<<

0tintB I y VOLUME 44 EAST JORDAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH B, 1940. NUMBER 10 l.i>. Third Ward To Herald. Contributors First Championship Community Bldg. Judge Gilbert Addresses To Discuss and Advertisers Joint Meeting of To Have Primary In Ten Years For East Jordan County Service Clubs Potato Blight For some reason the past few ON MONDAY, MARCH IS. MAYOR weeks contributed articles and adver­ E. J. H. S. CACERS COP CLASS C IT IS WITHIN OUR REACH IF WE The three service clubs of Charle­ PLANT PATHOLOGIST IN EAST HEALEY UNAPPOSED tising copy seems to be coming in at HONORS AT HARBOR REALLY WANT IT voix' county held their first joint JORDAN THIS FRIDAY meeting at the Jordan Inn Tuesday the eleventh hour. This means a Jot - AFTERNOON of night work or The Herald fails to evening." The-three clubs are theKi- Time for filing petitions for City For several year East Jordan citi­ wanis of Charlevoix and the Rotary get into the postoffice until late Coach Abe Cohn's comeback Crim­ and Ward offices in East Jordan son Wave aggregation advanced to­ zens have dreamed of an up-to-date Hlubs of Boyne City and East Jordan. Every potato grower in Charlevoix_ closed Tuesday afternoon with only Thursday. ward greater heights last Community Building. When the ques­ About seventy sat down-to the ban­ County should be interested in a ser­ contest on for Alderman in the First We have revised some of the Clos­ week end by copping the District tion has been asked "why don't we quet served by the management of ies of three meetings arranged for and Third Wards. In the Third Ward ing Time published elsewhere, and Class C Championship at Harbor get one?" the answer has been '^it the Inn. Ed. Reuling was toastmas- Friday, March 8th, when J. H. Mun- there are three candidates necessita­ wifl atrlctlyTtdtrerg to- same; Co-opera- -g-^rjjs cie,"Plant Pathologist, will discuss"th~e lings, TsT-ot poB-f-BIe'just'ndw." ter and short speeches were made by ting • run-off primary in this Ward tion in getting "copy in as early in the Thursday evening the Crimson's But now~fE" il possible tf =^1 it we the three "Presidents: Floyd Hupp of- history of late blight, its seriousness, which is set for March 18. Candidates week as possible will greatly facili­ came from behind in the waning ten really want it; if we want it to the Charlevoix, B. C. Mellencamp of and means of control. Great losses filing are as follows :._• ._. tate matters. # - seconds of play to eke out a 22 to 21 -.xtent that we will vote to do our .Boype City_and Howard - Porter . of were suffered, last year, in the major­ Mayor — Clarence Healey. Here's a hoping"—"and thank you. triumph over the Harbor Springs part. Rast Jordan. ity of potato fields and we are faced G. A. and PAUL LISK. Justice of Peace — Charles Mur­ Rams. Then the climax Saturday ev­ REASONS FOR WISHING The address of the evening was with the problem of whether or not phy. ening as they topped Boyne City 21 A COMMUNITY BUILDING ~iven by. Judge Parm C. Gilbert of we should use blight infected seed.' ' Alderman First Ward — Thomas to 20 for the third time this season, Ti-averse City. His theme , was The first meeting will be in the Bussler', Earl C. Gee. Enjoy Leapyear Birth­ bringing to East Jordan its first high The principal reasons given for wishing a Community Building ,are: 'Youth Problems and Good Citizen­ Charlevoix Go-op Co. at 9:30 a. m. Alderman Second Ward — Alex. day Anniversaries school basketball championship in ten ship." It was handled with understan­ on Friday, March 8th, the next meet­ Sinclair. years. 1. The welfare of the youth of East ding and with sympathy and showed a ing will be in the East Jordan Co-op. AldermafTThird Ward — Wm.-H. - Jordan. The facilities of _the. School, keen appreciation of—"present"" day CoT"at ITOOTI. nn,Tmd-the-third in the — The" "Harbor-fracas- was - nip -and House are too limited to provide am­ Alalnass, Thomas St. Charles, Joe A group of friends of Bert Hite tuck all the way and was anybody's vouth. Those who heard the address, Boyne City Co-op Co. at 3:00 p. m. Wilkins. met at his home last Thursday even­ ple recreation for our youth outside well understood why Judge Gilbert These meetings are all on the same ball game right up to the final gun. of school hours. This reason is in­ ing, Feb. 29, to remind him of the W'th but ten seconds remaining to is in great demand as guest speaker day. We have planned to hold these tensified by the growing number of by gatherings that are interested in meetings at the above mentioned pla­ occasion of his 19th birthday anniver­ nlay, few would have given a pennv our youth above school age who are LIBRARY NOTES sary. The evening was enjoyably for the Crimson's chances. Harbor good citizenship. ces as we will have a good many bins desperately in need of a place for of potatoes that we can actually see spent in games after which a delicious was awarded a free throw, but waived wholesome recreation. The record, of The purpose of the meeting was lunch was served. Those present were the try from the. charity circle in fa­ two'fold; sociability, and to talk over and note the varying degrees of in­ Our new books for the Rental .ast Jordan's Boys Club the past fection and what is happening to the .Shelf have arrived! Here is the list Alex. Weldy, Mr. and Mrs. Edd Wel- vor of taking the ball out of bounds the wisdom of having a county com­ at midcourt, thus enabling them to year emphasizes this. mittee selected from the three cities potatoes that are badly infected. of books:. dy, Sir. ,and Mrs. Bert Lenosky, Mr. 2. Our adult population urgently and Mrs. Arthur Brintnali and Mrs. rvrotect. their . one point advantage. of the county to:promote county wide These meetings will, have to be "The Sea Tower" by Hugh Wal- Harbor made, a loose pass, Bulow needs an adequate place for social pole. Brintnall Sr. interests. •'" ~~. ' somewhat brief and snappy so please pounced on it and let fly.-Players and gatherings and recreation. Provision be present promptly on time, as all "Death at the Bar", Ngaio Marsh. On Thursday evening, Feb. 29, for adult activities is a growing Those, present put themselves on spectators stood fixed as. the ball record as favoring the creation of meetings will start as per the an­ "Hawk of Detroit", Arthur Pound. about 20 friends and relatives of nrchod beautifully, falling cleanly problem all oyer the country. With nouncement. Mr. Muncie, in addition, "No ArmB, No Armour" by Robert the shortening of the hours of work community committees, selected from Mrs. Alonzo Shaw gathered at her through,the mesh just as the horn sig­ various organizatioss, in each of the •will discuss seed treatments and var­ Henriques. home to help her celebrate her fif­ nalled, ending the game with East there must be the possibility of an improved social life. three cities with the hope that these ious diseases that are,of interest to "False Star" by Anne Duffield. teenth birthday anniversary. The ev­ Jordan the victors. in turn will select representatives to us at this time. Hope you will attend _. "Johann Strauss: Father and Son" ening was spent in games and a de­ 3. There is no place in East Jor­ form a county committee. your nearest and most convenient by H. E. Jacob. An interesting book Bulow tallied 13 points to lead the dan with .dncmate facilities for .con­ licious pot luck supper was enjoyed. locals offensively. McBride of Harbor It was tentatively agreed to hold meeting. for all lovers of music. The tempes­ Mrs. Shaw, received many lovely ventions and banquets. This year it tuous, urgent lives of these men nearly matched his performance with would have bf-en easy to have sold another joint meeting in Charlevoix B. C. Mellencamp, •rifts and best wishes for many more ?r\ even dozen. Antoine's pfay again the-second Tuesday of July. County Agr'l Agent. make a book as romantic as fiction- such occasions. ~ — —•- tickets for a huudied-more-for -the- Ailed with a wealth of knowledge to warrants special mention, foi^ he Father and Son banquet had there "laved, one of the outstanding games bring the reader to a deeper appre­ been room to seat them. More and Chamber of Commerce ciation, of their music! of his four year career with the Red larger conventions can. be held here Canners Salt "This Isn't the End" by Agnes Helen Stephens and Black. : " - f we have a good Community Build­ Regular dinner meeting at the Jor­ Tut-nbull. WHATTA FINISH ing.. Down Three More "The Loon Feather" by Iola Fuller. Coming March 20 Ea.t Jordan (22) FG. FT. TP. dan Inn, next Thursday, March 14th, 4. East Jordan'has never been able (k30 p. m. Joe Bugai in charge. Joe A fine first novel tlutl is the winner V. Gee, l.f. 1 0 2 *o have a basketball tournament be- of the Hopwood Award at the Uni- Butow, r.f. cause we have no place to stage one. TAKE VICTORIES OVER PETOS­ always lines up a good program, so DATES ARE FINALLY IRONED Isaman '(c) c. —_ 2 This is also true of other kinds of KEY, BOYNE CITY AND let's everybody be out. with its traders, its voyageurs and —~OUTrHOOKCR CHARGE CrowelV l.g, — ___ o BENZON1A : Geo.. Secui'dj Bee^yr— Antoine, r.g. — __._ i: tournaments. fishermen is the scene for a story of ABLE WITH ERROR 5. A certain amount of WPA labor the days when white men were stead­ Woodcock, l.f. ___ 0 has and will be used in the county. The fast flying Canners continued ily intrenching themselves upon the Why not use some of it in East Jor­ Council Proceedings Indian's ground. In the life of Oneta, TheJEast Jordan Canners received Totals 10 2 22 their merry pace the past week, as Word ffom Helen Stephens Tuesday dan for something that will be per­ they salted down three more victor­ an Indian girl, who grows up in her Harbor Springs (21) FG. FT. TP. manent and impove the city? This Regular meeting,' Common Council white stepfather's family, is reflected a. m. ;fenat her team would be here for Squires, l.f. :__ 2 .0 .4 ies in their drive to defend their Nor­ City of East Jordan,-held on the 4th sure Wednesday, March 20th. " does not mean spending more money thern Michigan Championship. They ± thig WiVBiVf Kej-wePTi ancient tradt McBride, r.f. — 5 2 12" "or this labor; it means using the la. •day of March, 1940. tion and lore of her race and the new &~T„ix-up, on Hi, pat I of.the book-^ Hanna. (c) c , —J 0 2 opened their week with a 48 to 41 Present: Aldcrma-n- Busslcr, Mal- er, in dates forced postponement of Davert, l.g. bor for what will be of the most win at Petoskey last Wednesday, ad­ pass, Maddock, Shaw, Kenny and. custom? of the whites. value. . • Another copy of "Gone With The the igaime originally scheduled for Backus, r.g. .__ 0 ded a 58 to 38 victory at, the expense Mayor Healey. March 7th. The girls are playing in Knapp, l.f.. — 0 HOW THE MATTER HAS BEEN of Boyne City here'the next, nfght; Absent: Alderman Sinclair. w;nrt" has been ordered and will be APPROACHED "laced oh the shelves the latter part Indianapolis on March 6th, and could and closed with a 43 to 24 win at •; The following bills were presented of this week.' The patrons, whose hardly be expected to make a 500 Totals ._____• 9 21 The City Council is the body that Benzonia Monday evening. for payment:—• names are on the reserve list for it, mile jaunt in one day. has the original and final responsi­ In the game with the Petoskey Mich. Public .Service Co., lights The Canners are in tip-top shape BOYNE CITY GAME bility. A committee of the Council Merchants last week, the Red and and power __'_ $234.28 will be able to have their copy of the Coach Earl Brotherston's Boyne book much sooner. and a great game can be expected. met with representatives of various White were caught, off form as the G. A. Lisk, printing _v 38.05 The main'game will start at 9:00 p. City quintet advanced into the finals civic organizations to talk about the Little Traverse boys" jumped 'off"'to LeRoy Sherman, rent 10.00 m. instead of 8:30 p. m. as previously with a 41 to 25 triumph over the possibility. ? a quick lead. Petoskey was ahead 15 Delbert Hale, rent ______8.00 Forestry Meetings Reflect advertised. Charlevoix Red Rayders Friday even­ First there was the question of to 10 at the first quarter. The locals State Bank of E. J., Insurance 10.00 So remember the East Jordan gym­ ing. --ite. The old Russell Hotel which has came back and outscored them 17 to B. Mil.-tcin, insurance „_ _. 25.25 Great Interest nasium — Wednesday evening, March A large and enthusiastic crowd been long unused was a hazard and a 8 the second period, but lapsed badly Mich.' Bell Tel. Co., service __ 3.43 In Tree Planting 20th. turned out; to witness the finals, and liability to Main Street, but on ac­ in the final quarter till, with two min­ E-.-J. Co-op Co., mdse. ______19.63 for three quarters the game was a count, of tax laws, it seemed destined utes to play, Petoskey had foi-ged into Brabants, mdse. '. : .74 . rim away, East Jordan leading all to remain such, for some time to a 41 to 38 lead. Then Spin Cihak sud­ W. A. Porter, mdse. :__ 58.97 If the enthusiasm and interest Extension Leaders To the way. At one time in the third come. However, what seemed imposs­ denly came to life and sank four W. W. Stainger mdse. ______6.17 nhown in the recent series of four =tanza the Red and Black held a 17 ible came to pass. The building has successive long shots to put the con-, Rosenthal's, mdse 1 13.85 forestry meetings are any indication Hold Fourth and Last to 5 edge. Boyne's attack, led by the been torn down and the city owns the test in the bag. Hud. Sommerville al­ E. E. Wade, mdse. ______1.52 then Charlevoix County is going to Lesson on March 12th Deitz boys Ernie and Wally, began to real estate. This is a site made to or- so chipped in with a'long torn in the Trico Fuse Co., fuses 1.24 have more than twice as many young function in the final period and be­ ler, and a building there will be an final rally. Bertha Bowman, lunches , 3.30 trees set out this year as was the case fore the bewildered Jordanites knew asset to the city from every point of Petoskey (41) FG. FT. PF. Healey Sales Co., labor & mtrl. 30.06 last year. The Road Commission has The fourth and last lesson in the it Boyne had tied the count at 20 all. riew. Bremmeyr, l.f. 4 0 3 Crowell was awarded a free throw fader's Service Sta., gas &^_flr~3,6.56 kindly offered to furnish windbreak present Home Management Project The committee visited community Ross, r.f. — __ 5 4 2 Roy Nowland, gas & oil -,/-— 19-76 trees to farmers if they set these out will be given to the group leaders on with but -20 seconds remaining to buildings in many other cities, and __ 2 0 0 nlay, walked up and scored his first Reid, c. Elmer Reed, labor i-__ 5.25 as per directions along their roads for Tuesday, March 12th, in the Boyne the managers were all sympathetic, Billideau, c. —. .__ 3 1 1 Win. Nichols, labor _•_____. '7.20' snow protection. Within the next few City Library at the usual time of ten point of the Tourney and clinched __ 3 0 4 the victory for the Red and Black. pointing out the blunders as well as Smith, l.g. ___ Wm. Taylor, special police 6.00 days an order for twenty thousand o'clock. It is gratifying to note that the good points in their buildings. Wilcoxen, l.g. 0 0 0 Geo. Wright, janitor 10.00 young transplants will be sent in by all thirteen groups are carrying on V. Gee counted 11 to lead the Jor- The' committee publicly asked Lawrence, r.g. —" 0 1 1 the Road Commission which will as­ Harry Simmons, salary . 62.50 their projects satisfactorily and no danies. The Deitz boys split 14 points for suggestions. They have been gone Golden, r.g. 0 1 1 Henry Seholls, sal. & expense 11.25 sure a liberal quantity of trees for doubt will finish all requirements. between them to telly high for the over carefully, and a good architect this purpose. G. E. Boswell, sal. & expense 62.95 As a result of the action taken at losers. has so far as possible embodied tnem Totals _._____: 17 7 12 Wm. Aldrich, sal. & expense 35.00 Any farmer interested in obtaining the third lesson, plans will be devel- Thursday evening Frankfort plays all in a tentative plan that calls for an Ea.t Jordan (48) FG. FT. PF. Moved by Malpass, supported by any of these trees for windbreak pur­ nned for a county-wide Tour which Gaylsrd and Friday evening at. 6:45 expenditure of about $70,000. Noth­ M. Cihak, l.f 4 0 0 Shaw, that the bills be paid. Carried, poses should contact his Agricultural will replace the old style achievement •_ast Jordan will play Lake City in ing has been left undone to make the R. Saxton, l.f. -_' 5 2 3 all ayes. Adjustment Committeeman, the main day program. Everyone seems to feel ••he Regional Meet at Petoskey. The proposed building express the desires L. Cihak, r.f. _ 2 3 1 Moved by Bussler, supported by office in Boyne City, or the County that a tour through the county will winners will meet for the champion­ of the community in the fullest pos­ Stanek, r.f. —-. 0 1 1 Shaw, that the City set up a 6 month Agent. Further information will be be a worthwhile change and will at­ ship Saturday evening. sible manner. H. Sommerville, c. — 6 1 2 unit (WPA) for the construction of given relative to where the. trees tract more attention and be of great­ CHAMPS — '40 KIND OF BUILDING C. Sommerville, l.g. — 0 1 5 0 roadside tables, benches and so forth. must be planted and t^ie amount of er value to the membership. Ea«t Jordan (21) FG. FT. TP The tentative plans; call for a Gee, l.g. 1 0 Carried, all ayes. payment in recognitldn for this ap- Tentatively, we want to visit four V. Gee, l.f. 5 1 11 building of architectural-concrete. A LaPCcr, r.g. __ —3- 2- a —Moved to adjourn. : — proved practice. or five locations in the county where Bulow, r.f. '__ 0 1.1 full sized gym will accommodate WM. ALDRICH, City Clerk. We are always greatly pleased we can see the results of landscaping, Isaman (c) c. , 3 0 6 -bout 700, with size of floor about Totals 19 10 12 when *outside foresters tell us that proper arrangement in the kitchen, Crowell, l.g. , 0 1 ' 1 the same as in Boyne City. There will Score by Quarter*:— Charlevoix County has a larger num­ the- advantages of electricity, and Antoine, r.g. 10 2 be a dining room, with fully equip­ East Jordan 10 17 8 13 — 48 Primary Election Notice ber of good farm woodlots than other other features of interest to all home- Woodcock, 1.*. __ 0 0 0, ped kitchen, available to organiza­ Petoskey . 15 8 9 9-41 "counties"in this section. Let's proper­ makers. tions wishing to use it. There will be To the Qualified Electors of the ly manage our woodlots and set out B. C. Mellencamp, Totals .___ 9 3'21 rooms available for boy scouts, girl BOYNE CITY GAME Third Ward, City of East Jordan, windbreaks which not only perform County Agr'l Agent. Boyne City (20) FG. FT. TP. scouts, recreational rooms, and show­ Thursday evening they met the Michigan: an important function along the road, o w. Deitz, l.f. — 3 17 ers and lockers. There will probably Boyne City Mayors here and, after hut which add greatly to the enjov- Notice is hereby given that a Pri­ Price, r.f. 1 0 2 be ample space that can be.leased by a close first half, ( had no trouble win­ mary Election for the Third Ward of ment of the traveler. Be sure and Stirring Week Starts ^. Deitz, c. - 8 1 7 firms that have bowling equipment. ning 58 to 38. contact the above' mentioned parties the City of East Jordan, Mich., will Saturday At Temple Rteckus (c) l.g. '_ 12 4 The building is to be used by both Boyne played them fairly close the be. held at the Library Building, Mon­ n-'d find out more about this wonder­ Harner. r.g. 0 0 0 men and women, and boys and girls. first half but, during the final two ful opportunity. day, March 18th, 1940, for the pur­ Davis,, l.g. '— 0 0 0 HOW TO BE FINANCED? periods, the steady fast breaking pose of placing in nomination the fol­ B. C. Mellencamp, Double .barrelled entertainment An article next week will speak of pace of the Canners wore them down lowing officers:— County Agr'l Agent. Totals 8 20 It was another of those games where l; fills the schedule for the coming week the proposed method of financing and Third Ward — Two candidates for 6 .L—^C at' the Temple and including several will explain why it will not be neces­ the Red and White showed their the office of Alderman. sary to vote on a larger bond issue scoring punch in the final periods. In WHAT'S 3fHE BEST -TIME of the ace productions of the_ new Shantytown-Ownerju The polls of said election will be- vear. Ronald Colman, Alice Faye, than $lt>^0_!"with"th-i"uTiderstandiffg flve~"gaTnes"thig- winter, • the Canners TO APPLY FOR A JOB?_ open at 7:00 o'clock a. m. and will L "Walter Huston. Andy Devine, Fred Asked To Co-operate that the tax rate of the city shall not have shown a heavy scoring power in close at 6:00 o'clock p. m: -w There's a lot more to seeking em­ MacMurray and Richard Greene are be increased. the last quarter, scoring twenty Dated March 8th, 1940. ployment than mdrely being willing a few of the headliilers Cast in the With the spring break-up in the FULLEST INFORMATION points or better. They missed at WM. ALDRICH, to work. Do you know, for example, following programs: near future, all owners of fish shan­ DESIRED Grayling last week but sank 26 points adv. 10-2 City Clerk. whether a college education pays? Saturday only: The Three Mes- ties on the South Arm of Lake Char­ The committee that is co-operating in the third quarter to put that game Or, if there's a shortage of brain quiteers in "The Kansas Terrors." levoix are requested to make pro­ with the City Council is sponsoring (Continued on last, page) GETS CONSCIENCE MONEY workers? Or, where today's biggist Sunday and Monday: Alice Faye, visions for removal. Shanties must this article and plans to have articles Mason — The president of a local opportunities, lie? Lyle Spencer, fam­ Fred MacMurray. Andy Devine in not be placed on private property in the next two-iss-Hss-of The Herald. written for the Herald next week. mutual fire insurance company has ous employment authority who's ma­ "Ljttle Old New York." without the property-owners permis­ If anyone thinks of any,_flUfestjon that; ....::The.citizens otEast_Jorda_.-haxe. been receiving anonymous letters king a science of job-hunting, an­ Tuesday and Wednesday; Family sion. Unless taken care of by the should lie brought up please write dneamed of such a building for years, containing money since 1935. The swers these questions in an important Nights: William Henry and Virginia owners, the shanties will have to be out the question, properly sign it, and and until now it has seemed as far sender has now paid a total of |B21. series of articles. Be sure to read Dale in "Parole Fixer." taken to the city dump at the City's hand to the City Clerk by next Mon­ off as the fabled pot at the end of the It is believed someone who received them every Sunday in This Week, the Thursday and Friday: Ronald Col- expense. day morning. A representative of the rainbow. But the dream can come payment to which he was not en­ eolorgravure magazine wtth Sunday's man Ida Lupino, Walter Huston in HARRY SIMMONS, committee will ask the clerk for all true; it will come true if we will that titled for a fire loss is sending the. Detroit News, "The Light That Failed." advlO-2 Chief of Polios. such. questions before the, article is it shall. money, - \

THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, EAST JORDAN, MICH.

WHITE HOUSE: Bruckart's Washington Digest WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBlNE CLASSIFIED Home Again Outward from Panama into the DEPARTMENT Merger of Two Wars Feared Caribbean headed the cruiser Tus­ Navy Officers Bid for Power caloosa, bearing Franklin Roosevelt home from a fishing expedition. In Report to House Committee If Allies Send Aid to Finland; South of Panama he had fished for BABY CHICKS fish; in the Canal Zone $ W Poles Drill Big Army in France he had fished Department's Policy-Making Board Recommends Taking CHICKS!SSS 3 for informa­ hud Money Order lor Prompt Shipment. r Additional Control From Hands of Livt D*Uv*nt QwurmUtd (EDITOR'S NOTE—When opinions are expressed in these columns, they tion; getting ATLAS CO., a»51 CfcoutMii, St. Louis, M*. are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) himself con­ Civilian Authorities. Po1*°cnH ty Western Newspaper Union vinced that "RMtpr Bred" White Leghorns, Barred .nd Whit! Bocks. B. I. B*ed Chicks W.90 . America' s per hundred. PJemluro grade J8.B0. £.O.D. Gibraltar is By WILLIAM BRUCKART recommendations as showing a row If desired. Breeders careTUlly selected. inadequately WNU Service, National Press between the professional navy men MOORE HATCHEBIES, Wayne, Mich. U. S. and the Wars: After Six Months guarded. BIdg., Washington, D. C. and the civilian side. Secretary Ed­ Six months had passed since Get-many invaded , since Presi­ At a press ison disagreed with the board's find­ POULTRY SUPPUES&EQU1PMENT WASHINGTON.—The house com­ conference ings, and so reported to the house dentRoosevelt summoned congress -to safeguard-U.-&,^jieutrnltty±^ mittee on naval affairs., made _pub= ~atroard the committee. Unfortunately,-however, LOW FACTORY PRICESr,,,^^ Good intentions notwithstanding, the U, S. found itself deeply con­ PRESIDENT BOYD lie a report the other day that rec­ Tuscaloosa he Mr. Edison failed to hit the proposal cerned with Europe's wars—politically, financially, economically, He'll co-operate. ommends the delegation of further socially. Items in a week's news; gave report­ a good stiff uppercut. He should ers some news which startled con­ power to high officers of the navy. have called attention that it was Graduation Costume Rental gressmen who read it in Washing- That proposition has been made be- dangerous in that it represented an­ Agriculture Civilians fore,_but the current report came -During senateTJearing jor^ next day. Not only must the other step in the direction of control The popular and economical answer lor ifcrma—ymrthr^stoppe4 - -at- . jireseht number ot guns and planes' irom—the—navy^geher-al—boa: iry the military-minded servants-ef- -grijua&n^Aslcj^ur nipt, of ischools.to reciprocal trade act, Secrefarjpif TBtBgHBrarTIErgfouiUBd he diid 20- send JorTmnTlhr-e^-and-GOWlJt_gee pnlify making agency of the navy -the people.—^-——. .___.. • limp?"""" Them.. A. Peterson Co.. 3T~ Agriculture-Henry Wallace hinted otfier Americans had been recruit­ at-Panama be. doubled, said the" President, but a long-range defense department. It represents, therefore, Grand Aye.,-Kansas C*ty,«^i___ the U. S. may seek means to-help ed by one Col. Charles Sweeney an official move by ranking officers Army and Navy Affairs the farmer,' whose "exports have (believed an American soldier of program must be arranged to ex­ tend throughout Central America of the navy for great­ Need Careful Analysis been reduced since the war start-- fortune) and ordered to report in er concentration of power in their and as far south as Ecuador, Colom­ I doubt that the general board'* ed. Main reason for woe: Allies Toronto for aviation training. The hands, as naval officers, as dis­ bia and Venezuela. », . recommendations are going .to be Strange Facts claim they need all their foreign FBI went to' work. tinguished from the ciyilian control Reason for this, he said, was the followed by congress., It is time, exchange to buy munitions. One through the secretary and assist­ Human Hair MatsMats I Maritime need for a better opportunity to dis­ •however, to think over some of tho possible remedy is an excise tax ant secretary of the navy who al­ TttiJrlhietBuddhist MassesMasses I on munitions exports which might The U. S. had two British block­ cover an attacking force at a much things that,have happened with re­ t ways have been appointed from civil ade problems: (1) Britain sought longer, distance from the canal. spect to the navy and the army and Beetles on Pay Roll be paid to farmers. life. Canadian co-operation'in establish­ Even the new Caribbean fortresses in a few cases the marine corps Trade ing a contraband control system were inadequate protection from the The report failed to attract much and the coast guard. Moreover, it Several cottonseed oil mills in U. S. exports exceeded imports in the Pacific to stop U. S. rubber east, he maintained. attention. Certainly, it failed to re­ is time to remember what has hap­ the South still use the coarse hair in January by $126,589,000, the larg­ and tin from reaching Siberian An interested observer was ceive the publicity that it should pened to every single nation that has of Chinese women to weave the est margin in recent years. One Russia, from whence it may be Augusto Boyd, president of little have had in the newspapers. The given its military services too much mats through which the oil is sep­ unhappy trend: Gold and silver going to ; (2) Pan-Amer­ Panama, whose country will profit reason was, I believe, that many say about civilian affairs or affairs arated from the seeds after they holdings of the U. S. piled higher ican clippers, avoiding British by heavy U. S. expenditures in the~ .writers simply regarded the report that we, in this country, regard as have been mashed by hydraulic and higher as foreign nations used mail seizures at Bermuda, decided Canal Zone. Said he, after a con­ and its far-reaching recommenda­ civilian affairs. It cannot be said process. One large mill in Mem­ this method to pay for their pur­ to fly direct from the U. S. to the ference aboard the Tuscaloosa: "I tions as an isolated instance. My with too much emphasis that our phis purchases 2,000 heads of chases. Azores and Lisbon. think we're all in the same boat. feeling is, however, that the gen­ system of government must live or such hair a month for this pur­ Latin America must co-operate with eral board's views must be exam­ Industry Congress ' die by the measure of the power pose. the United States in defense of the ined closely because .to my mind over national policy that is retained Latest item in the $1,000,000,000 Ironed out were.senate-house dif­ canal ... We are in there 100 per they represent not an isolated in­ in the hands of elected officials. worth of allied war purchases in ferences in the measure to raise stance but evidence, often repeated, The Japanese hold the world's the U. S. was a $20,000,000 contract cent as far as co-operation is con­ The practice of appointing army most sentimental ceremonies— the Export-Import bank's lending cerned . . ."-.. of a general trend in governmental placed with Douglas Aircraft com­ power by $100,000,000, thus provid­ affairs that is highly dangerous. and navy officers to civilian posts Buddhist masses for the "souls" pany for construction of bombers ing $20,000,000 for non-military DOMESTIC: has been growing in recent years of such objects as ships that have for Great Britain. purchases by Finland. This discussion must not be con­ at an alarming rate. The usual been sunk, oysters that have been Nose Count sidered an attack on the navy. I practice has been to appoint retired eaten, dolls that have been have great respect for the navy and Ot all questions in the 1940 census, officers. More recently, however, smashed and needles that have especially for the present personnel officers have been taken right out of been broken in the past year. EUROPE: none has drawn more fire than those in the positions of policy determina­ regarding persona] income. When the military services — detached The Wars Congress' Work tion. There are some quacks and from commands, etc.—and named Passed by the House: (1) The census takers begin their rounds More fish is used in manufac­ -Finnish Frunt. Aretmd- Viipuri oo- hair-brained boys up near the top, to civilian jobs. I am hot going to senate-dppi-eved-bill to-give Fin^ -Acril 1 many a citizen will prob- turing processes and products -undertake to enumerate them. They- — the Karelian isthmus and near Pet- ably refuse to answer these ques­ od land a $20,000,000 non-military are scattered hither and yon, like samo in the far north, Finland's loan; (2) a $60,000,000-appropria­ tions despite the threat, of a fine. defenders continued retreating be­ Adding weight to the G. 0.. P.- head of the WPA and head of the tion to keep crop control checks wage-hour division of the. depart­ The American Museum of Nat­ fore Russian. pressure, . But the flowing to farmers. sponsored campaign of protest, Miss Finns held their ground at the ment of labor and that sort of thing. ural History in New York keeps Proposed: By Sen. Robert F. Catherine Curtis of New York ap­ a small "army" of live beetles, ••'waistline," halfway up the border. peared before the senate sub-com­ . One of the army officers is serving Wagner (D.-N. Y.), legislation to as secretary to the President of the whose job is to clean the bones; _Jestern Front., Increased patrol regulate investment companies mittee on behalf of women inves­ and artillery .activity was acknowl- United States. I could go on and of animals before they are mount- on behalf of the Securities and" tors;—Said she-:—Congress will hnvo "ed,—Collier's; _ edged. by both high commands. Exchange commission. to enlarge the jails to house protest- on and show where these men are Sent to the Senate-;—The house*. jngjypnien_if income questions are. functioning in strictly civilian posts were reported near Luxembourg, approved resolution to extend for. not stricken from the census and the Nazis_ were said, to be ex­ three years the administration's Nevertheless Census Director Wil­ say . that a couple of these- army, tending the Siegfried lirie along the reciprocal trade program. '•-' liam Austin went ahead with his officers on civilian duty are doing Belgian and Dutch frontiers. Argued in Both Houses: The plans, hoping his hose-count will not splendid jobs. But I hasten to add In the Air. British reconnaissance 1940 census, scheduled to start be completely sabotaged. Mean­ that they are the exceptions. The planes flew over Berlin two succes- April 1. While Census Director while the department of commerce reason is that a man from the mili­ W. ^L. Austin moaned, Republi- announced creation of a new nation­ tary services is trained along a par­ Got a cold? Every swallow can orators urged constituents to al income division which'will "an- ticular line of thinking. Briefly, that seem to scratch your throat thinking calls for and enforces disci- till it's rough and raw? risk penalties by not giving ceu- "glyae and—interpret -the^few ef in- Ort n fr?r nf Tinrlrn'y sustakers- "personal" information come from various sources and its pline, execution of orders,' blind obe­ Luden's special ingredients which is "none of their damned expenditure in the final analysis for dience — compulsion in all of its 'with cooling menthol help business." . . goods and services." For its source phases. - bring you quick relief from itchy, touchy, "sandpaper material the division will probe We might look back through 20 throat!" every source of personal income years or so-and recall how the navy Maginot line already well manned, data available, including social se­ and the coast guard were used in LUDEN'S 5* observers had reason to wonder curity records, bureau of internal prohibition enforcement. I cannot Menthol Cough Drops Where Poland-in-exile will send its, revenue—and the 1940 census,- SECRETARY OF NAVY EDISON believe that job was a part of the first five divisions which will be military service. But they were sp, ready for action by midsummer. used, and that was that. In the LABOR: but by and large the present list of Good Friends Finland seemed the best bet, for be­ rear "admirals and captains consti­ space that is accorded me, I cannot hind a ceaseless barrage of rumors Biggest Election tute a rather square-shooting and make any pretense of recounting You may depend upon it that and counter-rumors flpeding-Earope At Washington the National Labor able lot. That fact, nevertheless, the numerous instances where the he is a good man whose intimate this month, could be seen an ever- Relations board issued orders for must not prevent a closer examina­ military services were ordered into friends are all good, and whose narrowing breach between the two the largest collective bargaining tion of the general question, the duties that never were intended for enemies are characters decidedly wars. election ever held. "As soon as pos­ general problem, of which the re­ them by the founders of our nation. bad.—Lavater. Both London and Paris reported sible," approximately 150,000 em­ port recommending added power for One by one, these things have grown it was certain the allies would land ployees in 59 General Motors plants the general staff officers is only an up and they are now accepted. Isn't an army at far-north Petsamo, sup­ in 11 states will cast their ballots, insignificant part. That is the trou­ it about time to call a halt? . POLAND'S SIKORSKI plementing spasmodic aid which has the principal issue being affiliation ble, you know, with expansion pro­ Where will his army go? dribbled to the Finns through Nor­ with C. I. O. or A. F. of L. grams. Each addition to govern­ Here's a Concrete Example WOMEN (See Below) ' ~- way and Sweden. In the light of mental scope is, apparently, an in-. Of How Plan Might Work sive nights, while Nazi planes were this possibility, German overtures POLITICS: significant item. - Here's amazing way to in Scandinavia seemed ominous. Let's carry this general board rec­ chased away from Paris. Victory in Ohio ommendation through to a conclu­ The overtures: Nazidom has Details of Recommendation Relieve 'Regular' Pains At Sea. Allied warships, massing sion that is much mqre....real than Mrs. I. C. Uwson wrttas: "1 was undernour­ sought a FinnislvRussian truce to Both Republicans and Democrats ished, had cramps, headaches and back­ in the Arctic sea to block. Russian- By Navy's General Board apparent. stop consumption of Russian war conceded that Ohio's six-county sev­ ache, associated with my monthly periods, German sea commerce, sank two The navy's general board, in this I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription materials and thus get more for her­ enteenth-congressional district was Assume we, as nation, were hav­ JOT a while, gained strength, and was Nazi merchantmen near the Finnish recommendation, wants to have "con­ ing some hard feelings with one of greatly relieved oj these pains" self; Hitler has also threatened in­ a sounding board for Ohio's political 1 shore. An undenied report of naval gress provide the chief of naval op­ our North or South American neigh­ OR over 70 years, countless thousands of activity off Petsamo was considered tervention on Russia's side if an al­ cross-currents. In that district, Re­ Fwomen, who suffered functional monthly publican J. Harry McGregor was erations with power that is almost bors. Assume, further, that the oth­ pains, have taken Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre­ by observers as the first sign that lied expeditionary force is sent to scription over a period of time—and have been Finland's aid. He had also hinted fighting it out with Democrat Byron equal to that of the secretary of the er nation was doing us an injustice overjoyed to find that this famous remedy has Europe's,two wars may merge. navy. Now, of course, the chief of and was refusing to allow the mat­ helped them ward off such monthly discomforts- to Norway and Sweden that it would Ashbrook, nephew of the late Rep. Most amazing, this scientific remedy, for­ Behind Scenes be best for them to block allied aid William A. Ashbrook. naval operations is a professional ters to be arbitrated so that a show mulated hy a practicing physician, is guaran­ mariner and soldier. He usually of force could possibly serve a pur­ teed to contain no harmful drugs—no narcot­ Somewhere in France correspond­ to the Finns if they wanted to escape In the twenty-second district a Re­ ics. In a scientific way, it improves nutritional the war. But at the same time he publican victory was not unexpect­ knows so much more about sane na­ pose. Well, among our elected offi­ Assimilation; helps build you up and so in­ ents discovered Gen. Wladyslaw val operations than outlanders and cials, there obviously would be dif­ creases your resistance and fortifies you 'had not overlooked the value of ed, provided Ohio would send a against functional pain. Lessens nervousness Sikorski of Poland drilling almost members of congress that a parallel ferences of opinion. There always during this trying period. 100,000 troops—peasant boys, stu­ Scandinavian friendship, for Swed­ woman to congress. Hoping it ish iron ore would be cut off if the would; socially prominent Mrs. is unnecessary. But it never is to has been and there always will be. Doa't 6uffer one unnecessary moment from dents, miners, and professionals— be forgotten that the chief of naval •uch monthly discomfort. Get Dr. Pierce's Fa­ northern countries joined Britain Frances Payne Bolton sought to suc­ Does anybody think that the chief vorite Prescription, from your druggist. Dis­ men who escaped from Poland after operations is a career man who is, of naval operations with greater cover bow wonderfully it acts to relieve you ot Germany's blitzkrieg. With France's and France. ceed her late husband. •'Regular" pains. When the votes were in Mrs. Bol­ not responsible to the people, as are powers than he now has would be Peace Gesture ton found herself elected. So did elected representatives, and as long found on the side of restraint in Despite gloomy news, irrepressi- TTepurJtTtraTT as-ho obeys the- lawc and keeps his •dnalin[T nntl-i ciinh a prnhlpm? TflS WNU—O 10--1QI ble peace rumors still bobbed to the McGregor, health, he remains in the service un­ train of thought would lead to the NAMES surface. In London Lord Tavistock, which was a til retirement age is reached. conclusion that some heavy guns Flower and Die chairman of the British council for significant There is much to be said about should give the answer; he would Vain glory may flower but will in the news Christian settlement, said he had re­ victory if the careers in governmental service. In­ believe in force to compel acquies­ never bear seed.—Spanish prov­ ceived a set of peace terms through prophetic deed, What would our fighting forces cence, and he would never agree erb. ft At Little America, Adm. Richard Germany's legation in Dublin. These seventeenth ! be if they were not professionals? that compromise was the way out. E. Byrd reported he and two as­ he had passed on to Foreign Secre­ district Our army would be comparable to Probably, that is a far-fetched il­ Today's per clarity sistants had mapped the long-un­ tary Viscount Halifax. The terms: wasn't fool­ what we have seen under "Russia's lustration. I agree that it is under of Doan's Pills, after known South Pacific coast of Ant­ (1) Independence to Slovakia; (2) ing. At Wash­ grelat freedom." That is somewhat the present powers that are vested many years of world- i wide use, sorely must arctica, discovering a vast moun­ independence to Poland, with an cjut- ington the beside the point of this analysis. Our in the hands of the professional navy 1 be accepted as evidence tain range and an ice-covered is­ let to the sea; (3) a plebiscite in G. O. P. con- system- of government prescribes men. I purposely used the exag­ TRUTH 1 of satisfactory nse, J And favorable public land 80 miles offshore, Austria, maybe; (4) disarmament, gressio n a 1 that policy making and responsibil­ gerated illustration because if there SIMPLE opinion supports that ft At London, ex-Premier David if others will do likewise; (5) Ger­ ity for determination of policy shall is added power in the matter of of t*"e able physicians campaign MRS. BOLTON Lloyd George scored England's woe­ man re-entry to the League of Na­ committe e .,,. , ... be in the hands of elected represent­ making policy granted now, there wh* test the value" of , -, J ^,-- , Ohw accepted her. Doan's under exacting fully poor food production, claim­ tions, provided Britain doesn't con­ hailed Ohio s F atives—they being the fellows who will be additional grants of. power _,. ... hboratory conditions. ing that two and a half million acres These physicians, tf*o, approve every word tinue to run the show. To most ob­ results as a sign that "the tide of have membership in the senate or accorded later just as sure as little of advertising ya>;, read, the objective of which produced 1,000,000 tons of food servers, they looked like the same national sentiment continues strong­ house of representatives. apples grow on trees. It is that which is only to recommend Doan's Pillt in 1914 are 'now overgrown with old set of peace terms brightened as a good diur-tic treatment for disorder ly toward a Republican sweep next Some effort was made by politi­ "next step" that I have talked about of the^ kidney function and for relief of weeds. with a new coat of paint. November." cians to develop the general board's ih"tnel;e^oiumns"so"nTariy times. - the pain and worry it-causes. ft At London, it was rumored Maj. Other political news: - If more people were aware of how the Mr. Welles Goes Calling The whole thing can be summed Itidneyi must constantly remove waste Hermit Roosevelt, son of the ft Four Democratic senators (Mas­ up, I believe, in the conclusion that that cannot stay in the blood -without-in-. "Roughrider," would leave his Brit­ BID FOR POWER? jury to health, there would be better un­ Hastily concluding his preliminary sachusetts' Walsh, Iowa's Herring, we are getting too many military- derstanding of -why the whole body suffers ish army post to lead an interna­ In a recent recommendation of discussions in Rome with Benito Michigan's Brown and Indiana's trained people in positions of respon­ when kidneys Iagt and diuretic medica­ tional brigade against Russia in Mussolini, Undersecretary of State Minton) indicated they could con­ the navy's general board, Wil­ tion would be more often employed. liam Bruckart sees the naval of­ sibility. When they are transferred Burning, scanty or too frequent urina­ Finland. Sumner Welles hurried to Switzer­ ceive of an international situation to civilian functions, however hon­ tion sometimes warn of disturbed kidney ft Arriving in the U. S. for a three- land and thence to Berlin. What which would make it wise to nom­ ficers making a strong bid for function. _You may suffer nagging back­ additional control of the depart­ est and sincere they may be, those ache, persistent headache, attacks of dir­ week visit, Archduke Otto of Aus­ had been advertised as a pure-and- inate and elect Franklin Roosevelt officers naturally take with them the tiness, getting up nightr,! swelling, puffi- tria hoped to arouse sentiment for simple fact-finding expedition was for a third term. ment. He says they will be tak­ ness under the eyes—feel weak, nervous ing this power away from civilian deep fundamentals of their training. »11 played out. '*- ••• his enthronement—provided Ger­ developing (as everyone had expect­ ft Thomas E. Dewey had his name officers. While he doubts that It is not good. We have seen the Use Doan's Pith. It Is better to rely on many loses the war and Austria is ed) into a queer peace offensive. filed in the Nebraska G. O. P. pri­ -ft medicine that has won world-wide ac­ congress will accept this recom­ answer written on the other side of restored. Premier Mussolini had evidently mary, where he will fight it out with claim than on something less favorably mendation, Bruckart warns that the Atlantic ocean. I do not believe known. Ask your neighbor! • ft Died: Gen. WilUiun Graves, 74, told Mr. Welles his terms, and it Michigan's Sen. Arthur Vandenbgrg. we must watch any trend which it is going to happen here, but it who commanded U. S. expedition­ was widely advertised—that Adoli ft Vice President John Nance Gar­ would give too much power to -COU.M if citizens who are jealous of ary forces in Siberia from 1918 to Hitler would do likewise. Everyone, ner let his name be entered in New "non-elective" authorities. our system of government fail to 1920. obviously, would talk tough. York. keep their eyes open. D0ANS PILLS THE CHARLEVOlk COUNTY HERALD, EAST JORDAN, MICH. Swedish Troops Practice Arctic Circle Maneuvers Colorful Alphabet WHO'S In Easy Stitchery -•/" NEWS apt - I! *W^BMBK**J&JSJHWBIB 'Hi By VIRGINIA VALt THIS (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) ETTE DAVIS has always B made it very clear that she WEEK had the courage of her -convio tions. She's prepared to back By LEMUEL F. PARTON one of her pet theories with coin (Consolidated Features—WNU Service.) of the realm right now, and XT EW YORK7^';Ge7tle~Br:eezeiMs John Garfield^ James Cagney a loose translation of the name and Pat O'Brien are ready to of Paraguay's new dictator, Jose Fe­ lix Estigarribia. On September 13, string alongwith her. She believes that Hollywood 'Gentle Breeze'U J« j£ could be made a theatrical cen- New Iron Man served. "It is ^eFr-sinee-there - is-alLsoEts_o£_ Far Paraguay '.'•'.'• possible-that- a hew '"'iron man is checking in, in Paraguay, her.-partners are prepared -to with the emergence of the shrewd,, form an organization for pro­ resolute General Estigarribia." It ducing plays—and also to act in appeared to be a wrong guess, until recently, when the general an­ them. Plays that succeed will nounced his dictatorship, having as­ be seht along to Broadway. IT'S easy to initial or monogram sumed the presidency last August. * accessories with this colorful alphabet in simplest stitchery. Graying, handsome austere, just Swedish troops who guard their country's northern frontier pictured at training maneuvers within the Arc­ Olivia De Haviland hadn't much turning 50, he is the smallest of dic­ The initials are equally lovely on tic circle. It was in this area that Soviet warplanes bombed the Swedish village of Pajala. Left: Soldiers more than settled her differences household or personal articles. tators— 130 pounds, five feet, six operate a mortar, similar to the Stokes machine. Right: Nature made this emplacement, used by an anti-tank with Warner Brothers than she got inches tall. He was a Napoleon ad­ Pattern 2245 contains a transfer gun crew near the border north of the Gulf of Bothnia. into hot water again by refusing to pattern of two l7/s and one 1¼ dict in his youth, but is said to work in "Flight 8," and was sus­ have abandoned such attitudes and inch alphabet; illustration of pended again. Virginia Bruce was stitches; materials required. interests in later years. Of remote free, after cancellation of her Met- basque ancestry, he is the descend­ Send order to; ant of a wealthy Paraguayan fam­ Cubs' Pi tellers (Minus Dizzy) Begin Spring Training ily, educated for the army at home - Circle N ;edlecraft Dept. and in Paris. He entered the Gran Sewing Ave. New York Chaco war as a lieutenant colonel, 82 Eighth 15 cents In coins for Pat- gained a generaley in a year and Enclose emerged as a national hero. tern No. . Address The U. S. A. has a stake in his new dictatorship. When he entered his brief turn as minis­ ter to Washington, he lunched at Zealous Photographer the White House and was ex­ tended generous credits for the Was Looking Ahead "re-building" of Paraguay. Photographs had been taken at the wedding, and the happy pair "Extrasensory perception" has were assured that proofs would be becn-fad4fig—rapidly after itg- gnddpn sent to them so that the best might burgeoning of two years ago, but he chosen for delivery. here it is again, with Professor J. B. Rhine, its Some days passed, and the Expert Studies high pries^ of looked-for envelope arrived. Mental Powers Duke univer*. All agog, the young couple Of Girl Marvel sity,- making opened the envelope. But instead a study of of pictures of the bridal group they Talth Hope Charity IlaiJing, llie liU- were confronted with studies of a . tie Pennsylvania girl who has been two-months-old baby. OUVlA~DE~HAVIEANir railing thp fntnro the way a Dool- The bride nearly collapsed. So ; player calls his_shots. Now 4Vz years did the- bridegroom—when, on r — ro contract, so you'll see her as the old, she has been makirig~Bun s^e\e j' heroine, opposite Ralph Bellamy looking at the baik. uf une- of tho- prophecies since she was 18 months, The lovely"divia seeTfTs to know --proofs,. he read: - "Please__staie_ old; so naturally they get Professor | what she wants—the difficulty lies in deafly when ordering' which size Rhine on the job. I getting it. you want, and how many." He has kept right on running his parapsychological laboratory Metro is prepared to shoot the at Duke, since his 2,500,000 tests Members of the Chicago Cubs pitching staff pictured limbering up in an early-season workout on Cata- works and give the public a treat of University students there cdtr-— iinn—reta;nl, Amlnn, Cnlif l ett tn right nfe LarrxJ^c'ch, Bill Lee, Claude Passeau, Charley Root, Clay Bry­ in "Boom Town"; Clark Gable, vinced him of the reality of men­ an* and Vance Page. Rain interfered with opening days of spring training. Dizzy Dean, No. 1 holdout, was' ripencer tracy, Claudette Colbert tal telepathy, and the possibili­ conspicuous by his absence, , .-•'._'. and Hedy Lamarr will have the lead­ ty of our peeping into the fu­ ing roles, Jack Conway win- direct, ture, as well as into the minds Read This Important Message! and John Lee Mahin adapted the Do you dread those "trying years" (38 to of our neighbors. He said it story for the screen. 52)? Are you getting moody, cranky and would take 1,600 digits to ex­ Finn Troops View 'Gift' From Invaders Dalai Lama NERVOUS? Do you fear hot flashes, weak­ ening dizzy flpetis? Are you jealous of atten- . press the mathematical degree tions other women get? THEN LISTEN— of improbability in his tests. If you've tried to get "Swiss Fam­ These symptoms often result from female functional disorders. So start today and take Professor and Mrs. Rhine began ily Robinson" at your local library famous Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cam- exploring the spook world when they lately you've probably been cut of pound. For over 60 years Pinkham's Com­ pound, has helped hundreds of thousands of were getting the doctor's degree at luck. Translated from the Swiss in grateful women to go "smiling thru" difficult • 1820, the book is said still to be a days. Pinkham'a has helped culm unstrung the University of Chicago. Among nerves and lessen annoying female func­ other such phenomena they exam­ best-seller, ranking second only to tional "irregularities." One of ths most elec­ ined the feats of "Margery," the the Bible in gross sales. It had tive "woman's" tonics. Try ill Boston medium and reported that never been screened until RKO of­ the "whole game was base and bra­ fered it to the public, and the pic­ zen trickery." They repeatedly have ture has made the book more popu­ ! To Succeed assailed fake occultism. As to men­ lar than ever. I The success of most things de­ tal telepathy, they lay it on the line, pends upon knowing how long it but they're still working on the Small boys—and their fathers as will take to succeed.—Montqs- prophecy business. They started the well—are likely to want to camp jtjuieu. latter inquiry in April last year. out in the theaters showing R'KO's • Pathe's Sportscope reel on baseball. For the last year, knowing ob­ It features the tactics and tech­ servers of European war and poli­ nique of such experts as Gabby Relief At Last tics have warned the world to keep Hartnett, Dizzy Dean, Joe Moore, a sharp eye on Col. Gen. Walther Merrill May, Joe Medwick, Arky j _ *- i von Brauch- Vaughan and Paul Derringer. It's called "Pennant Chasers." For Your COUJ Army General itsch CQm_ Oreomulsion relieves promptly be­ Gets Credit for mander in cause it goes right to the seat of tha Nazi-Russ Deal chief °f t,le It's reunion on "Big Sister" for trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, German Alice Frost and Za- _ increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflam­ army. His tracks usually lead m su Pitts. Alice broke ed bronchial mucous membranes. the direction of the next German into radio years ago No matter how many medicines you lunge, and, controlling the army, he by doing imperson­ have tried, tell your druggist to sell makes as well as executes decisions New spiritual and temporal ruler ations of Zasu, as you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding that you are to like Genera) Von Brauchitsch is a of Tibet, the world's only theocracy, j taught her by Miss the way it quickly allays the cough member of an old east Prussian is a six-year-old Chinese peasant Pitts, a friend of or you are to have your money back. feudal family, a conservative by in­ White tlad Finnish soldiers give a "stolen" machine gun a thorough boy, Ling-erg La-Mu-Tan-Chu, the family. stinct, education and tradition, but examination before putting it back in commission against its former whose elaborate enthronement re­ Erin O'Br i en CREOMULSION politically malleable. A distin- owners. A foreign military observer estimated that 100,000 Russian sol­ Moore will appear cently took place. He is accepted -jTiiighed nfficpr in_tliaJorld_war, he diers lost their lives in bending the Mannerheim line far enough to as Empress Carlot- for Coughs, Chest Colds, B rorkhitis as the reincarnation of the thirteenth hated the republic, but went along, •i'reiUuu thc-citv of Viborg, Finnish_ne\vsnaners report that Russian ma ta, the role created - Jood's Influence with it, alienating his stiff-necked :.il losses so far have amounted to 473 planes, 1,193 tanks, 392 field" Dalai Lama, wliu died in 1933. Uiitfh "by TJeEte~TJavis on After a good dinner one can for- Junker colleagues, and became head ffun-, 399 guns, 630 motor tractors, 117 field kitchens, 1,569 horses and Ling-erg is 18, a regent will per­ the screen when Zasu Pitts of its armed forces. From 1922 to much other miscellaneous equipment. form administrative duties. she is heard on the give anybody, even one's own re­ 1932, he delivered many scholarly Star Theater in "Juarez and Max- lations.—Wilde. denunciations of bolshevism, but, imillian" on March 13. Aherne will perhaps more than any other one Televisionist play Maximillian, as he did in the man, put through the interchange of As Byrd Expedition Crosses the Equator picture. officers, technicians, fabricated goods, munitions and raw materials FEEL GOOD Anyone who says a magpie bit Here is Amazing Relief of between Germany and Russia dur­ him, in explanation of a gash under Conditions Due to Sluggish Bowels ing this decade. , It you think nD laxative* the eye, can't expect to be believed ' act alike, just try thla —A) Pearce can swear to that. He at! v#oM»bl» laxative. Weighty opinion from the oth­ mild, thorough, rcfreahinR, invigorating. De­ er side is that General Von • has an aviary in his yard, and pendable relic/ from slcV headaches, bflloua apclla, among the birds is a magpie. Pearce tired feeling when associated with constipation. Brauchitsch, rather than Hitler, W»I.AII+ Dielr Set n 25c box of NR from your Goering or Rosenberg, schemed was holding the bird—which he calls niUlOUI 111 51V druggist. Mate the teat—then Arlene Harris—and it snapped at 11 not delighted, return the box to us. We will the Russo-German deal and refund the purchase — forcedJt to a conclusion tliraugh him. That's his story, and he's price. Th«t'« f»lr. sticking to it; but his gang, how­ Get MR Taulctn today; \ kDTONICHT his unquestioned bold on the ITV TowonPoWiUftltHT. ' army. ever, is enthusiastically giving him "the bird!" To him is also attributed the plan, the decision, the timing and the start of the drive into Poland. In ODDS AND ENDS . . . An eastern Bureau of Standards several instances there have been syndicate is negotiating with f.iim and j indications of hostility between the | Ahner for the right to portray their ad- j BUSINESS organization general and Goering, with the bet­ , ventures in a newspaper cartoon series I A which wants to get the ting on the former, if it ever comes I . . . Don IVilson is now plugging eleven | most for the money sets up to an open break. The general was different products on the air—and never standards by which Co judge getting them mixed! . . . liill I'awell was what is offered to it, just as in .born in_Berr_in.J.n 18B1 and has been Pictured at uork in the office of so determined not to do "Cyrano dc in the army since his.early youth " Washington the government his Fort Wayne, Ind., laboratory is llergcrac"—uliich Metro hottght for him maintains a Bureau of Standards. He is handsome, imposing and bril­ Pliilo T. Famsworth, who was re­ —that he refused to sign his new contract • You can have your own Bureau liantly educated, within the limits of Southward bound for the wastes of Antarctica, the Byrd expedition cently designated one of the "ten until a clause was inserted that protected of Standards, too. Just consult the old army caste, and has em­ held appropriate ceremonies while the S. S. North Star Was crossing the outstanding young men of 1939." him against it . . . Spencer Tracy accepted the advertising columns of your ployed power in a manner to make equator. Under the guidance of Dr. Alfred B. Gcycr, a "southern cross" Farnsworth, who is now 34, had filed it without protest . . . "Pinocchio" is so newspaper. They safeguard good that it's hard to see how Walt Dis­ him an ace exhibit in Dr. Rausch- is clipped on the chest of Murray Wiener, assistant physicist of the expe­ a patent application on a complete your purchasing power every ning's "revolution of nihilism." ney and his talented crew can ever do dition. Jack Gambole assists by washing Wiener's mouth. television system before he was 21. anything better. day of every year. r^

THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD. (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, MARCH a, IMO.

Charlevoix County Herald NORTH WILSON PENINSULA SOUTH WILSON G. A. LISK, Editor ami PublU-W. (Edited by Mr*. August Knop) (Edited by Mn. B. Haydeii) (Edited by Miss Anna BrintnaU) Entered at the Poatofflce at East Jordan, Michigan, as second data BE SURE TO COME IN AND CHECK OUR mail matter. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reidel visi­ Evart "Bob" Jarman of Maple Sunday callers at Mr. and Mrs. ted Mr. and Mrs. August Knop Thurs­ Lawn farm hitch hiked to Grand Rap­ Peter Zoulek'i were Mrs. Cecil Mur- ADVERTISING RATE day afternoon. ids last week Monday and returned rand and children Gilbert and Betty,' ! j Bargain Table for Real Buys Reader! in Local Happening* column: Mr. and Mrs. Perry Christopher, all Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Weldy and daugh­ Tuesday evening with a used Model Three lines or less __ 30c A which he purchased there. He had of Old Mission; Mr, and Mrs. Carl FOR EXAMPLE: Over three lines, per line 10c ter Ardith visited their cousin near Schmidt of Petoskey, and Mr. and Norwood, Sunday. the- pleasure of running across Enos Display Kates on Request Lane, an old time resident of the Mrs. Wm. Zoulek and family. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Argetsinger To Close out, One Lot LOWE BROS. MELLOTONE Peninsula, who has a room in the Bob Scott and Clare Batterbee vis­ All suppers, ' entertainments and and Mrs. Carl Bergman were Charle­ Lorane Hotel on Ottawa St. and ited at FTank Rebec's Sunday. Quarts — 37c Y2 Gallon — 69c Gallon — 98c other meetings, which are held to voix business callers Saturday. keep's batch. They spent the evening >. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Smith of N. r raise money to promote some special Miss Betty Bader spent Saturday Wilson and Luther BrintnaU and PAROKEET LACQUER & DUCO. Dries in 1 hour. interest, will be charged for at our together and Mr. Lane had him to night with her school mate, Miss Car- breakfast. Mr. Lane is very much -daughters visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm. l regular-rates, unless accompanied by — /A pints: 9c */2 pints: 15c pints: 25c qts.: 45c olee-Knop. ~ crippled up with rheumatism. Spencer, Sunday, the occasion being advertising or job work. Mr. Spencer's birthday anniversary. Mrs. Dick Simmons gave a bunco The adult class of Star Sunday Closing out our stock of ALABASTINE TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION party last Wednesday. Sixteen neigh­ school took supper with John Seiler Mrs. Frank Haney visited Mrs. 'Ray Benson, Monday. Five pound Box for only —-—_. 39c (Payable in Advance) bors and friends were present. A pot in East Jordan, Tuesday evening. Mr. ; One Year . $1.60 luck lunch was served and everyone Seiler prepared the supper himself, i ' Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hawley and Six Months _l ~ .78-- went"home saying they had a _ne whiclrwas thebest ever (Mrs. Seiler 'family., visited MrL and Mrs. Wm. Here's a Real one — WINCHESTER DRY CELL Three Months .60 time. is visiting in Georgia). Those pres­ Zoulek Saturday evening. "BATTERIESr35c value at -1Z11S2 for 25tf (Anywhere in the United States) Afton- Grange had a bingo party ent were Mr. and MTS. Ray Loomis Beatrice and Edna Haney visited Canada $2.00 per year. last Saturday night and they raffled of Gravel Hill, north side, Mr. and Minnie BrintnaU Saturday afternoon. Nothing Wrong — Just over-stocked ., Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Smith visited off a quilt which Frank Woodcock of Mrs. Charles Arnott of Maple Row at Luther Brintnall's last Tuesday _MAKE_ YOUR FOR SALE -East J.ordan___>n.___ farm, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Duffy of These are only a few of our money-saving buys. night. -Mrs. Angiiat: Knnp and son visited Mountain Dist., "Mr. and Mrs. William - SIGN WORKy-NOT SHIRK —Joseph Xihak called-at L. : Sanderson and son Billy of~TSol Mrs. B. Weldy,_Monday. nail's last Sunday." A«ENC-Y-F OR-HOLiAND-FURNAG& CO— PUT IT HERE, IN THE wood, Mrs. J. W.' Hayden of Orchard 'Claude Pearsall was a business cal ; The big trucks are seen quite regu­ Hill, the Misaes Vert Staley, Erma Let Us Estimate That Job For You — Now! ler of August Knop, Saturday. larly on M-32 lpaded with logs and Kitson and Edna Reich of Peninsula, headed toward Bricker's saw mill. WANT ADS Mrs. Clara Kitsman of East Jordan, Everyone seems to be well pleas­ First Insertion FOR RENT — Modern eight-room Rev. and Mrs. Rolland Armstrong of Charlevoix, and John Seiler and his ed the way the weather man has used 26 words or less — "26c Furnished Dwelling, with Garage them during the month of February W. A. PORTER sons. Everyone surely had a fine time. Over 25 words, per word _ 1c and two lots, on Third St. LEROY and so far into March. Henry Johnson, who stays with the PLUMBING — HEATING . HARDWARE Subsequemt Insertions SHERMAN. 10x1 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zoulek visited Ted Westernian family at the F. H. (If ordered with first insertion). Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zoulek of Echo, Main Street, East Jordan Phone 19 CEDAR POSTS FOR SALE — Any Wangeman farm, returned Saturday 26 words or less ___ 15c Monday evening. Over 26 words, per word Y^c kind you may need. Inquire CHAS. from a week's visit with a daughter 10c extra per insertion if charged. J. STANEK, Phone 213F41, R. 4., at Traverse City. He spent Sunday East Jordan. 8-3 with the David and Will Gaunt fam­ SOUTH ARM ••»•»••#»•»»»»•»»»•»•»•.»»»•»••»»•»•••»•»•»•••»•••••• HELP WANTED ily in Three Bells Dist. (Edited by Ruth Goebel) PARCEL POST MAILING LABELS Mrs. Geo, Staley left for Ann Ar-' WOOD CUTTERS WANTED — On —blank form — for sale at The bor Monday, March 4, for a check Phemical wood in Echo Township, HERALD office. Twenty-five foT t Mr. and Mrs. Basil Crawford and up. Her brother-in-law, Bert Staley Antrim County. Inquire of DAN 25c. 13 t.f. children, arrived Saturday to spend of Charlevoix, will take her. or FRANK BENNETT. 8x3 the week with his parents,. Mr. and Horray for Coach I! FOR SALE —- 3-year-old Mare colt, Mr. and Mrs. William Bellow at Mrs. Irving Crawford. WANTED or 10-year old mare with foal. Traverse City visited her sister, Mrs J Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Smith spent RALPH RANNEY, Phone 122-F3 Fred Wurn in Star Dist., Tuesday.J Sunday with her parents, Mr. and WANTED — We buy Poultry of all And His Class C Champions R. 3.'. East Jordan. 10x1 Mr. and Mrs. Wurn are both ^im­ Mrs. Davis of Boyne City. kinds. Also young Cattle. SAM proving. Their son, W>. F., and fam­ Mr. and Mrs. Ed Constantine from VAN REE, East Jordan, Phone FOR SALE OR TRADE — for a cow ily of Boyne City spent the latter East Jordan spent Sunday with Mr. FOR A BREAKFAST FOR CHAMPIONS TRY 122F32. 49t.f. or poultry. Upright Piano in good part of last week with them. and Mrs. Ralph Walker. '•""• condition. E. HINTON on former ATTENTION FARMERS — Why eat Mr. and Mrs. Elmer-Olstrom of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Hayes, Mr. Joe Kenny farm. East Jordan. 10x1 salt pork all winter. Let us cure Qhaddock Dist. and Mr. and Mrs and Mrs. Jack Davis called on the Charles Healey of Willow Brook, Arnold Smith's Sunday night. Pancakes and Sausages your hogs into the finest Big Jug FARM FOR SALE, $325.00. Thir­ farm called on the F. K. Hayden fa­ Brand of Ham and Bacon. Only ty-four' acres on the Boyne City Frona* Isaman spent the week end mily at Pleasant View farm, Sunday, LEAN HOME MADE LINK SAUSAGES _ 15c lb. three cents per lb. J. P. SEILER, and Boyne Falls road, about two at the home of her parents, Mr. and John Print* nf Petoskfey visited his phone 243, East Jordan -49tf miles" from town. MARTHA ZIT- Mrs. Kenneth Isaman. -SAME SAUSAGE — IN BUIJC___-____2______25IL sister, Mrs. Charles Healey and fam: Mr. and Mrs. Marshal Shepard KA. 7x6 UNEXPECTED CHANGE makes a- ily at Willow Brook farm, Saturday. spent Sunday at the home of their FAMO PANCAKE FLOUR ______5 lbs. 23c vailable fine Rawleigh Route in BATTERY CHARGING & REPAIR­ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hayden and uncle, Irving Crawford. Otsego County. Rawleigh ' Pro­ ING — Charging: 2-volt, 26c; two little daughters of Hayden Cot­ The Walker girls called on Jean HARVEST TIME PANCAKE FLOUR __ 5 lbs. 20c ducts have been sold for 25 years. . 6-volt, 35c, Rental, 5c per day. tage went to Mancelona Saturday at Murray Sunday afternoon. Nearby Dealer makes Sales of $75 Lowest Prices on Rebuilding & re ternoon and picked up her brother, Betty and Gerald Moore called on last week,' Must havp car. Tf inter^ KARO SYRUP — 1½ lb. Blue ___ 2 for 25c pairing, EVAN, Mill St., Fast. .Im­ Bert Novack and they all went t6 the Flora children Sunday afternoon ested, write Rawleigh-'&, Dept. dan. 9-4 Traverse City and spent the- night Mr. and Mrs. James Sloan and" ;; HONEY IN GLASS,. ofielftflind __. ___--_r_-f8c- MCG—121—201, Freeport 111., with their parents, Mr. and Mrs; Otto children called on Mr. and Mrs. WiU 7x4 MILLWOOD FOR—SA__3- ^*y- Novack. They returned Sunday liaui Sloan of East Jordan, Sunday. -Hardwoed-at-$X1.00. JEor_five-cord. eningj :—'•-- ---—-—„-— -Mrs. R, V. Liskum &-children were. PERSONALS loads. Green hardwood at $10.00 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers of Sunday dinner guests at the hone: of for five-cord" load. — M. C. BRIC- Porkris theBujr CORRECTION Mountain Dist. spent Sunday after­ her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles KER & SONS, R. 4, East Jordan I will not be responsible for any noon with Mrs. Myer's parents;. Mr, Murphy. Drop us a card. 9-4 PORK STEAK ______= ^__--2 lbs. for 25c bills contracted by anyone other and Mrs. David Gaunt in Three B*}J» T -Ted and Ernie ManthieB and Lu­ Dist. "•" ' " '' than myself. WAYNE EVANS.9-1 WE HAVE Potatoes; HOME MADE cille Zink of Petoskey and Elizabeth Carefully cut from juicy, tender' Pork: /• The above notice was mislead- Butter, marie from pasturized Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crowell of Dave Diehm and Margaret and Eleanor ing and did not mean Thelma cream —- also Pasturized Cream ~Slaley Hill, east side, motored.to McfjBehling ^f—Boyne City wore Sunday ; > PORK ROASTS ___._.. 1 ._., lie lb. Evans. It referred to those asso­ that will Ujhip in 2 minutes. Butter­ Bain Saturday to visit relatives. They night callers at the Walter Goebel ciated anyway in business, WAY­ milk for-them good old pancakes plan to return Sunday. Alfred Crow; home. FRESH SIDE PORK _1 lie lb. NE EVANS. 10-1 and to drink — much better for ell is doing the chores. . Arthur Benn and Chester Nelson you than beer and won't make Mr. and Mrs. Perry Looze and fa-t are visitors at the Goebel farm. The FAT BACON __ 8c lb. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS you overbalanced. If you are mily of Cherry Hill were Sunday din-, boys are from Chicago and have been here before. When they left last HOME MADE PURE LARD — 1 cent for a pound— MILLWORK and REPAIRING — lady, 111 give you permission to nes guests of his parents, Mr. and fall sand seeped into their shoes and • PORTER- & ROBINSON 310 Main call up my wife. WM. SHEPARD. Mrs. Will Looze in Three Bells Dist: with each 2 lbs. for 19c — Or 3 lbs. for 20c they just could not stay away from ', ..St. East Jordan. Phone"112. 7x7 Phone 163-F3, . * ' 10x1 A large party gathered at the Pe­ ninsula Grange Hall Saturday" even­ our Wonderful northern Michigan. ing for a shower for Herman Kam. Walter Goebel made a trip to De­ radt and his bride who occupy the troit last week and while there he Henry Kamradt farm on tjie Boyne visited his boys, Harold and Walter, THE QUALITY City - East Jordan road. They stayed, who are working for the A. & P. Tea CDCriAl MARCH and until a late hour and had a fine time, Co., there. >Kt VIML APRIL ONLY Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kamradt and A surprise gathering met at Mrs. FOOD MARKET family of Traverse City spent the Arnold Smith's last Thursday. Many PHONE 142 — WE DELIVER — EAST JORDAN week end with relatives.on the Pe"-, gifts were presented to her. Lunch ninsula.. , •'»' was served at 4 o'clock and all pres­ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loomis of Gra^ ent had a wonderful time. ECONOM ASTER vel Hill, north side, took dinner with Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pree- Mrs. Loomis* parents, Mr; and Mrs,. vo a 7 H lb. girl. Mother and daugh­ TRY HERALD WANT ADS FOR RESULTS! Harlow Sweet in Advance. They weris ter doing fine. ELECTRIC joined by Gene Inman and others ot Boyne City. The occasion was Mij. HEATER Sweet's birthday anniversary. ?. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loomis of Gra­ Regular price $7.95 vel Hill, north side, spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Will Mae Gregor in Boyne City. MARCH & APRIL Rev. C. W. Sidebotham of East Jordan gave a very interesting ser* mon on the Lord's Supper and the '.•639. reason for the unsettled date of Eas^ ter, at Star school house Sunday, BIG PACKAGE March 3, to an audience of 36. Fred Crowell, Will Gaunt and Gi C. Ferris of the AAA committee wer$ signing up the farmers of Eveline Finished in a beautiful fawn Twp., Friday and Monday. r^ Both For A fine little man came to live witK brown crinkled enamel witfc Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dodd ia chrome trim. A handsomely Mountain Dist., Mar. 1st. Mrs. Dodd *"W95 was formerly Margie Scott. styled, sturdily constructed At the. Eveline Twp. Caucus held, 7 March 4 at the Ironton Grange Hal) heater, that harmonizes with the following were placed on Ticket »1.25 Down No. 1 and Ticket No. 2, also number the finest of interiors. of votes each received is shown:—s $1.20 Monthly Supervisor: Wm. Sanderson 28( G. C. Ferris IB. Clerk: Ralph Price, no opposition* Treasurer: Cash A. Hayden 32, General Electric Clayton Healey 13, Few things deliver as much value per dollar of cost as the telephone Highway Com: Richard Hosegood^ you are using today. It brings you a generous measure of security, no opposition. Alarm Clock Board of Review: Pete Anderson, convenience and enjoyment. It gives you 24-hour contact with the S3, Oakley Saunders 12 doctor, the police, and the fire department. It saves you steps, time •295 Justice of Peace: Datus Dean, no opposition. and trouble. It increases your opportunities for social pleasures, Attractive brown Constable, east side: James Cob-' sending and receiving invitations, exchanging greetings of the season. lentz, no opposition. ', > plastic case, a pre- Constable; west side: Albert Carls It does these things quickly . . . and it does them cheaply too. cision timekeeper, son, no opposition. •> and a product of the Unhappy end of our own Sherlock world's largest mak­ Holmes, Like most of the criminal* er of electrical equip­ he brought to justice, the homespun- ment. American detective made one mistake that brought his brilliant career to a tragic climax. Read of his most fam, ous cases and how he finally tripped; himself up, as told in The American MICHIOA-f BELL TBLEPHONB Michigan Public Service Co. Weekly, the magazine distributed COMPANY with next Sunday's Herald-American. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERAUJ. (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) fill DAY, MARCH S, I (MO. se Mr., and Mm. W. L. Jones spent tin Ur In Garden Gouip of Feb. 23rd re­ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHi week end in Detrpit. garding beautifying, that section of lake frontage near the" bridge where JLfitatOTcro^ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Campbell the awans are fed. A decorative were Lansing visitors the latter part background would add much to the of last week. attractiveness. AUTO LOANS Mr. and Mrs. Gus Mural were An open shore line and a spacious \f Otto Morton of Detroit, wain week Born to Mr. and Mrs. Donald John­ called to Rose City last Friday, by driveway to accommodate cars and end guest of East Jordan friends. son a son, Sunday, March 3 at Char* the death of Mrs. Xuina's step moth­ trucks must be maintained, as this is levoix hospital. the landing for row boats. Interested Coal, Wood or Hay for sale, and er, Mrs. Neil MacDpnald. Funeral services were held at Rose City wtth active and experienced folks of our we deliver. Malpass Hdwe. Co. adv. Mr. and Mrs. John Smith spent community have been approached on burial at Ea8t Tawas. last week end with relatives and the matter, and, as soon as the snows Harry Simmons and Barney Mil- friends in Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Work, Miss have melted, a'survey will be made. stein were Bay City visitors last Sun- Grace Osborn,' Mrs. Heberstreet and I walked there this morning (March • day. — - Williard Howe, Benny Clark and Mrs. Iden of Petoskey, were Sunday 1st) but the snow is still very deep. Bud Shepard have returned home guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Huns- The Civic Committee of the Gar­ Mrs. Leo LaCroix is guest of her from a trip to California. (hmghter, Miss Betty Clark in Lan­ berger. ' den Club welcomes helpful construc­ tive suggestions. sing. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hayner have Mr. and Mrs. Russell Riegling and M. B. Palmiter, Our automobile finance plan with its .returned home after spending the children _came from Grand Rapids Chairman, Civic Comm., low discount rates makes it easy for re­ Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dan- past two months in Florida." l,gst Friday • for the "week "end with GardenClubT - for'th a son, Larry Keith, Monday, Mrs. Riegling'g parents, Mr. and Mrs. * * * sponsible persons to buy "new "cars" "out March 4. •> Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Powers of Mike Gunderson. " of income. n Harbor Springs, were Sunday guests Thank you, Mrs. Palmiter. Garden "*""• Mrs. Wm Inman is spending two of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Rogers. Mr. and Mrs. Basil Crawford and Gossipera will be watching with in­ Buy your car this way. Besides saving -^weeks-in JJetroit, visiting friends and terest for a report of the survey of children_of Marquette, are visiting money you will be building credit for _ l-clatiires. Mrs. G. W. "Bechtoia spent ""the the former's "parents," Mr. and_Mrsr the spot^where,-as-you-say,_"a decora-, Week end—in Detroit,- Ur. beentold Trvihg~Crawford "Ttral—oilier - EMt|y.'ve background would add_much-io. 7 future use". Also","you"will deal withhomc the attractiveness. Mrs. Clarence Kidder was taken to drove down Sunday, returning" home Jordan relatives and friends. people and enjoy the benefits of bank Please read the following note Charlevoix hospital last week for an the same day. v appendectomy. The Presbyterian Ladies Aid meets from "Citizen." service and protection. Electric, coal, and oil Brooders and this Friday afternoon, March 8th, Jit Investigate all the advantages of this L. G. Bunker was admitted to Incubators, Poultry Breeders, Foun­ the home of Mrs. G. W. Bechtold. Dear Mrs. Harrington: - bank finance plan before you buy a car. Charlevoix hospital last Saturday, for tains, etc for sale or trade at Mal­ Mrs. Grace Boswell and Mrs. Wni. Wish you would follow up that idea Surgical treatment. pass Hdwe. adv. Shepard are assistant hostesses. ' "f T. J's. Hope we can get the spot where ducks and swans are fed clean­ Mrs. Harry Jankoviak left Friday Louise Bechtold who is attending Mrs. M. L. Northup (Edna Inman), ed up. It sure is a mess down there in for a visit with her sister and family school in Traverse Gityr-is spending of Boyne City and twins, Murray the summer time. STATE BANK of in Indianapolis, Ind., the week with her paTents, Dr. and Lynn, and Nels Julius are spending a , Citizen. Mrs. G. W. Bechtold. week at the home of Mrs. Northup'B: Mrs. Ora Woodcock has returned parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Inman. ; And summertime is the time when EAST JORDAN home from a two Weeks visit with Mrs. Arnold Dedose and children we should, look our best, isn't it? If friends and relatives in Clio. Judy and Jerry of Detroit, are guests Mrs. Grace Boswell returned homfe MEM1EI FEDEKAl DEPOSIT INSUHANCE COKPOKATION the first part of last week from a you will read Mrs." Palmiter's letter at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ted (above) you will see that T. J's idea White navy Beans to eat?-4c lb. in Malpass and other friends. week's visit with Detroit friends and five pound lots also green dry Peas relatives, she also visited her daughtj- is due for an active "follow up." 5c lb. Malpass Hdwe. Co. adv. The M. E. Ladies Aid will meet ei\ Mrs. Thede Banhagle and family, "fhank you for expressing an interest 'Jhe^e id /\fo Substitute. JfiA. Mwiau in tke Bant; 'A with Mrs. J. K. Bader, Wednesday in Lansing. j in the project. It means you think the M-. and Mrs. John Porter and afternoon March 13, with Mrs. Rus- idea practical, and that is encourag­ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii daughter SUzzahe, left last Saturday sel Barnett as assistant hostess. We will have a Big Opening Barn ing. The snow is melting fast (to­ for a few weeks""Btayin Florida. Dar>ce at the Peninsula Grange 'Hall day) and only 17 days of winter are Eugene Gregory has entered school this Sat. nite, March 9th. The road left (on the calendar) . . , sowrite Robert Joynt of C. S. T. C, Mt. in Chicago, finishing a course in Air is plowed open. Eddy O'Briens oni in your suggestions now. Everyone THE SHOW PLACE OF THE NORTH Plesisant was week end guest of his conditioning and refrigeration which ard only famous Jazz Band will play must help if we are to have satisfac­ brother Gilbert and-ether friends. he has been taking for the past year. rhythm that will make an* old man tory results. TEMPLE THEATRE ^I„ feel like a kid. Hambergers too. adv, The winter square dancing is over All kinds of improved smelt Dipp­ Hope you have seen the red tulips ! 10c - ,15c r*. the Stockade. No Cover Charge, ers, and Supplies, also some nice There was a birthday party at, thi on exhibition at Clark's store. As one SATURDAY, MARCH 9th g^-if ?V 10c - 26c Open every night from March 15 on. Cars and Trucks for sale on easy pay­ home of Mrs. Goldie Sommerville ii) reporter said, "They light up the THE THREE MESQUITEERS •10x2 ments or .trade. Malpass Hdwe. Co. ad honor of Mrs. Luetz Bennett Wednes­ whole store." This pot of tulips is day,JUtaiar^i_2&£JIrs^_Sojriin£rjaHe_ Frank Strehl returned to Detroit only one "f a prreat company of- THE KANSAS TERRORS Mrs. Edith Bartlett who has been 1 Sunday, after spending the week end made a white cake trimmed in blue blboms "out of season" — hyacinths, CARTOON"—=—COMEDY - -LATEST NEWS spending the winter^ in Ann Arbor, and yellow. Mrs. Bennett received with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edd left WAdnesddy accompanying het tulips and narcissus — which Mrs. Sun. Matinee 2.30 10c - 15c - many lovely gifts. Light refreshments Strehl. ! Clark has successfully forced, accor­ SUNDAY — MONDAY Eves. *7 and 9 p. m. 10c-25c sister, Mrs. R. M. Burr on a trip to were served. California. ding to the directions she gave to the ALICE FAYE — FRED MacMURRAY Mrs. Marvin Benson and Mrs. Garden Club last fall. Mrs. Clark has ANDY DEVINE — RICHARD GREENE Richard Malpass were Sunday guests Mrs. Josephine Stewart, Mrs. E, A. promised us a letter about bulb for­ "ffif~MTrand Mrs. F. R. Bulow in Char Plllmmi,—Mis. Lcahman and—Mrs." cing to he puhliahed soon. levoix. LITTLE OLD NEW YORK Amosegger of Alden were Sunday i TECHNICOLOR CARTOON- CURRENT NEWS FLASHES jynogtg f the former's daughter. Mrs. Grace JNewvine Cf Boyne n Garden Gossip Backache! It's TUESDAY - WED. FAMU Y N1TFS 2 for 25c ^XTftyTwas-grrestrof her-daughterrMrsr Mrs. Arthur Brintnall and family. Edited Jiatore^sJWarmng -WILLIAM HENRY W. G. Boswell arid' family the fore Easter comes earlier this year Letters and questions on garden VIRGIAN DALE part .of last week. than it will for more than sixty years. PAROLE^FIXER • topics will be welcome. They will Something is wrong. Act quickly. SPORTLIGHTS — COMEDY ZORRO'S FIGHTING LEGION Mrs. Maynard Harrison returned Easter is the first Sunday after the be published and discussed in this Make this 4-Day test. Backache, get­ home last Thursday from Charlevoix first full moon following the first column. •'...': ting, up nights, burning, scanty or fre- day of Spring. This year Spring is tijttent flow may result if kidneys do THUR, - FRL, MAR. 14-15 Eves 7 & 9. 10c - 25c hospital, where she recently under- RONALD COLMAN — IDA LUPINO ushered in at 12:24 p. m. March 20th. Dear Mrs.. Harrington: - '' not regularly eliminate excess acids full maon Wines SalLmifry—MiarcK WALTER HUSTON — CLYDE COOK Now that the year is turning to­ i-nA nthar nrnctc (jut a i.rlay <•«.«<; hoy 20th. Full—moon comes Saturday Jr.. Summerville, son of Mr. and wards spring," I'm wondering what of BURETS, the kidney evaeuant. March 23. Easter is March 24th. "THE LIGHT^FHAT^^nAfeEl^ Mrs. Ernie Summerville, is convales­ plans the members of your Garden from any druggist. Locally at Gidley cing at Charlevoix hospital following Club' have in their bonnets for the & Mac, Druggists. an operation for appendicitis. The Mary Martha Class will meet at the home of Mrs.. Jess Robinson on arboretum. Such an unusual arid con­ Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ellis of Mill St. (The former Cole residence) servative measure for wildlife must •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••»t»»»»»*» Pnntiac a daughter, Tonya Dee, Sun­ Friday evening, March, 15. Pot luck be a constant source of pleasure and day February 25. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis supper at 6:30. AH persons having pride to all East Jordan. It is an in­ were former East Jordan residents, quilt blocks are requested to turn dication of .real foresightedness to she the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. them in this week so the committee see the soil thus used for educational^ Glen Bulow and' the former the son can have the quilt set together by the and recreational purposes. of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ellis. 15th. I was extremely sorry to hear of the fire last summer. But sometimes a calamity is a good deed in disguise. •>•••••»•••»••»•••••»•••••»•••••••»•••»••••••»••••••»• This one may renew vigor and inter­ est in making outstanding in the state this sanctuary for our native trees and shrubs. What are the plans for the' coming season? I know other communities ii Just aiming toward similar goals will wel­ come any new ideas you may have. I should like to give the sanctuary project some publicity in my outdoor if Received... column in the Detroit Free Press.. I still recall that lovely summer < > day we walked over the grounds and how thrilled I was to see the extent of the replanting of pines and hard­ woods. What a forest for the children Big Ship- of tomorrow! I remember the cooling stream in the ravine, the carpet of mosses and the song of a field spar- i! mentof.... AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS PLEASE NOTE: An endless variety of "shots" await you in the arboretum. Ted Malpass, Jr., showed me one he made the other day, — a beauti­ I WALLPAPER ful composition of ravine, creek, hemlock, beech, snow — all.mixed • The new 1940 Spring designs in the best Wall in proportions just right to make Papers made have just arrived; They are the most a perfect picture. colorful, most-pleasing designs we have seen in years row echoing to us from a distance. A beautiful spot! A rare privilege, that — and there's something for every taste. of sharing the green places with oth­ Come in and look them over today. ers, has the East Jordan community. With continued best wishes, Grace V. Sharritt, • » * ., | WHITEFORD'S Right now (March 3rd) the arbor­ etum lies under a foot or more of snow and for the past month has been 5e to $1.00 Store inaccessible except on snow shoes. I have walked there often and am glad OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE — EAST JORDAN to report that many little pines sur -vivedJastjmmmer'g ghastly fire. Two things must be done if the arboretum iiillllllllllllllllllllllllliilllllllllilllillllllllliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iimiimiiiiiiH>iiiiiM'i_ is to survive, — fences must be re­ paired to.keep out the cows, and a All models priced erf Flint, Michigan. Transpor­ I Our many years of service in this community assures 1 fire lane must be mide around the |. you of the same helpful assistance you are accustom- i necessary but not harmless dump. tation based on rail rates, state and local taxes | ed to with your wishes ever the first consideration. | Soon the arboretum committee will '659 meet and Mr. E. E. Wade, Superin­ MASTER 15 HISMfSS COUPE (if any), optional equipment and accessories— | Our business is built upon the recommendations of § tendent of our schools, expects to tell = us of the school's plans for this pro- Other me*tt tUghtty high* extra. Prices subject to change without notice. -%- -—-- the-people we have served.._ - "je"cr,rr"w1!l~&e-glaii-to- write-you i*en- in more detail, for we do appreciate your interest. 1 R. G. WATSON FUNERAL HOME J Dear Mrs. Harrington: i HEALEY SALES CO. J0R^S I | East Jordan, Mich. . 66 Phones 244 | The Civic Committee of the Garden Club noted with interest T. J'«. let- •••••••••••••••••••••»»»«««»t»»»**»«»»»»»»*»»»»»»*»*»»»»»*»»»»»»*»»»»»«»***»»»»* iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii THE CHARLEVbVx COUNTY/ttEBALb, EA8T JORDAN, MICH. m Hinged Curtains for Princess Frock Is Window Cupboards Simple, Charming

Ky RUTH WYETH SPEARS HARMING and changeable are VA/HY not build cupboards at C the words for this very sim­ ** each side of a pair of win­ ple princess frock . (1898-B). dows and a comfortable seat be­ Charming, because it is so slim- tween? This takes very .little waisted and flare-skirted, with EAST qno WEST wide shoulders gathered at the space and adds useful storage room; as well as a~ cozy placebo- top:~~Changeablerbeoause-you-cah git. The cupboards are hidden by make the neckline two ways—ei­ r "hinged "curtainff'trfat are-a-part-of BY TALBOT MUNDY -JOLTAL&OT MUNDY—WNU SERVICE ther "with the-round tailored col­ the general window treatment. lar, or with the collarless square The chintz for the valance and neckline. As a matter of fact, if seat pad is in tan, yellow and blue- ace wall, riding slowly because the "You'd better leave that woman THE_STOEXJEHUSKAE- sais. was-following.onJtoot. He. had and her_bully_.guessingi ,and_ show ridden about fifty yards to a curve me the mine. Where is it?" Captairi Carl Norwood has been sent from his native England to the Kadur in the road when O'Leary stepped O'Leary pointed: "Two hours River district in India, along with his indispensable manservant, Moses O'Leary, forth from a shadow. He didn't look from now, when the moon's about soldier of fortune. Norwood's-job is to survey the district to determine whether a valuable secret diamond mine belongs to the temple priests or to the ruler, the like Q'Leary. He was wearing a there, I can guide you to a place Maharajah of Kadur. Norwood calls on the British Residency to pay his Initial turban, and dressed like a dripping where you can see along under the respects. On his way he catches a glimpse of two, women in a palace carriage, -^ne-^jf-whbtn^s-young-and-beautifiilT-^The^her-woman-he knuws lu by lliti Maharanee wet, dirty Hindu of no caste nr os- pr." L: of Kadur. O'Leary later tells him that the young woman Is an American girl tensible occupation. Norwood drew "Very well, O'Leary. Which way named Lynn Ufa rding, -who with her auntpMYsrTJetiofstf Ha-rdtng, is TT~guest at" rein and iistenedrwatchingthe road ~dld"youcome? " —— the palace. On a sightseeing tour Mrs..Harding sprains an ankle, and sends to the palace for aid. Prince Rundhia, handsome, spoiled nephew of the rulers, come;s for pedestrians. "Short cut. Don't you try it. Horse to her rescue, and takes her back to the palace where he meets Lynn, At a ban? "I didn't stable the mare in the might break a leg." quet that night in the palace, attended by Captain Norwood, Mrs. Harding takes city. She's back in camp. I'll need FASTEN rX2"BOAR0 -ones of -the -native dbclof's'-pllls,. and. becomes: vlolentlyAX^j^^^ :^^^:^^, 'All right, I'll follow the road. TO CLOSET WITH A her later." •••- Meet me in camp." :.- —• HINGE-TACK THE • "What for?" . CURTAIN INSIDE O'Leary vanished. Norwood had CHAPTER IV—Continued "Look at me." "As soon as I'm dressed decent ridden another fifty yards when he again, I'll go back to the bazaar. I —5— His eyes were hardly less fiery heard angry shouting, several times green. The blue-green edges the told a yarn about coming back to Lynn laughed: "That's a testimo­ than the glowing end of his ciga­ repeated. He wasn't sure, but he curtains and valance and is used camp for more money. I'm going nial for me! But thank you, I'll take rette. .They made Lynn's flesh tin­ thought he also heard a girl's voice. also for the two cushions. The to need it." care of Aunty." gle. He threw away the cigarette. He rode forward slowly and then, a frilled glass curtains are clear yel­ "What happened?" low. The closet curtains tacked, "No,'' said the doctor. He caught "Lynn, you romantic girl, this bit alarmed by the ensuing silence, to a hinged arm may be swung Rundhia's eye. Rundhia came to scene enchants you because love "Plenty. I was right about Noor stirred his horse to a canter. He back just as you would open a door. his rescue and made signals to the has stolen on you unaware. Neither Mahlam. They've ditched him. So drew rein, looking upward at Lynn, * * t Maharanee, who wanted nothing of us until now has ever known I did too. He was only ground bait. not much more than two or three NOTE: Mrs. Spears has pre­ better than to have Lynn under her what love is." He talked too much, then tried to minutes after Rundhia had left her. pared four booklets for our read­ own roof. "Do you think you know now?" have me knifed to stop me talking. She was sitting in full moonlight on ers containing a total of 128 thrifty "Lynn, dear, please do as the doc­ she retorted. They'd a trap set for me and I top of the wall, on a cushion, with homemaklng ideas; with step-by- tor tells you. Please, please." "You know I know it. You are walked straight into it. A woman. one' foot hanging over the wall and step illustrated directions. Each Aunty groaned and protested that cruel." I'll tell you about her later; she'd her back against the kiosk. book contains an assortment of it was a shame to inflict Lynn on the "I wish you'd sit farther away," fill a dictionary." "Hello!" he remarked. "Did Run­ curtains; slip covers; household Maharanee, but she was, overruled. she interrupted. "Why don't you "Never mind about the woman. dhia leave you all alone here?"; furnishings; rag rugs; toys; gifts She was carried out on an impro­ make love to your own countrywom­ What happened?" "He said he'd come back." and novelties for bazaars. Books vised litter and rushed to the guest­ en?" "Nothing happened there. It "Well, he'll keep that promise. may be ordered one at a time at house, where Lynn's belongings "There isn't in all India such a couldn't. I left your mare tied up How well do you know him?" . 10 cents each; but if you enclose were collected by the servants and lovely girl as you are." to the veranda railing, military "I met him for the first time this 40 cents with.your order for four conveyed to the palace. "How do you know? It's true, isn't saddle and all, and your initials on evening." books (Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4) you it, that most of them are kept in the bridle. So they couldn't take "Like him?" ' Will receive a FREE set of three CHAPTER V seclusion and you're not allowed to chances. And I could. And I did." '.'Shouldn't I?" quilt block patterns of Mrs. see them? Is that why you make "That's enough about you. What "At your age, there is danger in Spears' Favorite Early American Rundhia was. puzzled and Lynn love to me? Why not burgle a ze­ happened?" exotic likes and dislikes." designs. knew it. She enjoyed it. It was nana?" "Kindergarten stuff. Confidence "I'm twenty-two." Send oiders to; cool and beautiful beneath the moon­ "Lynn," he said, "I don't make game. The woman's bully flattered "Vnn dnn't lnnlr it. T had guessed lit trees in the garden. ~ low; 1 am love. And yollalso. We me I knew the woman's sister in you as eighteen. However, no doubt "You are the strangest mixture of are love itself, as a musician be­ Lahore, and he said the woman's you know how to take care of your­ MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS intelligence and innocence that I comes music. Why waste the glo­ sister'd given me a rep for being self among men of your own race. Drawer 10 have ever met," said Rundhia. "You rious hours?" smarter than most, and a man o' I'm taking it for granted that you're Bedford Hills New York are in love with all. this. You are "What do you know about mu­ my word. Then he introduced me to a nice girl with a sense of humor Enclose 10 cents for one book, or thrilled by the exotic strangeness. sic?" she retorted. "Can you sing the woman. She's all honey and poi­ 40 cents for four books and set of quilt but a bit rebellious against certain But it's all old stuff to me, remem- Indian songs?" son. Sister my eye. Two words, sorts of restraint. All this is new, block patterns. her. I'm a hahe in the woods, too. -Name—..-^.,.. "Yes, 1nvp songs! T play-the gnu. and I knew 3he WB3 lying about and you^'e enjuyiug it.—You like the Address in a certain sense. I'm as lost as tar. that." . Indian setting, and the novelty and you once get it on, and see whaT you are. Things and places don't . "You can? What fun! Why not "Never mind her lies or whose thp moonlight and all that stuff." nice things it does to your figure, make life worthrHving. It's the pen-* get-Tt?^-TrieTe~couiarrr De a n sister she is. How much truth did "you'll want it—both—waysy—as4- pie in the places, and the things '.'^Doh't you? she tell you?" "Yes. And I like you. I would make it. up time and again, in they do together. If you loved me "Not much," barring that I'm the street materials as well as in day­ and I loved you—" not like to hear of you making a AROUND most exciting man she'd ever seen. mess of your life for the sake of a time cottons. It's a very adapta­ "But neither of us does," Lynn in­ She was true enough excited, so I •spot of excitement. You don't un­ ble style, too, becoming to misses' terrupted. "We are East and West. knew the bully was listening in; and derstand India. You don't under­ and women's sizes alike. THE HOUSE Europe delights you because you he weren't her proper bully nei­ stand Rundhia." For home wear, choose crisp can't ever really, understand it. And ther; he was someone who'd been cottons like gingham, percale 01 thp. Fast pnrapt.nrpg mp for thp gamp A shadow moved. Someone chuck- When—i?'°aning tftlsry, use a. ning in on her, and-^shc scared o' TidT : ~ calico.—TTnr gtropt nr office wear. vegetable brush. It gets into the him and not used to his ways. . She reason. ."Doesn't she?" faille, flat crepe or gay silk print grooves and cleans the celery said there'd be a thousand rupees "So we've that much in common," Rundhia loomed on the wall with will be pretty, with' collar and better than it can be cleaned oth-. for me if I'd act discreet." said Rundhia. . "Let me tell you a guitar in his hand. He smiled cuffs of pique, linen or sharkskin. erwise. "Whose thousand rupees?" asked something else we have in com­ down at Norwood. The moonlight Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1898-B * * * . • Norwood. . mon. We like each other." shone on his teeth. is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; tfse Dry Holder.—Never use a . "Do we?" "Trust your Moses O'Leary. I 40 and 42. Corresponding bust "We were reaching a beautiful un­ damp or wet cloth or holder in "Yes. One would have to be blind, asked her that quick. She said it measurements 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 derstanding," said Rundhia. "Are removing a hot dish from the oven deaf; demented, not to like you. was Prince Rundhia's thousand ru­ and 42. Size 16 (34) requires 4¼ you on your way to camp? Well, it's or stove. A dry one prevents the What's wrong with me?" pees. So I knew it wasn't." yards of 39-inch material without a grand night for a ride. Sorry heat from penetrating and scorch­ Lynn's defensive tactic was a "What does she want you to do?" nap; % yard contrast. ing the fingers. you're tired and sleepy." thousand times more shrewd than "She told me a mess o' lies about Send order to: * * * Aunty would dream of giving her Prince Rundhia having quarrelled Norwood eased his horse a little nearer to the wall. He gave the [looked rugs will lay flat if they credit for: with the temple Brahmins, and him SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DET'T. are dried properly. Place them, "Well, for instance, why do you wanting to get back at 'em, to spite reins" to the sais. In another mo­ Room 1324 top side down, on papers spread, dislike Captain Norwood?" 'em. She told me, and I acted sur­ ment he was standing.upright on the-- 211 W. Wackcr Dr. Chicago over the floor. Allow "them to dry "For the same reason that he prised, that there's a diamond mine saddle, with his head within six Enclose 15 cents in coins for thoroughly. doesn't like me," said Rundhia. in the temple area. There's a thou­ inches of the top of the wall: Pattern No Size » * * "Cherchez la femme. Thank the sand rupees for me if I persuade "I am not so sleepy as perhaps I Name ., father and mother who bred him, you to run your survey line slap look," he answered. "Give me a Address Cooking Pork Sausage.—Pork hand up, Rundhia." sausage requires slow cooking. he's only an Engineers- If he were through the temple area, so that Lynn watched. This was some­ If much fat collects, drain it off Cavalry, I might feel jealous. Lynn, the mine will belong To the Mahara­ thing altogether new in her experi­ —to prevent greasiness. Pierce I love you." jah instead of the temple priests." ence. Rundhia hesitated. Moonlight link sausage several times with a "How many women have you said "What did you tell her?" betrayed him. Rundhia felt tempted fork to prevent them from burst­ that to?" "I said you're easy, but you're to refuse. But he hadn't the iron. ing while cooking. To form a "Hundreds-. But I lied to all the "Hello!" he remarked. honest. I said I'll have to find some ACH NG CHEST He could have scared the horse and brown, crusty covering on sausage others." way of artfully deceiving you if perfect place for singing than this made Norwood look ridiculous. But sprinkle them with flour just be­ "I have sometimes had to lie to you're to do what's needed. I said garden wall in moonlight." he hadn't the nerve. Lynn felt sor­ fore they are cocked. Aunty. But I'm not nearly as prac­ I'd have to look into it, and I made ticed a liar as you must be. Let's Rundhia sensed that he had cast her tell me where the mine is and ry for him. With a shrug he handed COLDS his fly too boldly. She wasn't hooked. * * * be truthful." how to get a look at it. She came the guitar to her, in order to use Need More Than "Just Salve" Wash dully-waxed furniture She needed more" subtle persuasion. "I am telling you the truth. I clean." both hands to help Norwood scram­ To Relieve DISTRESS! with a chamois skin that has been have always thought myself a cynic. He shouted to the. servant to fetch ble up the wall. To quickly relieve chest cold misery anil the guitar. There was no answer;,, "How did she know?" rinsed frequently in war.m water. I didn't know I had a heart until I "She'd been- told. And she was "You weren't invited," said Run­ muscular aches and pains due to colds- Doing so will remove the dirt met you. I have found and lost it the'Servant had taken him too strict­ dhia. it takes MORE thau "just a salve"—you ly at his word, he was out of ear­ out of her depth already. She want­ need a warming, soothing "counter* film. Then rub the furniture thor­ in the same moment. It is yours. Norwood stared. "No. I noticed it. irritan ("likaeoodoldreliableMusterole shot. Rundhia shouted again and ed word with the bully, and she oughly with a soft cloth saturated What will you do'with it?" tried to get me to stay, where I Can you strum on that thing?" —used by millions for over 30 years. again. He swore under his breath. Musterole penetrates the outer layers in furniture polish. Afterwards His arm crept around her. He was. But I thought of the bay mare Lynn spoke with all the malice she wipe the furniture dry with a Then he governed his anger and of the skin and helps break up local con- hardly knew how she slipped away standing outside in the. alley, and coi*»l put into her voice: estion and pain. 3 strengths: Regular, clean soft cloth. smiled at Lynn: from him. She waltzed away. She she fidgety, and you fond o' the "You like music, Captain Nor­ tIhildren'a (mild) and Extra Strong, 4CM. "Will you wait here if I go and ran along the path, her arms ex­ mare and liable to find fault with me wood? I supposed your line was en* get it?" tended to embrace the moonlit if she should come to harm. And I gineering and ordering people "Yes, but—" • . • Misery of luxury of hue and view and per­ guessed it 'ud be wise to look into about." "What?" fumed flowers. By the time he over­ the woman's story first." . (TO BE CONTINUED) took her, her retort was ready: "You look murderous. Don't whip the servant!" "Perhaps you don't like men with 1 red hair?" His undercover roan was waiting Zoo Animals Turn Popular Beliefs to Fables Better Than A Mustard Plaster! "I am looking," he answered, "at for him in the usual place, by the gate in the wall that separated the your hair. I want to bury my hands A Gentleman ..Maharajah's palace from Rundhia's An elephant's memory is no long­ tor and curator of mammals, de­ in it, bathe my face in it, breathe-' Somebody has said that a king the—" —an unimportant-looking but pecu­ er than its tail. Humming birds, so clared. liarly unmeek Hindu, whoispoke in may make a nobleman, but he Woo Virtue "Borax! I washed it and the Wa­ fragile that they seem winged in­ "I never heard anyone who, a low voice without preliminary ges­ cannot-make "a gentleman.—Ed­ He who asks repentance for the ter's terrible!" sects, are greedier than pigs. Mon­ worked with them say their memory, tures of respect: mund Burke. past should woo the angel virtue She escaped him again. Her black keys prefer popcorn to bananas. The amounted to anything. Take Honeyj "The priests have learned of Cap­ for the future,—Bulwer Lytton. pajamas vanished into shadow; she house cat is more cruel than a beast and Tembo, the baby elephants that tain Norwood's arrival. They sent became a beautiful, disembodied of the jungle. Christoph Schulz captured and me to speak with his Eurasian spy, DOT SQUEEZE SURFACE head in a golden aureole that asked: In fact, name any popular belief brought here. O'Leary, who is a reptile. O'Leary "Is Captain Norwood married? I about animals and it's a good two to "When he found Honey, she was a has already detected the opening of didn't ask him." one betthat it is wrong. baby, half starved and wandering the mine.'' "Well, why didn't you ask him?" That's the conclusion of experts in the jungle. He brought her here, Rundhia thought swiftly, and after actual observation at the Chi­ feeding her by bottle, -and she would PIMPLES "I didn't care." spoke slowly: "Go and tell the Don't riak scarring your skin and spread* "Good!" said Rundhia. "I'm go­ cago Zoological park at Brookfield. follow him everywhere. When he priests that Captain Norwood is here ing infection by squeezing, unsightly ing to make you care about some­ Consider the elephant, most ma­ left, she tried to trumpet, but when' to line his own pocket. Say he., is pimples and blackheads. Just applp thing else. Come along. I'll be­ ligned of the animal kingdom. he came back eight months later powerfully soothing Zemo—amazingly Oft, SPjBE:iKO'»ON VJROOSXS in debt and seeks an opportunity to have. Come this way." He is supposed to live the 969 she didn't remember him at all. successful Doctor's formula which quick­ pay his debts. His secret report Schulz," he added, "was very dis­ He led her up steps to the top of years of Methuselah, but instead ly relievos itching soreness and starts will be in favor of the highest bid­ appointed." right in to help nature promote FAST the ancient garden wall. There was lives only the three score and ten der. But don't say you heard it of man. The female is said to breed Elephants, too, are said to be healing. Results from few days* use ol a summerhouse on the wall, a sort from me. Say O'Leary .was drunk Zemo should thrill you! Its marvelous fi. of kiosk; it had been swept and at the age of 40 or 50; in reality, she afraid-of mice. The. truth is, Mr. medication has long been approved by and you heard it from him- Make breeds at six and eight years. Her Bean says, that they ignore them, leading skin special;sts. So clean, dainty mm IDEHS provided with cushions by a servant it perfectly clear to the priests that who crouched in shadow. Rundhia pregnancy is said to endure seven making the pachyderm house at —yet so EFFECTIVE. Ointment or ADVERTISEMENTS any other officer than Norwood years; as a matter of fact, it is 19 Brookfield the hardest in the park Liquid form. Used in best homes yet ordered the servant away. He went Would be scrupulously fair, so let costs only 3«, 601, $1. are your guide to modern living. and lurked at the foot of the steps, months, which is short enough, con­ to free of mice. Elephants like cats, They bring you today's NEWS them think about it." but Rundhia shouted at him and he sidering the size of her offspring. however, and allow them free access "about "the food you eat and the Then Rundhia founa a servant in to the stalls. The only animal most clothes you wear, the stores you fled. Rundhia led Lynn into the And the elephant's memory! Leg­ visit and the home you live in. open-sided kiosk. the garden of his own palace and end says it is enduring, tenacious. of them despise, Mr. Bean says, is mODERMZE sent him running 'o fetch .the guitar. man. .Whether you're planning a party Factories everywhere are turning "You have promised," she said, Do an elephant an injury today and out new and interesting products. or remodeling a room you should "to behave." he will repay you in kind 15 years jollow tht advertistmtnts... to learn • §> And. the place to find out about "Do you believe men's promises The palace front gate clanged be­ later. Brookfield officials say this is Palm Kernel Oil what's new... and cheaper... and these new things is right here, in applesauce. The United States soap industry better. And the place to find out when they're in love? Are you as hind Norwood. The sullen sentry about new things is tight here in this newspaper. Its Columns are naive as that?" stood at ease, then easy and re­ "An elephant's memory probably is using increasing quantities of this newspaper. Its columns are filled ' with important .messages sumed his snooze. Norwood turned is not as good as that, of oth6r ani^ palm kernel oil in place of tallow filled with important messages --which you ehould-read. ^ "Yes. Don't be silly. Let us look •t the view-'* his horse along the road by the pal- mals," Robert Bean, assistant direc­ and coconut oil. Which yon should read regularly. THE'CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERAUD, EAST JORDAN, MICH.

•—™ IMPROVED Fabric Alone or With Straw Is UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Ask Me Jlnother UNDAY I Millinery Theme for Easter # A General Quiz HK" sCHOO L Lesson ««,«,••»•«> SJSISI ••••••••••« Br HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D O. By CHERIE NICHOLAS The Questions Dun of The Moody Blbl* Institute of Chicago. (RslsaMd by Western Nswspspsr Union.) 1. What are the catacombs of v Pans? # 2. Is-itJtrue—that_ each _star. in_ Lesson for March 10 our flag stands for an individual state? _1L^.,.J _____ '.i Lesion subjects and SLrlpturs texts se­ lected and copyrighted by International 3. Why is the Arctic ocean so Council of Rellttlous Education, used by prrmisslon. named? 4. Where is the largest jail in GETHSEMANE: TRIUMPH the world? THROUGH SURRENDER 5. How did the word colony orig­ inate? LESSON TEXT—Matthew 26 36-W GOLDEN TEXT—Not as I will, but «S thou wilt.—Matthew 26.39. The Answers

_Surrender brings victory. 1.. Vast excavations extending -Ihe_worJd would~say~ thaT our ler—the—city; forme* statement is not true; surrender is raneaa_gHjBTiexj7hfeh~ tunijshetT the mark of defeat. It is the final building material for 'the city; " ON ST. PATRICK'S DAT IN THE MORNIN' chapter in a story of struggle 2. No, the stars collectively (See Recipes Below) against impossible circumstances, represent the 43 states "of' the against a stronger power, and final­ Union. ly of giving up to accept the bitter 3. "Arctic" is from the Greek sorrow of subjection and sometimes arctos, a bear, the reference be­ destruction. But again we say, the ing to the northern constellation of. way of strength is through surren­ the Great Bear. HouseholdNeius der, for we speak of the spiritual realm and of our relationship to 4. The largest jail is in Ward God. Here there is no victory until road, Shanghai, with accommoda­ there is surrender. In fact, the tions for more than 7,000 prison­ measure of victory is the degree of ers. surrender^ Full submission to 5. The Romans made settle­ Christ means complete triumph for ments of men to cultivate the the Christian. The Lord Jesus does soil, these being known as colonia; not ask His disciples to walk a way hence the origin of the word col­ which He has not trod Himself. He ony. Some Ideas (or a Party went the way of full surrender to Are "left-overs" a problem in the will of God in the garden of your household? They needn't Gethsemane. We observe five Shur-r-re an' In the mer'ry month NE glance at the new be! There are clever, unusual things about this way of "triumph O hat fashions for o' Mar-rch, it's St. Patrick's day through surrender." It was we're thinkin' of when we pass along ways of using them. Next week spring, year 1940, and these ideas for a party. Eleanor Howe will give you some I. A Way of Sorrow (w. 37, 38). forthwith you feel your .HELLO, AMERICA.' He was exceedingly. sorrowful spirits mount high for Parties seem to move along more of her own favorite recipes and suggestions for using odds and unto death. It was not an easy thing you know in a flash that 3 HOPE YOU'RE smoothly after a bit of fun—and fun milliners are turning out ends of vegetables and meats, that the Saviour did as He fulfilled •. it is to find an the will of God the Father in the creations of the flattering sort fk Irish Paddy's Pig and even a hint or two for using 'trend. Sand beige silk jersey is ENJOYING garden. We know that no man ever "Perhaps^ the most outstanding the fabric that fashions this charm­ at your place at stale cake and pie. sorrowed as He did on-that day, for news in regard to hats that will J f "W the table! Small ing costume. The bodice is softly SLOW-BURNING only He bore the sins of the world. grace the Easter millinery picture gathered from high neck to high •J) Irish potatoes, There is, however, a lesson here is the wide use being made of 1 ab- scrubbed until waistline. The flowing skirt is pleat- add, a few quartered marshmallows tor us wno are His disciples. icj-especially jerseyl-(for-wrapp_ed_ CAMELS AS they shine, make -ed-into-a^wide-wrappprt girdle, An and fold until melted. This, dress­ this is the road the Master trod, turbans and snoods) and silk prints the fat bodies of elaborate ornament set in gold ing will be sweeter and fluffier than should not His servants tread it still? as gay and colorful as an artist's MUCH AS WE ARE the pigs. For the trims the rajah turban of self silk the original and is perfectly delights The^way of victory for us is through palette. See the hat centered be­ head, fasten a large round gum drop jersey-jn the manner of a regal ful to keep on hand for fruit salads surrender. low in the illustration. Here is a to one end of each potato, with a potentate? HEREIN of all kinds. II. A Way of Self-Denial (w. 39, bright and shining example of what Sailors are with us again. Milli­ toothpick. Make the snout from is being done with silk print. This 42, 44). ners report they are better than ANTARCTICA. a small gum drop pinched to the ^Anrel Food Snowballs. wOndrously chic little pillbox with :0t consist in de- ever this season. Dusty pink suede proper shape, and fasten it to the (Makes 16) shirred crown is made of a bor- priving one's self of some little cher­ forms the panaeau of the navy blue head with a toothpick. Insert whole dered silk print scarf. Its pattern- -CAMELS SURE- 1 3Lcup milk ished luxury: It means the denial straw sailor shown at the top to cloves for "facial features? (Jut 2 tablespoons butter ' " ;" -ing-—of—overlapping—disc—motifs ears'"and Ja curly tail from—jeHy of self, namely, that self-will is~ 4he-right.—The ends of the sm»rifl 1 cup sugar achieves a dashing color jutliance. -gfVE THE. strings and fasten these in position put aside and God's will is supreme. jut through the crown and are 1 cup flour The manner in which the draped Jv with toothpicks too. Small gum It was no "easy thing for Jesus stitched to give stiffness. A lovely 1 teaspoon baking powder matching scarf is attached to the 'EXTRAS' IN drops, fastened to the body with to carry out the Father's will and model this, to wear with the very Vi teaspoon salt back of the hat by means of snaps toothpicks, make the legs. to go to the cross. He was sub­ new ani smart navy costume on 4 egg whites missive to that will; yet in this hour so that it can be removed at will Easter day. CIGARETTE Nut cups which look like Paddy's % teaspoon cream of tartar of anguish in the garden, when the is both unique and practical. The Another type that maintains style clay pipe, can be made from marsh- 1 teaspoon vanilla unspeakable horror trf what lay fact that.the.hat can be wajn,a>Lone prestige is - the postillion. Lime PLEASURE.' mallows, green eellouftaiie—soda- Heat milk and buLteT~to~scalding aneaa almost overwhelmed His soul, with its detached scarf translated green straw and a cactus blossom straws, and a bit of green ribbon. point. Add sugar and dissolve. Sift it means much to say, 'Not as I into a neckerchief, knotted in place" trim gives a springtime air to the With a pair of sharp-pointed scis­ flour, baking pow­ will but as thou wilt' " (Dr. B. L. or held' with a gay pin, adds greatly postillion illustrated below to the sors, hollow out the center of the der and salt, and Olmstead). It may be a hard thing to its interest. right. This simple model will make marshmallow slightly, to form the combine with the to do, but by His grace we too One of the big attractions offered an excellent fashion "first" to ini­ bowl of the pipe. Tie a green rib­ milk and sugar may say, "Thy will be done." to style-seeking women this season, tiate your spring style program. bon (with a jaunty bow) around the mixture. Beat is the print dress and hat ensem­ The new collections include many pipe bowl, and insert a cellophane well. Beat egg III. A Way of Loneliness (vv. 36, ble or the print blouse that sells hats that are made of ribbon.. A soda sipper low in one side, for the whites until 37, 40, 41, 43). with a matching turban. You will high-crowned chapeau of golden stem. frothy, add There were three disciples with ; find as-the season progresses that mustard-colored ribbon swathed in These two party menus are "cream of tartar, Him as He entered the garden, and the theme of the matching hat of black net veiling, as shown above planned for St. Patrick's day. You'll and beat until the their very presence reminds us how printed silk will prove"fashion's fa­ to the left, is a youthful headpiece find other suggestions for parties of egg whites stand very much alone Jesus actually was. vorite spring song. that tunes ideally to midseason and every kind, in my cook book, "Easy up in points. Fold There were twelve with Him in the Now that the pastel color craze early spring wear. -Entertaining." into the batter and add vanilla. Pour upper room, but one went out into is taking the world of fashion by Cellophane black straw and felt into greased muffin pans and bake the darkness to betray Him. Eleven storm it has become a reigning combine to produce the. smart tur­ Menu I in a moderate oven (350 degrees) came with Him to the gate of the s Chicken "Salad" in Lettuce Cups vogue to'wear a classic draped tur­ ban pictured below to the left. A for about 20 minutes. garden, but only three came into ban made of the identical pastel fan-shaped end of the felt mounting Hot Cloverleaf Rolls. Potato Chips the garden with Him. Even they St. Patrick's Lime Pie St. Patrick's Lime Pie. material that fashions the dress. from the crown gives a note of could not go all the way with Him. The striking dinner gown pictured Beverage (Serves 6) height. He prayed and agonized alone, and in the inset oval illustrates this hew VERNON BOYD of the Menu II 4 eggs (separated) (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) the three who were near at hand V S Antarctic Expedition Shamrock Salad . % cup sugar failed Him and slept through the St. Pat's Hats Small Sweet Piqkles 1 tablespoon flour. dark hour when He most needed AKE a tip from the men of the Vi cup lime juice Angel'Food Snowballs fi their fellowship in sympathy and U. S. Antarctic expedition com­ *-... Beverage Startling Color More Stripes T Pastry cut in shamrock shapes prayer. manded by Rear Admiral Richard Green and White Mints Salted Nuts . and baked Alone? If the Master had to walk Schemes Are Seen E. Byrd: When it came to cigarettes, Refrigerator Cloverleaf Rolls. Rind of one lime (grated) ' : the way of surrender alone, let no Daring is' the word for the star­ the expedition took Camels. Camels (Makes 3 dozen) Green vegetable coloring Christian expect that it will be tling color schemes that are carried burn slower...giveyou more pleasure 2 cups water (boiling) Vi teaspoon salt otherwise for him. Let us thank out to a nicety by designers this % cup and 1 teaspoon sugar 1 baked pie shell God for every blessing of true fel­ per puff and more puffs per pack, season. It is really a revelation, . Beat the egg yolks until thick and lowship, but let us not be surprised 1 tablespoon salt that colors so intensely "contrasty" light-colored. Mix Vi cup. of the if we are often called to walk alone 6 tablespoons shortening (part can resolve into a symphony of col­ butter for flavor) sugar and the flour, add lime juice —with God. or, loveliness under the touch of an "-"" »»rv te***' 2 cakes yeast and grated rind, and combine with IV. A Way of Betrayal (vv. 45., 46). the egg yolks. Cook until thick, artist style creator. in recent l^l.*- Vi cup water (lukewarm) "He is at hand who doth betray Navy for the skirt, old gold for 2 eggs (beaten) over very low heat, stirring constant­ me" "into the hands of sinners." ly. Cool. Add just enough green the blouse, bright red for the wide 8 cups flour e One feels that the cup of the Master corselet girdle and the entire sums than*" »* , est-»ett- Mix together ,the boiling water, coloring to tint the filling-slightly. is already overfull "Without adding er ar8 Add salt to egg whites and beat until up to colpr pertection as a charm­ % cup sugar, the salt, and shorten­ betrayal by one of His own, but ing dress in sheer ,wool recently ing. Cool slightly. Dissolve yeast stiff; gradually add the remaining there it is, a dark and tragic reality. Vi cup of sugar, and beat until very displayed bears testimony. and 1 teaspoon sugar in the luke­ Note with what peace and assurance than ««* °tw average. • stiff. Fold into the yolk mixture and Clever two or three-color alliances warm water, and add to the first Jesus goes to meet it. The victory are being handled with brilliant elnd mixture. Add eggs and half of the pour into baked pie shell. Place has already been won in prayer, pastry shamrocks on top. Bake in decidedly novel technique. A dark flour. Beat well. Add remaining in communion with the Father, and dress takes on a front panel of flour and mix thoroughly. a moderately hot oven (415 degrees) in submission to His will. for 5 to 7 minutes, or until the filling vivid tone, such as red with navy, Place dough in greased bowl, No one of us will ever know such fuchsia with turquoise. An. evening - grease the top lightly and cover the ig_set. Cool. , .. a betrayal as that of our Lord, but gown in blackberry tone has. a long bowl. Store in refrigerator. Before St. Pat's 'Hats) we do face similar crises as we go train starting between the shoulders using, let the dough stand at room Using a large round slice of bread on in a life of devotion to God's of bright fuchsia red. - temperature to warm . up, before (buttered) for a brim, build up a will. We do well to remember the shaping the rolls. To shape clover- hat-crown with a experience of Christ that we be not leaf rolls, brush very small balls of layer each of overwhelmed by the treachery, of Dual Personality the dough with melted butter and tunafish salad men and that we prepare ourselves place three balls in each section of a and sliced toma­ to meet it with the power and grace In Jacket Outfits greased muffin pan. Let rise until to, placed be­ of our God. , ' light and bake in a moderately hot Bright print jacket costumes, pos­ tween 3 smaller V. A Way of Divine Fellowship sess a dual personality which more, oven (400 degrees) for about 20 bread circles. minutes. and Blessing (vv. 39, 42). than doubles their practicality. Stick a toothpick The way of surrender is a glorious While they may be worn on coat- Cooked Mayonnaise Dressing. down through and delightful way to go. • But, less spring days they also present .2 tablespoons vinegar center. Spread some one may ask, have we not a smart late winter appearance un­ 2 eggs (beaten) entire sandwich with green-tinted been talking of sorrow, self-denial, der fur coats. 1 cup salad oil cream cheese. Add green pepper loneliness and betrayal? Yes, but A print with a white pattern on hat band. Chill. Serve on shred­ Day and night, stripes continue _y~- V* teaspoon dry mustard even these things may become the pearl gray makes an ideal back­ active in the fashion realm. A ded lettuce. means of blessing if God is in them. Yt teaspoon paprika ground for bright-colored accesso­ handsome silk in stripes that adopt FOR EXTRA MILDNESS, ^4 teaspoon salt Though no man stoqd by our Lord ries. With a gray or black fur coat a color scheme of Quaker gray, This Cook Book Is a Hostess' your accessories might include a Add Vinegar gradually to the beat­ Handbook! in His experience In Gethsemane, pink and white is the fabric choice EXTRA COOLNESS, en eggs, and continue beating until the Father was there. Jesus talked gray hat with a red feather trim, for this tailored jacket designed for ! If entertaining has been a problem blended. Cook in a double boiler, with Him, prayed to Him, trusted and red gloves and bag. , dinner wear. The leg o' mutton rather than a pleasure, let Eleanor EXTRA FLAVOR— stirring constantly until the mixture Him, yielded fully to His will, and sleeves, box-pleated (at the back) Howe's booklet, "Easy Entertain­ the result was peace and blessing. peplum, the zipped front fastening thickens; Remove from flame and ing," help you. In it she gives you cool. Thenslowly adoSthe oil, beat- We read in Luke 22:43 that an angel High-Color Gloves are important style details. The party menus and recipes for almost also came and strengthened Him. skirt is of black taffeta. Taffeta is ~iniTconStantly. Combine seasonings every holiday occasion. She gives and fold into the dressing. Match to Jewelry becoming increasingly important for you, too, pointers on how. to enjoy formal evening gowns and daytime CAMEL A new move in the fashion realm ,* Fruit Salad Dressing. your parties with your guests. To Springs of Water is that of bright gloves that sound costumes as well. MVhile making your favorite boiled get your copy of this clever cook And the parched ground shall be­ the key color for the rest of the salad dressing recipe you'll undoubt­ book now,' send 10 cents in coin to: come a pool, and the thirsty land accessories. Especially effective is edly want to reserve half of the "Easy Entertaining," care of Elea», springs of water: in the. habitation The Basic Coat this color treatment when gloves dressing "as is" for use on vege- nor Howe, 919 N. Michigan Ave., of dragons, where each lay, shall A perfect foil for magnificent fur match the color of the enamel flow­ table salads. However, to the re- Chicago, 111. be grass with reeds and rushes,— accessories is the simple untrimjned er necklace worn. imaining half—which should be hot- (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Isaiah 35:7. black cloth coat. CrfT&tTe&tcax THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, MARCH S, IMO. —*^T«——sssssss—e> To The Electors of East JecoVn (SS) FG. FT. PF, As to the game, they won 43 to 24. Crystal Bees (24) FG. FT. FF. CLOSING TIME Cahners L, Cihak, l.f. 10 2 A mishap with one of the can ne­ Bennett, l.f. 10 0 The City of East Jordan (Continued From First Pag*) R. Sutton, l.f. 0 14 cessitated traveling in one car from Orr, l.f. 0, 0 0 ON THE HERALD M. Clhak, r.f. 6 5 6 Acme to Benzonia. They did not ar­ Bargerstock, r.f. 6 0 3 The time for filing petitions clpsed Gee, r.f. 2 0 2 rive till after 9:00 p. m. and, of Mix, r.f. 118 March 6th at 4:00 p. m. with the fol­ on ice. The Boyne game was truly * H. Sommerville, c. __ 6 2. 3 course, had to dress immediately for All contributors of copy for leap year victory, being played on Mills, c, 113 lowing candidates filing petitions. LaPeer, l.g. 1_ 6 0 0 the game. After the cramped trip, Snow, c. ,-- 10 1 your Charlevoix County Herald_ CITY . February 29th. 3houl3~~iridcaTor to get same Into C. Sommerville, r.g. 6 --0-- —8 they -were not able to give the first Potter,^*. ^- 0 0 1- For Mayor — Clarence Healey. Boyne' City"?3S) FG"FT. PF. class passing and shooting show they Ihia oirice as early in the week of Sheaffer, l.f. _._ 4 10 Hannewald, Lg. 0 0 0 For Justice of Peace — Charles Totals 25 8 20 had hoped to give the large crowd on Milliron, r.g. 12 2 publication as possible. Murphy. Habasko, r.f. 14 2 FRONT PAGE — All articles Score by Quarters:— hand. Spellman, r.g. 0 0 0 FIRST WARD Fitzpatrick, c. 8 11 Boyne'City 7 16 8 8 — 38 intended for the first page must Hosegood, l.g. 4 6 4 Their passing was erratic, the snap For Alderman — Thomas Bussler. East Jordan 13 10 16 19 — 68 and drive was lacking, and many of Total* 10 4 13 be in the office by Tuesday night For Alderman — Earl C. Gee. Kanipe, r.g. 10 1 (6:00 p. m.) to insure publication. their dog shots missed the mark. How­ East Jordan (43) FG. FT. PF. SECOND WARD ._ CRYSTAL BEE GAME ever, this does not mean that "the G. Saxton, l.t.——-~- 4 1- 4- MAT SEKVICE — Those" hav­ Totals 13 12 8 ing mats for casting MUST have For Alderman — Alex. Sinclair. Monday evening the Canners tra­ Crystal BeeB were a poor team by. any R. Saxton, 1.1*. 2 18 these in the office" Tuesday noon THIRD WARD velled to-Benzonia where they-play- mean sr MrClhak, r.f.-^=z-_--__ 4-0 0 for the current week's issue. For Alderman — Wm. H. Malpass. KINDNESS BRINGS REWARD ed the Crystal Bees, a two city team Despite the fact the Canners grad­ L. Cihak, r.f. 110 LOCALS — Please phone your For Alderman — Thomas St. Char­ of Benzonia and Beulah players, in ually lengthened their lead the final H. Sommerville, c 3 2 2 local items to No. 182 where Mrs. les. Vassar — Abrahime Kline, 80-yr.- a feature show. The Benzonia-Beulah two quarters, the Bees never stopped C. Sommerville, l.g. — 4 0 2 .Sherman Conway — who covers For Alderman — Joe Wilkins. old Cass City junk dealer, had no school district has just completed a plugging and made a game of it all LaPeer, r.g. 10 1 these columns — will care for WM. ALDRICH. relatives in America and few friends, fine new gymnasium and the Canners the way. The Bees had a nice passing Gee, r.g. "_— 0 0 0 them. These should be in not later adv. 10 City Clerk. but a Cass City garage man, John were given the privilage of being the game and broke up many of the Can­ than fl o'cloek Wednesday night. Cole, was one of them. In return for first so-called power aggregation to ners erratic passes. They also sank Totals __,. 19 6 12 Your Herald publisher is en­ Anybody Can Use Want Ad. — Cole's small* acts of kindnesB, Kline play in it. After the game the squad several fine long shots. 4core by Quarters) "} deavoring to get each week's issue Practically Everybody Does — Pro­ willed him several thousand dollars agreed it will rank with any floor The five foul rule was not used in East Jordan 9 9 13 12 — 43 in the majls on Thursday^ after­ fitably. upon the latter's death recently. they have appeared on this winter. the game. Crystal Bees 6 7 4 8 — 24 noons." Tour co-operation in gel?" ting~newt mid advertising copy-itr our hands as eariy in the week as possible will be greatly apprecia­ ted. -,.•••

IJNHAPP Y END OF OUR OWN SHERLOCK HOLMES An article — one of many features i n The American Weekly, the great veekly magazine, with the March 10 i ssue of The Detroit Sunday Times— vill point out how America's personi- -' iicatio n of A. Conan Doyle's celebra- t ed-hero, like most of the criminals \l e brought to justice, made one mis- 1ak e and ended his brilliant career with a tragic climax — in a prison

' C ell. Be sure to get the March 10 issue jf The Detroit Sunday Times. I

1SURNING , GNAWING PAINS IN STOMACH RELIEVED When excess stomach acid irritates ind causes, discomfort help neutra- ize with Adia Tablets — yet eat what you want. Adla gives relief or ]none y back. Gidley & Mac Druggists.

Dr. H. M. HARRINGTON Physician and Surgeon Office Hours: 2 to 5 P. M. — 7 to 8 P. M. Office in Lumber Co. Building 1 / Office Pkon- — nn.Fa 1 Residence Phone 140-F3

Insurance AUTOMOBILE, LIFE, FIRE and WINDSTORM CITY and COUNTRY RELIABLE COMPANIES GEORGE JAQUAYS R. F. D. No. 4 Phone 166-F3 - EAST JORDAN, MICH.

FRANK PHILLIPS Tonsorial Artist

WHEN IN NEED OF ANYTHING IN MY LINE, CALL IN AND SEE ME.

Y 1 R. G. WATSON 1 FUNERAL DIRECTOR Phone — 66 Not just another new gasoline -(tut MONUMENTS EAST JORDAN, - MICH. a new miracle of gasoline BENJAMIN BUSTARD and PAUL LOVELAND GENERAL BUILDING AND LICENSED ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS chemistry New or Repair Work of All Kinds REASONABLE TERMS Phone 247 — East Jordan Nu-Blue Sunoco H a different kind of gasotkw r Address: P. O. Box 64, E. Jordan —made possible by a different kind of broom that was hailed by the press of tho work, as a great discovery. FARMERS W*. invite you to test Nu-Blue Sunoco against any other gasolines—particularly those selling ATTENTION at an extra price. ,^$*4?j# for ftesf ntulH u§» HwBlum Sunoco Ml sfrenfftV >" Don't dilute It wlf* other go—ttn: ^H DEADSTOCK REMOVAL Phone Collect Prompt Service SELLS RT REGULAR GflS PRICE 1 - VALLEY CHEMICAL CO. EAST JORDAN CO-OP. CO. Telephone Gaylord 123 PHONE 17» EAST JORDAN, MICH. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1940.

To The Electors of Ea.t Jordan (58) FG. FT1. PF. As to the game, they won 43 to 24. Cry.t.l Bee. (24) FG. FT. PF. Canoers L. Cihak, l.f. "_.___ 10 2 A mishap with one of the ears ne­ Bennett,, l.f. . - __ 1 0 0 0 CLOSING TIME The City of East Jordan (Continued From First Page) R. Saxton, l.f. 0 1 4 cessitated traveling ih one car from Orr, l.f. — 0 0 ON THE HERALD M. Cihak, r.f. G 6 6 Acme to Benzonia. They did not ar­ Bargerstock, r.f. - ._ 5 0 3 The time for filing petitions closed Gee, r.f. ...- . ,... 2 0 2 rive till after 9:00 p. m. and, of Mix, r.f/ --_'„ — 1 1 3 on ice. The Boyne game was truly a March 5th at -1:00 p. m. with the fol­ H. Sommerville, c 5 2 I) course, had to dress immediately for Mills, c. _- 1 1 3 All contributors of copy for leap year victory, being played on lowing candidates filing petitions. LaPeer, l.g. .. 6 0 0 the game. After the cramped "trip, Snow, c. -_ 1 0 1 •yrmr- Charlevoix-.County Herald February 29th. . . l — CITY_ C. Sommerville, r.g. ... 5 0 3. they were not able—to-give-the—first Potter, l.g. - _- 0 0 1 should endeavor to get same into Boyne CITy—C38} FGr FT.\ PF. For Mayor — Clarence Ilealey. class passing and shooting show they Hannewald, l.g. 0 0 0 this orriee as early in the week .of Shealrer, l.f. 4 1,,0 For Justice of Peace — Charles Milliron, r.g. 1 2 2 publication as possible. Totals __ 25 8 20 had hoped to give the large crowd on Murphy. Habasko, r.f. __•_. __'_ 14 2 Spellman, r.g. 0 0 0 FRONT PAGE — All articles Score by Quarter!:— hand. FIRST WARD FitZpatriek, c. _ 3 1 1 intended for the first page must Boyne City 7 15 8 8 — 38 Their passing was erratic, the snap For Alderman -r— Thomas Bussler. Hosegood, l.g. .. 4 6 4 lie in the office by Tuesday night East Jordan 13 10 10 19 — 58 and drive was lacking, and many of Totals 10 4 13 For Alderman — Earl C. Gee. Kanipe, r.g. 10 1 (0:00 p. .11!..) t» insure publication. their dog shots missed the mark. How- East Jordan I 43) FG.. FT. PF. SECOND WARD MAT SERVICE — Those hav­ CRYSTAL BEE GAME -ever, this does not mean that the- G. Saxton,-l.f. 4- 1 4 For Alderman — Alex. Sinclair. ~ Totals:-.--.-1---18 12 8 ing, mats-fox castinj£_MUST have Monday evening the Canners tra- Crystal Bees were a poor team by any R. Saxton, l.f. — 2 THIRD-WARD these in the office Tuesday noon jvelled to..J3erizoaiia_wJiere.-they- play­ means. -•- -- - —7- — • • Mr-Cihak,-r.f. _=„--„ _4~ For Alderman_— Win, H. Malpass. for the current week's issue. KINDNESS BRINGS REWARD ed the Crystal Bees, a two city team Despite the fact the Canners grad­ L. Cihak, r.f. __ 1 For Alderman — Thomas St. Char­ LOCALS — Please phone your of Benzonia and Beulah players, in ually lengthened their lead the final H. Sommerville, c. - ._. 3 les. local items to No. 192 where Mrs. Vassal' — Abrahime Kline, 80-yr.- a feature show. The Benzpnia-Beulah two quarters, the Bees never stopped C. Sommerville, l.g. — 4 Sherman Conway — who covers For Alderman — Joe Wilkins. old Cass City junk dealer, had TO school district has justicompleted a plugging and made a game of it all LaPeer, r.g. — 1 these columns — will care for WM. ALDRieil. relatives in America and few friends, fine new gymnasium and the Canners the way. The Bees had a nice passing Gee, r.g. .__ 0 them. These should be in not later adv. 10 City Clerk. but a Cass City garage man, John were given the privilage of being the game, and broke up many of the Can­ than (i o'clock Wednesday night.. Cole, was one of them. In return for first so-called power aggregation to ners -erratic .,passes. They also sank Totals - 19 12 Your Herald publisher is en­ Anybody Can Use Want Ada — Cole's small acts of kindness, Kline play in it. After the game the squad several fine long shots. ^-. Score by Quartern deavoring to get each wee.tes-Jss.ue Practically _ Everybody Does — Pro­ -willed him several thousand dollars agreed it-will rank with any floor The five foul rule was not, treed in East Jordan 9 13 12- •43 in the mails on Thursday after- fitably. upon the latter's death recently. they have appeared on this winter. the game. Crystal Bees 5 4 •24 noons. Your co-operation in get­ ting news, and advertising copy in our hands as early in the'Week as possible will be greatly apprecia­ ted.

UNHAPPY END OF OUR OWN SHERLOCK'HOLMES An article — one of'many features in The American Weekly, the great weekly magazine, with the March 10 issue of The Detroit Sunday Times— will point out how America's personi­ fication of A. Conan Doyle's celebra­ ted hero, like most of the criminals he brought to justice, made one mis­ take and ended Ids brilliant career with a tragic climax — in a prison cell. Be sure to get the March 10 issue of The Detroit Sunday Times.

BURNING, GNAWING PAINS IN STOMACH RELIEVED When excess stomach acid irritates and causes discomfort help neutra­ lize with Ailla Tablets — yet eat. what V"U want. Adla drives relief or moneyback. Gidloy & Mac Druggists.

Dr. H. M, HARRINGTON Physician and Surgeon Office Hours: 2 to 5 P.M. — 7 to 8 P. M.

Office in Lumber Co. Building

Office Phone -, 1 40-F2 Residence Phone 140-F3

Insurance AUTOMOBILE. LIFE, F1R-E and WINDSTORM CITY and COUNTRY RELIABLE COMPANIES GEORGE JAQUAYS R. F. D. No. 4 Phone 166-F3 EAST JORDAN, MICH.

FRANK PHILLIPS Tonsoriai Artist

WH EN IN N EED OF AN YTH' NG IN MY LINE, CALL IN AND SEE ME.

R. G. WATSON F U N E R A L DIRECTOR Phont: — 66 Not just another new gasoline-*W MONU MENTS ( EAST JORDAN, MICH. a new miracle of gasoline I'BENJAMIN BUSTARD and PAUL LOVELAND | GENERAL BUILDING AND j LICENSED ELECTRICAL I CONTRACTORS chemistry | New or Repair Work of All Kinds ! REASONABLE TERMS I Nu-Blue Sunoco is a different kind of gasolin* I Phone 247 — Easl Jordan | Address: P. O. Box f,4, E. Jordan — made possible by a different kind of process that was hailed by the press of the world as a great discovery. FARMERS We invite you to test Nu-Blue Sunoco against any other gasolines—particularly those selling ATTENTION at an extra price. For best results use Nu-Blue Sunoco Ml strength* j>EAD STOCK Don't dilute It with other gasoline. REMOVAL Phone Collect Prompt Service SELLS AT REGULAR CAS PRICE Wr>-,to^,-V VALLEY CHEMICAL CO. EAST JORDAN CO-OP. CO. Telephone GaylordT23 PHONE 179 EAST JORDAN, MICH.