cas s city chronicle - Rawson Memorial Library
Transcription
cas s city chronicle - Rawson Memorial Library
CAS S CITY CHRONICLE @ VOL. 23, NO. 48. ~ CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, J U N E 22, 1928. EIGHT PAGES. color scheme of pink and white beau- After the ceremony, a three-course wedding dinner was served to the immediate relatives at the hSme of the bride's parents. A very pretty threestory wedding cake made by the bride's mother graced the table. In the evening, a reception was given at the home of the ~groom's parents Which was attended by 300 friends, who left many valuable and useful gifts as tokens of their goo8 will. Friends were present from Flint, Detroit, Alma, Pontiac and other points in the state. Mrs. Severance graduated from the Sandusky high school, attended the Mr. Pleasant Normal and has taught two years in Sanilac county schools. Mr. Severance graduated from 'the Cass City high school, attended the Michigan State College and has t a u g h t one year in the Grand Blanc schools. Both are highly respected young people of this eommunity. They are m a k i n g a trip to Niagara Falls and other points east and will reside at Grand Blanc where Mr. Severance will continue as instructor in ~ the schools at t h a t place. LELAND KELLEY FUNERAL An~ SAGINAW u r w r ~ x ~ r ~ ~ v IN AUTO[;RASH Rev. F. A. Jones, Former M. B. C. Minister Here, Killed Wednesday Morning. :Rev. F r e d A. Jones of 15 Edison :St., Pontiac, is dead and F. V. Coates, 506 Cornelia St., Saginaw, and Rev. A. 0. DeGroat of E l k t o n are injured as the result of an automobile collision, four miles east of Cass City, at the junction o~ M-53 and M-81 at 8:30 a. m. Wednesday. Mr. J o n e s was d r i v i n g a Hudson coach and was accompanied by Mr. DeGroat. Both c l e r g y m e n w e r e attending the a n n u a l - s t a t e conference of the Mennonite church which is in aession this week at the Mizpah church, four miles east and four miles south of Gass City. T h e y had started to drive f r o m the church to Cass City and were going n o r t h on M-53 when t h e y collided w i t h a Dodge sedan driven by Mr. Coates, a traveling salesman, who was driving from. Atgyle to Cass City. Tl~e cars m e t at the" junction of the two state highways. The Jones ear was earried north some distanee from_ t h e e o r n e r and landed on its side a g a i n s t a t r e e on t h e roadside. Mr. Jones, it is thought, struck a g a i n s t t h e tree'. His skull was f r a c t u r e d and he was badly bruised on the chest. D e a t h was instantaneous. Mr. DeGroat was t h r o w n from t h e ear to the h i g h w a y before t h e ear struck the tree. He was n o t badly injured. The Jones automobile was tot a l l y wrecked. Mr. Coats was injured about the head and his baek owas "wrenched. He i.was t a k e n to P l e a s a n t Home Hospit~fl a t Cass City w h e r e h i s wounds we:re dressed. H e was able to No to his home in Saginaw Wednesday afternoon. His ear was b a d l y damaged. Dr. Geo. S. Tweedie, coroner, and Sheriff Hagle came f r o m Sandusky to view ~ e scene of the accident and sec u r e information regarding" the eolli* s i o n Wmlnesday morning. Fred A. J o n e s was born in St. Clair county A u g u s t i6, 1879. He m a r r i e d Miss Ella Nash. Rev. J o n e s was well' known in the Thumb. For five years, he was i)astor of the Mizpah church and was then appointed district eider w h i c h position he held for two years, residing at t h a t time in Bad Axe. A y e a r ago, he retired f r o m the active ministry and e n t e r e d t h e employ of the Pontiac Credit Bureau. Besides his -widow- and twin sons, Ra.) and Roy, aged 20 years, in Pontiac, he leaves his mother, Mrs. ~ h o d a Jones, and a sister, Mrs. J o h n Wilks, both of P o r t Huron, and five brothers, F r a n k , John, William and Stanton, a31 of Port Huron, and George Jones of Deekerville. Choir Singing Contest at Mayville A special feature for the T h u m b of Michiga~i Potato Show on Nov. 6, 7 and 8 at Mayville will be the town and country church choir s i n g i n g contest. Two h u n d r e d t e n dollars are offered in prizes, the m o n e y coming :from the R. E. Olds~ C o m m u n i t y Music Fund. The c h o i r f r o m a n y open country church or town church in towns of 2,000 populatiom,or less (according to 1920 census) will be eligible to enter the contest. Each choir m u s t consist O f at least six singers and as m a n y m o r e as possible. The participants m u s t be r e g u l a r choir m e m b e r s of t h e church represented. The l e a d e r and accompanist m a y or m a y n o t be m e m b e r s of the choir, if t h e y are not members t h e y m u s t not participate i n t h e singing~ Two selections will be r e n d e r e d by 'each contesting gr6up. The first to b e any; selection of sacred muMc the group M s h e s to make. Pretty Wedding at Shabbona Church The Methodist Episcopal church at S h a b b o n a was the scene of a very pretty wedding at one o clock Wednesday, J u n e 20, w h e n Miss Marg a r e t K e r r MacNiven, only d a u g h t e r o f Mr. and Mrs. Dugald MacNiven of Snover, became the bride of Mr. Roy W. Severance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Severance of E v e r g r e e n township. Rev~:A. T. Thompson of G r a n d Blanc, a f o r m e r pastor at Shabbona, r e a d the rites, the r i n g s e r v i c e bMng used. The bride was attired in a gown of white fiat crepe w i t h veil t r i m m e d in orange blossoms and carried a bouquet of pink and white snapdragons. She ~ a s attended by Helen Severance, s i s t e r of the groom, and Neff MacNiven, br~bther of the bride, was the .groomsman. The bride was given away by her father. Mrs. H a y of Sno"ver, a Iife-long i n t i m a t e friend of the bride and h e r family, played the wedding march. The church was decorat~ed with lighted tapers and w i t h flowe r s and f e r n s which c a r r i e d out the • " Leland Kelley, 16-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Kelley, 1717 Wadsworth Ave., ' S a g i n a w , who was accidentally shot on Sunday,~flune 17, while visiting a t the f a r m home of E z r a Kelley, his uncle, west of Cass City, died Sunday e v e n i n g at Pleasant Home hospital wl~ere he had been a patient since the accident. L e l a n d Kelley w a s % o r n June 12, 1912, in Tuscola county and in 1918 w e n t to Saginaw with his parents. Surviving" are his parents, four brothers and two sisters, Gertrude, Mellie, Paul, Donald, J u n i o r and Raymond Kelley, all at home. The f u n e r a l was held Wednesclay afternoon at the home of his parents and at 2 o'clock at the F r e e Methodist church. _ ?GOA[T[NDEDTHE BURSESIGH00[ People One Met Who Another Hadn't in Seen Fifty Years. Full Program Carried Out and Interest Kept at High Tension. Two h u n d r e d were p r e s e n t at the annual reunion of teachers and pupils of the Burse school in Dist. No. 6, Elmwood, which was held on the school grounds, six miles west and ~/2 mile n o r t h of Cass City, on Saturday, J u n e 16. People m e t t h a t day who h a d n ' t seen each other in fifty years. A good p r o g r a m was given ir~ the a f t e r n o o n at which time addresses were given by two teachers who instructed t h e young A m e r i c a n s in~ t h a t district fifty years ago. They were E. Darbee and Ivlrs. Chas. D. Peterhans, both of Caro. Mr. Darbee, in his speech, noted m a n y changes in the school, but said he t h o u g h t the position o f t h e stove pipe was the same as fifty years ago. Three were present who w e r e pupils of Mr. Darbee in the district a half century ~ago, E. L. Burse, Chgs. Seeley and ~Mianda White Dean. A pot luck dinner with ice cream was served. In the afternoon, married men won the ball g a m e from t h e single men. A group picture was taken during the day. People were present at the reunion f r o m Chelsea, Iralay City, Bay City, Saginaw, and near-by towns. The reunion in 1929 will be held at the same place on the third Saturdayjn Jufle. 'TUSOLA SCHOOLS TAKFTOP PLACES Caro, Cass City and Vassar Fini s h in O r d e r N a m e d at Upper Thumb Meet. F i r s t t h r e e places in the f i r s t annual track and-field m e e t of the Upper Thumb w e n t to Tuscola county schools. The m e e t w a s held at the city park at Cass City F r i d a y . Caro was first with 42 points, Cass City second with 26 and Vassar third with 24~. Points won by five other schools were: Marlette 17, ~ige0n 13, Croswell I0, Harbor 8 and Bad Axe 2~. Sanford of Marlette was high point man for the day, securing 13 points. Edgerton of Cass City placed second with 12 points and Rajkovich of Caro: was third as an individual point.winner. Brown City, champions of Sanilac, defeated Unionville, Tuscola county winner, in the base ball g a m e in t h e afternoon by a score of 8-7. In four events~the 100-yard dash, the 440-yard dash, the running broad jump and the 880-yard relay~better records were made at t]ae Upper Thumb meet than at the Tuscola County meet held a week earlier. In the 880-yard run, the time was exactly the same at both meets. Winners and records of the Upper Thumb meet follow. 220-~rd low hurdles ist, Hutchinson, Car6; 2nd, McCrea, Caro; 3rd., Conway, Vassar; 4th, Lee, Marlette. Tim@, 27.8 seconds. Pole vault--lst, McCullough, Cass City; 2nd, MeCrea, Caro; 3rd, Hutchinson, Caro; 4th, Smith, Bad Axe.~ Distance, 9 ft. 6 in. 100-yard dash ist, .Paul, Pigeon; 2nd, Sanford, Marlette;" 3rd, Barbour, Vassar; 4th, Dyer, Caro. Time, 10.2 seconds. Shot put~Ist, Edgerton, Cass City; 2nd, Rajkovich, Caro; 3rd, Sanford, Marlette; 4th, Schmidt, Pigeon. Distance, 40 ft. 7 in. Mile run~Ist, Putnam, Caro; 2nd, Toppin, Harbor Beach; 3rd, Palmeter, Vassar; 4th, F r a n k s , Cass City. Time, 4 rain., 59 sec. Running high jump--lst, Hill, Croswell; 2rid, E d g e r t o n , Cass City; McCullough, Cass City, and Shanahan, Bad Axe, tied f o r third place. Distance, 5 ft. 4 in. 440-yard dash 1st, Atkins, Vassar; 2nd, Schulte, H a r b o r Beach; 3rd, Schmidt, Pigeon; 4th, Schrader, Caroo Time, 53.8 seconds. Dis-cu~s throw i s t , Curren, Croswell; 2nd, Sanford, .Marlette; 3rd, Rajkovich, Caro; 4th, Edgerton, Cass City. Distance, 99 ft. 2 in. 220-yard d a s h l s t , Sanford, Marlette; 2nd, Paul, P i g e o n ; 3rd~ Bar~ bout, Vassar; 4th, Dye~; Caro. Time, 24.4 seconds. Running" broad jump---lst, Brown Cass City; 2nd, Wilcox, t~artette; 3rd, Luther, Cass City, a n d Comvay, Vassar, tied for third. Distance, 19 ft. 8 ~ in. 880-yard r u n ~ l s t , Haines, Vassar; 2nd, Edgerton, C a s s - City; 3rd, Petiprin, Caro; 4th, Reidel, Harbor Beach. Time, 2 raN. 12 see. Javelin t h r o w - - l s t , Rakjovieh, Cato; 2rid, McMahon, Caro; 3rd, Roth, Vassar; 4th, P e t i p r i n , C a r o . Distance, 143 ft. 11 in. 880-yard r e l a y ' ~ l s t , "Caro; 2nd, Vassar, "3~d, P i g e o n ; 4th, H a r b o r Beach. Tin~e, 1 rain. 41 sec. Favored with ideal weather, the County Woman's Christian Temperance Union's 46th annual TUSCOLA CO. DAIRY HERD FIRST DAY'S BUSINESS convention held at the Kingston M. E. IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION church Thursday afternoon and FriWAS BEYOND E X P E C T A T I O N S day, J u n e 14 and 15, was attended by The following is t h e report of t h e ! a l a r g e delegation. The r a t h e r full The S.,T. & H. Oil Co. held the p r o g r a m was carried through rapidly Tuscola C o u n t y Dairy Herd Improve- 1 opening of its new gasoline service | and interest was kept at h i g h tension. m e n t Ass'n No. 2 for May. station at Cass City on Saturday. ReThe leading cows in b u t t e r f a t pro-I A f t e r the business preliminaries, an turns from the day's business were interesting" paper was read by Mrs. duction as listed by age classes. beyond expectations, says A. H. KinHattie Koppelberger of Kingston off ° Two Y e a r Class . | Items Gleaned from Newspaper naird, station attendant, and offieials "Mother's Influence, Example and Reof the company were well pleased Owner Breed Milk F Exchanges a~d Other sponmbfl~ty to Her Children for Law with the business of the initiaI day. E n f o r c e m e n t . " Discussion led by Mrs. H e n r y Cooklin--Gr. J e r ...... 1147 48.2 Sources. Ice cream cones were presented to H e n r y Cooktin~Gr. Ho1.._:1038 41.5 Maud Van Patten of Vassar brought occupants of ears wh}Ch were s u p out the point that woman's life being F r e d A l e x a n d e r - plied with ,gasoline on S a t u r d a y and P. B. Hol ......... 1376 38.5 so much broader her responsibility to T h e Harbor Beach council last week a large number of these t r e a t s were Three Y e a r Class. ~he rising generation ~s ever increaspassed an anti-fireworks ordinance dispensed. ing. Six unions, Caro, Deford, Pleas- Fred A l e x a n d e r - - ~ whereby it is unlawful to sell or buy Edward Golding m a n a g e s 4he t a n k ant Hill, Kingston, Cass City and P. B. Hol ......... 1655 49.7 fireworks e~:eept in eases where the wagon delivery and also assists as Vassar, gave reports of much work Cleveland N e a I G r . J e r ..... 1007 48.1 Commissioner of Public Safety gives attendant at the service station. done in the year. ~. Reid & "Honsinger~Jersey.. 868 46.9 permission. In discussing the "Responsibilities Alfred H. Sauer, who is now servFour Y e a r Class. ~ of the Local President," Mrs. M. E. .ing his fourth t e r m as prosecuting atHawley, both from her long experi- H e n r y C0oklin~Hol ............. 1540 69.3 torney of Huron County, has anJno. R. Moshier--P. B. Hol...2124 61,6 ence as loeaI and county president, nounced t h a t he will not be a c a n , Novesta Church of C h r i s t ~ A . ] found the responsibilities m a n y be- F r e d A l e x a n d e r ~ ' d a t e for re-election. It is reported P. B.-Hol ......... 1779 55.2 Mudge, Minister. R. War~er, Supt. cause of, being responsible f~r the t h a t Alex Guyeau, of Bad Axe and MatureClass. Bible school, 11:00 a. m., followed~ @ork t h a t should t~e done by ql!aers. •Otis P e n g r a of Sebewaing will be Mrs. Alice Retherford of Deford, in Sherman Dibble--Gr. Hol...1485 59.4 candidates for the office in the prima- by preaching. Subject, "A Revival in l t h e Church." ~ ~ ~1 discussing "The Responsibilities of the Jno. R. Moshier P.B..Hol..1789 59.0 ry this year. / W. C . T . U . Members" found ";that G. W. Kor~hals Gr. J e t .... 1166 55.9 W o r k m e n excavating at the gravel l e t t i n g l i t t l e matt~i~s keep members Methodist Episcopal C h d r c h ~ C l a s s In the small herd class, Fred Alex- pit on Huron avenue at the Vassar The May-Heller t e a m are leading meeting, 10:00. away f r o m the regular meetings and ander with six purebred Holsteins had the 20 groups of the local horseshoe v m a g e limits u n e a r t h e d last week the shirking p r o g r a m d~ty the sins t h e y an average production of 1489 lbs. of i Morning worship, 10:30. pitchers with the McNamee-M. Wilbones of a h u m a n skeleton believed should avoid. Mrs. Stanley W a r n e r o f I milk and 44.5 lbs. of b u t t e r f a t per 1 Sunday sehooI, 11:45. son t e a m close followers. The standto. be t h a t of an unknown man b u r i e d Cass c i t y ga~;e a humorous reading-=- C O W . Union m e e t i n g at the P r e s b y t e r i a n ing o f t h e teams a f t e r Tuesday -~ " l t h e r e some 53 years ago. " W h e n Father" Sha-£;ed Off His Whi~, In the medium size h e r d class Reid 1 Robert A. Turrel, CrosweH d r u g - church at 7:30. night's contests wer~ a s follows: kers." Mrs. Belle tVf.:=Waters, not be- & Honsinger w i t h nine Purebred and Thursday evening, prayer meeting. W L % ing" present, .some very "good sugges- Grade Jerseys had an average produc- gist, and f o r m e r Brown City man, Bethel Church Sunday school, was re-elected t r e a s u r e r of the MichiMay-Heller ...................... 28 2 .933 tions w e r e given by Mrs. Shaw. tion of 749 lbs. of milk and 41.6 lbs. g a n State Pharmaceutical association 11:00. P r e a c h i n g service, 12:00. McNamee- M. Wilson .... 22 5 .815 A t the evening session: a f t e r devo- of b u t t e r f a t per cow. at its 46th annual convention at De8 .733tions by Rev. B. A. Sherk, short welPresbyterian Church~Paul J o h n s o n M. Smith-N. McCullough 22 Russell Koehler, T e ~ e r . t r o i t last Thursday. Tyo-Kirton ........................ 19 8 .704 comes were given on behalf of the Atlured, Minister. Sunday, J u n e 24: 9 .700 churches, The Woman's Study Club, One of the best attended school Morning worship, 10:30. Sermon: H a r t - D a y .......................... 21 McConkey-G. Wilson ...... 19 ~1 .633 m e e t i n g s in years was held at Elkton "My Measure and Value as a Man." a n d the union in which each speaker RICKER-LOREE. mentioned the many good things acJ u n e 11: On account of the scarcity Chfirch school at noon. "Jesus the H. Bohnsack-Lorentzen.. 19 11 .633 c o m p l i s h e d by the W. C. T. U. A of homes in Elkton, those ._presen} Saviour." Text: "Choose you this day R e i d - S h e r m a n .................. 16 11 .593 pleasing vocal solo was sung by Miss Married, at 12 o'clock noon, Satur- voted to either purchase or e~ect whom ye will serve." I Brown-& W e s t ................ 14 13 ~519 Neva Cones of Deford. Mrs. A. A. day, J u n e 9, 1928, at the F i r s t T r i n i t y h o m e for the s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of Chrisgan Endeavor, 6:00. "Whole- G. B o h n s a c k : H e n r y ........ 14 13 .519 R i c k e r / i n response to the welcomes, Episcopal church~ Toledo, Ohio, Rev. schools. The sum of $3,500 was voted some Recreation at Home ahd Corpron-Atwell .............. 15 12 .556 HavenaGage ...................... 15 15 .500 said in p a r t " t h a t while we appreci- William McDowell, rector of the f o r this purpose and the..head of the Abroad." Leader: J a n e t Allured. Baseball. ated ~ the kin~dly welcome given to church, officiating, Miss Clara J , school would thus be guaranteed a Union e v e n i n g service in this church N e v i l l e - S c h e n c k .............. 1L 16 .407 R H E their church and to their homes; we Loree of Sandusky, and Mr. A % h u r residence he could rent. at 7:30. (See display notice). This se- Bailey-Holmes ................ 9 15 .375 U n i o n v i l l e - 0 0 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 7 811 Croft-R. McCullough ...... 10 20 .333 appreciated still more their help and G. Ricker, of Owendale. They w e r e ries of evening biographical sermon's W. A. F a i r w e a t h e r , who has conco-operation in making the conventi0n~ attended by Mr. and MrK Cecil Mc- ducted a ladies' clothes shop in Im- ~ should prove especially valuable to F. S m i t h - G r a h a m ............ 10 20 .333 Brown City-~2 0 2 0 0 0 2 1 1 ~ 8 10 7 Lee-Allured ...................... 5 19 .208 a success and of mutual benefit to all Aulay, of Owendale. lay City for t e n years, has sold his every Christian. W r i g h t - Geo. W e s t ........ 4 20 .167' who attended." The bride is a d a u g h t e r of Mrs. R. business to H. E. Reid of Detroit. B a t t e n e s ~ U m o n v i l l e , Adams and A very instructive and helpful ad- J. Loree, of Sandusky, where she Owendale and Grant Methodist Bigelow-Wood ................ 0 24 .000 Russell; Brown City, Defoe and J o h n Robert oCarolan, three-year-old son dress was given by Rev. E t t a Sadler graduated from t h e local high school Episcopal Churches. Fred H. Town- J. Bohnsack-Lewis ........ 0 21 .000 son. U m p i r e s ~ G e i s t e r and Smarks. of Mr. and Mrs. A n t h o n y Carolan Shaw of Grand Rapids. She warned in the class of 1925, a f t e r which she send, Pastor. Monday was suffering" at his h o ~ e a t a g a i n s t t a k i n g too seriously some of s p e n t two years at the State Normal Owendale--Services for Sunday, Pigeon f r o m injuries received Satur• # WILL SHOW SHEEP AT'FAIRS the things printed in the big dailies at Ypsilanti. For t h e p a s t year s h e h a s day evening w h e n he was struck b y June 24.--Sunday~school, 10:00 a. m. IN C A N A D IA N NORTHWEST and t h o u g h t the Grand Rapids jour- t a u g h t in the Owendale school and an auto driven by Olie Popentz. Wit- Our goal is a n attendance of 75:~If0all nalists w e r e more careful to keep has b e e ~ : e n g a g e d to teach t h e r ~ a n nesses said the boy ran into %he that are enrolled and others t h a t ti-uth on t h e i r side about prohibition other year. T h e groom operates an oil H. T. Crandell expects to leav,e tostreet in f r o n t of the car and placed should attend are there,~we will reach t h a n sore% of the Detroit papers. station at Owendale and a moLor exit. m o r r o w on a trip to N o r t h w e s t e r n no blame for the accident on the dri, The third W e d n e s d a y in June b e i n g She t h o u g h t t h a t all good American p r e s s g i n e as a m e m b e r of the fi~m of ver. Preaching service: 11:00 a. m. Canada w h e r e he will show 40 head of the day selected f o r t h e Novesta piocitizens would be glad to pay t h e i r A r t & Duff. Mr. and Mrs. Ricker are Theme of sermon: "Conscience." Southdown, Oxfqrd and Leicester Thomas Hawkins, former rural dollar and give their name to the W. popular and well liked y o u n g people Grant P r e a c h i n g service and Sun- sheep a t t h e big fairs. He will be ac- neers' m e e t i n g chanced this year to mail-carrier out of the Wilmot, Mich., C. T. U. if t h e y knew the beneficial in a large circle of friends who exday school will be combined and Chil- companied by Leonard Striffier. They s t a r t w i t h rain, which was r a t h e r dispostoffice, will take the place left vaeffect a l a r g e list h a d on Congress in tend best wishes for a prosperous and dren's Day exercises will be held at will visit t h e expositions at Brandon, quieting to those who_ had made arcant by F r e d Ramage, former rural counteracting t h e bad effect of the h a p p y voyage on the sea of m a t r i m o l:30,p, m. The pastor~ will be g l a d to Calgary, Edmonton,. Saskatoon and r a n g e m e n t s for a picnic and plans mail carrier out of the Harbor Beach were m a d e to go to t h e Gleaner Hall so-called Lil~erty ~Leaguers or other ny. T h e y will make t h e i r home a t Regina. office. Mr. Hawkins has .been carry- baptize infanfs at this service. at Novesta Corners. However, by t e n societies who sen4 in long- lists of O w e n d a l e . ~ S a n d u s k y Tribune. i n g mail out of Wilmot for some time, ;)'clock, the ,sun was s h i n i n g and t h e members opposed to law~enforcement, Baptist Church--William R. Curtis, but the postal service discontinued his LOCAL OIL CO. HAD ground quite dry, so the crowd soon pastor. P r e a c h i n g service at 10:30. ~Turn to page 8. route by consolidating it into another, BUMPER BUSINESS SATURDAY g a t h e r e d at the g r o v e and preparaTHREE GRADUATES Sunday school at 11:45. the result being he is still kept in the tions were m a d e f o r dinner. A f t e r Union evening service at PresbyIN E L K T O N F A M I L Y service b y b e i n g t r a n s f e r r e d to the -CASS CITY, MARKETS. "The Cass City Oil & Gas Co. en- dinner, devotions b y Rev. Scott o f terian church. Harbor Beach office. He will t a k e n p joyed a b u m p e r business on Saturday, Deford and an address of welcome by B. Y. P. U. at 6:30. Three members of the Paul Bliszczak, his duties h e r e the first o f the week. P r a y e r and praise m e e t i n g Thurs- J u n e 16" says Robt. War=aer, m a n a g e r Rev, Mudge were followed by a short June 21, 1928. sr., fa/nily finished t h e i r high schooI H a r b o r Beach Times. of the company. "We waited on 189 business :session and election of offiday e v e n i n g at 7:30. Buying price-education with the Class of 1928 in William ~R. E v e r i n g h a m of Kinde cash customers and 70 r e g u l a r charge cers which resulted in Mrs. Ida Brown Boy Scouts Monday e v e n i n g and Mixed wheat, bu ............................... 1.52 Elkton. Anna Bliszczak completed w a s elected president of the Huron customers, m a k i n g a°total of 259 cars of Ca~o for president, Howar~l RethGirl Scouts F r i d a y evening. Rye, cwt ............................................. 1.16 h e r h i g h school course in three years County Bankers' Federation at its an~ Corn, shelled, bu. (56 lbs.) ............ 1.10 and was given the h i g h e s t accredited nual m e e t i n g in the Hotel Heasty a t = Business men's Volley Ball Tuesday and trucks which wer~ serviced dur- erford of Deford, vice president, a n d ing t h e day. The • total gallonage, Mrs. Colin F e r g u s o n secretary-treaSBeans, cwt ......................................... 9.45 record in the Elkton schools in m a n y Pigeon, attended by about 60 bankers evenings. wholesale and retail, totaled 2,453 urer. ~Thefi came a s h o r t p r o g r a m of Barley, cwt ....................................... 2.25 years. She was valedictorian of the and their wives and guests. Evangelical C h u r c h ~ B i b l e Study, gallons. Sales on tires, tubes and ac- music and r e c i t a t i o n s t h a t all enjoyed Buckwheat, cwt ............................... 2.25 class. John and Paul Bliszczak, brothcessories amounted to $120 andftotal and an hour or t w o t o visit w i t h t h e 10:00 a. m. Wool .................................................... 46 ers of the valedictorian, were m e m cash receipts for the day amounted to friends one sees only on rare occaSermon, 11:00. Eggs, dozen................................... ........ 26 bers of the class. Bingham School Reunion. sions. Many pronounced it the best Senior and J u n i o r League, 6%5 p. $883.45. Bhsifiess is fine." Butter, lb ............................................. 40 A school reunion Will be held at ~he m e e t i n g they had e v e r had. m. Cattle .............. 2. ........................... 6 10 B i n g h a m schoolhouse, District No. 2, Friends w e r e t h e r e f r o m Detroit, Union service at ~he P r e s b y t e r i a n Hogs, l i v e weight ............. ~............... 9 ½ Barbers Close Thursday Afternoons. ElnGvood, J u n e 30. ~11 for~per t~achA L e m u r machine for p e r m a n e n t P o n t i a c , Saginaw and f r o m all of t h e Calves, live weight ........................ ....12 We will close T h u r s d a y afternoons era, p u p i l ~ a n d t h e i r families are cor- church, 7:30. w a v i n g h~% been installed in our bar- smaller towns to t h e e s t i m a t e d n u m C. F. SMITH, Minister. Hens .................................................... 19 during the months of June, July, A u g - dially invited. Pot luck dinner will ber shop and beauty parlor. Phone 362 ber of two hundred. I t was voted to Stags ............................................ 10 12 ust and September. Chas. McCaslin, be served. Mrs. Wm. Simmons, secreShaw & Bednorek, Caro, Mich--1 Adv. hold the annual e v e n t in the same Hides ..................................................... 12 Tyo & Son, Bailey & GrahaviL--Adv3t t a r y . - - A d v . 1 • Advertise it in the Chronicle. tf grove next year. Tuscola THUMB DI T I T Church Calendar May-Heller Lead. HorseshOe Pitchers t Pioneers' Meeting an Enjoyable Day @AGE TWO. CASS CITY CHRONICLE Caps City, Michigan, J u n e 22, 1928. Mr. a n d Mrs. R. R a y w o r t h of P o n L u d i n g t o n - - W a r has been de~Iared GREENLEAF. RESCUI~. tiac w e r e callers h e r e S u n d a y . on dogs r u n n i n g at large in M a s o n Win. B a r r e n s , sr., h a s been on t h e county, killing game a n d sheep. T h e W o m a n ' s H o m e M i s s i o n a r y S'oA nice r a i n M o n d a y . "Shoot to kill" is the o r d e r f r o m Dis- c i e t y m e t w i t h Mrs. A r t h u r Ellicott sick list. J u n e 7 w a s Miss v i o l e t J a c k s o n ' s Mr. a n d Mrs. Edd. S t e v e n s anff trict W a r d e n W. C. K i d d e r to F r a n k l a s t T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n . birth anniversary and that evening a Gee. A l l e n of K i n g s t o n s p e n t S u n d a y Knowles, c o n s e r v a t i o n officer. A t our school m e e t i n g , Jos. Mellen:number of h e r f r i e n d s h e l p e d h e r i _o CASS CITY i a f t e r n o o n at t h e h o m e of Jeff B r u n P o n t i a c - - G e o r g e Tate, 45 y e a r s old, doff w a s r e - e l e c t e d m o d e r a t o r . c e l e b r a t e t h e event. A nice txme w a s son. lost his life in a s e w e r t r e n c h cave-in e n j o y e ~ b y t h o s e Who attended. She D o n ' t f o r g e t a b o u t t h e Children's Mina Clark and family of Pontiac ¢ F R I D A Y A N D S A T U R D A Y , J U N E 22 AI~D 23. w a s t h e r e c i p i e n t of several nice S c o t t s v i l l e ~ & fire in the p l a n t of h e r e recently. H e was buried b e n e a t h D a y e x e r c i s e s at t h e c h u r c h S u n d a y are spending a few days at their home 11 feet of s a n d in a t r e n c h on S a g i n a w g i f t s . R e f r e s h m e n t s w e r e served. i , BOB S T E E L E i N !. at 1:30 p. m. ~he K r a f t C h e e s e Co. h e r e c a u s e d here. It w a s an hour and a half Mr. and Mrs. J. B r i t t o n w e r e CaPs d a m a g e e s t i m a t e d at $20,000. T h e street. Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf entertained l a t e r before he could be dug out a n d *~-^ T - , 4 ; ~ ' C,~f.v vL~i~a~ MoncI~v. ^i ~ ~ u r ~ y , ~'~-~ -~A efforts to r e v i v e h i m proved futile. WEST ARGYLE. ~.... t h e T r a i l " a n d " A l i c e ' s Picnic." C u r i o s i t i e s ~ N i c ~ *." of cheese reauy o~-" ~or ~ -~'~ ~ n v m ~~,*~ w e r e d e and this Thursady Mrs. ~a~r, r .y. n. ." ~ ay H a r o l d A n d e r s o n is e m p l o y e d a~]' . . . . . . . . Centerline--Lester Lawrence, 14 e n t e r t a i n e d t h e m . stroyed. The origin of the blaze is CaP s City. t .~ N a x , 10 a n d 25 cents. y e a r s old, of Centerline, w a s d r o w n e d undetermined. Road w o r k is t h e o r d e r of t h e day. Mr. a n d Mrs. F r a n k F i n k l e and E d . Bliss w a s a S a n d u s k y c a l l e r l while t r y i n g to save the life of his 12- d a u g h t e r of P o n t i a c w e r e callers a t W m . H e l i k e r is b u i l d i n g a n a d d i t i o n las~ w e e k . ~ [ H e r s e y - - A t h e o r y t h a t W i l l i a m H. SUNDAY-MONDAY, JUNE 24-25, to his b a r n . ~eilfuse, 55 ~ e a r s old, H e r s e y f a r m e r , year-old c h u m , L a w r e n c e J a c k , w h o the J e s s e P u t m a n h o m e F r i d a y . W i n . W i l k i n s o n , Leslie H e w i t t , Gee. The • MARY PICKFORD IN w a s slain by robbers has b e e n aban- also w e n L t o a w a t e r y grave. L o r n M c I n t y r e of D e t r o i t and H e c - B u r n e t t , N. Robinson a n d ChaP. T a n - | Mr. a n d Mrs. J o h n Combs w e r e doned by Sheriff A u d r e y L. Brooks, J a c k boy fell off a raft on w h i c h the G a g e t o w n callers F r i d a y . tor, W m . , and J a n e M c ! n t y r e of A r - n e r w e r e S a n d u s k y callers Monday. of Reed City, w h o found e v i d e n c e t h e two w e r e p l a y i n g in a pool a t V a n S t a n l e y M e l l e n d o r f h a d his tonsils gyle received t h e s a d n e w s f r o m f a r m e r c a m e to his d e a t h by b e i n g Dyke a n d T h i r t e e n - m i l e roads. ~ Manigold's I Love, thrills, s i g h s - - L o t s of l a u g h t e r . O u r M a r y a t h e r lovable, r e m o v e d a t Dr. MaHoy's office a t "Gwinn, Mich., of E r n e s t S i l v e r w o o d ~ D a v i d W. S n o r e r , 81 kicked in t h e h e a d by a horse. death. Mrs. MaRigold w a s f o r m e r l y of Gagetown Monday. l a u g h a b l e best. MiRa MacIntyre. They motored Crystal F a l l s - - ~ p p l i c a t i o n h a s b e e n years old, died h e r e recently. H e c a m e C o m e d y , " S m i t h ' s P o n y . " M. G. M. n e w s reel, 15 a n d 35 cents. W e have come across a fine testiT h e P r e m o class held t h e i r class m a d e to the state b o a r d of agricul- to SilQerwood in 1873, and t h a t y e a r m e e t i n g a t t h e h o m e of R o y ~ Russell t h r o u g h to a t t e n d t h e f u n e r a l . m o n y to the power of advertising. T h e r e will be service a t t h e A u s t i n Some people went to Inspect a house ture, Dr. F. K. Hanson, a s s i s t a n t built tl~e h o u s e in w h i c h h e died. H e F r i d a y e v e n i n g . T U E S D A Y - W E D N E S D A Y , J U N E 26.27. c h u r c h n e x t S u n d a y , J u n e 24, a t 2:00 w h i c h had been offered for sale. " W e state v e t e r i n a r i a n , to q u a r a n t i n e I r o n is survived b y his w t d o w and e i g h t Miss E l v a H e r o n , assisted b y Mrs. children; also t w o brothers a n d one p. m. E v e r y one is i n v i t e d to a t t e n d . s a w the advertisement," they said. County a g a i n s t rabies. This a c t i o n R A N G E R , T H E DOG S T A R , I N C. E. ~ I a r t s e l l , will be t h e l e a d e r f o r results from finding several cows in s i s t e r - - D r . C. D. Shover, 92 y e a r s old; V e r n i c e P a t t e r s o n a n d I r e n e Bro~ks "Yes," answered the owner, "so did t h e E p w o r t h L e a g u e n e x t S u n d a y the vicinity of Crystal Falls suffering J o h n F. S n o r e r , 88 years old, a n d Ess p e n t t h e w e e k - e n d a t t h e Chas. Ross we, a n d a f t e r reading the ad writer's evening. from rabies r e s u l t i n g from dog bites. ther Shover, 72 y e a r s old. home. description of our hou~e we have de? C o m e d y , " P a s s i n g t h e H a t " - - " A l i c e ' s C h a r m e d Swim, 10 cents. Mr. a n d Mrs~ R a l p h B r i t t a n d chilL a n s i n g ~ I n c r e a s e in ~ms a n d t r u c k The cows w e r e killed. cided not to sell ! " ' T o r o n t o Globe. A S m i t h store is c o m i n g to A r g y l e d r e n a n d M r , and Mrs. O s t r u m Sum,~,,~,,8~,~,~,.~--~,~,~,,~,~,,~,~,~,~,~ -: = __ D e t r o i t ~ A n E a s t Grand b o u l e v a r d operation in Michigan this y e a r is in- e m r s a n d children w e r e E l k t o n cal- in t h e n e a r f u t u r e . dicated by a 20 per cent h i g h e r colr e s i d e n t said a~ m o t o r i s t c a m e to t h e Mr. a n d Mrs. H e n r y P r e n t i c e of A r lers S a t u r d a y evening. door r e c e n t l y and r e p o r t e d t h a t h e lection of fees f r o m motorized public Mr. a n d Mrs. H e n r y W a r r i n g t o n of g y l e e x p e c t to star~ on a t r i p to carriers, r e p o r t e d by the Public Utilhad run into a p a r k e d car, but the Collection f r o m South Oliver, Ardis J a r v i s and ~Mr. N i a g a r a F a l l s F r i d a y , J u n e 22. flamage was slight. "Yes, it's m i n e , " ities Commission. Mr. a n d Mrs. Cyril B u r n h a m of bus and t r u c k lines during t h e fiscal a n d Mrs. Jos. M e l l e n d o r f a n d children the r e s i d e n t said, "but how did y o u w e r e e n t e r t a i n e d f o r d i n n e r at the R i c h m o n d visited t h e l a t t e r ' s p a r e n t s y e a r e n d i n g Jun~ 30, 192% a m o u n t e d h a p p e n to stop?" T h e m o t o r i s t reSunday. plied that he was from I n d i a n a and to $107,333, w h i l e collections to d a t e L y d i a P a r k e r home. Mr. a n d Mrs. Ed. Rose and f a m i l y are Mrs. J o h n M a c C a l l u m a n d son, A r that he supposed it was c u s t o m a r y during the p r e s e n t fiscal y e a r s p e n t S u n d a y a t C a s a t~lty. $126,153. nold, a n d g r a n d s o n , J a c k F a y , w e r e to stop after an accident. "You d o n ' t Bud Chase expects to s t a r t t h e w a l l K a l a m a z o o - - - F o r the fifth time in callers in B a y City S a t u r d a y . T h e know Detroit," the r e s i d e n t said. f o r his b a r n this w e e k . the last four y e a r s t h e B r o w n d r u g Misses W i l n a C a t h c a r t a n d V e r a MacMr. and Mrs. J a m e s P a l m e r w e r e Clare~Marguerite Irwin~ 15 years store on W e s t s t r e e t was r o b b e d h e r e , CalIum a c c o m p a n i e d t h e m h o m e a n d business callers in Cass C i t y M o n d a y . old, was d r o w n e d w h e n the canoe in and a l a r g e quantity o£ fishing_ tackle s p e n t S u n d a y here. Win. W h i t e , sr., is v e r y p o o r l y a t w h i c h she w a s r i d i n g with f r i e n d s was taken. The place was held up by Mr. and Mrs. M y r o n C a r t a t t e n d e d this w r i t i n g . capsized at E i g h t P o i n t Lake, n e a r armed bandits Febrlxary 5. Entrance c o n f e r e n c e a t Pt. H u r o n t h e w e e k here. The girl w a s a t t e n d i n g a picDenominational prejudice and religious bigotry can be wiped a w a y b y worshipping this time w a s g a i n e d by s m a s h i n g a end. aic of t h e f r e s h m a n and s o p h o m o r e A d v e r t i s e it i n ~ t h e Chronicle. f r o n t w i n d o w , t h e crash of w h i c h T h e r e m a i n s of Gilbert F i n k l e ....... of classes of the Clare High School together and learning of the circumstances under which each church was founded, aroused employes of the store w h o P o n t i a c w e r e b r o u g h t to t h e G r a n t w h e n the a c c i d e n t occur~to P a t r i c k reside on tb~ s~cond floor. The robc e m e t e r y F r i d a y and w e r e i n t e r r e d M~Connetl, 16, ~ c l a s s m a t e of t h e beside his w i f e , who p r e c e d e d h i m in S T A T E D E P A R T M E N T girl, was n e a r l y d r o w n e d in a futile hers fled in a n automobile. OF AGRICULTURE P o n t i a c - - - J o h n Mackle, 63 y e a r s old, d e a t h e i g h t y e a r s ago. H e w a s an old effort to save her. H~r body w a s reDIVISION OF DRAINS was killed b y his own a u t o m o b i l e r e s i d e n t of G r a n t , h a v i n g lived h e r e a eovered. driven by h i s l ~ y e a r - o l d son, H u r s u l n u m b e r of y e a r s b e f o r e m o v i n g to I s h p e m i n g ~ W t t h a small ff~asoline Mackie. T h e two were emplcffed by O w e n d a l e a n d l a t e r to P o n t i a c a N o t i c e o f F i l i n g of O r d e r D e s i g n a t i n g a Drainage District. boat, a l a r g e seine a n d several o t h e r contractors~ on the paving of the n u m b e r of y e a r s ago. H e leaves to .nets as equipment, a crew of i n m a t e s T o W h o m It M a y C o n c e r n : R o c h e s t e r road and w e r e at w o r k m o u r n his loss f o u r sons a n d t w o ~rom the Marquetfe prison is c a t c h i n g N o t i c e is H e r e b y Given, t h a t I, E r e a s t of Pontiac. Mackie w a s s e t t i n g d a u g h t e r s , a n u m b e r of g r a n d c h i l m o r e t h a n e n o u g h fish ~out of L a k e f o r m s for the c o n c r e t e w h i l e t h e boy d r e n a n d o t h e r relatives. F r i e n d s n e s t L. H u n t e r , C h a i r m a n of D r a i n a g e SUperior to supply W a r d e n Corgan's hauled w a t e r in a small automobile. d e e p l y ~ m o u r n his d e p a r t u r e and ex- B o a r d f o r the H u r o n & B r a n c h D r a i n - N " f a m i l y " of m o r e t h a n 875 p e r s o n s S o m e o n e s h o u t e d a w a r n i n g t h a t the t e n d t h e i r s y m p a t h y to t h e b e r e a v e d a g e District, located in t h e counties of H u r o n , Sanilac and TusCola did on t h e w i t h a fish d i n n e r at least once a car w a s a p p r o a c h i n g and Mackie f a m i l y . s e v e n t h d a y of J u n e , 1928, file in t h e w e e k . Most of the fish caught f o r the, stepped b a c k directly into t h e p a t h JACOB ALLBRIGHT, Evangelist among the Germans o~ Eastern P e n n s y l v a n i a ~ w h e n office of t h e - s a i d Di'ain C o m m i s s i o n e r s :prison are lake a n d r a i n b o w trout, of the car. H e died o:a t h e w a y to r e s p e c t i v e l y an o r d e r d e s i g n a t i n g a George Washington was President--out of whose labels sprang The Evangelical AssociBEAULEY • rlth a small qtumttty of w h i t e f i s h and t h e hospital. d r a i n a g e district f o r t h e H u r o n & considerable n u m b e r of herring. B r a n c h d r a i n a c c o r d i n g to A c t No. ation. E s c a n a b a - - W l l l i a m Ash, 57 y e a r s L o v e l y rain. 316, P. A. of Michigan, 1923. Detroit--Burred alive for n e a r l y five old, a f a r m e r , b e c o m i n g s u d d e n l y inThe r o u t e and c o u r s e of said d r a i n Everybody welcome L D o n ' t * f o r g e t t h a t t h e Children's m i n u t e s bY a s e w e r Cave-in w a s t h e sane, killed his daughter, M y r t l e , 27 is as follows: ~harrowing e x p e r i e n c e of J o h n W a c h s , years old, a t t h e i r farm h o m e n e a r D a y e x e r c i s e s will be held n e x t SunR o u t e and Course f o r H u r o n Drain. 42 y e a r s old. W a c h s , an employe of. See Hill s e t t I e m e n t and d i s m e m b e r e d d a y a f t e r n o o n a t t h e G r a n t M . E . the D. P. W., was digging the s e w e r h e r b.~dy w i t h a h a c k s a w and a razor. c h u r c h a t 1:30. E v e r y b o d y welcome. M A I N D R A I N Mrs. B. Hotchk~'ss and son of Orion, w h e n a side of t h e excavation col- Ash was c a p t u r e d by deputies as he C o m m e n c i n g in a b r a n c h of t h e lapsed. F e l l o w e m p l o y e s f r a n t i c a l l y w a s t r y i n g to s m a s h e n t r a n c e into Mr. a n d Mrs. Clinton S h e r w o o d of P i g e o n R i v e r in t h e S E ~ of SW ~ d u g a w a y the loose e a r t h and b r o u g h t the home of Victor Johnson, a neigh- P o n t i a c , Mr. and Mrs. Gee. H a r t s e l l Sec. 2y, T 15 N, R 11 E, a t a p o i n t on \ ~Vachs out in a semi-conscious condi- bor. He w a s a r m e d with a hug9 a n d D a v i d T e l l e r of O w e n d a l e w e r e t h e W 1-8 line sec. 28, a n d 1.0 chain £ion. His action in crooking both club. H e w a s r e t u r n e d to t h e state calling on some of t h e i r relatives S of t h e c e n t e r ~Jf t h e S W ~A Sec. 27, G r a n t Township, H u r o n County, r u n a r m s over his face, provided b a r e l y insane h o s p i t a l at N e w b e r r y f r o m S u n d a y m o r n i n g a t t h e C. E. H a r t s e l l n i n g t h e n c e S 38 deg. 33 rain. E 12.32 e n o u g h air to last h i m until he w a s which he w a s d i s c h a r g e d in Septem- a n d S. H. H e r o n homes. chains; t h e n S 68 dog. E 24.68 c h a i n s ; ber of last y e a r . S t a n l e y H e r o n and Leslie T o w n - thence S 50 dog. 33 m i n E 2.00 c h a i n s ; rescued. K a l a m a z o o ~ A . C. E s t a b r o o k , of A1- send a,re s p e n d i n g a couple of d a y s t h e n c e S-63 dog. 44 min. E 13.28 Albion--;Lee B a r t l e t t of U n i o n CitY, ains; thence S 44 deg. E 10.72 A l b i o n College a t h l e t e who set a n e w logan, was e l e c t e d c o m m a n d e r of the in Detroit. ains; t h e n c e S 11 dog. 47 rain. E Mr. a n d Mrs. F r a n k R e a d e r a n d American record for the Javelin Michigan D e p a r t m e n t of the Grand 11:45 chains; t h e n c e S 3 deg. 33 rain. t h r o w at t h e N a t i o n a l Collegiate A. A r m y of the Republic at the closing Mildred s p e n t S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n w i t h W 19.72 chains; t h e n c e S 30 deg. 48 e n c a m p m e n z Mr. a n d Mrs. J o h n Zellars in Oliver. rain. W 20.04 chains; t h e n c e S 14 de4". A~ m e e t in Chicago r'~cently, and will session of the a n n u a l M r . a n d Mrs. C. E. H a r t s e l l spent 8 rain. W 18.85 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e S 41 undoubtedly b e c o m e a m e m b e r of t h e h e r e and B a y City was c h o s e n as the United States t e a m at the Amster- place of the 1929 convention. Esta- S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n at t h e W. O. Staf- deg. 13 rain. W 22.33 c h a i n s ; t h e n S 30 deg. 15 rain. W 16.34 c h a i n s ; flare Olympics, has a n o t h e r y e a r to brook, 83 y e a r s old, one of the young- f o r d h o m e in Cass City. t h e n c e S 03 deg. 1 0 rain. W 17.01 r e m a i n at Albion, b e i n g a j u n i o r this e s t v e t e r a n s at t h e e n c a m p m e n t , sucA r n o l d M c C a l l u m led t h e E p w o r t h chains; thence S 2 deg. 13 rain. W year. Coach "Bud" D a u g h e r t y be- ceeds Charles A. Bartlett, of Detroit. L e a g u e S u n d a y evening. A nice crowd 33.96 chains; t h e n c e S 72 deg. 47 rain. @ lieves B a r t l e t t will s~t a n e w world's Bay City w o n out over P o n t i a c for w a s p r e s e n t . Miss E l v a He,ion is t h e E 24.97 chains; t h e n c e S 50 deg. 30 record for the s p e a r h e a v e before he t h e h o n o r of e n t e r t a i n i n g the 1929 l e a d e r f o r n e x t S u n d a y evening, J u n e rain. E 14.19 chains; t h e n c e S 87 d e g . 6'Jacazllt)~ent of the Grand Arn~y s.nd 24th. finishes his collegiate career. 44 rain. E. 5.17 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e S 2 13 allied p a t r i o t i c organizations. deg. 36 rain. W 20.52 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e S B a t t l e C r e e k - - B a t t l e Crock's Boy 61 deg. 22 rain. E 1.33 chains; and M a n i s t e e ~ E i g h t y acres f r o n t i n g on Scout Council has a c c e p t e d a gift of a t h e r e end. Total l e n g t h 232.00 chains. ELKLAND-ELMWOOD $175,000 club building, e r e c t e d by Canfield and G r e e n Lakes, two miles TOWN LINE, R A W S O N B R A N C H W. K. Kellogg, B a t t l e Creek m a n u f a c - south of Manistee, have been l e a s e d C o m m e n c i n g in t h e m a i n ° d r a i n in turer, at the edge of Irving P a r k , n e a r by the P o r e M a r q u e t t e Council of the Mr. a n d Mrs. A. D a u s of I m l a y City the SE ~A of SE % sec. 34 at a p o i n t t h e high school athletic stadium. Boy Scouts, w i t h option to p u r c h a s e 10.26 chains N a n d 4.52 chains E of J a m e s E. W e s t , N a t i o n a l scout execu- as a p e r m a n e n t camp site for ~Boy s p e n t t h ~ w e e k - e n d in this vicinity. the E % q u a r t e r c o r n e r on t h e S line Mr. a n d Mrs. A. E w a l d a n d f a m i l y Sec. 34, T 15 N, R 11 E . ; t h e n c e N 85 tive~ of N e w Y~rk, gave the accept- Scouts of Manistee, Mason, O c e a n a ance address an~t p r e s e n t e d ' t h e Bat- and L a k e counties, The c o u n c i l will of P o n t i a c visited at t h e J. F. E v a n s deg. 30 rain. W 4.70 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e N tle Creek Council w i t h the Glore cup, conduct a camp there this s u m m e r h o m e S a t u r d a y and S u n d a y . N2 deg. 07 rain. W 12.29 chains; t h e n c e to t h e a regional a w a r d for the best all- u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of R o b e r t W e i r , Mrs. E. A. L i v i n g s t o n ' s section of " 8 9 d e g . 35 rain. W p a r a l l e l of Ludington. The tract is h e a v i l y ,around showing m a d e by Scouts of t h e L a d i e s ' A i d held a q u i l t i n g at t h e S 1-8" line Sec. 34, 12.07 c h a i n s ; ,Michigan, Illi'nois, I n d i a n a and Wis- wooded and a natural a m p h i t h e a t e r , h o m e of Mrs. C a t h e r i n e Y a k e s T h u r s - t h e n c e S 73 deg. 25 rain. W .94 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e 89 deg. 35 rain. W p a r a l l e l t o on the shore of Canfield L a k e , w i l l consin. day. A pot luck d i n n e r w a s served. t h e S 1-8 lihe Sec. 34; 9.65 c h a i n s ; be utilized for a camp fire circle. Mrs. Sadie B i n g h a m is s p e n d i n g thence S 00 deg. 20 rain. E 9.61 c h a i n s ; Port Austin~Floyd Schubel, 38~ E a s t L a n s i n g - - T h e idea t h a t colyears old, s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of the P o r t lege s t u d e n t s like to pet is all wrong, this w e e k a t the C. J. B i n g h a m home. t h e n c e S 83 deg. 10 rain. W 18:64 chains; t h e n c e S 89 deg. 50 rain. W Crescent S a n d & F u e l Co., w a s killed according to a study of the p e t t i n g Mr. a n d Mrs. E m e r y L o u n s b u r y and here w h e n he w a s buried u n d e r t o n s situation p r e s e n t e d in " T h e S t u d e n t , " b a b y a n d Mr. and Mrs. F. L o u n s b u r y 12.00 chains; and t h e r e end. T o t a l length, 79.90 ~chains. 6f moulder's sand he w a s h e l p i n g Michigan S t a t e College li{erary pub- visited E n o c h B r o w n a t ~ a n d u s k y on MAHARG BRANCH~ load onto a steamer. Schubel, w i t h lication. T h e conclusio~ r e a c h e d by S u n d a y o m m e n c i n g in t h e L i t t l e P i g e o n ~erank S m e a d e r and John Stro~zeski, tlm p a p e r is t h a t co-eds pet b e c a u s e Mr. a n d Mrs. W m . H. S i m m o n s and D rC a i n a t a point 7.31 chains E a n d ~ e n t into a bin to loosen t h e s a n d s o t h e y ~hing t h e m e n w a n t to; t h e m e n -family s p e n t S u n d a y a~ t h e h o m e of :a conveyor belt could pick it up a n d pet b e c a u s e t h e y think t h e co-eds Mr. a n d M r s . F r e d S e e l e y in E l m - 10.34 chains N of t h e W 1-8 post on the ~ line Sec. 27, T 15 N, R 11 E ; The COACH ,carry it to the ship. He w a s u s i n g a w a n t to; both t h e c o ~ d s a n d the m e n wood. t h e n c e S 30 deg. 07 rain. W 2.34 s h o v e l w h e n a b a n k of the sand col- °wo~ald p r e f e r n o t to pet. Miss M a x i n e Livingston, w h o t a u g h t chains; t h e n c e N 85 deg. 43 rain. W Opinions A smooth, quiet motor that sweeps you along at l a p s e d and fell on him. S m e a d e r and from various c a m p u s figures a r e of- t h e p a s t y e a r at P o r t Hope, wilt re- 3.36 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e S 3 deg. 44 min. W high speed for hour after hour--in perfect comfort! S t r o z e s k i w e r e b u r i e d to the waists, fered to s u b s t a n t i a t e ~the claim t h a t t u r n h o m e t h e last of t h e w e e k a f t e r ~;08 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e N 87 deg. 24 rain. W 2.57 chains; t h e n c e S 1 deg. 21 rain. ~but were removed unhurt. Acceleration that sho~ts y0uahead at the trafficline! T h e Touring $/I t'~ {etting c o m e s u n d e r the h e a d i n g of v i s i t i n g frienads in ~Ypsilanti and A n n W 11.01 chains; t h e n c e S 89 deg. 49 or Roadster . . . . . . s'f -~--2 Arbor. Power that conquers the steepest hills! The positive ' Muskegon~The Muskegon Trac~ ~ n w e l c o m e p a s t ~ e s . rain. W 8.11 chains; t h e n c e S 1 deg. ~uiss D o r i s L i v i n g s t o n r e t u r n e d Coupe.... ° ,o, °. * . 5 9 5 '~ion and Lightin~ Co. will use only 54 rain. E. 5.94 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e S 87 Lansing~Sheridan Township of braking action of big, nondocking @wheel brakesl ]aatural ga~ [Is fuel within the next ,Gladwin County will escape t a x a t i o n f r o m P o r t H o p e to h e r h o m e h e r e to deg. 30 rain. W 11.60 c h a i n s to t h e W And the delightful handling ease perfected by a fsedan ......... ; spend a w e e k w i t h h e r p a r e n t s . line, Sec. 34 at a poiflt 1.67 chains N 30 days, it is announced by D . A . this F e a r b e c a u s e there is no o n e to The Convertible $ ~ 0 ~ ball bearing, worm.and-gear steering mechanism! of t h e N 1=8 post on t h e W line, Sec. Sport Cabriolet .. ~JDv-J P o w e l l , g e n e r a l m a n a g e r . The com- serve as a s s e s s m e n t officer. O.B. 34, Granff t o w n s h i p , a n d t h e r e end. The Imperial $ P'] ] ~ p a n y has s t a r t e d w o r k l a y i n g a n Fuller, auditor~general, r e c e n t l y was That's what you get in the Bigger and Better ChevLandau . . . . . . . . . l ~ "1 Total l e n g t h 54.01 ch. WILMOT. eight-inch m a i n to t h e M u s k e g o n oil informed t h a t the supervisor, t r e a s u r Utility Truck ro!et~a type of performance so t h r i l l i n g that it is (Cho~,i~ o ~ y ) $ 4 9 5 MAHARG BRANCH EXTENSION-field, w h e r e 20,000,000 cubic feet of e r and c l e r k h a d moved out of the Light Dell*cry.. $ ~ Several attended the Children's Day bringin~ an entirely new order of motoring enjoy, C o m m e n c i n g a t t h e u p p e r end of gas are available daffy. ~ " O u r inves- township. All these officers w e r e (Chass/s O n t y ) the M a h a r a D r a i n a t Sta. 27 at a tigation has c o n v i n c e d us since the m e m b e r s of the family r e s i d i n g with- exercises a t K i n g s t o n on S u n d a y . A l l p r i c e s f , o . b . Flinh ment into the low-price field! point 2 . 6 7 chains N a n d .16 chains E Michigan gas was s t r u c k a t the l o w e r levels in its boundaries. Of the 23,040 a c r e s Win. M o u l t o n spent S u n d a y in C a r e of t h e N q u a r t e r ~ cor. on t h e W ~ k e c k C h e v r o l e ¢ Come in-'-and take thewheel~and see for yourself t h a t the field h e r e will last for in the t o w n s h i p , 680 have b e e n deed- and V a s s a r . line, Sec. 34, T 15 N, R 11 E.; t h e n c e Delivered prices y e a r s , " Mr. P o w e l l said. T h e com- ed to the s t a t e for n o n - p a y m e n t of w h a t a g r e a t c a r it is! T h e r e a r e . S e v e n b e a u t i f u l Mrs. Chas. M a r t i n , w h o h a s been S p a r a l l e l to and .50 c h a i n s E of t h e ' l ~ e y include the lowest p a n y , o w n e d by t h e A m e r i c a n Light- taxes and 19,200 are tax d e l i n q u e n t , sick f o r s o m e time, is b e t t e r a t this W line Sec. 34, 24.00 c h a i n s ; t h e n c e h a n d l i n g and f i n a n c i n g mod~ls to choose from. charges available. tng a n d T r a c t i o n Co., serves Muske- l e a v i n g only 3 , 6 1 0 to W h i c h private w r i t i n g . W .82 chains to a p o i n t 1.39 c h a i n s S gon and M u s k e g o n Heights. a n d .16 chains W of t h e E ~/~ post, owner9 hold clear title. M a s t e r W m . Moulton, Jr., of C a r e A l m a - - B u y e r s for ~ grocer groups La~aing---A rigid s t a t e w i d e test, de- is s p e n d i n g a few d a y s h e r e with his Sec. 33, G r a n t T o w n s h i p and t h e r e end. T o t a l l e n g t h 24.82 chains. m e e t i n g h e r e r e c e n t l y decided to Join s i g n e d to i n s u r e proper e q u i p m e n t g r a n d p a r e n t s , , M r . a n d Mrs. Win. B R A N C H NO. 1 O F M A t t ~ R G ~ t h the Quality S e r v i c e Stereo cor~ on motor v e h i c l e s u s i n g M i c h i g a n Moulton. BRANCH EXTENSION p o t a t i o n of Alma, and to open a brok, high,rays, is b e i n g m a d e by State Mr. a n d Mrs. F l o y d H a w k i n s left C o m m e n c i n g in t h e M a h a r g D r a i n l~olice. Cars driving t h r o u g h are ref o r t h e i r n e w h o m e a t H a r b o r B e a c h a t Sta. 27, it b e i n g .50 c h a i n s E a n d :erage office in th~s city for the bu~tng quired to s u b m i t to tests for brakes, F r i d a y . H e h a s t a k e n a m a i l r o u t e in for all stores a n d g r o u p s e n t e r i n g the 2.67 c h a i n s N of t h e N q u a r t e r light~ a n d horns. I m p r o p e r equip- t h a t vicinity. c o r n e r on t h e W line, Sec. 34; t h e n c e corporation. B u y e r s ware p r e s e n t m e n t will m e a n a police~ s u m m o n s L e w i s P o w e l l expects to move his W .66 chains to a p o i n t 2.67 c h a i n s N f r o m Kalamazoo, B a t t l e Creek, Jack- and probabIF a fine. H i g h w a y inspecf a m i l y n e a r Millington soon, w h e r e and .16 chains W o f t h e N ~£ c o r n e r son, Port H~lron, Saginaw, B a y City tion posts are ° located n e a r Mar- h e h a s a d i t c h job. on t h e E line, S'ec. 33 a n d t h e r e end. a n d m a n y o t h e r places. It is esti- quette, N e w b e r r y , Tot~l l e n g t k .66 chains. " Iron M o u n t a i n B. P o l w o r t h h a s m o v e d his f a m i l y D a t e d this s e v e n t h d a y of J u n e , 1928. m a t e d t h a t at l e a s t 500 stores will c h e b o ~ g a n , N I a n i s t ~ , B a y City, Flint, into F l o y d H a w k i n s ' house. Signed, 'Join the quality group in t h e i r btlying SL Cl~l~, W a y n e , South Ro~ckwood, E R N E S T L. H U N T E R , Miss L e l a T a l l m a n of F l i n t spent a a s a m e a n s of fighting the c h a i n Stores Sturgis, P a w Paw, Grand H a v e n and Chairman Drainage Board few days visiting friends here. L a n s i n g , :competition. Pastime inBrief-II + Theater "THE B A N D I T ' S SON" ! "MY B E S T GIRL" i i i Caused~Change - Mind i " B R E E D OF C O U R A G E " -@,.@**- @ NI N N NI N N @ N - What lie You Know About Great Les ers Prelesanlisrn? F, Smith al the Bni0n Service Hear Rev, Next Sunday Evening at the Presbyterian Church on N N N N N ~ Proof iS in the driving - - c o m e take a ride m m e B i g g e r and Better Chevrolet *585 *675 REMOVAL OF WAR TAX LOWERS DELIVERED .PRICES! A B C Sales and Service CaPs City Q U A-LI T Y A T LOW C OST _ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Cass City, Michigan, June 22, 1928. CASS CITY CHRONICLE • Buy the o /o' car thai has been proved by Two Million Owners... PAGE Thomas Colwell was a business caller in Mt. C l e m e n s Saturday. Dan Striffier spent f r o m Sunday until Tuesday with friends in Flint. Mr. and Mrs. John H n l b e r t of Snor e r were callers in town S a t u r d a y evening. Charles Roblin of Pontiac spent the week-end with his f a m i l y near Cass City. Basil B i g h a m visited his grandmother, Mrs. W a l t e r McCool, a t Shabbona a few days last week. Miss Lucile Bailey was the guest, LOCAL R. N. McCuilough and H a r r y Duke are new Pontiac buyers. M. C. W e n t w o r t h was a business caller in Detroit Tuesday. Delmar Striffier is assisting at the P. S. Rice grocery store. Alfred West left Wednesday to Vern Watson of D e t r o i t spen~ the from S u n d a y until Tuesday evening. week-end with his family here. Miss K a t h r y o n Cridland and Miss George Mellick of Elkton spent Mae Krickard of Detroit l e f t F r i d a y F r i d a y with his son, Nick Mellick. for Boulder, Colorado, to attend sumMiss Virginia and John D a y l e f t mer school. Saturday to visit relatives in Flint. Mrs. J a m e s Wood of Banning, CaliPaul Smarks of Yale spent several folmia, came S a t u r d a y to spend the Y o u will search in vain for a longer or more brilliant days last week witI1 friends in Cass summer w i t h her sister, Mrs. David record of service than Buick's. McComb, and with other relatives in City. _ and n e a r Cass City. Mr. and Mrs. Lorn Brown and Miss Two million Buicks have proved Buick value on the Mr. and Mrs. Wm. S t u r m and Flossie Crane were business callers in Miss M a r y Striffier, all of Detroit, road. More than a million: and a half, still in service, Saginaw Friday. A base ball t e a m is being formed visited the ladies' parents, Mr. and attest Buick stamina. among the Boy Scouts. A game w i t h Mrs. W. D. Striffler, f r o m S a t u r d a y until Monday morning. Every Buick h a s - - a s "regular e q u i p m e n t , " - - p o w e r in D~ford is planned. Members Of the Senior class and Mr. and Mrs. Win. Zinnecker spent excess of any need, beauty and luxury beyond compar e Sunday with t h e i r son, Wallace Zin- £heir sponsor, H a r r y Duke, enjoyed a chicken dinner at Williams Inn, Har~ a n d a degree o f dependabilky which has long been necker, in Pontiac. bor Beach, T h u r s d a y evening. Every Mr. and Mrs. Nick Mellick and member of the class was present b u t traditional. daughter, Catherine, were H a r b o r one. Beach callers Sunday. You're sure of real value when you buy the car that Mr. and Mrs. Albert D u n h a m and Dr. and Mrs. M. M. Wickware of two d a u g h t e r s of Royal Oak spent two million owners have proved. Detroit were week-end guests at t h e S a t u r d a y and Sunday with Mrs. DunDr. P. A, Schenck home. A l l B u i c k m o d e l s ha~,e L o , , e j o y Hydraulic Shock ham's mother, Mrs. Win. Schwaderer, Absorbers, front a n d r e a r , as s t a n d a r d e q u i p m e n t . Mrs. E m i l y W a r n e r of De ford spent Miss Kathleen remained to spend a few days l a s t week with h e r some time a t the Schwaderer home. ~ANS ~1195 to ~1995 . . . . COUPES ~1195 to ~1850 nephew, Richard Edgerton. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cohvell and two SPORT MODELS $1195 to ¢1525 Miss Bernice Gage of Deford spent children, Beryl and Pearl, of Gaylord ,dHpricesf. o. b. Flint, Mich. " TAr G.M.A.C. financeplan, ,_ tt~emostdes(tab!e,is avai~ble a few days last week with her cous- spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Colwell and attended the ins, Vetma and Rosalin Spencer. W. R. Kaiser and son, Kenneth, left Spencer reunion a t Deford Sunday. Monday morning and are spending Mrs. Colwell and children remained and are spending the week here. the week with relatives in Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cummings of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Tindale and daughter, Miss Dorothy, visited at the F l i n t spent Sunday w i t h the latter's sister, Mrs. Willis Campbell. Miss Dr. Maurer home in Reese Sunday. Bernice W a t e r s , who has spent two Raymond Wood entertained a num- weeks with h e r aunt, Mrs. Campbell, ber of young men a t a chicken dinner returned to F l i n t with t h e m Sunday CASS CITY, MICHIGAN Sunday at his home on West Main St. evening and will visit there before reMr. and Mrs. O . W . Nique and t u r n i n g to her home in Harrisville. daughter, Miss Eleanor, of Decker When Better Automobiles Are Built, Buick Will Build Them. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bixby and spent F r i d a y w i t h relatives in Cass daughter, Merita, returned l a s t week City. from Syracuse, N. Y , where they Mrs. A . A . Brian and daughter, have been m a k i n g t h e i r home, and Miss Mable, Mrs. H. T. Crandall and are visiting relatives i~ Cass City. son, Harry, were Bay Port visitors They expect to make t h e i r home in Ann Arbor agaffl. A son, Adrian BixSunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. Doerr, Mrs. Her- by, of Ann Arbor also visited in Cass m a n Doerr and children visited at t h e City the l a s t of the week. Hopcroft cottage a t Rose Island SunOrder for Publication Appointment day. of A d m i n i s t r a t o r . - - S t a t e of Michigan, Miss Florabelle U r q u h a r t left on The Probate Court for the County of BERMAN'S~KINGSTON W e d n e s d a y m o r n i n g to visit her sis- Tuscola. Your purchase is always dependable w h e l r i t comes ter, Mrs. Oakley Phetteplace, at YpsiAt a session of said Court, held at from Berman's where QUALITY MERCHANDISE 0nly the Probate Office in the Village of lanti. Mr. and Mrs. Malfley Asher and lit- Caro in said County, on the 14th day is sold at LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. of J u n e A. D. 1928. tle son, Eldon, returned W e d n e s d a y Present: Hon. Guy G. Hill, Judge f r o m Detroit where t h e y had spent of Probate. several days. In the M a t t e r of the E s t a t e of Mrs. Addle K n i g h t received word Jennie L. Dickinson, Deceased. Monday morning t h a t her brother, Levi E. Dickinson h a v i n g f i l e d in Win. Durfee, had been drowned Sun- said court his petition p r a y i n g t h a t is still in progress. the administration of said estate be d a y at Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Silvernail and granted to Levi E. Dickinson or to some other sutiabte person, Don't miss t h e s e CLEARANCE PRICES to save children and Miss Norma W e n t w o r t h I t Is Ordered, T h a t the 18th da)¢ of visited Mr. and Mrs. Van Horn a t J u l y A. D. 1928, at ten o'clock in the several dollars on a new Spring Coat Prices now $7.95 to Wilmot Sunday. forenoon, a t said probate office, be $19.75. Former prices $12.50 to $29.75. Mrs. David MeComb and three and is hereby appointed for hearing children spent a few days the first of said petition; g. It Is F u r t h e r Ordered, T h a t public the week with h e r father, David AN ATTRACTIVE LINE OF NEW FALL STYLES notice thereof be given b y publication Brown, at Holbrook. in Navy Georgette Dresses now on display, sizes 16 to 44, of a copy of this order, once each Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Striffier and week for three successive weeks prepriced at $16.75. Other new dresses in Flat Crepes, Miss Mary and Delmar Striffier were vious to said d~y of hearing, dn the Georgette and Printed P a t t e r n s priced at $9.85 to $12.50. callers at the R . H . Orr home in Cass City Chronicle, a newspapei* .I¢ Pigeon Sunday afternoon. printed and circulated in said county. GUY G. HILL, ¢e Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kosanke and SUMMER SPORTWEAR DRESSES OF BOTANY Judge of Probate. sons, Ralph and Donald, were Detroit g , , callers Tuesday. Ralph remained to A true copy. Flannel "in white and pastel colors, priced at $5.95. Myrtle Burse, spend some time there. Register of Probate. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Bailey and 6-22-3 q, WASH DRESSES, priced from $2.95 to $5.95. grandson, Wilfred Brewer, all of Pt. Huron, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Bailey's sister, Mrs. C. L. Graham. g. F r a n k Lenzner, Dr. G. F. Lenzner, Higgins~"Gifts That Last." and the Misses E m m a and Gladys Lenzner were dinner guests on Sunday Open evenings except Tuesdays and Thursdays. in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth MacRae at Greenleaf, Kingston, Mich. .Mr. and Mrs. Robert W a r n e r and daughter, Charlotte, and Mr. and Mrs. . ~ a n l e y W a r n e r and children, Albert ~We have a complete line and Waunetta, attended the W a r n e r reunion at Lake P l e a s a n t Thursday. of gift jewelry suitable for Mr. and Mrs. S'. L. B r o k e n s h i r e a n d any and all occasions, Weddaughters, Norella and Phyllis, of Marion, Indiana, spent from Thursding presents of good taste d a y until Sunday w i t h Mr. and Mrs. R: A. McNamee. and lasting quality. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. T a y l o r and children motored to Grand .Ledge Sunday where Mrs. Taylor and children will visit relatives for two weeks. Mr. Taylor returned to Cass Jeweler and Optometrist | City Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Smith, e n t e r rained over the week-end, Mrs. M a r g a r e t Livingston of-Detroit, Mr. and CORRECT HIGH -BLOOD Mrs. C. L . Stoner of Flint, Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y Hittle and children, DonPRESSURE ald and Jean, and Dorothy Holcomb, Dizziness and Avoid Paralysis all of Lansing. and Nerve Trouble in Ad -'~ Mr. and Mrs. Willis Campbell and vanced Years with San daughter, M ~ r y Jane, and t h e i r Yak Kidney Pills, guests, Mr. and Mrs. Cummings and Miss Bernice W a t e r s , with Mrs. H a r r i e t t Dodge, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gastro-Inte~tinal Disorders, the Menace of Humanity, the Only Cause It's really always ice cream time, for this delightful delicacy is Bigelow and daughter, Jean, enjoyed of Disease, Easily Avoided relished all the y e a r round; but in t h e M e r r y Month of June a picnic dinner at B a y Port" Sunday. with San Yak Pills. i t is more g r a t i f y i n g thma ever. R i c h a r d - E d g e r t o n accompanied his W h a t can be more p l e a s i n g to the t a s t e t h a n ice cream, premother, Mrs. Edgerton, to Clio T h u r s pared as it is b y us in all m a n n e r of t e m p t i n g combinations of day. M r : E d g e r t o n r e t u r n e d o t o C a s s CARES F O R T H E D I A B E T I C W I T H flavors and s y r u p s ? You'll smack y o u r lips iil perfect ecs.tacy OUT DIET City t h a t evening. Mrs. Edgerton reover our ~ce cream! mained to spend a few days with h e r And you can get M & B Ice Cream in bulk or brick, acc6rding Physicians Indorse San Yak. son, Dr. A. C. Edgerton, and from~ to y~0ur taste. I t ' s a h e a l t h y delicacy f o r parties and d i ~ e r s . t h e r e she visited h e r sister, Mrs. OsT r y a plate at:our soda fountain. Dr. L. P. Bailey, of McBride, Mich., car Armitage, at Ada. The Misses Eleanor and L a u r a ~ays of San Y a k : " I t will do all you Bigelow left Sunday morning to visit claim. I t is fine medicine for the blood relatives and friends in Pontiac and and has cured r h e u m a t i s m ¢ff long Detroit. Miss L a u r a expects to r e t u r n standing. When one treats the kidneys t o d a y ( F r i d a y ) and Eleanor will re- with . San Yak he is renewing the main for another week. Mrs. H a n n a h whole body. One can always depend McKim is s t a y i n g with Mrs. N. Bige- on San Yak." Sold at Burke's Drug low during their absence. ~ore.--Adv. Mrs. Catherine Yakes entertained Sunday Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y Vickers of Sandusky, Mr. and Mrs. James Yakes of Flint, and Mr. and Mrs. Alton Mark of Gagetown. Mr. a n d Mrs: H a r r y Hittle, son,[ 1Viers. W . H . Dawson of S a g i n a w Donald, and daughter, Jean, and spent Wednesciay at the home of h e r Dorothy Holcomb of Lansing were I brother, W a l t e r Schell, and attended week-end guests of relatives and l the commencement exerciss Wednesfriends here. I d a y evening. UD :#s" Economical Transportat~o~ /// ( L o o k for t h e Red/~ag.~ This Red " 0 . K." Tag Protects You A t t a c h e d t o t h e rradiamrs o f t h e best r e c o n d i t i o n e d u s e d cars w e o f f e r for sale is a r e d "O.K." tag w h i c h is t h 6 p u r . chaser's assurance that worn units have ibeen re. paBUICK CASS CITY, MICHIGAN Summer Sp ecials CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY A D e p e n d a b l e Store Silk Dresses. Suits Cases and Bags. J u s t arrived from New York Market. styles and colors at $6.75, June Coat Sale $9.75, New a s s o r t m e n t of g u a r a n t e e d - s u i t cases leather traveling b a g s at from :Newest $1.19 and up $12.75 Men's Dress Pants. $3.00 dark stripe pants---belt loops, cuff bottom, extra well made. $6.00 v a l u e s - - a l l wool and f a s t c o l o r - - l a t e s t styles and colors. E v e r y pair g u a r a n t e e d to give entire s a t i s f a c t i o n - - $1.79 pair $3.35 pair Girls' Coats. Men's $1.09 Summer Union Suits $7.50 values in good assortment of colors, mostly f u r trimmed. Sizes 3 to 8. Athletic style or short sleeve and long l e g s - size 36 to 46. 79c each $4.29 Silk Ties. Boys' Coverall Suits. $1.00 value blue stripe sizes 3 to 8 at with red $1.00 values pure silk, newest patterns and colors. I b o u g h t 50 dozen of these ties for m y t h r e e stores, so I can sell them to you a t trimming-- 79c 59c or 2for $1.00 Ladies' Hose. Dress Shirts. 79c value silk and r a y o n - - g u a r a n t e e d satisfaction--10 colors to choose from a t to give Broadcloth with or without collars attached. E v e r y s h i ~ g u a r a n t e e d f a s t colors and full cut in a t e s t patterns and colors. $3.00 values at 47c pair $1.79 each White shirts included. Oxfords and Pumps. Men's Work Shoes. $6.00 values in patent o r kid. E x t r a special a t - - $3.95 $3.00 values Endicott Johnson m a k e - - a l l s i z e s - - $2.19 pair Boys' Suits. o Straw Hats $10.95 values w i t h " s h o r t or long p a n t s - - s i z e s 6 to 16 a t for work or dress-~-large assortment in latest styles and colors--at f r o m $7.25 each 19c to $2.45 each A. H. HIGGINS Oxfords and Pumps. i Cass City Men's Work Sox. Values up to $5.00--odds and e nds-- - 97e 15c values in g r a y mixed, black or t a n at $1.49 9c pair Men's and Young Men's Suits $22.50 values in the popular l i g h t shades darker shades--some w i t h 2 pairs of pants. Men's Oxfords. and $5.00 values in all leather, black o r wonderful values to be had a t $16.75 each Ice Cream Time Is Here! A. FORT & SON and Men% Pants. JEWELRY-Z-THE GIFT IDEAL ! p l a c e d iby n e w o n e s ~ a n d t h a t t h e p r i c e quote~l r e p r e . sents actual value. Look for t h i s tag w h e n y o u b u y a u s e d car--and know that your i n v e s t m e n t is p r o t e c t e d . A B C Sales and Service Mo Bo Auten Berman's Dept. Store THREE. $3.45 pair. Wash Dresses. Men's Undershirts or Drawers. F a s t colors, short or long sleeves in good assortment of p a t t e r n s - - s i z e s 16 to 52 $3.00 Values. 75c values in s h o r t sleeved shirts. made with double seat and reinforced a t $1.98 r n,i Drawers 45c pair i . Best Values ! tan--most Lowest Prices ! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DependaNe Merchandise ! Schonmuller a,- CASS ~ r CITY PAGE CASS CITY CHRONICLE Published Weekly. The Tri-County Chronicle and Cass City Enterprise consolidated Apr. 20, 1906. All In fn In In CASS CITY CHRONICLE FOUR. Subscriptions Are Payable i n Advance. Michigan, one y e a r ..................$1.'/5. Mfchiffan, six months ..........:... 1.00 Outside State. United S~ates, one y e a r ..........$2.00 Canada, one y e a r ...................... 2.50 A d v e r t i s i n g ra~es made Known on application. Entered as second class m a t t e r Apr. 27, 1906, at the post office ~t Cass City, Michigan, ~under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. H. F. L E N Z N E R , Publisher~ Notice to Subscribers. The Chronicle subscription lis~ is indexed by post offices, not by names. Subscribers desiring to have t h e i r addresses changed W i l l please send F O R M E R as well as N E W address. If they will do this, their wishes will be more quickly and easily ¢gmplied with. Cass City, Michigan, June 22, 1928. Mrs. W i l l i a m McCarron and daughGeorge Hill spent the week-end in H e c t o r McKay of Detro it spent the Eyeslght of Snakes ter, Vera, qf P o r t Huron, Win. McAlbion on business. week-end with his f a m i l y here. Snakes do not actually go blind ' Carron, Jr., of Flint, and Mrs. WilJ o h n A. SandHam spent from Mr. and Mrs. Guy Rench and chilperiodically. The belief that they go dren w ~ r e callers in P i g e o n Saturday. W e d n e s d a y until F r i d a y in Cleveland. liam Quinlan ~nd daughter, Nellie, of blind during dog days is based on t h e Sau!t Ste. Marie were Sunday guests Clark Zinnecker is spending a few Miss ~Marine K r u e g e r of Adrian was fact that their eyes have a milky ap~ t the Thomas Kelly home. the g u e s t of Miss Helene Bardwelt d a y s w i t h r e l a t i v e s in Pontiac and Pearance shortly before the slough is ~ Tuesday guests of Mr. and M~s. A. Detroit. last week. cast. This, according to the United A. Brian were Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s States biological survey, is due to the Miss A g n e s F e r g u s o n left SaturWin. Duncan of D e t r o i t is spending Lockwood, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Lockseparation of the outer layer of epitwo Week~ ~t the home o f Mr. and d ay fo r A n n A r b o r w h e r e she has em~wood, and Samuei T e r g i d e o n , all of ployment. dermis from the cornea. The vision Mrs. D u g a l d K r u g spent Tuesday Mrs. Clauffe Karr. Miss J u n e D. Myers of P i g e o n w a s Fenton. J a m e s Lockwood r e m a i n e d Rev. and Mrs. Curtis are attending" and is spending a few days w i t h his ds'~greatly impaired while t~e snake I s Mrs. Charles Donnelly spent Saturthe guest of Miss Ella Cross T u e s d a y and W e d n e s d a y in Detroit. passing through this period. and Wednesday. 'rl~e ~i14gham school reunion will day evening and S u n d a y with h e r the N o r t h e r n B a p t i s t convention this niece, Mrs. Brian. week at Detroit. two sons in Pontiac. ¢ Duncan M c A r t h u r and Mrs. S a r a h be held S a t u r d a y , J u n e 30. Mr. and Mrs, L. Bailey and daughMiss Florence H o m e r of Casnovia t e r ~ Misses C ath erin e and ~Lucile, at_ K e n n e t h Higgins, Jr., spent the Gillies called on relatives m Wilmot Mrs. G. A. Striffier and son, Irvine, w e e k - f n d with his ~unt, Mrs. Thee is spending two ~w~eks with Miss tended the commencement exercises Sunday evening. were callers in Saginaw Monday. E i y , u : ~ ~igei~w. ~en~rlCK, a~ k;e0ar i~un. at Care T h u r s d a y evening. E . J . MilMrs. Charles D o ~ e l l y is spending Leo Sturm of Pigeon spent Sunday Wood is by all means the best maDr. and Mrs. P a r k Jones spent the lington gave th e address. His sub- terial for bird houses. Metal should~: Miss Nila Butt of B r o w n City visa few daY,S w i t h her son, Nell Don- night at the W. D. Striffler home. week-end w i t h f r i e n d s and relatives ject was "The Education of a Prince." be avoided because it is a conductor nelly, at S ~ d n a w . Mrs. Anna Streeter of Care visited ited a t the home of h e r fath er, Gee. in C a r e and Bay City. Butt, over t h e week-end. Miss M a r g u e r i t e Ross, a niece of Mrs. l of heat. i n the choice of wood, an Miss Ilo Smith of Grand L e d g e at the B. A. Elliott home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. L W. Hall and Mrs. Bailey, was a m e m b e r of the class. Guy Sweet and Mr. an d Mrs. Roy c a m e Tuesday to visit her sister, Mrs. easily workable kind, such as cypress. A n t o n Dennis is spending t h e sumA time long to be r e m e m b e r e d by pine or yellow poplar, is p r e f e r a b l e . B. F. Benkelman, Jr. m e r w i t h his aunt and uncle at A1- Clark spent Sunday ~with Mrs. An- A n n a P a t t e r s o n visited relatives in Po n tiac S a t u r d a y ev en in g and Sun- several little folks was enjoyed F r i , for homemade bird t~ouse~. Cypress drew Swadling at Fostoria. Miss Adeline Gallagher, a t e a c h e r ! mont. day. day when Mrs. I. D. McCoy e n t e r - is the most durable of these. Sawmill E d w a r d Greenleaf l~eft S a t u r d a y for at Highland_ Park, is expected to Mr. and Mrs. P e t e r D. Rushlo of r a i n e d a n u m b e r of Martha's little w a s t e - - r o u g h slabs with the bark on~ Mrs. T h o m a s Keenoy, Mrs. Ed. Painsville, Ohio, wh ere he has acceptspend the s u m m e r in Cass City. Care spent Sunday w i t h Mr. and Mrs. S u r p r e n a n t and d a u g h t e r , Shirley, of friends in h o n o r of ~her eighth birth- --furnishes cheap and satisfactory maed a position for the summer. W a r r e n Schenck, son of Dr. and David Tyo. Mr. P l e a s a n t w e r e callers at Thomas day. They w e r e taken to the McCoy terial for rustic houses. Mrs. P. A. Schenc~, is spending a f e w Mr. and Mrs. M . E . K e n n e y and Mr. and Mrs. Leo A s h e r of Care cottage at Caseville, wh ere t h e y spent Nelly's Tuesday. son, Jack, spent several days the first weeks with relatives in Detroit. w e r e Monday callers of Mr. and Mrs. th e day and enjoyed both dinner and Mr. and Mrs. A l e x H e n r y and son, of the week with relatives in Toledo. Donald L o r e n t z e n left T u e s d a y f o r F r a n k Asher. Delbert, and Mrs. Cridland visited supper. M a r t h a received ~rnany p r e t t y Mrs. Wm. Cooper of Deford spent D r a y t o n Plain~ w h e r e he expects to Larger Than Ca~itol E l m e r Wilsey of Chro was a guest Mr. and Mrs. Clare Keeler at North gifts. be employed during the s~ummer. II The Capitol at Washington Is 746; at the h o m e of his sister, Mrs. John several days t h e first of the week B r a n c h Sunday. with Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Wentworth. Mr. and Mrs. 'Morton Orr and two Bearss, Sunday. l feet long and 270 feet wide. The palMiss M a r g a r e t Nelly of Central Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W a r n e r and daughters spent Sunday w i t h Mr. and On the windo W of a London res-i ace of the Dalai Lama at Lhas~ i s The B a p t i s t Missionary Society met Mrs. Glen McQueen at H a y Creek. Albert and W a u n e t t a , S t a t e College, Mt. Pleasant, is spend- t a u r a n t a,n ABerdonian read, "No t 1,000 feet long, four stories in height, •Tuesday a f t e r n o o n at the home of children, called on friends in Bad Axe Sunday. ing this w e e k a t h e r home here be- Gratuities." So he entered. 1 surmounted by a large dome covered Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Vader and chil- Mrs. C a t h e r i n e Yakes. fore r e t u r n i n g to summe~ school. But going to wash his hands, he with gold, as are also the ~perlstyle The 4Misses Vera and E r m a F l i n t dren spent S a t u r d a y evening and R a y Le~vis of Pontiac spent a few Mrs,~Wm. S c h w e g l e r and sons, An- read the words, "Tip the basin." He pillars in front. It contains 490 r o o m s Sunday w i t h relatives at Marlette. days last week with his parents, Mr. left Wednesday for Detroit w h e r e d r e w and E d w a r d , Mrs. Benj. Schwegstepped h~ck. and 1.333 windows. The building was t h e e~ have e m p l o y m e n t for the sumMiss Ella Cross of B i r m i n g h a m and Mrs. H i r a m Lewis. ler, Mrs. E . W . K e r c h e r and son, "Aye," he grunted, "I thoeht t h e r e commenc~l t,200 years ago and the mer. came S a t u r d a y and will spend the Mr. and Mrs. Clarefice B u r t and Gerald, w e r e visitors in S a g i n a w on ~ a s a catch in it." most recent addition is 200 years old. Mr. and Mrs. H u g h DeCamp and s u m m e r w i t h h e r brother, A n d r e w Mr. and Mrs. John W e s t w e r e weekWednesday. A lamaserie nearby shelters 7,500 two children of I m l a y City visited a t Cross. end visitors in Caseville. lamas. Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s T e n n a n t and Advertise it in the Chronicle. the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. WilMr. and Mrs. McCrarry and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. E r n e s t L o r e n t z e n and Mr. and Mrs. Robert W a r n e r and son gunday. Taft of D e t r o i t visited Mrs. F l o r a children w e r e dinner guests Sunday of d a u g h t e r , Charlotte, spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. A r t h u r Galloway and McLaughlin and Mrs. Julia Gay last Mr. and Mrs. Phillip S h a r r a r d . w i t h Mrs. W a r n e r ' s cousins, Mr. and d a u g h t e r , Marg aret, of Care w e r e week. Mrs. John H a r r i s , a t Mayville. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. P e a s e left ~SunMiss McKellar and h e r Sister, Miss day f o r Mt. Pleasant, w h e r e Mr. c a l l e r s at the Ev an g elical p ars o n ag e Copy fo r the p r e m i u m lists of the Sunday afternoon° A n n a McKeller, of Sandusky w e r e P e a s e will a t t e n d s u m m e r school. Cass City F a i r is in the hands of the guests of Mrso F l o r a McLaughlin last The Busy Bees of the Baptist p r i n t e r and the books will be r e a d y Miss G e r t r u d e Striffier left Monday church held an all-day quilting and week. for D e t r o i t where she expects to atfo r distribution in the n e a r fu tu re. J u n e 22, 1928. No. 46. VoL 3. pot-luck dinner at the home of Mrs. Miss Helene Bardwell, who has tend ~he Detroit Business Institute. The dates of the f a i r are A u g u s t 7, 8, I. W. Hall Friday. been t e a c h i n g at Mason, is spending 9 and 10. Mr. and Mrs. George Holshoe and J u s t about the t i m e some of us the s u m m e r vacation at h e r h o m e in Mr. and Mrs. Duane Geister and Published in the interest of the Mr. and Mrs. Anson K a r r e n t e r O. P e t e r s o n w e r e S u n d a y visitors of get into the six-cylinder automobile People of Cass City and vicinity son, Carl, of Decker were Sunday Cass City. Mr. and h~[rso i~L Gillies at M.~nden tained the G r e e n l e a f F a r m e r s ' Club group our h/ends took up golf and guests of Mrs. Geister's parents, Mr. by the o Eo W. Keating, Mrs. Nancy Fulton City. Monday evening. Senator Phillip again left us with nothing to talk and Mrs. J o n a t h a n Whale. Elkland Roller Mills and their guests, Mrs. Yera Howard O'Connel was th e speaker and gave Mr. and Mrs. Ben Herr and Gus about. Roy Taylor, Editor and two daughters, visited in Bad Mrs. H e n r y W a g e r and d au g h ter, m a n y facts concerning the doings of Wisosky, all of Pontiac, were weekAxe Monday. Miss Bernice, of An n Arb o r visited the state l e g i s l a t u r e . end guests at the Dan~. McClorey Lloyd Re a gh has about 20 choice relatives and friends in Cass City E v e r y year, along about this Darwin Bailey, commercial teacher home. Division No. 2 of the Methodist LaRock cockerels for sale. These f r o m T h u r s d a y until Sunday. time, we m e e t the fellow who asks at Harbor Be~ch, will come home dies' Aid, of which Mrs. E. A. Corbirds a r e oz the very best breedMrs. L. I. Wood, Mrs. A. A. Ricker, Sunday ~o spend the gummer at his us, "Is it hot enough for you?" Mrs. H. T. Viekere and d au g h ter, pron is c h a i r m a n , entertained the ing', f r o m h e a v y l a y i n g s t r a i n and Mrs. J. A. S a n d h a m and t h r e e daughO. parentai home. can be b o u g h t at a v e r y reasonable ters w e r e business callers in Saginaw Jean, ~of Greenleaf spent a few days o t h e r divisions of t h e aid at a recepGee. Caister has a fine flock of l a s t week ~ t h h er g r a n d m o t h e r , Mrs. tion tea T h u r s d a y afternoon f r o m Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lauderbach price w h e n you consider quality. Tuesday. about two h u n d red pullets coming returned Wednesday from a visit at H u g h McColI. t h r e e until six o'clock at the home of Mrs. W a l t e r Milligan e n t e r t a i n e d on t h a t should make a good produthe home o~Mr. and Mrs. James Rev. and Mrs. George Hill. Mrs. H a r r y 0 s t r a n d e r and d a u g h A c e r t a i n sm~ll boy in this %wn the M a l f e m Club at h e r home Thurscing flock this winter. Campbell near Care. a p p e a r e d n e a r the post office the ter, Beatrice, and son, Isaac, of PontiMrs. A. A. Hitehcoek of Romeo d a y . a f t e r n o o n . Supper was served by O ac w e r e week-end guests at the came F r i d a y and with Mr. and Mrs. Miss Lottie W e s t is expected home the hostess. othe r morning" w i t h two dogs. E v e r h e a r about the fellow wh o " H a v e you got the licenses on both homes of Isaac C rag g and Floyd Otta- A. J. K n a p p and son, Clark, left Satfrom Owosso t o d a y ( F r i d a y ) : a n d will D. C. E l l i o t t is treating his house to quit smoking because he was getleave Sunday to attend the s u m m e r those d o g s ? " somebody asked. way. u r d a y f o r Cheboygan, Charlevoix and a coat of colonial yellow paint with ting a tobacco h e a r t ? Well, he be"No," w a s the reply, " t h e big t e r m at Mt. Pleasant. Mr. and ~V[rs. Ben K i t t e n and o t h e r places in the upper p a r t ~of the w h i t e t r i m m i n g . J a m e s S. McCrea is gan eating candy and now he h as a dog's all right, but the little one's Miss L o r e n a Wilson ends h e r school doing the work. d a u g h t e r , Elaine, of Cass City and state. T h e y expect to be gone th e sweetheart. just full of 'era." Mr. and Mrs. George K i t t e n of A r - week. year as t e a c h e r in the G a g e t o w n ~o~ Mr. and Mrs. G . A . Striffler and gyle w e r e entertained Sunday at the school t od a y ( F r i d a y ) and wilI a t t e n d Mr. and Mrs. Louis Smith and chilThis week w e culled Mrs. Whitson, I r v i n e , and Mr. and Mrs. William home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gotts. A horse doing h a r d field work Ypsilanti s u m m e r school. ~ dren of D e t r o i t c a m e T u e s d a y to visfield's hens. This flock is prodj~Paul s p e n t Sunday a t H u r o n "County always gets his grain. You Mr. and Mrs. John L o r e n t z e n a~d P a r k at Caseville. Miss Elda McKay of Detroit came it Mrs. Smith's m o th er, Mrs. Clara cing b e t t e r t h a n fifty per cent and w o u l d n ' t think of j u s t turning" him Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kosanke and W e d n e s d a y to spend a few days at Cridland. Mrs. Sm ith and children have been l a y i n g h eav y since e a r l y Mrs. J o h n Bearss and daughter, out to pasture. A milk cow is actuson, Donald, spent Sunday at t h e Lorh e r p a r e n t a l home. Thursday, she will r e m a i n fo r some time. Mr. last fall. ~. Miss E m m a , and the Misses E l y n o re ally doing h a r d e r work t h a n the S m i t h r e t u r n e d to Detroit Wednesentzen cottage at Caseville. u n d e r w e n t an operation at the N o n ' i s Bigelow a n d Ruth Elliott w e r e Bay horse, and ye t m a n y people give hospital for removal of tonsils. She day. C o n u n d r u m ~ I f a m a n ate his Mr. and Mrs. Win. H. W a r d (Thel- City callers Saturday. t h e m p a s t u r e alone in the summer. r e t u r n e d to Detroit Sunday. Several local g a r d e n e r s are comf a t h e r and mother, w h a t would he m a Williams) of W i c k w a r e a r e t h e F e e d P u r i n a Cow Chow and get Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Sweet and Mr. and Mrs. E r w i n W r i g h t w e r e plaining t h a t s p a r r o w s are especially be ? Think h a r d and let us k n o w if parents of a baby daughter, w h o will m o r e milk this summer. f a m i l y a n d Mr. and Mrs. George Mcin F l i n t Thursday. T h e y b r o u g h t destructive this s p r i n g in d e v o u r i n g you get it. ( A n s w e r is, Orphan.) answer to the n a m e of Caroline Irene. ---o--A r t h u r of Deford visited a t the Chas. home t h e i r d a u g h t e r , R u t h Bell, who th e corn, peas, cabbage and other Mr. and Mrs. Howard A s h e r of Ca- H e n d e r s o n home Sunday. "Actions s p e a k louder than has been a t t e n d i n g t~he Michigan v e g e t a b l e plants. T h e y fav o r a bounWe h a v e a q u a n t i t y of s e e d re and Mr. a n d Mrs. F r a n k A s h e r of words." Mr. and Mrs. Merrill A n d e r s o n and School for the Deaf, to spend the t y on sparrows as a m ean s of g e t t i n g Buckwheat f o r sale. Cass City visited at the h o m e of W e do m o r e t h a n just t a l k about d a u g h t e r of Imlay~ City spent Satur- s u m m e r at h er h o m e here. rid of the pests. Claude A s h e r a t Harbor Beach SunPurina. W e can show you facts d a y n i g h t w i t h Mr. A n d e r s o n ' s moth"I h a v e n ' t paid a cent f o r repairs Mrs. W. G. Duncan an d Miss EveR e g i s t r a t i o n of a l u m n i and p relim : day. about profits P u r i n a is m a k i n g for .er, Mrs. Phillip S h a r r a r d . since I've owned this car." lyn Duncan of Detroit and Mr. An- i n a r y activities of th e U n i v e r s i t y of l e a d i n g feeders. A sk us. o Mrs. Burr Hotchkiss and son, Wil"Yeah! T h a t ' s w h a t the fellow Miss D o r o t h y Tindale, in company k e r b r a n d t of Sebewaing were S u n d a y Michigan's annual commencement o--lard, of Ortonville and Mr. and Mrs. who does y o u r rep airin g just told T h e street was thronged with Clinton Shurwood of Pofitiac spent w i t h Miss Inez Niaurer of Reese, left guests at the Claud K a r r home. Mr. w e e k p r o g r a m b e g a n J u n e 14. GradT u e s d a y to spend a week a s the and Mrs. Elon Hill of London, Ont., u a t e s n u m b e r i n g me." several h u n d r e d thousands of h u r r y i n g pedestrians. the week end a t the home of George guests of Miss D o r o t h y L a n d w e h r a t w e r e also week-end g u e s t s of Mr. and f r o m twenty-five classes r e t u r n e d f o r Suddenly a w o m a n ' s c r y rose Hartsell. We received a n o t h e r car o f P u ~ shrilly above the noise of the pasMilwaukee, Wis. l~irs. K a r r . the festivities. Class day p r o g r a m s Mr. and Mrs. Win. Crandell, Mrs. r i n a Chows this week. The Butzbach Missionary Circle enMrs. Roy Bricker of Holly spent w e r e h e l d F r i d a y ' a n d S a t u r d a y folsing throngs. "Give me a ir r" she Archie M u r p h y and d a u g h t e r and o lowed by P r e s i d e n t Clarence Cook t e r t a i n e d t h e y o u n g people of th e S u n d a y with her m o t h e r , Mrs: T. H. shrieked. The crowds gasped and Mrs. Gay visited Sunday in H a r b o r Little's b a c c a l a u r e a t e address S u n d a y How m a n y hens in y o u r flock are stood aside. Then a w o m a n triumBeach, the" g u e s t s of Mrs. M01"ley and E v a n g e l i c a l church at the home of Wallace. Rex Bricker, who has spent Rev. a n d Mrs. Smith on Tu%sday eve- some time with his g r a n d m o t h e r , re- morning. On Monday, g r a d u a t i o n exeating good feed and p a y i n g n o th p h a n t l y •drove h e r car, w i t h oneTlat other friends. ing for i t ? Quite f r e q u e n t l y poulning. t u r n e d to Holly with his m o t h e r Sun- ercises b eg an w i t h the p a r a d e ~ o f tire, into t h e filling station. Miss Gertrude McWebb, a t e a c h e r t r y raisers lose on some hens all Mr. and Mrs. N a t h a n Yon and the~ day evening and will spend the sum- seniors down State street. Chester H. in a Cleveland school, is spending t h e Rowell, a m e m b e r of the board of t h a t other hens are earning. LoafSoda fountains, t a l c u m powder m e r there. ;Misses Bernice and ~: Hazel Sweet of week with h e r mother, Mrs. Sarah r e g e n t s of the U n i v e r s i t y of S o u t h e r n ing hens ru n down a v e r a g e e g g and p e r f u m e d soaps are now havPontiac visited over the week-end at A r t h u r Carson of Pontiac a n d Mr. McWebb. She will attend s u m m e r production p er hen and run up y o u r ing t h e i r inning. the home of t h e i r parents, Mr. and and Mrs. A r t h u r Cooley and children C a l i f o r n i a , delivered the commenceschool at Ypsilanti. feed costs. You lose both ways. Mrs. H e n r y Sweet. of Ow@ndale were c a l l e r s a t the home m e n t address, lWr. and Mrs. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bohnsack and L a w left S a t u r d a y morning" and Mr. By sending the loafers~ to m a r k e t Mr. and Mrs. Win. T u r n e r of E1- of Mrs. ~ g n e s Cooley Saturday. ~ Miss two sons, Mrs. Charles Hall and two and feeding y o u r l a j e r s P u r i n a , a In a Cooley, who has spent four weeks and Mrs. A~~ H . - H i g g i n s left S u n d a y lington, Robert Brown of W~ickware, daughters, Misses Irene and Carrie, feed t h a t l a y e r s can t u r n into eggs and J o s e p h B r o w n of Pontiac were with~ h e r g r a n d m o t h e r , r e t u r n e d to m o r n i n g to be w i t h t h e i r sons, B u r t were Sunday evening guests of Mr. L a w and K e n n e t h Higgins, who are at a lower cost, you'll be m o n e y S a t u r d a y visitors of Mr. and Mrs. h er home with h e r p a r e n t s S a t u r d a y and Mrs. John Tewksbury. Phone No. 15 Cass City, Mich. g r a d u a t e s f r o m t h e dental d ep artalaead. evening. J a m e s S. McCrea. ment. i Mr. and Mrs. Dan McClorey and M r . and Mrs. F. S. Sheldon and J u n i o r Donnelly, who has been stayMiss Beatrice, a n d t h e i r guests, Mr. 1 son, Paul, of Tecumseh a n d Miss Heling w i t h his g r a n d p a r e n t s , M r . and and Mrs. Benj. H e r r and Gus Wisosen Sheldon of Sebewaing were weekky, were e n t e r t a i n e d at dinner S u n d a y Mrs. Charles Donnelly, left l a s t week end guests of key. an d Mrs. Curtis. to spend some time w i t h his father, at Charles McConnell's home in NoMiss Sheldon and V a u g h n Curtis acLloyd Donnetly, in Pontiac. vesta township. companied the Sheldons to Tecumseh Mrs. V e r a E. H o w a r d a n d daughMiss A n n a Marjorie M c R a e , who Monday ~ w h e r e Migs Sheldon will ters, Misses Blanch and K a t h r y n , of has been t e a c h i n g at Shover, is spendspend h e r ~summer vacation w i t h h e r ing the week w i t h her parents, Mr. Bay P o r t came last week and are parents. Mr. Curtis spent a few days and Mrs. K e n n e t h McRae, and with visiting Mrs. Howard's mother, Mrs. ~there. ~::: her sister, Miss Evangeline, will at- N a n c y Fulton, at t h e E. W. K e a t i n g Mrs. George E. P u r d y and grandhome. tend s u m m e r school at Mt. Pleasant. Miss B e t t y ~P'hrdy, of Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s S. McCrea had d a u g h t e r , Mrs. Wilber SMmmel and little Brookings, South D a ~ t a , and Mr. as guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. daughter, M a r g a r e t Jane, of P o r t Huand Mrs. H. K. Smith and d a u g h t e r , ron are visiting" at the home of Mrs. Eltiott, Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Elliott and ~Barbara Jafie, of D e t r o i t were ~ e e k sons, Mr. a n d Mrs. R a y H u l b u r t and Shimmel's parents, Mr. an~ Mrs. end guests at t h e h o m es of W. 0. Glen McQueen; also with h e r sister, i three children, and Mr. a n d Mrs. Stafford and T . H . Wallace. Mrs. Samuel Blades. Mrs. Morton Orr. P u r d y and Miss B etty r e m a i n e d and Miss E m m a Bearss t e f t S u n d a y for Raymond McCullough has comwill spend several weeks in and n e a r Bay City, w h e r e she will t e a c h bookpleted his third y e a r as t e a c h e r in the Cass City. Mrs. S~nith will be bet~ Argyle school and"will r e t u r n a g a i n keeping" and m a t h e m a t i c s d u r i n g the t e r knov~n as Raydell Macomber, a for his fohr~h year. Mr. McCullough s u m m e r a t the Bay City Business [ o r n ~ r Cass City girl. leaves S u n d a y to attend s u m m e r College. Miss Bearss will also finish a About sixty enjoyed th e m e e t i n g of course w h i c h she started last s u m m e r school at Ypsilanti. t h e South Novesta F a r m e r s ' Club Mr. and Mrs. R. C. H u n t and chil- at the college. Students home f o r the s u m m e r va- held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. dren of Pontiac spent the week-end with relatives in Cass City. Gerald cation a r e Miss Pauline K n i g h t , Stu- Thomas Cohvell F r i d a y evening. A If not. L e t m e w r i t e your insurance whic~ will protect you against Caswell, who has spent t e n days in a r t Wilsey, and Marshall B u t t f r o m seven o'clock pot luck supper was Cass City, r e t u r n e d to his h o m e in Michigan State College at Lansing; held. A f t e r singing and prazgr, the Gordon Bliss and Alfred W e s t f r o m minutes of the l a s t m e e t i n g were read Pontiac w i t h them. A n u m b e r of friends f r o m D e t r o i t Mr. P l e a s a n t ; Richard Schenck f r o m and roll was called. E a c h m e m b e r re~ surprised Mr. and Mrs. Hector Ross of Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine; sponded by telling his or her hobby. B. A. Elliott and son, Leo n ard g a v e Greenteaf S a t u r d a y and gave a p a r t y Douglas McRae from A n n Arbor. Mrs. J o h n Lorentzen and Mrs. An- -several selections on t h e i r H a w a i i a n that afternoon and evening in h o n o r of the birth anniversaries of K a t h r y n drew Cross e n t e r t a i n e d at a shower guitars. County a g e n t , Mr. Jewell, and Hector Ross, twin children of Mrs. in honor of Mrs. E r n e s t L o r e n t z e n o~ was the speaker of th e evening and T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n at t h e home of gave m a n y helpful thoughts. Short Catherine Ross of Cass City. g a m e s w e r e talks Were given by R o b e r t Brown of Mr. and Mrs. F r e d Jaus and d a u g h - Mrs. Cross. Various ter, Laura, Mr. and Mrs. Sam J a u s played, one of which w a s to sew a Care, Mrs. A. J. K n a p p of Cass City and d a u g h t e r , Minnie, Mr. a n d Mrs. stork on a piece of w h i t e cotton. Mrs. and Louis and H o w a r d Retherford of Ben Crocker and two little sons, Mrs. Ben K i r t e n received t h e prize, a baby Deford. ~ reading was given by Mrs. C . S . CHAMPION, Local Agent. Legal l~eserve,-Non Assessable. Christina Jaus and Geraldine Striffier in a bath tub, f o r m a k i n g the best Alice Merrim an . Mrs. K n a p p gave an were dinner guests at the f a r m h o m e looking stork. Mrs. Lorentzen received invitation to hold the d u b picnic July of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Joos On Sun- m a n y beautiful gifts. A delicious self- 20 at the Knapp cottage at Caseville which was accepted. serve supper "gas enjoyed. day: Y]appentng'3 1 I NOVESTA. E v e r y t h i n g at a standstill since the rain Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C u n n i n g h a m and family visited Sunday at the A. H. Henderson home. Keith H o m e r spent the week-end w i t h his parents here. Mr. and Mrs. Holcomb had fo r company Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Sam H u i e t t and Mr. and Mrs. Gran Hul e t t and d a u g h t e r of Holly, Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y H i t t l e and children and Dorothy Holeomb of Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Preston of Snor e r and Mr. and Mrs. Niles and Miss Belva F e r g u s o n of Detroit were Sund a y visitors at t h e home of Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Bridges. The Church of Christ having organized a Ladies' Aid Society, m e t for t h e i r first g a t h e r i n g with Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Stone on Wednesday, J u n e 13. Abbut 49 were present, bei n g a v e r y satisfactory n u m b e r for t h e beginning and very e n c o u r a g i n g f or the ladies. Colin F e r g u s o n attended church and Sunday school on Sunday last, this being the first he has been able to attend for some time. All are glad to see him out agMn. Born to Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Deneen, J u n e 15, a baby girl. She has been named A m y Cora. The baby and h e r m o t h e r are spending a few weeks at the home of Mrs. Deneen's mot h er, Mrs. A m y Holtz. Mrs. D. J. Aiken and two daughters are spendi n g a couple of weeks at Mrs. Holtz' c a r i n g f o r the m o t h e r and baby. Guests at the f a r m home of Mr. and Mrs. John Tewkesbury in Nov e s t a township on Sunday included Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Tewksbury, Mr. and Mrs. W a r d Tewksbury and t h r e e children, and Mr. and Mrs. Leon Macklin, all of Romeo; F r e d Milligan of Clifford; William Tewksbury, Mr. a n d Mrs. A s h e r Tewksbury a nd f o u r children, all of Kingston; Mr. and Mrs. Levi Noble and two children of Palh~s; Miss Ella Cross and Mr. and Mrs. A n d r e w Cross and t h r e e children of Cass City. A t about t w o o'clock t h e guests found t h e i r places at the tables which w e r e bountifully spread with good t h i n g s to eat, to which all did justice,dAfter d i n n e r w a s served, the cameras w e r e k e p t busy t a k i n g several pictures of t h e group, a m o n g w~ich was a pic•t u r e of f o u r generations of the T e w k s b u r y family, including J o h n Tewksbury, his daughter, Mrs. And r e w Cross, h e r daughter, Mrs. Levi Noble, and Mrs. Noble's daughters, I la and Viola. The remainder (ff t h e a f t e r n o o n was spent iri visiting. All enjoyed the good time and consider Mr. and Mrs.. T e w ks bu ry splendid enter~ainers. Go Far Into History Druses form a community of Arabic-apeakifig mountaineers n~umberIng about 150.000. scattered through different parts of Syria. The settlement In the Jebel Hauran is the most Important. owing to its virtual independence. The Druses are ~o-cal!ed from the misslonary, .Darazi, who founded the ~ c t in the first quarter of the Eleventh Christian century. The D~amonds A diamond in the rough may be any color, but diamonds in this state generally have a greasy luster. Different colors may be seen in the stone before it is polished, if the stone i~ fract u r e d ; but these colors are not the colors that are seen in cut and polished stones. Tile United States geological survey says that ~ dhtmond can be tested only by an expert. "Home Brew" in Belgium Home brewing, frowned on by prohibitionists and agents of the law in these United States, Is still considered in Belgium Just as necessary and moral as baking bread. In many so, ~.eluded monasteries beer Is still made by the monks Just as they did In the Middle ages. In one, the monastery of Saint Slxte, at Poperlnghe, the monk~ are nat allowed to speak to one an. 4)ther.--Indlanapolls Star. GRIST SCREENINGS The Elkland Roller Mills Is Your Automobile Insured ? Fire, Theft, Public Liability Property Damage, Windstorm, Transportation, Collision and Emergency Road Service. With The Auto-Owners Insurance Co. . . :,.~,~: : , : Cass City, M i c h i g a n , June 22, 1928. ~.r~ CASS - - ~ .~+++++++++++ + S t o p p i n g of M o t o r + Maryland Dealer Fined Be-x. c a u s e P r o s p e c t i v e Cust o m e r Speeded Up. + + ,~ ~: Motorists who have ~,'ve t h o u g h t to the m a t t e r are somew h a t puzzled to u n d e r s t a n d how it is t h a t relatively little effort is r e q u i r e d to stop a car. Ttmy recall the g e n e r a l law of physics to the effect that "~/ machine n e v e r can produce an i n c r e a s e in th, e a m o u n t of energ-y a p plied.' - T h e y k n o w t h a t tim brak(ng system is a m a c h i n e and t h e y also realize t h a t the momentum which mt~s~ be checked in stopping a car neces$sarily is great. At a little over 17 miles per hour, a 3,000-pound car stores u p a m o m e n t u m t h a t can be m e a s u r e d in terms of 75,000 foot °pounds. In other ~ords, t h a t much w o r k must be expended to check trio car's speed, assuming a quick ~stop is made and the m o m e n t u m is not dissipated through n a t u r a l slowing down of the car. ± j~ KEEP "~ T h a t owners of m o t o r vehicles "~ should t a k e to h e a r t the f a c t t h a t :~ J.. th6v. fls ownor.~ n r o 1]yIf]OP tba nnto- I 4mnh~la !aw ~e Mo,.~.,--.~ responsible 4` q+. f o r the proper o p e r a t i o n of the vehicles .~ + owned by t h e m w h e t h e r t h e y be the actual driver a t t h e time an offense is c o m m i t t e d or not, was the gist of a i s t a t e m e n t from B a l t i m o r e by E. Austin B a u g h m a n , m o t o r vehicle commissioner. T h a t this provision of the law %,ith i ,+ r e s p e c t to m a n y of its sections is equally applicable in its penalties to o w n e r and o p e r a t o r is not. a p p a r e n t l y , $ well realized by the owners, according to Commissioner B a u g h m a n . + Applies to All. ~++++++++÷+++++++++++++++ F u r t h e r , it applies not only to the p r i v a t e owner, but to the dealers as well, when t h e i r c a r s are being driven not only by t h e i r own employees, but Captures His Wild Game by prospective p u r c h a s e r s who a r e testing the vehicles out before m a k i n g Wolf-hunting as done by Charles a purchase. Cummings of DeSmet, S. D., is no less The c o m m i s s i o n e r pointed out by novel thmn effective. The picture w a y of illustration the case of an s h o w s the c a r Cummings uses to make automobile d e a l e r in M a r y l a n d who his kill. It boasts a powerful engine, was fined $100 for p e r m i t t i n g one of . . . . .:>.:::::::!~::....::: his cars to be o p e r a t e d by a prospective Customer who was testing its +:. : ~v.:x :speed abilities in excess of 60 miles ~.'.' ~.~. an hour. T h e o p e r a t o r at the t i m e ~:iii:!i was the prospective customer, and t h e dealer was in t h e vehicle seated beside the driver. T h e prospect in testing the claims of the dealer speeded the vehicle up beyond sixty miles an .hour and at j u s t this time one of the s t a t e police dropped in behind t h e m and clocked t h e m at b e t t e r t h a n the ~:+. limit mentioned. The o p e r a t o r was taken before a magistrate, found guilty, and a s s e s s e d the m i n i m u m fine for this offense. T h e n the c h a r g e w a s laid a g a i n s t the dealer-owner for " p e r m i t t i n g " his vehicle to be o p e r a t e d ~.i. !~. in excess of sixty miles an hour and in" turn was found guilty and assessed the same m i n i m u m fine of $100. Since i;!....... ============= t h e n the driving licenses of both the driver and the d e a l e r have been I:eModern Wolf Hunter, His Dog yoked by the commissioner. and Car. Not a N e w Law. In discussing t h e m a t t e r Commisplenty of speed and unusually tough sioner B a u g h m a n s a i d : tires. The r e a r of it is a .veritable "I do not w a n t the impression to dog kennel in which is carried speedy exist that this is any new section of g r e y h o u n d s and stags, the release of the law, or t h a t t h e r e is any special w~lch is operated from the driver's intensive drive on a g a i n s t dealers who seat. With shotgun, car and dogs, permit thei,r c a r s to be d e m o n s t r a t e d Cummings slew 151 wolves last winin excess of the speed laws or in vioter, netting him $1,800. A fire siren lation of o t h e r sections of the s t a t u t e , on the car routs the wolves from while being t e s t e d by prospective purtheir hiding places, then Cummings chasers. However, it would be well and the dogs do the rest. for all car o w n e r s of all classes to t a k e thought of the f a c t t h a t as o w n e r s t h e y a r e held, u n d e r the a u t o m o b i l e law, to be e q u a l l y responsible a n d equally subject to t h e penalties appli- ° ' : / : : : - . . . . : _ : Z cable to the operator, in c e r t a i n t y p e s Stop, look, and listen, or t h e next of violation." minute you. may be s o m e w h e r e else. How Modem Wolf Hunter AUTOMOBILE NOTES Gear Shlft Lever Made Longer on New Models Looking over t h e latest model automobiles should i n d i c a t e m a n y things to the person who must get along a while longer with f h e - o l d car. F o r instance, t h e r e is t h e m a t t e r of the gear -shift lever. On the new models, it comes r i g h t up to the steering wheel, w h e r e reaching it is a m a t t e r of a few inches. T h e r e is a device t h a t serves this purpose for the o l d e r c a r to be f o u n d in almost every accessory shop. T h e y must be w o r t h while or so m a n y n e w cars would not h a v e similar f e a t u r e s . FAT MAN INSISTS ON Ninety-five per cent of the Cook County G a r d e n e r s ' association haul t h e i r products from garden to m a r k e t by truck. $ $ $ Scientists have found that germs i n c r e a s e t h e i r speed under a red light. Certainly, a n d some of them a r e driving automobiles. $ $ @ An automobile especiaIly a d a p t e d to Paris traffic t u r n s in its own length. This done by means of wheels t h a t t u r n at a s h a r p angle "so that t h e car can be w h e e l e d around without backing. MAKING GOLF EASY ALL MILK UTENSILS CLEAN hold r e t u r n e d to D e t r o i t S u n d a y a f t e r noon a f t e r a w e e k s p e n t a t t h e G. A. M a r t i n home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. P a r r i s h a n d d a u g h t e r were visitors at the J . D . Funk home Sunday. The Misses N o r t o n a n d M a r i o n R e t h e r f o r d of S a g i n a w s p e n t S a t u r day night and Sunday at their di0me here. Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Stephens" a n d s o n , Philip, of B i r m i n g h a m c a m e S a t u r d a y to s p e n d a f e w d a y s a t t h e h o m e of Mr. and Mrs. C l a r k Cour]iss a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. J. D. F u n k . P h i l i p Will r e m a i n f o r t h e s u m m e r v a c a t i o n a~ ~ne h o m e oz iVir. ana Mrs. ~ioya Osburn. Mr. a n d Mrs. G. A. M a r t i n w e r e in Imlay City S u n d a y afternoon. Don't f o r g e t the reunion of the L e e k L a d i e s ' Aid S o c i e t y T h u r s d a y , J u n e 28, in H o w a r d R e t h e r f o r d ' s grove. I f w e a t h e r conditions a r e n o t good, it will be held a t t h e h o m e of Mr. and Mrs. W m . Wood in N. E. KingstoI4. A pot luck d i n n e r will be e n j o y e d a t n o o n . E a c h one is r e q u e s t ed to b r i n g dishes f o r his own use. E v e r y o n e invited. ~Vhile no one food is used ~ m o r e u n i v e r s a l l y t h a n milk, it is one of t h e most easily c o n t a m i n a t e d by Its s~rs v u , d i , s ~ , ucuvidi~s tu Di. W. G. Sackett, bacteriologist of the Colo- a t North L a k e . . ado e x p e r i m e n t station, who spoke Mr. and~Mrs. Floi[o of Caro spent the dairy and c r e a m e r y fieldmen the .evening on M o n d a y at the Win. on the harmful ~effects of bacteria in Randall home. milk and cream. Marie Lewis is spending two weeks In an explanation of how dirt gets visiting her aunt and cousins at Cainto milk, Doctor Sackett stated that to. even milk coming directly from the Mr. and Mrs; A. Patterson and udder of the "cow is not sterile. Qual- two sons of A l m a spent Sa~urday ity and length of time milk will re- n i g h t a n d S u n d a y v i s i t i n g M r . ~ P ' s main sweet depends upon the ~bac- s~rothers, E. L. P a t e r s o n . terial count which can be kept down Mrs. R o y Colwell of G a y l o r d is by sanitary conditions and cleanlispending a week with her father, ness. Milk is contaminated with bacGeorge Spencer. Ceria from dirt, hair, straw or manure L l o y d W a r n e r r e t u r n e d to his h o m e SHABBONA. falling into the milk from the cow's body or from dust settling into the a f t e r b e i n g a w a y e i g h t w e e k s on a milk pail. This can be lessened by t r i p . Glad to see h i m back, a m o n g us W e d d i n g bells a r e r i n g i n g . c u r r y i n g cows to r e m o v e loose hair, a g a i n . Mr. and Mrs. G e o r g e Y o u n g s of Mr. a n d Mrs. L e w i s S h e r w o o d a n d N o v e s t a visited a t T. W. S t i t t ' s wiping flanks and u d d e r with d a m p on cloth, t h e use of pails with smaller f a m i l y called on Mrs. °Carrie McCain W e d n e s d a y . 'o S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g . openings, and care not to feed cows Dr. a n d Mrs. ~Logan of Mr. C l e m e n s and stir up dust in t h e b a r n just preMiss Alice S t e w a r t of F l i n t s p e n t visited t h e l a t t e r ' s sister, Mrs. W a l vious to m i l k i n g . t h e week~end a t t h e A. L: B r u c e t e r H y a t t S u n d a y . Cement floors and f r e q u e n t clean- h o m e . Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y V a n N o r m a n ing of stables are also advocated. K e n n e t h K e l l e y a n d sister, W i n n i visited r e l a t i v e s in F l i n t S u n d a y . T h e milker himseIf m a y i n c r e a s e f r e d , a n d B e r n i c e Gage called in Mr. a n d Mrs. B r u c e A d a m s a n d the bacterial c o n t a m i n a t i o n of milk S a g i n a w on F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n . t h r o u g h lack of personal cleanliness, Mr. a n d Mrs. H. Reid and Mr. a n d children of D e c k e r s p e n t S u n d a y a t Doctor S a c k e t t pointed out. H e should Mrs. J. L e e , ~ a t l of Cass City, s p e n t T. W. Stitt's. M~s. Lee J o n e s of C l a r k s t o n is visw e a r d e a n clothing, should himself M o n d a y e v e n i n g a t Win. G a g e ' s iting" h e r p a r e n t s , Mr. a n d Mrs. be f r e e from disease and in p e r f e c t h o m e . Smith° Mrs. B e r t h a Cooper s p e n t f r o m Owen condition of health. One of the g r e a t e s t sources of con- S a t u r d a y u n t i l T h u r s d a y a t t h e Mac Mrs. C~arence Whittaker of Flint ~tamination in milk is d i r t y utensils. W e n t w o r t h h o m e in Cass City. visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J o h n M e C r e e d y of Clifford ea]led James Kerbyson, last Week. The c r a c k s become, full of dirt a n d filth which can be r e m o v e d only by a t t h e Benj G a g e h o m e on S u n d a y M a n l e y K i t c h i n is d r i v i n g a S t u d e scalding with live s t e a m or scalding a f t e r n o o n . b a k e r coach. Mr. a n d Mrs. Gee: Gee and d a u g h hot w a t e r . Doctor S a c k e t t showed Mr. and Mrsl Levi K r i t z m a n a n d w h e r e t h e bacterial count of milk in t e r s of C a r e s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h Mrs. c h i l d r e n of A r g y l e v i s i t e d a t J a m e s a test was increased f r o m 5,000 per Gee's sister, Mrs. C a r r i e Lewis. M r . - a n d Mrs. C l a r e S m i t h o f . P o n - Burns' T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g . e. c. to 350,000 per c. c. m e r e l y Zelda T r a v i s of D e c k e r s p e n t S u n through dirty pails, strainers, clari- t i a c called a t t h e h o m e of Mrs. Benj. tier tank, ~elarifier, cooler and filter G a g e on M o n d a y m o r n i n g . M r s . C. d a y a~ h e r p a r e n t a l home. L. MeCain a e o c m p a n i e d t h e m h o m e Mr. a n d Mrs. D a v i d S t i t t a n d Mrs. M a r t h a A r n o l d o f Orion v i s i t e d t h e i r S t r a i n e r s do not t a k e out bacteria, f o r a t h r e e w e e k s ' visit. brother, Thos. S t i t t , f r o m F r i d a y £o but m e r e l y allow them to wash off Sunday. % from t h e strained dirt into the milk. KINGSTON-NO~ESTA Frank McGregory and daughter, A e r a t i o n does not lower t h e bacterial TOWN LINE Nellie, of Farmington visited relatives count except t h r o u g h effect of coolhere from Sunday to Tuesday. Miss ing. It does remove off odors and Rev. C. W. Scott o f D e f o r d w a s a Nellie remained for an indefinite vis" b a r n y " flavors, Doctor Sackett explained. Milk k e p t at a t e m p e r a t u r e T o w n Line c a l l e r S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n . it. below 50 degrees F a h r e n h e i t will reL e w i s R e t h e r f o r d w a s in Cass C i t y Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hoover of Minmain sweeg longer t h a n a t a high tem- M o n d a y a s s i s t i n g a t -Yourig & M a t e r ' s den City visited their niece, Mrs. Dunperature. meat market. can Waun, Sunday. Doctor Sackett pointed out the danMr. a n d Mrs. Chas. Cook and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. V e r n M c G r e g o r y visgers f r o m disease like tuberculosis, a n d Mrs. J o h n D a v i s visited f r i e n d s ited r e l a t i v e s in P o n t i a c S u n d a y . septic sore throat, diptheria, typhoid a t A r m a d a a n d M e m p h i s Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Wells a r e enfever, etc., t h r o u g h milk p r o d u c e d unMrs. S a n f o r d H o m e r of Clawson der u n s a n i t a r y conditions. P a s t e u r i z a - v i s i t e d Mrs. Berets B e n t l e y S u n d a y t e r t a i n i n g Mr. a n d Mrs. J. A. A v e r y this w e e k d u r i n g t h e M. B. C. c o n f e r tion will kill disease~producing bac- a n d w i t h Mr. a n d Mrs. B e n t l e y ealled ence w h i c h is b e i n g held a t t h e Mizt e r i a a n d is being d e m a n d e d m o r e a t t h e R o b e r t H o m e r home. p a h church. and more. P r e v e n t i o n of u n s a n i t a r y Mr. a n d Mrs. J o h n P r i n g l e a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. Roswell B r o w n a r e enconditions t h r o u g h cleanliness with c h i l d r e n w e r e v i s i t o r s S u n d a y of Mr. t e r t a i n i n g Mr. a n d Mrs. Chas. N e a l milk p r o d u c t s is very desirable, a n d Mrs. Irv'in C a l a n d e r n e a r M a r - o f St. Clair this week. lette. Mr. a n d Mrs. J o h n Atfield e n t e r Mr. a n d Mrs. H o w a r & ~ R e t h e r f o r d t a i n e d W m . W e b e r , Mr. a n d Mrs. a n d son, A r l e o n , w e r e S u n d a y a f t e r - R a l p h W e b e r a n d son, L e e ) A r t h u r , n o o n v i s i t o r s of Mr. a n d Mrs. Willis and Mr. a n d Mrs. J a s . Meadoi: o f DeSome excellent r a t i o n s t h a t fit in troit, SundaY. well in a district of Wisconsin w h e r e B e e e h e r of Caro. Mrs. J. M c L a u g h l i n a n d little son, 90 per c e n t of the f a r m e r s a r e feedA d v e r t i s e i t in t h e Chronicle. ing aifalfa hay are p r e s e n t e d here- D o n a l d , a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. E a r l A r with : With good silage--14.8 p e r cent protein ration composed of 700 pounds ground oats, ,500 pounds corn or barley, 300 pounds of bran, 200 pounds of oil m e a l a n d 200 pounds of gluten feed. With poor silage--15.8 p e r cent protein r a t i o n composed of 600 pounds ground oats, 400 pounds corn or barley, 200 pounds of bran, 300 pounds of gluten, feed. W h e n a f a r m e r has good corn silage and good quality mixed clo~er a n d t i m o t h y hay, t r y this o n e : T h r e e h u n d r e d pounds ground oats, _200 pounds of bran, 1190 pounds of gluten feed, 200 p o u n d s barley a n d 200 pounds of oil meal. F e e d one pound of g r a i n for e v e r y t h r e e a n d one-half to four~ pounds of milk. produced per cow. Rules for calf raising a t lower cost are given by C. J. F a w c e t t , extension professor of animal h u s b a n d r y a t M a s s a c h u s e t t s ~Agricultural college: " T h e c a l f should be t a k e n from its dam as soon as it has a good fill of colostrum milk. F e e d whole m i l k . f o r 10 to 14 days, t h r e e to f o u r q u a r t s d a i l y and ~radually i n c r e a s i n g t h e quantity. T h e r e is no h a r m in a c a l f ~ ) e i n g slightly h u n g r y f o r the f i r s t week. At two weeks, g r a d u a l l y substitute f o r the whole milk a s i m i l a r q u a n t i t y of skim milk m a d e from dry skim milk and~:~water so t h a t in 8 or 10 days the calf will b e given skim milk as its e n t i r e liquid feed. Mix one pound of dry skim milk with nine pints of w a t e r a t body t e m p e r ature. W h e n on full f e e d the calf will be getting abo~t eight quarts of liquid daily in two feeds." • ,,q-r..5 ~: o~• FIVE, M a k e s Record on A m c o Dairy F e e d Clarence Merchant's Grand champion Holstein Heifer is fed Anco Dairy Feed and has made the following enviable production record for the weeks following freshening 1st w e e k / a v e r a g e ........... : ................................ 40.5 lbs. 2nd ~veek a v e r a g e ............................................ 44.2 lbs. 3rd w e e k a v e r a g e ................................. :.......... 46.7 lbs. 4th w e e k a v e r a g e ............................................ 47.6 lbs. 5th w e e k a v e r a g e ............................................ 50.9 lbs. 6th w e e k a v e r a g e ............................................ 52.8 lbs. 7th w e e k a v e r a g e ............................................ 53.3 lbs. 8th w e e k a v e r a g e ........................................... 53.5 lbs. 9th w e e k a v e r a g e ............................................ 53.1 lbs. t 0 t h w e e k a v e r a g e ...................... ~................... 52.2 tbs'. l l t h w e e k a v e r a g e .......................................... 51.8 lbs. 12th -week a v e r a g e ........................................ 5i.0 Ibs. 13th w e e k a v e r a g e ........................................ 50.5 tbs. 14th w e e k a v e r a g e ........................................ 48.8 lbs. 15th w e e k a v e r a g e .......................................... 48.6 Ibs. 16th °week a v e r a g e ........................................ 47.7 lbs. 17th w e e k a v e r a g e .......................................... 46.6 lbs. 18th w e e k a v e r a g e ........................................ 46.7 tbs. t 9 t h w e e k a v e r a g e ........................................ 47.6 lbs. 20th w e e k a v e r a g e ............ , ........................... 45.2 ibs. This heifer's milk tests 4.1%. This h e i f e r is b e i n g milked t i m e s d u r i n g t h e first 20 weeks. ,%~o:: ~;4,~.~ Ropy Milk Cause }, 'Y Real r o p y milk is caused° by bac~ t e r i a a n d is developed a f t e r the milk i s d r a w n from the cow. Such ° milk, wh4n p u t t h r o u g h a s t r a i n e r , will form strings seve{al f e e t long. T h i s milk is Aot h a r i h f u l but is b o t h e r s o m e , as it is unsalable and c a n n o t be used for any purpose e x c e p t possibly swine feeding. The source o~ the organism is t h o u g h t to be surface water and possibly, at times, a diseased udder. Careful sterilization of utensils will eliminate this trouble.¢ twice a d a y , i n s t e a d of t h r e e WE HAVE IN STOCK SEED PEAS---Canadian Field Peas, Little Gem, Garden Peas. F a r m Produce Co. .% S mmer i Celanese Voile Some Good Grain Rations With Alfalfa and Silage Rules for Calf Feeding at Much Lower Expense Fat men refusing to reduce and insuring on making golf easy have started a new fad for heavyweight fans. The pkotograph %lmws Frank Alexander, ~weight 410, arriving at the first tee to ~tart hi~ eighteen-hole cgame, at Fox Hills, ~iear Los ~ngeles, o ................................. PAGE O n W e d n e s d a y of l a s t w e e k t h e C a s s C i t y G r a i n Co.'s h a y shed a t D e f o r d c a u g h t fire. Men a n d w o m e n t u r n e d out and s u r e l y did th6 w o r k of a fire d e p a r t m e n t . T h e y e s t i m a t e d t h e d a m a g e done a t a b o u t $150.00:: J o h n F i e l d s is r e m o d e l i n g his h o u s e a n d p u t t i n g in a n e w b a s e m e n t . Mrs. Bird, a s i s t e r of Mrs. Field has been here the past week helping her with the housework. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. M c I n t y r e s p e n t + i CHRONICLE O R S :I: .u 4*~ CITY - For fine thin dresses, choose Celanese Voile. We have just received a new shipment of this material and the p a t t e r n s and colors are smart. Large floral designs or smaller figures on light backgrounds. This material is 40 inches wide. Only $1.59 ad. Voile Underwear Chemise, step ins: gowns in good quality voile. In many light colors and white. Lace trimmed or tailored styles. Priced from $I up. Hosiery Holeproof hosiery in new colors. Service weight, or chiffon from which to select. Price range from $1 up. i i i Bathing Suits .I from the Start Bathing Suits for women in all wool. One piece styles in all colors. $4.98 up. o~ Children's suits in all wool from $1.25 up. Men's all worsted one-piece suits $5.00. Men's two-Riece suit~s, shirts at $3.50, trunks at $3.00. Children's W a s h D r e s s e s and P l a y Suits-Dresses for every age, in pi;aetieal t u b f a s t styles. From the very day you take delivery, ownership of a Pontiac Six is ~n experience in economy. You save in first cost because the Pontiac Six gives you those advanced features usually found only in higher.priced cars. You save in upkeep, because of its generously oversize dimensions. And you save in resale value; buyers every~ where are willing to pay more for every avail° able Pontiac Six. If you value your dollars, you will drive a Pontiac S i x a n d l e a r n t h e f u l l m e a n i n g o f m o t o r i n g :i: Pantie dreses in prints California prints with organdy trimmings t h a t look so welt on the slight figure. Flapper dresses for six£een year olds. Priced~ from $2.25 up. Play suits--middies a n d bloomers in blue $1.25 up. Coveralls of blue denim, t h a t protect good clothes 75c to $1. OUR SEMI ANNUAL DRESS SALE? Thursday, Friday, Saturday of This Week. All Garments in this sale are priced at $11. eco~ornv. S e d a n , $745; Coup6, $ 7 4 5 ; S p o r t Roadster, $745; P h a e t o n l -$775; Cabriolet, $ 7 9 5 ; 4-Door S e d a n , $825¢ S p o r t L a n d a u Sedani $875. O a k l a n d All, A m e r i c a n Six, $1045 to $1265~ A l l prices at,[~tc, ¢ory.~ Cheek OaMand-Pontiac delivered priees~----the~ include lo~3es$ handling charges. General M o t o r s T i m e P a y m e n t P l a n a v a i l a b I g 2-Door *I Lem6nade sets o f covered pitchers a n d six tall glasse~ in rose, amber or green are moderately priced at $1,50 at m i n i m u m rate. COME INI ~i~/Or YourselfWhy Expede~ed • Owners Demand Bodies by.Fisher Visit OUr s h o w r o o m during the speeiai ~ishe~ Bod~ Demonstration n o w being h e l d . Don't miss this opportunitv~to gain a sound understagding o £ s u c h a n i m ] p ~ o r t a u t part o f your automobile. Glassware~ set. l I War T a x l~emoved--Delive~ed Prices Reduced W I L L Y BROS., Cass City : Scarfs Triangle shape Scarfs in all colors and designs at 95e. Barle s G e n e s e e a t B aum PONTIAC SIX ~ S aglnaw " i Chronicle Liners Cost Little; Aecornplish Much. @ PAGE CASS CITY SiX. L Cass City, Michigan, June 22, 1928. CHRONICLE o . _ . _ '] _ _ f i I , i p I It'---__ " % i [ _ , ., '/" -: FRO M JUNE 23 TO JUNE 30 Not very long if you knew you were to be hanged at the end of the week. If you get as much kick out of this sale as you did at the annual school meetings, you will all be here...It's our way of paying you dividends for being faithful traders during the year. If you can save from 50 cents to $5.00, whose business is it? Yours, of course. Of course, we are not all Scotch--and t h e y are not the only ones who save. Now here's where we come in. We have a special each afternoon for you° Nothing put out but you can all use. i Sheeting and Pillow Cases Monday is wash day. Of course, you may find some sheets that would make good bandages. Drop in and get an 81x90 sheet, Heavy Quality Cotton, no seams for $I.20 each. Shirts and BV D's Say boys, how about some real B V D's, sizes 36 to 46, and only 85c. ~7 Bedspreads I got downstairs too soon. Forgot about the Bedspreads in 5 colorings 80x105, no seams, and only $1.65. We have better ones of course and at substantial savings. Percales and Prints Perhaps these w a r m days you would like to m a k e an Apron or Dress. Well, here's your chance. Our best Percales alwayssold for 25c, sale price 20c Our P e r m a n e n t Prints, new patterns, for ........... ,25c W h a t we have left of Peter Pans and similar makes of Ginghams " 42c "c -4. Broadcloth To Give Country Customers Their Chance We have some Boys' Broadcloth Shirts, sizes 12 to 141/~, priced from $1,00 to $1.25. If they fade, a new one in their place. Look t h e m over; please. o A nice new linen Specials Will Be Given Every Afternoon Regular B V D's, 2 for $1.25. While at it look over the Pillow Cases as well. A 42 or 45 by 36 for 30c. Use the time saved for reading instead of sewing. How about the Table Cloth? one 54x54, 4 coloring for $1.09. , . Dress Go,. ~-[s Monday's Special 10c Bath Towel How about Dress Goods? The greatest flyer you ever bought, 36 in. wide and 50c per yard. This includes goods from 65cto $1.00. Get your share. Black satin, silk back, yard wide, for $1.10, new goods. Much wanted Check Silks, washable, for $1.25. Worth $1.75. Linen Toweling .~.e..o..o.~..e~.,..o.*o.. •..Q..0~.~.O..~.~*$..@..O..o o.. *.8..0 . ~ . $ ..O..0..$..~.0..O..4..~.~O*.~..O ..O..O-.O.~..$~..@..O. *o*.o .'$"~-4. *O..O .O. *e; o '2 Tuesday's Special 10c Kettle Holders, Washable T e r r y ........................ 5c Wednesday's Special Wash Cloths Thursday's Special Women's $2.50 Dresses for ..................................... $2.00 ,. HERE IS A CONUNDRUM FOR YOU i~ ~ for which 3 prizes will be given 1st, $2.50; 2nd, i i, $1.50; 3rd, $1.00. Left to 3 competent judges, i i The conundrum: " W h y is religion like m y sale." ~ a Saturday (June 30) Special Children's 3-4 and 7-8 Sport Hose .......................... 40c Women's No-mend Hose, during sale, per pair $1.40 Broken size in Children's Black Hose, 25c quality for ................................................................. 10c pair Housecleaning, you m i g n t need an extra rug. Special on 27x54 Axminster, a $3.50 Rug for $2.75. A few room sizes at Special Prices. ~ . •.. CASS _.............. lc each ~, t I 5c each Friday's Special Women's Aprons .................................................. 69c each Say, women folks, We have some All Linen Tow. eling for the m e n to wash on, 6 yds. for $1.00, brown or white. •~.o..o Saturday (June 23) Special Just in time for house cleaning. $1.25 White and colored Dotted Swiss Curtains, $1.00 per pair. , M-I C H I C , A N ~ C a s s City, Michigan, J u n e 22, 1928. CASS CITY CHRONICLE ! ~he telephone at times is t h a t of Miss dies a t bridge in honor of her guest, Witma Wolf of Brookfield, who is as- Miss Narcissa Phelps of Caro; Mrs. sisting Mrs. Fairman. Roy L a F a v e and two daughters, and Mrs. Agnes O'Rourke and Mrs. Mesdames Mose F r e e m a n , F. D. HemMrs. S. T a m b l y n and E s t h e r were Ed Kehoe were callers in Caro Fri- erick, Martin Freeman, A. Rocheleau callers in Cass City S a t u r d a y . . . . . day. _ - and J. L. Purdy. Mrs. Hemerick and Mrs. P u r d y received prizes. A f t e r the Mr. and Mrs. X r t h u r K a r r spent Mrs. Conrad Mosack returned 9ery game, the ladies were invited to the S u n d a y at the J o h n Fournier home. recently from Ford hospital where Mr. and Mrs. g. L. P u r d y and'Caro-[ she underwent a serious operation. dining room~ where r e f r e s h m e n t s were served. Miss Marion L a F a v e gave a l y n and Miss E. Miller spent Sunday[ Mr. and Mrs. Mosack have moved reading. a t the John Monroe home in Albion. [ from D e t r o i t to their f a r m here. Mr. a n d Mrs. M. P . F r e e m a n were tl~rnnVd t}inh~vt~ h.nd R..T. O t t a w a v / j GAGETOWN l spent Sunday in Saginaw. Mr. and Mrs. Creguer and Rosemar y spent Sunday with relatives in Clare. T h e Brookfield Ladies' Aid met W e d n e s d a y at the home of Mrs. Win. :McKee. Proceeds from t h e dinner -were $11.45. Mrs. Ri~ehard Hughes a n d sister, Miss M a r g a r e t McKenzie, a r e v i g t i n g relatives in Detroit. Miss Lucile Gregor, 13 y e a r old d a u g h t e r , o f Mrs. Mabel Gregor, passed a w a y T h u r s d a y a t the Bad Axe hospital following an operation. Her r e m a i n s were t a k e n to Pontiac Saturd a y to be laid to rest beside h e r fat h e r . Mr. and Mrs. Jack and Chas. :Ross f a m i l y and J a y Crawford accompanied the remains. Lucile was :among" the eighth graders, a bright, •promising little girl. A r t h u r Ricker, Jr., and Miss Lee, Leacher in Owendale high school, were m a r r i e d l a s t week. Reception Tuesday a t the home of the groom, G e o r g e Ricker. J a c k L e h m a n spent l a s t week with iMrs. Barber of Flint. The soft sweet voice we h e a r over F£ON[NCf I Mary J a n e and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred day. Rocheleau and Catherine spent Sunday at Crescent Beach. Miss Myrtle Munroe leaves Monday to attend Kalamazoo Normal for the sumi~er. Supt. Brown will leave S a t u r d a y for F l i n t where she will t e a c h next year. ~ Miss Aileen S. Zehms spent gfinday with Miss Myrtle Munro,. Brookfield Sewing Circle spent Saturday at Bad Axe. The F a r m Bureau Extension course exhibited work done by the several groups. In t h e afternoon, an interesting program was given. Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Wood and family visited Wednesday in Cass City. L. C. P u r d y attended t h e commencement of Miss E s t h e r Tamblyn at ~ d r i a n last week. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Tamblyn are spending a few weeks at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel '/amblyn. About 30 relatives gathered at the f a r m home of Mr. a n d Mrs. Martin Freeman, the occasion being Mr. Freeman's birthday. Sunday, June 10, the same g a t h e r i n g at Mrs. Josephine McDonald's. Mrs. Wm. Anker and two children of Detroit will spend the summer with Mrs. Anker's father, Mr. Beekett. Mrs. Julian QUICK HEAT ~o wicks in the Florence Oil tlange--no smoke, no odor-j u s t i n t e n s e h e a t focused d o s e :up u n d e r t h e c o o k i n g . A d d p e r . fect safety and real economy. Come in and be convinced. W a n n e r & Matthe CASS s CITY 41otNs I DI N,. LENOX In tho hoart o / t h e do#n-to~n distric~noarall publicbu/Idi~s,d ~ m o n t s t o r e ~ n d t~oatro~, Vo~-~ a wag/rom Z,Oo no/sd or t $2 uew n Bartholomy Mr. and Mrs. AI Freeman of Detroit were guests Of their parents on Sunday. Mrs. Freeman accompanied them, to remain the week. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Kehoe spent t h e week-eiid in Detroit. Mrs. John H a y e s of Detroit spent Sunday with h e r parents, M r . and Mrs. J o h n Quinn. Mrs. M a r y Trudeau and Mrs. Martin W a l s h were callers in Owendale Saturday. beings to pUt into the~ system. :hv a pra-etiee o f 47 years ne never any teas_on for ~heir ~ . W ~ l a medicine like t~rrup repm~ w~ empty t t ~ bowels y a ~ as l~rom_pt!y: ~n&e clca~ly and gently - , wit~ ~,eep freo from con~,fitmf~kmt I t robs your" strength; haxde~ your ~rteries and brings on prematm~ old ag~. Do not le~ ~ day go bY ~ i t h o u t a bowel moveme~t~ D o no~ ~it and hope, lm~ go to a dr~ggi~ smd ge~ one of the generous bottles of ]Jr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Take t~he proper dose thut nigh~ and by morning y ~ wilt feel like a differ- pe~z~ Uee Syrup Pepsia f~ Albert Knobloc of Detroit spent t h e tized a t the Methodist church Sunday week-end w i t h his little daughter, morning. Dorothy, who is m a k i n g h e r home Mr. and Mrs. Benson Huston of with her aunt, Mrs. F. Lenhard. Thamesville, Ont., and Mr. and Mrs. Preston F o u r n i e r left Monday to George Kidd, and daughter, Helen, of take a s u m m e r course a t Michigan Port Huron, Mich., were week-end State College. guests of Roy. and Mrs. Fred H . Francis H u n t e r is home f o r the Townsend. The ladies are sisters of summer and will assist a t the post Mrs. Townsend. office. V e r y pleasing Children's D a y exerMr. and Mrs. Ohering, M a r g u e r i t e cises were held at . t h e Methodist W~ld ~ d ~,~,~11~ ~'~1! me ~ ' ~ b ' , ' ~ visited relatives here Sunday. [committee and the children deserve Mrs. F r a s i e r of F l i n t Visited l a s t l praise for their efforts. Mrs. Harold week at t~he home of h e r daughter,,[ J a r v i s was c h a i r m a n of the commitMrs. B. Ottaway. ::: ] tee. • A generous offering was received Chas. S e g w a r t of S'ebewaing t r a n s - [ f o r the Children's L o a n F u n d of t h e acted businegs here Monday. {"Board o f Education. t The Primo class of the G r a n t Methodist Sunday school held t h e i r monthOWENDALE. l y business and social m e e t i n g F r i d a y t ( e i t h F i n l e y McGregor, son of Mr. evening a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. S. D. McGregory, and Imo- Roy Russell. gene Pauline Wales, d a u g h t e r of Mr. and Mrs. N o r m a n Wales, were bapAdvertise it in the Chronicle. About Ourselves Guard well thy thoughts. thoughts are heard in heaven. t o t s to present t h e i r claims a g a i n s t said deceased to said e~urt for examination find" adjustment, .and ~that all creditors of.said deceased are required to present :their claims to •said court, at the probate office, in t h e Village of Caro in said county, on o r before t h e the 8th day of October, A. D. 1928, i~nd t h a t said claims will be heard b y said court on Monday t h e 8th d a y Of October A. D. 1928, a t t e n o'clock in the forenoon. Dated June 8th, A. D. 1928. GUY G. H I L L , : J u d g e o f irobate. 6-15-1 a¢ t h e s e L o w B. C. .Pre m i u m 7 : . . ] ~ . - L 2-1b carton . ... : Sugar Pickles i d e~re A , lO0-1b hag C~R~ Sweet Jam F -. or Sweet M xed sorted FI, v r ...... *b.4@ quart jar 2 9 ¢ 43 oz. jar 4 5 c pkg / Eva oraCe l P&@ So p or K i r k ' s Flake White House Brand / I Chipso Bulk R o n e d O ts E i g h t O ' c l o c k C o f f e e Gad Red Salmon AZk.e.ok Scratch Feed , Grandmother's Bread - 10 35° j 1@¢ lb $ 1 . 0 9 35c 29c ,oolbbag $ L 6 9 For Easy Washing !! P White twin loaf l ~" .f , i:ii~::~)i~i~i!i~:::: i i i i i i;"~::i !i - _ ~ -.. -T~-f A T AGE 83 ..f your~df and members of ~m famil~ e o n ~ p a t i o n , hiliousne~, sour ana ~py stomach, bad breath, 11o appetite, headaches, ~nd to break up ~ v e r s and colds. Always nave ~ i a the house, and these three rule~ of health: Keep the head cool, the feet ~ the. bowels o ~ n . W ~ would be glad to have prove at our ~ n s e how much ~ . Caldw~ll's Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write "S~rup Pepsin," Monticello,Ill~ois~ and we @ill send you prepai~ FREE SAMPLE B~2,F~ . . ~ ~ bott i Z? % . ESTABLISHED 1859 . . . . . . . . . . % .... i : _ -. r ~, . . . . ? % 241/21b bag 2", y :. iili~iiiii~..... Our N o t i c e of H e a r i n g Claims before C o u r t . - - S t a t e of Michigan, The Probate Court for the County of TuscoIa. In t h e M a t t e r of the E s t a t e of Lou V. Curtis, D ~ e a s e d . Notice is~ h e r e b y given t h a t 4 months from the 8th d a y of Jtme A. [ .Dr. C~ldwell watched the results 4~f constipation for 47 years, and believed that.no matter h o w careful l~ople are of their health, diet and m~ercise, constipation will occur from time to tLme regardless of how ~n Miss Bernice R y a n of Detroit was a caller on old friends here Sunday. Mrs. Jennie Case, John Case and Geo. Finkle of Detroit ate dinner with Mr. and Mrs. M. P. F r e e m a n on Friday. Mr. Gregg of the Landscape Gardening department, arid Miss J e w e t t from the Home Economics departmerit of M. S. e. visited f a r m s here in the interes£ of Michigan AIdproved F a r m Homes. Mrs. Jennie Case and son, John, of Detroit and Mrs. Margaret Finkle of Clifford attended t h e burial of Gilbert F i n k l e at Grant cemetery Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A r t h u r Rocheleau and f a m i l y moved last week to Caro where t h e y will reside. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W . P u r d y accompanied by Miss N. Phelps were in Caro Tuesday. A d r i a n Nutt, our new merchant, is nicely located in the Morris residence. Mrs. C. P. H u n t e r is ~spending a few d a y s in Detroit. of Detroit visited among relatives and friends here last wee]<. Mr. Buttdrs of Bay~ City transacted business here several days of last week. A l a r g e barn is being built on the M. Beckett f a r m to replace the one burned last summer. Miss Maude Hendershot is a busy lady, dressmaking at homes in and •about Owendale. School meeting held Monday even i n g of last week. Alvin Beach and F r a n k Lenhard were re-elected. Geo. Munro, Wes Downing and John Fournier are the other members of the new school board. °" P. Bartholomy and Fred Hemdrick retired from the board. Misses Lorena Wilson, Carolyn Purdy, Myrtle Munro and Genevieve Wills were in Bad Axe Wednesday evening. Gilbert Finkle passed a w a y at the home of his daughter, .Edith, in Dearborn. Burial F r i d a y in the Grant cemetery. About 15 years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Finkl~ moved from their farm home in Grant township, where they lived for m a n y years to Owendale. From there, they went t o Detroit. Mrs. Finkle passed a w a y a few years ago. Since her death, Mr. Finkle has lived with his daughter in Dearborn. He has been in poor health several years. He was 75 years old. Besides his surviving family of children, he leaves one sister, Mrs. Jennie Case of Detroit and a brother, George Finkle of Pontiac. Mr. and Mrs. Hebert LaFave and son, l~'~erle,are in Detroit. IKerle will enter the Seminary. Mr. and Mrs. Denzer are at their farm, southeast of town. T h e y will make extensive improvements in the way of re-roofing the barn, build porches and install a Delco lighting plant. Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Maynard and Barbara of Detroit spent Sunday at •their cottage at Rose Island. Mrs. Maynard and Barbara spent Monday with Mrs. Ted Fischer. Monday afternoon, Mrs. Geo. W. Purdy entertained the following la- What D . Caldwell Learned in 47 Years Practice much one tries to avoid it. Of next ~mport~nce, then, is how to treat it when i t comes. Dr. Caldwell always ~ a s in favor of getting as close to ~ t u r e as possible, hence his remedy ~or constipation, known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is a mild vege~ b l e compound. I t ea~ not harm ~he most delicate system and is not habit forming preparation. Syrup Pepsin is p~a~mt-tasting, and youngsters love it. I t does not gripe. ¢Yhousands of n..others have written ~s to that effect. • Dr. C~ldwell did no~ apl~.OVe of i t r ~ t i e physics amd purges. He did mot believe they were goocl, for.hu- PAGE SEVEN. lift . , jll l J PAGE EIGHT. T h u m b of Michigan Ass'n N e w s Letter CASS verse of conditions that have~ existed d u r i n g the past several :fears when m a n y feeders have produced beef w i t h o u t profit. The results of a winter swine fe~ding experiment, m a d e public at Feedors Day, showed t h a t hogs housed in portable houses which exposed t h e m to low t e m p e r a t u r e s made g r e a t e r gains on the same amount of feed t h a n those housed and fed in a barn Where the average temperature was i~.......... gl *~ i= thc ~c!icf ~ Prof. W. E. J. Edwards, under whose super~ s i o n the e x p e r i m e n t was @onducted, t h a t t h e lack of direct sunlight was l a r g e l y responsible for the lower gains of the pigs shel£ered in the barn. The attendance this year was t h e l a r g e s t in the history of Livestock F e e d e r s Day at the college. The m a i n speaker for the general p r o g r a m was Charles ~E. Snyder, editor of the Chicago Daily Droyers Journal. ELLINGTON AND Cass City, Michigan, Junco22, 1928., CITY CHRONICLE NOoVESTA. James Tuckey and Luke Tuckey were i n Caro on business Saturday. R. Karr of Detroit is being entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wanner. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kelley and f a m ily of Mayville were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kelley Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Little of Pon- Spencer R e u n i o n at Deford Sunday 1928 ASSOCIATED TOURS GUIDE FOR MOTORISTS. Motorists who plan to take a vacation tour, this summer, Will be interested to ,know t h a t The Automobile Club of America has just published ~the fourteenth edition of its annual road book, the 1928 Associated Tours Guide, which is now r e a d y for distribution. The Guide in its one hundred and t w e n t y - e i g h t pages, contains a wealth of useful information for exactly planning where~to go on your vacation t r i p and h o ~ to get there. The Motor maps, mileages and itineraries shown in the Guide, covering the vast area o f the United States east of the Mississippi and e a s t e r n Canada, as well as the more popular transcontinental and trans-Canadian routes, afford the motor v a c a t m m s t a wide range of touring fields f r o m which to select.--Advertisement. The n i n t h reunion was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F r a n k Spencer of Deford on Sunday, June 17th. Relatives and £riends, who attended were, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd C/~stie and sons, Wells and J o h n L., Mr. and Mrs. Harold Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Spencer, Mrs. Carrie Baldwin, St. Clair has added a n o t h e r indusI Nellie, Clarence, Wallace, Clyde, try. The Pouliot Boat Works are illUhla~ ~Ulbbl~. Gladys, John and Lowell Spencer, t r a n s f e r r i n g their plant f r o m Detroit Mr. ~and Mrs. W . A. Parrott m a d e a Ira, Dorothy, James and Earl Anderto St. Clair, where the~y will manubusiness trip to Mr. Pleasant Saturson, and Dale Spencer, all of North gacture speed boats. day." Branch; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Osborn The St. Clair River and Lake St. Chas. Tallmadge is improving his and sons, Leroy and Vernon, Mrs. Clair are known all ~over t h e world as f a r m buildings with paint. Ira Cowles, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy the birthplace of the f a s t e s t speed Levi Del0ng, Dolly a n d D o r o t h y Howey and children, Kenneth, Doroboats in the world. This is one of the Dougtas and Donatd Miljure s p e n t thy and Leland~ Mr. and Mrs. Elvin numerous items in which The Thumb Sunday at Maynard Delong's last Spencer and children, Helen, Wanda can modestly claim pre-eminence. and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Spenweek. Hotel and r e s 0 ~ p r o p r i e t o r s around Clinton Ware o f Cass City and Miss cer and daughter, Verda, A l b e r t SpenThe Thr b should wake up and send Georgia Waltrod of Gagetown w e r e cer, Mrs. Doan Howey, Mr. and Mrs. French and baby, Jimmie, their ~l i t ture to M@. Ludlow at the guests of Maynard Delong's last Sun- Russel Miss Cecile Huffman and Al Sledhorn he~dqu~ ors of the Association in LARG]~ N U M B E R AT THE day evening. "Wh6~e did the car hit h i m ? " P o r t I i u r o ~ : E v e r y day t h e r e are COUNTY W. C. T. U. M E E T Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Tallmadge spent all of Pontiac; Mr. and Mrs. Russell asked the.coroner. ~nore arid more people coming into Thursday and F r i d a y at the T a l l m a d g e Hart of Hollyowod, Calif; Mr. and " A t the junction of the dorsal and Mrs. A. C. Huffman, Miss Neatha ~he office asking for i n f o r m a t i o n farm. Concluded f r o m first page. Huffman, Mrs° H. L . Wilmot~ Mr. and cervical o4~ertebrae," replied the mediabout resorts, ~nd looking over the and composed largely of ignorant Mr. and Mrs. Morris Kelley visited Mrs. L. G. P a r k e r and baby, Jean, cal witness. rack to see what there is on file. Mr. foreigners who would be glad to bring Mrs. K's parents, Mr. and Mrs:. Van- Mr. and Mrs. K e n n e t h Huffman and The f o r e m a n of the jury rose from LudlOw is making an u r g e n t request to America the same sad condition of Blaricom, at ~Deford Sunday. baby Harold, all of Caro; Mr. and his seat. for this literature and will place ~it to d r u n k e n men and wome~ t h a t existed "Man and boy I've lived in these Mr. and Mrs: Ben Herr and Gus Mrs. Wylie NicklesS, Dolores and good advantage. in the countries t h e y were so glad to Wisosky of Auburn Heights and Mr. Palmarie Spencer of F a i r g r o v e ; Rod- parts for fifty years," he protested g e t a ~ a y from. Benediction was pro- and Mrs. Dan McCIorey of Cass City crick K e n n e d y of Romeo; Mr. and ponderously, "an' I never heered o' It is interesting to step into the headquarters of The Thumb Associa- nounced by Rev. D. J. F e a t h e r spent Sunday at the Chas. McConnell Mrs. Lyle Spencer a n d children, Vel~, the place." home. ma, Rosalind, Arnold R o b e r t and E s t h e r Hillis of Cass City was a Dorothy, Miss W a n e t a ~Bar~nes of Building in Port Huron. The girls , " ". .y .... '-1 ~aken u ~ b Order for Publication Probate of guest at the Wm. Kilbourn home on Cass City; W. B. and Adell Spencer W i l L - - S t a t e of Michigan, T h e Proof Highwood; Mr. and Mrs. Dave bate Court for the County of Tuscola. , ~" . P P • , . t~and included a reading by Mrs. Han- Wednesday. counzry % ~ i o s e i l a m e s c o m e ill o n ]Jfle, ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i n At a session of said Court, held at .~Mr. and Mrs. Clayton H u n t of Pon- McCracken, J o h n and Nina McCracklists received from various sources, na~si~,s°~n~nlue<:lS~e~ssrl:~[e?:n~ el~e%i tiac visited Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Mc- on, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Little and chil- the Probate Office i n the Village of dren, David and Cartoon, Mr. and Caro in said County, on the 20th day 200, 300 or 400 folders frequently go 113. ~ ~' ..... ~_g~ :. . . . . . ~,~out in one day zion oy omcers; wnlcn "~ulu~u in ~nv Lellan. Mrs. Harry Hyslop and ~daug~ter~ of June~ Ao D. 1928. Joseph Miljure lost a valuable cow .... ~°. . . . . Is a m e officersbeing' elected for anothPresent, Horn Guy G. Hill, J u d g e Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lambi~ is also s~range now inquimes ^. ^ ~ lagt week. of Probate. kin and children, Virginia and Grant, come m ~rom unexpec~e~. sources. ~ ±wrs. . . . A., . . o.. ~ n a p p gave a n ins p irin g In the Matter of the Mrs. Wm. McCumons of Brown City all of Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. R o y ColOne wonders how people in w e s t e r n . . . . . . . . . . . . " " %" ~"'1" i Isl n " l aa~ress o~ nal~ a n nour wi~n ClOSe a~- spent Tuesday evening with h e r sis- well and baby, Pearl, and Beryl Estate of Ella E. Gale, Deceasgd. ~oloracto, ~ne rni Ipp ne a as, or. ,^~,.^_ ~ ,u~ ~. . . . . . . . a ~r~d . . . . Delong. Merle Young, h a v i n g filed her petiFranklin of Gaylord; Mr. and Mrs. Louisiana have heard of The Thumb ~u~--u~ @ ~ ~.~,~,~ ~ ~ .o,~- t~r, Mrs. Maynard Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Tallmadge spent Albert McConnell of Kalamazoo; R O y tion, praying t h a t an i n s t r u m e n t filed of Michigan Association and have its t ~:c~:]nT:'de~Vv*r~io~:°~$;Up°~eTa~ ~l:f i n . s a i d Court be admitted to Probate Thursday and Friday in Ithaca. McCracken of Lupton; A. H. Howey, as t h e last will and t e s t a m e n t of said correct address, when t h e r e has been M. E. Hawley, "Out of our Yesterno advertising t h a t would ng%urally d a y s iffto Our Day," she compared the Mr. and Mrs. Win. Messner of De- Fannie, Marion, Sylvia and Lylia deceased a n d t h a t administrati}m of reach these places. p r e s e n t with~twenty-five years ago. troit visited.Mr, and Mrs. Win. Zin- Howey, Ed. Fox, I r v a n Byron, Gu:~ said estate be g r a n t e d to Merle Gaie Shaw, and Sherman Lucas, all of Young or some other suitable person. E v e r y mention ~t h a t is made of The Deford invited the conVentio6 to m e e t necker Tuesday evening. It Is Ordered, T h a t the 18th day of Thumb and The Thumb folder in the w i t h t h e m n e x t year. Mrs. E v a Cl~rk~'\ Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zinnecker were Sterling; Mr. and Mrs. Alex Grant Detroit papers or in various m a g a - oZ~Vassar gave an address ~and the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Zin- and baby', Rqbert, of Pontiac; Albert July, A. D. 1928, at t e n a. m., at said Howey, Wm. Keeps, M r . and MrS. Probate Office is hereby appointed~for zines brings inquiries s h o u t The i n f a n t grandson of the c o u n t y presi- necker at Pontiac Sunday. Lawrence Garries and children, Chas. hea'ring said petition. Thumb. I t certainly looks as if w e ' r e d e n t was c o n s e c r a t e d ~ t o t h e cause of It Is F u r t h e r Ordered, That public Mr. and Mrs. Jol~n P e r r y and son, and Francis, Mr. and Mrs. J o h n Mc- notice thereof be given by publication likely to have plenty of Visitors in temperance. The beautiful memorial Manford, and Miss Bertha Butterfield Cready; Alexander and Velma OsThe Thumb this summer. of a copy hereof for t h r e e successive service was conducted b:~:~Mrs. Nettle of Flint spent t h e : w e e k end with Mr. H e i n d e m a n of Caro and seven deaths a n d Mrs. Clyde Quick, Manford P e r r y born, Lloyd Howey, Mr. and Mrs. Roy weeks previous to said day of hearing Burger, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wiltsie in the Cass City Chronicle, a newspaof members ivere reported. The W. C. remaining for the week. and children, Kenneth, Vernita, Ray- per printed and circulated in said Corn Beats Barley T. U. benediction closed one of the Mr. and Mrs. E. W. P a r r o t t and mond, Maxine and Douglas, Miss Ver- County. best conventions. children arrived from Levering SaturGUY G. HILL, i n F e e d i n g Trials county's County W. C. T. U. officers who were day to visit relatives and attend the na W a l k e r and H a r r y Chard, all of J u d g e of Probate. reze~ected are: President, Mrs. Genie Michigan annual conference of t h e M. Clifford; Mrs. J a m e s Nickles, Mr. and A true copy. Mrs. E v e r e t t Darling and children, C. East Lansing, June. A l t h o u g h Martin, Deford; yice president at B. C. church. It is understood t h a t Myrtle Purse, barley has proved to be a good substi- large, Mrs. Adeline Everts, Vassar; Mr. P~rrott will open a dairy plant at d., Dorothy and Marie, of Shabbona; Register of Probate. Mr. and Mrs. H a r v e y P a h n a t e e r and 6-22-3 t u t e for corn as an efficient grain for corresponding secretary, Mrs. A. A. Bad Axe in t~e n e a r future. daughters, Mabel, Loots, and Alma, a f a t t e n i n g ratio~, a field of corn will Ricker, Cass City; recording secretaMr. and Mrs. Maynard Delong at- Wells Spencer, Willard Spencer, Alva Caro, Mich., June 22, 1928. f a t t e n m a n y more head of livestock ry, Mrs. C. S. Bates, Kingston; treastended a reception at Brown C i t y on Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. George SpenIn accordance with the Charter and f t h a n the same field planted to barley. urer, Mrs. Hattie Cody, Caro. Saturday given in honor of Mrs. Decer, Mr. and Mrs. Seth Spencer and By Laws of the Tuscola County FarThis is the result of one of the m o s t long's niece, Mrs: Earl Compual. Mrs. son, Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Spencer, mers' ~[utual Fire Insurance Compasignificant of the experiments conRather, m o t h e r and little T o m m y Compual, better known as Miss Rosa Miss Belle Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Al- ny, a Special Meeting will be held at ducted by the M. S. C. animal husMcCumons, received m a n y valuable bert Curtis and ,cMIdren, Armoi~d, the Court House in Caro, J u l y 2, 1928, bandry department Which w e r e w.ere in the street car. T o m m y had Carmen, Darwin, Detta and Royce, all at 2 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of b r o u g h t out at Livestock F e e d e r s Day secured seats, but poor ~father had to and useful p r e s e n t s . of Deford. The Michigan annual conference of stand. adjusting the claim of-Floyd and a t the college June 14. A pot luck dinner, ice cream and Flor@ Reid. Mother: "Tommy, doesn't it pain the M. B. C. church is being held at The steer feeding" experiments for w a t e r m e l o n were served at noon. The E. J. Darbee, SeCy. 1927-28 showed t h a t steers have re- you to see your f a t h e r reaching for a Mizpah of the Cass River circuit. A number of those in attendance are be- next reunion will be held at the home (Legal Publication)e turned a good profit this y e a r in spite s t r a p ~" ~ ing entertained at Riverside. Rev. of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wiltse at Clif -~ Tommy: "Only at home, mother." 6-22-2 of high feed costs, which is the reSchrader of Pontiac and A r t h u r Zel- ford. ler of Yale are at Allen Wi~nner's; lillllllliillllllililllllil Ill iIiiilill I IIII ~ n ~ ~ u ~ 1 ~ ~ l ~ 1 ~ ~ llimmllUmllll~_ R o y . J o h n Bradley of Battle Creek and Directory. HOSPITAL NOTES, Roy. Sam Surbrook of Roseburg at James Tracy's; Wm. Hazard and Mose P. A. SCHENCK, D. D. S. Mrs. Anna Phillips of Bad Axe en$ n i i i i i I i i I I i l l i 1111!!11!'ll~J.l! I l l l l R ! l l i l l i l II I !11! l i l l l l l i l l l l i l [1111l l l l l l l @ l U l l l l l l l i l l I II I I i l i l l u I I I I ! il f l l l l I I I l l I i l i l I I i I I l l l l 111III111 It I u I I I I I l l I I 1 1 1 II I I I I! I I i i !~ Rogers of Elkton at R. Knoblet's; and Dentist. R A T E S - - l i n e r of 25 words or I SUBSCRIPTIONS taken for all the Geo. Shimn of Flint and Roy. Gor- tered th@hospital June 14 and underwent an appendicitis operation the Graduate of the U n i v e r s i t y of Michless, 25 cents each insertion. Over~ [ well known magazines of the na- don Guilliat at Edward Knoblet's. igan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., Cass 25 words, one cent a word for tion at the Chronicle office. 10-14The ladies of the Church of Christ same day. Cecil McQueen, who was brougl~t to City, M i c h . each insertion. have organized an a i d w i t h M r s . Arthe hospital suffering from an acciFOUND--Confirmation picture of thur Henderson, preMdent; Mrs. Robt. dent with a tractor, was able to leave DENTISTRY W A N T E D - - R e l i e f cook, white, single, girl. Photo taken by A. E. Mast of Warner; vice president; Mrs. Nell the hospital this w e e k for his h o m e age 25 ~to 40 preferred. Apply Miss I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. Sebewaing. Call at Chronicle office McLarty, secretary; and Mrs. W i n t e r - near Shabbona. stein, treasurer. The first m e e t i n g Clal-k, Pontiac State Hospital, PonOffice over Burke's D r u g Store. We for picture. 6-15Miss Verneta Webber, daughter of .was held at the home of Mrs. H e n r y tiac, Michigan. 6-22-'2 Mr. an4 Mrs. Oscar Webber, of Cass ~olicit your patronage w h e n in~ nee& of work. A GOOD Police dog for sale cheap. Stone. Dinner was served to about City, underwent a tonsil operation. FOR SALE, the Mrs. Wallace Gilbert Mrs. Ed. Phetteplace, Shabbona. 6- 50. The next m e e t i n g wilFbe held at the home of Mrs. Arthur H e n d e r s o n home. A bargain if t a k e n at once. 15-2 o Yev:--First Act S t i E L D O N B. YOUNG, M. D. the first Thursday in July. E n q u i r e of E. W. Keating. 6-15-2p " W h a t m u s t a m a n b~ to be-buried Mrs. Chas. Wedow and N o r m a n Cass City, Mich. D O n ' T fail ~to see Mary Pickford, the Murphy and son, Charles, of Walled with m i l i t a r y honors ?" Telephone--No. 80. L O S T an E a s t m a n 116 A (Box type) world's sweetheart, in " M y Best Lake were guests from Tuesday until "Dead." C a m e r a / n west part of town. FindGirl" at Pastime, Sunday, Monday, Friday of A. J. and W. O. Root and er please leave it at t h e Bliss Mil- o~ J u n e 24-25. o t h e r relatives. I. D. McCOY, M. D. l i n e r y Shop. Reward °offered. 6-22Miss Olive Root spent the week end Surgery and Roentgenology. tf " M Y BEST GIRL" at Pastime Sun- with Miss N e r a Rohrbach at Caro. o Office in Pleasant H o m e Hospital. day-Monday, J u n e 24-25. The eternal play girl, Mary Pickford her W A N T E D , a calf 1 or 2 days old. Miracles are b e i n g p e r f o r m e d today Phone, Office 96-2R; Residence 96-3R ELKLAND. best picture. Fred McCaslin, Phone 147 F 1-2. just as in the t i m e of ChriSt, said the 6-15-2" Rev. J o h n Callahan, P r o t e s t a n t ChapK N A P P & DOUGLAS Mrs. Ella Donohue of Detroit spent lain of the T6mbs and Sdl~erintendent BOY of 13 wants odd jobs to do, such Funeral Directors and Licensed Emt h e past week w i t h her sister, Mrs. as mowing lawns, washing cars, of the Hadley Rescue Mission, in a H E R E is a good bright o,ne. f()r you. etc. Resides 4 blocks south of Ford Edw. Tulley, who has been ill. Mrs. sermon y e s t e r d a y m o r n i n g in t h e Cen- balmers. Mrs. Knapp, Lady Assistant A Coleman lamp for only $6.50 at Garage. N a m e Vincent O'Connor. Tulley is improving slowly. Mrs. tral M. E. church, Hanson Place and with license.~ N i g h t and day calls reCorpron's Hardware. 6-15-tf ceive prompt attention. City phone. 6-22-1p Donohue r e t u r n e d to her home Sun- Summerfield Street, Brooklyn. day. He said he r e g a r d e d prohibit~dn as ~vLOST--Log chain with hook on each N E W J O H N Deere 1½ H. P. gasoline Friends of Mrs. Nancy Marshall one p r e s e n t - d a y miracle g r e a t e r than A. McPHAIL ° e n d lost between f a r m s of D. Battel engine for sale cheap if t a k e n at are much pleased to learn t h a t she is t h a t p e r f o r m e d by Christ w h e n he Funeral Director, ~nd Thos. Colwell. F i n d e r please once. Also Studebaker wagon. E. able to u'p around tRh house again. stopped the funeral cortege of the son call ThoS. ColweH, Cass City. 6-22-1 Lady Assistant. Chisholm, Cass City. 6-22~i Mrs. Chas. Meadow, Mrs. Wm. of the widow of Nain and restored Phone No. 182. Cass City. Murphy" of Walled Lake, Mr. and the youth to life. ~1,000 CASH will bu~ Lenzner Bros.' ICE FOR SALE. A. Fort & Son, Cass 1Hrs. Asa Root and daughter, Viola, "NOt only Jesus p e r f o r m e d miraf u r n i t u r e store building on Main St. City. 6-22-tf ~ and W. O. ROot spent Wednesday at cles," he said, "but the church all ]Lot 66x132 ft. Enquire of F. LenzE. W. KEATING t h r o u g h t h e ages has been doing the t h e Claude Root home. iqel'. L E A V E your subscription for m a g a same thing. And t h e same t h i n g is Real Estate and Fire and Automobile Mr. and Mrs. B. Connell and sons b e i n g done today as in the days of zines with the Chronicle. 10-14Insurance. 20 P E R C E N T O F F on all Jewelry at of Pontiac spent the week-end at Christ, only in a slightly different CASS CITY, MICH. George Hooper's Store, Cass City. their farm. W I L L SELL or exchange m y 80'acre way. 6.22-I Marion Mellendorf of Rescue spent "Many a f u n e r a l procession is bef a r m 1½ miles south of Cass City on main road. Make me an offer. a few days this week at the Jacob ing stopped today just as Jesus R. N. McCULLoUGH FOR S A L E - - S e e d potatoes. F o u r east stopped the funeral of the son of the N. Apsel, 828 Detroit Savings Bank Helwig home. and 2 n o r t h of Cass City." J o h n A. AUCTIONEER J a m e s Profit and son, John, w e n t widow of Nain. For example, since its Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Phone RanSeeger, R. R. 1, Cass City. 5-18-tf AND ~ R E A L ESTATE DEALER, to Pontiac Saturday. J o h n expects to e n a c t m e n t prohibition has stopped d o l p h 7374. 6-22-1p CASS CITY. be employed there for the summer. m a n y a funeral procession. W h e n the ABOUT 12 acres of sweet clover h a y IN M E M O R I A M ~ I n loving - m e m o r y Ray LaVigne 5f Detroit, Lee Hel-~ E i g h t e e n t h A m e n d m e n t was p u t in F a r m sales a°specialty. Dates m a y for sale. Would like to sell on of Roy E. Durkee, who passed wig, and the Misses Arena H e l w i g t~he s t a t u t e books t h e r e was per- be arranged with Cass City Chronicle. ground. Glenn T uckey. 6~22-1 and Marion Mellendorf spent F r i d a y formed +as g r e a t a miracle, even a Office at I. Schonmuller's Store, Cass a w a y J u n e 23, 1927. in Bay City. ~i g r e a t e r miracle t h a n t h a t of Christ. City. MALTED MILK and ice &-cam a t No one heard the footsteps ~ Mr. and Mrs. Claude Moore and "I wonder if it is ever realized how DoefT's Restaurant, Cass City. 5- Of angels drawing near family spent Sunday in Pigeon. m a n y sons of the m o t h e r s of the naWh~ took from earth to Heaxen 25-tf ~o T U R N B u L L BROS. Wm. Durfey of Windsor was acci- tion would~: have been dead today if The bn~ we loved so dear. Jim Auctioneers Bill dentally dro~¢ned -Sunday, while out the E i g h t e e n t h A m e n d m e n t had not E L L I o T T MOTOR Lines ~ Schedule-- The pearly gates were open Youth, ability on the lake w i t h a party of friends. been put through. Many a m o t h e r to- Age, experience Bus leaves Cass O[ty for Imlay A gentle voice said come We sell anything anywh~ere. If you Sympathy is extended to his friends day, t h a n k God, has a boy alive beCity d a i l y at 8:30 a. m. and 4 : 4 5 p. ~And withl farewell uhspoken cause - t h e E i g h t e e n t h A m e n d m e n t don't employ us, we both lose money. here. m., f a s t time. Bus leaves Cass H e calmly entered home. Mr. and Mrs. ffnb. Marshall and has stopped f u n e r a l processions all Write for dates ~md instructions to City for Bad Axe at 11:45 a . m . His loving wife and children. son, 5ohnnie, w e r e callers at the M. over this country. Many men who to- Deckerville, Mich. Phone 56--15. and 5:45 p. ~m. On S~nday, (one Crawford-home Tuesday evening. Mr. d a y would have been u n d e r the bus each way), leaves Cass City I W I S H to t h a n k Mr. and ~Mrs. AI- Crawford is slowly improving. ground as a result of drink are alive for I m l a y City 12:45 p . m . and m e r for the delicious birthday cake Mr. and Mrs. Smith Luther ~ e r e and have decent clothes on t h e i r backs CASS CITY LODGE NO. 214, ~L. O. L. leaves Cass City for Bad Axe at t h e y both made for K a t h r y n and entertained at the Claude Root h o m e and are t a k i n g care of wives and meet the second and fourth Saturdays families, t h a n k s ~o p r o h i b i t i o n . ~ A d v . of each month at Town H a l l . Hector Ross. Mrs. Catherine Ross. Sunday. ~5~45 p . m . 12-9We see the dairying interests of The Thumb growing by leaps and bounds. In Sanilac County t h e y have set a m a r k of - doubling their~dairying production, and they will reach t h e i r goal without any question. Michigan's ":~ Most Beautiful Playground *:" Wen0na Beach -:. PRESENTS THE ":" .:.':" Inter nati onal .:. ....... FROM-SWISS GARDENS AND STATION W L W .:. ll--MELODY ,:, o .:.':"S A T U R D A Y -:- :!: ~.. Collegians MASTERS ¢. m 11 ~.¢~ o JUNE 23rd--SATURDAY :!: ¢, SUNDAY PETITE i: T T H E WORLD'S YOUNGEST A E R I A L I S T ~: MARIE ;i~ IN A DARING DEATH DEFYING .~.':" Balloon A s c e n s i o n and P a r a c h u t e J u m p ":" ***~ *I* ¢~ ":* o J i m m i e a n d H i s I. B . B a n d i n a n A f t e r n o o n C o n c e r t ,:,':" C h i c k e n - - S t e a k ~:.~.~ O o ":" THE CAFE White ~" o o .:. Fish--Roast ,:. FOR R E S E R V A T I O N S Phone Rural 6179-F2 BATHING SKATING FREE AMUSEMENTS ADMISSION *:* ~'~$~ O o ":" FREE *:" K i d d i e uD'a-'~r0un~ ~,~g ~:* '~ _ Red :.,:-~ i Chronicle Liners l- _ W.C.T.U. l Y@HF Car N e w Life'@ You will be surprised at the difference this famous gasoline can make in your motoring. No matter what make of car you drive---whether it is old or new--Red Crown Ethyl will increase its speed and power flexibility. You'll notice a definite difference in driving. Less gear shifting. Quicker ~eeeleration. S p e e d i e r get-away. More power all the time--.more speed when you want it. Your ear is eager to do your b i d d i n g - - - R e d C r o w n Ethyl ,ii~nocks out that knock". @ You pay very little for this big difference in performance. Red Crown Ethyl c u t s only a few cents more than ordinary gasoline ! Fill up the tank with it today! A~y ~ard Oil ~ i c e ~ a artd~at Most G~trages ~ 0il Compm CASS CITY, MICHIGAN I . . . . . I , ...... *:. A