Ci ASs CITY CHRONICLE - Rawson Memorial Library
Transcription
Ci ASs CITY CHRONICLE - Rawson Memorial Library
CiA S s CITY CHRONICLE ,r.r- ~OLUME 31, NUMBER 32: R E T U R N E D TO AT$1,000 iN EL LAii THE PRESIDENCY . . . . . . . . . . Armistice Sunday I Gave Address o[ on No___rthChina] Vote in Tuscola County on President and State and Dist. Officers $ ! o~ ' Akron ................ 221 180 92 A l m e r ................ 204 96 69 Arbela ................ 118 124 30 Columbia ............ 286 160 52 Dayton .............. 160 97 47 D e n m a r k ............ 302 271 62 Elkland .............. 589 218 20 Ellington ............ 184 97 25 Elmwood ............ 210 130 102 F a i r g r o v e .......... 349 197 96 F r e m o n t ............ 323 156 42 Gilford ................ 158 80 31 Indianfields, P1.. 711 120 62 Indianfields, P2.. 441 237 67 J u n i a t a .............. 151 93 27 Kingston ............ 186 124 32 Koylton .............. 120 114 23 Millington .......... 307 257 67 Novesta .............. 174 58 17 T~scola . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vassar ................ 503 427 33 W a t e r t o w n ........ 164 163 52 Wells .................. 58 77 16 Wisner ................ 86 77 15 296 243 159 338 201 385 678 212 218 410 382 189 769 507 191 229 163 367 191 155 78 110 134 71 216 128 80 124 173 109 57 85 199 75 93 89 202 44 262 223 136 311 181 342 644 200 236 379 359 170 752 482 179 213 140 341 179 140 65 116 138 70 210 134 81 110 161 114 66 73 173 70 95 99 210 44 564 233 81 96 348 118 63 61 519 204 77 92 363 108 62 60 7102 2812 Pros. Att'y. 6621 2762 273 146 241 70 140 101 319 136 185 70 367 202 649 135 202 79 246 109 386 161 369 114 173 64 764 69 499 171 188 66 214 98 140 101 335 218 188 39 ............ 536 354 204 120 79 62 94 60 6.791 2745 g O 234 208 130 291 172 344 601 192 203 351 335 159 706 465 162 196 123 318 172 154 91 125 145 75 227 178 83 125 178 131 72 106 187 75 104 106 223 46 501 378 172 140 63 65 88 63 6186 3077 278 147 264 150 236 83 237 74 124 123 129 123 312 142 318 134 176 73 181 69 336 217 332 216 620 151 661 125 192 92 201 81 242 117 243 108 386 165 3~ 165 335 136 350 123 171 68 169 67 751 80 752 73 475 195 481 187 182 76 181 75 204 101 206 99 137 101 135 102 ........................ .174 47 190 37 -..... 519 366 503 387 201 123 196 123 71 65 74 "~ 60 91 62 91 60 6213 2730 6268 2638 Sheriff Co. Clerk Co. Treas. Reg. Deeds Drain Com N.~ 6058 2463 . . . . 283 164 268 66 146 114 332 142 194 72 396 189 659 130 217 71 260 105 286 145 254 79 143 114 316 140 184 73 359 204 629 148 212 74 239 114 388 179 784 544 204 239 151 107 66 55 152 59 81 98 377 172 749 504 186 211 142 117 63 86 178 73 101 101 193 38 180 44 550 230 90 94 349 114 55 66 526 267 83 96 360 87 55 60 6401 2293 6115 2416 288 146 256 75 147 ,113 326 134 1N 70 373 193 641 137 207 77 248 108 5814 2423 gross. L A N D O N GROUP ARE L E A D I N G LOCAL BOWLERS F I T Z G E R A L D D E F E A T E D BY 5745 2419 5689 5643 2466 2381 ........ Totals M U R P H Y FOR GOVERNOR A record for electoral vote-gett i n g and for popular votes was set Tuesday when P r e s i d e n t F r a n k l i n D. Roosevelt was r e t u r n e d to the h i g h e s t office in the nation. He was the winner in 46 of the 48 states. P r e s i d e n t Roosevelt's plurality over Governor A l f r e d M. London in the presidential landslide had m o u n t e d on W e d n e s d a y n i g h t to n e a r l y nine million votes. With m a n y precincts t h r o u g h o u t the nation still not reported, the president's total was given then as 23,160,365 popular vo£es against 14,423,777 for London. This already has exceeded the total he piled up against H e r b e r t Hoover in 1932 when the popular vote was: Boosevelt, 22,821,857; Hoover, 15,761,841. Just two states, Maine and Vermont, with a total of eight electoral votes stood on the Landon side. In the end, President Roosevelt seems certain of 523 electoral votes. It is the n e a r e s t approach to u n a m i t y in the electoral college since J a m e s Monroe was re-elected in 1820 with only one vote a g a i n s t him. In Michigan, the returns on W e d n e s d a y n i g h t indicated t h a t Roosevelt had received 965,964 votes; London 669,838; Lemke, 58,214. F o r United States senator, Prentiss M. Brown (D) received 860,988; Wilber M. Brucker (R) 679,642; Louis B. Ward (TP) 59,140. The biggest surprise in the state was the defeat of Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald by his Democratic rival, Frank Murphy. Early returns indicate 848,453 for Murphy and 80.2,873 for Fitzgerald. By capturing every office on the state ticket Tuesday, Democrats were assured of a unanimous control of the administrative board. Democrats had gained one and possibly two Michigan seats in congress and established w o r k i n g majorities in both houses of t h e state legislature. There will be 18 Democrats to 14 Republicans in the state s e n a t e and 8 Democrats to 42 Republicans in the house. Tuscola, Huron and Sanilae counties remained in Bepublican r a n k s in Tuesday's contest, voters .casti n g substantial m a j o r i t i e s for Bepublicans over t h e i r Democratic opponents. Samuel P a n g b o r n (R) was elected state senator in the' 20th district over Clare T. P u r d y (D). Jessie P. W o l c o t t (R) def e a t e d Albert A. W a g n e r (D) for U. S. r e p r e s e n t a t i v e in the 7th congressional district. I FAFBMER 0N RISEIN MI[HI6AN t Preaching Mission Schedule Adopted Mrs. John Karr 84 Years Old Thursday Mrs. Bertha Brown, general mer~ chant here, and Mr. Robert L. Kil- Deford, r e c e i v e d a l e t t e r Friday] burn of Essexville. The ceremony l containing $5 w h e n he expected I A p oject jointly sponsored by was performed by Roy. Paul J. o n e containing at least ten times l the State D e p a r t m e n t of Public Allured, pastor of the Presbyterian t h a t amount, he became despond- Instruction and the State Departm e n t of the American L e g i o n church, at eight o'clock Wednesday ent, w e n t home and a t t e m p t e d to t h r o u g h .the Americanism commitl evening, at the home of the bride kill himself. A t a gas station n e a r his home, tee, is to distribute 8,000 American ] on E a s t Main street. A luncheon he announced his i n t e n t i o n to shoot flags to each rural school and some was served to guests following the ceremony. Mr. Kilburn is a re- himself. Listeners at f i r s t did nat parochial schools in the state. The consider his t h r e a t ,seriously, but flags were manufactured f r o m [ tired salesman. ~ Guests included Mrs. Allured and later decided to i n v e s t i g a t e and, W P A materials furnished f r o m ] t h e following members of the ira- found h i m at his h o m e about three I g o v e r n m e n t funds. mediate families: Mr. a n d Mrs. o'clock in the a f t e r n o o n with a I These flags will be distributed I Charles B. Kilburn of Essexville, bullet in his head f r o m a .32 Colt I to the schools in Michigan by the Legion posts with the cooperation 1Mr. and Mrs. A r t h u r Crampton of revolver. Flint, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. HendThe shot entered the r i g h t s i d e of the Auxiliary units on NovemI ricks and two daughters, Mrs. Bob- of his neck and lodged above the ber t3th. This is the first time in err Brown and two children, and left eye. In its travel, the bullet the history of the Legion in Michi]. Kenneth Higgins, all of Cuss City. cut a n e r v e to t h e eye and Trac- g a n t h a t they have been able to tured t h e skull. Carp lost the contact directly the rural ,schools in t h e state with a d e p a r t m e n t s i g h t of his left eye. He was b r o u g h t to Pleasant program. It will take the coopHome hospital here for t r e a t m e n t eration of every Legionnaire in Road Com. Coroners and regained consciousness six the state to complete the distribution. hours a f t e r the shooting. Twenty-six schools of Tuscola Mr. Carp has been a r e n t e r on Turn to page 4, please. the Harold E r n a t f a r m for two years. He has relatives in Poland. 283 146 268 167 262 72 242 74 137 117 139 114~' 319 141 319 141 184 71 • 176 75 365 198 377 201 633 144 632 144 ........................ 231 145 240 117 5909 2311 E ly, representing garages ,and g a s o - ! R o o s e v e l t Sweeps All But line stations. Because of the gen- 1 oral interest in these pictures the Maine and Vermont; Demobalcony will be open to women and students at eight o'clock. Admiscrats Retained Grip on Consion free. Despondent, Man Surprise Wedding Attempts S u i c i d e Turn__ to page 5, please. Wednesday Night When FrankKarp,42, residing Legion to Present A m a r r i a g e which surprised m a n y Cass City people was .that of five miles east, one mile south and I r Flags to Schools about a q u a r t e r of a mile west of t 205 223 262 271 162 153 ............ Akron 243 77 252 235 75 77 ............ Almer 133 116 141 131 116 119 .......... Arbela 303 156 309 317 145 138 ...... Columbia 182 71 175 173 75 74 ........... :Dayton 351 203 346 321 211 214 ...... Denmark 643 144 618 661 145 129 ........ Elkland .......................................... Ellington 238 110 226 236 118 109 ...... Elmwood .......................................... Fairgrove 378 118 369 107 360 125 356 123 351 3 4 6 1 3 3 121 ...... F r e m o n t 176 63 76 61 172 69 166 70 169 166 69 66 .......... Gilford 778 69 779 63 770 68 772 55 756 737 79 82 ...... Indianf 1 518 172 517 165 497 184 504 165 480 464 195 194 ...... Indianf 2 192 68 1 9 5 63 189 78 181 79 187 177 79 74 ........ Juniata 216 97 219 92 212 100 224 87 204 209 99 94 ...... Kingston 149 95 145 97 132 108 145 101 130 135 109 I01 ........ Koylton .............................................................................. Millingt'n 184 39 182 40 179 59 191 41 181 183 42 42 ........ Novesta ................................................................................ Tuscola 494 405 530 359 532 357 525 357 512 513 372 363 .......... Vassar 221 112 210 114 208 117 221 113 220 206 115 112 ....... W a t e r t ' n 82 57 80 57 74 63 80 57 73 73 63 58 ............ Wells 93 59 93 59 96 62 82 71 97 89 64 61 .......... Wisher 6151 2407 RfCORD8T!]MBLEO BY DENO[ RATI[L.NDSLJDE The London group are in the lead .this week of the local bowling league and the Pinney team continues to hold its cellar position. The standings: W L % Landon Team .......... 10 5 .667 Parsch ~?eam ............ 9 6 .600 Kelly Team ................6 6 .500 Wallace Team .......... 7 8 .466 Team ................ 5 7 .416 Officers Are Looking for the Reid Pinney Team .:.......... 5 I0 .333 Next Week's Games. Driver Who Hit Charles Tuesday, Nov. 10, Landon vs. Doan Friday Night. Kelly. Thursday, Nov. 12, Wallace vs.l Reid. Officers are searching for the Friday, Nov. 13, Pinney vs. hit and run driver who knocked Parsch. Charles Doan, 43, of Millington, an inmate of the Tuscola county infirmary, from his bicycle as he was traveling on M-81, a short distance east of Caro Friday night. The i man was so seriously injured that 1 he passed away in the Caro Community hospital early on Sunday mormng. Tire m a r k s and a handle of ,the Economist Finds the Farmers r i g h t door of the automobile, found at the scene, are the clues by which Likely to. Receive About Sheriff J e f f r e y hopes to trace the Same Income as 1930. machine. Witnesses of the accident believe t h a t t h e motorist was driving a Model A Ford car. Farmers in Michigan are in a Doan leaves his stepfather, Jas. position finanPecure, and one sister, Mrs. Fred fairly advantageous cially this year w h e n compared Colosky, both of Millinglon. agricultural producers in Funeral .services were held on with m a n y other states. In comparing Tuesday afternoon. crops and prices to estimate cash going into rural pocketbooks, R. V. Gunn, extension specialist in economics at Michigan State College, finds reason for optimism in comp a r i n g 1936 with the year 1932 A special prayer meeting is w h e n Michigan f a r m income was down to 119 million dollars. planned here for next ThUrsday In this state 60 per cent of the evening, November 12, at which f a r m income is derived from livepeople from all five of the local Turn to page 5, please congregations are expected to unite in earnest prayer for God's blessing on the National Preaching Mission. The place selected is the south room of .the Presbyterian church. The time: 7:30 p. m. "Since it is not by might nor by Mrs. John Karr, one of the oldpower but by God's spirit that such an undertaking as this can result er residents of this section, celein any measure of success, Chris- brated her eighty-fourth birthday tians are requested to pray earn- y e s t e r d a y (Thursday). Mrs. Karr, estly that the blessing of God shall who makes her home with her daughter-in-law, Mrs. R. D. Keatbe upon .the National Preaching ing, is a ~devout Christian and as Turn to page 5, please. long as she was able was a willing and faithful worker in the Methodist church. Now t h a t she is .t.oo Vote by Townships for County Officers in Tuscoia Totals .... 6434 2641 . HIT-RUNVI[TIN DIEDAT[AROSUNDAY [ITYUNBEATEN HEADOFGLEANERS INTHUryIBLEAGUE DIEDTH J DAY To Observe Akron ........ 274 151 276 150 A l m e r ......... 259 75 252 68 Arbela ...... 135 121 143 118 Columbia .. 317 145 321 142 Dayton ...... 182 74 181 74 D e n m a r k .. 352 211 366 208 Elkland .... 634 i44 561 230• Ellington .. 203 80 205 77 Elmwood .. 242 113 244 110 Fairgnove 402 164 ............ F r e m o n t .... 360 119 371 106 Gilford ...... 173 66 171 67 i n d i a n f 1 .. 764 80 780 56 Indianf 2 .. 508 184 515 165 J u n i a t a ...... 199 -64 197 64 Kingston .. 214 99 213 100 Koylton .... 134 106 135 106 Miilingt'n .............. Novesta .... 179 47 179 47 ~I~scola . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vassar ...... 525 361 551 345 Watert'n .. 206 120 222 112 Wells, ........ 83 5~ 82 56 Wisner ...... 89 64 93 62 . EIGHT PAGES. McLellan & H a r t t will have a saie of livestock, one ~:uiie south of Cass City, on Thursday, Nov. 12. In .the list are five head of h o r s e s and 83 head of cattle. Thomas Stahlbaum is the auctioneer and the Cass City State Bank is clerk. Casper Whalen will sell horses, cattle and f a r m m a c h i n e r y at auction on Friday, Nov. 13, 2 miles west and 21/~ miles n o r t h of Deford. W o r t h y Tait is the auctioneer and ,the P i n n e y State Bank is clerk. Both of these auction advertisements are printed on p a g e seven. Orville Vader will have a f a r m sale 2 miles south and 1½ miles west of Cass City on Monday, November 16. / Probate J u d g e , COMING AUCTIONS. MRS. DIED ON WAYTO [ HUR[ H Totals ............ 6005 3553 1079 ,. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936. when she told of conditions in Northern China where she served as missionary for 15 years. She .-aid t.h~£ ihe~e Lad bee~,.~ a marked progress in the lives of the y o u n g e r Chinese of t h a t section of the nation, many of w h o m are highly educated studer~ts, who reRobert Warner Disposes of 13 sent very deeply the aggressive methods o f Japan in Northern China. Acres of Gravel to Detroit Mrs. Supernois described the t Company at That Price. crude highways and few railroads, said the m a i n food articles of t h a t section we,re not rice, but millet Land values have reached $1,000 and sweet potatoes, and related ' sveral instances of narrow escapes an acre in Elkland township. Robert Warner, who f o r m a n y she and members of her family had years :has been in possession of 13 at the hands of bandits. Her adacres of gravel land situated just dress was most interesting. The Rotary club will meet with outside the southern village limits of Cuss City, disposed of the plot the Community club when the latlast week a t t h a t price to the ter organization holds its NovemGeorge Construction company of ber m e e t i n g at the high school n e x t Detroit. Surveyors in the employ Wednesday evening. of the Grand Trunk Railway were here Wednesday m e a s u r i n g the land for a side ,track which will run f r o m t h e D. & H. branch in a southwesterly direction to the gravel plat. "The George Construction company will s t a r t the erection of a gravel plant including in its equipm e n t a washer, stone crusher, Suffered a Heart Attack and screens and power shovels, and will have bin storage for 3,000 ,to 4,000 Found Dead on Steps of cubic yards of concrete gravel," W. I. Moore home. said Mr. Warner. "They expect not only to ship gravel by rail but to truck it to their v a r i o u s construction projects in the county Mrs. Hannah McKim :suffered a and elsewhere. They are at pres- heart attack on her way to attend ent e n g a g e d in erecting a£ Bay services in the Balatist church on City the second largest malting Thursday evening, Oct. 29, and was plant in the world. The company found dead sitting on the steps of expects to run both day and night the William I. Moore home. It is F R A N K L I N D. ROOSEVELT. w h e n w e a t h e r permits and aim to t h o u g h t t h a t she felt ill and atemploy local help as much as pos- tempted to reach the Moore home sible." for aid. Hannah Rebecca Hawkins was born in Rodney, Ontario, October 4, 1866. Her mother died when Hannah was a small girl and in t h e late seventies .she came with her f a t h e r and brother to a f a r m in U n d e r the auspices of the Chris, Novesta, n e a r the Quick school. tian Citizenship League, a union During the fire of '81, she with mass m e e t i n g observing Armistice m a n y others found safety in Wh£te Marlette Beaten 7-0 Although R. L. Holloway Was Formerly Sunday will be held in the Presby- Creek. Caro Educator and County terian church, November 8, at 7:45 Locals Fail to Show Usual In August, 1882, she was united p. m. Roy. F r a n k H a r t l e y of in m a r r i a g e with Andrew McKim Seat Publisher. Fighting Game. Bichmond will speak on the sub- and they purchased 40 acres of wild ject: "Visions of the World at land, t h r e e miles south and one Peace." Mr. Hartley was himself mile east of Cass City. Here t h e y R. L. Holloway, 71, president of a soldier in t h e World war and was cleared a space, cut the logs and Cuss City continued its string of severely wounded in the Gaiiipoii t built their first home, a log house. Iwctorzes I • • .~ the Upper Thumb the Ancient Order of Gleaners, ~n campaign. All who are present at I Mrs. MeKim always worked side I league by d e f e a t i n g Marlette s passed away at Harper hospital at this m e e t i n g will have an oppor-t by side with her husband in man- i scrappy w a r r i o r s 7-0 on Friday. Detroit on Thursday morning, Notunity to participate in the "peace I aging all affairs of ,the home and T h e listless playing of the Maroon vember 5. He has been in poor poll" being conducted by the Emer- ] no work was too much for either and Grey regulars ;~as almost poor health for some time and for t h a t reason left on a trip to Honolulu gency Peace Campaign. [ of t h e m in helping others, enough to allow Marlette a tie. In this summer. On his return, he A f t e r the death of Mr. McKim's the dying minutes of t h e game, resumed his duties at the Gleaner father, in 1884, the widowed m o t h - l h o w e v e r , t h e locals c a m e to life office and two weeks ago was told er and t h r e e sisters came to make i with a b a n g and scored two ,touch- by physicians to remain at home. I their home with them and it was downs, one of t h e m being called Monday, his condition became more the loving care of Mrs. H a n n a h ! b a c k because of a penalty. W h e n serious and he was taken to HarpMcKim t h a t made the last days °f~i the g a m e ended, the Cuss City team Roy. Libbie Supernois of Cass] the senior Mrs. McKim more pleas-t was within one play of another er hospital where he passed away early yesterday morning. City was an interesting speaker at[ ant. touchdown, due to the ,spectacular Funeral services will be held in the Rotary club luncheon Tuesday, Turn to page 8, please. Turn to page 8, please. Detroit Saturday morning. Interm e n t will be made in Elkland cometory. Mr. Holloway t a u g h t in the schools in St. Clair previous to acPresident Governor Lt. Gov. See. State Uo S. Senator Sto Senator St. Pep. Turn to page 8, please. LAND AN - Wild Life Movies Here Nov. 11 Moving pictures s h o w i n g Michigan wild life will be presented by the Educational Director, Departm e n t of Conservation of our great state, at the Community club program on next Wednesday evening, Nov. II, at the Cuss City high school auditorium. Supper will be served at 7:30 p~ m. by the P r e s b y t e r i a n Ladies' Aid society. Tickets now on sale m u s t be r e s e r v e d by club m e m b e r s before Monday noon. Only a limited number will be available Wednesday evening ,to care for unavoidable last-minute demands. The p r o g r a m is in charge of G . A. Tir~dale and Stanley Asher, joint- i Tuscola County. I n tables in the Chronicle today a r e given the election returns by ~townships for president, governor, l i e u t e n a n t governor, secretary of state, U. S. senator, state senator, Turn to page 5, please S E W E R PROJECT WORK TO START H E R E MONDAY C. M. Ruth of Flint, supervising e n g i n e e r of t h e W P A , was in Cuss City Wednesday conferring w i t h village officials r e g a r d i n g Project No. 1 of the sewer system here. He stated t h a t w o r k would be s t a r t e d next Monday. Anniversary Supper and Bazaar. Announcing chicken ,supper and b a z a a r at the Church of Christ, Novesta, Friday, November 6 , beg i n n i n g at 5:30. 25c and 40c.--Advertisement. A CALL FOR LOYAL COOPERATION The undersigned ministers h e r e b y call upon all m e m b e r s and friends of their respective c o n g r e g a t i o n s to reserve THE PERIOD: N O V E M B E R 15 TO 22 I N C L U S I V E for loyal cooperation w i t h a n d attendance upon THE EIGHT DAY P R E A C H I N G MISSION AT CASS CITY which is part of a country-wide evangelical m o v e m e n t known as the National Preaching Mission, described elsewhere on this page. Special Union Church Services will be held each evening f r o m Sunday, November 15, to Sunday, November 22, inclusive, excepting Saturday evening, the 21st. (Signed) L. A. KENNEDY, REV. LIBBIE SUPERNOIS, Pastor Baptist Church Pastor Nazarene Church GEORGE A. SPITLER, CHARLES BAYLESS, Minister Evangelical Church Minister Methodist Church P A U L Yo A L L U R E D , Minister P r e s b y t e r i a n Church P A G E TWO. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936. Theodore Roosevelt had much to say about the "strenuous life," and "hitting the line hard." Thereby he appealed to the boy love of T h e Tri-County Chronicle and power. Boys like to hear how he Cass City Enterprise consolidated was physically weak when a youth, A p r i l 20, 1906. but went out to .the western plains, and in that vigorous life in asS u b s c r i p t i o n Price in Advance. sociation with virile men, he acI n Tuscola, Huron or Sanilac quired physical and moral strength. Innumerable m e n have had poor counties, $1.00 a y e a r in advance. In other parts of Michigan, $1.50 a Success in life, because they had no year. In United States (outside of physical vigor on which to base tboir ~fforf~ ~7~,en tboy w , ~ t m~t ~i,au~~" " KiiOVv-i% v u ~ , ¢ ~ v v , v w.~,~ ~ne wuxm, , ~ y were A d v e r t i s i n g *~b~ ............ not prepared for any prolonged on application. E n t e r e d as second class m a t t e r struggle. Parents fall down on A p r i l 27, 1906, at the post office at t h e i r job, if they do not see to it Cass City, Michigan, under the Act t h a t their boys start in life with a reserve of strong physical ability. of Congress of March 3, 1879. The boys visited the Roosevelt H. F. Lenzner, Publisher. grave, and m a n y , o t h e r s who would have liked to be there, should remember t h a t .strength and force were not the only things this great man preached. He had a great deal to say about honesty and justice and fair play. If here today, he would be uttering denunciations A C C E P T I N G T H E RESULTS. of many boys who are coming up with crooked ideas. Some of them One of ,the most wonderful think it is all right to get money t h i n g s about the A m e r i c a n system dishonestly, provided they can covof g o v e r n m e n t , as contrasted with er it up. That is a confession of sys.tems of so-called democratic weakness, indicating that a boy g o v e r n m e n t prevailing elsewhere, does not feel he .can make good in is t h e calm and disciplined way in fair competition. No boy who which our people accept the result looks back to Theodore Roosevelt w h e n defeated at elections° with admiration is likely to seek I n m a n y other countries, the underhand ways of attaining his v o t i n g by ballot is only a prelimi- aims. n a r y to another kind of election. In t h a t second election, .the voting The people who can't sing in is rmt done by ballots. It is done by bullets, or the t h r e a t of using tune, need not .think t h e y have to t h e m . The defeated parties get to- m a k e up for t h a t defect by singing g e t h e r , and t r y to get .the a r m y on louder than anybody else. their side. If t h e soldiers favor THE TRUE SPORTSMAN. them, the fact that the election w e n t a g a i n s t t h e m will not count. The millions .of m e n who are getOf if they can raise a mob of exc£ted people who will overcome ting out in the woodlands and the forces of law and order, t h e y fields in pursuit of game, should are ready to do so. The real ruling" consider a few things. One is that power, is not found in the people t h e r e is a very limited supply of v o t i n g at the polls. Sometimes g a m e in the United States. Unthe national army will control the limited hunting and lawless pursuit government, and will use its power of animals and birds, have •exto c r e a t e a revolution. Sometimes terminated some of the most valua wild mob overturns the govern- able creatures which our rich land once produced. menu. Game laws have been made to In t h e United States the defeated parties merely sulk and nurse their protect this game for the benefit grievances in private, or t h e y say of everybody. The hunters who t h e y don't care, and will have bet- violate these laws, who sneak ter luck next time. No one thinks through the woods with illegal of t r y i n g to raise a mob or excite prey, help to make the land poorer the a r m y to revolt. No one dreams for everyone, including: themselves. Also these h u n t e r s should reof d i s p u t i n g the popular verdict. As long as this quiet submission member t h a t very m a n y people are to t h e will of the peopIe rules, our killed and wounded each year as c o u n t r y is safe. The principle is the result of carelessness by sportsdisputed by practically no one, t h a t men. The man who blazes away the will ,of the m a j o r i t y must pre- whenever he sees the bushes move, vail, and the beaten minority m u s t should stay at home and practice submit peacefully. Anybody w h o with a toy pistol. thinks differently will get laughed at if he tries to start something, When the roads are made 25 per and will probably go to jail if his cent safer, the speeding motorist m o v e m e n t becomes violent. usually thinks he can go 50 per cent faster. Cass City, Michiga~ CASS CITY CHRONICLE. The insurance men say m a n y Among the principal reasons why accidents take place in the homes. Most people seem disposed to keep we .shall all be thankful at Thanksg~wng, is that the election camout of t h a t dangerous place now. paign is over. NOVEMBER 11. A r m i s t i c e day brings more vivid m e m o r i e s t h a n other holidays. J u l y F o u r t h refers to a grand historieal fact, far back in the ancient h i s t o r y of the nation. It is often h a r d to make it seem real and vivid. The m a j o r i t y of our people have a very clear m e m o r y of Nov e m b e r 11, 1918, and of the surging" and ,tumultuous emotions t h a t r e a c h e d their climax at t h a t historte date. F e a r and anxiety had risen to a swelling tide in t h e hearts of the people of Michigan and everywhere else. Millions of families picked up t h e i r newspapers with horror, d r e a d i n g bad news. They feared to see the mail or t e l e g r a p h mess e n g e r coming, dreading lest some sad announcement was coming. The families ,of the boys in the Camps awaited with tense anxiety the day when they should be sent to t h e front. T h e families t h a t had no sons in the a r m y had plenty of things to fear. If national defeat came, t h e y k n e w not w h a t disasters m i g h t t h r e a t e n their own security. I n t o this atmosphere, trembling w i t h anxiety, came the peal of the bells on Armistice day, with t h e joyful word t h a t all horror was at an end. Never before and never since has there been such an exultant day in the life of the nation. N e v e r before were such enthusiastic celebrations. Never before did the h e a r t of the nation so respond to t h e removal of anxiety and despair. The events t h a t have occurred in the 18 years since t h a t date seem an anti-climax. Things have not gone as .the nation expected. Many hopes have been disappointed. But the s a m e power and force t h a t led the n a t i o n on to victory in 1918, are still with us. They can lead -as on to greater victories of peace and human welfare, if properly organized and directed. [Clipped Comment ..I. A f t e r the Smioke of Battle Clears. From Flint J ournM. Arnold Mulder, who writes articles on literary criticism for The Journal, a few days ago asked in one of them if it would not be interesting some 15 or 20 years hence to read an exchange of let{ors between Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt ~ letters which would review stirring events of the 1930's. There is a precedent for such a correspondence. J o h n Adams, the second president of the United States, and Thomas Jefferson, the third president, though bitter rivals in t h e day of their active political careers, began a correspondence, w h e n both had retired, which lasted until their deaths, which occurred on ,the same day, July 4, 1826, It is one of the most i n t e r e s t i n g exchanges of letters in American history. In their later year, mellowed by reflections and the passage of time, each of t h e m had arrived at the point of good humor toward their earlier rivalry. Their hate was gone. Yet t h e r e had been a day when they f o u g h t each other with as bitter rivalry as Mr. Hoover and Mr. Roosevelt. Time works curious changes in the strong feelings of men toward each other. Both Jefferson and Adams seemed to be saying over and over, "Weren't we a couple of hot-heads ?" That exchange of letters was more valuabIe to the country t h a n either imagind at the time. W h a t a pity there is so little of record about the opinions and reactions of our 'elder statesmen" once they have moved to the sidelines. WILMOT. IV~r. and Mrs. John Pierson and son of Goodrich were Sunday visitors at the Ass Durkee home. F i v e thousand Boy Scouts made Mrs. Alex McArthur attended a visit to the grave of the late the funeral of an old friend, Mrs. President Theodore Roosevelt at Oyster Bay, L. I., on the Sunday H. N_cKim, in Cass City Monday before that great man's birthday. afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J o h n R o b e , s and Boys are not usually interested in visiting' people's graves. They Mrs. Cora Atfield were callers in are more interested in the living Cass City Monday. than in the dead. Something" in Eugene Ruthford of Rochester Thoodore RooseveIt's life always spent Sunday with his sister, Mrs. gripped their admiration. " WMter McArthur. SCOUTS MAKE PILGRISlAGE. O o Unwritten Fiction Published Weekly. :i: ¢, o WorriedP. About How many more days e, o o o ÷I. o .**o ¢. #. ¢. ,is ¢. #. ¢. O o o 4~ What to give Dear Aunt Augusta? ~.~ ¢. ~,~ -. How long the Coal Supply will hold out? --Christmas will come a n y w a y . . , if you forget Aunt Augusta entirely, it won't be the firs~ ~ime . . . And when the coal runs out all you have to is call THE FARM PRODUCE CO: That's one reason, people tell us, they like The Farm Produce service. They don't have ~o worry. Just call us for coal and the first thing you know it's in your bin, without bother. any fuss ~-~ ¢. ~.. or The Farm ProduceCo. Phone 54 the purpose is to promote the production, g r a d i n g and m a r k e t i n g of better potatoes. The Michigan Quality Potato association is coBY operating with Michigan State College and the Michigan State DeItems from the files of Cass p a r t m e n t of Agriculture, the DeCity Chronicle of 1901 and 1911 troit Board of Trade and hotel and I In m a n y states special commitrestaurant associations. tees have been appointed by the Twenty-five Years Ago. One hundred dollars in prizes is governors to study the traffic conoffered, with a first prize of $25 ditions. Oct. 27 and Nov. 3, 1911. This is commendable. 5~rs. Eleanor Schenck died Fri- and 24 other smaller awards. PostOut of these studies and delibday night a t the homestead in Elk- ers must be mailed with postage 25 erations will come recommendaland township to which she a n d prepaid on or before November husband journeyed in 1869 to es- to H. C. Moore, Michigan State tions t h a t will apply to each and College, East Lansing. every community in the ,states intablish a home. The size must be 14 by 22 inches, volved. There should be more of B. O. Watkins, f r o m 3 acres on the H. H. Wilson farm, % mile on three or four ply cardboard the studies made. Many conditions east of Deford, harvested 920 bush- stiff enough to stand erect. Post- on our highways today are serious els of Rural New Yorker and Sir er paints of not more than three causes of accidents and, unless colors, with black or white to be careful studies are made, will nevW a l t e r Rahleigh potatoes. A. J. Spikes oY Romeo is the n e w considered a color, are other rules. er come to light. It is recommended t h a t every F l a t colors and simple design will station agent at Cass City. Mrs, Christian Striffler, a pio- have the best chance, Moore ex- community receiving these r e p o r t s n e e r resident died October 31 at plains. Slogans should not be of help the committee as much as the home of her daughter, Mrs. more t h a n six words and should be possible in bringing to the f r o n t Edward Helwig:, in Elkland town- illustrated in ,the posters. Ideas, serious conditions in t h a t commuattractiveness and neatness will nity. There is not a community ship. Bert Gowen has sold his pool count most in judging. Student's anywhere ,that does not ha~e a name, address and name of school traffic problem. These problems room to Alfred Genereaux. H u g h McDermott has accepted a m u s t be placed ,on the back of the should be discussed freely and postion as bookkeeper in ,the f a r m - poster in the upper right hand cor- recommendations made to the com] mittee so t h a t action can be t a k e n ers' cooperative elevator at Bad ner. Axe. Posters which win or receive by the main committee. Get behind the movement and Roy. Frederick Klump is attend- honorable m e n t i o n become the ig the annual meeting" of the board property of the quality potato as-! support it. of education of the Naperville col- sociation. Others will be returned l lege this week. if an addressed label and p o s t a g e Fritz & P a r r r e p o r t the sale of is enclosed with entries for return the 80-acre f a r m of John Russell, postage. During the Detroit ex3'~ miles west and 1 mile north of hibit a ~state potato queen will be Some of the f a r m e r s in ,this viCass Ci.ty, to Robert Milligan. crowned f r o m among the three cinity are wiring thMr houses f o r Dr. and Mrs. E. J. W e t t l a u f e r winners at .the sectional shows at electricity. expect to move f r o m Detroit to Iron River, KMkaska and Mayvitle. John Chapman, who has been Cass City Saturday. The doctor seriously ill, is a little improved a t will practice his profession as a this writing. dentist here. Mrs. S. Hamilton and Mrs. J o h n Joseph Eveland of Mayville was Chapman are numbered with t h e present at a business men's bansick. quet held at F l i n t recently and Mrs. Almeda Sharrard o f Mem, m a d e a plea for an electric line One of the first of the results phis is visiting friends and relaf r o m Flint to Harbor Beach, touching at Otter Lake, Fostoria, May- indicated in a survey undertaken tives here. ville and either Kingston or Cass last spring by Professor E. I. McFred Dafoe's are living on Floyd Daniel, entomology department at Phillips' f a r m and Virgil VanNorCity, Michigan State College, is t h a t a m a n ' s have moved into t h e Dafoe list previously drawn up showing house. Thirty-fiv~ Year~s Ago. 60 kinds of cutworms of economic Mr. and Mrs. A v e r y Loucks o f Oct. 25 and Nov. 1, 1901. importance in Michigan is.too small Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. W i l m e r There are 55 phone subscribers to include all the major pests. Squires of Bay P o r t visited at the at present with good prospects of Hundreds of cutworms from all several more in the n e a r future. sections of the lower peninsula Harvey McGregory home. Miss Lucile Burns and W i l l i a m The exchange is now located in the were sent in by farmers and hardChronicle office. n e t s last spring on invitation of Henry of Detroit spent S a t u r d a y E. W. Keating was called to Prof. McDaniel. The individuals night and Sunday with the forCanada on account of the serious w e r e sorted out and started on a mews parents, Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s Burns. illness of his father. life cycle in containers. Out of a May Landon left Friday for total of perhaps 250 differer~t kinds Mr. and Mrs. E r n e s t H y a t t and Caro where she has secured work the survey indicates t h a t perhaps daughter, Marjorie, and Miss Alice in M. Himelhock's millinery de- nearly 100 kinds are serious men- Chapman were business callers i n partment. aces to Michigan crops, lawns, fo- Port Huron Monday. A. A. McKenzie has sold his un- liage and other growth. Mr. and Mrs. •Clyde Hodges of dertaking establishment to H. T. F r o m the research, the ento- Detroit visited the latter's uncle, Elliott of Pontiac. mology d e p a r t m e n t hopes to find J a m e s Burns, Sunday. Last Wednesday, William Hen- some general f a r m practices t h a t Miss Marion McGregory renessy, while shredding" corn at will aid in curtailment of the cutturned to Chicago Monday w h e r e Henry Dunn's farm in Ellington ~ o r m population. Community contownship, accidentally got his left trol, fall plowing in some sections,, she is attending school after spendhand into the machinery, crushing" t r e e banding', field baiting and l ing a couple of weeks at h e r parental home. H e r mother, Mrs. two of the f i n g e r so badly t h a t an I other poison t r e a t m e n t s have been Vern McGregory, is improving v e r y amputation was necessary. advised for particular problems. slowly from her recent operation. E t t a Mark wheeled to Sanilae F r o m Lake Odessa, samples of Mrs. Gertrude Chapman and Cen.ter Friday ,and returned on the "Sidemia devastator" or the Monday, accompanied by J o h n " g l a s s y " cutworm were obtained ~ George Carter of Detroit visited the former's uncle, John Chapman, Christie and Clara Grimes. f r o m infestation in tomato plantThirty-one excursion tickets to ings. This pest is well distributed Sunday. Detroit were sold Thursday morn- over the state, but works underinf. ground and is thus hard to detect Miss !one Ostrander of Elmwood and control. It likes blue grass, has rented rooms in the City block i beans, cabbage, corn, tobacco where she will establish an art wheat and timothy. From the Mich])grs. William Thomas, Miss H e l studio. i g a n State College turf_ test plots, en Schaal and Donald Schaal, all specimens were obtained of the of Toledo, and Joseph Droll of " g r e a s y " cutw:orm that works es- Fort W a y n e , Indiana, were weekpecially in lawns. end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Indications of more conclusions Grappan. Mr. and ~{rs., Nell Campbelt of to be found in the project are sug-' 4spent Su,~day at the h o m e gested by proof that cutworms are Detroit Statewide i n t e r e s t in stimulating especially troublesome after a cold, of the latter's father, John Weiler. more consumption of potatoes withMr. and Mrs. Georg~e Yost and w e t spring, t h a t certain kinds are in the state of Michigan grown found in low, sour soils and o,~her son, John, were Sunday visitors potatoes is being aided by the antypes adhere to certain specific at the Joseph Grappan home. nouncement of a poster contest vegetations. Removal of rubbish open to any s.tudent in the ninth, used by cutworms for shelter and Must Marry Young tenth, eleventh or twelfth grades fall t u r n i n g of sod on land to be in The average age for marrying on of the Michigan public schools for eu!tivation the following year are the island of Madura, Dutch West use in connection with Michigan aids in cutting down cutworms. Indies, is twelve. If unmarried at Potato week to be centered in De'fourteen, the girls are considereq troit, December 1, 2 and 3. "old mMds." As weii as consumer demand, Advertise i i in the Chronieie. Turning BacR the Pages An Unusual Degree of Professional Ability . . . . . . Many persons have been good enough to mention our professional ability to attend suitably to E V E R Y aspect of the service without ever making ourselves conspicuous. EAR W. DOUGLAS FUNERAL HOME SHABBONA. Finds Increased Cutworm Breeds I W e are as n e a r as y o u r telephone and can give you fast delivery on E v e r y l o a d is g u a r a n t e e d to p l e a s e y o u . ICs real q u a l i t y . . . . over 95% pure h e a t less t h a n 3% ash. O r d e r t o d a y ! i F O R SALE B Y - -- Northwest Elrawood. Poster Con est te Aid Potatoes Telephone 15 Cuss City \ Unused Furniture Gets Covered with Dust-Want Ads Get Results--Sell It. *:Cass City, Michigan. ..... -.: PAGE THREE. CASS CITY C H R O N I C L E ~ F R I D A Y , NOVEMBER 6, 1936. m Leslie Karr of Traverse City "Paul Revere of Texas" knitting stitch is used or double or struck by a car Sunday. He is still _..~1 " spent t h e week-end with relatives treble crochet stitch, according to - a patient. Matthew Caldwell became known , the craft. Miss Winnifred Murphy was ad- as the "Paul Revere of Texas" when f here. m i t t e d Monday n i g h t and was op- he rode 48 miles summoning early Mrs. Pauline Stell of Detroit is Knitting Directions. @ e r a t e d on W e d n e s d a y m o r n i n g . colonists to the aid of the town s p e n d i n g a few weeks as the guest For a knit blanket lSA yards of Gonzales, just before the first square, cast 135 stitches on long, Wesley Charter of E a s t Lansing I of her cousin, Mrs. D. C. Elliott. By LYDIA LE BARON WALKER battle of the Texas revolution large wooden needles. Knit 100 ribs. spent t h e week:end at his home] Advertise it in the Chronicle. Miss Hazl McLean of Wahjaagainst Mexico Was fought there Bind off. Line with China silk or here. / m e g a spent Saturday with her October 2, 1835. Advertise it in the Chronicle. THE SMOOTH AND OPEN LANKETS, both heavy and light any light weight material preferred. Mr. and Mrs F r a n k B e r r y and l p a r e n t s , Mr. and M r s . J o h n Mcweight, are needed in mountain Bind lining and knitted edges to- two children visited r e l a t i v e s in t Lean. ROAD. resorts, the former especially in gether with straight 2~/~-inch wide Caro Sunday. / H a r r y Bohnsack of Mr. Pleasant Tr~b ,~gi~eors ~oU ~s t h a t 67 nor+her:2 can2Ls, and "n so:-nc shor~ strips of the ]i~ing m~feri~], Or with visited his parenZs, Mr. and M r s , The H~ppy D~,zeu met YvYonday 'pe~ ~ ceiit of fatal moCvr car acciplaces, where occupant,s c o m e eariy satia ribbon 2 inches wide. The latJ. H. Bohnsack, Wednesday night d e n t s occur in small towns and in the season and remain late. ter is recommended for durability, evening with Mrs. J. H. Bohnsack of last week. for a potluck supper. rural districts---four out of five on Woolen blankets are warmest, al- which spells saving. A good grade of Miss Esther Turner and Miss smooth, dry roads, and four out of Mrs. Celia E d g e r t o n left Thursthough n o w cotton ones are given a silk muslin can be used for lining of East Lansing five in clear weather. wool-like texture, However, the instead of the China silk. SeLf-tone day of last week to visit h e r son, Elaine Hoffman visited at their homes here SaturMany ,traffic engineers also a g r e e wool are warmest because this is blankets are daintiest, a pale pink, Richard Edgerton, at Croswell. day and Sunday. the inherent nature of the material. blue, or any color to suit the room that Speed too f a s t for existing Miss Mary Dobson of Holbrook The Misses Freida Parker, Eu- conditions is responsible for the For blankets of less warmth, cotton may be used. Owing to the loose was the guest of Miss H a r r i e t MeWe have an assortment of Used cars for sale-ones are especially well-adapted to mesh, knit and crochet blankets re- Comb from Saturday until Monday. nice Schell and Millicent Graham m a j o r i t y of fatal automobile accitwo Model A Fords, one 1928 Chevrolet, one 1931 Nash quire lining. of Ypsilanti spent S a t u r d a y and dents. s u m m e r needs. A h o m e m a k e r who Mr. and Mrs. Leland H i g g i n s of In working the crochet blanket, 4 Convertible coupe, and others. Glass installed while Sunday at their respective homes sees that a summer place is suitJ o h n Smith and thousands of Topeka, Indiana, spent Sunday ably and inexpensively furnished, stitches to the inch is recommend- with Cass City relatives and here. other m e n like him elimb into their you wait. Used tires. Prices reasonable. We buy saves the old blankets from the ed. Stitchery should be very loose. K e n n e t h Maharg, Pat G a r e t y high-powered cars, lured by t h e friends. scrap iron end metal. If triple c r o c h e t is used, and tenwinter home for the summer place. and t h e Misses Ruth Schenck, fine weather out ir~to the Country. My• and Mrs. Kenneth Dodge The weight of partially worn ones is sion is loose the same number of Marion Milligan and Betty Hunt of The road is ,smooth, the effortless One block north and one-half block west of Main row~ as in the knit blanket should and f a m i l y have moved ,to Sebe- Mt. P l e a s a n t spent .the week-end at driving" intoxicating. Unnoticed, good for this use. Corner, Cass City. the speed arrow climbs and climbs. A h o m e m a k e r who enjoys knitting be approximately the same in cro- waing w h e r e Mr. Dodge has em- their respective homes here. o r crocheting can make beautiful chet. However by making more or ployment. Suddenly there is a n emergency. A son, James Wallace, was born Mrs. H. O. Greenleaf a n d son, Thursday, Oct. 29, to Mr. and Mrs. Brakes are slammed on h a r d - - t o o w a r m and light-weight covers with less rows the length can be whatcrochet h o o k or knitting needles. ever the worker wishes, but not less Harold, attended t h e f u n e r a l of a Alva MacAlpine, in Pleasant Home hard at such s p e e d - a n d the beauT h e s e blankets or throws, as they than 1~ yards. Crocheted blankets cousin, Mrs. H a r r y Tiller, at Mil- hospital. Mrs. MacAlpine was for- tiful ear is rolling over and over. are also called, are rapidly worked are bound and lined as are the knit lington Saturday. m e r l y Miss Marion Hantsell. Or t h a t curve ahead turns out to with very large needles and heavy ones. Either type of throws are be sharper than anticipated, and K e r m i t t Hartwick of Rogers M. . . . . . . . . . . . delightfully light and sufficiently wool yarn (the weight of GermanCity spent the week-end w i t h his _n_, _.~_~___ ,~_ ~ ~ne no to., u.•r znal; n a l i warm. (t _,__ o.aug'n(~ers, t~race ana~ oune , . ~ -~lres~ oo not ~. town worsted), three-ply. Plain parents, Mr. and Mrs. E a r l Hart- ~lho~,~: ~-¢~oo+ ÷~ 1 ~ o ~o~o (~;+~, nlCtclen lane suoaemy alsg0rges a ~)BellSyndicate.--fWNUService. @ wick, n e a r Cass City. Eout~ ~ o n ~ E Nov~."i;, ~%'~s£end f a r m wagon or fliwer, and no posh u m a n effort can prevent a Mr. and Mrs. A. Dixon and t h e w i n t e r at Winter Park, Flori- 1ruble " daughter, Shirley, of Royal Oak da. The Gilberts have spent the smash-up. K .... . . con . . wlngers . . . . .in. ~]orlfla. . . t ~ John Smith were week-end guests of Mr. and .lash _ . _ ~often considers __ that ne nas mowed sown enough ~o pass Mrs. Chester L. Graham. . ~ ~ I the cross-roads ,safely--and yet, his Mr. and Mrs. George B e r g e n of ~ [ {speed carries him into t h e side of Detroit, f o r m e r l y young people of | ...... ~ t another ear. For speed is relative. this city, are celebrating t h e i r sil- | I Any speed is too fast t h a t m a y lead ver w e d d i n g anniversary today Jacob D. Maxwell. t to an accident (Friday). F u n e r a l services were held SunMr. and Mrs. Earl L. Heller and day afternoon at two o'clock in l ~~a~. ~ n ~ daughter, Miss Carol, visited at the the A n g u s McPhail home for Jacob t ...... ~......... home of their son and brother, Clifton Holier, in P o r t H u r o n over i DaylMesa27;lalst2r0 ofRet~eChae~:diPt[ho~s~r~a1F~amnkdaRe;:;nhd:rk lefm% he the week-end. Episcopal church, officiated and IBa~PAx e Y t Mr. and Mrs. E d w a r d Baker burial was in Elkland c e m e t e r y l " charge of' Tyler L odge,] Miss Lula Litner was t a k e n to and family have moved from the and was m Corkins' place, on South Seeger No. 317, F. & A. M., of which Mr. 1her home Thursday. street, to the Miss Kittie Ross Maxwell ~a~as a member. I Mrs. Angus McGillvray is still house, on West street. Jacob D. Maxwell was born on i a t the hospital. HERE is sanitary protecErnest Mark of Detroit spent March 1, 1856, near T i l s o n b u r g ,/ Mrs. Harvey Mayworm was able Lion that does away with napkins Saturday night in Cass City. His Ontario, and came to this country I to be t a k e n to her home in Bad A x e and belts . . . that is completely inparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter with h i s parents when a young iSaturday. Mark, returned to Detroit with him man. He ,spent a number of years I Master Maurice Simpkins was visible, and so comfortable that in South Dakota but returned to t discharged Friday and t a k e n to his and will spend some time there. there is no consciousness of wearMichigan some time ago. home in U b l y . Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Urquhart He passed away Thursday, Oct. Mrs. Clifford Smith of Caro oning sanitary protection at all. and daughter, Peggy, of Rogers 29, at t h e home of his brother, .toted Monday for medical care. City spent the week-end with relaB-ettes are approved b y physicians J a m e s Jackson, in Greenleaf townRaymond Simancek of Detroit tives here. Mrs. Urquhart and ship. . . . acclaimed by w o m e n everyentered Thursday with gunshot Peggy remained in Cass City. His wife preceded him in death wounds. He is still a patient. where as the most comfortable, Mrs. Ernest .Nichol and two several years. F r a n k Karp of L a m o t t e townm o s t convenient method ever dechildren of Marlette, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Maxwell is survived by a ship was brought to the hospital Max Agar and daughter, Maxine, sister, Mrs. J o h n Stouffer, P o r t Thursday with gunshot wounds. vised. -:-:-:of Caro spent Sunday afternoon Huron; three brothers, William He is still at .the hospital. I Boxes of 12, 39c; handbag packets of 3, 12c. Manufactured by and evening at the Robert Agar, iKaxwell, Fes senden, North DaIrvine, five-year-old son of Mr./ / B-Ettes Co., Inc., DuBois, Pc. Jr., home. kota.; John and J a m e s Jackson, and Mrs. Bruce Kritzman, was l / Mrs. Charles Harneek, son, Earl, Greenleaf; and a n u m b e r of nieces brought to the hospital Sunday i and g r a n d d a u g h t e r , Phyllis Me- and nephews. with injuries received w h e n he w a s / 1 Learn, all of Kingston, a n d Mr. and Mrs. H e r b e r t ~'Bigham visited at ,the Russell DeGrow h o m e in Pigeon Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Willard F a d e r of The knit or crocheted blanket is light weight and warm and may be useel Colling, Mr. and. Mrs. Alex Sini on bed for a throw. (A) Note binding ~beut blankeL clair and sons, Ray and Billie Jim, and daughter, June, ,of A l m a were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. ~lion. The m e e t i n g opened by sing- Ralph Ward. Mrs. F a d e r and Mrs. ing "The Last Rose of Summer." Sinclair are sisters of Mrs. Ward. The following people talked on the Howard Taylor of E a s t Lansing four great American parties: D e c School N e w s - I ocrats, Mrs. L. D. McRae; Re-~ was a visitor at his home h e r e on A m a s q u e r a d e Hallowe'en p a r t y l publican, Mrs. Mildred Helmbold;l Saturday. His grandparents, Mr. was given for the h i g h school b y U n i o n , Miss J a n e t Laurie; Social-I and Mrs. E. R. Taylor, who had the t o w n people Saturday n i g h t , ist, Miss Edith Miller. The meet-] spent the w e e k with .their son, Roy Music was furnished by Comment's i i n g closed by singing " A m e r i c a . , I Taylor, r e t u r n e d to L a n s i n g with orchestra for the dancing. R e - i T h e next meeting: will be held at / him, on the way to their h o m e in f r e s h m e n t s consisting" of doughnuts i the home of Mrs. Earl Russell on t Grand Ledge. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. K e n n e y and and cider w e r e served. Monday, Nov. 16: The p r i m a r y and i n t e r m e d i a t e i I sons, Jack and Clare, spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. K e n n e y ' s sisrooms h a d their Hallowe'en party~ Saturday at the hi h school Prizes The senior class and others, 25 ter, Mrs. A. Carroll, in Dearborn • g . " in number, were invited to be and attended a birthday dinner in were g~ven to the children w e a r i n g i the f u n n i e s t costumes. F i r s t prize l guests of Richard Downing at a honor of t h e birthdays of Mrs. went to Courtney Clara, second Hallowe'en party at his home on Carroll and another sister, Mrs. pirze to Jean Dafoe and .third to FHday evening. They all made McGinn, of Detroit. Royce Russell. merry by noise makers and dancMrs. Alex McArthur of Wilmot The football game with Ubly was i n t . Refreshments were served. spent Monday and Tuesday with Mrs. A r t h u r Carolan and Mrs. cancelled as a number of boys w e r e her sister, Mrs. M a r g a r e t LevaGeorge Purdy, at the home of the good. Mrs. Eliza Schwaderer and out on account of sickness. The seniors have received t h e former, entertained .the Euchre Mr. and Mrs;. Albert D u r h a m of proofs of t h e i r class pictures which clubb of St. Agatha's church Thurs- Royal Oak were also guests on were p h o t o g r a p h e d by the Camp day afternoon. P r i z e s were award- Monday and attended the funeral ed to Mrs. Jarvis Wood, Mrs. John of Mrs. H a n n a h McKim. Publishing company. A s t r a w vote was conducted in Caro[an and Mrs. M a r g a r e t HarBill H. Fowler of Mayville is the h i g h school on Tuesday, Nov. 3. rison. among the 95 enrolled in t h e 16 Born at their home to Mr. and weeks' g e n e r a l short course in agMrs. George Hendershot, a 7½ riculture at Michigan State ColHallowe'en P a r t y ~ pound baby boy. They call his lege, E a s t Lansing. Classes in the Total darkness, ,accompanied by Merton John. short courses bega~i Oct. 27. The creaking and moaning sounds, was I'1 Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. P u r d y the g h o s t l y situation which g r e e t e d entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. course, which requires two w i n t e r terms for completion, includes the g~ests who attended the Haland Mrs. J a m e s L. Purdy, Mr. and studies in livestock, dairy cattle, iowe'en p a r i y at the Duncan CrawMrs. George Purdy of Cass City, crops, poultry, f a r m accounting, ford h o m e F r i d a y evening. W h e n Mrs. E. Purdy and Clare P u r d y of f a r m e n g i n e e r i n g and agricultural seated in the imaginative graveCaro and Dr. and Mrs. P e r r y Fritz economics. yard a p o s t - m o r t e m w a s conducted of Pigeon. Joyce Elaine Asher, d a u g h t e r of by an u n s e e n ghost who passed- out Mr. and Mrs. Martin F r e e m a n Mr. and Mrs. Manley Asher, celevarious o r g a n s of the gang" m e m of Saginaw spent Saturday and brated h e r eleventh b i r t h d a y on ! @ bers present. Participants have Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J e r o m e Monday afternoon, Oct. 26, when not as y e t decided w h e t h e r Don Rocheleau. she e n t e r t a i n e d fifteen of h e r little Wilson's t e e t h or H a r r y Russell's Returning" from Cass City Sun' friends in h e r home. Hallowe'en windpipe would be the more grueday, Miss Lila Wood, d a u g h t e r of some to m e e t in the dark cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wood, escaped appointments were used to decoOther g a m e s and contests com- with slight injury when a tire blew rate the rooms where g a m e s were prised t h e evening which was cli- out causing the auto she was driv- enjoyed• A birthday supper w a s maxed by the scavenger hunt, a ing to go into the ditch, turning" served. The table w a s pretty with popular f e a t u r e of Haliowe'en. A n d over .twice. She was bruised about a beautiful cake with lighted canonce a g a i n orderly citizens w e r e the head and face and the machine dies and pumpkins. Unete NeaI told Joyee Elaine over W J R w h e r e aroused f r o m their sleep to h u n t -,:as slightly damaged° " she was to find her gifts. up tintypes, buttoned shoes and various relics of by-gone days. Thumb Order of E a s t e r n Star Where Bees Find Sweets Prizes f o r completing the list of association will hold its annual In the United States the greater meeting" Saturday, Nov. 7, with a~ticles in the allotted time w e r e awarded to Mrs. Ralph Clara and part of the honey produced is al- Fairgrove chapter No. 371. The Rev. W. Dafoe. The guests t h e n falfa honey f~om the Western sessions w i l l open £t 10:00 a. m . retired to the dining room w h e r e states. Sweet clover, white sage in the h i g h s@ooI auditorium. Dint a p e r i n g ligh)ed candles, g a y h a t s and other mountain flowers also ner will be served in the Masonic and noisemM/ers made festive t h e contribute to the Western supply. hall with ,the Methodist and Presm i d n i g h t meal which was in keep- In the Central states it is white clo- byterian church w o m e n co-operatver, sweet clover, Spanish needle ing in the serving. The afternoon with t h e season. and heartsease honey. In the South- m e e t i n g will open at 1:30. Mrs. ern states, cotton, mesquite, horse- Frances Bell Watson, Bad Axe, Meeting of Woman's Study C l u b - - mint and sweet clover, and in ihe past w o r t h y grand m a t r o n , and The S t u d y club m e t Monday eve- Eastern states, Northern states and George Ferguson, Bay Ciy, newly .2 ning w i t h M r s . A ~ h u r Fischer, Canada, buckwheat and wh{te clo- installed w o r t h y g r a n d patron, are hostess. The response to roll ca!! ver are the leading honey flowers. . . . . . du . . . . . . the sveakers. Mrs. was n a m i n g a United States presi-" Orange blossoms, cleome, aster and Alma McBride of Sandusky is dent and date of his administra- basswood complete the~,list president Of the Thumb association. The Household B Cass City Auto Parts New and Used Auto Parts R(>TNCTX P i n n e y D r y @ood$ ©Oo GAGETOWN ] Get R e a d y f o r C o l d W e a t h e r . . . ¢ There's a C a p a c | t y i n tl e II 'i//a r d X l O A u t o Batter' y More miles and months of service! performance. Bright at the starter! more of them. Better steady lights,v Higher voltage Quicker starts in any weather and Greater reserve capacity to hafidle the extra demands of high compression motors, auto radios, heaters and other electrical accessories. Cass ty a n d @as Company Stanley Asher, Manager " Phone 25 PAGE FOUR. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936. ocaz im~m~ \ appenzngs = :::- : = : - - ~ '" Connie Collins of Sandusky was a Cass City visitor Friday. Miss ,Geraldine Dykehuisen of St. Johns was a week-end guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McCullough. Mrs. Floyd Mellon and Mr. and Mrs. John MacKichan of Pontiac and Mrs. Hilburn of Detroit spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Ward Law. D o ~ d )fly:;. W. S. ~!ottc! a'=d daughter, Miss Mabel, of Detroit spent several days of ,this week in Cass City. Mr. Hottel, editor of the Sunday School quarterlies, published by the Union Gospel press of Cleveland, Ohio, was the guest speaker at the special Bible conference held in the Baptist church Wednesday, Thursday and t o d a y (Friday). Mrs. A. E. Goodall entertained Monday evening Mr. a n d Mrs. Leslie Goodall of Woodstock, Ontario; Mrs. Vern Page of Bloomingdale; Mr. and Mrs. George Mercer, Mrs. Ralph Partridge, Mr. and Mrs. J o h n Goodall and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Goodall and baby and Mr. and Mrs. Edwm~d Gotding and family. The supper celebrated t h e birthdays of W a l t e r Goodall and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Goodall whose birthdays are n e a r t h a t date. Moving" has been quite the order of the days this week. Mr. and Mrs.. Ashley Root have moved f r o m the Walmsley house to the Michael Munn house, on W e s t Pine street, which they have purchased. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Vyse, who have bought the W a l m s l e y house, also on Pine street, have taken possession this week. Mr. and Mrs. Giles Fulcher, who have been living at the Munn place, have rented t h e Floyd Zapfe house on Fourth street. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hutchinson Mrs. Carrie Foley of Chicago came Frid~:; .L, vis:.~ i~e~ ~'a~ zrom ~. H. Burke. Mrs. Francis Fritz. Mrs. Glenn Moore was a guest Mr. and Mrs. Peter Heronemus and family of Decker were Cass Sunday at the home of her uncle, J a m e s Campbell, in Columbia townCity Visitors Sunday. ,ship. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Benkelman Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Ivory and and son, Billie, visited relatives in daughter, Mona, of Lapeer were Detroit over the week-end. Karl and Ralph Almer and Wil- week-end guests o f Mr. and Mrs. liam Nutt, all of Detroit, were Glenn Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Manley Asher and visitors in Cass City Sunday. Miss Alison Spence of Flint family were entertained at Sunday spent Sunday at the home of her dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F r a n k Merchant. parents, Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s J. Mrs. Roy Consla of Painsville, Spence. OMo, came Sunday to spend sevMr. and Mrs. Paul Nelson and eral weeks with her mother, Mrs. two sons of Grand l~apids spent H. O. Greenleaf. the week-end w i t h Cass City The Cass City J u n i o r Music club friends. will m e e t Wednesday evening, NoK e n n e t h Hennessey and Miss v e m b e r 11, with the Misses CharLoretta A b e r n a t h y of Fli~t were lotte and Carolyn Auten. guests a t the Dan H e n n e s s e y home Robert Allured, a student at M. Sunday. S. C., East Lansing, spent the J a c k Holmberg and H e a t h W a y n e week-end with his parents, Roy. of Selfridge Field w e r e guests of and Mrs. Paul J. Allured. the former's sister, Miss Ione Misses Lorraine Hoffman and Holmberg, over the week-end. E s t h e r Turner, s t u d e n t s at MichiMr. and Mrs. Archie C. Kelley gan State college, spent Saturday and two children of K i n g s t o n spent and Sunday at their homes here. Sunday with Mrs. Kelley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Keating and Mr. and Mrs. J o h n McTavish. son, Robert, of Cass City and Leslie Mrs. Floyd McComb and Mrs. K a r r of Traverse City spent SunJ o h n Haley spent F r i d a y at ,the day w i t h Miss Mildred Karr in home of Mrs. McComb's daughter, Lansing. Mrs. Audley Walstead, in Bay Paul Stevens, 20, of Millington City. was arrested in t h a t village for Mrs. J. A. Sandham, Mrs. G. A. reckless driving on Hallowe'en. In Tindale, Mrs. Curtis H u n t and LEGION TO P R E S E N T dauhgkter, H a r r i e t Jane, spent justice court, he paid $25 fine and FLAGS TO SCHOOL T h u r s d a y at the Roy B r i g g s home $13.40 costs. J o h n McLean and daughter, Miss in Bad Axe. Geraldine, spent a f e w days last Concluded f r o m first page. Miss Theda Bardwell and nephw e e k with relatives in Rodney, On- county will have t h e i r flags deew, Robert Copland, both of D e tario, and a t t e n d e d t h e funeral of livered by the Sebewaing Post. troit, spent the week-end w i t h Miss an aunt, Mrs. Kate McLean. The remainder of t h e schools will Bardwell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. F r e d e r i c k H. Pin- be t a k e n care of by Care, V a s s a r Sire Bardwell. Mr. and Mrs. F o r e s t W r i g h t of ney s p e n t S a t u r d a y a n d Sunday in and Mayo:lie. Allison Stone of Indiana have rented t h e a p a r t m e n t A n n Arbor and Detroit. With Mr. Care is appointed chairman of Tusand Mrs. Jas. Lewis of Dowagiac, cola county, and L. L. Bateman of on t h e second floor of t h e W. I. Moore home. Mr. W r i g h t is em- t h e y a t t e n d e d t h e Illinois-Michigan Bad Axe is :chairman of Huron football g a m e in A n n Arl~or. county. Chairman for Elkland ployed by the Edison company. Mrs. Sarah M cWebb entertained towns•hip is George Elme2 Bearss; Rev. P. J. Allured, Rev. Charles for Elmwod township, Julius GosP. Bayless and Rev. G. A. Spitler at dinner on Sunday, Mrs. William lin; for Wisner township, Ovid attended a m e e t i n g of the Tuscola McWebb and son, Donald, and Black; Akron .township, Truman daughters, Ruth and Mary, all of County Ministerial association in Flint. The Flint group were also Ackerman; and Brookfield townt h e Presbyterian church a t Caro callers at the F r a n k Merchant ship, Wellington MacDonald. Monday. School districts will be supplied home. Miss Winni~red Schell enteras follows: Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Buehrly rained her class of girls o f the Almer N.os. I, 2, 5, 6, 7 by Earl are rejoicing over t h e arrival of a Methodist Sunday School at h e r Nose 3-4 and Eld a u g h t e r Friday, October 30, at Lauero A!mer home Saturday evening. A delightlington Nos. i, 2, 3 by Jim Cross. the h o m e of Mrs. Buehrly's parful supper was served a f t e r which Columbia Nos. I, 2, 3, 5 by Marle ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred White. games were played. She will answer to t h e name of Currey. Miss Harriet McComb enter- E s t h e r Marie. Gilford N0s. 1-7 and F a i r g r o v e tained t w e n t y guests at h e r home, Nos. 4, 5, 6 by Carl Kinsey. Mrs. William N o b l e entertained on South Seeder street, Saturday I n ~ a n f i e l d s No. 2 and Fairgrove e v e n i n g at a Hallowe'en party. a t a Hallowe'en p a r t y Friday af- Nos. 1, 2, 3, 7 to be supplied. Int e r n o o n in honor of her sister, Various games and stunts w e r e endianfields Nos. 1, 4, 5, 6, 7 by Irl joyed and doughnuts ~nd cider Little Miss Donna Turner. Apple Bagerley. bobbing and other Hallowe'en were served. K o y l t o n Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5 by Burton games were enjoyed. Refreshments Lee. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. W a l s t e a d of were served. Tuscola Nos. 1, 4, 6, 7 and one Bay City are the proud p a r e n t s of The Woman's Study club will parochial school by William Paine. a little son, born Tuesday, Nov. 3, Arbela Nos. 1, 3, 7 and two paroat General hospital, Bay City. He m e e t Tuesday 'afternoon, November has been named George Marion. 10, a t the home of Mrs. Warren chial schools to be supplied by VasWood. Members are asked to come sar. Mrs. W alstead was f o r m e r l y Miss prepared to ask questions on inMilling, ton Nos. 3, 4, 6, 7 by Irene McComb. ternational relations of the United Clarence Meyers. Millington Nos. A good attendance was present ~States with other countries. 1-5 and Arbela Nos. 4, 5, 2 by F. Monday evening w h e n t h e F o u r t h Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Doughty and E. Church. division met at ,the h o m e of Mrs. Ellington Nos. 4-5 and Wells H. T. Donahue to sew for the ba- two sons of Detroit and Mrs. Emzaar. Refreshments w e r e served m a Depew of Saginaw were week- Nos I, 3, 5 by Christopher Smith. of Mrs. Doughty's Juniata Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7 by George by the hostess/~ The division will end guests m e e t n e x t Monday n i g h t with Mrs. mother, Mrs. John L. Bearss. Mrs. Springer. Depew returned with Mr. and Mrs. Vassar No. 6 and Juniata Nos. I, Albert Gallagher. D o u g h t y to Detroit to spend a 6, 8; 2 to be supplied by Vassar Mrs. Bertha Brown and h e r Sun- week. Post. Vassar Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 9 by day School class of girls were enMrs. Clara Cridland, Mrs: Esther Fred McKenzie. t e r t a i n e d ,on Monday n i g h t at the Wells Nos. 2, 4, 6, 6 frl. and home of Miss Isabelle Bradshaw. Smith and daughter, Betty Ann, Kingston No. 2 to be supplied. Mrs. Ethel F a r r and daughter, Roll call was answered to by a Kingston Nos. I, 3, 4, 5, 6 by Bible verse and its location in the Jean, all of Detroit, were guests Fred Cooper. Bible. Games were played and re- at ,the Alex H e n r y h o m e from FriNovesta Nos. I, 3, 4, 5, 6 by day until Sunday evening and atf r e s h m e n t s were ,served. tended the f u n e r a l of Jacob D. Clinton Seetey. Visitors at the Charles Tall- Maxwell. D e n m a r k Nos. 3, 4, 6 and two m a d g e home Sunday w e r e Mr. and On Sunday, Mrs. Aletha Kilpat- parochial schools by Theron W. AtMrs. C. Livermore and two daughrick and daughter, Marion, and wood. ters, Carol and Margrate, of DeTuscola No. 3, Denmark No. 5 Mrs. Mary Seed and Mrs. Della ~roit, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. TallLauderbach attended a dinner and two parochial schools by Alm a d g e and son, Donald, and daughlison Stone. Ger, Helen, o f - S a n d u s k y , and Mr. served to members of the Fisher Commander F r a n k O. Jaynes of f a m i l y at the home of Mr. and a n d Mrs. R. ft. Campbell of Nothe Sebewaing Post kindly requests Mrs. Carl Wilcox in Columbia ~esta. t h a t all veterans report to the township. township chairman or their P0st A n enjoyable t i m e was had on A full grown doe was seen by T u e s d a y evening w h e n the Butz- J o h n McGrath 40 rods east of the commander for f u r t h e r instrucb a c h Missionary Circle ~f t h e George Russell f a r m Friday morn- tions regarding" the distribution of Evangelical church m e t a t the ing. Mrs. Stanley Hutchinson saw the flags. A special m e e t i n g is h o m e of Miss Ev Mac Sovey. The the deer cross the Hutchinson called for Monday evening, Novemp r o g r a m was in charge of Miss Lu- f a r m and the animal was also seen ber 9, for veterans belonging to the t i l e Anthes. A t the close of the in the J e r o m e Root orchard in No- Sebewaing Post to complete the arrangements. Ladies are requestm e e t i n g a social hour w a s enjoyed vesta township the same day. ed to be present. and r e f r e s h m e n t s w e r e served. Mrs. Stephen W. Morrison, wife l Mr. and Mrs. William M a r s h and of t h e clerk of Tuscola county, I son, A l l a n , of Carson City were passed away W e d n e s d a y morning. ] Our First O u t l y i n g P o s s e s s i o n Sunday guests of Rev. and Mrs. Mrs. Morrison has not been in the I Alaska was the first outlying posG. A. Spitler. Mr. Spitler's sister, best of health in recer~t weeks, but I sessions acquired by the U. S. A. Mrs. F r a n k Seeder, of Muskegon h e r ddath came m o s t unexpectdly. / Heights, who has been visiting in Besides her husband, she leaves4 Cass City, returned to Carson City five sons and one daughter. I ===~ ............................................. ~ with h e r daughter and f a m i l y and The F e a s t of All. Saints and the ] will visit there before r e t u r n i n g F e a s t .of All Souls, two important l home, special days in the Roman Catholic / .................... church, were observed Sunday and 1 Monday in St. Pancratius Romanl Catholic church here. Forty-hour NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. devotions began Monday morning. Ft. Lamber.t, a Capuchin priest, Y o u r particular a t t e n t i o n is called to the date on t h e yellow and several priests from nearby parishes attended. label carrying your name. If the date is "Nov. 1936" it A copy of Dr. L y m a n P. Powell's indicates t h a t t h e subscription book, "Mary Baker E d d y ~ A Life expires this m o n t h and should Size P o r t r a i t " has j u s t been added have your attention. Please help to t h e Woman's Study club library. in this m a t t e r by a t t e n d i n g to Dr. Powell, who is an Episcopal ,the p a y m e n t today. m i n i s t e r and not a Christian ScienR e m e m b e r ~ U n l e s s t h e date tist, is widely known as an author on your label is l a t e r t h a n Nov. and lecturer. The Christian Science 1936, renewal of your subscrip- textbook, "Science and Health with tier, should have your irmnedi- Key to the Scriptures," by Mary ate attention. T h a n k you! Baker Eddy, has also been placed in t h e library. _S Cass City, Michigan. Learning by E x p e r i e n c e "Of co'so you kin learn by experience," said Uncle Eben. "But, remember, son, you kin learn foolishness dat way de same as out o' books." Has Colonial Records of 1650 One file in the archives division of the state library in Richmond. Va., are official documents of the Colonial government that date back to 1650. Determination Determination means stick right when you are rigl~t, and get a new hold when you are wrong. Air Is H e a v y Soil Remover Air carries as much soil as water --possibly. more~from one part of the country to nnother. f Chronicle R A T E S ~ L i n e r of 25 w o r d s or less, 25 Cents e a c h i n s e r t i o n . Over 25 words, o n e cent a word for each i n s e r t i o n . lndustria| Panorama in the Saar, the German hordes when the Roman empire fell. HOUGH barely 738 square It was so in the France-Prussian miles in area and with fewer war; Von Moltke, in 1870, followed than 825,000 people, the Saar Blucher's route of 1813, and about has been one of Europe's most pubSaarbrucken came one of the first licized regions since the World war. clashes of that war which helped Powder keg of Europe; witches' Bismarck to found his German emcaldron; political sore spot. For pire. Again, of course, in the World years such graphic labels have been war, the armies passed this way, tacked onto this small but highly and many an allied soldier washed industrialized region lying north his shirt in' the Saar, the Moselle of Alsace-Lorraine between France and the Rhine, or traded cigarettes and Germany. and white bread to willing frauleins From the days of Attila and the for a jug of wine. Caesars down to Foch and Von Fly over Saarlonis, where MarHindenburg, its valleys and wooded shal Ney was born, and in its very hills have rocked and echoed to the heart you see the outline of the tramp and shouts of marching old forts built by Louis XIV of armies. France. Geographically, the Saar is an irDating, as a town, from 1680, tts regular patch of hilly land crossed people lived for more than 200 by small valleys. It lies alongside years almost w h o l l y by trading with Luxembourg, forms a buffer state the dart:sons--first French, then Gerbetween F r a n c e and Germany, and man, then French again. w a s cut from the two German states Today old w a l l s and moats that of Prussia and Bavaria. encircled the fort have been torn With a population about equal to down and filled to make .broad, that of Boston proper, it shelters smooth streets, as the Americans more than 1,000 people per square did with parts of Manila. mile--one of the most densely setGerman infantry, artillery, cavtled areas in all Europe. alry, army wagons--all the moneyOnly such miniature European spending machinery of war--made ~tates as Andora, Liechtenstein, San Saarlouis a busy town until after Marine and Monaco are smaller the World war. Wlmn they evacuthan this tiny, yet dynamic counated, the French came in for a try. America k n o w s no state so while; but now few occupants are dwarfish. Delaware is about three found for all the vast barracks. times the Saar's size, yet has less It is quiet, almost too quiet, for ttmn a third its population. Saarbrucken, metropolis of the those residents vGho remember the band concerts, tbe glittering reSaar, has only 132,409 people; yet views, and fat army pay rolls of tn one year Saar trains haul 60,000,- other days. 000 passengers ! French Are gcarce There. Sit in any stuffy care at SaarGerman in race, speech, culture, brucken, watch the guests eat red cabbage and boiled pork, or sip fat and traditions, the Saar showed steins of beer as the band plays by a pre-war census only about one heavy Wagner music, and the place person in 200 with French as his seems just another German indus- native tongue. It was simply a legal accident at Versailles which trial center. But look into its eventful annals. made these people citizens, tempoor make a careful trip about its rarily, of a plmntom state. The historic roads and rnins, and you Saar, under that treaty, gained no find a land with a past peculiar~ to nationality, no president or other ruler of its own. Instead, a comitself. mission of five Europeans was Saar Problem in Caesar's Time. named by the League of Nations to There was, in fact, a Saar prob- administer the territory's affairs lem even in Rolnan times, wimn until the plebiscite. blond men from t h e east of the :By treaty the Saar went under lHfine already had invaded this a customs union with France; basin. In Caesar's "Commentaries" Frehch customs guards were set to you read of these early German patrol the line between Germany settlers. One Roman report of the and the Saar and French money time says that 1211.000 b'~rl)arinns, was put into use. To pay France enamored of Gaul, had settled here. for her own coal mines damaged Caesar feared these Germans by Germans in the World war, she might menace Rome itself; so he was given the coal mines in the helped the GauIs drive them back Saar. The treaty provided also that across tim Rhine. His battles on after the plebiscite Germany might the Aisne and elsewhere were pro buy these mines back again if she cursors of centuries of fighting along wished, and such an agreement was the Rhine. concluded late in 1934. Some Roman military roads here()nly around Saarlouis is any abouts are shown on the Peutinger French influence noticeable, and that map of about 200 A. D. One rqn is not due to the presence there of north from Argentoratum (now many living Frenchmen. Such inStrasbourg) to the Saar basin. fluence belongs to the past~VauAbout this same time the Romans ban's old forts built when Louis built a castle at a point on the Saar XIV made this a French garrison river where it was bridged by their town; French names and epitaphs military road from Paris to Mainz. In the cemetery; and an odd local Saarbruckea was so named, mean- dialect current among older• resiin~ "Saar Bridge." dents, a curious :blend of German Dense forests choked all the ba- and French. sin t h e n , forests frequented by To see how thoroughly German 1.eathen druids, by wild Celtic tribes the region is, in speech and senwho hunted deer and boars with timent, you have only to mingle spears. Scattered ruins of men- with any holiday crowd and listen hits, dolmens and cromlechs, sym- to the songs, the speeches, and the bols of the druid cult, have been music; or read the papers; or see found in the Saar forests. what crowds follow broadcast~ Roman ruins are there--if you from the radio stations at Frankd i g ~ r u i n s of villas, of baths and furt and Stuttgart. bridges, some aImost in the shadow Industry Is intenMve. of early Christh~n churches. At As in the Ruhr, industry here is Tholey is a cimrch that dates from compact, intensive, and theatrical tile Thirteenth century. In sharp in its setting. eont:'ast, near Saarbrucken is a Like volcanoes, its giant mills, as mosque built by tile French dur- at Volklingen (250,264), belch forth ing the World war, wherein their clouds of thick gray smoke; the 1;loroccan soldiers might pray l red glare of blast furnaces turns black night into brilliant Gehenna. Lon9 Held by Germans. Under every hill is coal. Over ~trategieally, the Saar lies on a natural route between France and every mine is a big wheel on a towGermany, and for centuries they er; again and again you see the big have disputed as to where their wheel spin, as it winds up a cable boundary lines should be fixed. that lifts its load from deep in Soon after the break up of Char- the earth. This is the only place on earth lemagne's empire, and the Treaty of Verdun, in 843, the Saar became where you see mines and steel mills closely crowded by forests, as if German soil. Briefly, for more than a thou- bits of industrial Pittsburgh were sand years prior to the Versailles set in o n e of our forest reserves. treaty, Germany held the Saar, ex- The wooded slopes of the winding cept for two short periods, the sec- Saar river all covered with snow ond being the years from 1793 to much resemble Algonquin park in 1815, when Napoleon pushed the Ontario in winter; it seems the woods must be as dense and mysFrench frontier to the Rhine. xxz ~ ~h..n Blucher and his Prussians terious as when druids built their advanced into France in 1S1.~, he sacrificial altars there and hungry followed the very route taken by pagan Celts searched for wild meat. Prepared bY National G e o g r a p h i c Society, ~¥a~hlngton, D. C.--WNU Service. T Liners SHABBONA cider mill will run Nov. 9, 10, Ii and 12; after ,these dates will close for the season. 11-6-1. FOR S A L E - - R o c k pullets and bay HOUSE FOR SALE or r e n t - - H a s lights, w a t e r and bath. E n q u i r e colt, yearling. Ben Crocker, l of Harold Murphy, Cass City. east, 1 south of Shabbona. l l - 6 - 1 p 11-6-1. ONE BRONZE tom turkey f o r sale; a good one. Mrs. F r a n k FOR S A L E - - B l a c k and white cow, 5 years old, due March 1. N. Streeter, Cass City. 11-6-2 Straky, 2% miles south of Cass City. ll-6-1p FOR S A L E - - T w o yearling steers; one yearling bull; some good F O U N D - - L a d y ' s purse. Enquire eating potatoes. Edd Russell, at Chronicle office. 11-6-1 1½ east, ~£ n o r t h of Gage`town. ll-6-1p. GET OUR prices on Unionville and Pocahontas coal delivered to A P P L E S - - C i d e r apples sold at 20c your bin. Reverse phone charges, bu. Cooking apples, 50c bu. number 39. John F: Fournier, Spies, Baldwins and Greenings Gagetown, Mich. 8-14-tf for sale. C . W . Heller. 10-30-tf W A N T E D - - H a y in any quantity. Call Elmwood store or w r i t e FOR S A L E - - T w o 22!38 I n t e r n a Harold Putnam, Cass City, R2. tional threshers, one 28148 A v e r y 10-16-4p. thresher, one 28146 P o r t H u r o n thresher, two 35]54 P o r t H u r o n ATTENTION, Farmers! The orithreshers, one 19 H P P o r t Huron! ginal company to pay for dead engine. The John Good:son and disabled stock is now payThresher Company, Inc., Pont ing: Horses, $4.00; cattle, $3.00; Huron. 10-9-tf hogs, sheep and calves accordingW A N T E D ~ 1 5 0 old horses for fox feed. Must be alive. Otto Monte:, F a i r g r o v e . Care P h o n e 954-R-5. ll-8-tf ly. P r o m p t service. Power loading trucks. Phone collect to Millenbach Bros. Co. S a g i n a w 23821 o r Sandusky 62. 9-18,26p CASH-PAiD for cream at Kenney's, RIFLE, 45-70, single shot, and Cass City. Craig, 30-40, 6-shot, for sale. Both in good condition. Mike FOR S A L E w T w o nice building Holik, 2 north, 2½ east of Cass lots located 2½ blocks w e s t of City. 11-6-1p Presbyterian church on the n o r t h side of t h e street. L . E . TawnNICE CLEAN living room suite. send. ll-6-1p Bargain. Cass City F u r n i t u r e Store. 11-6-1 FOR S A L E ~ 8 0 acres, sugar beet soil, buildings, $1,800.00 Terms. FOR S A L E - = D r y cedar rail kindWorth $3,000.00. Must be sold ling: J. Hartley. ll-6-1p this week. Telephone 10%F:11. Wm. Zemke, Deford. 1i-6-1p PIANO B a r g a L a ~ U p r i g h t , $29.50 cash plus cartage. Also beauti- FOR S A L E - - P u r e b r e d Shorthorn ful player piano, like new, f o r bulls, m i l k i n g strain, 1 to 18 terms of $10.00 per month. W r i t e months old, $25 to $60. Five at once to R. J. Lemke, 2335 W. miles south, 8½ east of Cass Viler street, Milwaukee, WisconCity° Corbett Puterbaugh, Shesin. He will advise where in- • ver. 10-30-4p s t r u m e n t .may be seen. 10-30-3p W H E N YOU have livestock for W A N T TO B U Y alfalfa, t i m o t h y sale, call Grant Patterson, Cass and clover hay. Will pay highCity. Phone 32. 6-19-tf est prices. Calliari Bros. W r i t e OLD N E W S P A P E R S for sale at or call J o h n HaIey, Cass~ City. 5c a bundle a t the Chronicle ofTelephone 84-F-12. 10-23-4p fice. 9-25POPCORN WANTED~S'tat~e quality, q u a n t i t y and prfce. E r n e s t 100-ACRE FARM, known as Guy Sweet Estate, Sec. 36, Novesta Koinis, 927 BeaconfieM, Grosse township, Tuscola county, for Pointe Park, Mich. 10-23-8p sale. Nine-room brick v e n e e r RANGE for sale. One y e ~ old house, full b a s e m e n t with furand used v e r y little. Martfn nace; two good barns; good outKisner, 2 south, 2½ west, ~/2 buildings; two drive wells; well south of Cass City. II-6~Ip fenced. Must be sold to settle estate. Price, $5,000. J.H. SCHOOL GIRLS w a n t work t a k i n g Pringle. Administrator, Deford. care of children evenings and on 9-II-tf. Saturdays. E n q u i r e of Mrs. E. Otis or phone No. 40. 11-6-1p DEER RIFLE, Model 53 Winchester, calibre 44-40, nearly new, GIRL W A N T S general housework f o r sale. McCaslin's Barber or care of children. Enquire 3 Shop, Cass City. 11-6-1 south, 1 west, 1£ south of Cass City. 11-6-1p ABOUT 12 TONS of mixed h a y f o r sale. H. L. Hunt, Cass City. 1935 D E L U X E table top Detroit ll-6-tf. Jewel range, cream color, excellent condition; no zeasonable of- REWARD O F F E R E D - - L o s t , two fer refused or will ,trade for good bags of chop on street south of cow. Mrs. V. Bogart, Deford, the Ford garage. Please n o t i f y R1, Ed Sutton farm. 11-6-1 F r u t c h e y Bean Co. 11-6-1 T H E Y ' R E H E R E ! The n e w 1'936 RUMMAGE SALE by M. E. W o m Rytex Christmas Cards. Smart, an's Missionary Society, Nov. new, colorful and the price, as of 13 and 14, at Council Rooms. old, is 50 f o r $1.00, including 10-23-3 your n a m e on the cards and 50 envelopes to match. See the n e w FOR R E N T - - R e s i d e n c e on W e s t Main street, Cass City, w i t h Rytex Christmas Cards at t h e lights, furnace and bath. Mrs. Chronicle. 10-23N. Karr, Kingston. 11-6-1 VACCINATION will not protect you f r o m auto accidents, but good FOR S A L E - - T e a m of horses. Mar.tin Kesner, 2 miles south, 2z~ insurance will ,take care of you. west and 1/~ south of Cass City. Don't neglect, or put it off. ll-6-Ip. Michigan's Financial Responsibility Law still has teeth. Let "TERROR," a dramatic love story us figure a coverage w i t h a nonof war-torn Spain by George assessable company w i t h special Agnew Chamberlain s t a r t s in rates to farmers: Call A. H. This Week, the colorgravure Henderson, 146-F-14, Auto O v ~ magazine in next Sunday's Deors' agent, Deford, MicMgan. troit News. Don't fail to r e a d 10-30this timely tale by the everpopular Chamberlain. 11-6-1 FOR S A L E ~ P u r e b r e d O x f o r d ram lambs at $15. YearIings a t $20 to $25. Also ewes and ewe IN LOVING m e m o r y of Alvin N. Deneen who died one year ago lambs, $10 to $15. Dorr W. today, November 6, 1935. No P e ~ y , Caro, Rd. Moore phone one k n o w s the silent heartache, 947-R-22. Seven miIes west and Only those who have lost can one south of Cass City. 10-30-2p tell, The grief we bear in silence, For the one we loved so well. FOR SALE Two Durham cows, Mrs. Myrtle Deneen and Family. freshen soon. D. C. Sinclair, 1 mile west, % north of Kingston. I AM T R U L Y g r a t e f u l to those who 11-6-1p. sent flowers and other r e m e m -brances and to M r s / J o h n Caister, FOR S A L E - - B e a g l e pups. Call a t Mrs. Louis Tray:s, Dr. Donahue Mrs. Addle Marshall's across and nurses during m y stay in the from P r e s b y t e r i a n church. H a r r y hospital, and to the m a n y friends Goodell. 11-6-1p who called at m y home. Mrs. F O R S A L E - - ' 3 5 Terraplane coach Vern McGregory. (12,000 miles), '31 Willy sedan, AM VERY grateful to young and '30 Pontiac coach, '29 Chevrolet old, neighbors and friends, for coupe, '29 Chevrolet sedan, '28 the m a n y expressions of kindness Chevrolet sedan, '29 Ford coach, during m y long weeks of illness '30 Dodge sedan, '28 Chevrolet and to the mysterious s e n d e r of coach, '29 E s s e x coach, '28 S t u Hey! Hey! cards which came debaker sedan, '28 Buick coach, punctually every Tuesday. Ar'27 Overland coach, '26 Chevrolet lington Hoffmaa, sedan. Cass Motor Sales. 11-6-1 CASS CITY C H R O N I C L E ~ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936. Cass City, Michigan. ' - ":" DO YOU REMEMBER? • - _ - b+++, o¢N++R++ + By L. L. S T E V E N S O N The Cass City Chzonicle has t h r o u g h t he y e a r s stored away pictures of local people a n d buildings, some of which date back m a n y years. T h e Chronicle will reprint some of t h e s e f r o m time to time. No n am e s or stories will a p p e a r u n d e r a n y pi c t ure and it will be le£t for t h e r e a d e r s to think back t h r o u g h the .years and search ,their m e m o r i e s for identification. DEFORD ] The Hallowe'en party," p r o g r a m and box social given by t h e school at th e school building on F r i d a y evening was much e n j o y e d by the goodly n u m b e r preserit. The proceeds a m o u n t i n g to over $15.00 will be used .to purchase some needed items used in t h e school. W i t h t h e proceeds of l a s t y e a r ' s e n t e r t a i n m e n t , a piano w a s purchased. Mrs. B e r t h a MacIntyre, who is in a hospital at Mayville, is n o t convalescing so well as h e r friends h ad hoped. Mrs. R. E. Bruce e n t e r t a i n e d s e v e r a l l a d i e s at dinner on Wednesday, and .they assisted h e r in m a k ing a quilt. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. W e s t spent th e week-end at Flint. M r . a n d Mrs. George 1VLaclmtyre w e r e ':Sunday guests of friends a t Saginaw. Mrs. H e g l e r spent S a t u r d a y a t S a g i n a w . On Sunday, Mr. a n d Mrs. H e g l e r e n t e r t a i n e d Mr. a n d Mrs. Thomas F r e e m a n of Gagetown. :. BEAULEY. M r s . T. J. Heron spent l a s t week visiting relatives in Romeo, re t u rn ing home Friday. Mrs. Charles Roblin, our teacher, was ill t h e first of t h e week so t h e r e w a s no school Monday a nd Tuesday. F r a n k Hill has been quite sick for several days but is up and around again. D u r w a r d Heron has been visiting his p a r e n t s a f e w days this week. Charles Dulmage and H o w a r d Axford of Pontiac visited Mr. and Mrs. H e r b e r t D u l m a g e laat w e e k an d enjoyed p a r t of the t i m e hunting pheasants. Mr. and Mrs. Alva McAlpine a re rejoicing over t h e arrival of a son, born Oct. 29, who will a n s w e r to the n a m e of J a m e s Wallace. S. H. Heron, d a u g ht e r, Madelyn, and Mrs. Cloia Moore a t t e n d e d t he double f u n e r a l of Mrs. M a r y Converse and son, E r n e s t C o n v e r s e , in L a p e e r T h u r s d a y a t ,two o'clock. Mrs. Converse and son, who reside in Lansing, were killed instantl~7 in an automobile accident n e a r t h a t city. Robert Converse, ~son and b r o th e r of the two deceased, is a brother-in-law of Mr. Heron, MRS. J O H N K A R R 84 Y E A R S OLD T H U R S D A Y Concluded from first page. lame to help in some ways, she is still With t h e m in her p r a y e r s a n d h er chief interest to4ay is in making the world a b e t t e r place in which to live. M a r y J. D o w n s was born at Hamilton, Ontario, N o v e m b e r 5, 1852, and came w i t h h e r m o t h e r and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. H. Moshier, to Michigan w h e n she was f o u r t e e n years of age., settled on a f a r m n e a r N o r t h B r a n c h and two y e a r s later moved to Brookfield township. Miss Downs was united in m a r r i a g e w i t h John K a r r , Oct. 23, 1880, and she has lived in and n e a r Cass City since. Mr. K a r r passed a w a y Oct. 19, 1918. The last thirteen years, Mrs. K a r r has lived in Cass City w i t h Mrs. Keating. She has t h r e e d a u g h t e r s , Mrs. W a l t e r Mark, Mrs. R. J . K n i g h t and Mrs. F r a n k Reid, all of Cass City. Y P R E A C H I N G MISSION SCHEDULE ADOPTED Concluded from f i r s t page. Mission," says an excerpt f r o m a m e m o r a n d u m released this week by the local committee on a r r a n g e ments. Intercession is a s k e d f o r "the rebuilding in h u m a n lives of the foundations of Christian faith, and for the sturdy and swift revival of true religion in this time of crisis and ,the world's need." The usual Thursday evening midweek services of the local churches have been "taken up" in favor of this special united session on November 12, just prior to the opening of the Eight Day Preaching Mission, November 15 to 22 inclusive. Begin with Baptists. The first union service of the P r e a c h i n g Mission will be held a t the Baptist church, 7:30 p. m., Sunday, November 15. Roy. Libbie Supernois has been selected to p r e a c h the k e y n o t e sermon of the series. Other ministers listed f o r subsequent evenings a r e : Rev. God. Spitler, Monday; Roy. Paul Allured, Tuesday; Roy. L. A. K e n nedy, W e d n e s d a y ; Roy. Charles Bayless, Thursday. RECORDS TUMBLED BY DEMOCRATIC LANDSLIDE Concluded f r o m first page. s t a t e re pre s e n t a t i v e , a n d county offices fo r which t h e r e was competition. Sanilac County. F o r p r e s i d e n t - - A l f r e d M. London (R) 6968; F r a n k l i n D. Roosevelt (D) 3268; Win. Lemke (T) 754. G o v e r n o r ~ F ~ . a n k D. Fitzgerald (R) 8261; Frank Murphy (D) 2427. L i e u t . g o v e r n o r ~ L u r e n D. Dickinson (R) 7370; Leo g. Nowicki ( D ) 2277. S e c r e t a r y of state--Orville E. Atwood (R) 7923; Leon D. Case (D) 2178. Attorney g e n e r a l - - D a v i d H. C row l e y (R) 7543; Raymond W. S t a r r (D) 2257. State t r e a s u r e r - - H o w a r d M. Warner (R) 7409; Theodore I. F r y (D) 2471. Auditor g e n e r a l - - John J. O ' H a r a (R) 7556; God. T. Gundry (D) 2288. J u s t i c e of S u p r e m e c o u r t - - H a r ry S. T o y (R) 7494; B e r t D. Chandler (D) 2304. U n i t e d States senator--Wilber M. B r u c k e r (R) 7350; Prentiss M. B row n (D) 2922; Louis B. W a r d (W) 499. R e p r e s e n t a t i v e in Congress:, 7th D i s t . - - J e s s e P. Wolcott (R) 7716; A l b e r t A. W a g n e r (D) 2158. S t a t e senator, 20th D i s t . - - S a m uel H. P a n g b o r n (R) 7315; :Clare T. P u r d y (D) 2116. S t a t e r e p r e s e n t a t t i v e - - A. P. D e c k e r (R) 6987; Jas. Igahaffy (D) 2764. J u d g e of probate--GOd. W. Paldi (R) 7682; F r a n k R. Reed (D) 2174, Prosecuting" attorney--Leormrd J. P a t e r s o n (R) 7693; F r e d S. Volts (D) 2194. Sheriff Ace T. Campbell (R) 6865; E d w a r d K o l a r (D) 1593; H. M. Stone, Ind. 1846. C o u n t y clerk Joseph Dawe (R) 7868; Pirl Reed (D) 2013. C o u n t y t r e a s u r e r - - G e o . C. Gardne r (R) 7895; Leo Herdell (D) 2073. R e g i s t e r of d e e d s - - H a r o l d Greenlee (R) 7930; F r a n k Pagel (D) 1946. Circuit court c o m m i s s i o n e r s - J a m e s Toots (R) 7607; Fred A. Simpson (R) 7620. Both elected. Drain commissioner - - Philip O'Connell (R) 7446; Win. F. 0'Connell (D) 2318. Coroners ~ H a r v e y E. Jewell (R) 7209; Burton A. Pitcher (R) 7443; Jos. J. O'Connor (D) 2044; A r t h u r C u r r a n (D) 2029. Two elected. S u r v e y o r ~ B e n j . A. Howard (R) 7454. C o u n t y road commissioner - E l m e r Russell (R) 7690; John W. Ports (D) 2055. I PAGE FIVE. A M E N D M E N T VOTE IN TWO T O W N S H I P S T U E S D A Y " Elk lan d township voted 420 yes an d 218 no on th e first amendm e n t ; 91 yes and 422 no on th e second; 111 yes and 621 no on the t h i r d ; and 76 yes and 614 no on th e f o u r t h proposed amendment. Four hundred eighty-eight s t r a i g h t Republican votes w e r e cast Tuesday and 92 strai~'ht Demo<:r~A[?. FOr ~3~'~;+~++7 T~,~A.~,~, +P~++ ceived 589, l~oosevel)c" --++ +++----+218,'Lemke 20, Thomas 2, Browder 1. F o u r y e a r s ago, Hoover received 535 and Roosevelt 232 in Elkland. Elmwood Vote on Amendments. On the first proposed amendment, Elmwood voted 80 yes and 206 no; on the second, 37 yes and 237 no; on the third, 55 yes and 241 no; and on the fourth, 43 yes and 237 no. High Hat: The Sixth avenue bus line, late in the evening, gets a h e a vy correct evening attire trade. It seems that those who seek diversion in the various large hotels in that vicinity choose the busses in,toad oi taxis ior ~omc going4, p o s + •sibly since the fare, no matter how far they travel is only a nickel or possibly they like company. At any rate, their presence adds a lot of swank to the public vehicles. The drivers, however, instead of rejoicing, are apt to do a bit of grousing when questioned about the matter. It seems that those in soup and fish uniform expect taxi service from the bus line. Naturally, a driver, piloting the bus and its cargo between elevated railway pillars, collecting fares and trying to get to the Condor Needs a Start P r o b a t e judge - - J o s h u a Brown end of the route before 22 minutes The bureau of biological survey (R) 6658; Joseph H. Jaroch (D) have elapsed, has other things on says that the condor, like other his mind. So the well dressed make 2580. That so~.ne are ex- large, heavy birds, cannot get off Prosecuting attorney~Thos. R. complaints. tremely trivial doesn't ease the feel- the ground in flight without some McAllister (R) 7120. aid from the feet in a so-called Sheriff--John A. Graham (R) ings of the drivers irt the slightest. running start. In this, the wings That being true, they prefer the 7149; Dennis Morgan (D) 3385. are flapping from the beginning of ClerkJohn Doyle (R) 6889; proletariat which pays its nickels the run. The condor can also proand lets it go at that. Milo B. Alexander (D) 3369. pel itself from a projection, as a Treasurer-- Robt. I. Richardson cliff, and boo'in flight by ~li,lit~. (R) 6779; Otto Kunish (D) 3228. By Any Other Name: Hors Register of deeds--Ted H. Schu- d'oeuvres have become an essenThe Italian Lute bel (R) 6641; Edward A. Tennant tial part of the cocktail hour, such The Italian lute is a beautiful (D) 3602. an extensive part that they have Drain commissioner ~ Wm. J. expanded from m e r e cheese wafers mandolin. Hungary is the place to Steadman (R) 6386; Paul Chamand olives to selections that com- go for dulcimer players, for there pagne (D) 3799. bine both quality and quantity. In they have made a study of t-he simCircuit court commissioner some of the establishments, there Ilar zimbalon. The English. liking Frederick S. Beach (R) 6272. is a preference for c a v i a r , both red Its sweet tones, changed Its name S u r v e y o r - - W i n . H. Case (R) and black. In others, cute little to dulcimer. 6637. sausage~ on toothpicks are considCoroners - - Russell G. P a y n t e r ered quite the thing while at least First to Turn to Right (R) 6564; J o s h u a Morgan (R) one mid-town place specializes in The Conestoga wagons of the pio6360; Stuart H. P f a f f (D) 3309; miniature hot dogs in miniature Chas. W a r d (D) 3285. Tw9 elected. rolls. The cocktail b a r of one of neers were the first American ve. the hotels sets out such a variety hlcles to pass on the right when that a hungry patron is able to en- meeting another vehicle. F A R M E R INCOME ON j o y a fish course, a m e a t course R I S E I N M I C H I G A N and a vegetable course with a bit of Reaching the Port c h e e s e as a dessert, t h e whole being To reach the port, w e must somecarried about on silver trays by Concluded fr.om first page. white-clad servitors. And thus is times sail with the wind and somestock and livestock p r o d u c t s , with the old-time free lunch duded up to times against it. B u t w e must sail and not drift nor lie at anchor. less t h a n 40 per cent f r o m actual m e e t modern requirements. sales of crops and miscellaneous $ $ $ Camera Invention T r a c e d to Italy products, Guan finds. Gunn's figures on the division .of It is believed that the camera Illusion Turned Into Fact: Fifl the 1935income of 185 million dol- D'Orsay, screen and stage star w a s invented in Italy in the Sixlars received by f a r m e r s are as known generally as a F r e n c h come° teenth century, though the princifollows: dienne, has never been any nearer ple was actually known before. D a i r y products, 55 millions; sales to F r a n c e than we h a v e been to c o l of livestock, more t h a n 36 millions, lecting the F r e n c h w a r debt. She w i t h cash sales f r o m cattle a n d was born in Canada and, as is Ethel calves more t h a n h a l f of this live- Merman, is a former stenographer. stock income, hogs second in i m - Incidentally, George Givot, . the portance and .sheep and l a m b s Greek ambassador of the radio, is Jewish. Emile Boreo, Portrayer of third. P o u l t r y is the t h i r d i m p o r t a n t F r e n c h roles, is a Russian, while source of Michigan farm income, Igor Gorin who sings all those row i t h over 21 millions o r almost 12 mantic songs won't have anything to per cent of the 1935 total. In 1929 do with romance because he holds over 35 millions w a s received f r o m it would interfere with h i s c a r e e r . poultry, while only 13 millions was derived in 1933 f r o m poultry. 24,A lb. bag City Life: Coal rat:ling down a Cash field crops a r e next in b r i n g i n g in the dollars. Beans, chute into an p a r t m e n t house basepotatoes, w h e a t and s u g a r beets m e n t . . . A street full of children engaged in noisy g a m e s . . . Woma r e included. Last y e a r beans and en engaged in a strident quarrel potatoes each contributed about 9 that at any m o m e n t threatens to Barrel $8.75 millions, w h e a t 8 113 millions but r e a c h the hair-pulling stage . . . A s u g a r beets were cat down by low vegetable peddler bawling his yields to 41/~ millions. F r u i t and wares . . . Taxicab drivers racing t r u c k crops added about 11' millions their motors . . . Radios blaring each. Apples obtained 40 per cent in full volume . . . and in an upof the fruit dollars, and peaches, stairs apartment, a violinis~ praccherries, grapes and strawberries ticing "Wings of Song." followed in order. P e p p e r m i n t contributed about a million dollars. Shopp~g District Chatter: "You ought to see the light where I work." W o m e n Coal Steamers "She tells me she wears a St. Thomas, Virgin islands, wa~ . . . . 2B and I can't get a 5C on her + once called the Gibraltar of Amerfoot." . "We take a chance and 24 ½ lbs. 75c ica, and holds a military interest, d o n ' t i e t a deposit. He comes in as it virtually commands one sea for two try-ons and now we have approach to the Panama canal. It the suit on our hands." "Right after is the home of the bay rum indus- I sold it, that stock went up nine try, but the trees grow on a neigh- points." . . . "If he knew how she boring island. Here the work of was two-timing him, he'd go back to coaling steamers is done by women, his wife." . . . "I never can get hold each one carrying a basket of coal of enough nickels. Seems like I nicely balanced upon her head. .spend half m y time lining up at a change booth." . . . "I know a fellow who can get it for you wholeWashlngton's Trip Abroad Barbadoes is the only foreign sale." We have the ?: Buy Now t 5 I+. 25c Walter Baker's Cocoa ......... two ½ lb. cans 15c Calumet Baking Powder .................. lb. can 21c +oo 19c RED SALMON Peanut Brittle (fancy quality).. ..... 2 lbs. 25c Pumpkin ........................................ large can 10c MATCHES . . 6 +x++20c Kirks' Cocoa Hardwater Castile Soap ................................ .4 bars 15c A. H E N R Y Telephone 82 Cash P a i d f o r Cream and E g g s Lad|es T o. Shoe Sale ! eek One Group of Regular $2.49, now ................................ $ 1 . A j~:~Jk . One Group of Regular $3.00 to $3.50, now ................ $¢}®A~~ t'~7 SALE STARTS FRIDAY, NOV. 6th PARSCH S Cass City Sooner or Later You'll Wonder Why You Didn't Use Liner Ads Sooner. Fall Flour Sale Old Mill Flour Pillsbury Flour Made by P i l l s b u r y $1.1o $7.49 barrel White Robin Tuscola Pastry ,5.95 8oc Economy country ever visited by Gen. George Washington. He went there in 1751 with his brother Lawrence, who was in ill health. The house the two brothers occupied may be seen in Bridgetown, the island's port and main city. The town was once the headquarters of Lord Nelson. May God Bless Her: She and her husband have been m a r r i e d more than 60 years, yet she still looks young. Maybe that is because she is so full of life and so deeply interested i n life. Her church, her club, her wide circle of friends take m u c h of her time; nevertheless, she ~ continues to m a k e a home, a real home. Before he was of school age, The Seychelles Palm The Seychelles palm grows 100 s h e taught her oldest son to read, feet and requires a century to ma- then led him to good books and in ture with leaves 20 feet long and later years, encouraged h im on 12 feet wide. The fruits often when his wings were weak. To weigh 40 to 50 pounds each. They her, he owes a g reat debt. It's require about ten years to ripen. her birthday today. Many, m a n y The gigantic seed requires upward m o r e and m a y all of t h e m be hapof three years to sprout. The meat, py, mother. like that of the coconut is edible. Huron County. F,or p r e s i d e n t - - A l f r e d M. Landon (R) 5140; Franklin D. Roose, volt (D) 3949; Win. Lemke (T) 1952. G o v e r n o r ~ F r a n k D. Fitzgerald (R) 6644; F r a n k M u r p h y (D) 3853. Lieut. g o v e r n o r L u r e n D. Dickinson (R) 6320; Leo J. Nowicki (D) 3663. S e c r e t a r y of .state--Orville E. A t w o o d (R) 6446; Leon D. Case (D) 3377. Early Recreations A t t o r n e y general - - David H. , According to a diary of Fanny Crowley (R) 6259; Raymond W. I Shippen, a Revolutionary child, the S t a r r (D) 3416. S t a t e t r e a s u r e r - - Howard M. ~ principal recreations of that day W a r n e r (R) 6115; Theodore I. F r y l were concerts, balls, assemblies, (D) 3663. [ cards, teas, whist, music (singing, A u d i t o r g e n e r a l - - J o h n J. 0 ' H a r a [ PlaYing the harp, viol, guitar), par(R) 6209; Geo. T. Gundry (D) ties, piayi,ng chess and Metghing. 3445. J u s t i c e of s u p r e m e c o u r t - - H a r r y The International Boundary S. Toy (R) 6301; Bert D. ChandThe International boundary beler (D) 3435. tween the United States and CanU n i t e d States s e n a t o r - - W i l b e r ada pases practically through the M. B r u c k e r (R) 5570; Prentiss M. center of all of the Great Lakes B r o w n (D) 3402; Louis B. W a r d except Lake Michigan. It is on. (T) 1315. tirely within the United States. R e p r e s e n t a t i v e i n Congress, 7th D i s t r i c t - - J e s s e P. Wolcott (R) Sea Gulls First Dunkers 6513; A l b e r t A. W a g n e r (D) 3508. Although the "blue book of etiS t a t e senator, 20th D i s t . ~ S a m u e l H. P a n g b o r n ( R ) 6700; Clare quette" forbids the dunking of one's food, sea gulls disregard this social T. P u r d y (D) 3221. State representative - - IIoward ! grace and won't eat food until it N u g e n t (R) 6648; B u r r B. Lincoln i has been well soaked, according to an ornithologist and yachtsman. (D) 3344. . H e ard in the subway: " I ' m down to m y last dime and I see that five spot on the sidewalk. I beat two other guys to it an' shove it in m y pocket an' lain. It was a phony all righ~ but m y landlady don't go to the ~ank 'til I ' m in shape to m a k e good. so I don't get throwed outta my room." ~]) B e l l ] Syndieate.--YVNU Service. U--~ S. F a r m Is P r i c e d • at $ 2 , 5 5 6 P e r A c r e Washington. ~ The highestpriced f a r m land in ~ e United States is in the District of Columi bia, the census b u r e a u reveals. District of Columbia f a r m s - 89 of them, according to the bureau's f a r m cen s u s --are valued at $7,183,087 altogether, or $2,556.47 an acre° We Deliver 2 4 ~ lbs. 94e Food Market S . A . Striffler, Prop. Phones 211 and 27 Auction Sale O[ ll0rses A carload of Wyoming horses will be sold at the Vassar Stock Yards Monday, Nov. 9 Commencing at one o'clock, sharp We have 28 head, some mares and suckling colts, a few yearlings, coming 2 years, a few work horses. These horses are good, clean, healthy stock. If you farmers are in need of horses, be sure and look this lot over. Sale rain or shine. Terms, cash, A. L. G a t e w o o d , Manager WORTHY TAIT, Auctioneer f + P A G E SIX. RURAL SCHOOLS ] Winton School, Teacher, Miss Beatrice Martin. Our teacher is reading us Pilg r i m stories every morning for opening exercises. We like to listen to them. The percentage of attendance for the month of October was 97. 2~7~ had. ~.'. ~all~;ve~en par'<¢ and program F r i d a y afternoon. Quite a few of the parents came ,to our party. For refreshments we had apples, pope0rn and candy. We also had a peanut hunt. The pupils who were neither t a r d y nor absent during the month of Octobe~ were: Edith and Elizabeth Butler, Francis Clara, Lavina Evens, Wanda Karr, Lorine Muntz, Richard and Robert McDonald, Lewis Profit, Leo Russell and Ronald Vyse. We have a new beginner. His name is Donald Biddle. Those having A's and B's this month are: Lorine and Velma Muntz, Lewis Profit, Edith Butler, (all A's); Wanda Karr, Lewis Langenburg and Robert McDonald. Our teacher spent last week at her home in Cass City. C A S S CITY C H R O N I C L E - - F R I D A Y , F r i d a y afternoon we enjoyed a masquerade p a r t y f o r Hallowe'en. We then played m a n y interesting games, after which we had popcorn, apples and candy. M a n y of the grades are studying letter w r i t i n g for language. Many of our boys and girls attended the carnival Thursday and F r i d a y nights. The p r i m a r y grades colored pictures for art this week. 51h< :5~)arlins~" caiie,.i at o,:r school Tuesday a f t e r n o o n and gave us an interesting talk. M c H u g h School. Teacher, Rowena Smith. Repor.ters, Doris Darling and W a u n i t a Hoge. Some of the boys have been absent from school on account of the bean harvest. Those who have b e e n neither t a r d y nor absent this year are: June Coulter, Dorothy Miller, Jim- m y Miller, Helen and Shirley Hillman, Ellen and H u g h Mitchell, Doris Darling: and Angola Burr. We are planning to have a school f a i r and a p r o g r a m at our school on Thursday evening, Nov. 5. The p r o g r a m will commence at eigh~ o'clock. Everybody is welcome. The boys and girls have been m a k i n g things .to selI at the fair. T h e y w a n t to earn some money to Rescue School. Teacher, Catherine MacLachlan. Reporter, Lawrence Summers. W e had a Hallowe'en p a r t y on F r i d a y . Our schoolroom was deco:rated with witches, c a t s , and owls. E v e r y o n e had a v e r y nice time. Miss Gertrude P u t m a n visited ,our school last week. Mr. Sparling called on us Tues,day morning and gave a short talk. F i f t h , sixth, seventh and eighth g r a d e s are m a k i n g history notebooks. Those receiving full month certificates for October are: Theodore Ashmore, Sylvia Fay, Elda, Roland and William Hartsell, Clarence Kilpatrick. Those receiving A's and B's this month are: John Ashmore, Harold Cummins, Elda, Roland and William Hartsell, Clarence Kilpatriek, Elinore Longuski, Isabel and Marie Martin, Lawrence Summers and Arvilla Webster. Sharrard Sch(mi. Teacher, Miss Agnes MacLach1an. Reporters, Eva Kipfer and Marie Rolph. Marie Rolph, Lloyd Wolfe and Edward King received a spelling certificate this week. Our visitors for this week were John Stockle and Clyde Deller. The first, second and third graders made health charts for hygiene. Some were v e r y good. Those having 100 in spelling f o r the week were Onnallee Rolph, I r a D e l l Stockle, John Cooley, Edward King, Albertus Kipfer, Genevieve -a ,~ • , ] Nnaure, ALeen KJrby, Josephine Zaleski, Eva Kipfer, Fred Cooley and Edward Wiechert. .. Cass City, M i c h i g a n . ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward East- Destination." Miss A n n a Young gave special music. E v e l y n Green Esther Everett of Care spent and Grace M a r s h a l l gave reports o f Sunday with her parents, Mr. and County F e d e r a t i o n of Clubs' m e e t ing at Vassar. Mrs. V. Everett. Over $200 were taken in at t h e senior fair and carnival F r i d a y and Saturday evenings. Mrs. E m m a Hitcheock.of W a h j a mega and daughter, Lois, of Care spent Saturday n i g h t with Mrs. T. Lounsbury is numbered w i t h Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Livingston entertained the following at a chicken supper Saturday evening: Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Livingston and son, Clarence, of Care, Misses Audrey and Pauline Livingston of B a y City, Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Livingston and son, Lewis, and A r t h u r Livingston. held its a n n u a l Hallowe'en p a r t y October 31. A large crowd attended and a good time was had. Cider and doughnuts were served. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wills took f i r s t prize in t h e i r Hallowe'en costumes and Mr. and Mrs. R. Chroan, second prize. A Home Extension club was organized at Mrs. E. Hendricks on October 27. Mrs. James Nic%ol is chairman and Mrs. R. S~encer and ~4rz. ):! ~ o b i n s o n are leaders. ~/-e H u n t i n g pheasants and election hope the ladies of Greenleaf will be are over and are we glad! interested in t h i s pro~eet. Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis and Restored Righes to D e s e r t e r s sons of Bad Axe visited Mrs. Louise Lewis Sunday. President Coolidge issued a pracBorn to Mr. and Mrs. R. Fox, a tamation restoring civil rigY~ts to ~eserters between November 11. 9½ pound son, October 26. Fred Swarthout, Jr., was aeei- 1918, and July 2, 1921, but it did dentally shot in ,the foot, n e a r l y not remove any charges of desertion, mitigate any punishments or taking off one toe. Iremlt any sentences. The Circle 3 met at R. Spencer's I Tuesday night. The Holbrook Community club Advertise it in the Chronicle. Elkland and Elmwood Town]ine. uKfm, vv ~:"~ li&bll ""': ....... ~ 1 .i.1. be organized SOOli. --'~'~ Mrs. Mary H y a t t of Wilmot In art this week, we made post- spent F r i d a y and Saturday with ers to advertise our fair. her sister, Mrs. Carrie Everett. The eighth grade history class Mrs. Alex Marshall was guest had a test Friday. speaker at Care Garden club l a s t Tuesday. The Woman's Study club met on Tuesday evening with .their president, Mrs. Rhea Henderson, east Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Froede and and south of town. Roll call was f a m i l y of Pontiac visited relatives answered by giving: " W h a t I Read here Sunday. F i r s t i n the Newspaper.,' Mac Roberta E a s t m a n of Detroit Hotmes gave a v e r y interesting spent the week-end with her par- book review on "Heaven Is My HOLBROOK. Mrs. E l m e r Bearss and Mrs. Lloyd Reagh spent F r i d a y in Care. Mrs. E. A. Livingston is c a r i n g for Mrs. A u d l e y Rawson. Mrs. M a r y Daus of I n l a y City came Monday to attend the funeral of Mrs. H a n n a h MeKim. The pupils of Bingham school had a Hallowe'en p r o g r a m Thursday and the teacher treated them all to marshmallows. Mr. and Mrs. Orville K a r r and daughter, Jane, spent Sunday a t the W. M. Simmons home. KINGSTON. 2 : W r i g h t School. Teacher, Helen Fournier. Reporters, George Chapel, John and Eleanor Voss. We had our masquerade p a r t y at school Friday, Oct. 30. A good time was had by all. Besides our games and contests, we had a n amateur program. Those having 100 in spelling l a s t week were: Lyle Holik,~ John Voss, Eleanor Voss and George Chapel. W e received our report cards last week and were pleased w i t h our improvements. F o r morning exercises, Miss Fournier is reading 'Junior and Mr. Germ." The sixth and seventh graders have made a physical map of the United States. W e are now enjoying working in our sand table v e r y much. 6, 1936. m a i l , ~ Greenwood Schook Teacher, Mildred Everett. T h e seventh and eighth grades received their United States history workbooks this week. F o r art, this week we made Hallowe'en ~masks and hats. We pasted Hallowe'en pictures on our hats. The lower grades made a wigwam. W e had a Hallowe'en party on F r i d a y afternoon. We had .to go through a pile of leaves in the entry. We made the entry dark. The Jolly Sunshine 4-H club met Tuesday afternoon. A f t e r the business meeting, everyone enjoyed a treasure hunt. Reporters, James Burrows and Gilbert Horak. Fox Scho(fl. Teacher, Jason Kitchin. Mr. Griffin has completed t h e school yard fence. It is well built and adds to the appearance of the school grounds. Posts are painted in the club colors, w h i t e and green. The boys' tools have arrived and are neatly a r r a n g e d above the work bench. Mr. Kitchia made vises for the bench and the boys have started work on their f i r s t exercise, a piece of squared ~tock. Mr. and Mrs. Kitchin, Mrs. Pringle and Mrs. Chard attended the leaders' meeting at Sandusky on Thursday night. The girls' sewing class will hold their first meeting at Mrs. Chard's home Thursday afternoon. The primer class of six have finished Part I in their primer. We are sorry to lose the Clark family, Leonard, Bernice and Floyd. They are moving .tO a farm in Custer township. Reporters, Iris Heronemus and Ruth Philpot. NOVEMBER u i J i d m "n 7 [i "98 1 1 ON DISPLAY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 NEW H~GH-COMPRESS~ON VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES ~ (With D0uble-ArticulatedBrakeShoe Linkage) l~ecognized everywhere as the safest, smoothest, most dependable brakes ever Built. 1YIueh more powerful, much more spirited, mad the thrift king of its price class. |MPROVED GL-JDING KNEE-ACTION RiDE *~ HEWALLoSILENT, ALL-STEEL BOD|ES (Wlth UNISTEEL Turret Top ConstructJon) (at no extra,cast) Proved by more than two~million~ Knee.Actlon, users to be the world% safest;, smQo~hes~ ~ide,. Wider, t e e n i e r , more luxurious, and t h e f i r s t allsteel bodies combining silence with safety. I t ' s the newest of all low-priced c a r s . . , new in, every feature fitting and f a b r i c . . , also the m o s t thoroughly safe, the m o s t thoroughly proved, 191iiiiii!iNi iiiiiiiiii Nii!!?ii ;iiii i i the m o s t thoroughly dependable. iii!!!i!!!iiiiiiiliy,iiii; ,i ii;ii ,iii!ili' iiiiii NiiiiiSATURDAY, ' November 7, Chevrolet will present the brilliant successor to '!'iiiiiiiiiiiiii i? iiiiiiiiliiiii = ' i; iii}iiiiiiiiiiiitheiiiiionly' complete low.priced car--Chevrolet NEW DIAMOND CROWN SPEEDLINE STYLING Making this new 1937 Chevrolet the smartest and most distinctive of all low-prlced ears. for 1937, the complete car--completely new. You'll want to see it, for it reveals an even greater measure of superiority 'over its ..... field than the fine car which in 1936 set a new all-time high in Chevrolet sales. Chevrolet for 1937 is new all through... new in the unequaled beauty of its Diamond •Crown Speedline Styling . . . new in the unmatched comfort and safety of its AllSilent, All-Steel Body, now available for the first time on any low-priced c a r . . , and most excitingly new in the greatly increased power and acceleration of its High-Corn: pression Valve-in-Head Engine. Then, too, this thrilling motor ca~ is proved all through. It embodies all the extra-value features which have made Chevrolet de. pendable and complete beyond any other car in its price range. Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer. See and drive the complete car--completely new. Let your own good judgment tell you that this new Chevrolet for 1937 is the outstanding value of this new m e , or year! CHEVROLET MOTOR COMIPAI~ ~T:~O~T, l SAFETY PLATE GLASS ALL AROUND (a~ no extra~s0 The finest quality, clearest-v:Mon safety plate glass, included as standard eqtfipment. ]N[ICI~ ALL THESE FEATURES AT CHEVROLET'S LOW PRICES GENUINE NSHER NO DRAFT VI:NTILAY|ON Eliminating drafts, smoke, windshield clouding-- promoting health, comfort, safety. *Knee-Action and Shockproof Steering on Master De Luxe models only. General Motors Installment Plan--monthly payments to suit y o u r purse. FOR ECONOMICALTRANSP6RTATION & GENERAL MOTORS VALUI~ SUPER-SAFE SHOCKPROOF STEERING* (at no extracost) Steering so h u e and vibrat i o n l e s s t h a t d r i v i n g is almost effortless. BARKLEY MOTOR SALES, Cass C,ity Comment Chevrolet Sales, Associate Dealer, Gagetown Cass City, Michigan. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936. Lights in Yards Hit Farm Thieves AREN'T WE ALL? PAGE SEVEN. ROBOT PILOT WILL L A N D P L A N E IN F O G Desire for better l i g h t i n g in the f a r m home and o,ther f a r m buildings is t h e principle motive which actuates f a r m e r s to secure electric service. This better lighting however is too often confined to the interior of the buildings only. On many of the so-called electrified farms the kerosene lan.tern still serves as the only source of ]igh~ in the yard. Yard lighting is desirable on every farm, says D. G. Ebinger, of the agricultural engineering department at Michigan State college. L i g h t m a k e s it possible to do f a r m chores a f t e r dark with ease, in less t i m e and with g r e a t e r safety to t h e worker. It s o m e t i m e s becomes necessary to guard a g a i n s t thieves and other n i g h t prowlers. Properly located yard light helps serve ,this purpose. The cost of these lights is often paid back several times by a noticeable decrease in theft. W h e r e v e r t h e y are installed t h e y should flood the barnyard with light. "The proper number and location of y a r d lights will depend largely on the f a r m layout," E b i n g e r ~,uggests. "They should be placed as h i g h as is practical and may be New Development Takes th Rizk Out of Flying. Chicago.--Radio and aeronautical instrument engineers have perfected a robot which not only stabilizes airplanes while they are in flight but lands them without the aid of gone ~y means of a curved radio "glide path" beam which guides the planes in safe and precise descents regardless of clouds or fog. This was announced here by J. R. Cunningham, superintendent of communications for United Air Lines. Experiments to produce such a mechanism have been conducted for more than six years at Oakland (Calif.) airport, the transport company's western base field, he said, but success came only a few months ago. Since then t h e r e liability of the gyro-pilot, operate~ automatically by the radio beams, has been proved in thousands of test landings. When the robot mechanism Is operating the Boeing 247D airplane in which it is installed, the human pilot takes both his hands and feet off the aileron and rudder controls. He th~rottles back the engines until the ship is flying 85 miles an hour. The robot device then does the rest, guiding the plane along the bent radio beam until the ship's landing mounted either on a pole or on the Mr. and Mrs. K e n n e t h Pike of L. D. MacRAE, M. D. side of the house or barn and F a i r g r o v e were Sunday guests of wheels touch the ground. The human pilot then closes the No office hours on Tuesday and should be fitted with a shallow Mr. and Mrs. Frank Southworth. throttle and applies the brakes. T h u r s d a y evenings except by ap- dome or angle type reflector to obMr. and Mrs. Harold Hendricks Even on the ground the ropointment. tain the most satisfactory illumi- of Wickware were Sunday guests bot handles the ailerons and rud~' Gagetown. Phone 8. nation. Lamps of 150 to 200 watts at the O. A. Hendrick home. der, keeping the plane rolling in a are recommended. The yard lights Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Evans and B. H. ST.ARMANN, M. D. should be controlled by ,three point Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tucker, all s t r a i g h t line, and raising the "flippers" to prevent the ship from nosor four point ,switches. One of of Auburn P h y s i c i a n and Surgemx Heights, spent the ing over as the brakes take hold. these switches m a y be located at week-end as gues.ts of the ladies' All the hazardous part of the landOffice hours, 10:00 to 12:00 a. m. 2:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m, the rear door of the house and the parents~ Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hending is accomplished thus by the roothers at the g~arage, barn, poultry ricks. Telephone 189-F-2. bot. As a safeguard, however, house or wherever needed. Mr. and Mrs. i r a Biack and Mr. against failure of the device, inI. D. McCOY, M. D. "Some farmers are now using, and Mrs. Ralph Rayl w e r e Sunday struments are provided to detect and others are contemplating: the guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. HendH. T. D O N A H U E , M. D. such failure and to warn the huinstallation of burglar alarm sys- rick, S u r g e r y and Roentgenology. man pilot to take back the controls. tems. It is possible and practical Mr. and Mrs, E r n e s t Beardsley Office in Pleasant Home Hospital. to have the circuits ,so arranged and family and Mildred Young Phone, Office 96; Residence 47. F i n g e r p r i n t s IdentKy that when the alarm is given by visited in Lapeer Sunday. the opening" of protected doors or The Elmwood Missionary society 536 Dead in 9 Months MORRIS HOSPITAL. windows, the yards at the same meets today (Friday) at the home Washington.--Many persons are F. L. MORRIS, M. D. time will be automatically flooded of Mrs. G. T. Leishman. buried in potter's fields because Office hours, 1-4 and 7-9 p. m. with light." The Cedar Run .school fair of their fingerprints were not filed with Inquiries regarding the installa- last Thursday n i g h t was declared Phone 62-F-2. the government, the Department of tion of yard lights either separate~ a successful event With an attendDENTISTRY. ly or in combination with a burglar ante of 75. E v e r y b o d y was weli Justice reports: From May 1, 1935, to February 1, I. A. FRITZ, Resident Dentist. alarm system, should be sent to pleased. 1936, fingerprints of 2,030 deceased Office over Bul;ke's D r u g Store. the Agricultural E n g i n e e r i n g Detoersons, whose identities were unWe solicit your p a t r o n a g e when partment, Michigan State College, known or in. doubt, were received an need of work. East Lansing. by the bureau of investigation, Department of Justice, police agencies P. A. SCHENCK, D~ D. S. Mrs, A r t h u r Taylor and Mrs. and coroners' offices in ever:¢ part Dentist. Henry }tartsell still continue very of the country. Of these, identificaGraduate of the University of ill tion of 536 was definitely estabMictiigan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., Miss Doris Wilson spent the Edwin LAnce of Kinde was a visi- lished and the addresses and names Cuss City, Mich. week-end with her sister, Miss tor Sunday at the h o m e of his sis- of relatives were furnished. Madlyn Wilson, of Nlmwood. The fingerprint contributors of A. McPHAIL. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton V a d e r ~'er, Mrs. Ralph Britt. Mrs. DeEtte J. Mellendorf and 729 cases of the 2,030 prints were! have moved int~ ~che J o h n Peddiu F U N E R A L DIRECTOR. without information of any kind! sons, Norris and Perry, were b a ~ house. Lady Assistant. relative to the identities of the d e ness callers in Elkton and Bad Axe Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bear&sl'ey ~ o n e No. 182. Cass City. ceased persons, whereas the identity of Oxford spen~ Sunday at the Wil- Monday. E. W. DOUGLAS. liam Burse homu. The Ladies' Aid served ~d~im~er of the other 1,301 had been tenMr. and Mrs. J d h n Gray spent and supper on election 'day at the tatively established. A comparison ~ u n e r a l Director. of the 2,030 sets of fingerprints with Lady assistant. Ambulance ser- Sunday wi~h H r s . E t h e l Rambo of John MacCallum home. more than 5,600,000 on record in the Marlette. wdce. Phone 188-F-3. A number of r e l a t i v e s a n d neighMr. and ~r~m R o b e r t Spaven re- bors helped }¢Irs. J o h n CDombs cele- identification division's files proturned :~onday n i g h t f r o m a three brate her 80th b i r t h d a y on Thurs- vided positive identification of 173 (CLARENCE CHADWICK weeks' visit @ith their daughter, day, October 29. A lovely birth- of the first group and 368 of the Deford, Michigan second. Mrs. T. D. L'e~dh, Of Saginaw. W e l l Drilling and Contractor day supper was e n j o y e d to all One typical case, in which refer~l-dnch to 16-inc]~ wells present and wished ]~er m a n y more ence to the bureau's identification birthdays. facilities identified the dead person, Mr. and ~ffrs. M a r v i n Quant and occurred on December 24, 1935. An mother, Mrs. Anr/ie "Quant, of P o r t unidentified man was killed by a Huron were c d I I i ~ on old friends train near Oakland, Calif. Finger!Naturopathic Physician Order ~or ~ n ~ I i e a f i o m - - F i n a l Ad- around here Sunday. prints were forwarded to the Demirfistration A c c o u n t . - - S t a t e o f CHIROPRACTOR Mr. and -~rs. J e s s P u t m a n and partment of Justice by the coroner's M~c/h'igan, ~he 'l~db~te Court for family were 'in Owendale Saturday office there. The department, after Established in the Practice the <O~n~y :.~ ~Tusc01a. evening~ a search through its files, disclosed At a session o f s a i d court, held of Natural Healing Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hartsell that the dead man had a record of at t h e Probate Office in the VilSince 1913 lag.e of Caro, ] n 'said County, on and son, Orville, w e r e in Owendale four arrests. the 17th day o f October, A. D. Wednesday everiing. S p e c i a l i z i n g in All F o r m s of 1036. On Sunday, O c t o b e r 25, a num- Find E m b a l m i n g Secret Chronic and N e r v o u s Diseases, ~ e s e n t : Hon. H. W a l t e r Cooper, ber of relatives helped Mr. and J u d g e of Prdbate. and Rupture of Ancient Egyptians Mrs. Ostrum S u m m e r s celebrate I n the m a t t e r of the Jerusalem.--Claiming to have distheir s h y e r w e d d i n g anniversary. Estahe ~of M a l o n E. Fordyee, CONSULTATION FREE They received a lovely set of silver- covered the secret of the embalmDeceased. Phone 232 ing process known to the E g y ~ ~Sadie IM. !Fordyce, having filed tians of old, M. Zev Nieman, eighty 5 - 7 McNair Block - - Caro, Mich. in sgid c o u ~ her final adminis,trayears old, of Zichron Jacob, has tion account, and her petition prayR E S O L U T I O N S OF R E S P E C T . announced the successful results of ing for t h e allowance thereof and Member: American Naturoexperiments in mummifying a rabfor t h e assignment and distribupathic Association Vlo~ ~olf:~ke r e s i d u e of said estate, "Our lives :are rivers, guiding bit, a fish, dove and other creatures. Niember: Michigan State. Chiro- to the :persons entitled thereto, through According to Nieman, a certain It is ordered, t h a t the 16th day lTo t h a t unfathomed, boundless sea herb found only in P,q!estine was practic Society, Inc. of N or~aqJ~er, A . D. 1936, at ten I The ~ilent tomb." used by the Egyptians in their i o'clock -'in the forenoon, at said [ embalming process. The herb was probate office, be and is hereby I In memm~.y ~of ~B~ther J a c o b D. imported from the Holy Land. I a p p o i n t e d f o r :examining. and al- Maxwell, w l ~ ~died Oct. 29, 1936. Nieman said that after a visit "Leaves have t h e i r t i m e to fall, lowing sm'd account and hearing and flowers ~co Wither a t the north to Luxor and Assure, where he said petJ~ion; It is flxrfNer ,:ordered, t h a t p u b - w i n d s cold :blast, but thou, oh studied the well-preserved mumlic notice thereof be given by publi- I Death! h a t h M1 :seasons for thine mies, he experimented for many cation of a copy of this order, for i own." years with this process. three succ.esgiv6 w e e k s p~evious to / Once again a B r o t h e r Mason, The rabbit he had thus preserved Do~'~ wait until snow said day of hear'ing, in the Cuss h a v i n g completed ~he designs writ- remained for many years without. City Chronicle, :a newspaper print- t e n for him oft life's t r e s t l e board, decaying. flies before you have ed and circulated ~n said county. I has passed throu, gh ~he portals of That the secret may not be lost, H. WALTER COOPER, Judge ,of E t e r n i t y and e n t e r e d t h e Grand your overcoat cleaned he said he was prepared to reveal Probate. Lodge of the New J e r u s a l e m and A t r u e copy. and pressed. Bring it has received as his reward, the it to a representative of the He] Almon C. Pierce, Re~ister of Pro- white stone with the n e w n a m e breve University of Jerusalem. in now and be ready for bate. 10-23-3 w r i t t e n thereon. A science master at the Pardest ] Secondary school was And Whereas, the all-wise and Hannah cold weather. Notice of Hearing Claims Before merciful Master of the universe asked to investigate. Court.--State of Michigan, the has called f r o m labor to refreshProbate Court for the Cottony of ments our beloved and respected 364-Foot R e d w o o d Wins Tuscola. brother. In the matter of the And whereas he h a v i n g been a Tit~e of '!Tallest T r e e " E s t a t e of Louis Krahling, !true and faithful b r o t h e r of our Sacramento, Calif.--After a surDeceased° b e l o v e d Order, therefore, be it vey of California's many redwood Notice is hereby given t h a t four i Resolved, That Tyler Lodge, No groves, officials of that state's divi!317, F. & A. M. of Cass City, I months from the 20th day of OctoGET UP N I G H T S ? ber, A. D. 1936, have been allowed Mich., in t e s t i m o n y of h e r loss, be sion of parks have given the title M A K E THIS 25c TEST. for creditors to present,their claims draped in m o u r n i n g for t h i r t y days, of "the tallest tree in the world" If irritated or weak bladder l against said deceased to ,said court and t h a t we tender to t h e family to a redwood in Dyerville Flat causes g e t t i n g up nights, frequent i for examination and adjustment, of our deceased b r o t h e r our sincere grove, 45 miles south of Eureka. desire, scanty flow, b u r n i n g or land t h a t all creditors of saia de- condolence in their d e e p affliction, The redwood towers 346 feet. It baehaehe, drink lots of boiled or ceased are required to present their and t h a t a copy of these resolutions is 47 feet in circumference and condistilled water. You know what claims to said court, at the probate be sent to the family. tains approximately 120,000 board h a r d w a t e r does to a teakettle. office, in the Village of Carp, in i Joseph E. Crawford, feet of lumber. Also help flush out excess ~cids, said county, on or before the 23rd' John Marshall, Another tree, even larger from w a s t e and deposits, w i t h little day of February, A. D. 1937, and H . F . Lenzner, the s.tandpoint of potential l u m b e r , g r e e n Bukets, a bladder laxative, that said claims will be heard by! Committee. Two of t h e 8 time-tested ingredi- said court on Tuesday, the 23rd "There is only a curtain between is in Bull Ci}eek Flat grove. This ents are buchu leaves and juniper lday of February, A. D. 1937, at us, tree is 72 feet in circumference at oil. If you are not pleased in four ten o'clock in the forenoon. ~Between the beyond and the here; the ground, is 345 feet high and'l days, your druggist will refund Dated October 20, A. D. 1936. They w h o m t h e y call dead have would make approximately 154,000 your 25c. L. I. Wood & Co.--AdH. WALTER COOPER, Judge of not left us, board feet measure of lumber. v e ~ o ~ , ~ , + ]3!64. r~.^ ................ ~ .u--~v. i0-30-3 Nay-, they were never so near." l Directory. i RESCUE. CEDAR RUN. south On account of the sale of the Brooker Ranch, one mile o f Cass City, we are forced to sell the following property, on Thursday, Nov. 12 at one o'clock HORSES Roan Durham bull, 10 months old Sorrel colt, coming 3. Weight 1400 2-yr.-old Red Durham heifer, freshen soon Roan colt, coming 3 years, weight 1400 2-year-old Roan Durham heifer, freshen Bay mare, 7 years, weight 1600 sport Team of roan mare colts, weight 2200, coming 2 years, well matched CATTLE 3 Hereford steers, 2 years 4 Durham steers, 2 years 2 Durham heifers, 2 years Durham cow, 6 years, pasture bred 2 Hereford heifers, 2 years Durham cow, 7 years, pasture bred 8 Hereford steers, coming I year Durham cow, 8 years, due Nov. 25 8 Black Angus yearlings Red Durham cow, 6 years, due Dee. 20 35 Durham yearlings Red Durham cow, 7 years, pasture bred 10 last spring Durham calves Red Durham cow, 6 years, pasture bred 110 Barred Rock pullets Red Durham cow, 4 years, not bred 15 tons of mixed hay Blue Durham cow, 6 years, milking 200 feet hay rope, new, and pulHes TERMS--All sums of $10 and under, cash; over that amount, 11 months' time o n good approved, endorsed notes bearing 7% interest. McLellan and Hartt, Owners Thos. Stahlbaum, Auctioneer Cass City State Bank Clerk i Dr. John H. Reisdorf 3 Q aim IIC lO On account of poor health, I will sell the following personal property at auction, 3 miles west and 3½ miles south of Cass City, or 2 miles west and 2½ miles north of Deford, on Frid ay, Nov. 13 at one o'clock w a r e . Warning! . Rob]nson's Laundry and Dry C]eaning t 7: -- ~ " " " HORSES Black Percheron horsel 7 years old, weight 1600 B~y horse, 8 years old, weight 1600 Grade Jersey heifer, 1 year old Holstein heifer, 3 months old Purebred heifer, 21~ months old CATTLE MACHINERY Registered Jersey cow, 8 yrs. old, milking Purebred Jersey cow, 5 years old, due December 27 Jersey cow, 4 years old, fresh Purebred cow, 2 y e a r s old, milking Purebred cow, 2 years old, milking Jersey cow, 2 years old, milking Grade Jersey cow, 8 years old, calf by side Black Jersey cow, 2 years old, calf by side Purebred Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, milking Purebred heifer, 2 years old, due April 3 0 Jersey heifer, 2 years old, due Nay 3 Jersey heifer, 2 years old, due Nay 3 Purebred bull, 2 ~ years old Purebred heifer, 1 year old Black Jersey heifer, I year old McCormick-Deering grain binder Deering corn binder, good as new McCormick mower John Deere hay loader Dump rake McCormick-Deering spreader McCormick-Deering 3-section drags Spike tooth drags Miller bean puller Cultipacker Wagon and flat rack Oliver plow, No. 99 McCormick gas engine 15-ump jack Rope slings Horse collars Double harness Four I0-gallon milk cans ]Y/ilk strainer Jewelry wagon TERMS--All sums of $10 and under, cash; over that amount, 10 months' time ~n good approved, endorsed notes bearing 7% interest. i Casper Whalem J Worthy Tait, Auctioneer Pinney State Bank, Clerk PAGE Cass City, Michigan. ? £]OU. C A S S CITY C H R O N I C L E - - FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, .1.~a-o EIGHT. = $ CASS CITY U N D E F E A T E D IN THUMB LEAGUE championship---if, and ,this is b y f a r the biggest "if," the Maroon and Grey have yet faced, they can defeat Bad Axe next Friday. The Concluded f r o m f i r s t t~age. • r u n n i n g of Phil D o e r r had Will'ard odds ~will all be in their favor, as the .Harbor Beach .squad who will Davidson. The locals have two games left be met here on Thanksgiving day between t h e m and another Thumb is not rated as strong: as Bad Axe, Naturopathic P h y s i c i a n CHIROPRACTOR E s t a b l i s h e d in t h e P r a c t i c e of N a t u r a l H e a l i n g Since 1913 Specializing i~ All F o r m s of Chronic and N'ervous Diseases 5-7 McNair Block -- Caro, Mich. Member: A m e r i c a n Naturopathic Association Member: Michigan State Chiropractic Society, Inc. HEALTH through CNIROPRACTIC B y a s y s t e m e n t i r e l y d i f f e r e n t f r o m all other methods C h i r o p r a c t i c t r e a t s t h e c a u s e of d i s e a s e a n d gives y o u a n e w g r i p o n life. No m a t t e r w h a t your ailment m a y be don't be discouraged but t r y C H I R O P R A C T I C . I will be g l a d to discuss y o u r condition with you in relation to Chiropractic with no obligation to you whatsoever. Call at my office or write today for my leaflet explaining in g r e a t e r detail the principles of Chiropractic. DR. W. W. GRIFFIN~Chir~pract~r 151 Wo Lincoln St. Caro, Mich. _ ..-. *E i:i: i:i: o.., ..% ..-o -X %., ilii AKEYOI.RCHRISTNAS gIFTA PHOTOGI PH.... ..'.: :~i~ l tion for the preaching mission on OF GLEANERS I Thursday evening at the Pres byD I E D T H U R S D A Y terian church. Concluded from ~rst page. :i:! %-, Oo% i:i: :!:! .-.- • HEAD P h o n e 370 •:::: although t h e y will be no set up. l Tuscola Breeder Bad Axe will be played at Bad] Axe, and if the field should be wet, / to S h o w at C h i c a g o the chances for a Cass City victory / would be lowered as they will be I P r e s b y t e r i a n C h u r c h - - P a u l J. AlFourteen members of ,the Michioutweighed decisively by the B a d ' lured, Minister. Armistice Sunday, gan D r a f t Horse Breeders' associaAxe squad. Nov. 8 : tion from 12 counties listed entries This is the outstanding contest Morning worship and church left in the Thumb and both sides school, 10:30 to 12:30. Sermon: l today for t h e Belgian and Percheron competitions which they are will be out for blood. "Mars or Christ." ' entering as a group exhibit in the Guild class, Study VII: "Isaiah." 1936 International Live S t o c k ExMRS. ~ c K I M D I E D Adult class, "The Christian W a r - i position, November 28 to December O:C v : ~ TO ~h,_.~C~.:~ Christian Endeavor, 6:00. ~ Those who have entered Belgian Concluded from f i r s t page. Church n i g h t , Thursday, 7:30. horses are W. K. Bkistol, LapPer The log house was finally re- p r e p a r a t o r y service for the eight- county; Minard Diver, Lenawee placed by a f r a m e building and lat- day preaching mission which be- county,; Leon Longnecker, Livinger with a brick house, but because gins Sunday, Nov. 15. ston county; MarshM1 CampbelI of ill health, Mr. McKim found it and Raymond Simpson, St. Clair Mennor~ite C h u r c h ~ S p e c i a l evannecessary to leave the f a r m and in county; Milo F. Anson, Shiawassee 1912 they bought the place j u s t gelistic m e e t i n g s are still in prog- county; and Robert L. Robinson, outside the city limits, on South ress in the Riverside chureh w i t h Tuscola county. Seeger street, where Mr. McKim M. J. B u r g a s of Yale as evangePercherons will be exhibited b y list. Your attendance will be ap- Geisler Brothers, of Berrien coundied F e b r u a r y 14, 1914. A niece, Mrs. J a m e s R. Hurley, preciated. ty; Orville Conway and J a m e s E. Riverside C h u r c h - - P r e a c h i n g .at Davidson, of Gratiot county; Leo (Hester McKim) made her home 10:00 a . m . Sunday School, 11:00 With Mr. and Mrs. McKim from the Brownell, I n g h a m county; A. W. time she was a .small child until a . m . Jackson, Ionia county; F r a n k RichMizpah C h u r c h - - S u n d a y School, she grew to womanhood. ardson, Jackson county; and Helen Although Mrs. McKim had no 10:30 a . m . Preaching, 11:30 a. m. Woodworth of Eaton county. B. Douglass, Pastor. children of her own, she, with a distinct mother love, expressed h e r E v a n g e l i c a l C h u r c h ~ G . A. Spitdevotion in the care to those of h e r M A R R I A G E LICENSES. ler, Minister. kin, and not only to relatives, b u t 10:00, church school. Peace Sunto all children. Mrs. McKim's home Shurley McIntyre, 21, V a s s a r ; was a rendezvous for the children day. The topic for young people Helen Datum, 21, Reese. and adults, "The Gospel F a c i n g of the neighborhood and she will Arold E. Poet, 21, Silverwood; the Forces of Evil." be greatly missed by all. 11:00, worship service. Thank- Beatrice M. Green, 16, Kingston. She was a f a i t h f u l ad willing Grant Lee, 22, Vassar; Opal Doboffering service by the W. M. S. worker in the Baptist church and Mrs. W. F. Boettcher ,of Caro is son, 18, Vassar. was on her w a y there when she H a r l e y Foster, 21, Mayville; the special speaker. slipped a w a y to her reward. 6:45, C h r i s t i a n Endeavor. Topic Irene W r i g h t , 17, Mayville. Funeral services were held on for d i s c d s s i o n ~ " A s a Christian I t Monday afternoon in the B a p t i s t Renounce W a r . " Leader, Floyd Hil- l Livestock Sale. church. Rev. L. A. Kennedy, pasler. The I n t e r m e d i a t e s will meet I Michigan's largest, at Fenton all tor, officiated and burial was in in a s e p a r a t e group. Leader is day Tuesday, November 10.. 3,000 Elkland cemetery. provided. head horses, cattle, sheep, h o g s . ~ Mrs. McKim is survived by a E v e n i n g union Armistice service Advertisement. half-brother, Joe Morden, of P o r t at the P r e s b y t e r i a n church. See Huron as well as a number of their notice. nieces and nephews. Union p r a y e r service in prepara- i:i: .%. il!i cepting the superintendency of .the schools at Caro. Later he entered the newspaper business, being editor and one of the publishers of the Tuscola County Courier a t Caro. For several years, he served as secretary of the Gleaners and on the death of the president, G r a n t Slocum, he was elected head of t h a t insurance organization. He leaves his widow; a daughter, Doris; and a brother, H e r b e r t Holloway, of Ionia. Mrs. Holloway (Sarah Anderson) was the daughter of the !ate Rev. S. G. Anderson, at one time pastor of the Baptist church a t Cass City. <-: •:.: Someone you know . o o whether i:i: mother, sister/brother it is y o u r f a t h e r , or friend . . . someone you .:.: iiii ELKLAND. HolinessMeeting--The monthly 212 W E S T meeting of the Huron-Tuscola Counties Interdenominational Association for the Promoton of Holiness will be held on Friday, Nov. 13, in the Nazarene :church at Caro, w i t h services and speakers as follows: Annual business meeting and election of officers. 10:30 a. m., Roy. B. Douglass o f Cass City. 2:30 p. m., Roy. H. A. Cole of Decker. 7:30 p. m., Roy. Mrs. Steinberger of Mayville. Everyone invited. Basket lunch at noon. :!:i i:i: .-.- iiii . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' "'1 Our Christmas Special 75 ill M New er s S t u d i o Merchandise For November ., Selling ,~ ! Berman's AppareI Store LINCOLN CARO Where Treatments Are Different MINERAL VAPOR BATHS MASSAGE l PHYSICAL ELECTRIC , ADJUSTMENTS TREATMENTS, ETC. A. M e G I L P Methodist Epis,copal P a r i s h Charles Bayless, Minister. Sunday, Registered Drugless P h y s i c i a n Lady Attendant November 8: Cuss City Church--Class meet- Telepho~e No. 114 10:00, J o h n Mark, leader. Morning worship, 10:30, with vested chonr; .sermon, "Christ's W a y and the World's." Sunday School, 11:45, E r n e s t Beardsley, supt. Classes for every Thumb's Finest Theatre member of t h e family. Bring" the "See the Cream of Pictures" children r a t h e r t h a n send them. Union service, 7:45 p. m., at the Fri. - Sat. Nov. 6 - 7 P r e s b y t e r i a n church. $90 Cas~h Nite Friday Bethel C h u r c h ~ S u n d a y School, D e L u x e Double Bill 11:00, H e r b e r t Maharg, supt. A Zane Grey presents another friendly welcome always• great Story of the old W e s t ! Morning worship, 12:00 (noon), with story for children and sermon " D e s e r t Gold" for all. starring Laxry " B u s t e r " Wednesday, Nov. 11 ~ UniOn Crabbe prayer circles, 10:30 a. m., anticiAn interesting: and exci£ing pating .the preaching mission. story of the final s t r u g g l e s Thursday, the 12th - - United of the Indian to preserve the prayer meeting at Presbyterian last remnants of his empire! church, 7:30 p. m. and~ o The new~ youthful s i n g i n g hit o~ the screen! Cass City Nazarene Church Sunday services, Nov. 8: BOBBY B R E E N in 10:30, Sunday School. "Let's S i n g 11:30, m o r n i n g worship. 7:30, evening worship. Studies Again" in the Revelation. with Henry A r m e t t a P r a y e r m e e t i n g Tuesday eveH e a r this boy's sensational ning a t 7:30 a t the home of the voice. pastor. Sun. - Mon. Nov. 8 - 9 Union p r a y e r meetHng T h u r s d a y Superb Double Bill evening, N o v . 12, at 7:30 at the P r e s b y t e r i a n church. The great new h u m a n d r a m a Bey. Libbie Supernois, Pastor. that is stirring the nation--pr e se nti ng the Aces of BoThood S t a r s - Uni(m P r a y e r Circles~Scheduled Freddie Bartholomew, Jackie for Nov. l l - - T h r e e prayer groups Cooper and Mickey Rooney will meet in various places in the village next Wednesday morning, " T h e D e v i l Is a at 10:30, in preparation for the E i g h t D a y P r e a c h i n g Mission. Sissy" Places and leaders will be anfrom the city jungles . . . nounced in t h e churches next Sunwhere it takes courage to day morning. All who will share live . . . courage to hate . . . and courage to love! in this m a t t e r are asked to plan now to a t t e n d the nearest group, and - See the trials and tribulaeast end, w e s t end or north side. tions of these two with their The m e e t i n g s will be confined to n~atrimanial p r o b l e m s - one-half hour or less. Jonah Bennett and Cary Grant in Make No Discoveries Wesley C h a r t e r and George Abel spe~t the week-end at the home of else y o u c a n give. the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Charter. Miss R e t t a Char;= :::: ter took them back to L a n s i n g on .:.: :::: Sunday afternoon. :i:! John Marshall and Miss Mabel .:.: o... McKee of L a n s i n g spent several .... !iii :.:. days this week at the Marshall °. oo% :::: home. Six P h o t ~ in folders and $3 .... Mrs. E. A. Livingston is caring one 8x10 colored picture for ................ * %-. :::: for Mrs. Audley Rawson, who h a s been ill for some time. !:!: .. Mr. and Mrs. John Profit of !ii~ " ~ " :i:! Orion have been spending a few days in the vicinity with ~'elatives and calling on friends. Mr. and Mrs. H e r m a n C h a r t e r and family w e r e Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Doerr in Cass City. Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y Hool and son, Jackie, were Sunday dinner guests of M r . and Mrs, William Profit. Mrs. Andrew W r i g h t of Hi],tman is visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs. Claude Root. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Helwig A m a r k e t trip to Chicago last week brings a new collecwere Sunday afternoon visitors a t tion of Coats, Dresses and Millinery for November Selling. the David Murphy home. Mr. and Mrs. S. Sabourne of PonCOATS ! tiac were Sunday dinner guests a t the Claude Root home. Mr. and New f~ze trimmed coats in our super-value group repreMrs. Root accompanied them to sents t h e bes.t buy. of the season. All wool Ripple Suede Capac in the afternoon where t h e y materials, durable linings and w a r m interlinings. All sizes visited at the home of Mr. and 14 to 48. Mrs. Fred F r o s t until Tuesday. An Unusually Smart New Collection of Miss W i n n i f r e d Murphy i s a Coats at $25.00 ! patient a t P l e a s a n t Home hospital. She underwent an operatioin there T r i m m e d with selected f u r s of Kit Fox, Skunk, Caracul, Wednesday mornnig. Fitch and Marmot. All sizes 14 to 52. Kenneth M a h a r g spent the weekSPORTS COATS e n d with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. of New Fleece materials of Plaid Backs, all .sizes 12 to 48. H, Maharg. Mr. and Mrs. M a h a r g Remarkable values a t $10.75 a n d $12.95. accompanied him to Mt. P l e a s a n t Sunday afternoon where he attends GIRLS' C O A T S , Central State Teachers' college. sizes 7 to 16, priced f r o m $5.95 to $12.95. Th Bethel Ladies' Aid will meet Who never walks save where he -~,: .... with Mrs. Joe Crawford Thursday, sees men's tracks, makes no discov. November 12. Dresses cries. S m a r t N e w Woolen Frocks in both Misses' and Womens' .sizes priced a t $5.95 and $7.95. Also a group in Misses' sizes CASS CITY MARKETS. o n l y a,t $4.95. New Silk Dresses in Misses', Women's and halfNovember 5, 1936. sizes, priced f r o m $4.95 to $7.95. Buying p r i c e - Wheat, No. 2, mixed, bushel .... $1•05 Sportswear ! Oats, bushel ............................... 40 ~0 YOU KnO~ New F l a n n e l Skirts a t $1.95. Twin Sweaters at $2.95. Rye, bushel .................................. 90 , ~E ANSW~~TO Beans, cwt ................................. 6.15 / f ~W M POE~A Millinery ! Light Red Kidney Beans, cwt. 6•50 Now showing new styles in Velvet. Turbans at $1.95. New Dark Red Kidney Beans, cwt. 7.59 Sparton Barley, cwt ................... 1.90 styles in F e l t Ida ts at $1,45 and $1.95. Malting Barley, cwt ................. 2.45 Buckwheat, cwt ......................... 1.50 ° Clothing Department ! Shelled Corn, bushel .................. 95 Overcoat time is here. Select yours now from our top Butterfat, pound ........... :........... 35 values priced f r o m $13.50 to $19.50. New arrivals of Men's and Butter, pound .............................. 30 Young Men's suits at $18.50. Sports models at $19.50. Eggs, dozen ............................. . . . . 32 Cattle, pound ..................... 04 5½ Calves, pound .............................. 09 Hogs, pound ............................... 0 8 ¾ KINGSTON, M I C H I G A N Hens, pound .: ..................... 09 .13 Store Open T u e s d a y and Thursday E v e n i n g s Until 9:00. Springers, pound ............... 09 .12 Saturdays U n t i l 10:00 p. m~ White Ducks, pound ..................... 18 Turkeys, pound ......................... 15 o-.. Service CA$S "Wedding Present" A new comedy smash hit. TUES. - WED. - T H U R S . Nov. 10 - 11 - 12 The Cass has the opportunity to present the Michigan premier showing of Tennyson's immortal classic-- "The C h a r g e of the Light Brigade" starring Errol F l y n n and Olivia DeHaviland of "Captain Blood." A salute to the g a l l a n t "600" who rode "into t h e jaws of death" t h a t a comrade m i g h t live for l o v e N scenes t h a t were thought impossible for the camera to portray. $20 Cash Nite Tuesday • Sabbath Every Day of 'Week A Sabbath fails on every day of the week. Sunday is the Christian Sabbath, Monday the Greek, Tuesday the Persian, Wednesday the Assyrian, Thursday th.e Egyptian, Friday the Turkish, and Saturday the Jewish.~Pearson's Weekly. Rules Brazil Coffee Industry The National Coffee bureau in Brazil has charge of everything relating to that product: Limitation of the planting of trees to avoid excess production; improvement in the quality of the coffee bean; financing of the harvest, and the regulation of exports. ! PILLSBURY'SBEST FLOU SUGAR, 100 lbs. $4 80 Bulk, Beet ~ Cane ........ o WESCO; POREGRAIN SCRATCH CREAM CHEESE . FEED . FRENCH BRAND, HOT-DATED COFFr:r: . . oo-B.$24g P & G, WHITE NAPTHA SOAP lO,'~n'b'~3 3¢ WALDORF bag T | S S U [ . 4 0,, 17¢ WESCO, MORE EGG LAYING WISCONSIN, RYE os248 BR[AD. 10¢ MASH,oo-,b.,, Wesco, 20% Dairy FRESH DO-NUTS..o 10¢ FEED $1 Q~ 100 lb. b a g .IL®~]~_J I JEWEL,HOT-DATED COFFEE .3 .045, P i n e a p p l e O r a n g e s ................ 5 lbs. f o r 25c C a b b a g e ........................................ C a r r o t s .................................. per lb. 2c per bunch 5c C e l e r y S t a l k s ........................................... 6c H e a d L e t t u c e .......................................... 7c L e a f L e t t u c e ..... __:.................................... 12c G r e e n O n i o n s ........................ p e r b u n c h 4c D e l i c i o u s Apples_ ................... 4 lbs, f o r 25c G r e e n i n g A p p l e s ........ ........... 4 lbs. f o r 19c F r e s h B u l k D a t e s ...................... ~....... lb. 10c D i c e d M i x e d F r u i t s ............................ lb. 39c Package F i g s ................................ B u l k F i g s ................................ ½ lb. 10c ........ 2 lbs. 25c C u r r a n t s ........................................ ½ lb. 10c B u l k W a l n u t M e a t s .......................... lb. 49c S h e l l W a l n u t s .............................. per lb. 25c You're INVITED BRING YOUR FAMILY A N D FRIENDS . . . NOTE THE DATE BELOW. Sensational Four Feature Talking Farm Movie Show --Drama.. Inspiration.. Romance! ,--Stars of Stage and Radio! --Thrilling Story of Steel! --Rollicking, Wholesome Comedy! Entertainment" o o oP r i z e s Fun.. and it's all Free T h e r e ' l l be a c r o w d o o o Pl,aa to C o m e E a r l y [ High School Auditorium Caius City Friday, Nov. 6 7 : 3 0 p. m. E. PAUL & SON