To the Tax Payers of Shiawassee County f T f f t X T huts m m* fi*tf sc t T J T T ff r FRED F. RANDOLPH County Treasurer C. J. TAYLOR Funeral Home T T T T T T T T T t COMING Dr* Rae, of Minnesata imnsttttiSttszittmttnsttnmL NURSERY STOCK 5 ft Norway Spruce, 4 ft Chinesis Juniper 30 inch spread Mugho Pine, $1.00 Large Shrubs, Honeysuckle, Kydranges, Mockcrange, etc., 25c LTNDALE NURSERY ST. CHARLES, MICHIGAN | One Day Only Soy Bean Acreage in 1934 The total area in commercial soy beans in this country in 1934 was 1.145,000 acres, an increase of 302,000 Dr. Rea, registered and licensed over 1933. The yield was 21.074,000 Physician in many states, specializing bushels, worth §21,670,000 based on in stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels average farm prices December 1. Illi- iBfc ^ ¾ J!J» .~ri i f t i j r t t ^m ^¾. JTM ^ ¾ ^1¾ iW> * * ^ •*•** -*^- ^^ '•toj^^^jG^. *&*- ^^ •*•"• «6» A ^ ¾ j&L. J& and rectal diseases as complicated nois iosf exceeds all other states in ' ' " '*• with other diseases without surgical soy boa a area, with 50^,000 acres. " Others running over 100,000 acres werft. operation. Dr. Rea has a record of countless 1 ^ o r d e r * - X o r t h Carolina, 200,000; Ini J,I— 1 . ^ ^ . 1 . , ^ ''^^^^'Ijouisiana, Illinois per acre, ,., ,,,, , , , 1 ^ bushels. This is three to four asthma, kidney bladder trouble, dropsy, leg ulcer, blood pressure, pel- | b u s h e J g a b o v e p r a c t i c a l , y ftll o l b e r states, and is about the limit of yield lagra, diabetes, wasting diseases. Only the best Quality of Materials and Dr. Rea uses the hypodermic injec- for the past three years. This report T tion method for piles, fistula, fissure naturally does not take in the soy T> and rectal growths. For small tumors, beans cut for hay.—Rural New Yorker. the finest Workmanship used by tubercular glands, moles, warts, and Cleanliness Around Dairy .suspicious non-healing- growths quick Certain precautions in the producresults are also had with the injection method. Has a special diploma in tion of high-quality milk and sweet diseases of children, treats bed- cream need to be taken even in cold wetting, slow growth, large and in- weather, warns an authority at tke University of Minnesota, S t Paul. Use fected tonsils. clean milk utensils. Milk clean, healthy No charge for consultation and ex~ cows in clean barns. See that the milkanimation, medicines and services at Phone 1373 Corunna, Mich. & ers wear clean clothes aud milk with ? reasonable cost if treatment desired. Married women come with husbands, clean, dry hands. Keep thje cream separator in a room that is free from dirt, children with parents. Dr. W. D. Rea Medical Laboratory, tfost and foul odors. Protect tbe milk c Minneapolis, Minnesota. Since 1898. and cream from contamination*by dirt, j * dust, etc I t HOURS—10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. t L t J • It Printing T T t t i 1 THE NEWS I