CASS CITY CHRONICLE\ VOLUME 24, NUMBER 43. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1930. EIGHT PAGES.

Warner, Janet Allured, Evelyn Rob- VOLLEYBALL STANDINGS. inson, Helen Battel--gave three num- DECIDESEBEWAINB bers at the conclusion of the program. Unsullied HERETYLE,[S In the volleyball games in the A During the business session Guy !Leamlo Wodno~dsy to,re ~ dofosf~d THIS AND i Landvn, chairman o2 ~hc membership l eommittee, announced a contest for NO0 L team 2, 45-30, and team 4 defeated new members of which Alex Henry team 5, 42-37. and Robt. Warner are the captains. THAT In the B League, team 1 defeated ;Six Special Commissioners Were The losers will furnish a pot-luck Fashion Requires Extensive team 6, 45-27. Team 3 beat team 2, Unanimous in Decision supper at the April meeting. Healthy Winter, Wardrobe for Correct 45-26, and team 5 defeated team 4, Reached Tuesday. 39-35. A salesman for a wholesale casket Attire, SERVICE STATION IN The standings of the teams to date: firm called on a local undertaker soy- B. League. oral days ago and complained about The six special commissioners ap- YELLOW AND RED the duli business season. Making calls ;pointed in the probate proceedings of Of course any would-be Beau Bruin- Team 4 ...... 213 reel of Cass City won't be able to en- on 12 undertakers in two days, all of the Sebewaing River and Branches Yellow and red will be popular col- Team 5 202 ter any competition for honors as the whom were regular customers and all Drain decided unanimousiy Tuesday ors with the Elkland Gas and Oil Co. Team 2 180 nation's best dressed man on these found at home, he received but two that the drain was "a necessity~ in the future as these are the official Team 6 173 meagre figures, however, he will be orders, each for a single casket. An- The commissioners have since been colors of Shell stations and the local Team 3 ...... 167 able to gain some local distinction other salesman in the same line occupied in looking over the property company is now handling this brand Team 1 ...... 154 ~, \ as one of the towns well dressed gen- traveled two days and had as a result ..of land owners who did not sign re- of gasoline. A. League. l of his efforts but one order and that 2~l,, ~ tlemen by investing from $5,000 l~ases and are fixing the amount of The company's service station on to 't~)~ ~ $10,000 annually on his wardrobe. Team 6 ...... 210 for a door badge. He said business 'd~mages to be awarded to such own- East Main St. is being decorated in Any local dealer in men's furnish- Team i ...... 205 was so poor that he might as ~well ers. It is expected that this will oeeu- these colors. Team 3 ...... 202 stay at home where he would at .py a week's time. rags would probably fall into a dead } faint if he thought there was a pros- Team 4 ...... 176 least be free from gas and oil ex- Several build,hason the banks of pense and towing charges. poet of discovering anyone in these Team 2 ...... 160 the river in Sebewaing village will Team 5 ...... 127 King Winter has sent an abundance have to be moved, some of them many parts who would think of putting ARE that much money in clothes for a of snow, some snug weather and feet, in order that the river bed may rather difficult traveling- at times be- year, yet according to an official of be widened. This is particularly cause of drifted roads, but he has ~necessary in the district occupied by l the association of Merchants and Tai- SlYiALLES[81NCE ]lors, this is the amount necessary to favored us with a comparatively warehouses of fishermen. The com- TWP. TREASURERS healthy season thus far for which we l keep a man dressed as he should be missioners were in- this district iCO. ODD FELLOWS may be grateful. Wednesday' and were thoroughly Michigan's Present Supply IS B00{} ALBLF DRAW. If°rm°rning'na°nandnightand f~°~l° ~ehilled' in the performance of their MEET HERE TONIGHT Ivarious social and business engage- One,half of TLIRNINGIN TAXIS Farmers Should Help Themselves. duty by the cold winds coming from That Three ments during a single year. Saginaw Bay. Years Ageo I Cass City Lodge, I. O. O. F., will Most of the men hereabouts have An Elkland township dairyman Chas. Frenzel of Mayville, Albert i entertain members of Odd Fellow CAUSEbeen struggling along for lo, these Co So CottrelI of Tnscoia Twp. -whose milk check is over $t00.00 less lodges in Tuscola county at the local ,TTE TION TO many years on a suit or two of top than it was a year ago due to the W. Atkins of Vassar and Preston First te Make Second Pay= Black of Wisher township are the The mercantile stocks of potatoes lodge halI this (Friday) evening. This etothes a year, and an occasional pur- slump in milk prices but -whose feed- commissioners representing Tuscola in the United States on January 1 in is one of a series of county meetings Hay Inspectors Ask Reason for chase of a shirt, under suit, pair of merit to Co. Treas. ing costs are practically the same the hands of growers and dealers of of the fraternity which are being seeks, shoes, necktie and eollar. Most says that oleo purchases are poor in- county. Those from Huron county are Excellent Michigan Hay "Burr Lincoln of Harbor Beach, Thos. the 35 late-producing states is 83,- held at different villages this winter. of them make a pretty fair appear: vestments for farmers here. Having 754,000 bushels according to the Care Lodge will confer the initia- Now Sold. ance on this scanty supply of cIoth- C. S. Cottretl of Tuscola township several children in his home, this McCormick of Bad Axe and James [was the first township treasurer to Maharg of Grant township. Government report released by Her- tory degree at the meeting tonight. ing, but if a fellow wants to be in the dairyman has always used butter on bert E. Powell, Commissioner of Ag- Supper will be served to-visiting and swim he must have a supply in his make the second payment of state' his •table, believing the food value of and county taxes to County Treasur- riculture, and Verne H. Church, Agri- local members of the fraternity after The excellent grade of alfalfa hay wardrobe which wilI Iook like the in- that article is much greater than a er Orlo McDurmon. In his second re- LUCAS DRAIN LET cultural Statistician. These holdings the degree work. from Michigan now being soId on eas- Turn to page 4. butter substitute. In addition to this, mittance made Wednesday, Mr. Cot- are the smallest since January 1, tern markets started government hay he points out that every farmer TO HOMER HILLAKER troll turned in $4,800.00. All township 1926, although nearly as large as inspectors searching for the reasons shouId help build up the market for treasurers are to report with their those of January 1, 1927, with which WON MANY PRIZES for the improvement which has taken SCHOLASTIC CONTEST his own product. The Lucas Drain located in Gilford second payments by Feb. 10. The they are comparable for analytical place in the past few years. A recent number of the Michigan township was let Thursday, Jan. 30, AT WESTERN SHOWS AT MT, PLEASANT third installment of state and county purposes. The crop grown in 1926 These officials who wrote tot he Farmer contained these "hot shots" by Win. Kelley, deputy drain com- taxes collected is turned over to the was about three millions or one per crops department at Michigan State regarding the farmer's position in re- missioner. The construction work on Harry T. Crandell has returned to county treasurer early in March. cent smaller than that of 1929, but College were told that the better I The eyes of academic Michigan will lation to dairy products. the drain was let to Homer Hillaker Cass City from his Western trip dur- In the first payments of state and the January 1 stocks were a fraction quality was the natural sequence of ibe turned towards Central State "The great dairy state of Wiscon- .of Fa~rgrove township at $4.00 a rod. ing which time he exhibited his flock county tax money transferred to the of a per cent larger than from the the improved methods of hay making :Teachers College Thursday and Fri- sin for years had a law allowing" only The bid of Mr. Hillaker as submitted of Oxford, Cotswold, Lincoln, Hamp- county treasurer by the 23 township crop harvested last fall. Owing to the which h~ve been demonstrated at 120 !day, May 15 and 16, as high school butter to be used in the state institu- .totalled $~,280.00. very short crop in Michigan last year, shire and Southdown sheep at wes- i students representing public and treasurers of Tuscola county, $95,- tions, such as prisons and asylums. places in the state. t - • • o E. G. Wilsey of Care was awarded tern stock shows and won a fine lot of 000.00 were paid to Mr. McDurmon. the stocks in the state are estimated The methods recommended at these . parochial institutions from all over The oleo interests finally had a law •the contract for building three bridges first prizes. For the years of,1927 and 1928, the at only 5,325,000 bushels, or about t meetings emphasize the importance the state compete in the fifth annual passed that oleo could be used in .on this drain for $3,233.55. An addi- He showed at the National Western tax collected for the court house fund one-half those on January 1, 1927. I of handling the crop to prevent loss scholastic contest--Michigan's only these institutions. Immediately these tional item in this contract was Stock Show at Denver, Colo., and the i together with the interest paid on The average farm prices that pre- of leaves and to avoid damage by ad- state-wide competition to test class- institutions started to use oleo to $185.40 for iron pipe placed for an- Intermountain Stock Show at Ogden, i the same to date has amounted to vailed in Michigan on October 15 and verse weather conditions. The leaves room progress, and ability. save expense. What did they save? . other bridge. Utah, and won ~he follov~ing prizes: As announced this week by Presi-i$63,426.97. The tax for this purpose November 15, 1926 were $1.10 and of the plant contain ~r~ost of the food They saved a few thousand dollars a Mr. Hillaker expects to start ex- At dent E. C. Warriner the 1930 contest :assessed in 1929 was $31,517.00 which $1.20 respectively per bushel; for the Denver. value, and also, !a~gely determine Eyear on the difference in price on cavation work on the Lueas Drain in will incorporate two radical changes will bring the total up to $94,943.97. corresponding dates in 1929 they All first prizes and champions in the mark~% grad6 o~'%he tiay: oIeo, but their medical bill jumped up the near future if weather conditions ~the first being the addition of a mu- ~Of course, all of the 1929 tax wilI were $1.45 and $1.35 respectively. The Oxfords downs. The expense of handling hay prop- by leaps and bounds, and at the end permit. sical division to the established aca- Inot be paid this year. Some. will be higher prices last fall can be attribut- All first prizes and champions in erty is no greater than for ways of the year they found that oleo ed to the fact that the Michigan crop CotswoIds. which do not result in a good grade demic and vocational divisions. A ireturned, but the interest on the ae- (with added medical expense) costs modification is the introduction of a !count this year will more than make P. T. A. TO HAVE was much shorter than in 1926. Many All first and champions in Lincolns, of forage, and no more time is re- more than butter, and they gladly farmers did not raise enough for home except one. quired. Modern hay making ma- rule limiting each school to the entry up the amount of court house tax re- went back to butter. Is oleo cheaper ? MEMBERSHIP CONTEST use and this lack of uniform distri- First prize Hampshire wether and ehinery i~ adapted for use in making of one contestant in each individual turned. The court house tax as voted "Shall President Hoover help the bution within the state strengthened champion, good hay so no extra hand labor is i event~instead of two as in former in 1926 covers a seven-year period. dairy farmer ? A few days ago a far- • The meeting of the Parent Teach- the prices obtained by growers who First prize and champion Lincoln required. years. Money in the court house fund has mer with a basket of groceries under ers' Association Monday evening was were fortunate to haw a surplus for wether. In a letter to the federal inspectors, The growth of the scholastic con- been invested to some extent in pur- his arm raised cain because Hoover designated "Music Night" and was sale. However, this may not be so First prize and champion Cotswold members of the crops department at /test has been phenomenal since its in- !chasing short-time drain and road doesn't help the dairy farmer and under the leadership of Miss Elynore much of a factor in connection with wether. the~ College stated that greater quan- i troduetion to Michigan by Central i b°nds issued in Tuscola county. because the local creamery and cream 'Bigelow, instructor of music and art the sale of the remainder of the crop. I First prize and champion South- tities of the best grades of alfalfa State in 1926. The first year there State auditors are evidently not stations are not paying enough for .in the Cass City schools. The March 15 and April 15 prices for i down wether. could be expected from Michigan as were 671 students representing 51 dif- worried over the accounts of Tuseola cream. In his basket of groceries The program was opened by two 1926 were $.95. An increase of I First pen of three, Southdowns, larger numbers of farmers are using" ferent high schools. In 1927 the total le°unty officers. A real thorough audit could be seen three pounds of oleo. piano duets by Ruth Schenck and her eighteen per cent in plantings is re- Lincolns and. Cotswolds: the new hay making methods each jumibed to 1150 contestants and 75 i°f the county's books has not been "The United States has 8,000,000 music teacher, Mrs. R. A. McNamee. ported for the thirteen early southern i First pen of five wether lambs. year. i schools. In 1928 there was a new made for over two years. The last farms, of which governmental statis- Six youthful sol0ists--James McCoy, states, which may cause increased 1 First prize and grand champion record with 1464 students and 89 was made at the dose of 1927. Audi- tics claim 2,000,000 use oleo. If these Carol Holler, Zelpha Kehoe, Andrew competition from early potatoes dur- :pen of wethers of entire sl~ow. schools. For the fourth successive tors expect to visit the county in the 2,000,000 farmers would use butter in near future. Barnes, jr., Donald Allured and Mary ing the late spring marketing of the~ First prize champion and grand LOCALS WIN ONE AND time, in 1929 old marks were sur- the next three -weeks, our surplus of Lou McCoy~sang selections. Miss remainder of the old crop. i champion wether of the show, and !passed when 1673 students competed butter would disapPear and the price As the good prices obtained for the for 96 schools; of butter would go up." Bigelow and sixth ~,rade girls gave a 1929 crop were" not due" to aver i sold for $1.05 per pound. LOSE ONE GAME During the five years (1920-24) WM. HURLEY NEW teaching demonstration, and sang ~, ~ ~ Y ~ A several two-part songs. Members of ~r,~n~'...... auieage -~- -pmntea • "...... ou~ cnleny ~o j ,, . t _Ogden. , ...... ' I ...... ~na~ tne zmcnlgan man sonora mume , ~went nine firsts tJass ~i~y ~elea~ea uage~own Jsrl CASHIER AI FAIR~uv Value of Friendliness. the first ~,rade and kindergarten gave yields below normal in. man Y states ' ' ana, au.^ o~nery~: . rmoons,"~, , lnemdlng"6 cha_mpions" all uuy...... mgnb ue±ore a ~'~s"~.... ~"~~. ~ i contest took place, at" Mount "Pleasant, a radm" program and Delbert Henry, growers should not assume that a first and champions on..... Oxfords, Cots 114,-8, ttus being Gagetown's first de- ,*the...... solo events took a prominent.... and To get a clear picture of the im- Wm. Hurley, who left Cass City five portance of friendliness, courtesy and bandmaster,...... anu ms comvamlun~'~-~ ole substantial increase in acreage and wolds and Lincoln sheep -treat of the season. The Gage~own" !..e~ecuve par~. ~s ~ne eon~esv ~evet- years ago to serve Tuscola county as the fifth grade an entertainment of average yields will bring satisfactory - ' I team showed si ns of "1 .., 'oped and was taken over by the state affability, we have only to recall the prices The increase in intended acre i First prize wether lamb in cross-I • g n ease a~ ~ne i ...... clerk, is the new cashier of the Fair- slight embarassment most of us feel ensemble numbers, vocal solos, duets~ . : " • ! " - breeds size~ of the floor ann...... ~nls prooamy ~aeparsmens'...... is became aavlsame,, oy. grove State Bank. Mr. Hurley. served age m comparison with that reported - " ' laed a lar e at- i "" ._ reason oI sne increasing numbers In whenever we enter a strange place. paniedanddanceS.by DeloriSFrancesSandham,HenryataCc°m-the a year ago is" approximately" two and , F~rst prize Lincoln and, Cotswold. I gPa;e went ...... g~h: l?ca~s ~n;oTe~Y ~e the group events~ to omit the solo If the hotel clerk, the head waiter, ni . n~ "T orld I Waitin one-half per cent If the actual in ...... Inumbers. Central State is creating the floorwalker, the information clerk, ano. sa ~ he W s g . - . " i I nem gems m ~ne nrs~ ~nree mmu~es i this thir ~ ~i-'~'^~ "- *~-^ ~'~ *;-~ or the ticket Seller give us a cold for the Sunrise ,, and Eleanor McCal- crease. in plantings does .not .exceed i FARM HOME BURNED heId...... u ,a w~un m une uw~ex una~ :lum rendereda, piano solo. The High farthis frompercentage, andfor the yield is notas l ~ "" ~oand the £ah;12~rP;~. eIeab%:hr:::~s there will boa response to any on- stare and a.nswer our questions with- out even looking at us our spirits suf- School Girls Glee Club, composed of average the countr Y ~ NEAR GAuEt~WN ~nIi scoring,,• y2 gearing.,. iour, nero.... goals ...... dearer to encourage and foster spec- fer a chill. Other things being equal, the following girls--Florence Schenck, a whole, fair" prices" should result . t ~ ' and ~wr~...... tou~.~ i lal musical ability on the part of in- Deloris Sandham, Irene Stafford, ~~ The farm home of Arthur Free- and R0ss each= :::redu :n~lnfi~'ld g;~ dividual high school students in the or even acceptable, we will transfer our patronage to another establish- Audrey Bliss, Loma Reagh, Waunet- C.W. and Earl Holler, H. T. Cran- I man , 3 ~½ miles" west of Gagetown, for the maroon total. The home lt various...... fields of applied music " -Pro- :ta Warner, Marjorie Boyes, Kather- dell and Willis Campbell were in Lan-. was destroyed by fire Friday after- team's defense nonplussed the ~isi- lessor o. ~arold rowers, head of the ment where we are received more hu- manly. ine Bailey,• Marjorie Graham, Velma sing Tuesday and Wednesday attend- inoon. The fire started on the roof tots nnd ~bov h,d h.~A ..... ~ .... ;~ Imuslc department and a pioneer in (O'Dell, Esther Krake, Charlotte ing the Farmers' Week sessions, land ha.d done considerable damage from the field. Beach, CroweI1" 2~nd lthe. development of the originaI mu- Every person deeply desires to be • i before it was discovered by Julius Karr ~ach ~ea~od ~o~ ,~,h~]~ F .... ]division. The hst of solo events WlI1 considered of some importance, and for many of us this opportunity oc- Have Ilou a dHome oBey- ,Fisher passing enroute to Care. and Crowell dr~(~2~='~=:~=::::Isiccontests,... =-.. ~..~. . t Mrs. Freeman was alone in the for ~h~fr ~,n~nl C~.~a+ .... h .... ;o~lbe as follows: soprano, contralto, ten- curs most often when we have money to spend. We like to feel that the es- ( ; GO0 ,v...... house and before a P hone could be team and wilI...... go a ~long ...... way in the D or, bass, piano, violin, cello " ) " ~reached to send for help it was im- CIass. Supt. Randall says that Cass City tablishment that receives our patron- age is appreciative. We may have no of 7 or 9 a Girl of 6? possible to check the of Care trimmed the maroon team on Schools wilI be represented at the an- Years, or flames. All Win. Hurley. right to feel that way, but' that the household furniture was saved. the county seaters' court before a ,nual scholastic contest at Mt. Pleas- Have you a home for a boy four, The poor superintendents of Tuscola ant next May. The school will send doesn't alter the fact that we do. +The house was owned by Miles Kehoe record crowd. The homers presented two terms as county clerk and on seven or nine years of age, a girl of county eventually had six of the 10 to 15 students to participate in the and thee loss is partly covered by in- a vastly improved style of play and Feb. 1st commenced his new duties Mx, or a boy of fourteen ? children on their hands. One was giv- contests. surance. led by "Pete" Rajkovitch had the Loyalty. Tuseola county poor superinten- en.a good home in Grant township at Fairgrove. He succeeds A. R. Lun- visitors buffaloed. McDurmon and dents are housing these children tem- and another is in a good home in No- dean, who severed his connection with Loyalty to our community costs us Ogden each scored fo~ Care; before JOINT MEETING OF the Fairgrove bank on Jan. 31. porarily at the county farm, but are vesta township. nothing and yields big returns. Think GAS CO'S FREE MOVIE Gowen caged a free throw to bring PRESBYTERIAN SOCIETIES about it! anxious to get these American young- : Anyone interested in the welfare the score 4-1 at quarter time. Rajko- sters into good homes where they will of these children still at the county WELL ATTENDED vitch goaled a set shot inside the fo~4~ A joint meeting of the Presbyteri- CO. ORATORICAL CONTEST be more Welcome than among the old farm may secure more definite infor- i line in the second period, while CapL an Missionary Society and the Spar- Co-operation. people who are spending" their de- matio~ from Robert Brown, secreta- If any one had a doubt that a free WILL BE HELD HERE Edgerton dropped in another free ford Guild will be held Monday eve- Our extra piece of pie this week is dining years at the county farm. This ry of s~perintendents of the poor, movie was not well attended, that toss to bring the score 6-.2 at half ning, Feb. 10, at the home of Mrs. awarded to the man who, after fnish- -institution devoted particularly to an Care. doubt was dispelled if he glanced in 5 time. Elizabeth Pinney with the following Oratory and declamation contests ing his work at the farm or store~ .old generation seems unfitted for at the Pastime Theater Thursday The second half was a fast going- program: in Michigan this season will com- goes home to relieve his wife of the ,children to spend their early years, night, Jan. 30. The occasion was an affair with Cass City trying ,minly to Prayer service--Mrs. Allured. mence with county meets as the pro- housework. even though the keeper at the county H. S. ASSEMBLIES entertainment the Cass City Oil and close the ever widening gap. Both Election of Officers. iiminary instead of sub-district con- home is doing his best to make the Gas Co. gave their customers and FOR SECOND SEMESTER teams played a great style of defen- tests as has been the custom in for- i friends and the show place was Program--Mrs. Wilsey, Mrs. Burke, M. E. Church Dinner February 12. place pleasant for them. sive ball but only the county seaters' mer years. Those successful in the !packed to the doors. A second show- Mrs. Cameron Wallace. The ladies of the M. E. Church will Fate has not dealt kindly thus far offense functioned right. As a resul~ county meets will be advanced to the The following is a list of the gen- ing of the picture was necessary. Hostesses~Mrs. Pinney, Mrs. Cole, serve an evening dinner Wednesday, for these five. Four of them come of each team's victory on the home sub-district contests and the success- eral assembly of High School and i. Preceding the pictures, V. L. Bro- Mrs. M. McKenzie, Mrs, Auten, Mrs. Feb. 12, beginning at 5:30. Price, ~0c. from a family of seven children whose court, a lot of pep is manifest in the McCoy. ful ones there will strive for honors Junior High programs for the second phy of Saginaw and Mr. Lafluer of The foIlowing menu will be served: •father, while residing in the eastern possibility that the rubber game may in the district events. semester: Chicago, representatives of the Sin- part of Tuscola county was seriously be played in the tournament. The fi- The county contest in Tuscola will Roast Pork Mashed Potatoes Feb. 21~Commercial Club. clair Oil Co., gave short _addresses. injured in an accident and died a few nal score of Tuesday's contest was Banks Closed Feb. 12. be held at Cass City under the man- Dressing Brown Gravy Mar. 7~Public Speaking Dept. They extolled the new products Baked Beans Cabbage Salad years ago. The family later moved to Mar. 21~Music Dept. 13-8. Wednesday, Feb. 12, Lincoln's agement of "Supt. L. C. Randall. The Midland county for "a short stay, and handled by the local company and Birthday, Will be recognized as a Bro~ and White Bread Apr. 4---Athletic Dept. Sebewaing is here Friday, Feb. 7. sub-district event, held in Cass City in the course of events which, accord- i told of the essentials entering into a Pickles Jelly Apr. 18~Lambda Sigma. holiday and the undersigned banks last year, will be held at Care this ing to officials of the county, are ..gasoline to make ' it a high quality will be closed all day. Pie Coffee not May 2~Agricultural Dept. spring with Supt. Crawford as the :j / pleasant to mother is i product. Mr. Warner's ability as a Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Clark of Care Cass City State Bank. relate, the re- May 16---Home Economics Club. manager. ~1 Advertisement 1 :ported to have deserted her family. manager was recognized and praised were guests at the W. D. Striffier Pinney State Bank. The district music contest will be June 6--Hill Top Players. by Mr. Lafluer. home Monday afternoon. ---Adv. held in Lapeer this year. Advert/se it in the Chronicle, o

PAGE T~O CASS CITY CHRONICLE Cass City, Michigan, Friday, February 7, 1930.

C. F. Collins, who has been spend- CASS CITY CHRONICLE to full seating capacity. Much good [SIX CYLINDER. ~""~ i Volunteer Fighting Force • Published Weekly° ing the past month with friends in has resulted from the efforts. The ' Silver Springs, N. Y., and also at Ar- [ DEFORD ! The French F,,weign legion was en- The Tri-County Chronicle and Cass church desires, through these col- ISENTENCES [ raged in Europe during the World City Enterprise consolidated Apr. 20, mada, returned this week and has umns, to thank all those who assisted again resumed employment as tin- Floyd Carpenter, employed at Flint, )~: By DR. JOHN W. HOLLAND ~ war. Replacements were not recruited 1906. in a financial way ~oward the expen- |~ . ~ for the legion. All enlistments were smith for N. Bigelow & Sons. spent Sunday with his family here. ses which always accompany a spec- O<>O ~ ,)luntary. Many persons went into Gee. Taylor spent Sunday with All Subscriptions Are Payable in ial effort. It is unusual for a small ' he legion because they were not tak- friends at Wilmot. ' Advance. church to be able to secure the servi- Ability is a poor alibi for hard ,~i. en into the regular F~ench army. In Michigan~One year, $1.75; six SLATS' DIARY. Itarley and Robert Kelley, and Mr. ces of so talented an evangelist as is work. ~, months, $1.00. I GIVE FALL CALVES and Mrs. Kenneth Kelley attended a Miss Wilson. The upward track of success Is li Outside Michigan -- In United BY ROSS FARQUHAR shower given for Mr. and Mrs. Ward Max Johnson's car was considera- best oiled with elbow l~ i Simple Cures for "Blues" Harmon on Wednesday evening at grease. ~ States, one year, $2.00. In Canada, Friday--Are Vachashun issent dis- CHANCE TO START bly crippled at Cass City, where it one year, $2.50. Mayville. Luck and Work got married. ~ Deep 0reathing is recommended as sided yet. Pa says if munney keeps on and one driven by a young man from a cure for those who get depxessed. ho~nc: ~c~ oln~o nod f lf.o. Mr. and Mrs. Ellison Biddle spent Bad Axe arrived at the same place | The world named their first ~ When the hmgs are properly fille0 3_ C¢L[iii~ O~iit[ ~.Jt,e%~d,kiii~ n~e week-erm a~; i~air~rove wim~ m~-. a~ ~ne same ~meo Advertising rates made ktmwn on v. ~lli[i2 W&~y'S ig iS t,s~w ~ ti~e br~in ~e~s i~s 0~ii su~miv ,,~f <~v- ~pplication. Biddle's parents. During the past few weeks, T. L. Tim greatest success in tire is ~: genized bl'/,od and functions proper- even if it aint so close, Are Great Essentials. i, ~ that which makes many oth- ~ ly. That dispels the depressed..... feel- Entered as second class matter he says he will let I Thos. Davis is spending a few days Stewart has withdrawn himself from Apr. 27, 1906, at the post office at community activities and confines !~ ors successful. and ma go sum wares If one is to have their dairy cows with relatives here, Cheer up' No ()he gave P. T ~ into Cass City, •Michigan, under the Act his efforts solely to his household du- and he will stay at freshen during the fall, which practi- Hazen Warner, rural carrier, on of Congress of March 3, 1879. ties. Barnum a "show," but he ~ Immense Ocean Liners H. F. Lenzner, Publisher. home for us to send cal results show is the most profitable, Route two, is "driving a new Ford ~ .died and left one. Postle cards to. then one must see that the little calves coach. i Mr. and Mrs. George Spencer One difference between a' wise ~ There are steamers on the 'Atlantic ~spent Sunday at Oxford with Mrs. Saterday--I rote a get a good start during the fall and Mrs. Thedore Martin, who was 0P- man and a fool is that one ~ engaged in a heavy tourist traffic note to Jane all ritten winter months. While this may prove Spencer's brother, F. B. McCain, and thinks before I~e speaks. ~ which are so large that if placed on eratdd on at Care Hospital for re- mother, Mrs. Carrie McCain. in french this p. m. Pa more difficult for some on account of moval of cancerous growth, is recov- '; ~ and the other after. ~ end and stood up they would rise i Mr. and Mrs. Wesley McCain and sod to me What did the need for better stables; fall calves ering steadily and expects soon to be t~ , ~ more than 200 feet higher than the daughter of Pontiac spent Sunday [ ~ ((El, 1929. Western Newspaper Union.) you do that fer you that are properly grown during the again with her family. }~ Woolworth skyscraper in New York with Mr. and Mrs. Seth Spencer...... ~ city, dent no enny thing first winter are ready to go on grass The many friends of H. P. Wool- about writeing french. the following spring and grow better man, now of Detroit, will be sorry to ...... than spring calves. ADVERTISING HONESTY. I sed Well it wont learn that his indisposition shows no make no differents be- Proper feeding, plus proper stabling, improvement. cuz Jane cant read no are the greatest essentials in starting We notice an announcement from french heather. fall calves. When a calf is first Dec. Ist to April 1st is the portion i the Federal Trade Commission which of the year, when milk haulers and Sunday--Ma sod she diddent see dropped it is essential that it receive ! states that an unnamed tobacco cor- why we euddent take a nice trip to the colostrum milk from its mother. rural carriers, hand over to the poration has agreed to discontinue the Mrs. this summer becuz she new This milk is laxative in character and garages a great big slice of each pay Oleo vs. Profit certain cigarette advertising prac- very well that are house hold Xpenses helps to clean out the calf's system. check for gas and repair bills. tices which the Commission contend- O was not as big as they was a yr. ago. Where it is not availaMe, the calf Russell Clark and Miss Winnifred O ed was unfair, improper, and mislead- [for Dairymen ] Pa sod That was true but the onley should be given an ounce of castor oil. Kelle~ drove to Imlay City on Satur- $ it ing to the public. reason they was not as big was becuz The calf can be allowed to g. During the final there is today no newly discoverer" fastened itself to these days. History tells us that in early times :eek, the church has been attended way to wealth and happiness, ant ~ g~_,an,~rn~e ~nnA .~mnhr they cannot be had by working a rab- u,,~ ,~,.w were estimated as foi'ty in bit's foot or mumbling a mysteriouz number--twenty before and twenty Seen for Coming Year after tt~e risin), of the dog star. As a aeauty set of words. The supply of feed tiffs coming year matter of fact, the duration of this "If you build up your knowledge c will be generous. Preliminary indi- MAKE READING the field you enter, face facts ar period appears to have varied from as little as thirty to as much as fifty- cations are that there wilI: be 400' figures squarely, have the" will to suc pounds more grain feed per animal A PLEASURE four days, beginning anywhere from Never has a Chevrolet car won greater ,? reed, develop sound judgment ar unit than was available during the You don't have to suffer In addition to its new beauty, the new neither over-estimate or under-es~*: July .~ to August 15 The co-incl. praise for its appearance than the new dental appearance of the dog star and average year of the last five years. Chevrolet Six represents a remarkable mate Yourself or others, you eannc with headaches when you these so-called dog days appears to The supply of hay per aninml unit Chevrolet Six. Its new Fisher bodies :fail to accomplish your purpose." read or sew. That is advance in every phase of perform- have been accidental, as the~ time of will be the largest of, any year as far Contained in these few words the( reveal in every detail the artistry that ance. Its improved six-cylinder valve- the Nsing of this star varies with the back as 1920 with the exception of simply nature's way of is a large challenge and a giganti altitude. In some climates there are lqst year nnd 1924. Unfortunately for letting you know your has made the Fisher name famous in-head engine has been increased to task to any young person as life bc no dog days, for the reason that in dairymen there is a shortage of legume eyes are overworked. throughout the motor car world. In gins. hay. This shortage of protein hqys is: 50 horsepower~giving faster acceler. certain altitudes the dog .star is not • A pair of correct titling beauty of line and color, in balance visible, hence there can be no dog IU

@ Cass City, Michigan, Friday, February 7, 1930. CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE THREE. , -5

¢~. ,@ I Fournier, Harvey Beadle, Howard i The Sugnet residence has passed in- spent part Of last week with her Canada's Natal Day Fortune for Old Book i GAGETOWN l!nucker, Patrick Kehoe, jr., Ned to the possession of outside parties. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Win. Pen- July 1 is called "I~ominion day" be Probably the most valuable bobk in ¢...... o'!Malloy, Willis McGinn, Elm.re Hurd Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Freeman enter- fold. cause it was upon this day in 1867 the world is the Gutenberg Bible. first i The Woman's Study Club met to- are registered Scouts. The scouts !rained at six o'clock dinner Thursday. Phyllis Penfold of Car, spent Sun- that ('anada came into being as a selt to bo printed on movable type. Not so very long ago an Austrian collector night with Mrs. A. J. Burden. Mrs. have done many acts of kindness, The evening was spent with cards. day at her parental home here. governing dominion within the British parted with $300J)(10 for the privilege Grace Clara gave a paper on "Down which have been appreciated. Mrs. C. P. Hunter and F. D. Hemerick Miss Helen Penfold spent Sunday empire, its constitution resting upon of possessing a copy. the Hudson River"; "Up the St. Law- The farm residence of Miles Kehoe, i won high honors, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred afternoon with Doris Barrens, west the British North America acl of 1867 "OLD SETTIN' HEN" fence River to Quebec," by Miss three miles west of Gagetown, burned Rocheleau second honors. of town. IN LOSING RACE Edith Miller; "Mississippi River Friday about one o'clock. The fire was ! Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Leipprandt of Roy Ashcroft of Pontiac spent Sun- Trip" by Phebe Bartholomy," and discovered by Julius Fischer who was Detroit spent the week,end at Mr. da~ with his family here. passing, and was caused from a spark ~"The Gulf Stream" by Mary Tru- and Mrs. J. L. Purdy's. Ira Berry expects to move his fam- from the chimney. The contents were deau. : Mrs. Thomas Farson entertained ily on a farm near Ellington in the Incubators on 'Farm Hatch saved and moved to the house across i ~ T'~ ~ , ~ *",~'~ • "~ Wednesday the Owendale ancl Brook- ! R. J. Ottaway of Sebewain~" suent near future. ,a~ Ye~

HOSPITAL NOTES. Dose of Nature • Metal Shield Bars Ants Why bother tc buy tonics or stimu- 'I?,o prevent termites, the destructive Bruno Neuman of Sebewaing en- lants when nature will provide you insects that devour wood, from enter- tered the hospital Sunday evening, wKh all you need free of charge, ask- ing homes. University of California February 2, and was operated on ing in return only common sense and engineers have devised a metal shield Monday morning for double hernioto- become a good listener.--American to be placed en top of the concrete my. Magazine. foundation immediately under the IIappenzngs Mrs. Ignatius Buginski of Kinde wooden sill that rests upon it.-~Popu- underwent an operation Tuesday lar Mechanics Magazine. morning, February 4, for removal of Growing in Grace J. A. Sandham was a caller in Lan- Miss Eva Heron of Beauley spent spleen. He that is faithful in the first al- Sunday at the A. A. Brian home. sing Thursday. ternative that tests him, not only acts Uncle Eben Clarence Quick of Cass City under- "If you had to believe everything Hiram Lewis is spending the week Miss Ernestine Manigold spent went a minor operation Tuesday more promptly, but also sees further in th~a novt ~ob Htf!O ~r~o~ ~nv~t.'a~ you hears," said Uncle Eben. ".you'd ,,,~ sen, Ray Lew'~, at Roehes ~furd~y i~ S~gi~w. 27. ga~=~s a large~ ; and hi,s s[ep """ ...... "~ m~bb~ begin to wondm, whether deaf- ter. J. A. Sandham visited relatives in Saturday afternoon, the infant son Ms view is widor--.l',mos Martineau. ness wasn't a blessin'."--Washine'*n'~e~,~. Mrt and Mrs. Guy Rench attended Detroit Saturday and Sunday. of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Profit was Star. a "feeders' mee{ing" at Peek Friday brought to the hospital geriously ill Louis Brooks, who has been very China Needs Foreats? evening. ill with pneumonia, is improving very with erysipelas and passed away The two great curses of ¢'hina, flood Not All in Same Mold Mrvand Mrs. Howard Asher of Ca- slowly. Monday evening. and f~mine, are closely related, and Our vanities dh"fer as our noses do; rd spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Robert Day of Flint spent at foresters believe they may be partly all conceit is not the same conceit, but Frank Asher. few days the first of the week with Curiou: Old Beliefs if not wholly prevented by S.cie~atific varies in correspondence with the men- Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Croft and relatives here. In Sweden a book is placed beneath forestry tal make in which one of US differs two children visited relatives in Bad The art department of the Cass the head of a newly born child so tha~ from another --George Eliot. Ax~ Sunday. City Schools is preparing an art ex- Jvor.t/eC t/x /w~z.~e~ or t,qe stores he may be quick at reading'. They Most Costly Bible Miss Helen Doerr entertained a hibit for the week of March 24. . 7X)&re ~eA, z~&/~g~ wares. say, too, that so long as a child is With its cover entrusted with dia- Slow Medical Advance number of friends at supper Monday Mrs. Harold Morgan of Flint visit- unchristened, the fire must never be monds and emeralds, a Bible recently It was L4oo years between the dis- eve:hint in honor of her 12th birth- ed her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George extinguished test evil spirits come, and offered for sale in London is stated to covery by a Roman physician that the day. Bartle, from Thursday until Monday. • Or ~avez~n& m[Zeo~ ~, . no one must pass between the fire be the most costly in.the world. It arteries contain blood and the discov- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jackson and Misses Frances and Jacqueline and the child whilst it is being fed by came from the Russian,~mperial palace ery by an English physician of how Mr. and Mrs. Robert Agar, jr., spent Middleton visited their grandparents, O/v',azs~ive" s~n.~ or tg&. the mother. at Tsarskoye Selo. the blood circulates. Monday in Flint. Mr. and ~rs. L. B0 Middleton, at Miss Ruby Tibbits of Saginaw has Groswell over Sunday, been doing special nursing at Pleas- The ice harvest has been on in full ant Home Hospital. force the past week. The product is Malcolm Whale of Detroit visited 16 inches thick and is said to be the , ~ Rgj~m4/~Z ~/, &yeaAer; his grandmother, Mrs. Isabelle Whale, finest in several winters. tZ[Z s@i6l~./or t/ie g~'~gs t/~y w~ from Monday untiI Wednesday. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ryland ]~ ~t'r~r s&~y wea2A;er, Mrs. B. L. Middleton, Mrs. E. on Jan. 30, a son, Jack Dean, at the Hunter and Mrs. George McIntyre home of Mr. Ryland's parents, Mr. were callers in Saginaw Saturday. and Mrs. M. D. Hartt. ° ! ~2er6ve# [AeX mag & ; Miss Margaret Ross, Miss Mabel Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lewis left last ../Ou2 5/4 fo~s matte ~ ~w~w wor~wAde Brian and James Mclntyre spent) Thursday for their home at Roches- Tuesday in gagln~w and Bay City. ter after sp0nding two weeks with Mr. and ~s, Hiram Lewis, parents Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reid spent from Tuesday until Thursday on a of Ray Lew~, business and pleasure trip to Detroit, Ed. Marks has purchased the resi- Dr. i. D. McCo:g and daugJate), Ma- takes occasion to make a iittie an- Mrs. Wm. Crandell has returned dence property on the corner of Pine ry Lou, spent Sunday in Detroit. nouncement with regard to forth- tREt from Harbor Beach where she spent St, and Woodland Ave. J~rom Joseph Tesho and expects to move there in Mr. and Mrs. Charles Steers visited coming spring styles. The proper two weeks with her mother, Mrs. thing in clothes for the spring will the near future° relatives in Detroit for the week-end. The new R S~orc~ ~,e M...: Jo:h~ Morley. be seen in wide shoulders and narrow Dan MeClorey is very ill with igan's own stores -- operated Mrs, A14iaa ~atterson Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Knight left on waists and fairly wide trousers. by ]Vlichigan people on Michi- and. Tho~ag pneumonia at his home on Garfield Argo Nail were entertained at the farm Wednesday to attend Farmers' Week Those of you round Cass City who gan capital. The Manager is at Lansing and visit their three Avenue. financially interested. Here home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Col- have been brushing that old tux for daughters, who are attending Michi- Miss Esther Mark visited relatives you wilt find price and quality well Tuesday. the past several years and handling it only possible through tremen- gan State College. in Detroit a few days the first of the dous buying power. You will D't. O. McRae and Dr. ~a~'~ so carefully every time it was C, of E. W. Keating, local real estate week. find service that only a man- Ant~ Arbor were Sunday guests at dragged out to be worn to some very dealer, reports the sale of the Mary Miss Pauline Sandham of Lansing ager financially interested can the ~home of Dr. McRae's parents, Mr. formal occasion, are slated for a give. The new R Stores are GemmiH property to Alfred Craft of spent the week-end at the home of knockout. The tux is no longer the and Mrs. Christopher McRae. new,~remodeled, redecorated, Detroit and the Cridland residence on her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. proper thing for Very formal occa- restocked with the world'~ fin- ~Ir. and Mrs. John Race and Mr. North Oak St. to E. W. Kercher. S'andham. sions. It has been replaced by the full est [ood:',~ready to serve yo'a and' Mrs. Hale Guyette and baby of well and constantly. PER PKG ...... ]...... Miss Blanch Stafford entertained a Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lorentzen and dress Oxford in very dark blue or Pofitiac spent Saturday evening and number of friends most delightfully children of Romeo were Sunday black and with it goes the pique Su/~day with Cuss City relatives. at her home on Garfield Avenue Sat- guests of Mr. Lorentzen's parents, waistcoat with the white tie. t~arry T. Crandell left Tuesday for urday evening. Bridge was played, Mr. and Mrs. John Lorentzen. Of course with these announce- TOILET SOAP LU~ @~ PA~O~]VE 3 bars g@¢ Lansing to visit his daughter, Miss prizes going to Johanna Sandham Mr. and Mrs. Sam Vyse and three ments it is confidently expected that M@el. While there, Mr. Crandell at- and Florence Sehenek. A dainty lun- sons of Flint spent from Saturday local dealers will make a mad rush ten'ted the Farmers' Week meetings cheon was served. until Monday at the home of Mr. and to get in a full stock to take care of wt~ich are held at the Michigan State Darwin Bailey of the Harbor Beaeh Mrs. I. W. Hall, parents of Mrs. Vyse. the demands of tiffs particular sec- Col.~ege this week. high school faculty, broke his left i Arthur Little returned home on tion of the eountry:*.In all probability PE&NUT BUTTER CherryBlossomBra~d...16-oz.jar I~C 3}uesday evening, Jan. 28, fourteen collar bone while skating on the har- i Wednesday from Bay City where he ~they will hardly ha ye time to place of i:I-Iarold Dickinson's friends met at bor last Wednesday. He kept right on spent nearly three weeks as a mem- their orders and ~t in their goods his~ home to help him celebrate his with his duties however and met 'ber of the grand jury in federal before the rush wi!~Ntart. As soon as PURE PRESEBVE$ court. the men folks hav4~ad time to digest birthday. The evening was spent in with his classes each day. Pineapple Cherry Btossom-- / Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Ottaway enter- these few fashion i~nts, their present pl@ing 500 after which Mrs. Dickin- Mr. and Mrs. William I. Moore, Sliced Large No. 2½ 23 Coffee--Social Brew 25C I Eversweet Oleo tained Mr. Ottaway's brother and wardrobes will be t~rned over to the son, served delicious refreshments. Roy B. Crosby and Laverne Hill were Can~8 Slices ...... ~ It's new. Try it! ...... 2 Pounds ...... C his family, Mr. and Mrs. B. Ottaway second hand clothing dealers and they 35 ~. A. Elliott and William Foe spent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lorn Trathen Suhday in Ann Arbor where Mr. Foe and three children, of Flint Saturday will lay in a complete new supply in near Greenleaf Sunday. Miss Lorraine and Sunday. accordance with the latest regula- vistted his daughter, Mrs. Allis. Mrs. Barnes, who had spent the week-end tions. We reckon! William Foe left Wednesday to spend with her grandmother, Mrs. Moore, sortie time with Mrs. Allis, who is returned to Greenleaf with them Sun- HERE IS STYLE, Chipso stig a patient in a hospital at Ann day. CASS CITY MEN NOVESTA. Arbor. Mrs. Guy Reneh entertained her LARGE -~ ~, 1~. A. Elliott and son, Leonard, i Sunday School class of young ladies Concluded from first page. f Winter is still doing her stuff. spent Tuesday evening at Snorer, i at her home on South Seeger street John Woolley is stilI very poorly. PACKAGE side of a haberdashery itself. w~re they played their Hawaiian Wednesday evening. The evening was Listen to this: Here are the mini- Mrs. Win. Paul is very sick at guitars at an entertainment presented spent in playing the corn game. Pri- a mum .requirements for the well present. bykthe young people of the Shabbon zes were won by Catherine Bailey dressed man: Roy Clark has purchased the Win. M6thodist church. Wednesday eve- and Beatrice Lefler. Delicious refresh- One dressy black coat for evening Collins farm, north of Novesta Cor- 119c "8lEi&Suds" ] ni~g, Mr. Elliott and Leonard played ments were served. ov@r~ WBCM at Bay City. wear, either of the cape or the inver- ners, and wilt take possession at Miss Alvina O'Camb, who attends ness type. once. ~iss Thelma Warner, who has been the Wagner school, received a certifi- At least half a dozen sack suits in training for a nurse at Saginaw Gen- Eldon Bruce and A. H. Henderson cate at the beginning of this semes- the new powder blue, gray blue and FRUIT SPECIALS ! ! erql hospital, is spending the week at represented the South Novesta Far- ter for five months' perfect atten- silver green colors. 3 for 20c Oranges, 176, per dozen ...... 54c th@ home of her parents, Mr. and mer's Club at a preliminary meeting Head Lettuce, dance, with no tardiness. Even with One or two morning coats. Mr~s. Stanley Warner. She will leave in Card on Saturday to arrange for Carrots, 3 bunches ...... 25c t Grape Fruit, 3 for ...... 25c \ weather and road conditions bad, this Several pairs of striped trousers. the first of next week to put in three the annual meeting of the County Mammoth Celery, 2 for ...... 23c I Northern Spies, 6 lbs. for...... 23c school had a 100% attendance during Two formal overcoats for day use. Federation of Clubs to be held on months at the Children's Free Hospi- the month of December. Mrs. F. H. One heavy winter ulster. March 6. tal' in Detroit. Korte is the teacher. One medium weight town coat Of Funeral services were held Sunday Stuart Henderson and Elwin Sadler A woman caught at shoplifting in semi-rough material. went to Detroit on Saturday, visiting at the Meimonite church for Richard, the Folkert Store by Nightwatchman One polo coat. three months old son of Mr. and Mrs. friends at Detroit and Pontiac. They Keenoy was arrested Tuesday after- Now that you have gone over this returned home on Sunday. Frederick Brown, living 4% miles noon. Arraigned before Justice Cragg, partial list of top clothes, can you lo- east and 3 miles south of Cass City. she was fined $5.00 and costs. It is cate the fellow who will comply with Miss Madeline Burse and Miss Richard passed away Friday morning thought that the name she gave was the demands of a well dressed man in Thelma Henderson were visitors on The N~ana~er is Financially interested after a short ilIness. He leaves be- a fictitious one. She resides near Elk- these parts? There are just three Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. sides his parents, three brothers. ton, store proprietors say, and has guesses coming to you, so be careful and Mrs. William Churchill. ALSO AT ARGYLE, MICH. Burial was in Novesta cemetery. been suspected for some time. in naming the fellow. A new gas anaesthesia apparatus .Funeral services for Donald Alexan- Just in this particular the official Advertise it m the Chronicle. i , I I I II II I II , [ of t~ae latest type, which records the der, son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert patient's respiration, heart action and Profit, were held at the home, four blood pressure during the complete miles north of Cuss City, Wednesday NNNINNNNINNNNNNN NNINNNNNNNNNNINNNNINNNNNNINNN~ operation, is befng installed in Pleas- afternoon. Donald was born January N ant Home Hospital. Dr. I. D. McCoy 4, 1930, and passed away February *I*¢" Over 95% Pure Combustibleo ":"**** NI left Wednesday for Toledo to take a 0 0 3. He leaves besides his parents, one 0 **** short course in gas anaesthesia and sis'let, Betty Jean, three years old. learn the details of the equipment. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Harrison of " Don't Read This---" " Mr. and Mrs. Durward Heron en- Detroit were among those who at- tertained a number of their friends tended the funeral. .--"Cavalier4* Coal".--O at a delightful evening bridge party Miss Dorothy McEldowney, teach- ¢. *I* Unless You Are Looking at their home Thursday evening. er of the Dillman school, found it Prizes were won by Mrs. D. A. Krug o SO MUCH HEAT o necessary last week to keep the sev- o ¢* and Andrew Bigelow. Luncheon was enth and eighth grades for "after- o:. That you use much lesscoal and actually heat your ¢. for a Better Gas served by the hostess. Mrs. Heron's school" sessions. After attending "~ home for less money. .:. N mother, Mrs. Phelps, of Detroit, and these overtime meetings for two suc- her sister of Mayville were out of ceeding afternoons, Ray Brown, a o.,. SO PURE ÷I*o N Our service station is being decorated in yellow ~J~ town guests. student of this school, decided the That it does not contain a single visible impurity such o INI .and red, the official colors of the Shell Gasoline sta- ~ll Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Guyette of third might be a rather late session .:. as rock, slate or bone coal. ¢. N Flint and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Ashe and he appeared at school the third lions, indicating that we are handling this superior [1~ and daughter, Miss Ione, of Vassar morning carrying a lantern. Ray is o SO LITTLE ASH o spent Saturday afternoon and Sunday the 11 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. .:. That a bushel basket will hold all there is in a ton and +~ ~t1 product. with Mrs. William Paul, who is very Bruce Brown. 4**:" not a clinker all winter. ¢"*I* ~1 There is but one way to learn why Shell Gaso- ill at her home south of town. Mrs. "Enclosed find check for a year's ~I1 line is so popular, and that is to fill your car with it Guyette and Mrs. Ashe remained and subscription to the Cass City Chroni- ¢" SO EASY TO FIRE ":" are spending the week there. Mrs. and make a test run. The greater starting ease and N] cle," writes Jas. A. Whale from Colo- ¢.o That it responds quickly to draft regulation and yet o":" Paul is a sister of Mr. Guyette and rado Springs. Everything going fine ¢. holds fire over long periods during the day or night. -:, ~I] the longer mileage are but two advantages. You will ~1 Mrs. Ashe. out here in Col~0rado Springs; no .I. o ~)J] learn the others ±rom experience. Drive in and get a "~ Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Seed arrived snow and nice and warm. Some parts e- SO LASTING THAT IT MEETS ALIKE~ .:. .I. ¢*~ ~] i tank full. ~1 safely in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Jan. of Colorado have lots of snow but not o The desire of the Housewife for a clean, hot kitchen o here. We are too close to Pike's Peak N 29 from their home in Rochester, at- *:" fire * * * The needs of a Furnace or Boiler in the home e.":" N N ter encountering snow and rain foothills. Snow blows clear over us :i: * * * The demands of a Great Apartment or Hotel. "~ storms enroute. Mr. Seed says snow about 20 miles before it drops. Lots 4- 4* followed them to the Cumberland of snow east of us. Getting the Elkland Gas and Oil Co. Gap, and then changed to rain which Chronicle out here is like getting a N @ continued intermittently until they letter fr6m home when our friends o':" Elkland Roller Mills .:.-:-" Telephone 180 reached their destination. Mr. and forget to write. We hear about the @ N Mrs. Seed will remain for three city and friends through the columns * Telephone Number 15 :~: N months in St. Petersburg. This is and we look forward every Monday • ~.~ their fourth season in Florida. morning for the paper." ~N@NNNNNNN@NNN@NNNNN@~@ NN~NNNNNNN~@~@~N~ Cass City, Michigan, Friday, February 7, 1930. CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE FIVE

CHURCH CALEN~A~R. REPORT OF TUSCOLA NO. 2 went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. :EASY MEASURES STOP Jesse Cooper and gave them a real DAIRY HERD IMP. ASS'N. surprise, the occasion being the LOSSES FROM GOITER St. Pancratius Church-- Services birthda~r of Mrs. Cooper. A pot-luck/ . Grist Screenings are held each Sunday morning at For Month of January, 1930. dinner was enjoyed. A delicious large Michigan flockmasters can prevent Published Every Friday 11 o'clock. Cows tested, 219. Cows dry, 50. pyramid cake decorated with candles the occurrence of goiter in next Rev. Fr. Fitzpatrick, ~astor. ,b.pArthur Brisbane Number cows producing above 50 lbs. graced the center of the table. The spring's lambs by feeding their breed- V01. 5. ~ Feb. 7, 1930. No. 26 ing ewes one or two grains daily of To Dea'th Barefo~.t fat, 24; number cows producing above cake was made by their daughter, Presbyterian Church-dPaul .John- 1250 lbs. milk, 29. Number herds Mrs. Walter Schell. Mrs. Cooper was either potassium iodide or sodium Published in the in- A lady who bakes her most feeding value A Dwarf :Can Kill son Allured, Minister. Sunday, Feb. tested, 24. Average production per presented with a beautiful bouquet iodide, according to a statement by terest of the People of I own bread told us last from them. Must S~a Gulls Die~? 9: cow in Ass'n; Milk, 658.4; Fat 27.13. of pink carnations by the guests. Mr. animal husbandry specialists at Mich- Cass City and vicinity week that Cream of by the Wheat flour makes The best you can do Morning worship, 10:30. "The Path-+ and Mrs. Clayton iLee and Mr. and igan State College. Safer Flying Three High Cows--Butterfat Basis. more loaves to the sack usually isn't quite good ~ay to Holiness." Text: "Ye there- Mrs. Henry Phillips and Mrs. Lloyd The chemical can be fed to the Elkland Roller Mills Los ~ngeles, Calif.~In +Orleans, Au- Owner Lbs. Lbs. than any she's ever enough. gusmne ~go~ue. 3eats ~oy iavior, ~di~or u~ed. -...... LwenLS'-s~+,c~-~ of Cow +~,'~ {.Ki!k Fat Md, who killed her mother to get the !2viarletce were al~ gue~t~. Tim after- Somehow or other, which is fed to the sheep. Another m~ther's ~arm, ,was senteneed t0 death. Church School at noon. "Warnings Under Three Years. + noon was spent in visiting and re-. Clarence Quick has Bill-Your gir-t is we like a chronic method of administering the medicine .accordance ,with :the Napoleonic and Promises." Matt. 7:12, 15-27. .Harry Rohlfs-=P. B. H ..... 1150.1 *48.3 viewing old. times, Mr. and Mrs. about 12 Rock pullets somewhat spoiled, isn't grduch better than the is to mix one ounce of it with 25 code,-seeking :to .humiliate and pun- Junior Endeavor, 3:00. Henry Gohs & Son-- l Cooper came to Kingston township for sale. she ? fellow who is satisfied senior Endeavor and Epwor.th P. B. H ...... 1122.2 41,5 I from Oakland county in 1882, and pounds of salt and 25 pounds of Jim--No, it's just the with everything. ish ,mo~e severel,y ~those 'that murder perfume she uses. their • parents, Augustine ,will walk League, 6:30. No evening "service. John Horst--Gr. H ...... 961.1 39.4 l lived here for many years. After their steamed bone meal. This year we will I family were grown up and doing for Care must be taken in mixing the sell the Jamesway Winter cackles sound barefoot :to ,the guillotine, 'Member when they Under Four Years. themselves, Mr. and Mrs. Cooper went chemical with the salt and bone meal Brooder stoves and best, because + winter Decker Methodist +Circui¢--Shabbo- equipment. :Also the used to hang meat in cackles signify that J. C. Kirk & Sons-- to Cass City to live for a little while, to get an even distribution of the .Interesting :historical ,contrast be- na Church.--Sunday school at 10:30 the smoke house for there is something do- P. B. H ...... 1779.4 56.9 iodide. It is best not to make up too Buckeye stoves. Can tween her death and that of Joan of a.m. Evening service at 7:30 p. m. later moving to Marlette, where they use a second hand days ? Figaro smoked ing in the egg factory. Are, ,the maid .of :.Means. One walks Prayer service on Thursday at 2:30 B. ~B. Reavey--P. B. H ..... 1178.0 47.1 have a fine home with all the com- large a quantity of the mixture at Buckeye stove in ex- salt has certainly sim- It must be remora- to the guillotine barefoot ~for murder- ,Glen :Smith---Gr. H ...... 1342.3 47.0 forts of life. Both are in good health one time. change on a new stove. plified that bored, however, that P. m. Goiter is quite common in Michi- ing her mother. The other .walked Decker Church--Sunday school at Under Five Years. and happy. They are highly respected What have you ? the hen must be the barefoot t~) ,the stake, ~burned alive 10:30 a. m. Morning service at 11:30 by all their acquaintances, being con- gan flocks, the specialists say, and A man in Michigan first one to catch ,that :Harry ;Rohlfs--P. B. H ..... 1646.1 *60.9 swallowed a collar but- ~o:r saving -her .country. a.m. sidered as real friends to everyone. they advise the prevention of the Fred Schwaderer has joyous spirit. Winter Chas. VanAllen--P. B.H._1608.9 54.7 ton and three opera+- cackles come from joy- Elmer Church--Morning ser@ice at trouble by the treatment given rather two Holstein cows for New ~g,o rk a ,dwarf ,only four Lee Fowler--Gr. Guer ..... 1147.0 53.9 than attempts at cure after the lambs sale. These are good° tions have failed to lo- ous, ambitious hens 10:00 a. m. Sunday School at 11:00 cate it. He might just high, Peter Arata, ,is sentenced SHABBONA are affected with the disease. ones. One is registered. who enjoy their daily feet a. m. Nature .Class--Five Years and Over. as well have bought a feeds of Wayne Butter- death .for .murder. It is sometimes possible to reduce to Prayer service on Wednesday ag Harry I~dhlfs--P. B. H ..... 2166.9 *82.3 Husband "I new one in the first milk Egg Mash° [['he modern "automatic" pistol The Willing Workers met with the goiter on lambs by painting the -- just 8:00 p. m. Sherman Dibble--Gr. H...1701.9 64.7 paid the doctor some place. makes i~ easy .for :Peter ,to ,kill. In Mrs. A. L. Sharrard Wednesday. swelling with tincture • of iodine or "We believe that men are made for Jahn Hor sf~--Gr. H ...... )_.1466.3 58.7 more money on our If you want those ancien~ days when men fought with Christ and cannot really live apart George Silvernaile of Detroit spent with an ointment prepared by com- bill." "Never saw a better calves to make a clubs, maces and swords, 'he :would from Him. Our fathers were im- the week-end at the S. J. Mitchell bining one ounce of iodine crystals, Wife--"Oh, goody! coal in my life," says profitable growth, feed only have :been ~ jester, ~oo >small to pressed with the horror that men High H~!ds--Buttearfat Basis. home. Mrs. Silvernaile, who has been six grams of potassium iodide, and Two more payments one of our "Cavalier" them Purina Calf Chow. It's great stuff.+ m~der. should die without Christ--we share Name ~ Ave. Ave. visiting her parents for the past four ounces of vaseline. and the baby's ours." customers. Neither have we. that horror. We are impressed also ,of No.. Lbs. Lbs. three weeks, returned home with him. Purina Calf Chow After the elopement Similarly a .sma1,1 ,na~cion, .as small with the horror that men should live Owner Cows Bxeed Milk Fat The play given in the M. E. church ISSUE NEW COUNTY es Hungary, or Holland, or Switzer- fed correctly will raise We know a man who a fellow usually sits without Christ." + on Friday evening was well attended. land, in these days of flying machines Small Herd--Six Cows or Less. HIGHWAY MAPS a calf for about one- likes salt on his grape- down and wonders J. H. James, Pastor. Harry The proceeds were $36.00. third the cost of milk. fruit. what all the rush was and poison gas might be the most ef- Rohlfs-- Harvey MeGregory and family vis- 6 P.B..H. 1172.3 "45.18 about. ficient international kilter ,i-n elm m~r- ited his brother, Vern MeGregory, New county road maps, replacing Methodist Church--Feb. 9. Class Henry Welke-- We saw six young Wayne 32% Farm tier game ,of war. Saturday evening. those issued in 1926, have been pre- Conditions change, o A fi~e po:und meeting, 10:00. 6 Gr. H. 245.6 12.1 pared by J. H. Schwaderer, engineer people in a Ford coupe Mix provides what is Elkland Roller Hazen Kritzman of Detroit spen~ Sunday. And we don't needed to properly bal- ~baby taken up in an airplane might l~orning worship, i0:30. for the Tuscola county road commis- Medium Herd--7-15 Cows. the week-end at his parental home. know how many there ance farm grains, so Mills release a poison gas bomb thai w+~Ja:l,d Sunday school, Ii:45. sion. The maps are designed primari- Chas. VanAllen-- Mrs. Bruce Adams of Decker visit- were out of sight. that you wilt get the Phone 15 Cass City kill 500,000 :in a big city. Epworth League, 6:30. At this ser- ly to designate the location of state vice the Christian Endeavor Society 8 P.B.H. 1145.0 39.9 ed her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Stitt, Tuesday. and county trunk line highways. In R. G. F,ernal.d, member CaH- of the Presbyterian Church unites Cleveland NeaI-- ,o~ Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hirsch of Ponti- addition, township roads are shown, ~orni.a's game commission and~owne~ iwilh us in the study of the second 13 Gr. Jer. <6!92.0 36.7 ac are visiting relatives in this vi- also the location of townships and of the Santa Barbara Morning Press, chapter of the Mission Study book, Large Herd--16 or More Cows. villages, streams, lakes and railroads, Chronicle Liners Cost Little; Accomplish uch, says sea gulls are the worst enemies "Seven Thousand Emeralds," led by cinity. Geo. Foster- of wild ducks and other wild life. Miss Grace Beach. 25 P.B.H. 973.3 32.4 Congress, says he, should authorize Evening service, 7:30. ELKLAND-ELMWOOD and finance extermination of the mil- Prayer meeting Thursday evening. Henry Gobs & Son-- 16 P.B. & Gr. H. 760.9 26.4 lions of sea gulls in Alaska. A small Bethel Church -- Sunday school, TOWN LINE bounty and the Esquimaux would kill 11)00. Preaching service, 12:00. * Denotes 3 times milker. them off quickly. George Hill, Pastor. Mrs. G.W. Purdy entertained a Signed, few of her lady friends at a doorstop Sea gulls destroy the eggs and FRED J. KIRK/Tester. party one day last week. young of wild ducks in. their northern SMiem Evangelical Church--Charles W. Lyman, minister. Mrs. Win+ Anker and sons of De- Surprises for 1930 breeding grounds, millions of them. Services for Sunday, February 9: DEFORD. troit are spending a few days at the They dive and devour the eggs of the M. Beckett home. "Say, John, do you use Hi-Test Gasoline in your car?" "No, not now. I used to, salmon. Adult fish near the spawning The Sunny Sunday School meets grounds are seen floundering aimlessly at 10 a. m. The superintendent, Ed. Mrs. E. R. Johnson entertained the Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Livingston and but now that I can get Sinclair Premium Gasoline I do not need it." daughter, Marjorie, spent Friday in in shallow water. Easily caught, they Helwig, extends the glad hand wel- Happy Hour Club on Wednesday af- "Jim, does your motor knock when you are climbing a hill with a heavy load?" are found to be blind, both eyes picked come to all. A splendid temperance ternoon. Bay City. ~, Answer--"It did, until I started to use Sinclair Gas." • out by gulls not strong enough to lift lessbn for Sun4ay: "Warnings and Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Kennedy spent Mr. and Mrs. McConkey, sr., of the heavy salmon. Promises." Spiritual, able teachers. A Tuesday evening in Car.. Cass City spent Sunday at the C. J. "Say, Tom, has your motor got as much pep as it used to have when it was new?" smile and a cosy place for you! Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gage and daugh- Bingham home. "Yes, and more, since I began to use Sinclair Premium Gasoline. Congress should do something about Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Mes- ~;+ an_ ._a a~ xxr+.. ~ ..... -~ ~- + Mr. and Mrs. Roy Strong and "k ±m ~ ,~-~ ] t-~ ~ ~ t+c~i, ±v.l.£. i~l£1,,t ±vJk£~. VV 11~. x,Xi~t:~ i=tllU l¥1i. that, with two "IFS"--if the gulls can sage ~y me passor on uraer ~us oi ...... daughter of Bay City spent Sunday ,~. ,, ~+ + .. . _ anG ~wrs. w. J~. ~age were callect ~o Imlay City and Saginaw Bus Lines are using Sinclair Gas and find it hard work to be spared from their work as scav- ....t~naos " ....±vir " ~yman Will say,..... in par~"" Detroit on Thursday of last week on at the T. Lounsbury;~home. i ±he ,smm assures us ~na~ ~i we ...... +. hold their busses to a standstill long enough for their passengers to climb aboard. TraffÉc engers for the sake.of ducks and sal- ...... ; . accoun~ oI ~ne serious l~mess oi ~sen E.A. Livingston and Lloyd Reagh I have nov bnrls~ s splrll;, we are ,. ~ ,~ ~. cops insist on Sinclair Gas so as to overtake their victim who is evading the law...... noL uage,~ ,s aaugnver,. avtrs, ueo. ~man. spent part of the week in Lansing mon; and if it makes much difference I of him. Credal Chmstmnlty furnishes Don't take our word, Please try our wonderful product and be convinced. 'nothln" g but the menu card--no sus-I Mrs"" washing"Lawson Stinger• . has a new attendingc.J. BinghamFarmers' Week, whether gulls have the fun of eating Sadie Bingham the ducks as babies or men have the raining food, just the bill of fare. I electric machine, a~d God is indivisible. Where the Father ] Mr. and Mrs. C. W. MeCain of Pon- visited in Unio~vi~:g at the Kline fun of shooting them as full-grown ducks. is, there is the Son and the.Holy / tiae called in Deford on Sunday. home one day last week, Spirit. God is love. Measure not your] Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Spencer and ] Mr. and Mrs. James Peddle spent religion by your knowledge of theol.- / son, Alvah, spent Sunday with Mr. ]Tuesday at the T. Lounsbury home. 0ur.Siaclair Pr+miumGas--Pric+,21c £all0a Mr. Young, assistant secretary of .... but b- the love of God in ,tour / and Mrs. T. B. MeCain at Oxford, vis- I The friends and relatives of Mr. the Department of Commerce,. an- ~:~J, J , J . • . ~ . Works fine in gas lamps or stoves. Will not plug the generator and has no bad odor. nounces that passenger airships must he ar t; L e a rn the l esson of l'stening1 ~tlngM thmr mother, Mrs .....C L McCam t and Mrs. Chas. Beckett gathered at with your heart. A sculptor was rs. Max Ajar and little son, Got- I the home of Elmer Bearss Monday We were very fortunate in securing this product and in regard to lubricating oils, carry two-way radio facilities to re- !evening and had a shower for them. ceive weather information and send asked how he made a statue. He an- don, of Car. spent Wednesday with t They received many useful gifts. The our Sinclair Opaline Oils are stan~ped with the Government approval. emergencT messages. swered, 'I get a piece of marble and IMrs. Benj. Gage. knock off what I don ,t want. , God Mrs • John Clark left on Wednesda y, evening was spent in playing games We aim to give to the public ~ product which is second to none other on the Presently more powerful engines, makes mere trifles of man's seeming Jan. 29, to visit her daughter, Mrs. and dancing. market, and we can prove our assertion who n we say that our Sinclair Premium Gaso- impossibilities. For instance, Daddy] Geo' Huffman, and returned on Sun- bigger ships, better understanding of line is the highest quality of regular gasdin e that has ever been sold in the Thumb of air navigation, will eliminate the im- drives a stake in the ground and tells day. On Monday, her son-in-law came EVERGREEN. portance of weather conditions. little Johnnie to pull it up.. The boy back for her on account of the sick- Michigan. Come and let us prove it. Meanwhile the government, not tries--and fails. Then Daddy places ness of a little daughter. A number from here attended ser- youthful, enthusiastic pilots, should his big, strong hand over Johnnie's Mrs. E. R. Johnson entertained the vices at Shover on Monday evening. decide on flying or not flying. little one, and helps. Up comes the Happy Hour Club on Wednesday af- Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kitchin and stake." + ternoon. family, Mrs. Win. Kitchin and A. W. Mr. B. C> l~orbes, asking himself In the evening" at 7:30 Mr. Lyman's Kitchin and grandson, Ernest, at- Cass City .it and Gas Co. tended revival services at Colfax +'What is this all about, this terrific subject will be (with apologies for the KINGSTON-NOVESTA on Phone 25. ROBERT WARNER, Manager. strenuosity and strain?" as he talked slang phrase) " 'Passing the Buck'; Sunday evening. to George F. Baker, richest banker or Four Mottoes on a Sack of Flour." TOWN LINE Walter Wood of Detroit visited his in th.e world, says of a certain multi- Odd s~bjeet? Yes. Suppose you try family here on Saturday and Sunday. millionaire, not Mr. Baker, that he and hear it. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Cook enter- Mrs. Walter Wood and daughters, would "trade all his riches for youth." E. L. C. E. devotionals at 6:45 p. tained the latter's nephew, Roy Jef- Hazel and Eunice, are visiting rela- The multi-millionaire thinks, he m. Topic, "Ways of Studying the Bi- fery, of Detroit for dinner Sunday, tives at Wheatland this week. NNINNNNNNNItl]NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNINN g ,N NNNNNN would do it, but wouldn't. ble." Leader, Mrs. C. J. Strittler. Miss and in the afternoon they were cal- Mrs. Chas. Mudge has been quite @ Elsie Buehrly will lead the Juniors. lers at the John Pringle home. sick. N A man like Edison might desire Prayer meeting Thursday evening, Mrs. Clark Montague was on the Roy. and Mrs. L. L. Surbrook of renewed youth, to live another life 7:30. sick list the first of the week. Colfax visited Mrs. Manley Kitchin N of useful invention. But a man who Choir practice Friday evening at Mr. and Mrs. L. Retherford spent on Monday. N has only made money would be foolish the home of B. A. Elliott. Saturday afternoon in Car., calling Mrs. A. W. Kitchin spent from 2 DOG OWNERS +@ to live his life again. on relatives. Wednesday until Sunday with her An intelligent man, after working Nazarene Church--Sunday School N Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Hutchir/~on of daughter, Mrs. L. L. Surbrook, of Col- Pay your do~' license to County or Township hard through a lifetime, would not go at two o'clock. 2 N back to the gate by which we enter, Cass City visited at the home of Mr. fax. Preaching at 3:00 p. m. Sunday. N Treasurer before February 28 2 but rather look to the door at the and Mrs. G. A. Martin Wednesday. Some of the farmers are putting up Woman's Missionary Society meets ice. far end of life, as a trained dog in Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clark have pur- N Friday afternoon, Feb. 7, at the home The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. the show yearns for the moment when chased the farm of Win. Collins which of Mrs. Margaret Houghton. Fred Brown passed away Friday N he may get down on all fours and is just north Novesta Corners. The N. Y. P. S. meets Friday eve- of morning'. The funeral service was N trot off the stage. Mr. and Mrs. Bemis Bentley spent ning with Miss Alma Whalen. held at the Mizpeh M. B. C. church Not ceW °@ the week-end in Pontiac on business. N E. Ferguson, Pastor. on Sunday, Elder Krake officiating. Old men cling to money that pro- Win. Jenereaux and Son, Oscar, of N ¸ The bereaved family have the sympa- DOG LAW PUBLIC ACT NO. 339 P. A. 1919 + tects them from the rough world. It Pontiac .... spent Sunday with relatives thy of their many friends. N is the one reality extracted from life's Bapt~t Church--William Curtis, here. SEC. 6 AS AMENDED ACT NO. 53 P. Ao 1927. ~I] unreal dream. pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Retherford Preaching Sunday morning at and son, Arleon, and Mrs. Bertha ELKLAND. N N He who thinks he understands the 10:30. Theme, "Simon's Load," or Cooper visited Sunday at the home of :"Carrying Jesus' Cross." 2 On or before the first day of March, 1928, and on or before the .+ [~ character and emotions of. women de- Ray Gibbs in Car,. David 5~rphy's have recently in- same day in each year thereafter, the owner of any dog four months old 2 ceives himself. Sunday School at 11:45. Cecil Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Osburn and stalled a radio in their home. N Brown, Supt. or over shall, except as provided in Section 14, apply to the County or ~t] Mrs. Della ("Dot") Lee, manicure children of Marlette spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. John Ross are the N B. Y. P. U. at 6:30 in charge of the Township Treasurer, where such owner resides, in writing, for a license . N]+: lady who lived here, sent $50 to her afternoon at the home of Mr. and parents of a baby girl born Jan. 29 N Dev&ional Commission. sister, writing: "I think something is Mrs. J. D. Funk. at Morris Hospital, Cass City. 2 "for each such dog owned or kept by him. Such application shall state the !~ going to happen. If it ~does and How- Preaching at 7:30. Theme, "And Novesta Arbor, )~. O. O. G., met at breed, sex, age, color and markings of such dog, together with name of ard gets me, bury me in white with Peter." The sale of the Peter Doerr Estate N the home of Mr. and Mrs. John was largely attended on Tuesday, Township and number of the Section where owner resides. 2 yellow roses in my hand. This money Young People's Bible and Devotion- Pringle last week Thursday and the 2 Feb. 4. + At the time of making such application the owner shall pay the will pay for the dress." al training class Wednesday evening following officers were elected for the ' i @ at 7:00. year of 1930: Chief Gleaner; Cyrus • Geo. and Hermam Charter are num- following license fee. If such application is made before March 1st the 2 Her womanly iatuition did not de- Prayer meeting Thursday evening Wells; vice chief, Mrs. C. Welts; bered among the si~k this week. 2 same shall be accompanied by a license fee of two dollars for each male ~t] ceive her. Something did happen. ~at 7:30. chaplain, Mrs, Emily Warner; sec. The Bethel Ladies' Aid will meet N dog or unsexed dog; and four dollars for each female dog; if said applica- Howard, twenty-eight-year-old mechan- Brotherhood next Wednesday eve- and treas., John Pringle; conductor, on Thursday, Feb. 13, with Mrs. Glen 2 tion is made on or after March 1st, the same shall be accompanied by a ical engineer, called. She shot him ning at+Eugene Livingston's. Chas. Cook; conductress, Mrs. Chas. Profit. N license fee of four dollars for each male or unsexed dog; and six dollars for i~ dead as he slept, killed herself and is Cook; inner guard, Mrs. Hazen War- The ififant son of Mr. and Mrs. each femaledog. presumably wearing the white dress, 2 Fancied Boredom ner; outer guard, Mrs. C. Crawford. Delb.ert Profit" passed away at Pleas- holding the yellow roses. Friday, Jan. 31, Mrs. Walter ant Home HospitaI Monday evening, N A lady killing a gentleman, or vice The office never really bores a man. If inconvenient to appear in person remittance may be made by mail direct He grunts and sputters and wishes he, Schell and Mrs. F. E. Hutchinson of after a few days' illness with ery- 2 v,ersa, is part of .civilization"s routine. Cass City, Mr. and Mrs. L. Rether- sipelis. Donald Alexander was born toTownship Treasurer or office of Tuscola County Treasurer, Car., Mich., when !~N But why did the lady specify a white had twelve monthS' vacation instead ford, Mr. and Mrs. H. Retherford, Jan..4. Funeral was conducted from N dress and yellow roses? "No man plan- of two weeks, but at heart he likes it ~] receipt and tag will be mailed to your+address. 2 Mrs. Bertha Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. ft. the residence Wednesday, Feb. 5. Rev. ning suicide would demand blue serge --Woman's Home Companion. D. Funk, and Mr. and Mrs. G. A/ !Hill officiated. Interment was mad~ and purple orchids. N N Martin journeyed to Marlette. Four in Elkland cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. ~. ORLO J. McDURMON, Tuscola Co. Treasurer, Car., Mich. There is something in woman's char- "Alamo's" Real Meaning miles north of Marlette, at the home Profit have the sympathy of a host of acter more puzzling than. a dozen Ein- "Alamo". is a Spanish word, and of Geo. Cooper, they were joined by friends and relatives in this their sad stein theories. • tJ: (@, 1950. by King FeatureaSyndicate, Int.) means poplur tree. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Cooper, and all b~reavement. mmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm m mmmmmm i + ....

PAGE SIX ~ CASS CITY CHRONICLE Cass City, Michigan, Friday, February 7, 1930.

Miss Lulu Barton spent the week- her brothers, S. and Wm. Mitchell, Mrs. Walter McCool and°grandson, WICKWARE. i J. Land of Fig Trees Order for Publication--Final Ad- Leo McLean, of Shabbona visited end with her sister, Miss Edna Bar- ] over the week-end. ministration Account.--State of Mich- Mexico has more than 200,000 pro- Mrs. McCool's daughter, Mrs. Percy ton, in Saginaw. Ward Law was a business caller in igan, The Probate Court for-the l Clare Burns was a caller in Detroit ducing fig trees. Read, Sunday. Mrs. C. E. Sharp and son, Billy, of Caro Wednesday. the first of the week. County of Tuscola. Bay City were• Tuesday guests of Dr. John Bartle made a business trip to At a session of said Court, held at Levi Bardwell spent Wednesday J. Richter is driving a new Ford Order for Publication~Pr~bate of and Mrs. I. D. McCoy. Saginaw Tuesday. the Probate Office in the Village of and Thursday in Lansing with his these days.' Will--State of Michigan, The Probate Caro, in said County, on the 16th day Mrs. Chris Nolty left Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Truman Chambers daughter, Mrs. E. R. Wilson, and also Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mitchell are Court for the County of Tuscola. of January, A. D. 1930. spend some time with her son, Rob- spent Wednesday in Ca~o. ' C. D. Striffier was a business caller attended Farmers' Week. the happy parepts of a baby girl born At a session of said Court, held at Present: .Hon. Guy G. Hill, Judge ert Wilson, at Gagetown. the Probate Office in the Village of of Probate. m Bad Axe Thursday. Miss Hester Cathcart entertained a Mrs. John Jackson received word of Tuesday, Jan. 28. Dr. A. D. Law of Detroit visited the death of her nephew, Leslie Ellis, Caro in said County, on the 30th day In the Matter of the Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Kenney were number of ~her friends at a bridge Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Phetteplace and his parents' Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Law, Monday, Jan. 27, in North Branch. of January A. D. 1930. Estate of Isabel Brotherton, Deceased, Saginaw visitors Tuesday. party Thursday evening at her home family spent Sunday at the Owen Present, Hon. Guy G. Hill, Judge of Saturday night and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Maharg of Cass A. J. Wallace, having filed in said : Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Benkelman, jr., on North Seeger street. Refreshments Smith home. Probate. court his final administration account, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Katz of King- City were Tuesday callers at the Lynn In the Matter of the ~vere callers in Saginaw Thursday. were served. and his petition praying for the al- ~*^,- w~::c Sundav evcr, fn~ ~ucst~ ~ Harold ~r..~.~-.,,~,,~, spent t ~,~..... week-end JV~rs. D. A. !irug and Cbaries Big'e- Advertise it in the Chronicle. iowance thereo~ and for ti~e assign- lvir. and Mrs. E. W. Kercher. Miss Nora Jackson, who is attend- William Graeey and Addle Mar- ment and distribution of the residue with his aunt, Mrs. James MeMahon. low were visitors in Port Huron on J. A. Sandham, John, Lloyd and Ira ing school in Mt. Pleasant, spent the shall, having filed their petition, pray- of. said estate, Charles Ewing of Pontiac visited I Monday and called at the home of ing that an instrument filed in said It Is Ordered, That the 18th day of t Mr. and Mrs: William Lamb at Jeddo Reagh attended the funeral of Leslie week-end with her parents, Mr. and Directory. his mother, Mrs. Sarah Ewing Tues- Ellis at North Branch Wednesday. Mrs. James Jackson. Court be admitted to Probate as the February, A. D. 1930, at ten o'clock Ion the way. P. A. SCHENCK, D. D. S. last will and testament of said de- in the forenoon, at said probate office, day. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Ricker were Mrs. Ward Law was pleasantly sur- Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Striffter and Dentist. ceased and that administration of be and is hereby appointed for ex- Wm. Cleland of Minden spent Sun- ICon, Irvine, were guests of Mr. and l callers in Decker at the home of Mrs. prised Monday evening when a num- said estate be granted to William amining" and allowing said account day at the home of Mrs. Catherine l Mrs. A. H. Smith at Port Huron Sun-'~Ri@er's sister, Mrs. O. W. Nique, on ber of her friends and relatives gath- Graduate of the University of Mich- Gracey and Addle Marshall or some and hearing said petition; igan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., Cass I~OSS. l day where they attended a dinner in IThdrsday" ered at her home to help her celebrate other suitable person. It Is Further Ordered, That public City, Mich. notice thereof be given by publication : Miss Helen Doerr entertained a l honor of Mrs. Striffier's birthday, A miscellaneous shower was held her birthday. A very happy time was It Is Ordered, That the 28th day of laumber of friends at supper Monday enjoyed by all. Dainty refreshments February, A. D. 1930, at ten a. m., at of a copy of this order, for three suc- Mrs. Anna McLean, who has spent Monday evening at the home of Mr. cessive weeks previous to said day of ~iay. were served. SHELDON B. YOUNG, M. D. said Probate Office is hereby appoint- .~everal weeks with her sister, Mrs. and Mrs. Elmer Bearss in honor of ed for hearing said petition. hearing, in the Cass City Chronicle, Cass City, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Creguer and Dan Urquhart, left Tuesday for her Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beckett. A pot John Jackson was a business caller It Is Further Ordered, That Public a newspaper printed and circulated in Telephone--No. 80. children visited friends in Marlette home in Port Huron. She was accom- •luck supper was served. in Sandusky Tuesday. notice thereof be given by publieatibn said county. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Milligan spent of a copy hereof for three successive GUY G. HILL, Judge of Probate. panied by her nephew, Leonard Urqu- DENTISTRY Mrs. Anna McLean spent last week family of Detroit have rented the weeks previous to said day of hearing A true copy. hart, who returned to Cass City on Sunday at the Fisher home. Elijah Minta E. Hill, Mrs. B. F. Gemmill house on Third I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. in the 'Cass City Chronicle, a newspa- with Mr. and Mrs. Hector McIntyre Wednesday. Fisher is still quite poorly. per printed and circulated in said Registrar of Probate. at Argyle. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cooley and street and are moving there this Office over Burke's Drug Store. We County. 1-24-3 -week. solicit your patronage when in nee ] Miss Marjorie Sickles of Saginaw children and Mr. and Mrs. L. Parker, GUY G. HILL, Judge of Probate. Delayed Letter. of work. visited Cass City friends over the all of Owendale, spent Thursday with Mr. oand Mrs. John May motored to A true copy. TOOK SODA FOR STOM- Week-end. Mr. Cooley~s mother, Mrs. Agnes Stockbridge Saturday to visit rela- Flossie Law entertained Sunday af- I. D. McCOY, M. D. Minta E. Hill, Registrar of Probate. ACH FOR 2(1 YEARS i~ Hector MeKay left Sunday to spend Cooley, and helped her celebrate her tives. Mr. May returned Monday and ternoon: Laurence Solgat and Miss 2-7-3 a few days with his father, George 72nd birthday. Mrs. May remained to spend a few Ada Karr of Gagetown. Surgery and Roentgenology. "For 20 years I took soda for indi- McKay, at Greenleaf. Mrs. John Wentworth and daugh- days there. Sherman CopeIand has purchased Office in Pleasant Home Hospital. Order for Publication~Sale or gestion and stomach gas. Then I tried Mortgage of l~al Estate.~State Adlerika. One bottle brought com- Mr. and Mrs. John Wentworth on- ter, Gladys, were completely sur- Mrs. F. H. Korte and son, Hurford, the David Law farm. Mr. and Mrs. Phone, Office 96; Resideiace 47. of Frank Kile, who have lived on the Michigan, The Probate Court for the plete relief."~Jno. B. Hardy. rained at dinner Sunday Mrs. C. Wha- prised Monday evening when about visited relatives in Caro Saturday. Adlerika relieves GAS and sour ~ Hurford remained with his grandpar- I Law place, are moving to Mrs. Frank KNAPP & DOUGLAS County of Tuscola. len and .daughter, Alma. 140 friends came in to help them cele- At a session of said Court, held at stomach in TEN minutes! Acts on ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hurford, t Bond's farm. i Wesley McBurney of Detroit spent ~brate their birthdays. After an eve- Funeral Directors and Licensed Em- the Probate Office in the Village of BOTH upper and lower bowel, re- until the week-end with his parents, Mr. ning- of games and music, ice cream Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Keyser spent balmers. Mrs. Knapp, Lady Assistant Caro in said County, on the 29th day moving poisons you never knew were there. Don't fool with medicine which and Mrs. Hugh MeBurney. "and cake were served. Mrs. A. A. Rieker entertained at Sunday in Brown City visiting the with license. Night and day calls re- of January A. D. 1930. .dinner Saturday evening in honor of latter's mother, Mrs. Stimson. ceive prompt attention. City phone. Present: Hon. Guy G. Hill, Judge cleans only PART of the bowels, but : Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Webber and Mr. and Mrs. GUy Rench enter- Miss Geraldine Dykehuizen of St. of Probate. let AdIerika give stomach and bowels ~hildren teft Monday to spend the tained a number Of their friends Flossie Law spent the'week-end a REAL cleaning and see how good Johns, who spent the week-end at the A. McPHAIL In the Matter of the tveek with relatives in Caseville. Thursday evening at their home on with Miss Meadie Karr. you feel! Burke's Drug Store.~Ad- South Seeger street. Cards were Ricker home. Funeral Director. Estate of David A. Law, vertisement Mr. and Mrs. Albert Creguer and Clark Jackson spent ~onday in De- I played prizes going to J. C. Hutchin- Mrs. M. M. Moore and Miss Flor- Lady Assistant. Chester W. Law, having filed in ~hildren, Harold and Helene, were troit. He was accompanied there by said court his petition, praying for son and Mrs. Sheldon Peterson. ence Berry motored to Port' Huron business callers in Saginaw Tuesdayo I William Simkins, who went on to Phone No. 182. Cass City. license to sell the interest of said es- Quick Relief for On February 18 and 19, a special- Friday. Mrs. Moore returned Satur- Cleveland, Ohio, where he will be em- Mrs. Harriet Dodge, Mrs. L. Bailey, tate in certain real estate therein de- ist from the Forestry Department of day and Miss Berry left for a ten- l ployed in the state hospital. E. W. KEATING scribed. " Coughing Spells Mrs. A. Bigelow and daughter, Jean Michigan State College . will be in day visit with her parents, Mr. and Real Estate and Fire and Automobile It Is Ordered, That the 24th day of Marie, were Saginaw visitors Thurs- Famous Prescription Stops Mrs. Harry Berry, at Brantford, On- Insurance. February A. D. 1930, at ten o'clock day. Tuscola county to hold meetings with the maple syrup producers of the tario. SHABBONA. CASS CITY, MICH. in the forenoon, at said probate of- Them Almost Instantly. rice, be and is hereby appointed for Friends of Mrs. John Mark were county at which meeting the subjects Darwin L. Bailey and Miss Gwen The phenomenal success of a doc- jery much pleased to see her at Andrews of Harbor Beach spent from (Delayed letter). hearing" said petition, and that all of maple syrup and shade trees will R. N. McCULLOUGH persons interested in said estate ap- tor's famous prescription called Thox- 'church again Sunday morning after be discussed. The place of these meet- Friday until Sunday at Mr. Bailey's Miss Lucile Burns of Kingston is AUCTIONEER pear befor~ said court, at said time ine is due to its double action. It im- mediately soothes the irritation and ~everal month's illness, ings and dCcails will be given later. home here. Other Sunday dinner spending some time at her parental AND REAL ESTATE DEALER and place, to show cause why a li- Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sullivan Of The Novesta Nutrition Group met guests at the Bailey home were Rheo time. CASS CITY. cerise to sell the interest of said es, goes direct to the internal cause not Hainstock and Miss Harriet Davey, reached by patent medicines and Northville spent Saturday afternoorl Tuesday, January 28, at the home of Miss Peterson and Clifford Furness Farm sales a specialty. Dates may tate in said real estate should not be cough syrups. The very first swallow also of Harbor Beach. granted; and Sunday with Mrs. Sullivan's par- Mrs. Eldon Bruce. The business ses- were entertained for supper at the be arranged with Cass City Chronicle, ! u~ually stops even the most obstinate ents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Urquhart. sion was held in the forenoon, fol- Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schwaderer Office at I. Schonmuller's Store, Cass It Is Further Ordered, That public i cough. Duncan Waun home Wednesday eve -- notice thereof be given by publica- • Mr. and Mrs. John Gray were lowed by a balanced luncheon. In the spent last week with relatives in ning. City. tion of a copy of this order, for three i . Thoxine contains no harmful drugs, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Shay afternoon, the study of the lesson Canada and attended the funeral of successive weeks previous to said day is pleasant tasting and safe for the Dan Leslie returned home Monday TURNBULL BROS. "end other friends and relatives in De- was in charge of Mrs. Norman Gillies Mr. Schwaderer's sister, Mrs. Eva from a visit with his daughter, Mrs. of hearing, in the Cass City Chronicle, whole family. Sold on a money back Nixon, at Glencoe, Canada. Mrs. Ben Jim Auctioneers Bill guarantee to give better and quicker ~roit Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. after which Mrs. Mack Little gave a Emerick, at Mr. Clemens. a newspaper printed and circulated in relief for coughs or sore throat than Gray's brother, Edwin, who has spent demonstration on the making and Clement of Wilmot, James Schwad- Age, experience -- Youth, ability said county. Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Stitt visited anything you have ever tried. Ask for six weeks here, accompanied them to serving of salads. The next regular erer of Caro and Ernest Schwaderer We sell anything anywhere. • If you their daughter, Mrs. Hazel Kitchin, GUY G. HILL, Judge of Probate. Thoxine, put up ready for use in 35c, Detroit and will visit his sister, Mrs. meeting is to be held at the home of of Cass City also attended the funer- don't employ us, we both lose money. A true copy. 60c, and $1.00 bottles. Sold by Burke's )ohn Portor, before returning" to his Mrs. Walter Kelley, March 4. Visitors al. Mrs. Clement is a sister of Mrs. Tuesday. Write for dates and instructions to Minta E. Hill, Registrar of Probate. and all other good drug stores.--Ad- ~ome at Muskoka, Canada. l are always welcome. Nixon. Mrs. John Mann of Davison visited Deckerville, Mich. Phone 56--15. 2-7-3 vertisement 2 1 NNNNN N NN N NN N NN N gg NN NNN NN NNNNINN N NN N NNINNNN N N~N N N N NINN N gg N NgN N N iN N :N COME TO OUR N BUy NOw at Sale N N N N N ® ® N T rac t: or N ces YY N Pri N N PRICES LOWER THAN EVER. JUST A FEW ITEMS TO GIVE N N N N YOU AN IDEA HOW MUCH YOU CAN SAVE NOW. COME! N ~ ~_z~__T~___ . , , ..... P ~2:- DRESS SHIRTS EXTRA ! N N 11 ] i ! MEN'S SUITS AND Fast Colors, Full Cut Ladies' and Children's N N N OVERCOATS New Patterns WINTER COATS N ALL GO AT N N $18.00 to $20.00 N N ONE-HALF PRICE N Going at N and Power Farming Entertainment LADIES HOSE N N MEN'S SWEATERS N N $10 @ 95 Silk and Rayon--All Colors N at our store N 59c value Brown Mixed N N Part Wool N N MEN'S DRESS PANTS N 37c N Up to $4.50 values 77c N N N N Extra Well Made I ary New Patterns and Styles BLANKETS Friday, Febru 14th BEAR BRAND HOSE N N N Double .Size, 66x80 Fast Black Colors . STARTING PROMPTLY AT 10 A. M. N N $2.95 Plain colors, good weight All Sizes N N ' N N Going at LADIES' OVERSHOES N N 18C @ N Ball Band and Other Makes $1.44 N Seven Reels Motion Pictures N Values up 'to $3.00 N N _ " MEN'S SOX Operation of Farmall Tractor Through Factory- Comedy N N N $1.47 LADIES' BLOOMERS Heavy .Wool Mixed N $1.00 values 35c Values N N N MEN'S UNION SUITS Re-inforced seams N INTERESTING TALKS " CASH PRIZE N Heavy Ribbed All Colors and Sizes 17c N N N Full Ct!t, .now 2 pairs for N N 50C N N N HOT LUNCH---FREE N 79c $1.00 N N The Course will be interesting from start to finish. N N N Extra[ Ladies' Silk Dresses ...... Balance of stock is being sacrificed at N N N N ONE- HALF REGULAR PRICE N N N E. Paul &S on, Cass City iN iN N N N i. SCHONMuLLER, Cass City, < 7k ? NNNNNNtNN~NNNINNNNJNNN~NNNNNINNNNNNNINNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN @

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Cass City, Michigan, Friday, February 7, 1930. CASS CITY CHRONICLE PAGE SEVEN

terness a-gafnst fife as it had been was shut out. The iTMg-e--widened and and daughter, Dorothea, were visi- g-ui~i "even wlTen "i~mV look solid, it RESCUE. Tricks of Fire Eaters given him to live, a determination to turned, so they were going through a tors at the Levi Helwig and Frank is necessary to loosen a rock and then Different methods are used by flrd turn it" his own way at last. tunnel in the roek, where water had Reader homes Friday. make a run for it. The stick will The Komjoynus S. S. class will eaters to keep the tongue and hand~ Before she could move his arms once made its way to underground give me a few feet start." meet Friday evening, Feb. 7, at the from burning. Some rub the skin ot The were about her. depths. They had g~,ne only a shorn "But it may be more firmly fixed home of Mr. and Mrs. Harmon En- GREENLEAF. the part,~ to be affected with hard "I haw lived a hell in this place," distance when Paul stopped an0 !:han you think." dersbe. soap, the tongue included, and over he cried. "Not because l was afraid smothered his torch' ~r~ the sand unti! Crippled : My stink wLl prove it. Until then Smallpox is reported east of town. ttmt a layer of powdered sugar iS to die, but because in dying I knew its flame was extinguislmd. After that The Woman's Home Missionary So- yOU must remain here." Geo. Jackson, who is ill of typhoid placed. Others use a solution of altfml would lose you. Only in life can l they saw a pale reflection of light ciety wilt meet at the C. E. Hartsell She accompanied him to the down. fever, is reported to be improving. ,)r liquid storax. have you, and I want life because of ahead of them. When they reached il home Tuesday evening, Feb. 11. All Lady ward exit of the small, room-like that. You say it is God showing us a they could look up through a long. members are urged to come. Win. Simkins has gone to Cleve- prison they had entered, and listened way out! It is just as true that God narrow fissure that sloped steeply land where he will work in an insti- Advertise it in the Chronicle. ~o his footsteps until the sound of them Mr. and Mrs. Levi Helwig and ba- gave you to me here. That world up with daY at the top of it. It was a tution. grew faint. Then sl~e ascended to the by, Lenora, of Elkland spent last there means nothing to me--except two or three hundred-yard climb, lit ~:~:~: cf "~- rock ...... :~ ~core Wednesday at the.aosenh Mellendorf Several are hauling straw and up- with yot~ ,in it It, tOO, n~8 Dee'n a l.ered wills broke~ r~'.ck wiih'b t~all setti,~g every iit, Ue ways~ owJ:og ~c; ~t~e of feet beyond lay ,=he danger point...... hell for me. Now I'm going to make choked the ascent in places A mass big drifts. @ •@ ~etweenit and where she stood was Nell MaeCallum is working for ~as. it a heaven. I won't let man-made close to them had freshly fallen. George Rolston was employed at Auction Sale tire rou~h,o depression, out of which I Arnott west of-Owendale, these days. law and convention stand in the way "1 spoiled my shirt on that," said By James Oliver l)aul would be compelled 'to race for I Miss Erma Hartwick of Cass City the Vogel farm last week. of what is right and intended to be. Paul. "I loosened the stuff and came 40 Head of Young, Broke, Curwood l~is life should he loosen the avalanche. ~lwas a Saturday' evening guest at the Nearly everyone takes his shovel You are mine, and ~ shall have you down with it. I hope there,isn't an Well Bred, Percheron There was an overimng< of rock , high, i Joseph Mellendorf home. with him these days to help him WNU gervleo and keep you, one way or the other. other place like it farther up." up and she did not see how he could ~,~. " ...... through "bad spots." and Belgian ((~), 1929, Doubleday We'll face the world together, and tell Paul was breathing deeply from his • ' " . . . i ~wr. ana Mrs. undergo reDeau aria Dora~ & Co., ]hae.) escape it. Si~e turned to mote nacg 1 ...... We were glad to hear that Mrs. it so--or we'll go out there and never exertions, and Carla was fighting for : , , - I Cnllctren, l~alpn reoeau an~ ±vlrs. n the direction he ha(: gone. It was John McCallum was able to leave the let it know w¢ live. It is for yo,u to breath. He could see where the sharp I ) ~ ...... !Katheryn Fay and son, Nelson, were HORSES Dike [aul to tat{e tne siruanon in .. ",* ...... hospital last week. say which it shall be!" edges of the stones had bruised the ,- ...... i~ ~+ ...... i,.., t VllS~Ors near ±Nor~n ~rancn ~Un~ay thl~ B'a.y a~ i, it Wgl ~:: alJ ut~* t~" SOME PURE BRED Steadily her hands had pressed A quarantine sign is seen on Leslie CHAPTER • Xl hands whicl~ she was holding at he; p,,r~ant incident rather than a tragic i Rescue school visited Grant Dist. against him, and with that pressure breast Her skirt was torn, and thing. INd. 2 where John McQuaxrle teaches Hewitt's tenant house. Win. McKay Weighing 1400 to 1800 Lbs came such a change in her face that lives there. He moved lagt week. through a rent in her sleeve the wtiite- IAght was fading swiftly, and eve. Monday. Rescue was victorious in the Paul knew he must keep moving, or the fierceness of Pa:Ji's arms relaxed. ness cf her arm revealed itself. Her Roads are in bad condition again; rouse Carla from her sleep. The ping shadows were falling between spelling" match and football game. SATURDAY and he ~ saw an idol crushed and face was streaked with rock dust. Stanley and Dorothea Mellendorf in fact, all roads east and south of ~akedness and desolation of aloneness the deep, close wails of the crevasse. broken in her eyes. To the level of and hollows which ne had not noticed visited Sunday at the Edward Hart-iUbly are almost impassable. Some FEBRUARY 8 were ~urning him into a coward. Not that ruin he had sunk his own ideal A radiance was in ('arla's face. as if a dearly before were in her cheeks and ~miceless spirit within her were send- wick home in Elkland. i days the milk haulers failed to get a coward who was afraid of death. of Carla. He let her move away from H. W. Cooper's Sale Barn, under her eyes. Over them was a h]g a message to s~,me one in the through. :but one who felt increasing horror in him, and stood with a grim, set face Mrs. John Davison returned home i broader light of day. He could have world above She could hear Paul's CARO passively waiting for it. He went to before her. from Midland last Thursday where i flung a stone up to the level of the b'otsteps returning, tim iron nails in the debris of rock again. He had no "I'm sorry," he saffl. "1 know you she had been to t~ke care of her 1 Land of Fig~Trees earth, and beyond that was a sky of iris boots striking on rock, and her Sale Commences 12:30 reason for this, no thought, except are thinMng that i am vile and un- daughter, who was ill. ] Mexico has more than 200200 pro- vivid blue, still touched by the glow lips moved, yearning to call his name. that it offered him the one chance to clean." of a declining sun. II was this light. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf duclng fig trees. m do something physical besides fumbing Then she ran down into the hollow "Not that," she spoke quickly. ~I descending in a pool upon them, which ~tnd up its farther edge. After all. It his way over unstable and shifty sand would rather think [ am the one who made him see another Carla. The mel- The desire for a work to do was an ~Hght not be such a sword of I)amocles is unclean." lowing illumination of the pitch pine. ache in his body as well as his brain. pver them. if it were not, then Paul That was all she said, and he made the velvety softening of shadows, the and he began toclimb the broken Could only scold. If it were~ no effort to answer her. Words be- pale unreality of first daylight had mass. as he had done once before She begqn to climb. came futile, even impossible, as she concealed things from him. Now they He had gone about thirty or forty To be continued., looked at him., What he might have were revealed, betrayin~ a change feet above the floor their dungeon ot said, his pleading, the arguments he which could no longer keep itself be- then, but this time he found ~ootholds had built for himself, and for her, hind the mask of her courage. Some- "~ Rat Exterminator" which carried him e little farther erumbled under the tragedy which had thing in her had died since they left Police IAeut William L. Dwyer, said Basketball Tonight until, from the point he reached, he come like a sickness into~ her white, the pitchwood fire. The ash of it -'as recently he found a way to rid his .could look over the bulge in the rock beautiful face~a tragedy that was in her faee, the ghost of it in her premises of rats° His garage and back which had previously concealed their filled with appeal, with pain, and for eyes, and she knew that he saw it and yard were infested with the rodents fire, and could clearly see Carla in a moment or two with an utter loneli- tried to smile at him bravely. He He attached a hose to the exhaus~ February 7 the glow of it. ness, as if she had lost something wanted to take her in his arms, and pipe of his automobile and turned the tie had the desire to call to her, to which could never come back to her. his lips almost cried out the desire hose into the holes and under the ga feel her glorious life a part of their He had seen the same look in her Carla saw that, too, and when the rage. He said the fumes drove the existence again. Sleeping, she seemed eyes the night her mother died. Then thing of iron in him triumphed over rats out. and they haven't returned. gone from him. He swung his torch. it .had filled him with a great pity. both voice and act, gratitude eased the bewaing H.S. making a writing of fire in the black. Now its tenderness, its yearning for anguish in her face. hess, and his lips almost cried her a thing gone, shook him to the founda- "I'm glad you understand," she name. Then he recognized the weak tion of his soul. He saw Carla as said, as if he had spoken, and knew ness of his act and t)egan to pull him he had always known she would be what was in her mind. "I might ru~ VS. self a Httle more up the broken' wall. when it came to her love for a man. away. That would be easier for me if Carl~ had awal~ened and turned Only a love that had no scar of ugli- I cot~ld hide myself somewhere, an,q o her eyes toward him. she would have ness upon it would she take to her al3vays love you. Nothing can kill :seen a strange,and weird thing. The breast and hold there. The memory those things--memories--and love. l burning piece of 0itchwood was a ,)f love, its burned-out ash, a love that would be satisfied to do that. ! would waSS el ty H. S. sI)m~t of yellow flame, ilTumining at ~as crippled and blind but clean, she be--almost~happy. But I must do times the ghostly figure that bore it, would cherish with the sa,'red faith- the other thing. I must go to Claire. and tl~en floating alone in a limbo of fulness of an altar nun. But not such it will be hard to do that." midnight emptiness as if borne by a love as he had offered her--a theft, Her admission of her love for him at High School Gym at Cass City sha(les that in color and spirit were a though it could be made a legal theft, was ms'de in a quiet and introspective part ot the gloom. She might ,have from another woman. Even as he felt way, as if his physical self had ceased thoughL rousing herself from slumber, this crushing sense of his loss of her, to be a living part of it. It was this, Chat hands which were no longer another emotion, a freeing of his and her reference to Claire, which "'Mother says there gs no better Paul's were bearing ~t toward the roof spirit, a rejoicing with his' grief, en- strengthened his determination not to cough medicine for children than of their world. Steadily up into this tered into him. Carla, as she stood weaken her faith in him again. pit o~++Ac+heron it went, and there it before him, he could worship through Foley's Honey and Tar, and we He moved to the edge of piled-up 3. disappeared, as if smitten by a mighty + all eternity. The (?aria he had asked debris and began to investigate it, ~oo f ind it so," M~. N. w.--, breath that extinguished it in a sec- Cal~erg Wis. for, yielding to him, would have de- cautioning her to stand back a little. ond. For a time utter darkness lay Quickly effective. No opiates, no ingre- scended out of heaven to the level of The rubble loosened under his fee'~ where the light had been. Then the dient that a careful mother would hesi- his own debasement. Clearly as she and Mid down. There was quite a . ¢orch reappeared as suddenly as sable -I had seen his passion and felt the tate to give her child, Ask for Foley's /yee/ Jxf e en q'e qf $ o/ell little rock slip before he had gone far, wings had engulfed it, and in another crush of his arms, Carla now saw this sending up a cloud of dust 'between moment it was plunging down through change in him, and slowly, believing space. In a few minutes Paul came them. Through this, wlmn it had s~et. joyously, a miracle wrought itself in where it had fallen sl.uttering in the tle(l, Carla followed him. She heard her face, and all that Paul had seen him calling to her to go back, but in GEN ERAL MOTORS' sand, and picked it np again. More I Wi0h 1 00 !d broken down built itself up again. than ever his face was like that of a a moment was standing at his side. Softness came into her mouth, and Almost above them, so steep was the ghost. His cheek was marked by ,a she smiled at him. bleeding wound. His shirt was in ascent, the fissure narrowed to half a "Shall we go, Paul?" shreds on his breast. His eyes blazed dozen feet in width and was choked T ll Everybody /o :/ked He bowed his head, then picked up in a way that would have startled with loose rock and sand. Paul looked the coat which had been her pillow: A $' Carla. at it with somberly appraising eyes and shook the sand from it. and instinctively put llimself between it He went to the edge o~ the water "Yes. The cleft in the rock faces A 0ul K0 j01 and Carla. Another explosion dt dyna. and bathed his face and hands. Then west, and I think the sun was setting ~ mite sent a scarcely perceptible tremor he returned to the fire and knelt be- when t found it. [f we can get out through the earth. Slight as it was. a side ('arla. He raised tier head gently before dark and make a racket, some tiny stream of sand and pebbles came Michigan Lady Tells How New in his arms, and she did not awaken. one may be near enough to hear us." He held it against his breast and trickling down from the suspended He lighted a torch, and they walked kissed her tmir. avalanche. He caughl her hand and Medicine Put Speedy End To across the sand together. At the pile took her swiftly back to safety. "Carla !" he widspered. of rocks he took her hand. helping I "A nearer shot would send that Her Suffering. Her lips moved, her lashes trembled, and guiding her, until they came to] thing down on us," he sa~d. X\,n and opened slowty to unveil tier eyes. the beginning of the ledge from where! "You have slept a long time," he here until I find Out more about it." "I suffered terribly from stomach sa~d. "At least--ii seemed long~and "What are you going to do?" she and kidn,ey ailments," said Mrs. C. I'took a torch and climbed the pile of asked. rocks again, l went liigher ttian be- "First, climb the edge of the wall Seaman, 419 Webber street, Saginaw. fore--so high that l came to a ledge, and see wire| is bey,rod." "The simplest of foods caused gases ;and followed it--and then l came to a He did this and returned to her in great crack in the wall, and there, at a few minutes. :the end of it--l saw--light.." "Funny how little ti:ings put them- "IAght !" she breathed. selves in our way l" He tried to speak lightly. "The fissure is clear as a "Yes, light. From the sum l have ":::.:.:~ii:!!~h:Y~{?i +found a way ouL." floor beyond thai slug of debris, which There was silence then. Almost is ready to tol)ple. We could be (nit without effort, it seemed to Paul. in five nfinutes if it were not for that. Carla crept oat of his arms. He knew As it" is," I've got to lake,, a chance." ~hat something was ~oing with her~ "And--the chance? The development of the well it merits the description, "the car with supe- forever. Her face was whiter than "We must get over the loose stuff. New Oakland Eight in +rior performance." ((The New Oakland's power his own. What he had dreaded to see Either that or go back~to tim little reality goes back sixteen plant is also exceptionally smooth. Its inherent lay in her eyes--a thing fighting, bark fire." . . years. Several of the engi- eight-cylinder smoothness has been increased and crushing the gh)ry which had "We must go on," size sazG. neers responsible for its design by a complete down-draft fuel system--new lived in them for a little while. The "Yes, we've got to go on. We ~ .....ssssis!.::iisisi~?s~ ss!~s!s}i~ssis~: participated in the production of type cylinder heads insuring uniform com- Imderstanding of what his discovery passed a stick back ltmre five or six General Motors' first eight, in 1914. bustion ~-Iaminated steel spring and meant came quickly to her, and he ,feet h}ng. By liugging close to the Their extensive knowledge of eight- rubber engine mountings. K Considering saw a ,fabric of assembled dreams go- wall l think I can reach one of the cyiinderengines has resulted in a car its superior performance, exceptional ing to pieces, like one of the odd keystones in the slide and loosen it. of remarkably sound basic design, as smoothness and the beauty of its new It won't be ditlicult, and the wtmle Jumble pictures on ~ screen When well as one which has many advanced Fisher bodies, the New Oakland thing will come down like a h(mse its hundred disintegrated parts came features. ~lts 85-horsepower engine de- with the foundation pulled out from Eight is very moderatelypriced. PRODUCT OF together again, they formed Claire's velops one horsepower for every 37 Thus many who have wanted to GENERAL MOTORS face, wmting for him at the end of under it. I'm going to take you back Mrs. C. Seaman, pounds of car weight. This explains why own a fine eight-cylinder auto- 'the trail of light sent to gui{le ihem 'a distance." back to an ,-arthl~

the ~:eneral merchandise business in STATE OIL INDUSTRY N ~ Mi!lingtor. :['or the fourtee~ past HAS ~"~V 2-~l_z U .i~ OF ~D~UUU~UUO~ ~ ~...... , ...... **~,,,~s new-spa- here to the unfinished work that they have thus far so nobiy carried on. it years, the firm of Cobb & Holmes pel contest at the school of journal- is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us: N have mutua!ly agreed to dissolve ism of the University of Illinois. The that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to the cause, for' T Michigan produced approximately partnership. Albert Cobb bought AI-" N 5,000,000 barrels of oil during the awards were made "on the basis of which they here gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here, highly bert Holmes' interest in the store year 1929, it is estimated by the Geo- general merit in view of the oppor- resolve that the dead shall not have died in vain; that the nation shall, and the entire business wilI be under logical Survey Division of the De- @ his guidance. Mr. Holmes is one of tunity." under God, have a new birth in freedom; and that the government of the partment of Conservation. GROCERY the large stockholders in the Milling- people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth. This is compared w~th about 500,- ton NationaI Ba~k, and as its Presi- REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. M. D. HARTT 000 barrels produced in 1928. " ~ABRAHASI LINCOLN~ dent, will spend part of the time each Michigan produced oil is valued at Joseph Tesho and w~fe to Edward week at that institution. He aIso re- an average of slightly more than $1 Mark and wife, e ~ of lots 1 and 2, m~t~n~I~I~I~I~u~I~nI~|~I~I~Ill~~t~I~ IIIIllllllllllllIIIlllllllltl(ltlllJ tains the live stock and trucking PEANUT BUTTER, 1 LB. JARS a barrel, giving the oil indl~stry dur- blk. 3, Pinney's Add., Cass City, $1.00 business and will give a part of his ing the past~ year a value of slightly Frank Hoffman and wife to The 19 C time to these enterprises. Chronicle Liners -=== over $5,000,.000. Lincoln National Life Insurance Co., ¢i~~~I~~~!q~ii~~~~~i~i~" Fire of undetermined origin, which The figures are only approximate, se ~ of se ¼ see. 13, Kingston, $1.00. CALIFORNIA PEACHES broke out at 8:30 p. m.~Friday in the since complete reports have not been George G. Hall, et al, to Erwin W. RATES-Liner of 25 words or CHURCH DINNER--The ladies of LARGE CAN 24e eli rear of the store owned by the Mer- received. Kereher and wife, lots 3 and 4, blk. 5, less, 25 cents each insertion. Over t the M. E. Church will serve an eve- cantile company at Port Hope caused Practically all of the production oc- Seed's Second Add., Cass City, $1.00. 25 words, one cent a word for ning dinner Wednesday~ Feb. 12, QUAKER CRACKELS 24e damages of $3,000 to the grocery curred in the Mt. Pleasant and Mus- Charles M. Graves and wife to each insertion. beginning at 5:30. Price 40c. 2-7-1 2 PACKAGES ...... stock. kegon fields. Julius Hollitz and wife, s ~ of sw 1£ t Rev. H. W. Ambrose of Howell has see. 22, Kingston, $1.00. BABY CHICKS--Order your chicks THREE FRESH cows for sale. En- CURTIS PIMENTOES 9 quire of Earl Chisholm. Phone PER JAR ...... accepted the call from the members POULTRY SCHOOL Henry Pattison and wife to State now. Buy Brooded Chicks one week old, and not have all that running Ii R 3. 2-7-2 of the Care Baptist church and will Savings Bank, Care, s ~ of sw ~ KIRK'S FLAKE WHITE SOAP take charge of the Care field Feb. 16. I AT CARe FEB. 20-21 and sw 1£ of se ~, sec. 35, Columbia, to the brooder house the first week. N Since the resignation on Nov. 1st % $1.00. S. C. White Leghorn bred to lay. BOX SOCIAL at the Dillman School BARS FOR ...... April day old chicks, $10.00 per Friday night, Feb. 14. Ladies are last of Rev. B. H. Taylor, who moved I A two-day poultry school will be John M. Veitengruber to Elmer R. APPLE BUTTER to Davison, the Care church has been conducted ~n Tuscola county on ~Feb- Haines, e % of sw ~ sec. 28 and se 100; May day old chicks, $9 per requested to bring boxes. All are •without a regular minister, ruary 20 and 21 in co-operation with of nw ~ sec. 28, Indianfields, $1.00. 100; June day old chicks, $8.00 per welcome. 2-7-2 19 c Receipts from the sale of 1930 the poultry department of Michigan Ancient Order of Gleaners to Pie- 100; Brooded Chicks one week old, N automobile licenses are running State College. The meetings will be tro Miceli and wife, e % of se ~A sec. $2.00 per 100 extra. Pine Grove FOR SALE--Two Registered Guern- 3 BARS FOR ~C ahead of 1929, according to "Henry W. held at the Legion Hall, Care. Fore- 17, Juniata, $1.00. Poultry Farm, Sebewaing, Mich. sey bull calves, about eight weeks Beecher, branch manager for the sec- noon sessions will begin at 10:00 a. John Lindsay Estate, by Adm., to Phone 96. Louis Schulz. old; at farm, one mile west of San- PET MILK 9 retary of state. On January 28 of this m. and the afternoon, at 1:30 p. m. Judson B. Howe and wife, lot 9, blk. 2-7-2p dusky. Leonard Hassler, Sandusky. LARGE CAN ...... ¢ year, the total of sales amounted to The program will be as follows: i7, Fostoria, $1.00. Phone 141-Rll. 1-31-2p N $86,455.53. On the same date in 1929, First Half Day. Mauriee C. Eveland and wife to "I BUY poultrY, eggs and small pigs total sales amounted to $79,810. Sherman Miller and wife, lot 2, blk. from 25 to 65 pounds at Heller's SALE--Straw and mixed hay, in "Magnitude Poultry Industry FOR of the 10, Turner's add., also lot 2 and w % Fruit Store on Wednesday and Sat- barn. J. D. Tuckey, Cass City. 2- 25c N Thomas Quinn of Bay City received and the Im~portance of Poultry Breed- of lot 1, blk. 1 Woodside Add., May- urday. Phone 178 R 2. Jos. Molnar, 7-1 a broken right leg Friday morning ing in MaMng Profits PossibIe," J. A. when a cake of ice slipped from its vilte, $1.00. 1-31-tf Hannah. Maurice C. Eveland and wife to Jo- place on a load and struck him. Quinn "Produetion and Care of Good Eggs ELLIOTT MOTOR Lines Schedule~ FRUIT SPECIALS X seph J. Russell and wife, sw ~ see. FOR SALE One new feed grinder, was heIping William Duteher of Se- on the Farm," R. L. Gulliver, director Bus leaves Cass City for Pon- bewaing haul the ice to an ice house 24, Watertown, $1.00. one hand washing machine and tiac daily at 8:20 a. m. and 5:00 p. BANANAS N of public relations of the A. M. Smith Bruno Stange and wife to Joseph when one of the eut pieces of ice Company. wringer and three good second- m., fast time. Bus leaves Cass City ...... 23c Konopka and wife, w ½ of nw ~/~ and hand ranges. G. L. HitShcock. 1-31- loaded on a sled slipped off. He was "Poultry Hygiene and Sanitation," for Bad Axe at 11:40 a. m. and taken to his home in Bay City after n ½ of nw ~A of sw ~ sec. i and ne 2 4:45 p. m. On Sunday (one bus HEAD LETTUCE Dr. H. J: Stafaeth, Bacteriology De- V~,e % ofnw ~A,n % ofse ~/~ ande a Sebewaing physician attended him. partment. each way), leaves Cass City for 2 FOR ...... 15C % of sw ~/; sec. 2, Dayton, $1.00. VILLAGE CAUCUS will be held at Pontiac 4:05 p. m. and 4eaves N John Patskan, 22, of Austin town- See(rod HMf-Day. ship, Sanilac county, formerly of De- the Village Council Rooms Feb. 13 Cass City for Bad Axe at 10:45 "Feeding for Profits" or "Feeding N troit, was sentenced Thursday after- at 7:30 p.m., for the purpose of p.m.* 2 BUNCHES FOR for Egg Production," J. A. Hannah. STATE CROP REMOVES ...... 15+C N noon by Judge X. A. Boomhower, to nominating the following officers: "Eggs from the Farm to the Con- ORANGES~Sweet and Juicy serve two and one-half to 10 years in GAMBLE FROM CLOVER One Presider/t, one Clerk, one iFOR SALE Four year old cow, due sumer," R. L. Gulliver. the Michigan reformatory at Ionia. Treasurer, one Assessor, three trus- Feb. 10. Jas. J. Wallace. Phone , R,ozEN ...... 35e "Roup, Pox and Bronchitis," Dr. H. Patskan was convicted last week by a The yield and quality of Michigan's tees for two years. C. M. Wallace, 1.(31 F 2-3. 2-7-2 J. Stafaeth. circuit court jury on a charge of last clover seed crop make it possible Clerk. 2-7-1 driving away an automobile owned by Third Half-Day. for farmers of the state to avoid the EVENING DINNERAn evening Charles Sehildbaeh, also of Detroit. "Importance of the Poultry House" gamble of planting unadapted seed I WISH to announce that I will be a dinner will be served in the base- The act was committed in Ubly. J. A. Hannah. from questionable sources, is the candidate for the nomination of rnent of the M. E. Church Wednes- _. _ - . - ...... _ _,_. _ _ The Kingston Woman's Club has "Production of Quality Poultry statement made by the farm crops treasurer of Greenleaf township at day, Feb. 12, at 5:30. Price 40c. elected the following offÉcers: Presi- Meat on the Farm", R. L. Gulliver. department at Michigan State Col- the township caucus. Your support 2-'/-1 dent, Dorothy Lee; vice-president, Ina "Parasites, Tuberculosis, Leukemia, lege. will be appreciated. Chas. Bond. Store Open 'Till 9 p. m., Saiurday BAKE SALE--The Baptist Ladies' Everett; secretary, Elva Coan; treas- and Cancers in Fowls," Dr. H. J. Sta- While ordinary clovers are not ex- 2-7-1p Aid will conduct a bake sale on urer, Grace Henderson. faeth. pected to last through many seasons, the crop is no exception to the rule of FOR SALE--Some of those fine Per- Saturday, Feb. 15, at Mrs. Bliss' Fourth Half-Day. J. H. Beehton has been appointed the farm crops department that good cheron work h6rses;" also some Store. i-7-i supervisor of Indianfields township to "Raising Baby Chicks in 1930," J. seed is cheapest. Inferior seed fre- Registered Percheron brood mares fill the vacancy caused bs) the death of A. Hannah. quently germinates poorly and is apt in foal, and some young stallions OLD HORSES WANTED for fox BARIE'$ Giles Whitloek. Mr. Beekton formerly "Marketing of Quality Poultry to contain mixtures of undesirable at the right price. E. A. Rohlfs, feed. Otto Montei, Fairgrove, R. 2, served in this position for 11 years Meat," R. L. Gulliver. weeds. Akron, Mich. 1-31-2p or Care phone 954-R5, reverse SAGINAW Genesee at Baum and during that time was ehairman "Bacillary White Diarrhea, Coccidi- One Michigan farmer was found charges. 12-6-tf of the board of supervisors. He will osis, Blackhead," Dr. H. J. Stafaeth. during a survey of seed sources who TO EXCHANGE, Cass City property hold office until the township election i had grown the same strain of clover for farm. For Sale--Farms, farms, FOR SALE 32½x44 frame. in April. barn J. on his farm for 64 years. Several re- farms. E. W. Keating, C ass _City. H, Good_all~ R~ R, 4, Cuss City. For the ConvenienCesaginaw,Of Shoppers In 1 ported growing the same clover for 1-31-2p Phoue 1_48 F 5, 1-31-2 WALKER FAMILY CAME BOYS AND GIRLS, forty years, and many had produce4 BE CAREFUL! the same kind for 15 FOR SALE OR TRADE for stock or HERE 47 YEARS AGO years. 200-ACRE stock farm ~.or sMe_" or With any purchase at Barie's you may park at Grover Clovers of this sort have proved hen~Fordson tractor or parts, rent, equipped with excellent build- : their worth for Michigan farms. The new governors and 2-bottom ]2-in. ings, a large silo, good orchard, Stein's, on Janes and Franklin Street, free of e~rge. Forty-seven years ago last Satur- Carl Peters@, ~;-yeai'-old, hung survey wa~ made by the cro, p,+ depart- John Deere plow; one 14-in. Oliver plenty, of excellent water from day, February 1, Walter Walker came. on to the rear of a Minneapolis ment to find ~ueh strain~ and to make plow, 3 incubators, 150, 250, 400- flowing spring and from a 300-ft. to this part of the country from Til- truck, used to push a snow plow. them available for use throughout egg in good order. Sam Putnam, well. G. L. Hitchcock. 1-31-2 .sonburg, Ontario. By holding to a dangling chain sections where they are adapted. R4, Care, Mich. Care phone 947 R1-2 BEDDING Part Wool Blankets--y4.85 The family, consisting of his par- he, and other boys, found that Tests made at the College through 2-7-i LOST Bale of hay wire between ents, two sons and two daughters ar- they eould slide along the snow- t a series of years have proved that Cass City and Gagetown. Finder A very good quality blanket, size 60x80 comes in green, rived in Tyre at nine o clock in the covered street. i seed from certain sources are not NOTICE to Greenleaf township vo- please inform R. J. Wills, Gage- rose, orchid and gold plaid combined with white. evening and were met by Walter's One of Carl's feet slipped too i adapted to Michigan. Home grown ters I will be a candidate for town. 2-7-1 uncle, Linus Walker, now living in elose to a moving wheel and eaught seed of good quality removes most of treasurer. Your support will be ap- Deckerville, with a team and sleighs. in a tire chain which dragged him the element of chance from the busi- preciated. Arthur Ballard. 2-7-1p MASQUEPADE dance at Doerr's Because of the deep snow they were in to the driving, gear, where he ness of getting a stand of elover. Hall Friday evening, Feb. 14. Kile CAMEL HAIR BLANKETS $5.75 compelled to drive the entire distance met a horrible death. NEW COPPER wash boilers at low & Fay. 2-7-1p from Tyre to Mr. Walker's home in price. Wanner & Matthews, Cass Tan, part wool, part camel hair blankets, size 66x80. ' Argyle through the fields and woods. Boys and girls~BE CAREFUL! CASE CITY MARKETS. City. 1-31-2 WE WISH to extend our sincere: Very warm. They purchased a farm 11 miles thanks to friends and neighbors WANTED--Farms exchanged for .east and one-half mile south of Cass Feb. 6, 1930. who were so kind; for the beautiful -City and began at once to build a THIEVES MAKE HAUL Buying Price~ city property. All business trans- flowers; Rev. Krake for his kind acted confidential. Charles Tupper, ALL WOOL BLANKETS $7.95 house. Lumber was sawed at a mill Mixed wheat, bu ...... 1.03 words, and also Mr. and Mrs. three miles south of Argyle, and just FROM FRITZ HOME dealer in real estate, Croswell, Knapp, during the sickness and All Wool, in plain colors of tan, green, rose, copen and Oats ...... 44 Mich. References Croswell, Peck one month from the time the Walker Rye, bu ...... 74 death of our darling baby. Mr. and : lavender, size 70x80. family landed in Tyre, they ate their Thieves ~broke into the home of Mr. or Sandusky Bank. 10-11-tf Mrs. Freddie J. Brown and family. I and Mrs. A. G. Fritz (Golda Hoag- Peas, bu ...... 1.65 i first dinner in their new home, a Beans, cwt ...... 5.80 land) of Detroit Satflrday night. They WANTED TO TRADE for farm CARD OF THANKS I wish to plank house built by Walter Walker, Dark red kidney beans, cwt ...... 1°0.25 gained entrance by breaking a glass House, ~A acre land, chicken house, thank my friends and neighbors~ COMFORTERS $2.95 Chen 18 years of age, and his father. Light red kidney beans, cwt ...... 8.00 in the kitchen door, reaching in and fruit, berries, two miles Detroit, for the fruit, plants, letters and Mail was received once a week and Barley, cwt ...... 1.40 We are offering these cotton filled comforters at a special Mr. Walker says that there was much unlocking the door. Mrs. Fritz and one block Super highway. E. Brig- cards, especially the Premo S. S. son, Jack, were visiting in Richmond Buckwheat, cwt ...... 1.75 ham, Tyre, Mich. 2-7-1p • price. They are covered with cotton challis, in figured rejoicing when the mail began com- ..Butter, lb ...... 30 Class and Ladies' Aid of the Grant ~ at the home of her sister. Mr. Fritz M. E. Church for the lovely flow- patterns. Rose, blue, gold, size 72x84. Regularly $5.50. ing twice a week. Mr. Walker's br6th- Eggs, doz ...... 36 and son, Arthur, left at 6:30 p. m. ¢o FOR SALE Team of colts coming 3 ers and Dr. McCoy and all his help i er, Charles, still lives on the old Hogs, live weight ...... 9bfi attend a theater. On their return at and 4 years. Well matched and for their kindness to me while at homestead, living alone since the Cattle ...... 8 10 11:30 p. m., ~r. Frit~ entering a side broke. Also 9 tons of good clover the Pleasant Home Hospital. .Mrs. death of his mother two years ago.. Calves, live weight ...... 13 door heard the intruder leave by the- mixed hay. Lynn Fuester. Phone Frank Reader. DOUBLE BLANKETS $12.00 front door, but at the time thought it Broilers ...... 15 22 112 F 5. . 1-31-2p Heavy quality double blankets for single or double beds, DAIRY TRUCK IN was Arthur hanging up his coat in Hens ...... 15 24 the closet off a vestibule. RADIO ACCESSoRIEs--All kinds in red and black plaid wool. Regularly $18. $19.50. COUNTY NEXT WEEK of radio accessories at the May & SIX CYLINDER...... r. Not a thing in the home remained Gifts MisappG~-.d Douglas furniture store, Cass City. I untouched from the kitchen through For it w,~ul(l have I)ee~) better that SENTENCES Estimates indicate that 35c of the 1-17-tf I to a bedroom on the third floor. All man should have been born dumb-- OUTING BLANKET SHEETS $1.69 consumer's food dollar will be spent the drawers were pulled out in the n, By DR. JOHN W. HOLLAND for dairy products in the future and nay, w)id of all reason--rather than FOR SALE Trailer made from Ford | ! All white, whipped edge, heavy quality outing btanket kitchen, buffet drawers containing sil- that he should employ the gifts of O<>O to hasten the approach of this day, axle. Enquire of Win. Simmons, 3 | I sheets 70x99. verware opened, @illows in the daven- Providence to the destrv.ction of his the Michigan State College has re- miles west, 3 north of Cass City. Stealing money debases the cur- port suite turned upside down and pa- neighbor.--Q.intillan. --='Main Floor sponded to a quality milk and cream pers~in a desk strewn about the floor. 2-7-1p l rency. I demand exerted by Michigan dairy So completely was the house searched Success calls many but only a BEAN STRAW--Four loads of good farmers themselves. A special truck that even the power pact in an elec- Great American ~aman few get up. bean straw for sale. A. D. Gillies, CLOTH OF GOLD PRINTS 29c Yard has been arranged to help bring the tric radio was pulled out. Every dres- David G Farraffut. famous Amer Sometimes a bitter way proves Cass City. 2-7-tf latest steps and information in cream ser drawer in the house was ransacked lean seaman, was born at Knoxville i to be tim better way. New patterns are shown in this delightful fabric that is and milk production to the farm. This Tenn., on July 5 18~11 He was the No deed of hurnan helpfulness is and clothing- and jewelry .dumped out FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE for res- used extensively for house frocks and children's clothes. truck carries exhibit material and and piled on the floors and beds. Even first ma~ to be given the 'rqn~ of ad I so little but that it makes a I utensils, barn equipment, ventilation rniral in the United Slates navy. He idence property, an 80-acre farm big man greater, i Guaranteed Washable. the shelves in the clothes closets located near Cass City with stock features, milk house construction were upset. ontered the navy at the age of nine | There are no bouquets in this | and tools if desired. Good drainage, plans and other interesting features It is qu~te evident, the intruder years. earthly life for the shirk. I basement barn, large machine shed, I Say it with Work. together with the extension dairyman wanted nothing but money for he left I RAYON CREPE--y1.25 per yard fair house. Five acres timber, bal- Socrates was o'nce asked on the t and agricultural engineer from the jewelry strewn on the floor, and two Growing in Grace ance good productive soil. Low I street of Hermes. "What The darker patterns figured, dotted and floral are shown Michigan State College. automatics in the bedroom were me- He that b, faHhful in the first al- taxes. Near good school. If inter- I are you thinking about?" I in this splendid qtm.lity crepe that makes smart dresses. This truck is scheduled to appear lested, but not taken. Mr. Fritz hada ternative that tests him, not only acts ested, address P. O. Box 44, Cass I He said, "of things I can be in Tuscola county on February 10 and wallet containing $30.00 in the dres- more promptly, but also sees further City. 2-7-1p I happy withm~t.'" I 11. Meetings will be held indoors ser drawer. The money was gone and in the next. Each little grace invites I | under comfortable surroundings as (~, 1929. Western Newspaper Union.} ! the purse thrown on the bed. One a larger; and his step being upward, ELECTRIC vacuum sweeper for sale. follows: small bank was taken and another of his view is wider .l,~mos Martineau. Mrs. Mylo Ragan, Cass City. 1-31-2 Advertise it in the Chronicle. Advertise it in the Chronicle.