VOLUME 43 EAST JORDAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1939. NUMBER 41 Rural Electric Co. First P.-T. A. Meeting Farmers To Study Club Hold Theodore Conway Ei J.H.S. Steam- -——Scheduled-For Former Resident Here Passed Away At Flint Annual Meeting Thursday, Oct. 19 Rally At Gaylord Silver Anniversary rolls Mancelona ——B •• ••' VOTE LIFE MEMBERSHIPS TO Theodore Conway, oldest son of CRIMSON WAVE TAKES GAME HELD AT BOYNE CITY. WORK The executive committee is happy PRODUCTION CREDIT ASS'N TO MEET OCT. 25 — TEN COUN­ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conway, was REVIEWED AND OFFICERS to announce that the first meeting of OLD MEMBERS THERE LAST FRIDAY, TIES INCLUDED born in Laurence County, Ky., in No­ ELECTED the Parent-Teachers Association, the vember, 1884, and passed away in 46 TO O annual Harvest Supper,"will.be held The East Jordan Study Club, which Flint, Mich., Monday, Oct. 2, after October 19 in the high* school build­ Gaylord will be the meeting place was organized here twenty-five years an illness of three days. - The annual meeting of the mem­ Coach Abe Gohn'sr~East— Jordan ing at 7 o'clock. This is a pot luck of farmers from.10. counties on Wed­ ago, celebrated with a Silver Anni­ In April, 1907, he with his parents, bers of the Top 0' Michigan Rural high school Crimson Wave steam- supper at which the organization will nesday, October 25th, when members versary program Tuesday evening at brother and sisters moved to Spring- Electric Company was held at Boyne rolled to a 46 to 0 triumph over the furnish the meat, rolls and coffee. of the Gaylord Production Credit as­ ihe home of Mrs. E. E. Wade, with vale, Mich., later moved to East Jor­ Orange and Black at Mancelona last City on Monday evening:, October 2. The following program has been sociation gather at the V. F. W. Hall Mrs. H. M. Harrington as assistant dan in 1912, where he was employed Friday afternoon, to register, its The following-directors -were elected -planned.-——-—; •-- —- '-•-'•— for~ the -5th- annual stockholders' hostess;" For ty^three. members and at the Michigan Iron and .-Chemical third- successive -triumph-and-remain for the ensuing year: Charlevoix Co. Invocation — Rev. C. W. Sidebotham. meeting. Secretary-Treasurer A. J. Co. , —• Calvin J. Bennett and Clinton quests were present. undefeated and l^pscored upon this Qommunity Singing — Miss Mac- Townsend says that .over 800 mem­ Blanchard representing the mainland, • In 1915 he was united in marriage season. Donald. bers and their wives have been invi­ Both roll call and program were and Vernon J. LaFreniere represent­ to Ch)oe Ostrander of East Jordan, to The Jordanites all but demolished Welcome- —- Mrs. Vernon Vance, ted to heai' reports-on-the-year's bus­ "em'miscent in character. this union were born two sons, Har­ ing Beaver Island; Antrim Co. — Pe­ a lighter and far less expenencp'd President. iness and elect members to the board Six of the earlier members, Clara old and Everett, the latter preceding ter Wieland and Harry Bos; Emmet Dunne coached machine, unleashing Response — A Parent and a Teacher. of directors. Kitsman, Mettle . Palmiter, Annie him in death some ten years ago. Co. — .Ralph Luesing and Christian its powerful ground gaining attack Remarks — Supt^E. E. Wade. ".unstedt, Eriline Rogers, Gertrude In 1,917 he, with his family, moved O. Jensen; Otsego Co. — Herman Charles, Shepard, president of the scoring almost at will. Showing little Introduction of Teachers. Waterman, and Ida Kinsey, gave to Flint where they have resided local association, will call the meet i" "" mawytha T?prf unrl Rliiplr wcw —FT5trgWa~WirtU;r Wiegandfe—- Report' of the CommitLees. ;—" brief talks and were presente vrth- ing to order at., 10 a. m. A cafeteria since. way out in front 33 to 0 at the half- E. W. Hover of Washington, D. C, The membership drive has already carnations, the Club Flower. luncheon will be served during the Masonic services-were held in Flint time. Frequent substituting by the REA field engineer, and Ivan Bos- been started. If you have not already Greetings were read from Karen noon hour and all those present will last Thursday afternoon, Oct. 5 by locals kept the score from mounting man of Washington, REA power plant pledged membership to the P.-T. A., be guests of the association. There S. Clemens, Grand Haven; Ella Clark, Flint Lodge No. 23, F. & A. M., con­ to a far larger total in the final two supervisor, gave brief talks. plan to do so at the Harvest Supper. will be a number of attractive and Crystal Falls; dWa M. Fox, Spring duced by Rev. Geo. M. Vereie, with stanzas. The public is urged to attend the P.-. valuable prizes awarded during the Lake; Lili Johnson, Kewadin; Grace At the time of this publication 528 burial in Roselawn Cemetery. Glen Gee, key-man of the local of- S- gsr -: '- 35^^011--111^ miles of line are completed an. given to--price, Dayton, Ohio; and Muse Sloan- —-Us is' survived^by his-"widow, son fense wound up his high school athle- t'ized and on these—lines—there—a^e- Ln6 BtOClCilolcior vFtivciing HIc J.J esi-j-East-Jordan. -SfeeJeV-his mother Mrs.-Emma Con­ tic career scoring four of the Jor^- H43 members hooked on and using distance to attend the meeting, Life memberships were voted to all way of Clio, the following sisters, daniteS seven touchdowns. St. Arno service. Along these same lines which Rev. C. W. Sidebotham Secretary-Treasurer Townsend snid members belonging to the Club for Mrs. Bert Hogstert' of Clio, Mrs. romped around loft end 30 yds. to have been energized we have 421 Elected Moderator of that special invitations will be sent twenty-five years. Claude Annabel, Mrs. Carl Pardee another. Isaman intercepted a Mance­ members who have failed to wire to county agents, leaders of other State Preshyterian Synod The Study Club was responsible of Flint, Mrs.. Leow Davis of Flush­ lona pass on his own 27 tallying an­ their buildings and prepare to use farm organizations and non-member for many civic improvements, includ­ ing, and one brother Joe Conway, of other and* Crowell smashed off tackle farmers and stockmen in the territory current! These members are expec­ ing the G. A. R. Park across from the Bay city. He' was a cousin to Sher- 8 yds. for the other, and as the game served bv the local association. ted -to_pr.eparethemseJy_e.s_tp _take_etv —Revr-Cr-W;—Sidebotham was elee-- library and the planting—of -willows man Go.riway of East Jordan. •enided -the-loeals-were again seriously— ergy as rapidly as possible. led Moderator, of the Presbyterian Directors\of the association are ta- along the .fill at the'7heaa~o"f Lake Ma'. Conway wis a member of East threatening to score. Mancelona's ..The Co-operative • has, had-a good" tTrrp^m-activa part in promoting at. — Jn,-,lnn T,r,Hge Nn .,79, V. & A. M. -ehicf "offcijnive asset-wasyite-aCTJal at--~ Syno^^f _.Miohigan last. week aTTfs .uharleyoix. ~ : -' . ' •—~ ; :;; summer and with the new lines which annual""meeting which was held at tendarare- .faTr^.th&~-animal .-meeting. tack,; -wfiiSh gaA^th«m-4---e3 Trreit 5~- have been energized this fall in Ot- Marquette. The ' Synod consists The present board of directors in­ first downs, butnot once did the los­ *ego and Emmet counties, the winter of all Presbyterian ministers cludes; Roy Anderson of Gaylord; This Salmon Didn't Come Charlevoix County ers threaten to scor.e_,_ • East Jordan's line blopked beauti­ business should exceed that of the consists of all Presbyterian ministers David McConnell of Lactone; A. W. Veterans' Council Out of A Can! — He Says fully, furnishing excellent assistance summer.' The Co-operative,is already in1 Michigan and a lay representative Ostrander of Afton; Charles Shepard . Elect Officers for local ball- toters. Tinjie and -again ,-olling sufficient energy so that there from each Presbyterian-church. -oi-Boyne City; and Frank Sluyter of they mowed down the opposition ,aj.„. is a Considerable net operating re­ Petoskey., After many lean years East Jordan The duties of the Moderator are to if they were so many ten.-piflfr-Coalmon. From that point on the con­ troit Sunday Times. ' Bulow LE • Kube test was initiated, telephone drivers the stop sign is precise. Much of the testants wei-e on their own until the Watson LT Howard Rainbow trout have begun to make "•sh was hooked. It is reported that won first'place. Last year it placed hope of a reduced accident toll CARD OF THANKS D. Gee LG Jolmson fifth but. again was less than 1 per their way up the Manistee river and through enforcement of the act cen­ Mr. Porter's plan of battle consisted Isaman C Sheppcrl if the use of his sense of seeing, his cent out of first place. with colder weather the movement ters in strict adherance to provisions Justice RG Watson upstream of fish from Great; Lakes or •rift of oratory, and a little foresight He points out that the company's of the act concerning safety stops. We wish to -express our sincere Barnett RT W oodruff (c) connecting waters will begin in a In the past there was some con­ in taking an efficient and capable appreciation of the many acts' of Sonnabend RE Griffore record this year represents the driv­ Tuide along. In any event he sighted number of rivers in the northern part fusion about stopping at a stop sign. kindness extended by neighbors and Crowell Q Velez ing habits of 4,482 employees in met­ his fish 7 fathoms down with his keen of the state. The sign has only one meaning under other friends during the illness and at Antoine (co-c) LH Rumsr-y ropolitan Detroit, while the two De­ nyes, lured him onto his hook^ withjiis. This fall movement of trout- at­ the new act —• and that is to STOP. the death of our beloved husband and St. Arno RH LaDere troit firms "that top yoil-by a frac­ magnificent oratory and then turned 1 tracts increasing numbers of fisher­ It is a violation to coast through s»ch father, Joseph Martinek, Sr. We es­ F Patrick tion of 1 per cent' have only 800 and the rod and reel over to the guide G. Gee men from southern Michigan points •-i sign into an intersection'. Michigan S. Substitutes Pollit, Mc- 900 employees, respectively. with the .simple request "you land pecially with to thank Rev. Mathews E. J. H. each season. The rainbows remain in dcock, Mai- The state policy head emphasizes. State Police, in their enforcement him." The landing took 1 hour and for his comforting words and to the Kinnon, Mocherman, Woe the streams until the end of the pass, Gratsch, Haynerv~Penfold, Wr that the same safety habits are found orders, define a "stop" as "bringing 10 minutes at the end of which time A. Ross Huffman Funeral Home. spring spawning period. all four wheels to a complete stop." Mrs. Joseph Martinek, Sr. Saxton, T. Kemp, and Sturgell. - among Michigan Bell employees Conservation officers in tall sec- it was a draw as to who was more ^throughout the state. "They are not Stops should be made about oppo- thtHish or the fisherman. Mrs. Anna Frickie ^--., tions of the state are reporting fair site the sign. Where there are cross- Mrs. Annie Laggness goad 'uity diivera,' " he writes, worn-nut- to exceljent fishing success.. Many walks, the stop should be made before Mrs. Barbara Springer Temple Hits [ they are also exceptionally care- perch are being taken in the east and Mr. Porter's salmon tipped the scales 'drivers in smaller communities reaching such crosswalks. In every Mrs. Blanche Peevey west arms -of-'ti-rana^rirverge bary and case, the stop should be made before at 24 pounds and was big enough to in the country, Mrs. Betty Ostrander A colorful entertainment program fishing for rainbow trout in Charle­ reaching the traveled portion of the take the fishing reel which was offered safe driver in the city isn't al- Anthony Martinek is at the Temple this week with four voix and Burt lakes'is good.'The trout cross-street. as second prize. It is rumored that way a safe driver out in the country. Joseph Martinek, Jr. interesting presentations arranged.. are taken with spinners and night • Although all trunklihe highways Mr. Porter would have supplanted Traffic lights and Bharing city streets _——o Charlie Chan heads the bill with his crawlers. are through highways, traffic on them Charles Carey, Ass't Cashier of the with 'city drivers' is a different prob­ World Famoua Correspondent* newest mystery-thriller on Saturday. Rainbow trout may be taken with may, at certain locations, be required Harris Trust and Savings Bank of lem from being on the open road with Cover War FronU For The New» Wallace Beery and Chester Morris, hook and line during September, Oc­ to stop. Usually such locations are at , as fist place winner with a the speed limit lifted and many er­ salmon weighing 29 pounds had not The Joint Detroit News - Chicago head the cast of an exciting-drama of ratic drivers darting in and out of tober and November from": Crooked points where two trunklines inter­ Mr. Porter's salmon lost six pounds News Cable ajid Wireless Service, the Service men Sunday and Monday. rural lanes and cross roads." river, Crooked and Pickerel lakes, sect. _. . . , ., ., T-ffmd-all of its teeth during the land- Associated press, the North Ameri­ Tuneful Bobby Breen holds fourth o Emmet county; Lake Charlevoix, can, Newspaper Alliance, and the Uni Family Nights, Tuesday and Wednes­ Charlevoix county; the channel below routeSincs e expecmotoristt thoss oe n on the thethroug croshs ir,i batt.]e ted Press — all of them the world's day. Lana Turner with Ann Ruther­ "fw power house at Elk Rapids, An­ roads to stop they too should stop __After the fis.h had been proudly Extension Group No. 1 foremost'news-gathering agencies — ford and Artie Shaw make delightful trim county; and many other streams. when driving on the cross roads. displayed to Mrs. Porter and all of now serve readers of The Detroit Whoopee Thursday and Friday. This i . ~~~ ~ Stop signs are octagonal in shape, the others who were eager to see our News. Among the-famous correspon­ variety of Music, Mystery, Action East Jordan Home Extension painted yellow and are located near hero's victim it was packed in dry ice 'V CARD OF THANKS dents writing for these agencies are and Adventure is announced in the Club No. 1 met with Mrs. Blanche intersections. and shipped to East Jordan as a spec­ ial treat for the Rotary Club. The Ro- Edgar Ansel Mowrer, Richard Mow- following order;—a —Thompson,-. W_ednesdayj_Ocjtober_ 4 Next week;— Parking. "Saturday oxrly: -Sidney -Toler—and— There were 18 members and six visi­ We wish to express our heartfelt ^ananr-whTnrartOTlri!iTIbvmrfPrsaT" TCT, Colonel FrWleTmirFalWBTrfcTOw P. 'Lochner, Webb Miller, Pertinax, Cesar Romero in "Charlie Chan At tors present who enjoyed a co-opera- thanks and sincere appreciation to the mon at their Tuesday meeting repor­ Henry C. Cassidy, Negley Farson, Treasure Island." trWdinner, after which the leaders, relatives, friends and neighbors for CAT'S PARADISE ted that the fish lived up to all ad John Giinther, Henry Taylor and Isabell Walcutt and Priscilla Lisk their many acts of "kindness shown, us vance notices but that Howard him­ Sunday - Monday: Wallace Beery Ithaca — Cream enough for a scores of other fully as well kriown presented the lesson, "Housecleaning in the death of our son and brother. self did not quite look the part of the and Chester Morris in "Thunder whrilo. pack of cats flowed in ditches Together with this service, The De­ Made "Easy." Isabell Walcutt and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Bennett robust fisherman described under Afloat." between Alma and St. Louis recently. troit News also offers readers the re­ Bernice Bashaw, who attended Farm Hazel Bennett triple size headlines in the Sept. 27th Tuesday, Wed., (Family Nights): A creamery truck, carrying 30 cans sults of the scientifically-conducted Women's.Week at M. S. C. in July, Irving^ Bennett. issue Of the Seattle Daily Times. Bobby Breen and Sally Blane in of the fluid had overturned, after polls of the American Institute of gave their report. —,—:—L_O_J —; o- "Way Down South." striking a concrete bridge abutment. PublicJ0pinionp()nder the direction of Thursday_an^Fjndjiy^aT!a_Tur-_. — idrKlnseyy Sec'y. Measurements of , beaches show The cream was valued atobout $500 Trifling Co»t, Small Space, But Dr. George Gallup, noted research -o — ner, Ann Rutherford, Leon Errol with. that northern Michigan jg. rising at and the truck was damaged to the ex- Power To Do ;'»f"H authority."To bo best informedr-read: Artie-Shaw and hig ba-nd in "Dancing . Try A HeraM W*nt~A«lr-Hoirl the-rat&j>f one inch every 10 years. tend of $800. Want Ki: The Detroit.Newa regularly. co-Ed," : : r

THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.), FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1939

Bruckart't Washington Digest WEEKLY NEWS' ANALYSIS BY JOSEPJTWrTSBlNE mmmssj,^ WHO'S Oratory J Repeal Bill Would Extend Credit Expanding Soviet Domination Minus the strength of his convic­ tions is the man who can be swayed by oratory. This purpose, however, To Belligerents Buying in U. S. Presents Threat to Germany; stood as a ghost beside every man JEWS who shouted in the U. S. senate chamber, which, in the first days of Afghanistan IJ)rive Predicted October's bright blue weather, was Danger of Getting Into Same Mess Over War Debts That THIS over-run with oratory. The issue: (EDITOR'S NOTE—When opinion* are expressed in these columns, they Neutrality; whether to keep the Followed World War; Added Authority Given Presi­ are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper,) arms embargo now enforced against dent in Bill Carries Potential Danger. ______„____ Released by Western Newspaper TT"'"" Europe's- belligerents, or to substi­ WEEK tute "cash-and-carry," in which bel­ ligerents could buy what they pleased, taking" it away in their own - . By WILLIAM BRUCKART - By LEMUEL F. PARTON -ships. WNU Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C. EW YORK.—The aged president One by one the flower of the sen­ N of Poland, Ignaz Moscicki, put ate's far-famed oratory club rose WASHINGTON,—As the fuU dress bai'go repeal mistakenly assume an air-conditioning system in his old and pleaded that the one sure way of debate of the so-called neutrality that substitution of the cash, and plush-draped Baroque palace three getting the U. S. into war is to (1) bill continues in the senate, numer­ carry provisions will let us rest in %M • L- w L years_ago.. A repeal the arms embargo, (2) re^ ous phases and angles and incidents peace. It is perfect, they say, Op­ Moscicki Looks scientist, a de- tain the arms 'embargo. Idaho's have cropped up and demanded at­ position sentiment can see only To Science to vout believer Borah, Nevada's Pittman, Michi­ tention. It is easy for one side to hosts of marching men and ships carrying warriors over seas if there in the benig gan's Vandenberg, Texas' Connally, say that the thing must be accepted Cure III World miracle. , s o"f Washington's Schwellenbach, North by the senate and the house and the is repeal. Therefore, neither side the laboratory which will same day Dakota's Nye and Louisiana's Over­ country, without so much as a is giving really "serious"attention' to ' transform a tragically """afflicted ton led the parade. crossed "t" or a dotted "i" and it perfecting the cash and carry pro­ world, he devised the system him­ Sample repeal talk (by Connally): is equally easy for the oppositionists vision, in event it shalbbe accepted, self and superintended its installa­ "Unless the act is changed the Unit­ to say that we should haye none of eventually, and the bill become law. tion. It turned heavy, sluggish air ed States will be brought to the it at all. The truth is neither side That is a grave mistake. into cool mountain breezes, and gave' brink of war, perhaps plunged into is completely coixsct, and Mr. John That lack- of consideration of de­ him new energy for his continuing^ its dark and cruel depths." Q. Public must remember that in tails of this phase is a great mistake scientific work, at the age of 70. Sample anti-repeal talk (by Van­ forming his own conclusions. can be proved by the shudders of Perhaps the falling leaves give denberg): "I do not say that repea. .inl —The bill that was reported by-ihs_ business interests when sharp eyes poignancy and sadness to the fate thprmuiUlee long views us, intI doo thriote wa believr e we senate committee on foreign rela­ and analytical minds disepvered- of this kindly old gentleman, driven -can become an arsenal for one bel­ tions, I believe, must be accepted what the section, as written by the from his country in the up-thrust of ligerent without becoming a target as a , sincere effort. Sixteen of committee, would do to commerce the new—or possibly the old—sav­ USSIA for another." the twenty-three members of the in this part of the world. Protests agery of Europe. ••--. After a week of this sort of thing committee believed it, or believed filed by shipping and air transport RUSSIAN ACTIVITY IN THE BALTIC some trends, amazingly, were ap­ it should have a chance to~be dis­ companies serve as an example. One might—write—off- Josef cussed fully.and freely. There was Beck and Marshal Edward Why, if not to stalemate German ambitions? parent. Majority Leader Alben Actually,' as originally presented, Barkley claimed repealists had no division along the lines of Demo­ the cash and carry sections would Smig-ly-Rydz, political and mil­ the reichstag speech. Word got crats or Republicans; seven sena­ itary careerists, also exiled, as RUSSIA: picked up "one or two votes." have kept many businesses from around that Hitler would end the More important, however, the tors voted against sending the bill dealing further with British and incidental casualties, caught in war on terms including: (1) removal to the senate because they are op­ the backwash of their own am­ Kiss of Death? once vague issue was sifting down French possessions in the Caribbean A welter of confused comment of international trade restrictions; and its rough spots were becoming posed to repeal of the embargo sea. They would have halted buy­ bitions. President Moscicki, al­ (2) creation of some form of Polish against shipments of arms to any though merely a symbol in came sharp on the heels of Russo- apparent. Among them: Should 90 ing, and selling in some quarters of German partition of Poland, trade state under German supervision, days" credit be allowed' Shouldn't belligerent powers, while-President South America, like the Guianas; feudal Poland; may find a place and readjustment __of_tlie__Czechs' -Roosevelt and the ;tnajority—mem­ 7 in the later balance brought tot- agreement and promise to co-oper­ air" lines from "the ate for European peace. Even status; (3) general disarmament. bers of the senate committee want could not have Stopped there; regu­ warfl, If therfl is tn he a new But the speech itself was far less -to-get-rid nf.lha^emha dark age, it may be that lab­ Japan; lung friendly lu Germany, lar North and South American ship attacked the Reich in its press. Sum specific. There Was a pleafor-arm -ernh.a,rg.o..- oratories will be the monas- istiee and a conference: "Since this Publication of the'text of the" bill, schedules wouldTiave been disrupt- ~ teries which will be the havens total of comment was that Russia's ed. Well, the committee made Dictator Josef Stalin is interested problem must be solved it would be however, shows some provisions of the humane spirit and the reasonable to start . . . before.mil­ .that have gone far to load the guns hasty changes, but it remains to be : aspiring ..intelligence, as were only in himself, and that Germany seen whether even these will work must eventually discover it has lions . . . have- sacrificed their of those who want to keep an arms the monastic refuges of the lives." embargo iri force. Some of the in practice. ' ' Middle ages. kissed death. members of the group opposing re­ The trouble is that no one man or - He -is one-of-the-greatest electro • Baltic. Heavy was the activity There was no capitulation over peal' were sufficiently wrought up group of men can visualize all of chemists in Europerraiiked"with-the~ here (See map). The Russian bear's Poland. In substance: Polandjs fu- to accuse the administration—Mr. the possible contingencies and con­ great German, Haber. In the field big red paw reached "into" Estonia ture^will be determined by-Germany- Roosevelt, - Secretary -of-Slate Hull sequences of a.piece oOar^r.e.ac.h-ing.- of synthetic chemistry, he holds and made it a virtual protectorate and Soviet Russia alone. A Polish and others—of having misled the and rigid legislation. None ought about 300 patents. He was a college harbor in g state may be ^created, also a sepa­ country in telling .what they think to claim that it has been done, professor for many years, tall and Soviets na­ rate regime for Jews. ought to be done, by way of legis­ but claims to that effect are heing" thin with white hair and a spiked val and air 7n~Totsi_the-^G=rninute—ha«aag: lation, to , keep the country out, of advanced and ballyhooed. moustache, as convinced as was bases. Next offered nothing new.. On the west­ War. It is a condition of bad tem­ that a "new free­ it reached in­ ern front, French soldiers merely per and it is likely to cause dam­ Monroe Doctrine-Must Be '; dom' ' -could—be - gained- by the mo­ to Latvia for tightened their belts and. sighed. age all around. Nevertheless, until Given Consideration bilization of planetary intelligence th-e s-a m e JtLexs_would_be no peace. the senate committee finished writ­ purpose, so Now, it might be said that these "and good will. Much in the manner ing the—biU-,--alI ef-4he—discussion, phases of the problem are matters, of our own distinguished Dr. Robert unexpected­ At Sea '. was' whether to repeal the arms em­ ly that For­ TEXAS' CONNALLY that concern only, "business- inter- Andrews MiHiKarfThe acclaimed the Never has Germany accepted re­ bargo; since publication of /the estsy" and big business interests, at. ; ultimate triumph—of—science—over eign Minis­ sponsibility for sinking the Athenta, *\ . . into its dark and cruel depths." bill, it is. shown that not only is re­ ter Vilhelms that. Such, unfortunately, is not the hate and stupidity. To date, the British vessel sunk mysteriously off- credit restrictions be applied against peal of the embargo sought, but per­ case. Since, every one of those good genii which they have sum­ M u h t~e r s 's coast the day Britain, de­ mission would be given for' exten­ scooted off residents of belligerent nations as points of difficulty lie in the west­ moned^, are enslaved by men of VILHELMS MUNTERS clared war on Germany. The Ger­ well as the nations themselves? sion of credit to those belligerent ern hemisphere, consideration must lesser understanding. to Moscow man charge: That Britain herself nations that want to buy here. and signed a How were "belligerent waters" to be given to the application of the treaty. Next it side- sank the boat, hoping to drown its be defined; would they include ports Monroe Doctrine. Our trade . with swiped Lithuania, nominally within American passengers, pin the blame of Canada, Australia, Hongkong and Many Object to Giving nations and possessions in the west­ R. JUAN DEMOSTHENES Germany's sphere of influence, ap­ on Germany and thus draw the U. S. other Franco-British possessions? President Extreme Power ern hemisphere, therefore, is con­ D AROSEMENA, president-of the propriating transit privileges from into Europe's war. The credit issue evoked most de­ Another section of the bill that siderably different than with Great Republic of Panama, is,-in spite of the Baltic seacoast to inner Russia. Britain and prance, themselves. his middle name, a practical man* No commentator needed to stretch A month later Germany's. Grand bate. Thoroughly disgusted with ex­ was not well advertised in advance Admiral Raeder did a strange thing. tending any credit after the way is a section giving President Rooser- Yet,: with all'of the close commer­ •> ^. • » cautious in his imagination to see the reason: cial ties with those possessions, with speech and ac­ Russia, not trusting her Nazi ac­ Through the U. S. naval attache at European nations have failed to re­ velt additional authority during Panama Chief Berlin he sent word that the Iroquois, pay war debts, Missouri's Sen. Ben­ threats of war. It allows the Presi­ due recollection of the principles of tion. - As the complice, is merely strengthening the Monroe Doctrine, there remains Talks American keynoter for her Baltic position. Caribbean.vessel chartered to"bring nett Champ Clark and Minnesota's dent to define "combat-areas," afld' refugees home from Britain, would Sen. Ernest Lundeen dragged out a to forbid American ships and Amer­ the—fact- that congress, under the Unity, Isolation - the inter- Two Balkan question marks were urge of "the administration, is seek­ American conference of foreign be sunk with her 584 American pas- weather-beaten suggestion: That ican citizens from going into 'those left.First, wondered wheth­ Zrance and Britain surrender their zones. That provision is highly pro­ ing to legislate neutrality, a neutral­ ministers'at'Panama, he sharply as­ er she would be called to Moscow, senger-s^-in the same manner, as the_ ity that works one way with the sails—totalitarianism and religious Athenia. western Atlantic insular possessions vocative. For there are'many who like her Baltic neighbors. Second, (Bahamas, Jamaica, Newfoundland, believe no Chief Executive ought to parent nation and another way with and racial persecution and invokes the Soviet made arrangements to roomies'—the children—of the bel- unity of tnp- American rppuhlics in_ PAN AMERICA: Trinidad, etc.) to the U. S. be clothed with such extreme power rent Fiimish.-Banish, Norwegian and- T-dniihtJhfli it pypr will h« rrvjsuaed ligerent nation. It is quite evident, the spirit of constructive isolation Swedish boats to haul timber from for which our state department 'is Insulation? or abused, yet it has that possible indeed, that whatever law is finally ~ the White sea to Britain in defiance WHITE HOUSE: enacted will contain many imperfec­ proselyting just now. of the Nazi blockade. This month, for the first time in danger within it. Having such po­ its century-old existence, the Mon­ Statecraft tential danger, the section is being tions, some loopholes and some dan­ Dr. Arosemenal a realistic Balkans. Having intended to stay - gerous pfincipTesT veteran of Panamanian politics, roe doctrine gfb"ws"watef wiiigsT Big­ ~ IrrParis, U. S. Ambassador to Po­ vigorously opposed by "men "jutt as in Moscow only three, days, the gest accomplishment of Panama land Anthony Drexel Biddle paid his anxious to keep the nation out of It-should be said to President has, in the past, accepted our Turkish delegation headed by For­ "good neighbor" policy on City's recent conference of 21 Amer­ first official call on the new presi­ war as those who say that only re­ Roosevelt's credit that, thus far, he eign Minister Sukru Saracoglu re­ ican nations was the 300-mile "safe­ dent of Poland-on-wheels, Wladislaw peal of the arms embargo will keep has not openly put the pressure grounds of enlightened self- mained two weeks, apparently rep­ interest. He has been keenly ty belt" around both northern and Rackiewicz. In Washington, Secre­ us from being embroiled in Europe's on his congressional leaders - for - resenting all Balkan, states. Any­ southern continents; inside which tary of State Cordell Hull issued a mess.- passage of the bill without changes. aware that the Canal Zone body could guess what was in the might be a major trouble spot,^ Europe's belligerents are denied ac­ statement that the U. S. will con­ Debate has made it appear, thus Membership of the two parties in air, but many observers believed tivity on land, sea or in the air tinue to recognize Count Jerzy Po- congress is widely split. Perhaps if war comes this way, and, re­ Russia sought to neutralize the far at least, that the original "cash cently, discussing its defense, he (See Map). tocki as Polish ambassador, and re­ and carry" sections constitute a that is why White House force can­ Black sea, control the strategic Dar­ fusing to recognize that nation's sei­ not be used effectively. True, some said, "If they starUshooting Up danelles and thus assure herself a Immediate reaction of wizened strong bulwark against our entan­ : the canal, they'll be shooting at seamen and diplomats was to brand zure by Germany and Russia: "Po­ glement. But there surely is ground of the anti-administration Demo­ free hand to move against Afghani­ land is the victim of force used as crats have predicted that the Presi­ j us, too, and that's why we want stan and thence to , both with­ the "safety belt" impractical. First, for objection to that part which was I to help defend it." an instrument of territory . . . added—that part which will give dent will get both feet into the situa­ in Britain's sphere of influence. Mere seizure of territory, however, buying nations 90 days in which to tion before action, is had, but that He was foreign minister of Pan­ does not extinguish the legal exist­ pay. A buying nation can come to has not happened, yet. ama from 1929-te-1936Y elected pres­ THE WAR: ence of a government." our shores, load down many ships ident in the latter year, and in years Pan-American Conference M' past has been sharply opposed to No Peace By the same token, the U. S. said and go away with, the cargoes with­ nothing about Poland's $179,000,000 in 90 days—and say at the end: Does a Worth-While Job the United States on various issues. . Consigned to the inside pages of war debt, which Germany and Rus­ "We have not the money to pay." In the presidency, he has inclined U. S. newspapers were reports of sia - wouldn't pay anyway. When Of course, it will not be as raw as While all of 'these things have much more in our direction. He is actual knife-tc-knife combat in Eu­ Austria was seized by the Reich, that. The purchasers did that dur­ been going on in Washington, the friendly and genial, rather in the cut rope's war. Germany laughed over the U. S. promptly blundered by ing the World war, also, and we are sessions of the conference at Pan­ of an enterprising business man. In a British claim that bombers had handing Austria's war debt bill to still waiting for those nations to ama City ought not be overlooked. the 1938 Lima convention, he joined "raided" Berlin with propaganda Herr Hitler, not realizing this con­ pay more than $12,000,000(000 on The representatives of our own and the Brazilian delegation in accept leaflets. German troops were beat- those debts. I am the only corre- our neighbor republics did a good stituted tacit U. S. recognition of job_in arranging for

Decorative Initials Germany Breath; See What Hapj^nedt Lend Personality

Post-war Germany, minus ter­ Saar basin (see arrow) joined Six months later , ritory lost to~-, Belgium, the Reich in 1935 by plebiscite. On the rim of Czecho-Slovakia, was Poland, Danzig, Denmark and March 12, 1938, Hitler entered added following the Munich con­ Czecho-Slovakla. _...... : Austria "to restore peace-.'*. ference which averted war.

Moravia and Bohemia became The next month the Mcmel ter­ In September of this year, after the lightning war in Poland, Ger­ a "protectorate" on March 15 this ritory was handed over by Lith­ Pattern 3274. year; Slovakia was taken the next uania after a plebiscite; the ter­ many took a lion's share of the Crusty, piping hot bran muffins are family favorites. day. This ended . ritory was mainly German. spoils; Russia got the rest. These decorative initials are . See Recipe Below. equally effective in satin, button­ Germany's population is now more than twice that of France proper; almost three times Italy's, For a Special Treat milk. Mix lightly with a fork. Place hole, seed stitch or cutwork. Pat­ and considerably more than the British Isles, Canada and Australia combined. Only Russia and the half of dough in well-greased layer tern 2274 contains a transfer United States, of western countries, have greater populations, and in Europe only Russia has more Serve Hot Breads cake pan. Mix together brown sug­ 7 ar, chopped nuts, remaining 1 ta­ pattern of two l /s inch and one territory. 1¾ inch alphabet; illustration of Was there ever a family that blespoon flour, cinnamon and butter. stitches. didn't adore hot breads? Biscuits Sprinkle % of this mixture over Sough. Top with remaining dough; Send 15 cents in coins for this that melt in your mouth, muffins pattern to The Sewing Circle, that are feather-light and crusty and sprinkle with remaining brewa-sug~ Moral: Don't Throw Your Jewels in the Garbage ar mixture. Bake in moderately hot Needlecraft I)ept„ Wl Eighth Ave.,- full of flavor, or a golden corn bread New~ybrSrN_y.: with the tantalizing taste of bacon oven (J75 degrees) for approxi­ mately 30 minutes. Serve while Please write your name, ad­ to make it even more delicious—all dress and pattern number plainly. these are special treats for a hungry warm. family. « —BffrigrrntOT Parkerh"ns<* Rolls. Serve hot muffins or flaky biscuits (Makes 3 dozen Parkerhouse rolls) at the next church supper or the . 2 .cups boiling water Living by Spurts first fall dinner Vz cup and 1 teaspoon sugar \\L~|ES> meeting of the 1 tablespoon salt TpHERE are people who do their guild, and watch 3 tablespoons butter * work in the world evenly, them disappear 3 tablespoons lard .steadily, quietly. They get up in . like snowBakes . -2 cakes compressed yeast the morning knowing that the on a'._warm spring Vi cup lukewarm water day-has its appointed task, which day.' 2 eggs '" ""• must he done. They dispose of It's easy to 8 cups flour. the task with serene exactitude. achieve success with hot breads if youjll follow just a few basic rules. Mix together boiling water, Vz cup The next day brings another, A tested recipe, good ingredients," -sugar,,. salt, butter and lard. Cool _and_the next another; each is per- accurate measurements, deft Han­ slightly. Dissolve yeast and 1 tea~ formecnirrThe same~spirit; There dling, and the proper temperature spoon sugar in the lukewarm water is competence, accuracy, but no for baking are the factors of suc­ and atid. Add eggs and one-half of excitement, no enthusiasm, and the flour; beat thoroughly. Then likewise there is no discourage­ cess. — add remaining flour. Mix well. Place If you've had difficulty with quick ment or despondency. Such in refrigerator. When ready to use persons take work and play, as breads that are coarse, textured and roll dough about %-inch thick and full of the long holes called "tun- : they take sleeping and eating, as. cut in circles. Then cut each cir­ part of the routine of life. nelsf' m all probability you've been cle almost in two. Turn, circle of over-conscientious in mixing. Unless dough so that cut side is on the Other people live and move- by otherwise specified, mix lightly and outside. Spread inside with melted spurts. Everything with them is . only enough to blend the ingredients. butter and fold. Let rise until dou­ a matter of zeal and passion. When you're making baking pow­ bled in bulk. Then bake in a hot There are days when their daily der biscuits, remember that a little oven (400 degrees) approximately labor takes on a glory. They "see kneading goes a long way toward 20 minutes. rich possibilities in it of achieve­ When Mrs. Robert Stranahan visited a New York stylist to get her hair fixed, she placed her 525,000 making biscuits flaky and light. ment and distinction. They throw square-cut diamond ring in a paper cup. A few hours later police were making a thorough search of garbage A simple recipe for baking pow­ Skillet Corn Bread. themselves into it entirely; they trucks. P. S.—The ring was found. der biscuit is the starting point for J (Makes one 9-inch bread). see new- openings for effort, and a variety of tempting breads. Make IV2 cups general purpose flour take advantage of them, build Prelate Succumbs "Pinwheels" by rolling out biscuit 1½ tablespoons sugar large and- splendid edifices of Her Brother's Keeper, and Good One! dough to ^4-inch thickness, brushing 1 teaspoon_sait hope and confidence and call upon with melted butter, and spreading IV2 tablespoons baking powder every resource of their spirits to generously with grated cheese, dev­ 1¼ cups yellow corn meal realize them. illed ham, or thick jam. Roll up 3 eggs (beaten) Then come days of reaction. the dough as for jelly-roll, cut in 1½ cups milk Perhaps there is a physical ele­ slices, and bake in a hot oven (425 Bacon ment to consider. At any rate, the degrees). Sift together the flour, sugar, salt spurt collapses. If there is char­ -EST; Quick Butterscotch Rolls are and baking powder. Stir in the corn acter behind it, the man goes on made in the' same fashion. — • meal. Gemhiee- working somehow, gets_his daily Ginger Cheese Muffins. the eggs and task done; but there is nolpassion 2 cups cake flour milk, and blend in it, and very little hope. Such 2 teaspoons baking powder with the dry in­ lives are made up of alterna­ .¾ teaspoon soda gredients. Pour tions of enthusiasm and despair. % teaspoon. ginger into a greased, 9- Vz teaspoon salt • inch skillet. Ar­ range bacon % cup cheese (grated) slices, lattice- DO YOU LACK PEP? 1 egg (beaten). fashion, over the Madison, Wis. — Charles % cup milk top. Bake in a A. Smith, 1331 Williamson V cup molasses St , says : "I have used Dr. 2 moderately hot oven (375 degrees) Pierre's Go Wen Medical Vi cup butter (melted) for 50 to 60 minutes. If necessa^y-r _DificaYexx_Jor_.jny-Eel£_ and George Cardinal Mundelein, head Mix and sift all dry ingredients. the bread may be placed in the for. (he children, with excel* of the Roman Catholic archdiocese lent results. It stimulate! Add grated cheese. Blend egg, milk, broiler for a few minutes to brown the appetite and tends to of Chicago, strenuous foe of Hitler- molasses, and melted butter. Pour the bacon. increase the flow of gastric ism and the only cardinal ever ap­ juice, thus aiding diRestion this mixture slowly into the dry in­ of food and so helps to pointed in this country west of the gredients and.mix lightly. Fill well Molasses All-Bran Muffins. build you up 30 that you feel fit." Aslcyour Atlantic seaboard, pictured in Chi­ greased muffin tins approximately % (Makes 1 dozen muffins) druggist for it today in liquid or tablets. Charged with being the alleged lookout for two other boys involved cago shortly beforechis recent de?th. full -and bake in a hot oven (425 de­ 2 cups bran Vz cup molasses - . In a store robbery, 17-year-old Patrick Lynch of New York was placed grees) for 12 to 15 minutes. Wiisdoi m and Fear In legal custody of his 13 year-old sister, Nora, while awaiting sentence. Old-fashioned Nut and Raisin Bread. 1½ cups'milk 7 BergdolFs Mother 1 egg (beaten) There is a courageous wisdom; Two months later Nora delivered such a well-disciplined brother to the 2 tablespoons butter there is also a false reptile pru­ court that Pat got a suspended sentence. 2 tablespoons granulated sugar 1 cup flour Vz teaspoon salt dence, the result, not of caution 2 cups bread flour but of fear.—Burke. 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon soda "" No Arms Embargo Repeal for Them! - .½. JeaspooiL salt Add bran to molasses and milk and allow to soak for 15 minutes. Beat % cup milk /ULUMfitts Vi cup seedless raisins egg and add to first mixture. Sift Vi cup nutmeats (broken) flour, salt and soda together and Cream butter and add sugar. Mix combine with bran mixture. Fill and sift all dry ingredients and add greased muffin nans two-thirds full alternately with and bake in moderately Hot oven LIQUID-TABLETS ^^T/ the milk. Mix (400 degrees) about 20 minutes. SALVE-N05E DROPS fcut ! lightly and fold in the raisins and Is it hard to get children (and nuts. Place bat­ grown folk, too) out of bed in WNU—O 41—39 ter in a 'well- time to breakfast with the rest of greased loaf pan, #^ the family? Eleanor Howe will let stand 20 min­ give you, in this column next utes, and then bake in a moderate week, suggestions for unusual oven (350 degrees) for approximate­ breakfast dishes rwhiehfjwill help ly one hour. you overcome that problem. WATCH Quick German Coffee Cake. (Makes 1 coffee cake) This Practical Book. Vi cup shortening In her new cook book, "Better % cup sugar Baking," Eleanor Howe gives you You can depend on the spe­ 2 eggs (well beaten) her secrets for making delicious hot cial sales the merchants of —1½ eups-«nd- I -tablespoon-flow:— -breads, cakes, cookies and pies. Vz teaspoon salt You'll find here over 12fT recipe sug­ ^>ur tawn^anngjinoeJnthe_ 2 teaspoons baking powder gestions, too-^recipes for "Funny columnsofthispaper.They x fz cup milk Cake/' "Jelly Tuck-A-Ways," "Lem­ mean money saving to our Vi cup brown sugar on Sunny Silver Pie," and countless ½ cup nut meats (chopped) others just as interesting and un­ readers. It always pays to 1 teaspoon cinnamon usual. patronize the merchants 1 tablespoon butter Send 10 cents in coin to "Better who advertise. TEey' ate Mrs. Emma Bergdoll, mother of Cream shortening; arfd sugar Baking," care of Eleanor Howe, 919 Four of the United States senate's most ddlighty isolationists pose at Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, notori­ slowly while beating constantly. Add not afraid of their mer­ * hearing. Top row, left to right: Sen, Hiram Johnson of California and ous . World war draft dodger who North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, eggs and blend. Mix and sift to­ Illinois, and get your copy of this chandise or their price*. Sen. William E. Bolrah of Idaho. Bottom row, left to right: Sen. Arthur came back from German exile, is gether 1¼ cups flour, salt and bak­ Vandenberg of Michigan and Sen. Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin. shown at her son's trial. grand book now. ing powder and add alternately with (Released by Wet tern Newspaper Ualeo.) THB CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD. (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, list.

Charlevoix County Herald PENINSULA SOUTH WILSON Legion Auxiliary IIIIIIIIIIHIIIllimiUIUIIIIIIIIIllHlllMllMIIIIIIHIIIMirilllllllMIIMIIIIIIIUH IIIIIIIHIU G. A. LISK, Editor ami PablUkw. (Edited by Mrs. E. Haydea) (Edited by Mies Anna Brlntnall) " Our many years of service in this community assures | Entered at the Postoffice at East Install Officer* Jordan, Michigan, as second claw you of the same helpful assistance vou are accustom* | ^Mri^o^JMcLane, who only re- ' The Legion Auxiliaries of Charle­ ed to with your wishes ever the first consideration. 3 -mail matter,— •-- _ 1 Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Zouiek-and fa­ voix County met in a joint session at cently lost her husband in Three Bells mily were Sunday evening callers at ADVERTISING RATE Disk, is stopping with the Geo. Staley Boyne City Tuesday evening the fol­ Our business is buiUupoa the recommendations of | Readers in Local Happening! column: Peter Zoulek's. lowing officers were installed for the family at Stoney Ridge farm because James Divis is not in the best of the people we have served. | Three lines or leas 8J0C of Mrs. Staley's poor health. local Auxiliary: health* at this writing. President— Mrs. Ed. Kamradt. Over three lines, per line 10c Clarence Dewey of Dewey Dells Display Rates on Request Jim Rebec left for Flint the first 1st Vice Pres — Mrs. Russell Barnett spent Sunday night with the David of the week to geek employment. 2nd Vice Pres. — Mrs. Louis Bathke TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION and Will Gaunt families in Three Misses Rosetta and Lena Spencer Secretary — Mrs. Thomas St. Charles' 1 R.G. WATSON FUNERAL HOME 1 * (Payable in Advance) Bells Dist. of Boyne City spent Saturday night Treasurer —• Mrs. Clifford Brown One Year __: »1.50 The Calf Club had their last meet­ with their cousins, Anna and Minnie Chaplain —- Mrs. Oscar Weialer I Ea»t Jordan, Mich. 66 Phones 244 | Six Months—_< .75 ing with their Leader, Nyle Gould at Brintnall. Sergeant-at-Arms — MM. Otto Kaley ftiilitiiiimiiiimiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHitiiiiiiiiiififMi'i'iriiiin Three Months __..: .60 his home in Mountain Dist, Friday Committee woman of the lower (Anywhere, in the United States.) evening. Those present were Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zouiek and fa­ mily and Shirley Sonnabend visited eleventh district, Mrs. Marie LaMare Canada '_!_' — $2,00 per year. Gaunt, Mac McDonald, Sam Bricker, of Alpena was installing officer. TRY HERALD" WANT ADS FOR RESULTS! and Lyle Wilson. Jack Conyer and Mrs. Wm. Swabb near Charlevoix, All suppers, "entertainments and Lloyd Hayden were absent. Sunday. other meetings, which are held to Mrs, Steve Bedes of Zeeland spent raise money to promote some special Milton and Jack Cyr of Boyne City last week with her friend, Mrs. Mel- interest; will be charged for at our spent the week end with their grand­ vin Smith. Mrs. Bedes returned to regular rates, unless accompanied by parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wurn in Zeeland, Monday. advertising or job work. Star Dist. Mr. and Mrs, Clem. Kenny and fa­ Mr. and'Mrs. Fred Wurn of Star mily were visitors at Frank Rebec's, Dist. received a long distance tele­ Sunday. PLANS CQLD TRIP phone call from Lockwood Hospital Sunday callers at Joseph Cihak's in Petoskey, Sunday evening, stating were Albert Canda, Mr. Korthase, Sparta — One Michigan man is in a daughter had been born to her for a siege of cold weather this year, Mr. Haney and Dan Trojanek. daughter, MTS. Elwood Cyr of Boyne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carson and much longer than most state residents City. will experience. Jack Bursey of Spar­ Lorraine Blair were Sunday visitors Mrs. Lydia Hawkins and a young at Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ulvund's. Mrs. ta will serve" as dog driver for the lady friend of St. Ignace, who were government Antarctic service expedi­ Nellie Blair was also there. attending Teachers Institute in Pe­ Mr. and Mrs. James Habasko Sr. tion, which is being led by Admiral toskey, and Mrs. Hawkins brother, Richard' ¢. Byrd. Bursey has been and daughter of Boyne City were John Beyer of Petoskey made a fly­ Sunday visitors and supper guests of called-east for—training and sailing ing trip to the Peninsula Thursday preparations. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stanek and fam-' : evening, calling on the F. K. Hayden : . 0 ; family, Pleasant View faring the Rul- jiy. Ladies, Make Your Legs Behave! land Beyer family in Three Bells If you want to be graceful and at­ Dist., the Richard Beyer family in NORTH WILSON tractive you should see these photo­ Chaddock Dist., and Mr. and Mrs. (Edited by Mrs. August Knop) graphs and read what Hildegarde Leo Beyer in East Jordan. Dolson has to say on this topic of in­ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Arnott- and terest to women — and men. An en­ four sons of Maple Row farm were Mrs. Walter Kerchner visited Mrs. tertaining and instructive feature in Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Albert Walters one day last week. \ The American' Weekly, the magazine Mrs. Rolland Beyer and three sons in Eldon Peck of Petoskey spent the distributed with the Sunday Chicago Three Bells Disk-. week end with his parents, Mr. arid Herald-American. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loomis of Gra­ Mrs. V. Peck. vel JfclL-nhrth sidfl^^apent Thursda; —Boh .TtihnRnn sppnt tha week end iri evening with She Geo. Staley family Boyne City. at Stoney Ridge farrnr —Clark Colver2was a business caller C. A. Crane came up from Detroit of V. Peek, Mortday. last week and'will stay with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. V. Peck and son'El- Crane at Cedar Lodge until th£ last don motored to Antrim Sunday. of the month when Mrs. (Jrane will 'gov Mr, and Mrs. v. feck wereTstOs^ back with him;to spend the winter.. key business callers, Tuesday. The Geo. Staley family of Stoney Mrs. August Knop and son visited First Insertion Ridge farm had for Sunday callers, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Ray­ 25 words or less : __: 25c Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Stibbits Sr. and mond, Friday. Over 25 words, per word lc Irvin Stibbits Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Frank Stone of Grand Rapids Subsequent Insertions Earl Stibbits of Traverse' City, Mr.- visited Mrs. August Knop, Thursday. 25 words or less :_ 15c and Mrs. Arthur Staley and son of Mrs. Frank Stone of Grand Rapids Over 25 words, per word , %c Charlevoix, and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. is visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs, lOe extra per insertion if charged Nicloy and two sons of Sunny Slopes Frank Behling, Sr. farm and Leslie Gibbard of East WANTED Mrs. Frank Stone visited Mrs. A. Jordan. Walters, Thursday. j^ANTED^^TmJng-Csives --- no Silo filling, which lasted four weeks Mrr~and~Mrsr A. "Kiidp—and ^smr "HXCTBm _. _, Jersey or Guernsey males. "-MAY [ was finally finished Friday afternoon were Friday supper guests of Mr. and r _ THOMPSON, East Jordan. See with most silos filled to overflowing Mrs. Albert Walters. • Bringing to the af^Michigan the Advantage* CTyde Irvin for information. .41x1. with splendid ensilage. Mr. and Mrs. A. Walters-and son ' of the Natinn-teUte-Bell Telephone Sjritem. Julius Klump and Miss Harriett Albert, Ed. Henniog-and s°n Edward WANTED To BUY —.8 or 10 Guern­ Bassett of Northport, called on Miss returned to Chicago Sunday, having sey Cows. Must be Fresh or coming Bassett's fosteT grandmother, Mrs, spent the past week here. -Fresh Soon — ages .4 to 7 years. Louisa Brace at Gravel Hill, Sunday, Mris. A. Knop and son called en ART SEYMOUR," Phone' 98 East as did Mr. and-Mrs. Irvin Stibbits Mjy and Mrs. Ernest Raymond and piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiii^ Jordan. 41x1 Sr. and Irvin Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. f amily,£9unday: Ear] Stibbits of Traverse City. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS Mr. and Mrs. ErnesfUaymond and Geo. Jarman and his houselceSped. family_ visited his parents, Mr. and' FOR SALE — Cedar Shingles at a Mrs. Louisa Brace of Gravel ^-Hill Mrs. Eugerie; Raymond, Tuesday ev­ low price. FRED LANWAY at were Sunday dinner guests of Mr; and ening. - - Graves Crossing. 37x6 Mrs. Fred Croweli at Dave Staley o i How Hill. After dinner they all motored HOUSE FOR SALE on West Side. above the Jordan and called on Mr. SOUTH ARM Cheap. Inquire at BANK, R. A. and Mrs. Kirk Brace. (Edited by Walter Goebel Jr.)'~ CAMPBELL, Adm. 37t.f, Clarence Mullett of Fremont, Co. FOR SAUE —- Ten'"six-week-old Pigs. Agent of Newaygo Co., made a flying Really Cost? JOSEPH F. ZITKA, Jr., R. 4 East visit to his farm, the F. H. Wangeman The Walther League of Petoskey, Jordan. In the Bohemian Settle­ farm, in his new car Sunday after, Boyne City and Wilson met Thursday ment. 41x1 noon. night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harriett Russell of <• -Maple Walter Goebel. The league gave a PARCEL POST MAILING LABELS Lawn farm helped Mrs. Orval Ben shower on Charles Schroeder and his • Not long agcrf we heard a,house-to-house salesman tell a —blank form — for sale at The nett with silo fillers Wednesday, and bride Miss Moore of Boyne City. HERALD office. Twenty-five for Mrs. F. K. Hayden of Pleasant View Many nice gifts were received. Char­ prospect: "Fcan sell you this gadget 25 per cent cheaper because 25cT ', 13 U. farm and Mrs. F. D. Russell of Ridge: les Twas formerly a Walther League" -my-firm-docsn't advertise." — way farms helped her Thursday and member. FOR- SALE — Kitchen Range in fair Friday. • condition, only $10.00. — JASON Sam Van Ree returned to Grand ' Little Stella Looze of Cherry Hill Rapids Saturday, after spending a • Many of you no doubt would believe such a statement, but SNYDER, 5il Second St, East has been confined "tTo he^bed with Jordan, 41x1 few days on his farm. tonsilitis for several days, but is bet­ With the'weather being grand and how many of you realize how little advertising really costs? As a FOR SALE — Team of Horses, ter now. the children home from school it was cheap. Also Corn in shockr~On the Rep. D. D. Tibbits of Cherry Hill an ideal time for digging potatoes customer every day in your life, you are entitled to know. BIRT SINCLAIR farm, .2½ miles has been confined to the house sev­ and many of us took advantage of it." s. e. of Ellsworth. 41x2 eral days with bronchitistDr.,Gonkle Mr. and Mrs. Walter Goebel called.! • Automobiles are extensively advertised. But despite the hun­ of Boyne City attended him Sunday. on Mr. and Mrs. Harry Behling Sun­ FOR SALE — Dry Poplar Mixed He is improving. day evening. Later, with Mr, and Mrs. dreds of colored advertisements in large magazines, despite the Wood; 90 cents per cord at yard; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bowman of Harry Behling, they called on Mrs. $1.35 delivered. GILBERT MAY- East Jordan called on Rep. D. D. Tib Behling's folks, Mr. and Mrs. Stenke. huge newspaper advertisements .you see frequently, only 3½ per HEW, R.l, East Jordan. 41x2 bits at Cherry Hill Sunday afternoon. They were very glad to see that Mr. Captain Baston of Traverse City Stenke was much better. He had been cent of the selling price of a car goes for^dvertising. This is about FOR SALE — A Ben Franklin Heat called on Rep. D. D. Tibbits at Cherry sick in bed for over a week. er in excellent condition and rea Hill Thursday. sonably priced. Se me for cash or Walter Goebel Jr. is now working $17 on a $500 machine. — Yet before advertising made large- terms. V. J. WHITEFORD. 40t.f. Sunday", Oct. 8 was Rally Day at in Boyne City for the Behling Bro­ Star Sunday school and a turnout of thers who run the Co-operative Store, scale selling possible, you paid $1,000 for a car not so good. FOR SALE — 1935 Ford Tudor. In 35 in spite of the threatening wea­ good condition and priced reason­ ther, which turned out to be a pleas Church of God able if sold at once. K. V. DRES- ant afternoon after all. Plans were • Coff ee^canned foods, soft drinks, and so forth, have large ad­ SEL, R. 2, East Jordan, West Side. made to paint the building next week Rev. S. J. High — Pastor 41x2 also the time of opening was changed 10;00 a. m. Sunday School. vertising budgets. Yet only 5½ per cent of the selling cost, or ½ to 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon and FOR-SALE —.All kinds of used 11:00 a. m. — Morning Worship. the first Sunday of each month will 8:00 p. m. — Evening Worship. cent on a 10 cent can is used for promotional advertising. Lumber and Timbers, $15 per thou- be a preaching service! There "were sand up. Also Wrick. BILL PUK 8:00 p. m. Thursday — Prayer several helpers from Earn Jordan but meeting at the churchT TER. Can be bought ' at Lumber the real guests of honor were Mr. and -#—Thfl avftragf retail ftorp^p^nds from 1 per cent to 4 per cent Co. Warehouse from Len Swaf- Mrs. David Gaunt of Three Bells ford. 34x7 Dist. who are the last real pioneers truck in a fog pocket such as they oh advertising. rThat costs you from 1 cent to 4 cents on a dollar s *rt» of the Peninsula. Mrs. Gaunt (Sarah had encountered several times be­ FOR SALE — Two parcels of Lake fore. The head lights of the truck in purchase. Frontage near East Jordan and on Clark) came to the west side of the South Arm Lake with her parents, the fog confused Mr. Kitson who pas­ the east shore of the South Arm of sed the truck but pulled right into Lake Charlevoix. One parcel 325ft. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clark, about • Think it over! Isn't it worth your while to pay this much fox 1868-69 and David Gaunt came with the side of the trailer. The car was a frontage containing five acres. complete wreck, but upon being ex­ The second 400ft. frontage,' one his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Gaunt the knowledge that advertising gives you? And isn't it worth in 1868 and they were married and tracted no serious injury was done acre. — FRANK F. BIRD, Charle­ either man beyond a bruise no larger voix. 41x2 set up house keeping at their.present knowing that the low prices on extensively advertised products home in January, 1882 and have been than a quarter and some hacks where FOR SALE — Flat-bottom Boat, constant residents ever since. We sure Mr. Kitson stuck his head through the are made possible only through the volume production that this $6:00; small Cook Stove, $4.00; were glad to have them with us. windshield,' the bruise is on the left two Writing Desks; two Bureaus; Only a few went to the Pedro Par­ cheek bona and there are some small advertising brings? ' Commode; three Bed Springs, ty Saturday evening. Those who did hacks. Mr. Heich was not hurt beyond $1.50'each; a Jenny Lind Bed, go. only visited, but spent a pleasant a severe shaking up. The trailer did It Pays To Advertise and It Pay» To Read $10.00; two Rocking Chairs; Single evening. not seem-to-.be badly damaged went ste^rCotrMRS.TX H.~PRAY7Easf —Friday night-or rather-earty-Sstar- flrrjis_WBy.J(n a_jhorJJime_a__cjjfl. The Advertisement! Regularly. Jordan. ' 41-1 day morning, while John Reich and came along and took the men back to his brother-in-law Lewis Kitson, wad Bay City where they got a wrecker, FOR-SALE OR TRADE — 4-wheel were coming up from Detroit where to tow the wreck in and sold it for Rubber Tired Trailer, with 2 extra Mr. Reich is employed at a steel tub­ $5 for junk and came home on a bus. tires. Would make a fine wagon. ing plant were north of Bay City. Mr. Reich returned to Detroit by [ THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD Buick pick-up, with 2 extra tires. Mr. Reich, who had worked until bus Sunday. Mrs. Reich, who has Two chests of Carpenter Tools. midnight and had; -driven as far as been stopping with her parents, Mr. | PHONE32 EAST JORDAN, MICH. Will.take any livestock in ex­ Bay City, had got into the back seat and Mrs. Ralph Kitson in Three change. ART SEYMOUR, Phone and gone to sleep. Mr. Kitson WOT Bells Dist for two weeks, went back 0», East Jordan. 41x1 driving and m«t a saral-trailer and with him, lllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW

•'"••'. /" :.:. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1»3«.

Garden Gossip CWtC^ftflttS REPORT OF CONDITION OF Edited by Caroline Harrington St. Joseph Church Letters and questions on garden East Jordan State Bank of East Jordan Miss Bernice J3n»haw !• vieiting Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Loveday were topics will be welcome. 'They will of East Jordan, in the State of Michigan at the close of business on be published and diseimsed in this St. John's Church relatives and friends in Dowagiac. Lansing visitors last week end. October 2, 1339. column. Bohemian Settlement Published in accordance with a call made by the Commission­ Mrs. R. M. Burr of Ann Arbor' is Trade ycur old stove for a new one Rev. Joseph J. Malinowski, Pastor er of the Banking Department pursuant to the provisions of Section guest of her sister, Mrs.- Edith Bart- at Malpass Hdwe. Co's adv. Possibly wo have taken too much to 82 of the Michigan Financial Institutions Act. Sunday, October 15, 1939. lett. heart the couplet warning us against 8:00 a. m. — Settlement. ASSETS • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Haney of poison ivy, "Leaflets three — let it Miss Leila Muck was week end Elyria, Ohio, spent the past week 10:00 a. m. — Eiist Jorfdan. Loans and discounts (Including $61.06 overdrafts)' $320,131.86 be." This warning was never meant United States Government obligations, direct (fuest of her parents at Jackson with Mrs. Jos. Kenny. to intimidate us, make us traitors to and guaranteed . ' 110,680.50 Michigan. * Mrs. Mary Bisbee and- daughter our own interest. Fleeing this poison­ Obligations of States and political subdivisions 60,050.00 Presbyterian Church Other bonds, notes, and debentures 110,026,00 Mrs. Henrietta Elbers of, Coopers- Harriet of Jackson visited East Jor­ ous weed has resulted in its increase C. W. Sidebotham, Pastor Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve bal­ ville is guest of her sister Mrs. Ro­ dan relatives last week. * by leaps and bounds. Apparently we C R. Harper, Foreign Pastor ances, and cash items in process of collection . 283,948.57 bert Sherman. have abandoned the field to the en­ "A Church for Folks." Bank premises owned $4,200.00 Mrs. Anna Keats returned to East Furniture and fixtures 1,384.37 Jordan Saturday, having spent the emy. At any rate we seldom contest Mrs. Jos. Kenny had as guest the its right to live and hear fruit which 10:30 a. m. — Morning Wprshif.. 5,584.37 past two weeks in Central Lake. Real estate owned other than bank premises 3,428:36 past week Mrs. I. £, McGowan of birds eat, apparently without harm 11:45 Sunday School. 7:00 p. m. Young Peoples Meeting. Other assets __. 89.44 Sparta, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Reid of Muske­ to themselves, and scatter along fen­ gon Heights were week end guests of 8:00 p. m. Adult Bible Class. Jay Salsbury left last Thursday ces and under trees there to grow and TOTAL ASSETS . $899,939.10 East Jordan friends and relatives. o for Royal Oak where he will spend bear more fruit. If we do not do LIABILITIES the winter months. Some good furniture and mattres­ something to root out this pest, if we First M. E. Church Demand deposits of individuals, partnor- ses to sell on easy payments or trade do' not do something to preven! it Rev. J. C. Matthews. Pastor . ships, and corporations $237,401.74 Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Porter, return­ for yours at Malpass Hdwe. Co's ad. from going to seed, it is going to take Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, ed homo last Thursday from a trip to over the scene. The woods m'e "pene­ Preaehinj; — 11:15 a. in. and corporations 1 604,543.23 Seattle, Washington. Mr. Charles Nachazel has returned trated" by poison ivy, and the road­ Sunday School — 12:1 ili p. m. Deposits of United State3 Government' home from Portland, Oregon where (including postal savings) 53.59 sides are fortified by it. We seem to Epworth League — 7:30 p. in. Fred Lewis spent the week end he has been employed for the past Deposits of States and political subdivisions 37,335.19 have surrendered to an enemy which Miss Ethel VanderZelm will lead. Other deposits (certified and' officers' cheeks, etc.) 4,282.62 from .his studies ut Albion College year. V Her subject is "The Rains' Came." with his mother, Mrs. Flora Lewis. each year exacts more and more in TOTAL DEPOSITS \J. ___$783,616.37 Announcement has been made of the way of tribute. Here is an enemy Everyone welcome. Other liabilities -—•r.- -- 8,949.20 the marriage of Blanche Gee and Thfl Opening Meeting of. the K. of with which we cannot mediate. Let' TOTAL LIABILITIES -$792,565.57 P. Lodge No 180 will be held Wed­ Max E. Bader—at , Central M.—&- stamp it out, root and branch, wher- Church in Kalamazoo, Saturday, ever we find it. If you are interested, "Seventh-day Adventist ~ ~" CAPITAL ACCOUNT nesday Oct. 18, 1939. Please attend. S. W. Hyde — Pastor Sept. 30. Garden Gossip will publish a descrip­ Capital ** ___^ : ______„$ 50,000.00 Trade your gas machine in on the tion of the strategy to use in flanking Surplus _ _ ,-_TL 27,600.00 • Mr. and" Mrs. M. M. Caldwell, Sabbath School— 10:30 a. m. Sat­ Undivided profits _: •_ 14,873.53 new Horton Twintex at Malpass Hdw. and liquidating this enemy. urday. Virginia and Alvjn Ward of Lansins* ; Reserves (and retirement account for preferred capital) 15,000.00 for yours at Malpass Hdwe.Co's. adv. \ -' . ,i. : were week end guests of. their Church, Service — 11:30 a. m. Sat­ urday. TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS _-_ $107,373.53 Kathryn Kitsman, a student at Al­ mother, Mrs. Mae Ward and other Why The L-aves Turn Color_ By Donna Barrie. bion College spent the week end with relatives TOTAL Liabilities and Capital Account ^-__$899,939.10 her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Kits- The M. E. Ladies Aid will be en­ . - Finkton School Full Gospel Church **This bank's capital consists of common stock with total man. tertained at the home of Mrs. Ver­ In spring the leaves are all green Rev. Arden Ragsdale, Pastor par value of $50,000.00. ... non Vance, witlrMrs. Percy fentolcl "an3~pretty,-BuT iTTthunv there--are- ' • _J MEMORANDA Leo LaLpnde has purchased the as assistant. hostess, Wednesday af­ red, yellow and .orange colors un­ Sunday school —• 11 a. in. Valdemar^Peterson 40-acre farm On On date of report-the .required legal reserve against ternoon Oct. 18. """ < T der the' green: . '—— -Worship—- -12-noon. ----- _..- -... the "old" East Jordan — Charlevoix — —-. deposi.ts_of this bank was ^_ $117,542.46 Then along the latter part of Evangelistic service' — 8 p. m. Assets reported .above which were "eligible- as-legal re---- road. Mrs. Alice Joynt Roberts arid' son summer, the tree starts to take the Wednesday prayer servicers p. m. serve amounted to . ^ . 394,629.07 Tom, left last Thursday for Melbour- Mr. and Mrs. Max Bader uf Kala­ grppii (which is cjilled chlorophyll! Everyone Welcome. I, Robert A. Camph#ll, Cashier, of the above-named bank, do ne, Florida. Enrouteithey will-visit solemnly swear that ^he. nhnve statement ic tmo, and thnt it fully mazoo were guests for a few days at out of the leaves so that it will not their daughter and sister, Mrs. Sam and corrlctly represents -Hie trill state of' the several matters the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. go to waste. Malone in Grand Rapids. Latter Day Saints Church herein contained and set forth, to the best of my knowledge and J. K. Bader. Jn autumn after the green has belief ROBERT A, »CAMPBELL. gone down into the trunk of the C. H-.- McKihnon, -Pastor Annual Chicken Dinner and Baz­ ' • Correct,—-Attest:-— Some nice rebuilt used cars and aar given by the St. Ann's Altar So­ tree, a cork-like layer forms be­ 10:00 a. m. — Church School. Pro. H. P. PORTER one Ford V8 for sale cheap in ex­ ciety, Wednesday evening, October tween the stem and the twig so JAMES GIDLEY . change, or on easy payments Malpass that the green cannot come back gram each Sunday except first Sunday 18th at the Odd Fellows Hall. Dinner nf month. - JOHN J. PORTER.- -- - Hdwe. Co. adv. served from 5:30 to 7:30. Adults 51) and run out of the stem after the Directors. 1 leaf his dropped off. .8:00 p. m. — Evening Services. (SEAL) cents; children under. 12 yrs. 25' 8:00 p. m., Wednesday — Prayer • I. E. Bowen was recent guest of his The red, yellow and orange isn't State of Michigan, county»of Charlevoix ss: '-(-cents. Everybody welcome, adv. 40-2 Meeting. daughter, Mrs. Victor Lindelius and -very important so it isleft.in the: Sworn to and subscribed before me this 10th day of October, 1939, All are welcome to attend any cf and I hereby certify that I am not-an-officer of. director of this bank. ^family at^Hazel Park and of his son leaves. Next year the tree will A plea of not guilty was entered these services. • . ' Grace E. Boswell, Notary Public. Rolandln Detroit. at Kellaire W ednesday^for Andrew; have -new—reaves and tmnr~Tit trill- -My commission expires-January 18^.1942. > Rev. and Mrs. JFrank Blair of Essenberg,, charged with, assault with put the green back into them. It Iron Mt. are .guests "of" the former's intent to. do great bodily harm. Es­ is nor freezing which makes the Christ Evangelical Lutheran senberg, arraigned before Circuit leaves turn. (German Settlement) parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Ulvund_ ent) r ' '•] and other relatives. Jirdge V. D, Sprague,. stood mute — V. Feltan — Pastor Trail wis set for the December term — In her essay, "Why the Leaves of court. . .. Mrs. R. Brintnall left for her home Turn," which you will find in a box in 2:30 p. m;—English Worship. in Regina, Sask. after spending the this column, Donna Barrie has told , Waith'er league meets every 1st past several weeks with East. Jordan us-, aw'interesting' Short sloiy about' and 3rd Thursday Of the month.-V" friends' and relates. , Mehnonite Bretheren In plant life. Although she has not toS3 Ladies Aid meets every 2nd Thurs­ New Sidewalk - us what it is that the mysterious chl­ day of the month. f- Mary Jane Porter cane from her Christ Church Rev. H. L. Matteson, Pastor. orophyll does, she gives us a strong, school in Muskegon Heights, to spepd The Church With A Gospel Message. hint in her statement that the tree the week end with her parents. Mr. does not waste this precious sub­ and^ Mrs,. H. P. Porte'-. stance, but stores it safely within its New Curb Sunday School — 10:00 a. m. trunk for use in the coming spring: Mr. and Mrs. Ben Powell and - Morning Worship — 11:00 a. m. Historic We regret you were inconvenienced Staring daughter of Bellaire were Sunday Evangelistic Service •—- 8:00 p. m. Donna tells us, too, that it is not guests of Mrs. Powell's parents, Mr. Mid-week Prayer Service, Thurs­ the frost which makes the leaves turn the building of our new walk —but think the im­ and Mrs. R. P. Maddock. day — 8:00 p. m.' color. She knows that Jack Frost only Hoaxes All are Welcome. hastens the change as sure to come as By Elmo Scott Watson provement well worth while. Mr. andr Mrs. Francis Quinn and fall and winter. We cordially invite you to inspect our new children, Jackie and Lorraine of Me­ If Donna's essay had been longer, costa are guests of the former's par­ I think, too, she would have told us The Joke's on Him curb and sidewalk. 1 ents, Mr.' and^Mrs. M. Quinn. that the leaves are useful after they ^^ HEN Joe Miller, a famous CLOSING TIME v Easy steps from street to store door. drop to the ground. She would have ' * English comedian of the Eight­ The Townsend Club will entertain ON THE HERALD told us how rain and snow leach out eenth century, died in August, 1733, Convenient Parking — You can dpeiT yonv with a fie Supper at the n«xt meet? the mineial ballt, the leaveo contain) it was discovered that his widow re- ceivea as her • legacy naught but car rlonr without striking the curb. ing Monday night Oct. 16, at the I.- All. contributors of copy for and so. restore th.e fertility of the memories of an. amiable and faith­ O. O. F. Hall. Everyone welcome. your, Charlevoix County Herald soil on which the tree feeds. Leaves We'll leave it to you, it's really a mce~lobT ful, "but improvident, husband The Mary Martha Sunday School should endeavor to get same into make the important humas, too. So this orriee as early in the week of Thereupon a certain publisher Don Clark was the builder. Class will be=entertained at the home don't burn the leaves. Copy-cat the publication as possible. named T. Read, a shrewd fellow of of Mrs. Newton Jones Friday, Octo­ trees, be frugal, and save them. Ev­ FRONT PAGE — All articles speculative tendencies, engaged -a ber 20, Pot luck supper at 6:30. ery gardener worth her salt has a man named John Mottley to_^ather intended for the first page must compost heap, another juraie for . a together all the current jests of the be in the oflice by Wednesday noon Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brown of De­ storage place for -plant"-food to make day and set them in type. LUMBER QUALITY troit, and Mrs. Sarah Kill of - Lake to insure publication. your garden a success. MAT SERVICE — Those hav­ Soon afterwards there appeared City and Mrs. Brown's sister and in the bookstalls of a volume ing mats for casting MUST have family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Yesterday while driving through which bore this imposing title: "Joe COMPANY FOOD these in the office Tuesday noon Harry Slate last Saturday. the eourrtry I though to myself, "To: Miller's Jests, or the Wits Vade for the current we'ek's.-iasjter day must be the most beautiful in the. Mecum. Being a Collection of the Mr. and Mrs. William Nachazel LOCALS — Please phone your year." I wished for color photography ;mojst Brilliant jests; the Politest STORE MARKET and son Billy of Muskegon have re-, local items to No. 152 where Mrs. to hold -fast the picture of white Repartees; the most Elegant Bon turned to their home after spending Sherman Conway — who covers - Phone 19 EAST JORDAN, MICH. Phone 142 clouds, blue sky, gold and crimson Mots , and most pleasant short Sto­ a two weeks vacation with the for­ these columns — will care" for maples, green wheat fields, the red of ries in the English Language. First mer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John them. These should be in .not later sumac and cherry oh the hillsides, carefully collected in the Company, Nachazel at Pine Ridge Farm. than 10:00 a. m. of Thursdays. brown corn shocks, . yellow ears in and many of them transcribed from Your Herald publisher is "en­ patches among them, and beyond ev­ the Mouth of the Facetious Gentle­ Mr. and Mrs. Edd Barrieand Mrs. deavoring to get each week's issue man, whose Name they bear; and erything, the hills wrapped in;a pur­ Clifton Harvey of Flint spent the in the mails on Thursday after­ now set forth and published by his week end here. They were accompan­ noons. Your co-operation in get­ ple haze. This morning it rained and Lamentable Friend and former THE SHOW PLACE OF THE NORTH ied to-Flint by Mrs. Elva Barrie and ting news and advertising copy in the leaves are tumbling- down. A car­ •Companion, Elijah Jenkins, Esq. EAST Mrs. Leda Ruhling, who have been our hands as early in the week as pet of them covers the road and the jMost Humbly Inscribed to those i JORDAN spending the summer months in East possible will be greatly apprecia­ walks and even the cars parked at the .Choice-Spirits of the Age, Captain TEMPLE THEATRE Jordan. ted. curb. The sky is overcast, but the day •iBodens, Mr. Alexander Pope, Mr. is not dark. Yesterday saved much of "Professor Lacy, Mr. Orator Henley, SATURDAY ONLY, OCT. 14-^¾:?V io°c -'' III her hi-iphtness for today and-reflects--4anr t Job Hanker, the-JKeltl 4EY TOLER CESAR ROMERO SALLY BLANE it from every leaf. Today is as beau­ jmer." tiful as- yesterday and I stilly wisMS for " The book was immediately popu­ color photography. lar and was followed by an endless Charlie Chan at Treasure Island succession of "Joe Miller" joke SCREEN VARIETIES LATEST NEWS FACTSIJ not fiction Yesterday I walked in the arbore­ 'books. As a result, the name "Joe tum . . . the fences are down and the -^Miller" became firmly fixed in the SUNDAY — MONDAY Sun. Matinee 2.30 10c - 16c That is what our readers get each week in cows can walk there, too, The fire we consciousness of the English-speak- Eves 7 and 9:15 10c - 25c entertained there this summer was a ilng races as a synonym for "joke." WALLACE BEERY — CHESTER MORRIS — VIRGINIA GREY destructive visitor. Pitiful little pines } But the joke of it all is this: this sticking up everywhere, stumps and _man who, for two centuMes,, has WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS fallen logs scorcHed, great bare pat-, je'en regarded as the King of Jesters, THUNDER AFLOAT ches of blackened] earthj teU-the story. 3yas a solemn fellow who not only EDGAR KENNEDY COMEDY LATEST NEWS And outside all this destruction, al­ *ever joked in his life (except when It is prepared for us by Joseph W. La Bine, a most to the fence, the ploughed fur­ Repeating, his lines on the stage) row. That fire lane so close to the ibut was utterly unable to see the TUESDAY - WED. FAMILY NITES 2 for 25c trained observer and capable writer. It gives fence 1 It wouldn't have included so ioint of a joke when it was told BOBBY BREEN — SALLY BLANE much waste and destruction if it had ihirn by other men. each reader a comprehensive report of the been ploughed sooner. .;' © Weatern Newspaper Union.' 'actwhhappenings-^HrTtper4anee4n-^ar4oriu Sin-Eatlnr. London Custom WAY DOWN SOUTH Michigan is recognized as one of . Sin-eating was a London cusforrr RlbERTTJFTreD-^MRefcE— JtfjyjELTY "GOLD" Europe. It eliminates the countless rumors and the finest areas in the world for bird ;ln the Seventeenth century, when study . . . how manyrof the birds of ia man was hired to eat .bread dur­ the propaganda with which newspapers and your" state can you name? What, has ing a funeral to "eat" away ths THURSDAY AND FRIDAY — OCT. 1$ — 20 dead man's sins. your.garden taught you this summer LANA TURNER — ANN RUTHERFORD — LEON ERROL radio are being flooded, and covers the facts* . . . about plant life . . . about bird life . . . about insect life? No Place for Color Blind . AND ARTIE SHAW AND HIS JITTERBUG BAND Read if each week, and quote it without fear : In Beauvais, the famous tapestry ;city of France, threads of 745 hues of successful contradiction. Anybody Can U.« Want Ada — jare used in weaving the tapestries DANCING CC*ED l Practically Everybody DOM — Pro, 'and there are twenty-five grada­ fitably. tion* to each hue. *», JORDAN, M|CH.), FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1939THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EA8T

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UNDAY I By RUTH WIETH Sl'EARS The DIM LANTERN SCHOOL Lesson " Every one who has, «"v«sr lived By HAROLD I_. LUNDOU15T, D. D. in the country knows the possi­ Dean of The Moody Bible Institute : of Chlcasp. bilities of unbleached muslin. The (Released by Western Newspaper Union,1 source of supply there is flour and food sacks but even purchased by By TEMPLE BAILEY Lesson for October 15 the yard it is an inexpensive, sturdy material for aprons ,and T*S-, O PENN PUBUSHiNO COMPANY—WNU SERVIC* ' . many other things. .'...- Lesson subjects, and Scripture texts se­ lected and. copyrighted by International Council at Religious Education: used by If you have friends who share oermlssion. yotir enthusiasm for interesting and watched him go down the "I'm not hinting, I am telling it aprons, plan and cut them in a THE STORY THUS FAR steps. He waved to her when he straight out." THE TEMPTATION OF JESUS reached his car. They heard Baldy's step in the young, pretty Jane Barnes, who lived with tier brother, Baldwin, in Sher. "Oh, Evans," she said, "I've had ball. Jane, rising, gave Evans' head LESSON TEXT—Matthew 4:1-11. wood Park, near Washington, was not particulurly Impressed when she read GOLDEN TEXT—For we.have not an high- tn«t rich, artraoUve'Ediih'Tbwne hadibeenleK atme altar by DelafieldSlmms, such a day." a pat as she passed him. "You are priest which cannot be touched with the wealthy New Yorker. However, she still ftiused over It when she met Evans They went into the house together. thinking about yourself; too much, feeling of our infirmities; but was in all Follette, a young neighbor, whom the war had left completely discouraged and points tempted like as we are, yet without despondent. Evans had always loved Jane. That morning Baldwin Barnes, on Jane lighted the lamp. "Can't you old dear; stop it." .in.—Hebrews 4:15. his way to work in Washington, offered assistance to a tall, lovely girl in distress. dine with us?" Baldy, ramping in, demanded a later he found a bag she had left in the car, containing a diamond ring on ''I hoped you might ask me. Moth­ detailed account of Jane's adven­ which was inscribed "Del to Edith—Forever." He knew then that his passenger Temptation is the common lot of had been Edith Towne. Already he was Kali In love with her. That night he er is staying with a sick friend. ture. - • discussed the matter with Jane, and they called her uncle, worldly, sophisticated If I go home, I shall sup on bread "And .JUtook Briggs to market," all mankind (I Cor. 10:13). The Frederick Towne. He visited them at their home, delighted with Jane's sim­ and milk." she told him gleefully, midway of strongest and most noble of men plicity. He told them Edith's story. Because her uncle desired iUJEdith Towne are subject to it; angels were had accepted Delafleld Simms, whom she liked but did not love. She disappeared "Sophy's chops will be much bet­ her. recital; "you should have seen immediately after the wedding was to have taken place. The next day Jane him. He carried my parcels—and tempted, and our scripture reveals received a basket of fruit from Towne, and a note asking if he might call again. ter." , She held her flowers up to that even Jesus was tempted. We Mrs. Follette, widowed mother of Evans, was a woman of indomitable courage. him. "Isn't the fragrance heaven­ offered advice—" Impoverished, she nevertheless managed to keep Evans and herself In compara­ ly?" Baldy had no ears for Briggs' at­ recognize that Jesus was tempted tive comfort by running 6. dairy farm. Evans, mentally depressed and dis­ as the Messiah (vv. 3, 6) and as one illusioned, had little self reliance and looked to his mother and Jane for guid­ "Towne gave them to you?" tractions. "Did you get the things ance. Edith Towne phones Baldy in answer to an ad. She asked him to bring She nodded. "Oh, I've been very Miss Towne wanted?" without sin (Heb. 4:15), but it is group; then trimmings may be her pocketbook. Jane calls on Frederick Towne in his elaborate office. grand and gorgeous—lunch at the "We did. We went to the house also true that He was tempted in exchanged and every piece-bag .Chevy Chase club—a long drive aft­ and I waited in the car while Mr. all points as we are, apart from sin, and that we may learn from His will produce something. erward—" she broke off.. "Evans_ , Towne had the bags packed. He The diagram shown here gives youTBBk half-frozen. Sit'heic by'llie I wnnted_raeJo_go in but I wouldn't. temptation how we maymeet and They discussed Mrs. Follette, whose ru» tfjp vipttvrs pv»i- temptation. you cutting dimensions "for the CHAPTER V—Continued fire and get warm. We broughther b.dgs out Willi us." irirt pTirt nf p plflin little apron ' —8— faults furnished a perpetual topic. "I met both trains." "Who's we?" I. What Is Temptation? and shows how to shape the waist­ Jane bought modestly and Mrs. Allison told them that the "Mr. Towne and I, myself," she young Baldwins had dined at Castle "Evans—why will you do such "Temptation is seduction to evil, line. Belts for the bibless type Briggs carried her parcels. He even things?" added the spectacular details. solicitation to wrong. It stands dis­ are rather wide now—two or two made a suggestion as to"the cut of- Manor.__on Thanksgiving. And that "Do you mean that you've been tinguished from trial thus: • trial the steak. , His father, it-seemed^ Jhejrejiadbeen other guests. "I wanted to see you." playing around with him all day?" and a half inches finished. Ties "But you can see me any time—" tests, seeks to discover the man's are generally 4-inches wide and had been a butcher. HowTcarr she afford ft," was the "Not all day, Baldy.* Part of it." unanimous opinion, "with that poor "I cannot. Not when.you are moral -qualities- or_ cha______Je£.;______t ^iS_iong_.as. yotLlike. _ Now, do be They drove back then for Fred­ "I'm not sure that I like it." temptation persuades to evil, de­ daring_when you come tojSoC-Tef-t™ erick. Briggs went up for him, and •boy on her hands?" lunching with fashionable gentlemen "Why not?" "He's sitting up, there on the ter- with gold-lined'pocketbooks." He ludes, that it may ruim GodTries; or adding a~W5. Try srridea-of- jrned to say that Mr. Towne "A man like that. He might fill Satan tempts" (A. M. Pairbairn). jaeeZlMrg. Allison further informed held out his hands to the blaze. "Do your head with ideas." your own. These gay unbleached would -be-down in a moment: - them. "Do~you~ think I'd better-ask -you-Jike-Jun______Temptation is not sin, but yielding muslin aprons are jtfst sugges­ Frederick was, as a matter of f him to come over?" "Mr. Towne? Yes, and I like the CHAFTER^VI tp temptation is sin. Luther said, tions to get you started. fact, finishing a-letter_.to_D_elafiblr| - -They*thought she might, but her things he does for me. I had to "We cannot keep the birds from EDITOR'S NOTE: Th, Simms." - hospitable 'purpose was-never. ful< pinch myself tojje sure it was true.". Baldy Barnes faring forth to find flying over our heads, but we can Sewing Booklet which Mrs. Spears keep them from building nests in "I am assummgTKSPyou-Will ,^r_^s_she_^Upped;outon the "If what was true?" -Edith -Towne- on___S.unday_ morning, has prepared for our readers, con- your mail at the Foinciana, but I porch,-:-*-- -.long,;. Tow limousine ~"uThat-rwas~ wag a fiftnriv ps old as the ages— OurrhairT^v^TemptatiGn cpmesJrom_H«ins-4hir-ty--tAV4^ew-_and_j0jagjnal -within, thatJs^A-anLaur-Qwn. lusts p . hnrripmakprg To get" shall also send a copy to your New stopped in front of the" house, and with the great Frederick -Towne/:' youth .in. .quest of romance. ici aa fm York office. .Edith has asked me to out of it came Jane in all the glory It was very cold and the clouds: :(JameSl: 1,3, 14).. Satanjtlso tempts ' oneM'thS's- e .useful• ' Bo.SKtgtg; _._.__-• "You talk as if he were conferring us (Eph. tlYll). God17 may permit- w return the ring to you. I shall hold of a great bunch of orchids, and a favor." were heavy with wind. But neither "pTy* a'6!Jre^--'-3^s;""Spea-rsr,--iM6.'-S>r- it until I learn where it may be de­ with a man by her side, whose ele­ cold nor clouds could damp his ar­ temptation as a means of proving Desplaines St, Chicago, 111., With '• She had her coat off now and her our faith (James 1:2, 3). livered into your hands. gance measured up to the limousine hat. She came and sat down in the dor—at his journey's.end was.a lady name and address, and 10 cents and the lovely flowers. : "As for myself, I can only say chair opposite*him. '-'Evans," she with eyes of burningHrtue. II. How Temptation Works. in coin; booklet will be postpaid this^—that—my first impulse was to They came up the path and Jane said, "you're jealous." She was still People. w.ere_.going to church-as he ' It is significant that the tempta­ by return mail. kill you. But perhaps I am too civi­ said, "Mrs. Allison, may I present vivid with.the'excitemeni of Jhe aft­ came into the'eity and bells were tions of Jesus were along, the three­ lized to believe that your death ernoon, lighted up by it, her skin ringing, but presently he rode again fold line of the temptations of Adam "'wouktmake things better. You must warmed into color by the swift flow­ in country silences. He crossed the" and Eve (Gen. 3:6)-and -the-general Of Such Is Friendship -uodersland.__pf course,, that you've ing blood beneath. long bridge into Virginia and fol­ threefold temptation of all men, Despite Cicero's "D'e Ami- _put yourself beyond the pale of de­ "Well, I am jealous," he tried to lowed the road to the south. namely,. the lust of the flesh,., the citia" and uncounted other pride of life, and the lust of the cent people." ""'" ^- _smili______^e at ^her , then went on with a It was early and he mei_few cars. - =books and papers on the sub­ touch "of bitterneBsr^Do-^r^-kflOw-^etJiacUthE-jvay been^packed with eyes (I John 2:16). These three ject, friendship remain's difficult Lucy's pencil wavered—-a flush •what I thought about as I sat watchr motors, he would ha~ve~stlir been temptations Teaify—exhaust Satan^s. - -tcL_deftne.__B.ut_ so is .electricity. stained her throat and cheeks—then ing the lights at- Mrs. Allison's? alone in that world of imagination bag of tricks, but he can dress up Both possess a dynamic quality she wrote steadily, as Frederick's Well, as I came over today I passed where he saw Edith Towne and that these three fundamental . tempta­ difficult to catch on the photo­ voice continued: a snowy field—and there was a first wonderful moment of meeting. tions with almost endless variety. graphic plate of words. Both are scarecrow in the midst of it, flutter­ So he entered Alexandria, pass­ He works' ' best understood by their works. "You will^find yourself black­ ing his rags, a lonely thing, an ugly ing through the narrow streets that 1. By. appealing to the flesh (vv. 'A boy once stood on a holloek, balled by several 6T the clubs. What?- thing. Well, -we're two of a kind, speak so eloqHehtly~"of history. Be­ 2, 3). He observes the normal ap­ unwinding, from a reel a string ever your motive, the wolTaTseesTio- Jane, tkat scarecrow and I." yond the town was another stretch petites and desires of a man's body, that stretched in ah arc upward excuse." Her shocked glance stopped him. of road parallel to the broad stream, excites them to a high degree, and. until it was lost in,the clouds. "Evans,'you don't know what you and at' last an ancient roadside •then- suggests an^impi -_Wlial_ar.e_^_s______oing?" some­ He stopped. "Will you read that are saying." inn, of red brick, with a garden at of satisfying them. Hunger _s"rJ6r- over again, Miss Logan?" ., - one asked. •He went on recklessly. "Well, aft­ the back, barren now,' but in sum­ mal and a sign of good health.. "Flying a kite." So Lucy read it—still with that er all, Jane, the thing is this. It's a mer a tangle of bloom, with an ex­ Jesus had fasted forty days _and "But you can't see your kite. hot flush on her cheeks, and when man's looks and his money that panse of . reeds and water plants, Satan took advantage of that fact to How do you know it is there?" she had finished Frederick said, count. I'm the same man inside of extending out into the river, and a suggest the use of His divine power low spidery boat-landing, which "By the pull of the string in "You can lock the ring in the safe me that I was when I went away. to satisfy His hunger. This would my hand,'" the boy answered. until I give you further instruc­ You know that. You might have showed black at this season above involve a denial of His entire _ mis­ tions." loved me. The thing that is left the ice. sion on earth, namely, the redemp­ you don't love. Yet I am the same For years the old inn had been de­ A clerk came in to say that the tion, of man by a divine person who Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a car was waiting, and presently man—" serted, until motor cars had brought had become a real man. As he flung the words at her, her back its vanished glories. Once tonic which has been helping women Frederick Towne went away and 2. By appealing to pride (vv. 5, of all ages for nearly 70 years. Adv. Lucy was left alone in the great eyes met his steadily. "No," she more its wide doors were open. 6). Satan misapplied Scripture to room, which was not to her a for­ said, "you are not the same man." There was nothing pretentious about tempt Jesus to presumption on the est of adventure, as it had seemed "Why not?" it. But Baldy knew its reputation assumption that He was exercising Self Faith to Jane, but a great prison where "The man of yesterday did not for genuine hospitality. faith;-- God had promised to keep Doubt whom you will but never -slip t.iEge__L___L______chains^ think—dark thoughts—" He wondered how Edith had kept Him "in all his ways" (Ps. 91:11),. yourself.—Bovee. • She thought of Delafleld Simms The light had gone out of her as herself hidden in such a place. It To cast himself down from the tem- "lTlie had blown it With a breathe was ama7ing_th_at no one had dis- ple was not one of the ways in sailing fast to southern waters. Of "Jane," he said, unsteadily, "I am those purple seas—the blazing stars They came up the path. covered her/That some hint oi ner which Christ was called to walk sorry—" presence had not been given to the in the splendid nights. Delafleld had Mr. Towne, and will you give him a Satan comes, tp..us. with the. same She melted-at-once and began to newspapers.' kind of temptation. If He cannot GOOD told her of them. They had often cup of tea?" scold him, almost with tenderness. ~H«re U Amazlnr R«H*f of talked together. He found her in a quaint sitting get us to forsake faith, he tempts Condition* DIM to Sluggish Bow*lm "Indeed, I will," Mrs.. Allison "What made you look at the scare­ room upstairs. "I think," she saio She turned the ring around-iei-i=_-«r us to become fanatic and to proudly If you think all laxatives seemed to rise on wings of gratifica­ crow? Why didn't you turn your to him, as he came in, "that you are substitute presumption, for faith. art alike, just try this finger, studying the carved figure. tion, "only it is chocolate and not back on him, or if you had to look, »11 v»g*t»bl» taxatlv*. very good-natured to take all this 3. By appealing to the eyes' (vv. thorough. refreshing, Invigoratlnf. De­ The-woman with the butterfly wings tea." why didn't you wave and say, 'Cheer trouble for me—" pendable relief from sick faeadachca. bilious spells, was exquisite—but she did not know 8, 9). By showing Christ the king­ tired feeling when associated with conatiptitloa. And Frederick said that he adored up, old chap, summer's coming, and "It isn't any;'trouble." His assur­ U/iilimif Di*Ir £** a 25c bo* o( NR fron> yo^ her name. She slipped the ring on chocolate, and presently Mrs. Alli­ you'll be on the job again'? To me ance was gone. With, her hat off doms of the world and offering them T1IUIUUL nlSK druggist. Make the test—then to Him by the short-cut of a brief If not delighted, return the box to us. We will the third finger of her left hand. Its son's little living-room was all in a there's something debonair in a she was doubly wonderful. He felt refund the purchase diamonds blazed. pleasant flutter; and over on Jane's scarecrow in summer—he dances act of worship rather than by the price. That'* fair. his youth "and inexperience, yet Get NR Tablets today. She locked it presently in the safe terrace, Evans Follette sat, a lonely in the breeze and seems to.fling de­ words came to him, "And I didn't way of the cross, Satan tempted kOTO-NIGHT —then came back and read the letter sentinel,, and pondered on the limou­ fiance to the crows." do it for you, I did it.for myself." Him again. Here the devil showed which Towne had signed. She sealed sine, and the elegance of Jane's es­ He fell in with her mood. "But She laughed. "Do you always say his true desire that man should wor-f it and stamped trie envelope. Then cort. his defiance is all bluff." such nice things?" ship him rather than God. Use of Things she wrote a letter of her own. She Once old Sophy called to him, "How do you know? If he keeps "I shall always say them to you. III. How to Meet Temptation (vv. Even the best things ill used be­ mode a little ring of her hair, and "You'll ketch your death, Mr. Ev­ away a crow, and adds an ear of And you mustn't mind. Really," 4, 7, 10). come evils; and, contrarily, the fastened it to the page. Beneath it ans." corn to a farmer's store—hasn't he Jane would have recognized return­ 1. By the. right use-ef-Scripture. worst things used well prove she wrote, "Lucy to Del—forever.!' He shook his head and smiled at fulfilled his destiny?" ing confidence in that cock of the If Jes,us needed that weapon, how good.—Bishop Hall. She kissed the words, held the her. A man who had lived through "Oh, if you Want to put it that head, "I'm just a page—twanging can w.e dp without it? How can we crackling sheet against her heart. a winter in the trenches thought way. I suppose you are hinting that a lyre." use Scripture if we do not study it Her eyes-were shining. The great nothing' of this. Physical cold was I can keep away a crow or two—" (TO BE CONTINUED/ and hide -it in our hearts? room was no longer a prison. She easy to endure. The cold that 2. By dependence on God. Every saw beyond captivity to the open clutched at his heart was the thing Scripture used by Jesus honored sea. that frightened him. Dust Is a Constant Enemy Throughout the Home God. We cannot fight Satan in "bur own strength. To attempt to do so The early night came on. There -Mrs. Allison andJ In the home, dust is misplaced window and door frames and on is to fail utterly.. The real victfiry- now in Mrs. Allison's for the Christian is to bring" Satan dies with whom Jane was to drink house, and within was warmth ana tttrt.' Its-proper-hahitat. may_be__the_ J^ilingsasveil as on mantels, fur' tea, were neighbors. Mrs. Allison broad acres of our farm land, or, niture and th<> ROOTS;—fitrt-tmsr-ef- back to the cross where Christ won OH SPREAD ON ROOSTS laughter. The old ladies, excited Trdecisive. vi_ct9rjr6\^T~fth-T: lived alone, and the other three lived and eager, told each other in flash? resolved into itsi, components, their course, is hot nearly so apparent in the homes of their several sons ing asides that Mr. Towne was the place may be the seashore, the coal to the homemaker. , 3. By denouncing' Satan. Jesus and daughters. They played cards minSTftd a dozen or more organic Suppose all the furnishings, up­ sent him on his way. We may do The GreaterUeed great Frederick Towne. The one the same in Jesus' name. It is al­ every Friday afternoon, and Jane whose name was so often in the pa­ sources. Singly, all these range from holstering and floor coverings of a To pity distress is but human; always came over when Mrs. Alli­ the harmless to the downright harm­ room were made in pure white! It ways a sefious error to try to argue pers, and his niece, EditW, had been with Satan or to engage in any dis-- to relieve it is Godlike.—Horace son entertained and helped her with deserted at the altar. "You know, ful, points out a writer in the Cleve­ would take less than a day to con­ Mann. the refreshments. They were very my dear, the one who. ran away." land Plain Dealer. vince even the most negligent house> cussion with him. Let us meet him simple.and pleasant old ladies with with Scripture and with a "Get thee When Jine said that she must be Merged as dust, and within the wife that there is constant need for a nice sense of their ow-n dignity. four walls of our homes, however, the consistent ure of her vacuurr. hence."^ >. getting home, they pressed around IV. The Result. At any rate, they had Jane. Some her, sniffing her flowers, saying it should be attacked wherever and cleaner. Watch Your of the other young people scorned whenever it is encountered. Everyone knows, for instance, Satan left and angels came to pleasant things of her prettiness— minister to Christ. The overcom­ these elderly tea-parties, and if th,ey hinting of Towne's absorption in her. Dust is our constant and ubiquit­ how soon white clothing soils, ye\ | Kidneys/ came, were apt to show it in their ous enemy, and the worst of i£ is dust and soot lodge just as consist­ ing of temptation results in peace, manner. But Jane was never scorn­ She laughed and sparkled. It was that it is present in so many places ently on all tho exposed surfaces ir. victory, and blessing. This is ever Help ThM-eieanae the Blood ful. She always had the time of a joyous experience. Mr. Towne Of which we are not readily aware. the home. It is simply that they so in the life of the believer. Temp­ of Harmful Body Wuto had a way of making her feel im­ tation overcome makes us stronger Your kldiityi ut eomuntlr -Uterine her life, and the old ladies felt par­ When soot filters in around the are not nearly so evident, which w»rt« rn»tt«r from th< blood stmm. But ticularly joyous and juvenile when portant. And the adulation of the makes us forget the constant need to meet the next temptation, and kldneyi Kim«tlrn« l«t in their work—d» old ladies added to her elation. edges of a loosely adjusted window not Mt M N»tur» InttndMl—fill to r»- she was one ot them. and settles on the sill, any careful for using our dependable family also enables us to help out weaker nrora .mpuritlM tint, if reulnwi, «_»» As Frederick and Jane walked friend, the vacuum cleaner. brethren. POMK the «y_t«ra and lipnt U» wktt* Butrttris aflernoon-Jane-wag-UU^ horriemaker is quick to remove it, body machlnory. Tea was always served promptly aSSsTtB^feeTTow^s-lhe^mhr ~But how many-woTTierrstop-to-refrect- - Symptom m. b* n>n<»t btclnebt at four. And it happened that there house on the terrace, a gaunt figure LargesrUrSTCSMSt^— —E_i_»m_ng__Oj_r_Lives_ penlitmt tmdtchir, stucu of dittln_», that not all such soot remains on the -«W_Hf-^_»l»kUr-*w»UlD«^U-l!Mll _ were popovers. So, of course, they rose from the top step and greeted sill? Some surely sifts past the sill, The Ail-American canal is by far Religion does not consist in the under tl» eyee—» (Mint of mmroa couldn't wait. them. the largest irrigation ditch in the performance of certain ceremonial Mixlety and low of pep and •trentth. drops onto the floor, and is not near­ Other ilfna ot kidney or bladder dla- "I telephoned to Sophy," said: "Evans," Jane scolded; "you need ly so likely to get equally quick United States. It is 80 miles long acts at specified times, outside order ro«y be buraini, maty or to* Mrs. Allison, "and Jane has gone a guardian. Don't you know that you and thorough attention. and has an initial capacity of 15,000 which acts and times it has no frenuent urination. place: bbt consists in framing our Therthere ihoulihould bbe nno doubt that prom..romp. j * to town. I suppose something has shouldn't sit out in such weather as The same is true of all the finer cubic feet of water per second. The treatmenjifr______i&t _.__It, _•______wteer. _L_'than_ netlect_.e__?_> . #1. kept her. Anyhow we'll start in." this?" maximum section' [has a width of whole life, and all our acts, upon a Dctn't Pillt. Docn't have been uinninf dust that continually is sifting in newfrteuda for mora tban forty yean. So'the old ladies-ate the popovers "I'm-not cold." through loose openings, or is being 232 feet at the water surface and distinct view of pur position as cre­ They key*, a n_.tlo.i-w.de reputation. and drank hot sweet chocolate, and She "presented him to Frederick. carried in' through doorways,^ or a bottom width of 162 feet, with s ated beings, changed by the fact of Are recommended by fnteful people th* found them not as delectable as "Won't you come in, Mr. Towne?" comes into the house from faulty water depth of-21 fee^. The earth our creation, with duties both to our wintry OTW. Atk your MfeftMrl when Jane was there to sha^them. But he would not. He would call heating equipment. Furthermore, it excavation amounted to approxj fellow creatures and to our Creator. > Thing* wtrnv indeed, a bit dull. her up. Jane stood on the porch settles everywhere, on. the WJn of matelV 65,000.000 cubic yards. —Edward Oenison. _ r , J...

THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EA8T JORDAN, MICH.), FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 193»,

Let Them Help! More Gay Plaids and Stripes Strange Facts ^G ^¾ This Season Than Ever Seen l Adam's DayDay I / Children Learn t Slow in Anger ATTERN I S/nffl in Anonr I I B •Spotted Aristocrats By CHERIE NICHOLAS EPARTH ENT By Experience The world's 250,000,000 Moslems imimiuiiiiiii D observe Friday as their Sabbath It will be lovely made up in thin;., because, according to Mohammed, wool, flat crepe or sheer velvet, • MENTAL LIST OF POS- this was the day Adam was cre­ with a gleaming brooch or clip sible activities tvill do much ated, the"day he entered and was at the plain v- neckline. also expelled from Paradise, the toward solving problem of day of his repentance, the day of Three Styles in Aprons. naughtiness. Childish energy his death and the day he will be This practical pattern, 1829, re­ resurrected. ally gives you three apron styles, demands outlet, and should because the pinafore part 1s per­ be put to a constructive pur­ forated so that you can make it pose through suggestion. Chameleons are "slow-motion" two ways, and both ways are thor­ fighters. When two enemies start oughly protective and useful, with a battle, many minutes, even buttoned straps, crossed in the By LELIA MUNSELL hours, pass between each thrust back, that won't slip off. Both "T WISH," mourned Sue Tressel, and parry. ' Sometimes the only pinafores and .the little tie-around 1 "I had somJgJring to do. I wish waythat-one-can-tell-a-fight-is-in. |-have-a-pretty-ftare^—Make-these- Arlene didn't have the meastesy or progress is by the color of their of linen, gingham, lawn or ba­ that I'd had them so I could go skins, which have turned black tiste, and tuck two or three sets over and play with- her." with rage. away for. gifts, too. "I expect," smiled Mother, "that- * * * No. 1830 is designed for sizes 36, Arlene wishes much the same thing. - - Increasing age diminishes at­ 38, 40, 42, 44. 43, 48, 50 and 52. She's just sick enough to have to tendance at the movies to an as­ Size 38 requires 5V2 yards of 39 inch'material wlth_J.ong-.sle.ey-es; stay in bed, and just well enough to tonishing degree. Surveys indi-. 7 want something to do. Maybe you cate that the number wh6 no long­ 4 /s yards with short. could fix something for her to do. er attend increases from 50 per No. 1829 is designed for sizes 34, That would give you something to ! cent at the age of forty to 75 per 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36 -doy-teo^ .^= j_ cent at sixty to 98 per cent at requires, for No. 1., 1¾ yards of "What?" \ eighty. —— - 35 inch material and 0 yards bias "Arlene's mother has a little lap- j Although about nine thousand fold; for No. 2, 1½ yards of 35 board that Arlene could use for past- I members of Britain's aristocracy' inch material and 2 yards.of pleat­ ing. Of course, you wouldn't want a , and sporting world are admitted IF YOU take a large size and ing; for No. 3, 1¾ yards of 35 big scrapbook if you were sick, j to the Royal Enclosure at Ascot, * want to have your afternoon inch material. but—" England, at each meeting, thou­ dress fit with the perfection the New Ball Pattern Book. Sue's face beamed. "FirmaKe a ' sands are "excluded Because they smart -silhouette demands, send Special extra! Send today for little—scrapbook—^of seme—of- -my ^re in bankruptcy,- involved—in^-a- for 183.0..-'-It-'s- vexy„easy to work your new Fall Pattern Book with new notepaper," she said delighted­ divorce, owe too much money with, and is carefully detailed to ly. "Arlene can handle that." to a bookmaker or have not been give you the uplifted biistline and perfect patterns, for all shapes and Mother punched the holes for her presented at a royal court.—Col- narrow hips that are essentially sizes. Save money and know the ~" and shelled the sheetstogether with lier's. 7_ important to a slenderizing effect; keen satisfaction of personally- ribbon. Then she had the happiest kind of a time finding" and cutting by making your own frocks.with out pretty pictures that would fit. these smart, carefully cut designs. _When she" had "enough, Mother said" ItemsoUriteresL, j_Xo_u_can't go . wrojig—every pat- she could carry them AROUND tern includes a "itep-by-step sew "It will be. all right -to -go ^tq the art, to guide- bpginm?rs Prira door." So Sue ^trotted across the of Pattern Bookr-loci:-':'•_•:, :"••'••- street with the scrapbook-material *3HOUSEI Send your order to The Sewing and a bottle of paste. Circle Pattern-Dept., Room 1324, "Tomorrow we will think of some­ Preserving Rugs. — Constant Shiny Windows. — A lump of 211 W. Wacker Dr,, Chicago, 111. thing else," said Mother. The next turning preserves rugs. They starch dissolved in the water with Price of patterns, 15 cents (in should' be turned around every six which windows are to be washed coins) each. morning she laid out some maga­ months1. will make the glass' shine. zines, all of them open at paper dolls. "When you're sick you like to NameChanges.; C\F ALL the enthusiams taking spicuously enhance at the waistline, Metallic Scarfs.—Silver-and -gold Retaining Color of- Spinach;— play with paper dolls," she said to embroidered scarfs will not tar­ "SiamTs the latest country to Sue. • ^-^ the„world of fashion by storm Which reminds us that designers The color of spinach will be pre­ change itSTiame. . It is now to this season, there is none that ex­ are very enthusiastic in regard to nish when . packed away if served if a_pinch of soda is added "O, this is going to be a nice wrapped in black paper. be known as Muang-Thaj, the land -thing to do," was the smilipg—re­ ceeds the mad rush that is now on ornamental buttons, either large to the w~ater in which it is boiled. of the free. : for gorgeously and colorful like these, or veritable sponse. She began to sing and sang gay plaids and 1 Towns sometimes" change tlieif"" stripes. jewel pieces~lH their settings of col- Distributing Bluing. — .When Tight Curtain Springs.—To tight­ almost all the time she was cutting making blue-water, try adding a names, too. Comparing the latest out the dolls and putting each doll ' The showings in plaids and stripes -| oreH stones. en springs in curtain rollers, hold U. S. Postal Guide with former includes types for every occasion, If there is a school-faring maiden little._.common salt. This helps to and her wardrobe into a separate distribute . the color evenly and the rollers firmly and with pincers issues, a newspaper .finds that envelope. Then Mother brought a informal or formal. When you want who has not turned plaid-minded tighten the end springs. "Frugality has disappeared from informality the biggest daytime hit this season during'tms'epMe^rc"^ 1¾^°^ fr°m looklng * * * Pennsylvania, Graft from Colo­ big envelope. of the season is the richly colorful streaked and patchy. . "When you're sickit's nice to have plaids now sweeping through fash­ Cleaning Felt Hat.—To clean a rado, Coin from Kentucky, and wool clan plaids and if you are-a ion realms be it 'known that she is •V *•-•* Truth from Arkansas." Worst of something to smile over. Can you connoisseur on plaids you can get. - Spicing >Your Cookies.—Add one light felt hat brush well to" re­ read what I .have written?'l ' she certainly an exception to the rule. move., all dusf, then cover with all, Love, Arkansas, has become J_a-_5i!'Lj»-clari; patternings and colorings-that When^you—see such—eye-compelling teaspi).an. of: cimiajrionandone-Jialf Ash ..Fiat.._. asked. -are authentic. Robin Hood reds, for­ a teaspoon of cloves to your favor­ trench" chalk.—--betHStarr&Tfcr^-se-Vi .Sue read: -outfits as that' shown above to!'the Love let down. And burned out. est greens,, golden yellows, radiant right in the illustration one readily ite cooky recipe. The two spices eral hours before brushing off. "These dolls cannot take the measles browns and heather tones mingle in understands the reason why such a will convert an ordinary cooky from you. and one grand splurge of gay color that fuss and furor is being made over dough into something delightfully Dressing them all will be something makes merry throughout the whole handsome wool plaids this fall. This different. to do." -program of fashion this season and most attractive 'daytime frock fash­ . * * * A Quiz With Answers After enclosing the little envelopes we mean.just-that for•• everything ioned of fine Scottish elan wool plaid Apple. Fritters. — Pare several ASK ME Q she trotted across the street and from hats to bags, gloves to wear was selected for-illustration from apples, slice them, sprinkle the Offering Information left them at Arlene's door. with cloth coats and suits and en­ among a flock of gorgeous plaids slices with sugar and allow them on Various Subjects The third morning was bright and tire costume ensembles is being displayed at a prevufc showing of to stand in a cold place for an ANOTHER f sunny. "How about taking Arlene made of plaid (or stripes if you autumn and winter fashions present­ hour. Meanwhile, make a batter please) this season. a bit of outdoors?" suggested Moth­ ed by the Style Creators of Chicago. from one cup flour, two beaten The Questions The Answers er. "Do you know the names of the As to formal evening occasion, It is typical of schoolgirl ^choices eggs, one-half cup milk, one grated leaves of all the trees in our yard? have you seen the gorgeous metal- this season. lemon rind, two tablespoons sugar 1. What are the following: (a) 1. (a) Various species of yucca See if you can think_up a game for- threaded silk and wool stripes that and one-fourth teaspoon salt. Dip Adam's needle; (b) Adam's peak; plants; (b) Mountain peak in Cey­ Arlene." Had you thought of a Roman (c) Adam's profession? lon; (c) Gardening. are being made into jackets, blouses striped wool jacket to wear with the cold apple slices in the batter and skirts for dine and dance wear? 2. Because such wells were first Help Children When Necessary. different skirts, of dark monotone and fry in deep fat. Sprinkle with 2. Why is an artesian well so- sunk in Artois (anc. Arte-sium), After a time Sue came running uv ^f not, the joy of anticipation is wool? The biggest argument we powdered sugar and serve. called? The newest dinner dresses France. her eyes shining, "Could I get some yours can make in favor of such a selec­ 37"Wh~at do "tBe~Taciirg clulhes —3. A jockey's uulfil seldom weighs pieces of paper and pin a-different contrast fabrics . and colors after tion is the stunning- style pictured including boots of a jockey weigh? more than 30. ounces. leaf tO"SSch and let her write what the manner shown to the right in above to the left in the group. Here Flowered Hat Came 4. Monaco, the smallest "state," is she thinks their names are under the picture. In this instance the is an example qf the effective way 4. Which are the two smallest To Do Double Duty states in Europe? \ • - -•• 8 square miles, and San Marino, them?" skirt is of yellow jersey, topped with in which designers are working out the next smallest state, is 38 square • a jacket-blouse of yellow metal cloth Mother nodded. "So that she need color alliances. Under this Roman A young matron found herself 5. A gnomon is a person of no miles. ( not think too hard, write the names horizontally striped in exotic greens striped wool jacket this lady of high importance, • a • dwarf, Scottish and orange, and stripes of glittering^ somewhat hustled by the number 5. A geometrical figure. ] "feir^er on amrther-sheetpf paper; fashion-wears^a .chartreuse ..blouse and variety c-f _her_engagements.. chieftain or a geometrical figure? 6. A small river. \ but don't arrange the leaves in the gold weave. of silk crepe draped from a demure A strikingly beautifulldinner gown One day in particular she found 6. To what does the song, l. An" ampere", named" "after" "An- 7 same order. Tomorrow you can neckline and rendered uneven at troublesome, for she had to go dre Ampere, French scientist who give .her some more leaves with the is pictured below to the left. The the waistline by a black serpentine "Comin' Through the Rye" refer? shirtwaist top is of lustrous black first to a funeral service and established the relationship be­ name of each written underneath, belt. The plain skirt is of black then to a garden party. 7. The unit of current or flow tween electricity and magnetism. and she can change the names or velvet. The long flared skirt of wool. of electricity is called—an am­ sheer wool is plaided in brilliant ' She solved the dress problem by 8. Dr. Rossiter Johnson, in "Al­ the leaves on her sheets if any are (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) wearing smart but sober clothes pere, a volt or a watt? phabet of Rhetoric," says—" 'If wrong." tones of gold, green, cyclamen and deep wine. Two large buttons con­ and taking in a hat box a flow­ 8. Which is the correct idiomat­ worse comes to worst' is often Soon Sue had samples of all the Porcelain Chains ered hat which, during the service, ic expression—"If worst comes to rendered meaningless , by being leaves in the yard and was earnest^ she placed in the vestry. worst" or "if worse comes to changed to 'If worst comes to ly at work preparing them for Ar­ Scoring Success Her sense of quiet pleasure at worst"? worst.' The original and correct lene. Metal Cloth this successful solution of the form is evident on a moment's Mother had a large envelope With pottery and china jewelry problem was somewhat marred, 9. What American city was first thought. It is essentially a con­ ready, on which she had written: scoring such success, it has been known as New Amsterdam? tinuation of from 'bad to worse— only a short step' to the use of por­ however, when the coffin was "Cut out each name and pin it light. brought into church. For repo& 10. What kind of foundations are from worse to worst.' " Tomorrow you'll see which names are celain for their chains. Thin plastic links rather than metal for neck­ ing in' the center of the wreaths under the buildings in Venice, 9. New York. right." oh the coffin was her flowered hat. Italy? 10. Mostly piles. Sue's mother was not only under­ laces and bracelets are sometimes standing, but she was wise. She opaque and sometimes transparent kne"w~childish energy demanded an and will not tarnish as some metals outl6t."Tn this instance she made use do. They are, of course, much light­ -of-two-fund*rnentaLpriiiciples^She er than metal, and add the fln- gave Sue an objective: to help make ishing—touch-r:to--the—whole—sefaeftiej MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF-MORE PUFFS PER PACKI Arlene happy, and she led Sue to of lightweight"jewelry. think out what to do herself. By burning 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest* Much of what we call naughtiness Three in One New selling brands tested -sloUer than any of them-CAMELS give in children is lack of something to do. Let us keep our thinking caps a smoking plus equal to handy and have, for ready use, a Design in Coats mental list of possible activities. As Somethirtg-startMngly different in we use these, from time to time, let fur coats for next season is the us give the children help where three-in-one design. It is made as needed, but not to the extent of de­ a.jacket, skirt and sash. When the stroying their own initiative. jacket and skirt are worn together, they make a full length coat, with And let us help them to help in the sash for a belt. The jacket the things we do. It's sometimes can be worn separately, as can the tiresome to have them "messing skirt, which, combined with the around," but that is the way they sash, forms a cape that will do for learn. And we mustn't forget to evening wear.. appreciate the children's efforts, no matter how crude—ignore them, or Winter Blues -criticize too harshly,- and wft chill j £ —Last—falL_and_many~=pre ceding their enthusiasm falls, saw you tucking away until National Kindergarten Auoclatlon (WNU Service.) spring" a}l of your blue clothes. This Again metal cloth for the cocktail year that will not be necessary, tot Chinese Shampoos or dinner .gown becomes first page navy blue is to be worn while the For many .centuries before the news. The picture shows a flatter­ snow falls; and winter blue, a new ing mode carried out in* gold lame. shade, will be worn as an acces­ West intruded upon the East, Chi­ sory color with black. nese women used hair shampoos, to The naivete of the smocking on achieve the sleek glossiness that is the sleeves is offset by the luxuri­ ous, clips of topaz and diamonds at Three Golden Feathers the principal pride of their coiffures. the top of the midriff girdle. Not "6ne of the most beautiful pieces Some of these shampoos were made only does, fashion spotlight gowns of jewelry seen at the Paris open' of crushed mulberry leaves, rose made entirely of metal cloth as in ings was designed by Maggy Rouff. and jasmine perfumed oils and "pao this instance but equally in favor Three golden feathers, veined with LONG-BURNING hua ttu"—pine tree shavings—the are jacket blouses worn with velvet tiny diamonds, are held together by PENNY FOR PENNY YOUR latter used for their resinous' con­ •kirta-. . a diamond-studded bowknot. tent and balsamic . odor. BEST CIQARETTE BUY CAMELS COSTLIER TOBACCOS •I; THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1939.

STATE OF MICHIGAN — ORDER mands for economy and hopingi that forced by the present commission. Under this plan the three-man infirmary, and other services. The OF THE CONSERVATION COM~| local controtfor relief would aid in A hitch also developed between the county Welfare board wili .either be­ third man will be responsible for the MISSION — RACCOON — LOW­ realizing this objective, passed a law supervisors who wished to control the come a working board whose mem­ social .security funds — unemploy­ ER PENINSULA. „ Michigan that givesthe„coujvJ# supj^jsjyrj^t^e spending of all relief funds and the bers draw annual salaries and devote ment compensation,, old age assist The Director of Conservation, hav­ whip hand with certain limitations, social security administration at thSF'fulFtTrfie-tpTheir duties' or will and-so-tm. ing made a thorough investigation re­ First, the act attached a string to Washington which adhered strictly to become a policy board with per diem Each administrator will get $3,000 lative to trapping of raccoon in the Mirror- - - the "home rule" proviso by requiring a policy of hiring skilled, trained allowance and with the actual work a year salary. , ' , Lower Peninsula, recommends cer­ Non-partiaan State News Letter counties to pay the cost of local ad­ workers on a non-partisan, civil ser-' being done by full-time administra­ Unless Washington rules otherwise, tain regulations. By GENE ALLEMAN ministration — an expense which the vice basis, thus minimizing any tors. the social security administrator must THEREFORE, the Conservation Michigan Press Assaciation centralized system (or state control chance df political mishandling of Federal-state funds (social secur­ meet rigid civil service requirements Commission, by authority of Act 230, at Lansing) had previously borne. ' federal or state funds. ity) will be expended by persons who for a competent, trained man in the P. A. 1925, hereby orders that for meet federal civil service standards. field of social welfare. Supervisors Second, more administrative re­ Supervisors proposed, in some 1 a period of one year it shall be .un­ Lansing -.— Home rule for adminis­ sponsibility meant more financial re­ counties, to engage a single director State-county funds will be handled can ' pick who they please for their lawful to trap raccoon in the Lower tration: of relief," authorized by the sponsibility. That called for raising whom they would hold responsible for by persons who meet requirements two members on the-board, and the Peninsula north of the north line of 1939 state legislature as part of an the "ante" in some counties which administration of all welfare funds established by the local county board. state commission fs Expected to con­ T. 16 N. and west of Saginaw Bay "economy" program, is coming home had coasted along, letting the state — direct relief hy the state and coun­ This, in brief, will.constitute the cur in their recommendation for the excepting from November IB to De to roost in more than 80 counties this carry most of their load. ty governments, unemployment com­ third man who is to represent the Week. • . ' *' 1 "dual system." cember 15, 1939, inclusive, and south Third, a practical limitation was pensation and old age pension jointly For example, Genesee county has a state in welfare activity. But the so­ of the north line of«T. 16,N. and east County supervisors' are in session. imposed by an arbitrary slicing of the by state and federal governments, three-man working board. One man cial security administrator must hur­ of Saginaw Bay, including all of Hur­ During the last, gubernatorial cam­ fiscal relief appropriation (1939-40) and so on. . will administer direct relief. Another dle the civil service test of proven on County, excepting from December paign supervisors urged defeat of th^ from $15,000,000 to $8,750,000, or a Washington was unyielding to sug­ will be in charge of hospitalization, competency. - 1 to December 15,1939, inclusive. 1937 welfare act. They insisted that reduction of nearly one-half. gestions "for an integrated system un­ ' Signed, sealed, and_ ordered pub­ a centralized system of providing re­ True, legislators prayed that busi­ less it was. established ' according to lished this 14th day of July, 1939. lief to jobless and unempioyables was ness would pick up, that the new plan civil service requirements. P. J. HOFFMASTER fodder for a highly trained social would effect hew economies, and that And there hangs another interest- workerj yet-^was-a-luxur^-that-Mich- - 0jjgg^or> Department; of counties would^bsOTb tmTlJaiance^ofiJTriE^tclrin-the-MichigaTrw^lfETPrBit ^ Conservation. igan could not afford. Local control the need. The present state social uation today* ., • Conservation Commission by: would lower costs, they pleaded. Many welfare commission headed by Wal­ INSULATE YOUR HOME WITH W. H. LOUTIT, Chairman. voters agreed. ter F. Gries of Ishpeming; has turn­ Clvil Service WAYLAND OSGOOD, Secretary, The 1937 welfare act was defeat­ ed a deaf ear to occasional cries for O adv.40-4. This Saturday (Oct. -A.i) written ed, and the problem was thrown into a special session of the legislature. tests will be conducted by the civil © the laps of 1939 legislators. Even Mel McPherson, unofficial state service commission for Social workers %suhXuuj A new law was enacted whereby spokesman for the supervisors, has and social work administrators who nnT The OequeofTriver inTresque Isle |Tfanaiimr~of relief was-returned to aSfiloTTished—countiesto prepare to are to handle the social security county is the only river in the south- counties. The state was pledged to carry their part of the load. Having money. W . ern peninsula of Michigan that has a match local payments, dollar for dol­ asked for home rule, supervisors were id lar. A three-member board was to be The minimum requirements for a SAVES H FAT • SAVES FUEL • KEEPS V0U falls in its course. tnlH t.n ahoiilrip.r the new responsibil- social, work administrator under fed- set up in each county, two members ities cheerfully. This they are doing eral standards are these: "Four years WARHkH in WiSTLR AND COOLER IN SUMMER of which were to be named by the for the most part, although grumb­ of experience\ in social welfare work MAIL-SCHEDULE supervisors and the third man to be ling profusely and loudly against in a public or private social agency, appointed by the state social welfare Washington's hard-boiled attitude one year of wbich shall have been in EAST JORDAN P.O. commission. .that spending' of social security mon­ a responsible administrative capacity • fced Top Insulating Wool is a fireproof, vermin OUTGOING This sounds simple, but complica­ ey (unemployment compensation, old and completion of two years of col-,| proof insulation made from a molten mass of min­ tions were numerous. age assistance, etc.) must be done on­ North and Sotrtfay lege training.including or supplemen- erals. The long, fine fibres make it look like finely Tnsmi. m. ly by persons hired .Under federal ted-by coursea.in the social sciences. spun sheep's wool and you know how wool' coh- civil service standards. — at 6:30 p.m. previous night. ~^^Rlgfier'classes lor social work ~a

Management, circulation, etc., of R. G. WATSON the Charlevoix County Herald, pub­ lished weekly at East Jordan, Michi­ FUNERAL gan, as-required by the Act of Con­ gress of August 24, 1912. DIRECTOR Publisher—G. A. Lisk, East Jordan Michigan. Phone 66 Editor—G'. A. Lisk, Mrcnigam.. ;::. ~ ~.—— MONTTMENTS Managing-Editor—G. A Jordan, Michigan/ EAST. JORDAN, - MICH. Business Manager—G. A. i East Jordan, Michigan. Owner—G. A. Lisk, East Jordan, BENJAMIN BUSTARD Michigan. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and PAUL LOVELAND and other security holders, holding 1 GENERAL BUILDING AND per cent or more at total amount of LICENSED ELECTRICAL bonds, mortgages "or other securities, — State Bank of East Jordan. CONTRACTORS G. A. LISK, Publisher. New or Repair Work of All Kinds Sworn to- and subscribed before me this 9th day of October, 1939. REASONABLE TERMS GRACE E. BOSWELL, Phone 247 — East Jordan Notary Public. Address: P. O. Box 64, E. Jordan My Commission expires Jan. 18, 1942 M9SMS» rant ST Again W. O. CANOUTS Jeweler 38 Years Experience. Weekly Reliable and Honest Service Office at Residence Juit Back . —Nctus of Jordan Inn. ... EAST JORDAN, — MICH.' * l^^^^ JEBf^^SSJ Please don't bring or call for work Analysis during the day on Saturdays. by Joseph W. La Bine Look at the greatly Increased size Tune into gear with Chevrolet's New Only Chevrolet gives such high quality at such low cost. Givercrnrreader8 each week and luxury of this car with new Exclusive Vacuum-Power Shift.... FARMERS a comprehensive report of the longer wheelbase and stunning new Test its matchless combination of . . . Low Prices . . . Low Oper­ important, verified happen­ "Royal Clipper'' styling.... And then power, acceleration, smoothness and ating Costs . . . Low Upkeep. ATTENTION ings in war-torn Europe, and economy.... And then you will know in our own country. you will know it's the streamlined No other motor car can beauty leader of the low-price field it's the best-driving, best-riding DEAD STOCK You can rely upon it as match its all-round value being authentic, free from and the biggest value money can buy 1 and best-performing low-priced carl REMOVAL the countless unconfirmed -rumors-and-fronv-ttte-propa— TTioneXolIect ganda with which European NEW "ROYAL CUPPER" STYLING • BIGGER INSIDE AND O0TSIDrTr>)EW-F«LL-VlSiON-BODIES-BY-HSHEIL- 1 :UlW** Prompt Service nations are flooding us. XW^ " NEW EXCLUSIVE VACUUM-POWER SHIFT • "THE RIDE ROYAL"—Ch»vrol»f'i P«rf»et«d KnwActlon Riding Quote It as your source of Syit.rn* • SUPER-SILENT VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE • ALL-SILENT SYNCRO-MESH TRANSMISSION information regarding the CWofef fiai mor« than 175 Important medtn Itatunt. ^ SpecUl D. Lu«e .ml M..ter De Lue Scria VALLEY activities of the war. CHEMICAL CO. HEALEY SALES CO. - East Jordan Telephone Gaylerd 123 rea d it each wee)

r THfc CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1939r <+• STATE OF MICHIGAN — ORDER mauds for economy and hoping, that forced by the present commission. Under this plan the three-man infirmary, and other services. The OF THE CONSERVATION COM­ local control for relief would aid in A hitch also developed between the county welfare board will either be­ third man will he responsible for the MISSION — RACCOON — LOW- realizing this objective, passed a law supervisors wdio wished to control the come a working board whose niem- social security funds'p- unemploy­ fiR-PE-NINSUiA lg&EL •t4mt-g4v-eK—t,he-c*o tin fy -super visors- the spendiug-.iu.t-ii.il. relief. i'undii_and__the. biu'ii_draw„annuaj,sahuJes and de'\'i11e ment compensation, old age assist- The Director ol' Conservation, hav­ 'whip hand \vith certain limitations. social security administration at their full time to their duties or will ancc, and'so on. ing- mack' a thorough investigation re­ First, the act attached a string to Washington which adhered strictly to become a policy board with per diem Eaclehi administrator will get $3,000 lative to trapping of raccoon in the M irror --- the "home rule" proviso by requiring a policy, of hiring skilled, trained allowance and with the actual work a ye; lary. Lower Peninsula, recommends cer­ Non-partisan State News Letter counties to pay the cost of local ad­ workers on a non-partisan, civil ser­ being done by full-ti.me administra­ Unless Washington rules otherwise, tain regulations. • By GENE ALLEMAN ministration — an expense which the vice basis, thus minimizing any tors. the social security administrator must chance of political mishandling of 1 ' THEREFORE, the Conservation Michigan Press Assaciation centralized system (or state control —Federal-state funds (social secur­ meet rigid civil service requirements Commission, by authority of Act 230, at Lansing) had previously borne.. federal or state funds. ity) will be expended by persons who' lor a competent, trained man in the I'. A. 11) 1*r>, hereby orders that for ^Second, more administrative re­ Supervisors proposed, in some meet federal civil service standards. field of social welfare. Supervisors a period of one year it shall be un­ ^Lansing — Home rule for adminis­ sponsibility meant more financial re­ counties, to engage a single director State-county funds will be handled tration of relief, authorized by the can pick who they please for their lawful to trap raccoon in the Lower sponsibility. That called for raising Whom they would hold responsible for by persons who meet requirements two members on the board, and the Peninsula north of the north line of 1939 state legislature as part o.f an the "ante" in "some counties which administration of all welfare funds established by the local county board. "economy" program, is coming home state commission is expected to eon-. T. Hi N. and west of Saginaw Bay had coasted along, letting the state — direct relief by the state and coun­ This, in brief, will constitute the to roost in more than 80 counties this cur in their recommendation for the excepting from November 15 to De­ carry most of their load. ty governments, unemployment com­ "dual system." week. third man who is to represent the cember 15, 1939, inclusive, and south Third, a practical limitation was pensation and old age pension jointly For example, Genesee county has a state in welfare activity. But the so­ of the north line of T. 1G N. and east County supervisors are in session. imposed by an arbitrary slicing of the by state and federal governments, three-man working board. One man cial security administrator must hur­ of Saginaw Bay, including all of Ilur During the last gubernatorial cam­ fiscal relief appropriation (1939-40) and so on. will administer direct relief. Another dle the civil service test of proven on County, excepting from December paign supervisors m-ged defeat of the from $15,000,000 to $8,750,000, or a Washinglnn was unyielding to sug­ will be in charge of hospitalization, competency. 1 to "December 1.5, 1939, inclusive. 1937 welfare act. They insisted that reduction of nearly one-half. gestions for an integrated system un­ ii centralized system of providing re­ Signed, sealed, and ordered pub­ True, legislators prayed that busi­ less it was established according to lief to jobless and unemployables was lished this Uth day of Julv, 1939. ness would pick up, that the new plan civil service requirements. fodder for a highly trained social P. J. HOFFMASTER would effect new economies, and that And there hangs another interest­ worker, yet was a luxury that Mich­ .Director, Department of counties would absorb the balance of ing hitch in the Michigan welfare sit­ igan- ecru Id—net-affowh—Local—control Itflnwil', The present state-' social uation-today. •- — Conservation. would lower costs, they pleaded, Many Conservation Commission by: voters agreed. \velfaixvM-nimis_sjon(..hea.ded by Wal: INSULATE YOUR HOME WITH W. II. I.OUTIT, Chairman. tcr F. Cries of Ishpeming, has turn­ Civil Service v a. The 1937. welfare act was defeat­ WAYI.AND OSGOOD, Secretary, ed a deaf ear to occasional cries for This Saturday (Oct. 14) written ed, and the problem was thrown into adv.41)-4. a special session of the legislature. lests will he conducted by the civil © the laps of 1939 legislators. Even Mel McPherson, unofficial state service commission for social workers 9/isumifiq A new law was enacted whereby spokesman for the supervisors, has and social work administrators., who. handling' of relief was returned to The OcquooC'' rivor in Prcsque Islo admonished counties to ' prepare to are to handle the social security 1 counties. The state was pledged to county i> tin unly river in the south­ carry their part of the load. Having money. vinw' ern peninsula of Michigan that has a match local payments, dollar for dol­ REDTOP asked for home rule, supervisors were The minimum requirements for a fa!Is in iir course. lar. A three-member board was to be told to shoulder the new responsihil- -SAVES HEAT • S AVE S F U EL •• K E E P S YOU -set up in each county, two members -•ocial work administrator under fud- ities cheerfully. This they are doing eral standards are these: "Four years WARMER IN WINTER AND COOLER IN SUMMER of which were to he named by the for the most part, although grumb­ of experience in social welfare work supervisors and the third man to be ling ' profusely anil loudly against in a public or private social agency, MAIL SCHEDULE appointed by the state social welfare Washington's hard-boiled attitude one year of which shall have been in commission. 1 EAST JORDAN P.O. that spending of social security mon­ a responsible .administrative capacity • Red Top* Insulating Wool is srftreproof, vermin OUTGOING This sounds simple, but complica­ ey (unemployment compensation, old and completion of two years of col­ proof insulation made from a molten mass of" min­ tions were numerous. age assistance, etc.) must be done on­ €:30 a.'m. — North and South, lege training including or supplemen- erals.- The long, fine fibres make it look like finely ly by persons hired under federal fed by'courses in the social sciences. _SpjUl_Sh-e£p-'s wnnlanrl ynll ltnnw rinw wopl Con- first class anil newspapers. Tied Big Business^ civil service standards, : """Higher classes 1 or "social work ad- serves heat. Let us show you how the sum you will at 5:30 p.'m. previous night. Relief has become "big business" 1 li :00 m. — North, first class. ministrators (to be hired in larger save in fuel will soon repay the cost of insulating in America today. South, parcel post. Matching Plan Is Out counties) call for six years of exper­ VOUr hOUSe 'PRODUCT or AHD THADE-MARK BEG. BI D. S. CYPS..'W CO. Expenditures for the- poor once 3 :00 p. m. — South to points from The legislative intent, as expressed ience as a social welfare administra­ were nominal. The word "poor", us- ""Crand Rapids. in the law. was that the state should tor and up to- four years' college uatTyTassoeiatecl with "charity", van­ NOTE — All first class mail match relief dollars of counties. It training. ished upon the__ajlycnt of the Great and parcel post should be in Post- was thought at the time to lie instii'- It is ,S>H+1 on good authority in Lan- TIME FOR STORM SASH Depression which swallowed millions -nfficr-tTmr^ha-lf-houT-bfrfoFe pou-e-h- a-nc-e- tha-t—^+HH4-t+e^\viH:i-hl—d«—their -si'rtg thai -not one coursty- of worker? into, idleness".-Ir~BecameT one- supervrsor ine~ Jimp. ___—„___ part in a decentralized program. LET US MEASURE YOUR WINDOWS "unemployed." Millions-—of—dollars [ Michigan. could pos •ibly qualify 4——i-ANDLGlViiYXlUJlLIGES^._ •:•:--. INCOMING were poured out from Washington 4-0¾ Ho\vever.jRist the unexpected hap- "the job of-] tor un- .•f tin se conditions!." _ 0:3,0 a. m., 2:40 p.m., 3:00 p.m. sustain life and to maintain morale on ( A LARGE STOCK OF BUILDING MATERIAL a basis of American decency. State; pie. the 50-50 plan was hailed with The result was inevitable. capitals were called upon f or legisla-j delight. Wayne county had been doing AT THE OLD PRICES tive appropriations. . ... ;S more than a good many upstate conn- Dual System Favored lti.es. With only S8.750.(1()0 nn hand to Because- of the civil service stand­ To prevent possible political ' mis­ spend, state officials realized the ards which automatically ruled out use of relief millions, the social war- Dr. H. M. HARRINGTON : matching plan would quickly exhaust the average local official, most of Jtei-ja:as Horifiod in'a bjgj^v/Jlelief j East Jordan Lumber Co 'Trretr^l-2-- nm Htfo""ii-i---se«:e-^iou-i--i4-ie-s—-a-re i applicants had to he certified as to Physician and Surgeon part of the law has been openly ig- -o adopt what is known-as the j need, and that meant careful scrutiny i nored and probably will not 'be en- ystem." Office Houra: I by trained 'investigators. Salaries in­ 2 to 5 P. M. — 7 to 8 P. M. creased as responsibilities grew: pay-j ! rolls'lndunted_lu^_nToTTiTnitltoTi'S-'^TeTF^ Office in Lumber Co., Building • spent; the entire administrative over-j ! head_ sprung up like a mushroom. OfficEicee Phone — 140-F2 ResidencSlide e Phone — 140-F3 The old relief system, keyed tn 'limited need, was put into totn j eclipse by a highly centralized svs- ! tern focused _on Washington and T.an- ,sing. ! During the 1938-39 fiscal year the FRANK-PHILLIPS instate spent approximately._S1.5J)JlQ..-- 000 for direct relief alone. Tonsorial Artist | This was a lot of money.-A deficit in the state treasury was on,e result. WHEN IN NEED OF ANYTHING Economy IN MY LINE, CALL IN The 1030 legislature, heeding de- AND SEE ME. Statement of the Ownership

Management, circulation, etc., of R, G. WATSON the Charlevoix County Herald, pub­ lished weekly at East Jordan, Michi- : FUNERAL gan, as required by the Act of Con­ gress .of August 24. 1912. DIRECTOR Publisher—G. A. Lisk, East Jordan •Michigan. Phone 66 Editor—G. A. Lisk. Michigan. - MONUMENTS Managing Editor-—G. A. KAST JORDAN, - 'MICH. Jordan, Michigan. Business Manager—G. i East Jordan, Michigan. Owner—G. A. Lisk, East Jordan, • BENJAMIN BUSTARD Michigan. ; Known bondholders, mortgagees, and PAUL LOVELAND and other security holders, holding 1 GENERAL BUILDING AND per cent or more of lotal amount of LICENSED ELECTRICAL bonds, mortgages or other securities, , — Slate Bank of East Jordan. ; CONTRACTORS G. A. LISK, Publisher. ' New or Repair Work of All Kinds Sworn to and subscribed before me REASONABLE TERMS -. - this Uth dav of October, 11139. GRACE E. BOSWELL, Phone 247 -^- East Jordan — Notary Public. ' Address: P. O. Box 64, E. Jordan My Commission expires Jan. 18, 1942

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