VOLUME 3S EAST JORDAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1931. NUMBER 34

GOV. W. M. BRUCKER TIME TO GET BUSY COUNTY CLUB "WHO IS UNCLE SAM?" HEAVY AUGUST RAM TRUCK PAYS FIRST OFFICIAL MEMBERS ENJOY ORIGINAL POEM BY CIRCUIT COURT * WILL VISIT It would seem that many bankers PROF. F. G. BLAIR VISIT TO CHARLEVOIX are inclined to accept bank failures CAMP AT GAYLORD CLOSED FRIDAY THIS COUNTY as "acts of God" in the sense that The keys to the City of Charlevoix they are due largely to conditions Handicraft and Canning Demonstra­ Prof. Francis G. Blair, Superin­ Closing a heavy August Court Shropshire, Hampshire, Oxford Rams were handed to Governor Wilber M. beyond human control. Perhaps often tion Teams Win Trips to Detroit. tendent of Public Instruction of the docket, Judge Parm C. Gilbert, of Will Predominate. Brucker ' last Saturday on his first enough such failures are due to econ­ State of Illinois, was the speaker at Traverse City, last Friday afternoon official visit to this county on invita­ omic causes beyond the/Immediate the last meeting of the Chamber of sentenced Elmer LaDuke, Cheboygan, Charlevoix County can feel highly All sheep owners will be interested tion of American Legion Posts and control of the batlker himself, once Commerce. He gave an excellent ad­ to serve from five to ten years at gratified over the splendid attendance v in the announcement that the "Ram the County Republican Committee. he has permitted his' institution to dress in which he stressed correct Ionia for statutory rape. reach a status wherein those causes of Club members at the recent North­ Truck" will again visit the county Arriving at the McMillan 'home educational ideals, and the import­ Raymond Dodd, Charlevoix lad, may operate; but often, too, bank ern Michigap 4-H Clup Encampment within the next three or four weeks Jr Saturday afternoon in the Governor's ance of keeping one's feet on the who broke parole resulting from con­ failures are due at least in part to at Gaylord last week. Our county with a load of splendid quality pure­ party were Mrs. Brucker, Senator ground. If was the finest address viction for breaking an<} , entering, quite human causes entirely within had double the attendance of any bred 'rams. This truck is sponsored and Mrs. Calvin Campbell of Indian along the lines of practical education must serve from one to five years at the grasp of the bankers who suffer other in ,Northern Michigan, a total by the different Breed Associations River, and Representative and Mrs. that the writer has heard in several Ionia. their effects. of 78 club members and leaders being years. co-operating with the Michigan State Louis Anderson of Northport. Led present at the Camp for various Twelve liquor law violators were College. m by the Legion drum and bugle corps, In this connection may be quoted a Prof. Blair closed his speech with placed on probation. Nine of them, lengths of time. The next nearest Any person interested in buying a the executive party marched to therecen t press dispatch concerning the an effective reading of an original all farmers, were given until October county was Alpena county with 39 in ram is cordially invited to inform city dock to board the yacht "Sylvia- closing of the Belding Savings Bank. attendance. poem entitled to arrange their affairs before sen­ The dispatch says in part: tence is passed. They were Robert County Agent Mellencamp at Boyne Gee," owned by Mr. and Mrs. S. T. The club members left Mon4ay Struthers, Rbert Kane, Delos Ostrum City, so that a ram can be secured to - Gilbert, Detroit, Charlevoix summer "A seldom used law for protection afternoon, Aug. 10th, and returned "UNCLE SAM" and Alfred Allison, Hayes Township; meet the request in quality and price. residents.. of banks against false rumors may be home Friday afternoon, Aug. 14th, You ask me who is Uncle Sam, Mrs. Anna Saganek and son, Charles These rams are personally selected invoked as a result of the recent clos- having spent the time of their lives. The visiting guests saw coast I modestly reply, I am. of Marion Township; Floyd _Edson , bya representative of Michigan State ng of the Belding Savings Bank. A F©rtunately -weather-conditions_were_ "" -guardsmen—driH—in- Lake Michigan search is being made for persons who T -These- - hungry urchins meanly Joe~"KeTo8ki-Wn5"fce-4kop~- Bp^ lCnllege,-and are guaranteed in every channel and later'enjoyed an after­ favorable throughout the week, all of are alleged to have circulated reports dressed, Falls particular. noon pleasure trip up Lake Charle­ which made the week more enjoyable. which caused withdrawals and-forced These mothers suckling babes at Thomas McWaters, Charles Blaha This year the rams are somewhat voix. Over three hundred club members breast, jlosing to protect depositors. were in attendance. In addition, and Floyd Morgan of East Jordan, cheaper in price being all the way • A large crowd was on hand for the These traffic^cops along the street, "If foijnd, officials declare, they many local leaders and county ex­ were placed on probation for a year. from $20.00 up to $35.00 or $40.00. reception held at the Belvedere Ca­ These' rushing crowds on eager will be'' prosecuted under statute tension workers were present. The latter pair must pay fifty dollars They can be obtained cheaper from sino, and the banquet at the Belve­ which provides a $5,000 fine and feet, court costs. the truck than by personal orders as The week was filled with demon­ dere Hotel was attended--by 160 prison sentence up to five years for These thousands caught in for- the overhead is spread over such a strations, varioys contests, educa­ county citizens. Dr. F. F. McMillan anyone who "wilfully and maliciously ' tune's jam,— large number that the expense of tional programs, athletic games, and of Charlevoix, acted as Toastmaster, circulates false rumors or derogatory All these, and you and I are Uncle each one is cut down to a minimum. other features too numerous to men­ NOTED ARTIST and in turn introduced members of statements concerning the solvency Sam. This will give you a splendid oppor­ tion. • • -'. v ( Governor Bracket's party, who re­ of an incorporated bank or trust in­ PAINTS NEW tunity to get the greatest value for All farmers working in the field, sponded with short talks. stitution." At the camp the various elimina­ HEALTH POSTERS your money, so please inform your tion contests were held to decide All bankers making dollars yield, County Agent at once if you wish Speaking before a large crowd at The moral, of course, is obvious. what teams would represent'North­ All those who teach or preach or the school gym in the evening; Gov. further particulars, or wish to have If the bankers of the State were a ern Michigan at the Michigan State pray, Brucker lauded the northern Michi­ Pictures of wild animal life, will be this outlined more in detail to you. little more zealous in prosecuting Fair. We are very glad to announce All honest workers, night and day, gan region and the entire State for used to teach health Tiabits to Michi­ B. C. MELLENCAHP, cases of this kind, fewer banks would that Robert Tainter and Melvin Som- All montebanks who cheat and its enterprise in promoting the tourist gan school children during the com­ County Agr'l Agent. be forced into liquidation through merville of Boyne City won a trip in sham,-7- industry, now one of the State's lar­ ing school year. Four paintings have causes which have none of the im­ the Handicraft demonstration con­ All these, and you and I are Uncle gest. He pledged his support to a personality of fate, but which on the been made for this purpose by Chas. test, and the Misses Hazel Mosley and Sam. Livingston Bull, the nationally known continuance and necessary financial othpr ,hand are quite personal and Beth Simpson of Boyne Falls also ADVERTISING aid for the resort', survey which has close at home. artist, for the Michigan tuberculosis won a trip in the Canning demonstra­ This miner climbing from the mine, Association. RACKETEERS been started. He enumerated the It may be said that the flurry of This boot-black calling for your tion contest. There is a strong possi­ Color posters of the four original many wonderful resources Michigan bank closings which has caused sleep­ shine, bility that one or two other teams drawings have been made for distri­ boasts and propheeied a vast im­ less nights to a considerable portion This lawyer pleading at the bar, Our town may not have the blood­ will win a trip to Detroit, but they bution among School Commissioners provement in the next decade. . of the population during recent This, doctor rushing by in car,. thirsty wops who flourish in the have not been announced as yet. and Superintendents. The pictures months is about over. Be that as it This druggist measuring gill and Gov. Brucker pleaded for more If youjthink these club members illustrate the importance of proper underworld of the great cities, but may, now is the time to make a few gram respect of the State's laws. He de­ did not enjoy themselves just ask eating, sleeping, bathing, and play­ there is nevertheless a class of racke­ examples that will be remembered by All these, and you^and I are Uncle- plored what he termed a slackening those who attended the camp and see ing. The artist, who is famous for teers who have their eyes on this city, self-constituted bank critics in future Sam. of moral support on the part of what they say. Space will not per-, hii reproductions of wild life in their and are continually slipping in and day sof stress that are bound to come Michigan's citizens in justice. "The mit a list of names of those who at­ natural surroundings, has taken one going out with a generous amount of in a world which is far from having Those prosperous in high estate, ir'only way to stop crime," the Gover­ tended the c£mp, but we are indeed animal for each health function and coin for their meager efforts. reached its millenium.—Michigan In­ Those beggars "waiting at the gate, nor stated, "is to let the criminal proud of this fine number who were shown the mother as she trains her There are very few more harassed vestor.. • -• ' Those morons breeding in the know that he will be punished to the in attendance. Of the number, 32 young in health habits. personages in the land than the fullest, extent of the law if appre The statute referred to'above pro- slums, were in attendance throughout the Those soldiers stepping to the A mother deer and her fawns are country merchant. He is "systemati­ hended, and that there is no escape; vides that, "Any person who shall entire week, while there were 19 who shown in one drawing as they eat cally coaxed, teased; cajoled and wilfully and maliciously make, circu­ - drums, --.- from the hand of justice." He said stayed two days or more! water lilies. In ancther scene a brow-beaten by these racketeers late or transmit to another or others, Those topers swigging down their • that during his term of office no pri- B. C. MELLENCAMP, family of mountain sheep is seen (who are looking for easy money) any statement, rumor or suggestion, dram,— • soner had been paroled from a State Co. Agr'l Agent. sleeping high on a ledge in the Rocky into taking on their advertising fakes, written, printed or by word of mouth, All these, and" you and I are Uncle penal institution, and declared he will mountains. A bear rolling an unwill­ and these schemes are without end in which is directly or by inference Sam. continue that policy as long as he is ing cub in water teaches the health number, and in the main practically derogatory to the financial condition in office. Not high topped hat nor stripes importance of bathing and swinttning. all without advertising value. or affects the solvency or financial COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS Governor Brucker -*as introduced mrr bars, In the fourth poster, three puma cubs standing of any incorporated bank, They range from railroad time Not gaudy coat, bedecked with playing in the sunshine around the by Dr. B. J. Beuker of East Jordan, savings bank, banking institution or cards, hotel registers, cafe menus, . Regular meeting of the common stars, ~. mother show the part of outdoor - who was in the Governor's Division, Lrust company doing business in this door-knob hangers, so-called booster the 32nd, during the World War. council of the City of East Jordan Not whiskered chin nor pointed exercise in health. write-ups, to almost every kind of State, or who shall counsel, aid, pro­ held at the council rooms, Monday The executive paid a glowing tribute nose, Each poster also carries a phrase bologna the mind of a human can cure, or induce another to start, evening, Aug. 17, 1931. ' to Lee C. Allard, blind Commander transmit or circulate' any such state­ Not gawky form from head to. toes, telling the health moral of the pic­ conjure. Not Yankee Doodle's slap and slam, of the Charlevoix American Legion, ment or rumor, shall be guilty of a Meeting was called to order by the ture, such as "Eat for strength, grace Several years ago illuminated sign Mayor. Present: Mayor Watson, Not any or all of these are Uncle through whose efforts much of the felony," and upon conviction thereof, and vigor," "Sleep for long hours in boards with changing pictures were and Aldermen Maddock, Dudley, Tay­ Sam. •.program was planned. shall be punished by a fine of 'not cool, clean air," "Bath, enjoy the placed along roads adjacent to the The Legion drum and bugle corps lor, Kenny, Parmeter and Williams. water; learn to swim," and "Play out more than five thousand dollars or by But pioneers on land and" sea, city. Cars whizzing along at 40 to gave a very creditable performance Absent: None. of doors the year round." punishment for a term of not more Unnumbered millions yet to be 60 had a lot of spare time to read during the afternoon and evening Lhari five years or both'. Minutes of the last meeting were Of noble men who work and plan Educators and , health workers these "advertisements." If they did festivities, and music by the combin- read and approved. To build and guard their native have found school health instruction take their eyes off the road they .-^ ed Charlevoix and East Jordan school The following resolution was offer­ -land; valuable in training children to build merely flirted with the ditch, a turn­ * bands, under Director John TerWee, ed by Alderman Parmeter, who mov­ Who daily do their civic share body strength against tuberculosis over, or a smash-up. was much enjoyed at the gym during HOWARD — TOWNSEND and other diseases. Distribution of ed its adoption, seconded by Alder­ Unflinchingly and unaware Then there came a bunch that sold the early evening.—Petoskey News. man Taylor: Of. those who praise or those who these posters to school officials is a part of the child health work carried "advertising" on cards with the order A very pretty early morning wed­ Resolved, That the Peoples State damn,—• of services of churches. They told ding took place Wednesday, Aug. 19 on in Michigan by the Michigan Tu­ DRAMA AND Savings Bank and the State Bank of All these, and you and I are Uncle berculosis Association and affiliated the advertisers the local church was at the home of Mrs. Win. Howard in East Jordan be, and the same are, Sam. hard pressed for cash, and had asked the presence of the immediate family, local societies with funds raised in ROMANCE FOUND, hereby made and declared legal de­ the annual sale of tuberculosis Xmas them to help thearout. The church when her daughter, Fern was united positories for moneys belonging to got 75 cards that were never used, in marriage to Irving Tbwnsend of seals. IN "DIRIGIBLE' the City of East Jordan. the printer got $5, and the fakers .. Detroit. After a very sumptiOus Adopted by the Council of the City Charlotte—Phyllis Ann Guthrie, J- netted $120 for their profits.- wedding breakfast the happy couple rear-old daughter, of Frank Guthrie, Is Duck: "I buy everything on the "Dirigible,"" a Columbia Picture left on a honeymoon trip through the of. East Jordan on the 17th day of The slicker with the circuB Bhell lead of .burns, caused by the explosion installment plan—so much down." enjoying the stellar services of Jack Upper Michigan eoiintry, after which \August, 1931, by an aye and nay game has nothing on these birds when ill gasoline lroner. Cat: "I pay so ,much purr." Holt and Ralph Graves, will open an they will make their home in Detroit. vote as follows: it comes to their "con" games. engagement at the Temple Theatre, The Rev. James Leitch of the M. E. Ayes— Maddock, Dudley; Taylor, Grand Rapids—Raymond Nicholas Scores of times since coming to East Jordan next Wednesday and Church officiating,- using the ring Kenny, Parmeterj.Williams and Wat­ Felkema, 9 years old; was seriously Qulncy—John Kline, Dayton, 0., his this City we have been approached by Thursday, Aug. 26-27. It is an airceremony . son. - njured when his stomach was pierced these fakers and offered juicy plums by a fence picket. He leaped from mother and his 86-year-old grandmoth­ special, with a background of human Nays—None. if we would co-operato wijh them in drama, directed by Frank Capra. :he roof of a garage, falling on the er escaped death in the waters of Far- Bills were presented for payment their schemes, and wc have invari­ Fay. Wray plays the leading femi­ tence. '•'••• well Lake, near here, When the party, as follows: ably turned them aWay. nine role and others of importance in I. W. W. VISIT riding In a speedboat, were thrown Wm. McPhersbn, mowing lawns $3.90 Greenville — Agricultural pupils of the cast are Hobart Bosworth, Roscoe Into the water when the driver made We turned them away because in Montcalm County high school recently a sharp turn which capsized the boat. Karns and Clarence Muse. One of those new super-service Roy Nowland, gasoline__ 7.48 practically every case there was no opened the county fair Here. The Kline rescued his mother by bringing advertising value in what they had to The principal characters, Jack stations had just been opend in Dan Parrott, cutting weeds- 1.50 youths took over the management of J her to the overturned boat where she offer; because their charges to the * Bradon and "Frisky" Pierce, are Grand Rapdis. A car with an out- John Whiteford, work at cem. 47.00 the exposition this year, after officers clung to the bow. Kline than effected prospective! customer were outrage­ * played by Holt and Graves. Bradon of-the-State license on it, driven by a Wm. Prause, Street labor 32.00 of the agricultural society announced 1 the rescue of his grandmother and ous; and mainly because they were is the commander of a huge Navy beaming fat woman, drove in. Im­ Win Nicholls, street labor 26.00 no fair would be held because of In­ then'sank. Rescuers brought Kline to fakirs, or in more modern parlance—- ^ dirigible and -Pierce is the Navy's mediately three or four uniformed J. F. Kenny, fgt., dray 1.57 sufficient public interest. attendants raced to the car, ready to shore where he was revived. t racketeers. .' foremost flying ace—a daredevil for Peoples State Sav. Bank, surety put on their act. Benton Harbor—Fruit receipts at fc whom no risk is too great.' Miss bonds ,-_ 8.50 Bellalre—The South BellaJre Metho­ There are home activities which "No, boys," explained the fat wo­ Hersey Mfg. Co., water meters the Benton Harbor market are approx­ dist Church now operates a gasoline mtfat be supported, but the next time .\ Wray plays the role of Pierce's wife. imately double the output here of one man, "this is just an I. W. W. visjt." and parts : _125,22 Ailing station. The Rev. Joseph B. one of these so-called racketeers ''•••'• The-plot swings-into-aetion—when Tear ago; More than-780,300 packages "I. W. W. visit?" repeated the firat lira Lee, labor and materianz 4782 Edle, pastor, and two members of the drops Info "town'and tries to "divorce Rondelle, an English explorer, who Df fruitjwere sold over the local mark­ attendant, puzzled. E. J. Hose Co., Ramsey fire. 48.50 congregation have donned grease- you from your much-needed cash- has attempted several times to reach et this year, as compared with 393,3(9 "Yes," said the visitor, "informa­ LeRoy Sherman, labor & mdse 24.18 soaked overalls In assuming the roles the South Pole over the ice, conceives In 1930. The number of buyers has show him the gate—no matter what tion, wind and water."—Grand Ra­ Chas. Shedina, labor & mat'l_ 3.40 of operators. Profits from the station, the idea, at a Navy Day celebration, Increased from 786 last year to 2,133 kind of advertising he is selling. pids Chronicle. - Moved by Alderman Williams, to which the entire congregation of of making the trip by dirigible. Bra­ this year. 600 has pledged its business, are to If you have any doubt as to the don is to pilot the expedition and supported by Alderman Maddock, probable advertising value of the Monroe—Allan McDonald, 66 yean be used In defraying expense* of the Pierce is to accompany them. Helen, that the bills be allowed and paid. proposition these fellows offer, con­ Knows His Ribs old, ot Detroit, fell dead at a base ball church. Mr. Edle has donated his Pierce's wife, appeals to Bradon, who Motion carried' by an aye and nay sult your local publishers, who in "Which do you like letter, balloon park here as he watched his son,services , although salaries are paid hie secretly loves her, to prevent Pierce's vote as follows: many instances, had the opportunity tires or high-pressure tires?" Allan, Jr., pitching his team to victory assistants. The station will not oper­ Ayes—Maddock, Dudley, Taylor, to analize the grafts before they participation. -' ; "I like balloon tires better." oyer a Monroe nine. The son sawat e on Sunday. Left behind, Pierce nurses a Kenny, Parmeter, Williams and Wat­ were offered to you. "What kind of a cai do you have?' his father collapse and hurried to hU Flint—Construction of about 1½ grudge and when the dirigible fails to son. . And at the end of the year your "I don't have any,» I'm a pedes­ side. McDonald was taken to a.hos­ miles of concrete paving on West accomplish its purpose he persuades trian." Nays—None. bank balance will be the more sub­ pital, where death was pronounced due Court street, Beecher road and the Rondelle to permit him to fly over the On motion by Alderman Dudley, to a heart attack. The game was stantial because you passed up their extension of the Clio road cutoff of Pole in his plane. Reaching the Pole meeting was adjourned. called oft. fakes. their plane crashes and rescue is His Level Best OTIS J. SMITH. City Clerk. the Dixie highway, which Is to skirt eventually made by Bradon in a new Knight of the Road: "Say, boy, Plymouth—Village officials report the city on the west side, It to start that July tax collections were higher and improved type of dirigible. Bra­ your dog bit me on' the ankle.' Two little soon. This announcement was made Ker-Plnnk! •a™,- "w«n t\,«t'c .. \,i~\, .„ -w' boys came into the den- than during July, 1930. More than don being the agent in bringing to­ Jooy: "well, that s as high as he *;„+>„ „«„„ n -J * u. j .. i by the Genesee County Road Commis­ S 0ffiC a brave little contacted high tension wires near the rane, of Birmingham, on a low bid of flying away up like that?" Do you want to buy, rant, or sell? boy. Which tooth is it?" municipal dam. Worse than the loss |61,ltt. The price of slightly more "Not by going away up, my dear," Do you want employment or give Subscribe for the Charlevoix Little Boy: "Show Kim your tooth, of lite'was the loss 6f light but service than $31,000 'a mile 1« the lowest In was his reply. "They are more likely employment? Try • CUuaiOed Ad». County Herald. Albert." • •oon WM restored. ~" ' ttt mletory ot concrete paring hart. to do it by coming down." .•*„

THE CHARLJ&Q1X_£»UHTY HERALD, (EAS T JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, AUGUtT 21, 1t31

LARGER PARCEL POST PACKAGES Dimple on Knee Worth' Improved Uniform International $750, Seattle Jury Rules ^Seattle, Wash.—Kathleen SepoU, Stcrv of Ccffee twelTBTW-oid schoolgirl, betleved her- dlmpled knee was worth $10,000, but a SiindaySchool Superior court jury decide* that $700 was enough to pay for the loss of a dimple on that part of the unutomy. » Lesson' A dog belonging to Hverete K. Rockey (B» REV V B FI'lZWATKIt. D D. HI took u bite out of Miss SepoU' knee b«r of Faculty. Moody Bible Inntltute of Chicago.) and she sued for $10,000. <{Q 1*31 Western Nawiuauer Union.V.

Wanted a Harem Lesson for August 23 Washington.-- Her husband "wunted above all things else to possess a A GOSPEL FOR ALU MEN harem," Mrs. Lindsay S. Stott al­ leged in a petition for divorce on tile L1SHSON TEXT— Acta 10.1- "One woman was not enough for him," GOLDEN TEXT—For theret tw< no dif­ the petition continued, "but, because ference between the Jew and ths of financial restriction!), he was forced Greek, for the same Lord over All 1« rich unto all that call upon him. to get along by developing love nfCuirs PRIMARY TOPIC—The Gospel for on the outside." Everybody JUNIOR TOPIC—The Gospel for Everybody. AIDS HER COUNTRY INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP­ By virtue of a regulation recently enacted by the postmaster gen­ IC—Firm Steps In World Brotherhood. eral and approved by the Interstate commerce commission, the size YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP­ ' of parcels which may be se»t by parcel post has been Increased from IC;—The Gospel for All Men I a maximum length and girth of 84 inches to 100 Inches with a weight In the lesson for August 2 we saw the limit of TO pounds. Ralph V/. Dakln, postal inspector detailed to the missionary program of the church division of parcel post, and Jesse C. Harraman, director of parcel pobt, Picking Coffae Berries in Brazil. _ are seen checking one of the first of the new-sized packages. broadened to Include the Samaritans^ We see in this lesson the program *ti)l (Prepared l-y the National Geographic is served first to the eldest and uA^Qf' Society; Washington, D. C.) widening and embracing the Gentiles. honored guest To hand a full cup to), The conversion of Cornelius Illus­ HE recent announcement that a guest would be an insult. ncoffe e consumption in the Unit­ Garden Spot on U. S.-Canada Line trates the breaking down of "the mid­ Coffee Map of the World. ed States climbed to a total of 13 dle wall of partition" (Eph. 2:14). T If one were to construct a coffee I. Cornelius (10:1, 2). :pound s per person in 1930, adds interest to ttejeijeckered career of the map of the world filling in c6ffee grow­ Plan Living Monument to The road now runs from Bowsman 1. His official position (v. 1). He ing areas in blaclj..he would find most and Swan River, Manitoba, across the beverage since 1(1 was first brewed in m» H rtnmnn officer over a company of his dark area on the portion Of the —Honor Long Friendship. boundary and down through the the Near East a inillennium and a of one hundred soldiers. • , ^wofld""Bap TSefwSebi ^the Tropic of to Mexico, City. It is half ago. 2. His character (v. 2). a. A de­ Capricorn and the Tropic of Cancer. Toronto, Ont.—The project of an in­ not yet a completed highway through­ There a're about 80 species of coffee vout, pious man. b. A praying man. Mexico would be filled in from the> ternational peace garden on the bound­ out. plants but.-Only a few of them are c. A charitable man. Tropic of Cancer to its southernmost ary line, 'between United States and The reason for the recent strong extensively taltlvated for commercial II. The Supernatural Preparation border. The whole area of Central Canada j is proceeding. Before very wave of support from regions on the use. The coffee plant is a cousin of for the Transition of the Gospel to America and a wide coastal rim long it will be possible for the spon­ Canada-to-Canal higKway is evident the cinchona tree, from the bark of the Gentile* (10:3-33). around the northwestern shoulder of sors to announce the site of this mod­ from the fact that the road runs which quinine is produced. Gambler, 1. Two visions ^rere given (vr. South America, including portions of ern, Eden of trees, shrubs and flowers through an area tha|t Is being consid­ which furnishes tanning material and 8-16). (a). The vision of Cornelius Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru on the which will be laid out as a living ered as a possible—one might almost dyes that bear the same name, and (vv. 3-8). While engaged In prayer Pacific, and Columbia and the Guiana* monument to the long amity of the write probable—site for the Interna­ madder from the roots of which a; an angel of God announced that his on the Atlantic would also be marked, two nations. ; tional Peace garden. This area ls,Tur- substance is extracted that "is impor­ as well as Jamaica, Haiti, Porto Rico, Then, according to H. J. Moore of tle mountains, on the boundary be­ prayer and alms had come before tant in some red dyes, also are re­ and Santo Domingo. Islington, Ont., who conceived the tween Manitoba and North Dakota, God as a memorial and instructed him lated to the coffee plant. idea and is now international secre­ one Of the few heights of land in the Little Countess Marlette YVuruibrund to send to Joppa for Peter who would An inverted pear-lJiap'ed area on, tell him what to do. (h). The vision The coffee plant started Its world­ tary of the scheme, the drive for mid-west prairies. of Napajedla, Moravia, has forwarded wide rambllngs centuries ago; Begin­ the Atlantic coast of ^Brazil from Ba- - of Peter (vv, 9-16).. This took place funds will be on In earnest. Funds Geographically this area could not to the president of Czechoslovakia ning in the- hills of, Ethiopia, it hia to ji point south oWRiode Janeiro- while Peter was praying (v.. 8). ' He- have been coming In, although no spe­ have been more ideally located for her own check for $25,000, drawn on ''jumped" the Red Sea and coffee in; Brazil Is the world's leading coffee- saw a certain vessel containing clean cial effort has been made to induce its purpose. It is on this main north- the Chlldrens' Bank of Prague, with a plantations began to rise above the producing area. In this region is Sao- and unclean animals let dowa,trom them. These have been spontaneous south highway of the continent and little letter requesting him to apply it soil of the extreme southern tip of Paulo state whose prosperity rises and , gifts from people who have, either in- on the boundary line almost exactly towards the reduction of the national heaven, and heard the command, "Rise Arabia where the famous Mocha cof­ falls with the condition of the coffe* : dividually or in groups, been seized midway between New Tork and Van­ debt. Countess Marlette possesses a Peter, kill and eat." This vision ln> fee now Is produced. Later it was Industry. Coffee is responsible for by the graphic beauty of the plan to couver. large fortune in her own right. She dicated that both Jews and Gentiles carried to Europe (about 250 years the fact that the state hafc more mile* make a boundary garden. It is, in fact, almost at the exact belongs to a well-known Styrlan noble Were accepted on high, ngo) and then to the West Indies and of railroads than any other state in, - » It was August, 1929, when Mr. geographical center of the North family and Is descended from King 2. A messenger sent from Cornelius Brazil. the republic. .The railroad leading- Ma.thias 1.. (vv. 17-22). Peter was greatly per­ Moore first outlined the Idea to the American continent. ' Tradition has it that the discovery from Santos, the world*** chief coffee plexed over what he had seen, but National! Association of Gardeners of of coffee's stimulating effect upon the port, to Sao Paulo, the world's coftstf'l not for long, for messengers from Cor­ America at their annual convention in human system was an accident One capital, is one of the richest steel high­ nelius made inquiry at the gate for Toronto/ It was enthusiastically in­ story runs that the plant was dis­ ways because It is literally a coffee? 13-Month Year Fast Gaining Friends him. The Spirit Informed Peter off dorsed and received such support that covered in the Fourth century by a funnel, the smaller end of the funnel today 56 national, state and provin­ the matter and bade him go, nothing group of monks who had been j driven .being set in ships' holds at Santos. cial organizations have put their 24 Nations Have Sanctioned during the year instead of 12, there doubting. out of Egypt and found refuge in the The first coffee berries did not reach pledges behind it. Proposed Calendar. would he a faster turnover in money '._ 3. The meeting of Cornelius and Ethiopian hills. The monks main­ Brazil until 1727. Todayrcoffee aiiw^ Recently a wave of support has and the same volume of business Peter (vv.23-33). (a). Peter took-six- tained themselves by agriculture and Brazil are nearly synonymous. In Sao come from the Middle West and Paris, France.—The year soon will could be handled with less money, re­ witnesses along (v. 23). He liad the- sheep and goat raising. One night a Paulo state alone there are more thanf -- South, particularly from Manitoba, the have 13 months instead of 12 if a sulting in -n considerable saving in ev­ good judgment to know thatpn a mat­ monk reported to his leader that the 40,000 coffee plantations with 996.000,— Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska and Texas. proposal sponsored by the League of ery country; ter of so great importance he must have flocks would not rest—that they were 000 trees in production. New trees - These are states on the great Can- Nations and supported by 24 nations witnesses, fbj. Cornelius waiting for- Wide awake and frisking about during numbering 158,000.000 have been set ada-to-Canal highway, called already goes into effect, according to Moses Ex-Passenger Ship Peter (v. 24). He had such confidence the hours when they should be quiet. out and soon will be in production. the Main street of America—which B. Cotsworth, director of the Inter­ In God's instruction that he called to­ The leader started investigations that One plantation owns its own rail­ will eventually run from Churchill on national Fixed Calendar league. Runs Michigan Mill gether his kinsmen and friends to be led to the coffee plant which%e found roads, highways, shops, stores and Hudson bay, down through Canada, the Disadvantages of the present calen­ Menominee, Mich.—Once a' proud, ready on Peter's arrival, (c). Cor­ the animals consumed while browsing warehouses. United. States, Mexico, "and Central dar, Cotsworth said, are due to three freight and passenger carrier on the nelius about to worship Peter (vv. on the hillsides. He chewed a few of Africa has several coffee-growing: : America to Cape Horn. It will be, it undisputed defects: The months are Great Lakes, the steamer Pere Mar 25, 26). Peter repudiated his act and the berries from the strange bush and regions.. Liberia, Sierra Leone and a is claimed, the world's greatest high­ unequal; the month is not an exact quette No. 6 is now operating a saw protested that he himself was but a found that they kept him unusually portion of southern Nigeria are large way and will make it possible to multiple of the week; as the ordinary mill. ^nan. (d). The reciprocal explanation alert during the night services which producers. The coastal zones or the motor from the sub-Arctic of Canada years consists of 365 days, just one Tom Tinn, owner of the vessel, also (w. 27-33). Peter explained to him were held in accordance with his re­ Belgian Congo and a portion of Angola- through the tropics to the southern day over 52 weeks, the week days controls the Sawyer Goodman Lumber how God had taken from him his ligion Mozambique and Kenya are dotted! tip of the continent. ^company. The company's boilers wore change each year to different dates. Jewish prejudice and asked why Cor­ Although coffee did not strike a "with plantations while Ethiopia, orig­ out this spring and since the mill was Several plans have been proposed to nelius had sent for him. Cornelius popular cord among Europeans until inal borne of the famous coffee berry, going to run only a few months it remedy these defects, but the plan explained that God had instructed him the Fifteenth-oentury.-as-early as the continues to-produce. Coffee planta­ was deemed inadvisable, to replace which is claimed to have the most to send for Peter. reign of Charles II. in the middle of tions in Madagascar are confined to> them. 1 Laws Allows Horse * % advantages and is most practical from III. Peter's Sermon (vv. 3*-43). the. Seventeenth century there were the eastern half of the island. '- im^a^*^mpmia"mim", m^mmm^lKim

THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAT JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, AUOUeVT 21, 1M1 AeHalJJlicfa)^

A New Scientific Marvel IMPROVE QUALITY OF PASTURE SODS

Methods That Will Increase Yields of Grass. Worried Husbands Pasture sods require feeding, re- Do Tout, own weariness, your wife'* seeding and cultivating much the same unhappinea* and "nerves", leave you as any other crop, declares C. W. Gay, no peace of mind? Both of you are los­ chairman of the department of animal ing the joy you ought to find in life and husbandry-at the_ -Slate univer­ in each other. You-can-reeovw the-forgotten flow sity, who believes that the pasture of youth. Take Fellows' Syrup, which may be made one of the most profit­ supplies yourbody with vital ingredients able fields on the farm. , often missing. In a short time you will If dairy cows are fed on a grain be eager and fit for work, play, meals, ration In the stable, or If cattle aro and sleep. fed grain on pasture, they wll. put Begin now—don't miss another day of happiness and health. The first few back in fertility more than they take doses will begin to transform you: Fol­ off. However, the droppings are best low the prescription doctors have used distributed by some kind of drag or for years, and get the genuine Fellows' they will not be utilized to the best Syrup from your druggist today. advantage. If piled in large heaps, the manure kills the grass under It and stimulates such rank gkwtli around the pile that stock will not FELLOWS eat it. Boiling firms the soil about the grass roots, and disking may thicken the stand. Bare spots should SYRU P be reseeded and weeds and rank grass are best clipped. Voiemite Bear* Another good practice, Gay asserts, A "bumper crop" of bear cubs. Is its to top-dress the pasture in th fa I reported in. Yosemite National park or early spring. However, the manur J this year. Many of the proud moth­ of one kind ,gf. stock should not be put ers are displaying twins, and some on sod to be'grazed bj that same kind triplets. This is a great contrast to of stock. Germs of tuberculosis and last spring, when hardly a cub was abortion disease may infect the ma­ seen in Yosemlte valley. The special nure of cattle and sprea* tr stock on bear patrol is still functioning, and pasture. In the same way sheep and any bears which, damage cars or hogs may ibeeome infested with para­ tents, or are in any way a nuisance, sites if grazed on grass top-dressed are caught, daubed with white paint with sheep or hog manure. But' * par­ for identification purposes, and re- asites of sheep do not infest hogs, ....a movedtolthe lower end of the valley, vice versa. Cattle manure had best go away from the various centers of on corn ground, or ither ground tr be activity. plowed, while cattle pastures mi»y be top-dressed from either the horse, hog, or sheep barns.

Profits for Dairymen Filthy in Luxuriant Pasture Luxuriant pasture is the best friend of the dairy cow. It is rich in protein, is food mineral matter, and vitamins. "The dairyman who appreciates the touched value of tlie pasture crop in economy of production, in the'buildihg of health, by flies | Bi ELMO SCOTT WATSON and In the cutting down of actual labor N MAY of last year the announce­ and cost of production, is the man who • ment was made that the United is reaping the dairy dollars .from his States army had added another bril­ summer production," declares J. C Be safe liant achievement to the record Nisbet. extension dairyman, K. S. A. which makes valid the boast that C, in emphasizing the, importance of "the army does other things besides good pasture for dairy profits. fight." A new. record In long dis­ On many a Kansas dairy farm, pas­ tance aerial photography had been ture may be provided about nine .set by the air corps of the army when Capt. A. months in the year. W. Stevens,, photographic expert, succeeded In. Sweet clover seeded in oats would taking a picture covering a distance of 270 be ready for light grazing in the fall, miles in a single exposure. In 1929 Captain suggests Nisbet. Winter wheat'or rye . Stevens had set a long distance photographic could furnish early winter pasture last­ record when his camera registered objects 22T FLIT ing many years through December. miles away from the camera eye hut his 1930 Largest Seller in 121 Countries The same winter wheat would be avail­ flight in a plane piloted by (,!eut. John D. Corkille over Crater lake In Oregon added more able for early spring pasture, followed Destoainff La&d. than 50 m'.les to that record. 4 shortly by the sweet clover which A hew means of converting fields should formally cairry the dairy cow dotted with sandstone formations Uponhisreturn from thia.flight, Captain through until the early fall at which^ .into rich farming land has been Stevens declared ''While I am'"very well satis- 1. Two hundred and seventy miles of wide Perhaps the most interesting development lies time a new field of spring-sown sweet" found by M. Andre Piedallu In fled^w^th the results obtained on tills particular open spacet! A photograph of Mount Rainier in the use of long-range or high-altitude cam­ clover would again be ready. France. In a report before the Acad­ mission, I am inclined to believe that it will taken from over Crater lake, a distance of 270 eras, the same technique being 'used also foi Brome grass and Sudan could he emy of Agriculture, M. Piedallu out­ only be a matter of time before we will de­ miles, by Capt. Albert W. Stevens from an lower altitude work through fog. In high alti­ usecTas dry weather pastures. lined a-new method of blasting out velop a camera that will record even greater army air corps plane piloted by Lieut. John D. tude work the camera must have' tt long focal these rocky formations and by add­ •distances. Before we can use It, however, we Corkille. To get the "shot," the two army air­ length (the distance from the nodal point- ing the proper fertilizers make them must have a photographic plane that will -take men flew at 20,000 feet for nearly five hours In where the light rays cross, between the twe Improve Dairy Prices productive. His system requires a tis considerably higher than 20,000 feet because a temperature of 20 degrees-below zero and lenses—to the surface of the plate or film) Prices for dairy products can be curious placing of many small blast­ from that- Altitude even an dbject as tail as came down only when their supply of liquid With a short focal length it would be posslbl* helped if all Interested wllli^aoperate ing charges, which, electrically dis­ Mount Rainier will sink below-the horizon at oxygen was exhausted. Some of the "mountain* for the camera to "take the whole world," but charged, completely break up the ob­ «X) miles. * in the effort to cut down production shown in the picture are: 1. Mount Rainier, the detail would be too small. A camera witt by keeping fewer and better cowsa ac­ structing formation and open the "Shooting at Mount Rainier from a distance 270 miles; 2. Mount Hood, 2Q0.mile$; 3. Mount a long focal length, on the other hand, while cording to B. A. Gannon, PurttegSafii- land for cultivation. greater than that between New.* York city and Jefferson, 175 miles; 4. Three Sisters, 125 it will not take more than about thirty-three versity. miles; 5. Diamond Peak, 50 miles; Crescent Washington is much like shooting at the moon, square miles from an altitude of approximately By selling a couple of low producers Lake, 45 miles. PARKER'S •with the difference that you can see the moon. 33,000 feet, gives such' clearness of detail that to the butcher, not a neighbor, and by . HAIR BALSAM The principal task is to aim the camera rln the 2. Captain Stevens and Lieutenant Corkille the negatives may be readily enlarged to ten purchasing a .high quality purebred I Baaont Dudraff-Stopa Bair FaOhi diameters. . I Ifpartt Color end general direction you believe your objective to of the United States army air corps with the" heifer which comes from"a good breed­ iBwutrtoGwud F«M Hah be, snap the trigger and hope for luck." What large aerial camera used In taking high altitude I tOeaadtl.MfttDmufete. If the camera is tilted an oblique "photograph er, who has a disease-free herd and aHltwx Cham. Wfci..Pateboapa.N.Y, •"luck" the army captain had on this expedition photographs. This camera uses a 30-inch focal is taken—that is, a photograph which is which carries high-producing blood ' SHAMPOO - Ideal brwil was revealed by the remarkable photograph length lens of special construction. emneetlon with Paiker'tHairBalstm.MtVoo the progressively distorted as the objects taken are lines the farmer can Influence the mar­ hair oof t and fluffy.C O cents by mall or at dxw- •which is shown above. 3. This night photograph of lower Manhat­ distant from the lens. Tremendous distances ket materially. -gilts, HiscoxCbeatieal Works. Fstebogns; NT?. Another achievement in this new scientific tan, city, was taken by Captain have been covered in this way and objects have "There is one conclusion many have marvel of aerial photography, which was not Stevens from an airplane piloted by Lieutenant been taken which were not visiblq-to the naked made and many more will make In the Immense Grape Clutter so much a matter of luck, was demonstrated Corkille at an altitude of about 1,500 feet.. A eye, because aloft there Is almost always, even future." said Gannon.' "That better The biggest bunch of grapes ever bomb containing sufficient flashlight powder during the army air maneuvers over New York on a clear day, a certain amount of ground haze. cows are and will be needed if profits brought Into the United States ar­ City during May of this year, the results of for a three billion candlepower flash was Several refinements are necessary, however, are going to be produced for the dairy rived at Fall River, Mass., recently •which are shown in the photographs num­ dropped from the plane and the picture taken before these photographs may be taken. The men even under normal conditions." aboard the Red Star liner Western- bered three_and four above, As explained in with a specially .constructed camera equipped camera must be fitted with a special film sensi­ land from Brussels. The cluster the captions, these pictures were taken fay ex­ with an automatic device for exposing the film tive only to infra-red rays below the visible weighed 89 pounds, was 41 inches ploding a bomb containing enough magnesium at the height of Illumination, Avoiding, "Ropy" Milk spectrum—that is, the long wave lengths which long and 2. feet In diameter, and was powder to make a 3,000,000.000 candlepower 4. A night photograph of the Statue of Lib­ "Repy" milk causes a great Iffss to go through fog easily. This condition is met by insured for $500..__. flash and snapping the shutter at the height of erty and Fort Wood on Bedloe's island In New the dairy Industry each year. It is taking ordinary gelatine film and Immersing It Illumination. York harbor taken In the same manner as de­ more prevalent In the springtime than Sfa-h! scribed In No. 4. In a solution of kryptocyanlne. It would seem to be an easy matter to drop it Is during the fall and winter months. Gamekeeper (to mistress of es­ All photographs, Courtesy United States Army The next requisite Is a special type of filter, 1 « flashlight bomb and at the moment of the ex­ l In order to prevent this condition tate)—Somebody Is poaching on Air corps. so dense as to have the opaqueness of rubber. plosion to take the photograph. Since, however; from occurring, it Is best to make sure your preserves, Madam. there is a definite relationship between the alti­ 4>— — 3> AH lenses have to a greater or less extent th* that the water which Is used for the 1 property of a prism; that is, they break up th» Little William ^Cwith a smeared tude of the airplane and the height at which been carried forward mainly by the United cows to drink and for washing the mouth)—Tattle tale! jthe_bomb explodes, It Js not so simple. Night white light Into spectra. It is necessary under pails and utensils Is clean and frefch. States army. given conditions to use a filter to eliminate the i photographs can be taken only at comparatively _The_grganlsms which cause ropy milk Although the" army is chiefly Interested in active colora( such as vidTelsTTJIueaTana greeiwr ^- NewlT-Weda low altitudes. Measurements of the photographs are found generally in the water! map-making and Intelligence photography, "each and restore the light to white. By Increasing He—We'll stop at the best hotel, taken over New York showed the airplane to of which requires, a different technique. It has the opaqueness of the filter more of the visible The udders and flanks of cows which dear. We only marry once, . you have been flying at only 1,500 feet, although many times sent Its camera men and planes to spectrum Is eliminated, and It is possible to have been In pastures where stagnant know. night photographs could be taken effectively up co-operate with-" other government agencies. eliminate it altogether., This Is what has been water sta»ds are apt to be contami­ She—How delightfully old-fash­ to around 3,000 feet. The lens cannot be left The army has indirectly aided commercial done In, the cast of thai long-range camera. nated, and during the spring particu­ ioned you are, John. open until the bomb explodes because lights aerial photography by developing the best In larly, the flanks and udders should be from the ground would blur the plates or film. technique and In precision of the Instruments. Through its filter only the Infra-red rays are wiped off with a damp cloth. This Is The only thing the air camera man has to do In addition to military work, aerial surveys are admittedj and as ground haze or smoke is no a good practice and should be done at night Is to release the bomb; the rest of the used for a large variety of operations. Few obstacle 'to them, objects are recorded on the throughout the.year. iDU0tKEll06«P^ details are taken care of automatically. The public utility companies would consider putting film which are invisible to the naked eye. In bomb, containing twenty-five pounds of magne­ down a new power line without first having an this way Captain Stevens was able to photo­ sium powder. Is checked In its fall by a small aerial survey made. Aerial photography Is graph Mount Rainier from the record distance Tuberculosis Tests parachute and a time fuse sets -the interval also In demand for forestry services, geological of 270 miles, the peak jutting up. above the New Hampshire has been making from the release, to the explosion. As the bomb surveys, harbor developments, highway and horizon, though it was miles beyond It. excellent progress ^ln the testing of bursts the camera's shutter Is automatically traffic surveys, and all manner of city uses, from In the taking of photographs for map-making herds for tuberculosis, government No need to spend restless, i planning and zoning to tax equalization. nights, irritation quietly relieved and i tripped by an Ingenious mechanical device. a special technique has had to be developed, records show. Three of the ten coun­ net assured by using the remedy that I .Before the World * war the science of aerial • The cameras and equipment nsed for civil equally applicable to military and commercial ties In the state have been established has helped thousands of sufferer* . aerial surveying and for the production of photography, except for a few cases, most of purposes. It Is not enough to sight i5.e camera as modified accredited areas, signify­ IS cents and $1.00 at druggists. aerial photographs as illustrations have been , If unable to attain, write direct to: A —•which were unsuccessful, was virtually un­ and trip It; all sorts of things have to be,de­ ing that all the cattle have been tested Improved but little during the last ten years, tWR-rrmOP JivWAM CO, sac, J known. It took on added importance early In termined before the photograph can be taken. and that not more than 0.5 of 1 per BeaTaMagtwYork because the ordinary air camera, operated at cent of the cattle of these areas are ^Jtsnd for |Tva aa the war and,dcveloped rapidly a» the airplane relatively low altitudes, meets all usual require­ Because only the center of each photograph can tuberculosis. Interest In other coun­ became such an Important factor In waging ments at a small cost, This is not the case with • be considered anything like optically perfect, a ties, also, is Indicated by a waiting successful battles. But it has been since the military photography, and so It Is In this branch large number of overlapping exposures hart to w»r that Its. most rapid development has taken that the latest developments are found. be made. list of more than 8,000 cattle owners '. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 34-1931. place and that development In this'country has (» bjr Wenttrn Nawapapar Unlaswl who have made applications for the teat.

utttmm THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD> (EAT JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1931„ pmsi ETha ifes^- A N evr Scientific Marvel IMPROVE QUALITY . OF PASTURE SODS

Methods That Will Increase Yields of Grass. Worried Husbands Pasture soda' require feuding, re- Do YOUR own weariness, your wife's seeding and cultivating much the samo unhappiness and "nerves", leave you as any other crop, declares C. \V, Gay, no peace of mind? Both of you are los­ chairman of the department of animal ing the joy you ought to find in life and usbandry at the Ohio Stuta univer­ in each other. You can recover the forgotten glow sity, who believes that ••the pasture of youth. Take Fellows' Syrup, which may be made one of the most, profit- | supplies your body with vital ingredients able lields on lite farm. often missing. In a short time you will If dairy cows are fed on a grain be eager and fit for work, play, meals, ration in the stable, or if cattle are and sleep. fed grain mi pasture, thuy wit, put Begin now—don't miss another day of happiness and health. The first few buck in fertility .inure than they take doses. wiJl.b.?gin to transform you. Fol­ off. I To wever, the droppings are best low the prescription doctors have used distribuled by some kind of drag or for years, and get the genuine Fellows' (hey will not be utilized to the best Syrup, from your druggist today. advantage, if piled in large heaps, the manure kilhs the grass under it and stimulates such rank gi v.vth FELLOWS around (he pile that stock will not j eat it. Rolling linns the soil about j the gt'ass runts, and -disking may j thicken the stand. Hare spots should SYRUP ; be tvseoded and needs and rank grass ! are b..sl Yosemite Bear* '. Anulher geud practice, (my asserts, A '-bumper crop'" of lu;ur cubs is ; i.> to top-dress the pasture in th fa! reported in Yosemite National park ; ur-eariy spring. However, the nr.-tmtt • tins year. Many of.tiie proud moth­ \ of one .kind ntp-dres^od are caught, daubed with white paint "• Kb slji.fp .ir h<»u innnure. I'm ' '• par for identification purposes, and re­ asiie< of slieep do not intest hogs. • ..(1 moved to tim lower end of the valley, viee versa." I'wttb' inanur.' bad he-t go away from tin: various centers of on corn ground, or ufh-r ^nuiti'l ft "be acti vif v. plowed, while eatlio p;i-iures nm.* fie Iresse.i from either Hie hor'>c. leg.

Profits for panymen Filthy 1 , "' in Luxuriant Pasture Luxuriant pasture (> Ue'TeM t'riond is food ef-iho dairy enw. P i< rich in protein. , mineral ma!! e;. and. \ iianhns. airyman u ho appreeia'ns lb" touched value of the paMtiiv crop in ecotiomv r~p~roduo;!oii, fnTneMTrrrrnTrrg^ - byflf id in the enning down of uo;uuJ labor -f of prodimt ion. is i he man v.h'. is reaping the dairy dollars fro'ni h;s summer production.." derhires .1. ('. Be safe .\j>bc;. extension dair^m-in/ K. S. A. hn.-izing the imp-M'tame o'i g.K.d pasture for dairy profit«. 'Mi many a Kansas dairy farm. pa<- • tinv • may be pro\ hied about nine >car. Sweet . e|o\er seeded in ..m < would lie-ready for li-ht grazing-in the tall. MIJ^I'VN .\;-be;. Wiriiej" wheat i>r rye cub] furnish early winter pasture last- Largest Seller in 121 Countries miles ;t way fri'in 11-1^.-,-.:).1.1),, tv in :.-01 who'll u-oob| ) ,n •] \ ;t -1 - _ flight in a plane [: " for early --[iring pas; ure, followed , Destoning Land Corkille ovor ('raier lak u-ily l.y the sweet clover 'whii-h A new means' of ronviil'Ufl^L-lleid*— than .~o nrles to thai ret-nrd. diotild formally carry the''dair\ cow dotted -with sandstonc> formation*, -**--rpon his . renirn- from U.is flight, Captain irottgb until- the early fall' at which into rich farming land has been Stevens declared "While I am vorv wef"iv v. e can iise it, however, we Corkille. wjo get the "shot/* the two army air. length ft he distance from the nodal pnint-\ ing the proper fertilizers make them must have a photic-rapine plane iliar will take men flew at 20,000 feet for nearly five hours in- where the light rays cross, between the (w. Improve Dairy Pri?es productive. [lis system nipiires a •U.S Considerably higher than JIMKH) feet liei'ausp a temperature of 20 degre,es below zero and h*n*os— to Hie surface of the plat" or film) Pi-ires tY.r dairy pi-oilm:!.* can lie ; curious placing of many small blast­ -_£rom tli'at altitude even an. ob.ici-t as- [ ,n a* c*#tne down only when their supply of liquid ; With a Short focal length it would be pns>ilil^ helped if all inti'iCKlrd will cfiii|ieTille ing oliarcvs, whii-h, clcciri.ally dis- Mount Iminiep will sink b«'l-»w the leei-en at oxygen w"as exhausted. Some of,the "mountains for .the camera to ''take the whole world," but in ihe effort 1" nit duwn pmdui'lion i-har^ed. completely break up Ihe ob- a miles. * shown in the picture are: 1. Mount Rainier, the detail would be too small. A camera will, by- ki'epin^ fewer :mrt feet, gi\es smdi clearness of detail that PARKER'S •with tin' difference that yen" rauf^eo the moon. to the huu-hor, not a neidihor, and hy 1 the negatives may he readily enlarged to ten HAIR BALSAM The principal task is to'alm tie- CIIUIT,I in tin * '2. Captain Stevens and Lieutenant Corkille inifehiisini; a hiirh • ii oandjVpower 4. A night photograph of the Statue of Lib­ go through fog easily. This condition is met b> "Itopy" milk causes a great loss to insured for $."» simple. Night Suit es army. [tails and utensils Is clean and fresh.! HiVi'ii condithms to use n Jilter to eliminate th*» photographs can be taken only at eomparath ely Although the army ia chietly Interested In The organisms which cause ropy milk active colors( such as violets, blues and green?) Newly-Wedi iow altitudes. .Meastircmefifs of lite photographs map-making and intelligence photography, each are Count] generally in the water. ! and restore the light to while. I'.y increasing UP—We'll Mop at the best hotel, taken over New York shower] the airplane to of which requires n different technique, it has The udders and Hanks of cows which ; the opaqueness of the filter more of the visible ricar. We on 1.1- marry nn-<'e, you have been Hying at only l.r.m feet, nit hough many times sent its camera- men and planes to have been in pastures where stagnant ! spec) rum is eliminated, and it is possible; to know. night photographs could he taken effectively up co-operate with other government agencies. water stsiiids are apt to bo contami- ' eliminate it altogether. This is what has been She -How delightfully old-fash­ to around .'i.ixW feet. The lens cannot he left The- army has Nndireefly aided cnnirnerrnil . unfed, am) during the spring parfb-u- ,' done in the cast of the long-range camera. ioned you are, .lohn, Open until the bomb explodes because lights aerial phot ography by developing the best in hirU. Ihe Hanks and udders should hp '•. from the ground would blur the plates or film. techni'iue and in precision of the Instruments. Through its lilt er only the infra-red rays art? wiped nlT with a damp cloth. This \<\ . The only thing the air camera man has m dp In addition to military work, aerial surveys are admitted, and as ground haze or smoke is tin a -noil practice and should he done. • fit rn'ghf is to release the-bomb ; the rest of the used for n large variety of operations. Few obstacle to them, objects are reconh d on the throughout the u-iir. ! derails are taken care of automatically. The public utility companies wmild consider putting lilui which are Invisible to the naked e\ e. In bomb, continuing iweniylive pounds of magne­ down a new power line without first having an -this way Captain Stevens was able to photo­ ; sium powder, Is checked in its fall by a small aerial survey made. Aerial photography N graph Mount Jiainier from the record distance Tuberculosis Tests . iSTHM. parachute and a time fuse .set* the intend) also in demand for forestry services, feeologicnl of 'JTii miles, i lie peak jutting- up above the New Ilamj'sbire has been making1 from the release to the explosion. As Uhi bomb sur\eys. harbor developments, highway a in I horizon, though It was miles beyond It. evcelloiu progress in the testing of , trallic surveys, and u'.\ manner of city uses, from..; bursts the camera's shut I er is automat ically In the taking of photographs re- map-making herds for tuberculosis, government ' REMEDY' planning and zoning to tax equalization. ^ ' nfo need to spend restless, sleepless tripped by an ingenious, mechanical device. a special technique has had to he developed, reconh-show. Three of, the ten couti- j nights. Irritation quickly relieved and Ilefore the World war the science of aerial The cameras find equipment usd) for civiK equally applicable in military and commercial lies in ihe stale have been established i rost assured by using tho remedy that | has helped .thousands of sufferers, photography, except for a few cases, must, of aerial surveying ami for the product ion of ^ purposes. It'is' not enough -to sight iV camera as modified accredited areas, signify- ; 23 cents and $1.00 at druggists. which were unsuccessful, was vlrlually. un­ •aerial photographs as iilusi rat ions • have been and trip It ; all sorts of things have to ho de­ ing that all the cattle have been tested j If unablo to obtain, write direct to: known. It took on added importance early in impro\cd but. little during the last ten years, termined before the photograph can' he taken and that not more than ()..". of I pery, NORTHROP & LYMAN CO., Inc., A Buffalo, Now Vork the war and developed rapidly «** ih« /tirpbine because the ordinary air camera, operated at llocauso only the center of each photograph can cent t,f the calile of [hose areas jm» : Send for froesample^ became -such an Imp..riant factor In waging relatively low allitude.s. meets all usual require­ be considered anything like optically perfect, a tuberculovis. liuere^t in other conn- | Successful battles. Hut. it lias been since tne ments at a small cost. This is not tin* nisi; with large number of overlapping exposures have to t ie-i, siN.i, is indicateil |iy n wail ing J v,-,.v that its most rapid development hu* taken military photography, and so It In in this branch Im made. INI "i morn tfain ;:,doo callle nwin-rs ! N. U., DETROIT, WO. 34-1931. lhat the latest developments are found. place and that development in ibis '-otuitry has ifftby WV-

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THI CHAMJtVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (BAIT JORDAN, HICH,) FWDAY, AUOUfT tl, IMt.. SP 'i. n. ' - i r il i i n ' CH*rl*Tolx Cfltonty HtraM Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bholti of Sand Sunday visitors of Mrs. Wm\ Leib and Ksoanabe- Mrs. VriwtlM Latum, ECHO a A, UMC r«Mktor. Lake, Mich., visited at the Hardy family near Intermediate Lake. If yean old, waa burned to death In (Edited by Mra. D*MU Wileon) S»»e*rH»t1aa lata —I1J0 par |wr. homes over Sunday. They had been Mr. and Mrs. Ross, and Mr. and i Ore which destroyed the second Boor on a sightseeing .trip up .North. Mrs. Alderman of Chicago spent a State News >f her, bona here. The Are la be- MaBrtwri of ttw «-H clubs that at- week visiting tteir friend*, Mr., and, Jmd tn h«« Iwi «tar^ by a Mr. and Mra. John Carney and Mrs. Frank H. Behllng. ^ iSRT and~Mltt -Hwr Walker -an4 / tended the 4-H camp meeting at Gay- in if riei lghted candle Mrs. Leianer carried lord, all report a wonderful time. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kremkow, nto a store reom. several other families had a picnic at Deer Lake Grange had a lively her brother, Irving Coykendall and Portland—A swamp fire in.Orange Monroe Creek, Sunday. meeting Saturday evening and also •his father, Charles Kremkow return­ Olivet—Fred Hialer, *4, la dead at Township, near here, (mouldering Miss Leota Spent* and friend Miss Member Jdehiga0n Prea a Association. celebrated seven birthdays for the ed to Detroit Sunday, after spending' his home' here of injuria! received Marian Froggett returned to Lansing Member National Editorial Aw'n. since spring, flared out of control months of July and August. So a week's vacation with their relatives when trampled upon by a team of threatening farm property before it Sunday. everyone had all the birthday cake here. ' horses. Hlsler was holding the team was checked. Farmers reported the A large crowd attended the enter­ Entered at the Postofflce at East theycould eat. Mrs. Frank Derby and daughter, attached to a threshing outfit when Are had driven score* of rattlesnakes tainment at the Bennett schoolhouse Jordan, Michigan, aa second clan Juke Mary Guzniciak returned to Miss Margie were Sunday callers of they bolted. out of the swamp, and that the snakes Wednesday evening, which Ralph mail matter. - her work at Petoskey after spending Mrs. C. M. Nowland.' Bay City—Razing oil the Federal were invading their farms. Kidder of Alba put on. It was very a iweek with her sister, Sophia, who Mr. and Mrs, Robert Davis of East Building at Bay City to permit con­ interesting. is here from Chicago. Jordan were Sunday visitors of her Muskegon—Andrew Erickson, 58, of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Mackey with struction of a new structure on the 'Muskegon, well known in Qreaf Lakes PENINSULA "Ivan Korthase visited his grand­ daughter and husband at the Hayner same site has been started. . Work on son and daughter of Grand" Rapids parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. McGeorge, farm. • ' marine circles for his work on pier were Sunday guests of her parents, (Edited by Mr*. X Hayden) the new building, which will cost and port construction Jobs as a diver, Tuesday. »375,000, will be started this fall. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Barlhojomew. Miss Nellie Raymond visited Miss la dead. He waa killed Instantly at Frankfort, where he was employed on Mr. and Mrs. Percy Empey and Fred Moore, an old resident of this Mary Marvin Wednesday evening. EVELINE Albion—A Joes estimated by Fire children, and Iter father, Alfred Wil­ Mrs. Jack Craig and son, Gregory Chief William Schumacher ae more a new breakwater, after being struck section, and friend from Nilcs, Mich., (Edited by Mrs, Walter Clark) than $4,000 was caused at the farm by a crane block which slipped from son of Eastport were Sunday dinner who are vacationing in northern of Mt. BHSB visited at the E. Ray­ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Wilson. mond home Wednesday. of William Geyer, when & barn con­ a hoist. Michigan, called on Cash A. Hayden Richard and Herman Clark picked taining 500 bushels of wheat and a Miss Delia Wilson spent a few days at his farm Thursday evening. Mrs. Forrest Williams called on beans Monday at Spidles. Emma quantity ot rye, oats and hay, all of Saginaw—George Burney, If, is last week with Miss Margaret Kidder. W. D. Hosier, the Gleaner man, Mrs. Eugene Raymond one day last Jane Clark and George Whaling pick­ this year's crops, burned. dead of injuries Buffered when a truck Mr. and Mrs. Percy Penfold and. JL was at the Geo. Staley home Monday week. ed beans at Will Walkers, Monday. In which he waa riding turned orer children of East Jordan were Sunday <*v' Port Huron—Mrs. Minnie Maxwell, to confer with Secretary, Mrs. Bertha Mr. and Mrs. M. Hudkins were din­ Mrs. F. Kiser, spent Monday after­ in a ~ dltcb near Freeland. Leon evening callers of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Staley about Gleaner business. ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. 32, died at her home in Port Huron Barlant, the boy's stepfather and Murray. noon at Lew' Harndens while Viola Township a short time alter she fell Win. Frank had the misfortune to Hott Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer and Dale Kiser picked beans at driver of the truck, admitted he had Merle Thompson of East. Jordan be kicked by a cow, which he was Hott and son were afternoon callers from a wagon load of hay, breaking fallen asleep at the wheel. The boy's Spidles. / her neck. She had been helping her was a caller at Denzil WilBons Tues- ^ loading on a truck, and received two also. body -was crushed beneath the truck. day, evening. 4T^i Ben Clark visited at the farm, husband load the hay. She leaves Three other boys riding in the truck broken ribs. Mr. and,Mrs. Frank Winters of Los Tuesday. Everyone in this vicinity are busy Angeles, Calif., were Thursday eve­ seven children, from two months to escaped injury. Mr. and Mrs. S. Archie Hayden and The second cutting of hay has '9 years old. picking beans, and pickles. two children, Betty and Don, arrived ning supper guests al the E. Ray­ started. This crop is light. Big Rapids—William A,- Northrup, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilson and Thursday morning to spend som< mond home. Billie Sky gave a party and supper Grand Rapids—A letter which Mrs.' 34 years old, veteran of the Civil war, children of Pleasant Valley were weeks at Orchard Hill. Wm. Garberson and neice Maude for the threshers, Frank Schultz's Joseph Beaudoln of Detroit mailed on Is so hard to hurt that recently" it took callers at the home of his brother, A. B. Nicloy of Sunny_ Slope farm Sholtz and Noah Garberson visited men, at the Chris Lynklip farm Thurs May 17, 1919, to Mrs. Charles Fischer iilm 55 miles to find out for sure that Denzil Wilson and family, Sunday. helped Charles Fett thrash Thursday. relatives at "St. Joseph; Mich., last day night. in Grand Rapids was delivered only ie had broken a leg. He fell down a Charles Healey and Joel Bennett Sunday. recently to Mrs. Fischer. Where the short flight of steps as he boarded a Mr. and Mrs. Lew Harnden spent bus in Grand - Rapids, starting tor Big- (Received Too Late for Last 'Weekj thrashed Saturday. Sunday afternoon at the home of letter has been hiding the past 12 A. C. Hurd, 81 years old, of Sunny years is a mystery to Mrs. Flshcher, Rapids. He suffered slight pain while . Mr. and Mrs. Percy Penfold and Mrs. Nowtarid and Mr. and Mrs. Percy an the bus and when he arrived sum­ children of East Jordan were callers Slope farm, was the champion string WILSON TOWNSHIP Batterbee. who has lived .here all the time. bean picker among 18 pickers at Or­ moned a physician who diagnosed the at Elmer Murrays, Tuesday evening. (Edited by Mrs. C. M. Nowland) Mr. and Mrs. Will Walker and Sault Ste. Marie—Uncle Sam's econ­ Injury. chard Hill Saturday, not'in quantity, children, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter omy plans dealt a body blow to the Mary Umlor spent Sunday after­ but in the quality of work done. Clark and children went blackberry- reading public of the village of Fair- Big Rapids—Mrs. Loretta Mllner, noon with Alice and Reva Wilson. Miss Juanita Loomis who has The Faylers of Star City, Ind., ing near Harbor Springs. Berries view. Delivery of mall to Fairview 101 years old, received the first call Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sommerville spent the summer vacation here with Louis of Newberry, and Charles of arc scarce. Walter Clark only had was eliminated July 1 and now the 23 to be made through the new $200,000 and children, and Mrs. Opal Smith relatives, will return to her home in Muskegon spent a few days in Boyne five blowouts on the" way home, then families who have to travel about nine Big Rapids telephone office and and son called on Mrs. Ben Bolser, Detroit, Monday, Aug. 17th with G. City last week. The latter two were went the last three miles home on the miles for their mall, are preparing a plant. The call was made by her son, Sunday. C. Ferris when he returns to his work former residents of Wilson. rim. vigorous protest to be sent the post­ Seorge Mllner, 79 years old, who is Joseph Prevo's team ran away one at the Ford plant. Her cousin, Miss Mr. and Mrs. Milo Clute spent Fri­ Wilber Spidle went to Ludington master general. ane ot the earliest telephone subscrib­ day last week, breaking the buggy Pauline Loomis of Gravel Hill will day evening with her father, Martin Monday to meet Mrs. Spidle, who is Grand Rapids—The Saturday night ers in Big Rapids. The call was made all to pieces and injuring him quite accompany her as far as Bridgeport, Wilber of Walloon Lake. returning home from Zion City, 111. bath has attained great importance from the operating room of the new badly. where she will visit her aunt and here with a decision of the city com­ telephone building, Immediately after Mr. and Mrs. John Carney and son uncle,'Mr. and Mrs. George Loomis Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stanek and the new plant was placed in operation. visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. son, Charles of. Jordan Twp., spent mission to close the municipal swim­ for a week or two. EMMET COUNTY ming' pools on Sundays hereafter. Jackson—Warren Jewett, of Mos­ Earl Danforth, Sunday. Friday evening at the home of his Mr. and Mrs. Howard Spence and There was a very pleasant party cousin, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stanek. Action followed complaints that bath­ cow, took no chance iwlth automobile held at Star schoolhouse Saturday FREE FAIR AT ers disturbed the Sabbath quiet and thieves when he visited this city and children, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Spence evening. There were six tables of Mr. and Mrs. Conn Nowland of PETOSKEY, SEPT. that the employment of pool guards decided to make a night oi It. He and son, Miss Leota Spence and Miss progressive pedro in play. A very Cross Village visited his parents, Mr. 1-4 was unnecessary Sunday work. was accompanied by his 88-year-old Marian Froggett of Lansing are visit­ nice pot luck lunch was served. and Mrs. S. R. Nowland, Thursday." father-in-law,-Warren Sturdevant. To­ ing their sister, Mrs. Wm. Derenzy Mrs. Kenneth Speiry returned to Plans for the 1931 Emmet County Bay City—The lowly cabbage has Mr. and Mrs. , Warden, who have been blamed for many sins. Including wards late afternoon Jewett asked his and family this week. been visiting her parents, [Mr. and her home at Lansing, after a week's Free Fair which will -be held Sept. father-in-law to remain seated in the Mr, and Mrs. Thos. Bartholomew visit with Mr., and Mrs. Percy Bat- 1-2-3-4 at the Fair Grounds at Petos­ sauer kraut and indigestion, but state Mrs. Fred Crowell at Dave Staley froopeits were the first te prove the autdmoblle< while he did some shop­ and neice, Miss Hazel Walker visited i Hill for some time, have returned to terbee. key this year include 'new featur.es ping. In the morning the police found Mr. and Mrs, Joe Rebec, Sunday. .h>pe-bvJiich-arejure to^^v^large^crowds. cabbage as a law violator. When the their home in Jackso£ Miss- JKvff —^-Basft -Crawford troopers-raided the home»of Theodore the aged man still seated in the auto­ Mr. and Mrs. John Benzer "and Crowell accompanied them to remain farm accepted a position near Mar­ Another wedding is being arranged Perorer they found a *jjSbbage patch mobile. children of Gaylord were callers of until school starts, ^-f , quette this week. - which will far surpass the one staged sprouting bottles of-moonshine whisky Owosso—A coroner's jury has re­ Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Murray,-Sunday. The weather continues very dry William' Partello returned to Pon­ last year in beauty and settings. Any which they recovered "with the aid of turned a verdict that John and Edward Mrs. Thos. Bartholomew was a' and crops are suffering terribly. tine Tuesday, after spending a few couple who contemplate marriage spades to hold as evidence against Kramp, Shiawassee County farmerB, dinner guest of Mrs. John Carney,' y Mrs. J. W. Hayden of Orchard Hill weeks at the home of his grand­ should get in touch with Roy V. OttO, Perorer. came to their deaths as the result of Wednesday. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Shepard. Secretary of the Fair, who will be has received word of the birth of a an unavoidable accident. They were Notice—Community meeting at the< daughter to her son-in-law rand The Northern Michigan Grange glad to receive' applicants for this Lansing—The government Is pre­ pared to erect postofnees In Alma and killed when a car, driven by Cleyo Bennett Schoolhouse has been post­ daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Mc- Rally, consisting' of Granges from ceremony. A cash offer of $60- will Vaupver, of Owosso, crashed into a poned until Sept. 19th. Nabb, nee Allen Hayden, Aug. 5th. Otsego, Emmet, Cheboygan, Charle­ be given the couple who are married Marshall as soon as clear wkle to sites can be obtained, Charles B. W. county road grader, as they were re­ The little Miss will answer to the voix and- Presque Isle counties, held on. the night of Sept. 4th along with turning home after making arrange­ name of Elizabeth Allene. at the Wolverine Fair Grounds Tues­ merchandise which will be given by Aldrich, assistant United States dis­ ..'Saving Mama's Muicles trict attorney, has been notified by ments tor the funeral of another bro­ day, Aug; 18th was well attended, the the merchants of Petoskey. As yet ther, Fred Kramp. Vanever testified Mother (indolently): "Willie, Mrs. Alfred Ericksbn of Tuston there have been no names handed in Washington. He wrote to Mrs'. Belle spent the week end with, her sister, largest number from Charlevoix Co| he was blinded by a cloud of dust you've been a naughty boy. Go to National Grange Lecturer, James to the secretary, B. Perrln, in • Marshall and to I. N. the vibi-ator and give yourself a good Mrs. Will McGregor and family at Brainerd and Anna Messinger in raised by another car. Hayden Cottage, returning to her Farmer, and State Master, Geo. F. The feature of the, fre.e. acts this shaking." Hnirhin-^li (juuu iiiinilriiii;' •ninrhrn on lym- is a show of .trained animals and Alma for their titles. When he re­ Lansing—Construction of an office home Wednesday. ceives the titles tie will forward tnem hnlTrlfng fnr flip MinMftnn Stata P». the Grange taxation and other topics, an ariel. acrobatic act which will last A great many people attended the to Washington. lice will begin within a few weeks, Elk's picnic at Whiting Park, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepard, Mr. each afternoon and evening for about according to present plans. An appro­ and, Mrs. S. R. Nowland of Wilson two hours. As usual there will be Battle Creek—Employment for more Mrs. Dorothy Davis, nee Dorothy than 300 men will be furnished priation of $100,000 made by the Leg­ -HabeLand two_children of Muskegon Grange were among those present. horse races, band concerts, fine, ex­ islature has been released by the Dell Towns and family moved to hibits of things from this section, and throughout next winter^ In the -con- visited her sister, Mrs. Ralph Gaunt structipn-; of Battle Creek's jew half -State -Administrative Board. The several days last week. Boyne City Tuesday, from his farm. the large attractive midway where Jponpfiink building will be erected near the State Mr. and Mrs Victor Peck visited everyone is attracted and enjoys a million dollar Civic Auditorium and Mr. and,Mrs. David Gaunt attend­ Junior High School, the gift of W. P. Police ''barrack* in East Lansing. It uU|Jbu flu 0 ed camp meeting near Charlevoix, her uncle, Peter Kesler of Indian good time. Will accommodate the identification River, Sunday. . A feature on Grange Day which Kellogg, head of Kellogg Co. The MUNNIMAKERS Sunday. Civic Auditorium will seat 2,700 per­ bureau, the detective division and Mrs. Jim Earl and children of Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Collins re­ will be Friday, Sept. 4 will be Stanley other units which now occupy space Notices of Lost, Wanted, For Sale, turned to their home in Detroit last M. Powell of Ionia, representative sons. Work on the new structure is For Rent, etc., in this Column is'25 Muskegon spent some time at the to begin thJs month. The building will In the State office building In Lansing. Earl farm here last week, returning Thursday, after a ten days visit with and State ojjerseerer .of the Grange cents for one insertion for 25 words relatives here and at East Jordan. who will give a talk during the pro­ f be six stories high flanked by wings Port Huron—Hugh A. Gardner, 35 home Sunday. of three stories. c-r less. Initials count as one word They were accompanied by their gram in the forenoon. Senator Camp­ years old, former patrolman, has con­ And compound words count as two r , Friends of Charles Earl will be fessed to 18 burglaries In business pleased to hear he is so far recovered sister-in-law, Mrs. Ray Nowland, who bell of Indian River and Richard Cheboygan—In a 3,300-acre campus words. Above this number of words stopped at Midland to visit relatives. Paddock of Charlevoix are also slated on the shores of Burt and Douglas places, some of them, committed while a charge of one cent a word will be from a severe illness of many weeks, he was an officer making his rounds. to spend some time at his farm, for­ Mrs. Charles Hayner of Flint is as speakers for this occasion with J. Lakes, 115 miles west of here, the Uni­ made for the first insertion and one,, C. McLin of Pellston acting as chair­ versity of Michigan is operating a In one of the burglaries he assisted merly calledjthe 0."D. Wood place. visiting relatives here and will take In carrying a safe from a /uneatx half cent for subsequent insertions, her son, Harold home with her last of man for the entire program. There college'of the woods and waters. It with a minimum charge of 15 cents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ribble and will be a basket luncheon at noon is the twenty-third year of the uni­ market, loading it on a truck: after two daughters of East Jordan spent this week. Harold has been visiting \vliich. it was taken '" • r°trh of These rates are for cash only. Ten his aunt, Mrs. Chas. Shepard, and with the Fair furnishing the coffee, versity's biological summer camp, but cents, extra per insertion if charged. Monday evening with the David cream and sugar. Something doing only the second on the magnificent woods and opened. He refused to' Gaunt family. also suffered a seige of whooping give the names of his companions. He cough while here. all the time—day and night. tract fornjerly occupied by engineering WANTED Lynn Perry of East Jordan began ; and surveying classes. The northern Is-married and about six years ago A very enjoyable picnic and fish­ picking beans on the Peninsula Mon­ areas of the State are being inten­ was a member of the Detroit Police WANTEi..- Hay and Chickens C. day. He will have steady work as ing party was held at Monroe Creek, Owosso — A Saginaw" contracting sively studied with the aim ot giving Department Sunday by about 30r people. A good J. MALPASS. 40-tf long as the bean season lasts. firm, has begun construction on an tnem new and increased value. Lansing—The state has ordered A. B. Nicloy thrashed Monday ball game was played in which the addition to the Owosso Postofflce. It ladies joined. Mr. and Mrs, Thos. Monroe—Ben Lefevre thought the completion this year or the final gap FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS morning. The grain yield is very will cost $16,200 and'be completed In in the Wider Woodward avenue pro­ light this year. Shepard were in the party from this six months. • city had squatted on some of his land, vicinity. • so he put a fence around the plat. All ject between Detroit and Birmingham. FOR SALE—Ford Touring Car. - In­ Fay Sheldon of near East Jordan Detroit—E: B. T. Schumacher, blind A contract has been awarded to J. A. is working at the Billy Frank home. Mr, and Mrs. Will La Valley and would have been well, except it hap­ quire of JOE MONTROY, East veteran of the Spanish-American and pened to have a public sidewalk on It. Mercer companyTof Detroit. The con­ Jordan. 34x1 Mrs. Margaret Ingalls and children daughters returned to their home in World wars, has returned to Detroit tract calls tor 3.6 miles of 40-foot con­ of Grayling visited her aunt, Mrs. Detroit last Friday, after a visit with The city attorney an* city engineer from the annual reunion of the famous made an examination of the city plat crete on the east side of the double Fred Crowell and family at Dave his father George LaValley and other Fourth Infantry of Ohio volunteers, lane highway south of Birmingham PATENTS—Sell your patent or in­ Staley Hill part of last week. relatives. and discovered, they say, that Le- held at Columbus', 0., recently. Only fevre's entire lot is.land that has been at a coat of $198,890. An additional vention by exhibiting your model Mr. and Mrs. Earl Edwards of De­ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepard at­ BOO are left of the regiment that under half mile will be undertaken when a or drawing at the Second and ,* tended the banquet Saturday evening deeded to the city. Instead of gaining troit arrived Monday for a visit with Gen. Nelson A. Miles faced the anipers four feet ot land by his strategy, right-of-way - dispute is settled, thus Greater INTERNATIONAL PA- 7 her parents, Mr. and, Mrs. Daniel at the Belvedere Hotel,' Charlevoix, on, Aug. 6, 1898, in Porto Rico. The finishing the project between the two TENT EXPOSITION, CHICAGO. in honor of Governor Brucker. Lefevre is in danger of losing a strip Faust. .__ regiment, now scattered over \ the 33 feet wide and 150 feet deep. municipalities. . Thousands of manufacturers and Mr. and.Mrs. Will Korthase ;of Miss Milderd Laura of Jones Dist, world, holds a reunion each year on Kalamazoo—When an armed bandit patent buyers will inspect new de­ Who is stopping with the Geo. Staley Boyne Valley township spent Sunday the anniversary of the Porto Rlcb con­ Muskegon—An inebriated pigeon, on vices and patents for marketing. evening with Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Its homeward flight, is expected to ordered "hands up" to Howard Wicks, family and picking beans for Cash flict. manager of the Kalamazdo Creamery Very low rates. If you have no Hayden,-spent the-week-end with her Shepard; __ ... reveal the whereabouts of a home model, drawings and description - Bay.: City—Thlrty-eighU years ago, still.—The pigeon- tell into - a-windc-w company; Wicks took the command mother, Mrs. John Matthew and fam­ Sunday visitors at the home of Peter Van Harren, with a team of In the spirit of "every man for himr —will-do,—Send-for-free-pamphlet. 1 ily of Jones Dist. '-" Mrs. Alma Nowland . and grandson, at the home of Police Sergeant Edgar, Sturdy horses, hauled, loads of stone Johnson. "Yes sir, the bird was drunk, self." His right hancT went un­ B. Hamilton Edison, Managing Mr. and Mrs. Percy Batterbee were: over muddy streets of Bay City to be doubted up—and landed on the Director, International Patent Ex­ Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Burbank and dead drunk," Johnson reported. So used in the construction of the city's the number on the leg band was pub­ bandit's,-jaw. When.[attacked Wicks position, "Merchandise Mart, 'Chi­ DEER LAKE family of East Jordan, Mr^ and Mrs. first postofflce. Recently" his two sons was carrying $1,800 in cash and was cago. 32-4 Lou Harnden of Eveline, Mrs. Roland lished while police put the bird (Edited by Mrs." Roy Hardy) Fred and Venus, backed' their modern through a course of treatment for the preparing to get into his automobile Bowen and children of East Jordan, truck up to the curb at Third and to go to the bank,, * The blow so un­ and Mr. and Mrs. Rocco DeMaio of delirium tremens in hopes that when REPAIRS for Everything at C. J. Washington streets and with up-to- it recovered it would fly homeward to balanced the bandit, that he lowered MALPASS HDWE. CO. 29-tf Master Milo Sheffels spent Wed­ Peninsula. date equipment proceeded to pull his gun and in the meantime Wicks nesday evening with his cousin, Milan where it had been imbibing of the Mr. and Mrs. Albert St. John and down the stone walls In preparation ttiaah. i speeded away. The bandit escaped. 'lHardy.., •„• son, Howard were. Sunday dinner for.the erection qt the new federal Sault Ste. Marie—Jack Loucks, Battle Creek—Death of Joel Fuller v Around 70 members of Charlevoix guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cotter- building. •• Pugsley, 84 years old, and for many County Granges, attended the Tri- field ot Boyne City. chief of the forestry department, and H. A. LANGELL Escanaba—Awards of free trips to George Banks narrowly escaped injury years a prominent member of the County Grange Rally held at Wol­ Quite a number of the Stockholders the Michigan State Fair at, Detroit • ' OPTOMETRIST verine, Aug. 18th. '- -of the Jordan Valley Co-op. Cream­ when the gasoline rail ear in which Three-Quarters Century club, here, re­ were made to demonstration and judg­ they were traveling ran Into a moose moves one of the stauncheit friends of Mr. and Mrs. George Hardy of ery attended the meeting held at East ing champions on the closing day of Deer,Lake, and Mr. and Mrs, George Jordan Monday evening. on the track. They' were traveling the horse!; -Until recently, Mr. Pugs­ Camp Shaw, annual J-H boys and girls about 30 miles an hour and were close Plumb of Piersori, Mich., returned to Mrs. Will Behling returned home rouhdup, at Chatham. More than 300 ley was a familiar sight as each day their respective homes the latter part to the animal before they noticed it. he came downtown driving a high- from Chicago, last Wednesday, called boys•,and girls froni all parts of!the Banks was thrown into the ditch with '-.-. 'NBP* •' of the week after spending two weeks there by the death of her brother, peninsula attended. Kathryh Radue, stepping horse before a once flashy the moose, but not being hurt, got out Phone—89 in the Upper , Peninsula picking Ben Price, Aug. 8th. ot Menominee, and Elwyn Vaderstar, of the way as it rose. Joining Its buggy. Only falling health caused huckleberries. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Behling an of Chippewa County, are Upper Penin­ companion, it made for the bush. Al­ him to abandon the rig that would 308 Williams St. Christobel Sutton spent Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Harry Behling and sula entrants In the State's healthiest though bruised and shaken, both men thread ita way through long lines of Opposite High School evening with Evelyn Hardy. daughter, Miss Mary, his parents, Mr. hoy and - girl contest, to be held at were able to proceed home, but their honking automobiles—a sight that EAST JORDAN, - MICH. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wilson and and Me* Frank A. Behling Sr., war* the state fair. ; ...... car was demolished. caused many a tourist to wonder.

BBS* l%li^'w«™piwp^

V-,

THE CHAJuAvOllAftlift X COUHTY HIHALD,

Don't fqrgtt the Pira SaU starts at MUses Janice and Catherine Uber- RamMT't stors Baturday morntnj-. horst and Erin Learman of Bay Cfty adv. are visiting at the home of their aunt, Mrs. B. L. Severance. Postofflce Inspector R. B. Hlnss of • TfT lfl__ •tdslay-wi w«ek. Emma LaTour, and Ambrose Hibnejr, YOU AND YOUR BANK Rev. C. W. Sidebothum m at Richard Matpasa was a visitor at of Detroit were guests over the week Lake City, Monday on church busi­ Sagjnaw and Detroit this week. Walter Brinkman of Pontiac was end of Mrs. LaTour's sister, Mrs. Otis ness. here last week visiting his uncle, J. F. J. Smith. Misses Nell and Ometa Maddaugh Kenny. Harvey Pangborn and bride of of Detroit visited friends here Thurs­ Members of the Presbyterian Midland are here for a visit with day. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wells of Dear­ Ladies Aid Society and Missionary CONFIDE IN YOUR BANK'S DI- friends and relatives. 1 born are visiting at the home of her Society will, meet together at the Lutheran Ladies Aid will meet .parents, Mr. and Mrs. L, A. Hoyt. Presbyterian Church parlors, Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis and!with Mrs. Jacob Wag-bo, Thursday, Aug. 24th at 2:30 fast time. Miss RECTORS AND STOCKHOLDERS family are visiting friends in Flint Aug. 27th. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crowell and Clara Seller of Kolhapur, India will family returned home Tuesday from and Detroit this week. | Supt, and Mrs. A. J. Duncanson speak about the village women of ABOUT YOUR AFFAIRS. CONSULT a two weeks visit in Detroit, Jackson, India. Miss Anna Wagbo of Chicago is and children are visiting relatives in South Haven and other points. Mi. Pleasant. / here for a visit with her parents, Mr. A lot of the people who were wait­ WITH THEM FREELY. THEY ARE and Mrs. Jacob Wagbo. Mrs. Wm. Provost of Charlevoix, Mrs. George Ramsey of Cadillac and daughter,, Mrs. Otto Boike of De­ ing for'their ships to come in this year discovered that they were re­ WILLING AND ABLE TO ADVISE YOU Mrs. G. A. Lisk and son, Paul are visited friends and relatives here first troit were guests at the home of the spending the week end with relatives of last week. former's brother, Ray Benson, Tues­ ceiverships. at Pontiac and Rochester. ABOUT YOUR FINANCIAL PROBLEMS Mrs. R. M. Burr of Ann Arbor is a day. Fire Sale at Ramsey's starting this guest at Uie home of her sister, Mrs. Presbyterian Church Orrin Bartlett. Mrs. James Brezina~Mr. and Mrs. Saturday morning. Call and see the Charles J. Schultz, Angeline and rare bargains offered, adv. Marian Scheid were here from Tra­ <).• W.' Sidebotham. Pastor. KNOW YOUR BANK BETTER Come in and let mc order you a C. R. Harper, Foreign Pastor. Monarch 100% pure Paint, ¢1.75 (Royal Tailors Suit at $21.50. Bill verse City, Wednesday visitUtg with friends, "A Church for Folks." BY ACTUAL CONTACT WITH IT'S per gal., only while our stock, lasts, j Hawkins, adv. C. J. Malpass Hdwe. Co. adv. ' „ _ Henry J. Rlbble, of this city, Rural Eastern Standard Time. OFFICERS. Odds and ends sale of boy's Shoes, Seven Rock Elm families and Mail Carrier on Route 3, and Mrs. 10:00 a. m.—Sunday School. Shirts, Pants, etc., good for school friendroe Creeks enjoye, Sundayd a fish. dinner at Mon- Rose Kehoe of Grand Rapids, daugh­ 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship. and going cheap. Bill Hawkins, adv. ter of Mrs. Rose Habel of this city, The preachers for the next two An 8x10 photograph of yourself were united in marriage by a Justice Sunday mornings are: free with $10.00 iritrade at C. J. Mal­ of the Peace at Charlevoix on Mon­ - August 23—Dr. Carl A. Glover,' Boy! Did we sell bananas last pass Hdwe. Co. adv. Saturday. Same price this week, 4 day, Aug. 3rd. They SjJSnt a couple Pastor of the First Union Congrega­ lbs. for 21c at the Company Store. Miss Isabelle Kitsman is home of weeks at Leland and other points, tional Church, of Quincy, 111. from Wyandotte, spending her vaca­ returning here last Sunday. They are August 30—-Dr. S. N. Hutchinson, "PEOPLES STATEW^ SAVINGS BANK Henry Scholls, who has been work­ tion with her parents. now occupying rooms over the Good­ of the East Liberty Presbyterian ing for Rogers Construction Co., at man Hardware. Church, Pittsburg, Pa. St. Ignace, returned to his home here Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Matpass and Thursday. daughters, and Mrs. Jos. Hodge were at the Soo first of the week. Mrs.Minnie Freiberg is receiving a 'The Bank With The Chime Clock." visit from her sister and nephew, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas SeJby of j ! Fred Sauerbeir and Kenneth Frank Leland were guests over Sunday of of Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nesman. TEMPLE THEATRE Miss Rose Cihak of Chicago is here Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Goosmann and EAST JORDAN, - - MICHIGAN for a few days' visit with her parents, family of Cincinnati, Ohio are visit­ — ALWAYS COOL — Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cihak Jr., and ing at the Orrin Bartlett home. other relatives and friends. Att'y Fred Dye of Detroit visited Mr. and, Mrs. Peter Stanek and son over Sunday with his family here at PROGRAM Month of Archie were Sunday guests of Mr. their cottage near East Jordan. AUGUST MICHIGAN BELL and Mrs. Frank Cihak Jr. Also Mrs. James Cihak and son, George. Mr. and Mrs. John Chow and Mrs. J. E. Chew were Sunday visitors in Sun.--Mon., Aug. 23-24-Jackie Cooper in 'SKIPPY' TELEPHONE PHONE—66 j Hdwe. Co. adv. Ull'lllllllltHtllMltMIMIIMSIsMIIIIIIIIHlilllil ••••••'*•*"*"" T ~ ~ I '•"'•' • THI CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAT JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, AUQU8T 21, 1(31

consolation lying In the fact that In ^1^.4^ tAnn u.i^i. IA.^1. U^IAH^ umfc ^UAUtltfcUtllfc U.lfch iitlfch Mlli| so doing she was convinced that the greater good of her child lay in her heart Aud «o It was, Certainly the WHAT SHE subsequent environment of Greta Mul- litis, In the^horae of her father, and even after he had married again and Introduced a stepmother into that I Heart oflfier North home, was a safer, sounder one than any Ina would hare been able to pro­ By William Byron Mowery vide for her in the year* to come. To Paris Iia went, ljjVlng there for Copyright by William Byron MQWWT. (WNU Sarvlct.) '_ three years en the left bank of the Seine, enjoying Its comaraderle; car­ rying on the loose, pleasant vagabond life of the studios, 'working a little, n w?wfw w wmrm Tfmrnww f wn w*f <(Gl by McCIUre NetrHDaner Svnrllcall.t playing more; talking a great deal of "But he can't demote you, Alan 1" Baker? Was Baker taking her with (WNUSarvlce.r art, accomplishing not so much. Then she cried. "He can't blame you for him? THE 8T0RY there were rionths of the easy-come, his mistake." If siie went, bis act in busting the WO years after her marriage easy-go life along the Italian rlvlcra sergeant would prove a boomerang Ina Mulllns began to think she fclx bandits hold up the steam­ "He can't? He's already done itl and In the little art colonies that er, Midnight Sun, on the Mac­ against himself. He tried to tem­ 1 hha; d made a mistake. Tom Mul­ If I try to light him, if I make the flock to Cap'l. _./ j, kenzie, kill Jimmy Montgomery, slightest Insubordinate move, lie's porize. llns was all right. In fact be and escape with sold dust and *ra« a little more than that, because In her own eyes at least, Iua be­ fur*. At the Mounted Police post actually got the power to jail me!" "I haven't the authority to let yon. as time went on, she began to realize at Fort Endurance, fiergt. Alan "But the Incoiinu patrol—he'll let You'll have to make out application came a sort of beloved .vagabond. She LOTHERS who face the problem new things about him. Force, execu­ Baker disputes with his incom­ you go on that, Alan?" and wait for permission from head­ painted a great deal, mostly .where lit­ of the baby who "won't eat" will welcome petent superior, Inspector Hask­ tive ability, determination, not un­ tle art co'onles were foregathered, the new booklet by Dr. Lillian B. Stoma. "And capture those men and get the quarters." ell, regarding plans for the cap­ mixed with tenderness. but somehow, afler the first flash in In addition to discussingthe preparation ture of the bandits. Baker starts credit? Not Haskell! He's too wise. "That's the rule for close-in detach­ the pan of her talent, further accom­ ondgeneralfunctionoftheGerbcrSttained out in the police Launch with Ave Getting those bandits comes second ments. Down north here where * In the brief period of their mar­ V men. At the MacMillan trading plishment did not come out of the Vegetablesjthebooklet contains much that with him. So long as he saves his communication would take several riage he had gone forward astonish­ .post, Joyce MacMillan is thrilled hit-and-miss existence It pleased her should be helpful in training baby's meat- at tlia arrival of the police face, he doesn't really care whether months, it's understood that an office! ingly in his business and had matured to follow." Bohemia took too much of tune habits in a healthy, normal manner. launch. She had expected to he gets them or not. That Inconnu can accept a buy out on his own recog­ in the finest sense of the word. her time; Arty folk cluttered up what marry Baker, and had been patrol is dead. It was our best hope, nizance." The root of the evil of discontent If year grocer can't supply you with tht 4 stunned at tli*» news that he was should have been work-a-day hours. Product!—to* will gladly mail you an introductory to marry Elizabeth Spaulriing. but now it can't ever be. I could stir "But It's not the official rule. Un­ had its beginnings in a situation that It was pleusanter to sit in a studio assonmtnt containing one can of each of the sevtn \ Stolen furs are found on the Mac­ up trouble for him, I could bring on an der the circumstances I don't choose was quite outside the matter of her Products for your pear's nam* and on* dottmr. discussing art than to sit in a studio Millan place and evidence points Investigation: but that would take to accept your papers." relationships with her husband. Ina to Joyce's father. Joyce defends did not quite realize this, for she was indulging in art. Strained Vegetable Soup him. Alan leads his expedition months. It'd be too late then; those "You will choose! I'll make you Strained Carrou-Stralned Up the big Aloosku and catches bandlts'll bo gone." choose! You've busted me, all right; a type of woman who is not keen on And so the yeHrs marched on, a /Cl3JE5\ Prunes-Strained Spinach sight of the bandits. Compelled self-analysis. She only knew that as b-jer—S Strained Tomatoes She repeated, brokenly: "Gone, you've saddled the blame and shame good many of them, before Ina began ^asss*' Strained Peat. Strained by Haskell's foolish orders to the second year of her marriage drew to experience her first pangs of real­ divided the party, Alan fails to gone—yes, it'll be too late then. Alan, of that patrol on me; you've mouthed Green Beans to its conclusion there was gathering capture the bandits and returns that means.—means Dad will be your lie and you've got a stool-pigeon izations. The first realizations were In her breast a tightening knot of to Fort Endurance. Haskell found guilty—and sent to prison—or there to back you'tip. But I can bring that the world of her bohemla was Send for Booklet blames him for the f'lihire and unrest. a shifting one. Why, in the ten years A\nu \i alii wed to buy out of worse. . . ." on an investigation just the same. Send your name and td- Tom himself was sure, and rightly since she had been living here-and- dresi today to Dept. i, the Mounted on condition that Kor the second time in the years he There's things happened last winter he absolve Haskell from blame. that you can't lie out of. Williamson so, that he could have placed his lin­ there, faces had come and faces had- Gerbcr Products Divi­ had known her, Joyce broke down and 1 sion, Fremont Canning is coming down here next month. He ger upon the beginnings of the rift gone. Young students had flashed into xried. It hurt Alan as few things in Co.,FjemontJMich.,for between them. the scene and then somehow had his life had ever done. As lie felt her hasn't got any too much use for you free copy of Dr. Stormii' now. If I'm here when he comes, As a girl Ina had manifested a, drifted out of the scene. A fev^pf booklet. If you also wish CHAPTER V—Continued sobbing against him, as he thought of the introductory assorted what I'll tell him won't help your flair for painting. One of her water- them had gone on to accomplishment —u— this tragedy looming over her, his and fame. But most of them, in fact case, include one dollar last hesitancy about his plan was standing much." colors had been sold from an ama­ snd your grocer's name.' Thinking In hard practical terms. the appalling majority of them, had swept away. With those bandits safe Haskell lit a cigarette to hide his teur exhibition at two hundred dol­ Alan saw that so long as Haskell had just dropped out. Constantly Ina was' in the watery wilderness of the Thal- nervousness. He asked, "Where are lars while she was still a girl in power over him, he could not stir a receiving letters from erstwhile Azzah, Dave Macilillan would be con­ you going if you get out of service?" school. It was after the birth of her hand. It ire was ever to get those friends; art students who had come victed; he would be sent up for life. "That'll not be your affair, thank child that Ina once more began to criminals, he had to be .free. Several to Paris from Indiana. Sussex, Brit­ It would break Joyce, break her God! I'm leaving here. Tonight. resume her painting."""!! was her way paths lay open to him. One by one tany, Sicily and had drifted back STRAINED VEGETABLES spirited courage, her wild-born na­ That all you need to know." of warding off what she feared would he studied and re.iected them, till only home again, there to settle down to ture. When he thought of the terrible* ' Haskell started a little. Tonight- be the menace of domestic routine. the last remained. commercial life, marriage, obscurity. stigma upon a girl so innocent and no boat coming past—it meant Baker Mullins was well able to afford suffi­ Fiah Story For miimtes he weighed that pos­ brave, lie swore silently: was going by himself! Meant Eliza­ cient help to keep the.mind of Ina It seemed to Ina, looking back, that Jimmie's sole acquaintance with sible act. lis cost to him was a ter- beth would not go with him but would clear of household minutiae, and she (TO per cent of the inhabitants of her fish was as a commodity in a mar­ rlble cost. It would wipe out his "I'll never see her brought down to stay here at Endurance! began early in her marriage to see to Bohemia had passed in the night, so ket so when his daddy took him re­ brilliant, reputation, his whole police that. I'll get those men, I'll bring the it that the conventional routine of to speak. They had dabbled a bit, and cently to the creek to watch some record,—Jt_jennbi".lril1 his Inst chance Very thoughtful, he looked away, de­ truth into court," married life did not close heiHBT—Foi tn rhe grn trior- prnrtncrq' -fish—4a—their—native—environment of ever bringing Haskell to account. bating:—Baker's motives, his feasoris" instance, she made It her business, He realized fully that he was start­ of business, marriage, and home-life. Jimmie, nearly four, experienced a It would uproot him and take him for for ^his precipitate move, were dark after engaging the services of a com­ ing on a long trail, a trail never to be When Ina was forty, she was rather new sensation. good and all out of this North country. and puzzling. But he saw no way in petent practical nurse, to pack her retraced. - He was committing himself a scrawny, arty-lookihg woman, who "They were taking a bath," he ex­ Torn by doubt and indecision, he which they could possibly harm him. palettes, brushes and easels into her to a staggering self-sacrifice. But he wore homespun, sandals, berets and plained to a grownup who ques­ wavered. The price seemed too stag­ Hurdstock, an experienced northern pretty dark blue sedan every morn­ had to traverse that path; In honor had nicotine-stained fingers. tioned him about the trip. gering. . man, would still be available, a re­ ing and go off into the woods or into he could do nothing else. liable veteran to turn to, especially If She still moved about from bohe­ Presently he heard some one come the art galleries to sketch," copy or He rose abruptly, brushing away his baited by the hope of this vacated mla to bohemia. She still sat in the Easy to Tell Why tip the terrace and glide past him and paint. Tast trace of hesitancy; and gave sergeancy. Hardsock would be easier candle-lit cafes of this and that Latin "Does your cigar lighter workl" go on toward his cabin. The figure Joyce his hand to rise. to manage, too. Since Elizabeth was When her little girl was three years quarter, smoking, drinking, discussing "No, I won it at a bridge party."— was merely a moving blur in the mist, old, one oflna's oil paintings, "Rev- art—-discussing art—discussing' art. "Joyce, there's something I've got going to stay here, at least temporarily, Chicago News, but Alan recognized that' light foot­ to do now. I've got to go. You 'why shouldn't he let Baker go? The ery," received honorable mention in a Yearly she submitted her work to this step. prominent exhibition. and that salon; yearly it failed to mustn't stay here. Come." He took farther away be was, the better! Memory is the chief treasure of He nailed softly: -"Joyce! You It was right there Tom always felt achieve distinction. After a while, Ina her arm, and as they went down the the old. wauled to see me?" The more he studied the situation, he could have placed his finger on found herself working practically not .slope, he asked: "I want to see you the more it seemed too good to he "Alan! I've been wondering where again before I—some final arrange­ the beginnings of the end. at all. The business of being a bohe- true that Baker was deliberately cut-, minn monopolized her'entire time. you . . . Your cabin was all dark, ments with you. . . .. Won't you be ."• Ina began to indulge itl the well- and T couldn't find you." In eager ting his head off, buying out, getting known 'psychology of the woman who down=at the wharf in half an hour?" out of the country, leaving Elizabeth There came the night when, sitting bope she asked him: "Alan, what did feels that she has thrown a career Wondering at his odd tones, his here'alone, killing any possibility of In a cellar cafe known as "The Green Qe Haskell say about Dad? He's going and taTeit to the dogs, by virtue of stern purposive manner, Joyce prom­ the investigation that he secretly Duck" in the Greenwich village dis­ to release Dad on bail, as you having married. Ina began to: culti­ ised him. dreaded. trict of New York, she found herself thought?" vate an "art-set," so to speak. Tom, next to a table occupied by her hus­ SMAKTEST At MVs. Drummond's house he left "I'll consent on one condition to Alan shook his .bead, sorry for her," who was proud enough, in hls_ way, band, his second wife and her daugh­ her ami started nut along the terrace your buying out. .. Otherwise you'll sorry for all the heartache that lay of his wife's talent, encouraged" this ter Greta. The Tom Mulllnses were to Haskell's cnbin. — have to wait for official and regular COFFEE SHOP ahead for her—mas,—"Tovcp. Haskell nnri eve.i though.—he found little In on a business trip to New York and —AJTOss the desk ho demanded, with TrfTpToTal." — ' ~ can. he. brutal and Inhuman. He common with the rather special folk Tom was slumming with his wife and no preliminaries: in wouldnlt consent even to letting your "What's the condition?" who began to crowd Into his home at daughter. ' ' "I want to buy out. Tonight! Here! "There seems," Haskell said stead­ dad remain here. He intends to send odd houis. he was a man of sufficient Tom and Ina were modern about Now !" ily, with the ability to look Alan him outside to Edmonton." mental accomplishment to respect th,e this meeting of theirs. And so. for DETROIT squarely in the eyes, "to be a differ­ It was on his lips to add, "Your fa­ 'Haskell's eyes narrowed In sus­ xr^atjve in others. When tilings, how­ that matter, was the extremely blond ence of Opinion between us about the ther is being sacrificed to Haskell's picion. He could hardly believe it. ever. be?an to go Willy-nilly, as in­ and personable Pauline whom Tom responsibility of this Alooska patrol. need of a victim." But he could not He knew how deeply Baker was rooted evitably they did,, when Ina cast her had chosen for his second wife. Greta If you'll sign a statement to the effect hrlng himself to tell Joyce that. The in his work and friendships and life lot more and more with the so-called was the one who caught at the heart­ that you had complete, charge of the news had stricken her cruelly enough. in this northern country; and he could bohemiai groups who were glad of beat of Ina. It smote her with sud­ detail and split your party on your scarcely conceive of a man deliberate­ the opportunity to invade her com­ den terribleness. that she would nev­ If only she could be near her father, own initiative—if you'll do that, you if only she could visit him, the.ordeal ly throwing away a long brilliant po­ fortable home, Tom attempted to put er have recognized this exotic and can buy out. Otherwise you can't." his foot on the brakes. Rut too late. might he lightened for her. . The lone­ lice record at one irremediable step. lovely young woman as her daughter, ly waiting weeks of suspense would be Rut there was no doubting Baker's Alan wavered." Signing a brazen The smoldering suspicion within had she met her on the street. It lie, taking all the stinging disgrace agony. If her father was a thousand words, no doubting his grim manner. Inn Mulllns that she had thrown her­ was more of a shock to Ina than upon himself, strengthening Haskell's miles away, among strangers, with ho Baker was demanding to buy out— self awrty was a raging fire by now. anything that had ever happened to guilty hand . . . But then his one to lift a hand for him. to get out for good. As he studied.the. She wanted out. She wanted out of her. After that shock, however, the Thoughts leaped to Jimmy and Larry He offered gently: "Joyce, if yon sergeant, Haskell drew back warily. the confinement of household: out of meeting went on in what would be and Dave MacMillan, and to Joyce, want tO' go along and he near him,. Baker might be laying some trap fof the conservative regime that enclosed considered the ultra-modern manner. pinning her last hope to him.. What I'll pay—T'll see to It that ynu can. him; her as the wife of a conservative busi­ Ina, hi her homespun, sandals, and did it matter, his signing a lie? Would He refused, "I'm too short-handed ness man; heret, joined the Tnm Mulllnses at It'd he best for you, and-for him too, It change one jot or tittle of God's > here as it is now." It was from that point that Tom their table, They smoked; joked, ate if_you would.", J truth? What did a rag of paper mat­ Mulllns ceased to put up his fight. He and drank in the stuffy little Interior, Hotel Fort Joyce did not answer at once. As "I don't give a d—n about that. ter on his long free-flung hunt for was not a had psychologist, but per­ and Ina toelr-ffreat pains to point out he looked down at her. Alan was I'm buying out." those murderers, avenging his part­ Shelby's Cof­ haps he failed in the quality of per­ to them the notorious figures of her struck by the sense of how young and Haskell's confidence was returning ners, shielding Joyce? sistence that might have been neces­ bohemla. To the casual observer, It fee Shop is innocent a girl Joyce was; and with as he saw that Alan Intended no physi­ — He said: "I'll sign. Load It as heavy sary to subdue In Ina certain illu­ was just any meeting in any stuffy bitter self-reproach he remembered cal violence. "If you buy out, your as you like. But don't knock Hard- a unique res­ sions of self-gran.deur. Greenwich villnge cafe. those long months of the winter past record ends. You'll have to start all sock or Pedneault or Younge." taurant where the service and when he had left her alone to her over." He Ceased putting up his fight be­ The Tom Mulllnses were charming Haskell wrote out the declaration cause it seemed to him that the battle, because Elizabeth, protected, "I'm buying out for good. There'll toTna. PflvjJMne Mulllns displayed fine equipment enable you to dine of responsibility. Alan read it. As he things which he not only desired but sheltered, kept 'in ease here at Endur­ be no starting over again. I'm getting sense of humor, and the lovely Greta, wrote his name, he sneered: required in a wife were palpably not leisurely, or, if you wish to ance, had demanded It of him. He out of the Mounted, out of the coun­ regarding her mother with sweet, un- "If I were you, I'd frame that, in­ to be found in Ina. The subject of realized that in her desperate plight try !" awakened, unflabbergasted eyes, was hurry, you may be served as spector, and hang it on the wall. It's divorce was calmly discussed between she needed his strength and protec­ all that- could be desired In courtesy. Haskell debated swiftly. He was a certificate of your dishonor" them. Tom, with a natural conserva­ quickly as you please . . . tion far more than Elizabeth did. Ex­ It was after midnight when the not averse to Baker cutting his own Not answering, Haskell went on tism of the "male, and .with an.inborn cept for him Joyce was alone in the group at the table finally broke up. popular prices . .. open far head off; aud he saw now there was looking up the remaining enlistment abhorrence for notoriety, was willing world, without friends, relatives, Pauline Mulllns was concerned for no trap laid for him. But there were period and figuring the amount. to permit Ina to try an additional breakfast, luncheon or dinner. money, and with her father in the her stepdaughter. Greta had been up other things to be considered. His Whipple brought over the. forms and year of adjustment before coming to shadow of the gallows. too late on several consecutive nights. i Hotel Fort Shelby's 900 sober judgment, casting back over the filled in the-dtrta* Both Alan and Has­ the drastic act of separation. Much It was time she returned to their ho­ Presently, with the spirited courage last nine months, recalled the score kell, with the constable as witness, as he despised what he had come to units are servidor equipped tel for some sleep. The eyes of these he had always loved In he?, Joyce as­ of times Baker had corrected bad mis­ signed the numerous official sheets of regard as the pretentious fol-de-rol, two women—stepmother and daughter and paneled — all have pri­ serted : takes of his and kept the post running the procedure. pseudo-bohemlan groups with which she —met and smiled, their hands were "Alan, I'm going back home. The smoothly. Wisdom whispered to him had surrouiided herself, he agreed to vate bath. Rooms at low as Folding his copy of it, Alan walked constantly caressing one another. The pegribs are bringing in their furs next that he needed the man, needed him maintain Ina In a flat in the bohembin out of the door, out of service, out of threeof-thein trooped out after polite $3.00 per day ... suites $10 week. I'll send several of their men en desperately. And Elisabeth 'Spaul- section of the city for a perlodNif a the Mounted Police, good-nights to Ina, the two women arm deroulne to ther-Hflres_and_Louchcux_L<}ing. —Was-she_golng-away-Wlth ^ond upwards, M" twetvrimmtrr^errdtas^Maln^emwI- -^-^- affectionately following the i and get their furs, too. I'll sacrifice readjustments that he hoped would all our trade goods and raise money footsteps of Tom. who did all the Molerbii or* »ll«v*d el Hwir take place In her mind. for Dnd's defense. It'll he a true chores, paying the bllls^getting them mobllM at the door withe** Inn, champing at the bit. rebellious, in their wraps, bothering about their way of fighting for Dad If I go back Mrrlc* *. Mankind Still Clings to Pomp and Ceremony discontented, tired of conservatism, possessions, . picking up objects that home. I don't mind being alone. I yearning for the Latin quarters of can take care of myself. It'll be lone­ women are constantly dropping, such Writ, for fm Hood Mae It is, of course, mere blindness and cries out for some such sacramental Paris and the Greenwich village of some, but all the time I'll be knowing as purses, scarfs and gloves. blundering to suppose that monarchy sign- , New York, held out for Immediate ac­ that I'm doing the right thing and be-' They went out, lenvlng Ina seated is decaying in the modern world. The Ceremony will not depart from man­ tion. lng a real help to Dad." alone at her table In bohemia. danger is much more that the future kind ; on the contrary, as in the case , As usual, the matter of the child Alan acquiesced reluctantly, against governments will be too despotic than of monarchy, it is much more likely was controversial. The'daughter of his better judgment. A slender girl Acquiaitive Bird that they will be top democratic. that it wjll ..bfl very difficult to get an Inn and "Tom, Greta, ag^d three, be­ llke~her, scarcely out of her 'teens, But if there is one Idea more ab­ English king (even for two minutes) came a bone of contention. But In the One of the most remarkable birds of gojng back to tnut Isolated post. . . . surd than the Idea that we have seen to enjoy wearing a crown.—G. K. end It became'apparent, even to the New Guinea Is the gardener bird. A white girl, winsome, pretty, of lis­ rebellious Ina herself, that the kind the end of royallsm, It is the Idea that Chesterton tn: the American Magazine Around the base of a tree he builds some body, alone there, with Indians of life that lay ahead of her, the wo have seen the end of ritualism. a small hut, and In front of this lays coming and going, with hnlf-breeds life of the studio, was not the ideal Pomp and ceremony were always pop­ The • "FlnpparV out a lawn composed of moss. On coming and going, ... one in which to rear a child. ular with the real populace. Webster's New International dic­ this all "kinds of attractive objects are Joyce asked him: "What happened placed, such as flower* and the wings Nobody who lias seen, as I have, tionary says: A young girl of about It was here that Tom Mulllns saw between you and Haskell, Alan?" and bodies of gorgeaus Insects, and the the long procession of the Italian or­ fifteen to eighteen years of age, espe his advantage and pursued It. He Briefly Alan told her what had brighter the object the more the bird ganization of citizen soldiers! passing daily one who is not yet "out" offi­ agreed finally to dlvorco Ina and t. J. IRADWEU, Manaotr taken place down tller^ in the cabin. seems to admire it. When this little the tomb of a new and nameless sol­ cially ; probably so called with • grart her sufficient alimony on which His account left Joyce speechless, to live, but only on condition that gardener is tlrtd of his garden, he DETROIT dier and saluting it with a gesture double allusion to "flapper," a young In a silent fury, her little fists she surrender Greta. collects the objects, throws them away, three thousand years old,', can doubt duck, and to the braid of hair worn " ASLOW WITH FRIENDLINESS " clenched, her lips parted In astonish­ and sets to work to obtain another col­ that every crowtj in the world really hanging down the back of young girl* It was with a genufne mother pang ment. ' , that .I.Hi flnalV agreed to this, her lection.

•(. 'm. •:4uL. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1931

"01,0 OAKEN BUCKET' s.Tilic the nlil hnly'M elnnllons, hill It Bedroom Golf Latest Methods in Chance for Breeders ,lnos--elinmii-le lici- lliirlil In llii' bloek "I have my t'ouiul of strokes everv myr l,irl1 M 1, |H FLORIDA inn ] i jg'-" of Horses and Mules' WEEE STIEE IIN USE >" " ' '"''i' ""' ""'' W'i'si 1 iit.viima Jii'jtt.'li, if sold _EJeef_ProdiictiQn. on Ihe t>rt's •nl on *•!' Ihe Whin "V.'hal you play on before Si'iiii'tiilMM' 1. \vill' l;iki- _J Swan inn The baby, (Iruudmn Kvyell -fin a'nd chill *r.l,v,h,L' t'ne ; cabin and burned it. Iinriant faelms nl raising ln-ef under than i;.:'.7ri.iHIII— IIIHIIT hall—can be ],roposed increase in the water tax --- | When Samuel vVnodvvorll, was a arch Chili Sauce. » modern eonditions anil lias issued- Urn and planning !o u^e ihoir wells . boy. (ireenbusb vas quite a civilized results in a revision of l-";irnicrs' linl under ton years ol aiio. Most of the | Sold only by independent dealers. should the rale lie increased Had ] conijjiuuily. wilh slago coach to Ilos- k'tli) 15112-1.-. This publication, .-'Heel others livinc were loaied hoi ween I'.'l-I n twice a ,-.,-"!; tuid an occasional •S Proline, inn on the Farm." reports-t li'itt mid I'.Hii hh-lusivf, durlri" which six j SiMuinlc n«»t s.»l\fil tin* i.1* -I.U-in by I Quality years it.O.VT.-ITil hursc cults wvrv foaled • piiivliasiii- llic '.valor ruinpany. pass-' j FOR owners of I'arins where neef entile: pro tluil lived to January 1 tollmvmn. or*u\ on tnc did lakni l.mKcr 10,m 1 ' harbor t ) I'.ostou. 'l'lie lad early ex­ vide the major part of llic farm in In mnlrs. we prudut-rMl in 1H10 to \ inij:ht onco mmv iiavo wiinrsscd ihe 78 years hibited his poetic nature to Ids teach­ eomo ohtaill host results when me IftV.i inclusive, .'i.filid.orj mule cedts; | dl^nltied dip of Hie anci. .U sweep er. Hev. Nohernbih Thomas, and was breed in:,' herd is bu-ire eunuch to pro- from I'.I-JU 10 llfjii im-hisive onlyO,ii:;2,- 1 find hoard ihe spins!) uf tie bucket apprenticed to ];uij;Hn.in Itussed of No "After Bite" / duee at least a earhmd of eaille e;n-i, 7*J1—fin that oui nl' ."i.-JTlMHHi mint's on ! :>-q It sought the cool depihs of tbe the ('nluinbia Sentinel, in New York. " year. fiinna January 1. PA'jo. more r'liun ;' well iiniunriuliz'nd by the poem 1»; When Shaving Herd Bulls Important. I.at (a- Wood wort 1) was connected three-iifibs were over 'ei'i years obi. nmiiel Wonilworili. wilh As an aid in marketing fattened »',ni- wi ; 11 1 Such eonclusive ev'nlence ot -t) real The author of -rhe Old Oaken ; "' ' '" '- ' Morris, who founded the .'mils the bulletin SUJWSIS thai the N Yn, 1; Ctaticura shortage cannot be ignored, prices, al­ P.ttokor-who is often i'oiifiise.1 with j - ""' ' -Mirror. olfsprins lie as uniform as possible and ready rising., will J:O srihstantlally the Knglish pool Wordsworlli— was j of ihe incident of ihe writing' of Shaving Cream show a predominance of some purlieu 1 horn in Scituale in 17^.". Mis fat her : "The Old oaken I'.uckoi," Morris tells - 1 Id Liber within 1 lit ne\! tive yea r< A email amount quickly becomes a lar beef breed. Much depends,'There was Ileniaiiiin Woodworih who faTer |"ilie foilowihg slory. in the inlroduc- .Marcs hreil now will furnish ...Its thick, lasting lather that penetrates to lore, on ihe selection of liealtby, re,:: that if well Lrrown out will be H tor to'ik as second wife Ihe widow of I'apt. | tlon lo one of Samuel Woodworlh's the hair follicle?, while the medicated islered herd bulls, display!,,,; quulilv work in HHio. r.etler aei now ilcin Jiis-rtph' Nfinhey.' It was ;, ,t a ncest or ; vol nines of poems. The laller ro­ properties of C'lSlU'Ura soothe the and at ihe same lime representing t!,e to pay IOUL; prices t hen. of ll.is man.- ."John N'orlliev by name, j lurued from his olhce near Wall .skin. approved type for the breed. The pub '• The eolis that pull rhe load (<>( who dug Ihe well in 10,7,-, and built |slreet. one hot .summer's day in 1S17, At your dcnlcrs or sent postpaid on receipt lieution lays special emphasis on feed- j financial success) are (he ones you beside it a house which was sub- | and gratefully drank a nimbler of of Ijc. Address: Cuticura Laboratories. .in- and mana?enieiil of Hie b.erd and 1 Maiden, Mass. raiye yourself. sequenliy burned by Ihe Indians. i water—New York pump waler— lists several rations • w liicl, include ; Of ihe early N'orlheys. an interest- 1 brought him by his wife.. As he set liomegrown feeds. '• Bull Calf Must Have ing story is told. John and liis wife ! Ihe glass down, he sighed and said: Joke on Students were urged to go pea.-('ably to the Inclosures for Calves. ; wcra absent on a visit 1" some j '"Thai is \ery refreshing, but how liobinson ]>'.' Har-ley and Ward 11. asylum. It |o(,k (•ousiderahlf argu­ In feedine, calves for maximum ftains Roughage in Rations friojlds in another setllement. Their ! much more refre'shing would it be lo P.riidit, .hininrs. fit Hmgors univer­ ment in convince the guards that the the authors recommend the use of Alfalfa hay is just us important in baby boy had been enlrusied lo the.: lake a.good long .draught, this warm sity, narrowly escaped being taken students wore not crazv. creeps or inclosures which allow only feeding the hull ealf as in the feed­ eare of rirarulina F.well. wiio lived ' day. from ihe old oaken bucket 1 to an asylum for the' feeble-minded • the calves to have access to grain ing of dairy eows in milk. The qual­ not far from tbe house by the well, '[left hanging in my father's well at when farmers near Freehold, X. .1., His Long Suit while running will) their dams, lie ity of the roughage determines the While-,-he' baby slept in its crib, the home." who saw them wearing white run­ Kalher — 1 >oe-n'L I hat A'IIIIII;' HI.ID cent experiments have shown Ibis cost of rhe ealf ration. A good mix­ f!Xid lady was baking bread. Chane- MVH. Wondworth su-u'^sted that ning trunks find nothing else, in the kiKAv itow \aughter—-.I'll say he does * able where HnishiriK at an early age that has plenty of good quality al of her house, she saw n md of j theme for a poem. The pnes irumedi- at large. The stiide.nts had set out is essential. Copies of Formers' Hul- falfa hay is equal pans of barley 01 inarfiudinp Narratransott Itidifins | atcly ^at down and dashed off the for a long run when an automobile In tlie eity is where a lire se!rloi» letin loO'J-F may be obtained' from the corn. oats, and bran. When the prief swooping down the hillside. j sianzos which' are so familiar.—IJos- with four gnards and a nurse frntn destroys as muru of the budding as Office of Information, Fniteil Stales of bran gets too high. Ihe home Ilistory do not accurately do l ton Herald. the asylum overtook them and they >ou think it is going to. ; Bepaitiueiu uf Agriculture, VT'ishin"- "Trrnw-n—grtrhrs alone will nullice.—Koi ton. a poorer quality of alfalfa , hay• OT for some carbonaeeous' roughage, we Farm VegetaBle Patch would emphasis the need of from -~,C to Inn pounds of linseed mcii'l in tbi- Coming Into Its.Own above miKlures. While the ealf is be. ' One efteci of the drought which in:: supplied skimmilk. four or [i'f pounds uf grain a day will sutiice. Here Are the Reasons seems almost incongruous is thai it forced Miuiiy farmers to plan and work This should be increased at weaning lip"gardeiis on a scale which their real lime. A fresh supply , wlnui tl re was r,<>;h tliesn. Ni-w. ifi.re is hut one kn<>wn •?tew®&: ing else lo ,!o. \-vi !y : if all suites iiifesied witli Tbe lack of cash crops, due lo the I'dit \\.;'cv;!s. waill I'UISS \;\\\< m:i \< \ r i -J i' drought: brought many farmers >o n -i pt'id!.erii iary -iffen.-'e of five vears for I'.'illizalioll of Ihe iinporlaiiee ot loling kii'itLig rp:ad and -Una- bir M;il^. MI MYeet.-d- Manufacturing Efficiency witir w vv\ iN. ..will L'O into o-;,oi states plies from their own lands The Pe Firestone eonlrol every step in the manufacture of their w hero i!o-re m plcniy nf |u;iir:ind buv partinent of Agriculi ure. sensing the ( l.i'iHi fi.r e;o-lL stiite iiiel if alb-\u-l to d" so, of unemployment and is turning lo t ine (11 J : i i i wi'l de-t roy more v e.-\ lis Mail Order houses have their tires built as a part of a gardening on a much larger than 1 in mi.' >!a\. t bun ft ucin can \\ i: ii a ) miscellaneous assortment of production by some manufac­ usual scale will also tind lhal vain bis bait.—.1. A. Kobbins in tbe dki'i- turer who is unknown to the publie. Mail Order houses are able aid may he had from the depart- lioina fanner Stockman. men!. — dependent upon others for their tires. ...¾^ Soot Urged as Means Inoculation of Prime of Desti'oying Slugs Importance to Crops Distributing Economy A direct and speedy met 1 of o\ior- It has ,,,-,-n shown lhal in ,be oa-o Firestone have the most efficient and economical dis­ of alfalfa, sweet clover, | < or other miiialtbg slugs is sfi'pplie 1 bv the use PLIES tributing system through Service Dealers and Service Stores. of soot, which, if i! <"ou es in initial legumes tha, are being grown .or, the UMDER. THE Firestone know tires must carry with them the necessary contact wilh lliem, is im liately' fa land for Ihe -rirst lime, that it tiki- il) /fc.J, 1 till.- The operation may email lime lien is really necessary,. service for the economy, -safety, and satisfaction of car own­ Cultures f,,r , he inoculation may be TREAD nn,I tioiihle, bill on. badly infested land 'OLDFIELD TYPEi ers. Special brand mail order tires are usually made just to ii is ..,.11 worth while. 'I'll . soot should secured Through y,,ur farm bureau sell, with limited or no facilities for servicing the car 01 ncr be broadcast as km the evening as olbce or a commercial culture may be possible, preferably on a teoi-l. war.,, ,,I,tallied from 'your local dealer. In v^IVLY by comparing manufactur­ after the sale. evening or after a shower. l-"rei|iien.l apply in;. Ihe ;, ulanl to the seed, the surface oulluntioii helps m keep -lugs general practice is to n,i\ a small ing, construction, and distribution can ill <-l eok. as it does oilier soil vermin. ,p,:,,,lily o, ,1,,. -cod thoroughly with Quality and Construction because it destroys them In embryo ili,. iiioonkmtig material. !h,-n miv this you determine what is behind the price tren'od s 1 Ihorouglily wilh 'he en­ form, t'erlain birds arc al-o very u-e 4.50-11 Tiro 6.OO-19 H.D. tire a,noun, to he treated Increased tag on the tires you are asked to buy. Price fill In keeping down the -dug plagie- rircslono Firestone ^lA Sm-c,a< reittrns t'rom leg-one^ will more than -ftrestotlt Gives You oldneid Oldncld Brand Mai, I.ime air slaked. sed in Ihe Mime alone is never an index to value unless you pay for ihe -mull cos, of i, ulating. &s Typo Order Tiro vvtiv as the scot is also an 'ovellonl know the reputation and ability of the More Weight. pounilH,-; . . I7.I8 17.1(1 39-06 2R.45 remedy. More Thickness, inches . . .635 .:.% .879 .1177 Find Cost of Milk and manufacturer and what advantages he has More Non-SUid Depth, inclie. .166 .23li .344 .nor. Method of Destroying More lMies l.'niler Tread . 6 8 7 Rutterfat Production in purchasing of raw materials, manufac­ Same Width, im-hes ... 4.7S -1.7.". 6.03 6.02 Grub worms in Alfalfa j p,y p,.,,,.,! rliing ihe milk Same Price SS 69 $.-, .69 $11.45 $11.45 Fre.|uent relation will aid il sling ii for fa, turing efficiency, and distributing econo­ iliilr jriibworms. The alfalfa of ,!,<• kind, ami ,.,,,.1 ens,, should be plowed ,l,e am, ,r fi- i,-timed I.v her mies. These are the factors that determine i]i..roi,L'hl.v harrowed ami ,he„ il i. an CM matier. al ihe ,-1,,,(. ,,! tire value. Lowest Prices .,,,1,,- such crop as polaloes; •Ii year, to :\r'v: III,lie Ihe O-l of lllilk mil Flre.iono Firi-uonn Snee,a, ... some crop Fi"f~ Serioil-iy in ami bnuefta, pi-oduc-iou in -i-or-uis id Oldflcld *Sn<-' Oldncld + ofdneid llran, Brand feed cms,line,l. A, ,,,,-d with sticii rec­ Tion Typo ,,,,.,.,1 bv the such as soybeans, cow- Kead the fads at the right — then go 81:* Cash Mall SJIo Caih (Irdo Order pens, and the like. ords llic br !er of dairy ,•:,,lie is pre­ Pnro Prica Each Tiro I|,,gs will gorge themselves on grubs pared "I" sele, I the 11,,1.1 .ell'-cielll pro­ to the Firestone Service Dealer in your Each Per Pole in badly infested land, and if cm lined ducers for breeding purposes nnd 6.00-20 community and make your own compari­ 4.40-21 S4-98 $4.911 $9.60 II.,,. «11.47 $11.47 $Z*.30 so lhal they will I'ool il over thorough- Ihefehv make en,,,, „, ra t i v ely rapid 4..,0-20 S-60 IO.90 5.(,0 TRUCK and BUS TIRES lv. they will ciTecinally ml a held of si rides ill developing otilslaiiililig pro. sons with cross sections of Firestone Tires 4..10-21 5.69 5.(,9 11.10 Ihe grubs. l'locks of chickens j,,„l d,icing strains. The poiillry breeder 4.75-19 6.6S 6.65 ix.90 50x5 II.I). »795 $17.95 $34.90 52x61!.!). 4.7.-.-20 6.75 »9-75 29.75 lurkeys following Ihe plow will calcb lias no gia'aler dllhcullics in overcome and special bran'd mail order lires. See the 6.7S li.14 .16x611.0. 5790 hie n,in,her of ,1,,• grubs in building high egg producing (locks. -..00-19 6.98 6.9« 13.60 6.()0-20 32-95 52.95 63.70 ji Extra Values you get by equipping your 5.00-20 7.10 7.10 13.80 I, ,,. 15.*S 15.25 19.90 Profit in Vetch Agricultural Hints. car with Firestone Tires. itl Olhrr Sizrs Proportionately I*oic County agents ol southwest Arka 'I h, ),,,11. ip.il oblecl o| s„,n,i:er fab .,s rcporicd -field meetings In low i fo ? * A"Special Brand" tire is m.-wlr h v n ninnuf:<<"tur

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Si THl CHJtttlVOlX COUWTT HERALD, <»ABf JOMAH. MICH) PIUDAY, AUgUlf II, iMtfc- ^b**' =T*T HMkagon—-Reports that a safe con­ lun|Or|u la Seaiatr taining money and Jewelry went down DR. B. J. BEUKER The musician who writes lo prala* wit* the steamer City of Muskegon, State News State News CHAIN. GROUP AND of the barrel-organ, lamenting it* ran- In KM, he* caused renewed activities Physician and Surgeon M--dlo*pp**raac«, m^-J^JM-MtM^.^ twMMro hunt of dlvrUtotJO*. In Brief ' of the popularity the Instrument once at. BuUlvaa Dredging Co. The divan in Brief EKMHUAHKINC enjoyed among the great*one* of the •>M w«r* employed to clear the lake floor 1» »i** a, a*. earth, lays a writer In the Manches­ of debris from the wrecking ot the Monro*—Karl T, Finiel, Monroe, has Bankers' ComrJaUaion Detcrib«a ter (England) Guardian'. When first Eacanaba—The Eacanaba Oolf Club South Pier bar*. They have found Reeideaee Pfcea was found robbed of 170 In cub and a rare flower in his garden, a night Difference* Among Various Invented, barrel-organs were much In relies ot the ship. The steamer went Sfi& demand for society functions; the fa­ between (400 and $900 worth of coif­ blooming primrose. At sunset, the Kinds of Multi-Offico down with a lot* of SO live* a* it w** Ottee, SNH* Floor Hit* •aiMiag ing equipment, A baby's penny bank buds begin to open slowly and remains mous Lady Jersey set the fashion by Neat U PertsSn. Bank*. about to enter the harbor during a , containing f 10 was stolen from the in bloom until about t a. m. having one Installed In her drawing gale. room at Berkeley square. office. Lakeview—Virgil Crawford, 10, ton Maaon—In the future Ed Gardner •TpHB Economic Policy Commisslou As late at 1877 even Augustus Hare of Bea Crawford,, prominent Mont­ will test hi* liquor. When Bd woke Kalamaioo—Floyd Armstrong, Bat­ * of the American Bankers Associa­ found Lord Exeter, with his family calm Oounty farmer, died of lockjaw, up' In the- county Jail he thought some­ tle Creek construction engineer, tell tion has made the following statement and guests, dancing to the music of DR. F. P. RAMSEY caused, physicians say, by a sliver he thing was wrong with his teeth, and Into a M-foot municipal well at Gales- on various types of hanking systems a barrel-organ, which they took ID ran la' his leg while swimming. the dentist agreed. He Found what­ burg and was drowned. He fell while operating through more than one turns to grind. Royalty shared the Physician and Surgeon ever liquid Gardner drank had re­ engaged In sinking a test well Inside Flirt—After being pinned under an office: craze, for Napoleon III and the Em­ moved all of the enamel from hi* Gradaate of College of Physicians the large opening, automobile In six feat of water In "We find that there are recognised press Eugenie gave "barrel-organ par­ teeth. The dentist removed the teeth, •ad Surgeons of the University Port Huron — Chester Kidder, 14 Potter's Lake, nine miles east of here, In the banking world three types of ties" at the Tullleriee, when, accord­ bat the prisoner complained to officers rears old, suffered a fracture of the Mrs. Bertha Wygant, IS years old, of multiple banking, organizations, name­ ing to one of the guests, "the worst •f Illiaoe. that If they had not Interfered with skull when be fellfrom an automobile Lansing, was rescued, revived and Is ly, chain bank systems, group bank of the many bad organ-grinders was his drinking, the liquor, would have " Office—Over Bertlett's Stora trailer In which he was holding a recovering In Hurley Hospital. systems and branch bank systems. 'the emperor himself." horse while the car was driven by his Xt Clemens—Charles Schalln, Jr., 8 They are alike solely in respect to removed the teeth as well as , the Phono— 1 WI-FI father, Edward 0. Kidder. Team old, son of a policeman, received the fact that each embraces under enamel. some form of common control or In­ Village Life In Brittany Sault 8te. Marie—A total of 2,162 Serious Injuries suffered when a neigh­ Beauties Paint Their Hand* fluence two or more banking places, To visit Brittany after, a trip to vessels passed through the American bor, whose apples he was picking, The Arabian belles of (Morocco dec­ but here the similarity stops since Paris is like traveling to another Ba­ and Canadian canals here during July, frightened him into jumping 15 feet orate their bands Instead of their faces there are essential differences in or­ llon. Although part of the same Isaac De Young, general superintend­ from the roof of a barn. He struck as their occidental Bisters do. Their DR. E. J. BRENNER ganization and administration, ^Spe­ France, they are really a distinct peo­ ent, has announced. The American the limb of a tree. face* are largely hidden, so there 1* cially as between branch banking and ple from the rest of the nation, and Physician and Surgeon canal carried 7,327,061 short tons of Saginaw—Sickened after eating half no use of expending any energy In that the chain and group forms. not only in costume and liablts, but Office Hoars: freight and the Canadian 284,216 short a down green apples, Vernon Snellen- "Chain banking is recognized as" Bart of their anatomy. The decora- tins, tor a total of 7,611,267 short tons berger, 16, fell Into the Tlttabawassee In language have something peculiarly tions on the hands follow certain 10:00-12i00| 2:00-4:001 7iOO-»_l .probably the least definite form of their own. In the land west of the ' and by appointment. during the month. river and drowned. He ate the apples multiple hanking organization. Gen­ schemes of decoration, applied by the and then went swimming. Becoming St. Malo and Nantes, these people may use of some vegetable dyes which are Office Phone— 6 Ypsilanti—No longer must the school erally speaking, this term refers to 11L he crawled out of the water to he found. The villages are pictur­ fairly permanent. These designs may children of Ypsilanti, lacking the price merely a string of individual separate­ Residence Phone— 59 . stand on a log, but fell back Into the esque — low stone cottages with be applied by the women themselves, of admission, stare hungry-eyed past ly chartered banks owned or con­ stream. thatched roofs-and over- the door the but as a - rule the work is done by Office—Over Peoples. Bank_ the ticket takers at Michigan Normal trolled through stock holdings by "one initials of the first young couple to live street artists who occupy positions on home football games for an occasional Mio—Robert McLellan. of Hillman, or moTe common individuals, some­ in the place. Men with broad-brimmed the highways. Certain designs are re­ fleeting glimpse of play. Starting with Mich., was killed when an automobile times without public knowledge of the beaver hats and embroidered waist­ served for women of high social stand­ the fall campaign the youngsters will In which he was riding turned over common ownership. Frequently the coats may be seen, and If the villages ing. find the gates thrown open to them at twice after a front tire blew out. The controlled banks' are not administered DR. G. W. BECHTOLD as a coherent whole under the guid­ are seen at "Pardon" seasons, when all home games with exception of all driver, Mrs. Maurice McLellan, daugh­ ance of a central, publicly known head the saints are carried to bless the but one or two contests at which ca­ ter-in-law of McLellan, was Injured. Dentist office, but rather each bank is run as fields, yon 2an Bee Brittany^ In Its pacity crowds are expected. The accident occurred 15 miles north true, fo.-in. -. Office Equipped With X-Ray of Mlo. McLellan was a lumber a separate unit hank in accord with Jonesvllle—A woman Is dead and dealer. the wishes of the dominant interest. FRANK PHILLIPS Office Hoars:—8 to 12-fl to S five other persons are recovering from In some cases, however, there is a Evenings by Appointment injuries suffered In a head-on collision Ionia—Mrs. Eunice Craig, 40 years central, publicly known control with a Halting Tuberculosis Arrest of tuberculosis is1 accom­ In U. S. 112, five miles west of here. old, was burned to death on M-14, 10 head office that formally supervises Tontorial Artist Office, 2nd Floor Postoffic'e" Bldg. Mrs. Fred Heed, 57, of Jackson, was miles south of Ionia, when she was the operations of all the banks con­ plished by new growth of connective pinned beneath a roadster which burst tissue around and through Individual killed almost instantly. She was rid­ trolled, and this is perhaps the more WHEN IN NEED OF ANYTHING F2. Into flames after It had been over­ desirable arrangement. It lacks, how­ lesions of the disease. The process, ing with her son-in-law, Mr. and, Mrs. IN MY LINE, CALL IN Murl Andreas and their son, Bdland, turned by a tire blow-out. Her hus­ ever, the definite legal responsibility as described in Hygeia Magazine, 6. Bach suffered injuries. Carl John­ band, : Harry, 45, and a boarder, that a corporate head organization forms scar tissue and encapsulated AND SEE ME, son of Lake Neboganon, Mich., driver Ulysses Ay era, 24, attempted to extri­ would have. Each bank in. a chain nodules. When this Is done, it be­ of the other car, is in Hillsdale Hos­ cate her, but were driven off by the system operates under its own capital comes difficult for the germs to spread DR. C H. PRAY pital: : ftaimm Tha family hnm« IR nagr Bat­ and there is ordinarily no binding rela­ although the sears may still contain tion among members of the string. them. Dentist Aim Arbor—'Eighty-four patients of tle Creek. Ionia—A mass attack by members of The growth of connective tissue Is the Washtenaw county poor farm, a Group Responsibility Office Hoars: the family of Mrs. Ray Mikesell of brought about by the relief of all R. G. WATSON mile east of here, were thrown into a "Group banking, on the other hand, is strain and especially by limiting the panic when a huge frame barn about Shiloh ended the life of a six-foot blue a system in which, while the member 8:00 to 12:00—1:00 to 6:00 racer snake, which Intruded into the movement-OlLthe lung.; Consequently FUNERAL 25 feet from the main building burst banks are separately* chartered and the ^permanent-arrestof_a case of pul­ Evenings by Appointment. into flames. The farm Is beyond reach family parlor. The snake, non- operate as individual units with their poisonous, entered the furnace In the monary tuberculosis depends on a DIRECTOR of the Ann Arbor water system and own capital^-—control is exercised long period of absolute rest. - Phone—223-F2 sheriff's officers fo'flgnt the intense cellar, made Its way through; a cold through a publicly known corporate 244 Phones 66 blase with, water from a well on the sir pipe and emerged on a register organization under the uirectlon of a behind Mrs. MikeseU. who was read­ grounds. All traffic was blocked on responsible head office. It openly Get the habit—tell the Editor of ing a paper. Her daughter entered MONUMENTS U.;S. highway No. 12 by the hundreds holds stock control of the member your visitors of the visits that you the room, saw the snake and screamed. EAST JORDAN, MICH. Show the town you're alive and who halted to watch the blaze. banks and is morally and legally re­ make or other items of local interest. young in spirit. Advertise. Flint—Edwin W. Atwood, former Battle Creek—Dr. John Harvey sponsible as the chief stockholder for' their administration and the statutory mayor of Flint, has given the city a Kellogg, head of' the Battle Creek share of their liabilities. An essential deed, to two lots which have disap­ Sanitarium, Is in Washington confer­ ring with his lawyers regarding the feature is the fact that an organiza­ peared beneath the: waters of Thread tion of this kind is publicly known, Lake. A number of years ago he pur­ fight to obtain tor Battle Creek .Col­ lege the millions said to have been which creates a large degree of're­ chased the lots expecting the city at sponsiveness to public opinion. This left that institution in two wills, exe­ some time might want to build a is true because anything of an unde­ cuted in 1924 and 1926 by Mrs. Mary bridge across the lake and would need sirable nature developing in one mem­ the lots with 460 feet frontage for F. Henderson, of Washington, who ber of the group would create publlo a bridge approach. The bridge idea died a short time ago at Bar Harbor, distrust of the whole group. Therefore was given up and action of the park Me. A will executed in April of this its' sense; of self-preservation as a WHEN board, in raising the lake level, caused year changed the previous bequests. group, it nothing else, tends to make the lots to become submerged. = Grand Rapids—Two young men were it enforce standards of conduct Grand Rapids—Falling in front of killed and their young women com­ throughout the members of the group YOU ARE QUEEN a_ Grand _Trunk passenger train at a panions were seriously Injured when and to assume responsibilities for north side crossing* a 2-year-old child -the—automobile In -which—they— ^were^ Them BeyoSd whaT~rneTeTe~gaTTBSPoiF lay between the rails while the loco­ riding left the road on state highway Blbilities would bring a"bout. M-50 about 10 miles west of here in motive and two passenger coaches "Branch hanking Is completely dis­ Ottawa county. V Tony Topolski, 20 passed over her. The train was tinct from the two foregoing formB of stopped and she was removed, with years old, and Walter Wojeiaczek, 25, multiple organization in that it does THE EMPRESS of Germany was taught as a girl to only a few bruises and cuts to show both of Grand Rapids, were killed al­ not consist of a string, chain or group for her experience. The child is Betty most instantly. Miss Pauline Kirlas, of Independent banks, for there is mix dough and bake bread. Housekeeping was a Jean Zank, daughter of Otto Zank, of 21, and Miss Susanna Antonow, 20, only one chartered bank in a branch or­ Grand Rapids. Doctors say she was both of Grand Rapids, suffered severe ganization and the extensions from it serious problem for Queen Victoria of England. The too frightened to move after her fall, head injuries. are all In the form ot sub-offices with­ and to this fact she owes her life. Flint—Records of Genesee County out separate capital or corporate ex­ Empress of China sent anxiously to remote parts of / Oxford—A 16-year-old Genesee Coun­ show that Mr. and Mrs.*Harry Mc­ istence. • For everything that is done ty girl became the champion cattle clain, of Pine Run, have eight chil­ through these offices the bank itself Asia for delicacies to serve to guests. judge of the Michigan Holsteln-Frei- dren, whose names begin with "El." is just as responsible legally and in slan Association following the annual The children are Elsworth, Mberta, every other " sense of the word as field day meet. She la Mary Jane Elvira, Elvina, Elverna, Elvin, Elwln, though It were done over its own coun­ When you as a housewife enter the portals of Helms. While Mary proved herself and a baby three • months old, named ters In its head office." the best judge of dairy cattle among Elva, Two other children of the Mc- your new home, whether.it is a small apartment or a the youthful experts of 10 southern Clains who died also had names be­ Michigan counties, the prize award ginning with "El." The middle names Bankers Help residence of magnificent proportions, you are truly a went to a judging team of three Tus­ of Mr. and Mrs. McClaln begin with cola County boys, Sam and Ward Al- the same letters. His middle name is In a report on banker-farmer work, queen with power greater and swifter than any of drich and Wendall Biddle of Fair- Elsworth, and hers is Elberta. H._Lane Young, Chairman Agricultural grove. Commission, American Bankers As­ these regal ladies possessed over their own tables. Battle Creek—Horace Mechem, as­ sociation, shows that during the past Oak Park—A petition calling for sistant prosecuting attorney, says year there were 409 meetings reported dissolution of the village of Oak Park there is little likelihood that charges in 38 states, with a total attendance of You have behind you the organized resources of has been presented to the village, Will be pressed against two boys, one 38,578. County key hankers number­ council. Although the peMtion did not 7, the other 9 years old, who lured i- ing 2,541 we're appointed in 39 states. the greatest merchants in all the world. These mer­ set forth the reasons for the requested year-old Donald Swan from the home Thirty-fourt-states reported an expendi­ dissolution, Joseph F. Phillips, its of his grandmother, with whom he ture by banks of $105,926 for develop­ chants do not wait for your orders. THEY ANTICI­ sponsor, had said previously that he lived, to a nearby woods, ducked him ing better agricultural practices. believed the tax rate would be lowered in a pool of water several times, then Special banker-farmer activities en­ PATE THEM! if the village reverted to township stripped him of his clothing, beat him gaged in by banks in 27 states num­ government. On the other hand, dis­ with sticks and boards and left him bered 8,493, while 7,140 projects or solution would mean the commiTnity locked in a well house. The boys en­ farm programs were carried on by Bread? Merchant-bakers will deliver it prompt­ J would be without Are or police protec­ ticed Donald away from home with rural people through the influence of tion and that water, light and sewer candy. bankers. r ' ly to your order, in waxed paper, warm from the service would be abandoned. Muskegon—Plans' for a western For three years the Agricultural Jackson—A new plan to combat es- Michigan sports carnival, to be held Commission has given special recogni­ oven, perfectly mixed and baked to perfection! —capes^tromJhe^JaichlgaJLStateJrlson: Jn^MuskegoaJn^J^gust^J^S^jwere tion to the state reporting the highest : has been announced'by'Warden Harry made at a preliminary meeting here: record- of accomplishmetttB~jan4_Jhis: .•"" /""'X ''•/"" •'••'•-.•• H. Jackson to the 650 guards and free The program would combine golf, ten­ year Georgia achieved first place with ==='HBuseicBspingr?—No special tra&ing is needed employes of the institution. The war­ nis, boxing, boating and many other its banker-farmer agricultural pro­ den said that in attempting to capture sports. Plans already have been made gram. Representatives of the Georgia for this today> for mechanical servants serve you at fugitives in the future, an area 40 to hold some of the state tournaments State College and officials of the miles from Jackson in every direction In golf and tennis here in connection Georgia Bankers Association de­ will be covered. When an escape Is with the carnival. Mayor Thomas veloped the methods and policies which every turn, and the advertisements are always at reported, every guard and employe Bert Bennett was named chairman of made It possible for Georgia to carry will be given specific Instructions and a committee to be selected by him to out an effective program which em­ hand to guide and advise you iii-your selection of phasized "directed credit from banks commanding officers will be assigned perfect plans tor the event, which ; to direct the search in definite areas. would continue for one week. for producing crops on the Hve at-home food* furnishings or household aids. basis." • • , Battle Creek—W. K. Kellogg * has Monroe—The Monroe Yacht club Guests? Advertisers have mad& the art of en­ ordered dissolution of the foundation won its court battle against the Mon­ Appreciation for the cooperation re­ he established here in 1930 for cancer roe Piers Land company "tor a title to ceived from local hankers was recent­ tertaining one of the most precious accomplishments research with special attention to the the property occupied by the club, for ly expressed by County Agent R. B. Coffey-Humber extract. The founda­ roadway rights and water frontage. Bodley ot Gallatlne County, Montana, of American hostesses—and their "authoritative ad­ tion was to have been maintained for The, litigation has been in the courts who said: "My personal experience five years with yearly endowments of Since 1*14, when the clubhouse was has been that the average banker will vice helps you meet every delightful social occasion. $100,000. After nine months actual (removed from Monroe Piers to Its go more than half way with the county work was completed, the eight truste'eT" present site In Frenchtown. The court agent, providing this latter has demon­ applied in court for dissolution. They .granted a judgment to the Monroe strated that his work •« constructive . Advertisements have made you truly a Queen in said Mr. Kellogg wished to devote all Piers Land oompany for $2,209.40 as and conservative, that he It a man his attention to the Kellogg child wel­ accumulated rental and to cover the capable of handling confidential In­ the American Home !> fare foundation. Mr. Kellogg was not cost of moving the clubhouse.-. Th« formation and treating it as such,- and satisfied with the results shown from Yacht club was' ordered to pay 6126 a one who can 'keep his feet on th< the Coffey-Humber treatment. year maintenance of the roadway. ground'." , .

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