CASS CITY H ONICL, E.

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Vol. 14, No. 6. CASS CITY, MICH.; FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1918 ..... 8 PAGES l I ' l II llll I M ' l'!'l : 'i I '- "l'~l ' r ,, .... - , '~ ~ ., , . ~ ..~ W. S. DN[ ! Y" ~" A. ELyCT___OFFICERS.S '~flT II IN~r~ NHrN " plying ~omforts and delicacies to men tUliRiViril |ivrK tlinger long in their memories. ,,~,,,m,,,,L,~ v,,~,, ] ,'When will the war end? That's a [ "e andS:Lyre rtoepfgen Brought EFFOT'R the '~business meeting of the Y. mnt,mmmnr nm, n|nln[hard:'q uesti°n. If it depends on man ,P. A. held at the home of Miss Grace N[XTDDU)IIY I Meiser on Tuesday evening, the fol- IiiigflNi:F iiN Pfl~iNIpower it may be two or three years T°ge~her~by Lost Aviator" gl[J|~||~. U|| |~i|D~[bef0re the allies will be victorious. [IN DECORATIONDAYI , [lowifig officers were elected for the "' "~f ~he e~d ma~" come in si~ weeks ,en~uin~= six months: President, Alma Mark. trove been, ~IOOKIIIg '* for a fev ...... oi.lA blOll" ~L. and Mrs. P. A. Koepfgen of Cass TUSCOLA COUNTY'S QUOTA HAS Vice President, Roy Striffier. W:. GORDON HIN~S, BACK FROM in Germany and Austria. I saw Ger- CLOUDS FAIL TO DARKEN THE City, had a happy meeting in recentT~f ~~B0th ~young ~eh~are in the~:~ ~EEN INCRF~SED TO , ~Secretary, Stanley:Striffler. : :;;FRANCE,.GIVES HIS, OPINION man.) l?riso~rs, on .Apl~l. 9 who ~wp:re sPIRIT 0F PATRIOTISM ~. bdgs¢'~round their feet~{~ place of aviation service but in different com- " $557,380. Corres. Secretary, Elsie Buehrley. ON SITUATION. THURSDAY. Missionary Secretary, Mrs. C. J. shoes and whose uniforms were in a panies and each has hoped to meet the very poor state of preservation. They other since they went overseas. One " Striffier. Treasurer, Grace Meiser. reported provisions and other sup- of the aviators from the camp where Michigan, Eighth in Population, Is Young Man Served Four Months plies very low in their country." Largest Crowd in Years Gathers Leslie is situated became lost, and af- 47th in the Sale of War Sav- in Trenches on the Wes- Mr. Hines was shown a clipping to Pay Tribute to the ter travelling some diszance, sighted ings Stamps. tern Front. from the Ladies' Home" Journal which E~ys of '61, a camp and alighted. In the conver--~ advocated five distinct service-aids sation which followed he learned that REV, HAMBLIH ACCFPTS CALL that the Government cannot extend his brother-in-law and Lyle Koepfgen Authorized agents in Cuss City for The German raid en Paris does. not or give and which are left for each of Threatening skies failed to darken were both located in this camp which . 8F SAHTA FE GHUROH us to do as far as we can and oppor- was 40 miles distant. The "lost" avi- the sale of War Savings Stamps and ~,~ appear to worry W. Gordon Hires of the spirit of patriotism at the Memori- Thrift Stamps are: Hamilton, Ont., who saw 32 months' £unfty offers. After reading them, al Day exercises at Cass City on May ator informed L'~slie of their good Cass City Bank. he pronounced them "very good" and fortune on his return and they ar- Tenders Resignation as Pastor of Lo- service in the 123rd Battalion, 30 and what is said to be the largest McGregory-Townsend Co. Canadian Infantry, and who is now a added that he would suggest a scrap crowd in years gathered to pay honor ranged to make their brothers a visit Wilsey & Cathcart. cal Presbyterian Church guest at the )ome of his cousin, A. E. book in addition to periodicals. "These to the heroes of the Civil War. the following Saturday. Starting that afternoon, they made the trip in 20 • B. J. Dailey. Effective June 3{}. Goodall, in Elkland township. A few Continued on page eight. The program was opened by the N. Bigelow & Sons. more miles of German advance to- , , school children who sang "America" minutes, remained over night and Cuss City Chronicle. ward Paris contain no element which was followed by prayer by Rev. Sunday the four men enjoyed an auto L. I. Wood & Co Rev. J. W. Hamblin tendered his for alarm for Gen. Foeh, for as 10ng J. D. Young'. Rev. S. Cormany spoke trip and dinner together. Exchange Bank. resignation as pastor of the First as Von Hindenburg is permanently 1"6 ENROLL25,008 REGIS' briefly on the significance of Memori- Presbyterian church at Cass City Sun- halted at a reasonable distance from al Day. He said in pa,~: day and has accepted the call of the According to adviees received by the French capitaI, it is he and not "As the flowers were strewn over First Presbyterian ehureh of Santa Gen. Foch who should do the worry- ] TEREDNURSES ,fl RED GRUSSthe unknown graves of victims of the CASS= NY WON the Chronicle from J. W, Braun, direc- Fe, New Mexico. While the members tor of publicity of the National War ing. .A Detroit Times correspondent, Titanic disaster, so we are today by regret greatly the severance of the to "whose article Mr. Hines called the t People at Home Asked to Sub "U this act decorating unknown graves FROM AKRONFRIDAY Saving Stamp Committee of Tuscola pleasant relations which have existed Chronicte's attention, claims that each [ of as well as those we know. We are county, this county's War Saving between pastor and society for five Practical Nurses in Place Stamp quota has been inc~eased from mile by which Von Hindenburg ex- placing" upon theh ~ tombs the fairest years, they are pleased that Rev. t Trained Nurses. L~al Team Will Contest with Caro tends the new salient toward Paris product of the land they defended. But $320,000.00, the first figures set, to Hamblin's new field of labor opens f~r County Championship at $557,380.00. An intensive drive is to means that the German general staff one thing can merit the suffering and t~ him many opportunities in a dim- Field Meet Today° must find 6,000 more men for its pro- Surgeons General Gorgas and Brats- death of an army, the wealth of the be made throughout the county from ate that promises him an improve- June 20 28 secure pledges for tection. Each mile therefore ef Von ted of the Army and Nays have ap- land sinks into insignificance, the to to ment ii~ health. Mr. Hambtin, in the Hindenburg's new advance means ~aealed to the American Red Cross t~ popularity is a worthless factor, but Friday afternoon Akron came to the purchase of t:h~s amount of following letter ad&~essed to members 6,00(I men must be taken from the enroll 25,000 registered nurses for principle justifies the enormous effort Cass City with the idea that they st~mps, said purchases to be made be- of the session and the congTegat~on, German resmwes and placed perma- war service in a campaign which be- that is placed upon us. In 1620 our would have something" of an easy vic- fore Jan. ! ~e.xto tendered his resig'nati~n as pastor to nently along°~the batt}e truant wher,e gan June 3. fathers faced the west until the bow tory. But their minds were somewhat So~wehow *he littte Thrift Stamp, take effect on June 30: ~eosfing but 25 cents, and the War they can no longer serve for surp~q~e Our boys 'out there in No ZIan~s of the Mayflower was bathed b~ the changed when at the end of the tTnird "I "have now come to the time when a~acks such as were used in Picardy, Land and thos~ in training here must singing waters at Plymouth Rock. inning the score stood 4 to 0 for Cars ISa~;ings S~umps, .ca~ling for an inves> it seems to be my duty to res'ign the ment of a few cents over $4, which .on Flanders and A]sne offensives. If the have add~tion~fl nurse~ at once, and ~f Immediately after establishing them- City and in the fourth, two more lo- pastorate of this church. I "have re- german casualt%s Iast week be placed their t~ves are to t~e protected., ~he selves, they turned their faces east- cal men crossed the plate. Akron, in January I, 1923, ~ring~ a gross return ce}ved a unanimous and enthusiastic at 100,00(}, fire total depletion og Von peopie at home must get along wlth ward and from that time on have the same inning, scored one run. They 'of $5, has not been brought ~nt~ prom- edt'l to become*he pastor o~ the First Hindenburg'.s reserves must be placed fewer: ~rain~ed nurses. Private h~mes stood for the principles that caused rallied in the sixth and three men inence as an iwvestment for £n:ildren Presbyterian churc~ o~' SaDta Fe, at 280,000 because of ~he extortion of Lheir immigration. In 1775 the deter- crossed the plate, leaving the score 6 and ot~ners that is equally as ,good New Mexico; and desire, Wiih the con- employing trained nurses for ]n~allds, and sound as "a Liberty BonS. the Gern~an ~ront for about ag miles. in ..~.atern~ty ce.se~ and ~!l eme~g'e~cy ~ination for lib,erty develooed into to 4. for the locals. Neither team wag sent of this church, and of /he FI~nL "Things look good to me just now," is action, and a new nation was born. A able to score in the last three periods ~ With the energy and de~erminat~ion Presbytery, to accept that call. It 'is demands .must use such expert ~assis- of the new organization aria the Wil- the expression used by Ms:. Hines tenet the fewest possible m~m'ber of few minor demonstrations revealed of the game. With the greatest reluc!mnee and only Wednesday. the fact the fire was burning but in The locals placed almost a new line lingness of people of Tusc(/la counts after the most careful consider~ti6n days a'nd hours, and then st/bstitute Mr. -t-~ines eVtered {he Cana- 1861 the greatest of all struggles up up in the field for Friday's game. Har- to help w.in the wax, :saving and that I take thls step to end a ~happy ~rac~ical nurse~. Only in this way ear dian army on Oct. 30, 191~, and was traine(l nurse:s be i~les:sed for war to that time bm'st forth with tremen- ris and Craft worked well as battery, thrift as embodied in g-he purchase ~f service of five years.. discbarged because of disgbilities on dous fury and the celebration of this while Johnson held down second like these War Stamps is s~re to becorae "I am not taking this ac£~'on be, 'service and it is only trebled, re~s- popular in a very short time. May 9, 1918. During that ~ime he was tere~ nurses who are to :be enrolled :in fday is the memory 'of the nobility of a man. Striffler, Dodge and Wallace cause any dissafisfaction with my of in training' in for 18 months that struggle. Nearly all of those no- filled up the outfield. F. W. Hubbard, sta~e director oi ihe congree'ation or ~;i"~h my field. I have ~itiis campaigns. and ~spent four ~uonths ~n the trenches ble men have answered their final Harris has not been out-pitched by War Sav~:ng Stamp campaign,. ;:h:~ an not been conscious of any dissatisfac- in France. summons principles which annou~c~ment says: tion on the part of this congTegation but the for any one of the five opposing pitchers ~Trench life is not :so bad as it they ~stood are burning bright!y and "It seems hardl~ necessary 'Lhat that has int~uenced me in any degree, S'I~RIKING WJgR AD with whom he has battled, as the mi.~ht be;" he said sr~£ilingly. "You warmly in the hearts of all true strikouts of each game have shown. anyone should need ~'converting'-,~o a This celt came ~;it~hout SoIidi~ation on have your good and bad times there as Ame~:icans2' In the Akron game he struck out eight Government war financing plan, ~vhen my part, and in ways that h~ve clear- everywhere ~e O:f e~rse f]'ene}~ Jibe 2~sks for 50.00{} Men ~'or Seru:~ee in men, v:hi]e the Akron pitcher struch the ma~ihood of tLe country is "~eav- ly indicated the leading of :the Lord. l F.A. ~igclo~w, as chairman ef the %g our shores by tens of thousar~ds to is like ]ors of other conditions, you l ~'Merchant Narine. program committee, announced P~eg. out two. I have viefred t:he new fie]3, and have can get used to it, and the boy3 sim- face the enemy in trench warfare; but subjected ~t to a most cri~iical investi- W. F. Zander as the second speaker, The locals feel that their victory is some such canwaig n cf con~ersion ~iy make {he best Of ~t. Neither is "a who addressed the citizens in part as largely due to the fine coaching of G. gation and therefore I a~i able to dugout 20 'or 30 feeV below ground In the window o~ ~+;he L. i.-Wood & would not be out of Vlace in ~h~ war weigh ~l/is call in terms of service, fo;ilows: H. Burke, who has, in the last week, much likeflorae, alft'm~agh heated by -a ~Co. drug" store, there is dist~tayed a "Many died on the battle field and savings stamp ~)vement in t~ae state and the resffgc has been to make my given the fellows some very good ,dharcoaI 'b~'azier, but ~ou may be sm:e double:~age advmNisement Zrom a lie in the graves who never heard the pointers in the base ball line. .of MidMgan. way per~ec~iy clear. I am called up- current issue of ~a g'reat national "The national ~,~ar savings .c~mmit- '~t is a defightfuI spot at times after snout of victory, or read the emanci- Scores were made as follows: Har- on by the dictates of my own con-. weekly%hat brings %he war on the sea tee o~f the Of America a hard daF in the trenches. pa~ion:~ proclamation, but who !aid ris 3, Brooker I, Benkelman I, Striff- science, "by ~e manifest ~,arity of du- diree{l> home te ~i~/is seefioa, and to has been organi.~ed to teach ~e eiti- "The boys endure-hardships bravdI:g :Sown theh- lives hoping that God !or 1. ty, by the magriitude 0~ 'opportunity ~he ~t~m'e-where the. adyertise~nent ap- zens ef the United States thehdbit of and mike 'merry ,#&enevm/ the least -would atlast give victory. Lincoln is The winning of Friday's game puts for service tin {he field to ~;hich I have pears~ The prop~etor 0ffhe store thrift and turn savin~ "dr ,opportmiiW offers. A real aggrava- ~he high representative oT all the dead Cass City on the diamond at Carp a6 to £he the been calted =~o now lay ~own my work has a personal interest, in :~he adver- nation into the =,:reasury war :ser- '~ion is the trench]ouse, but ~'~m ~hat Who died with the noise of war and the field meet, today where they~will fox' here. TKis means to me, '~s welt as to tisement also, ~m"it relates to war vice. The money is a loan f~om the "is turned ;into a joke whenever the ~op- ~battle in tNeir ears, expecting victory meet Carp in the championship game. many ~of you, the pain~il severing o~ work ?chat he is ~sing 'for the Govern- people to ~he government, and the portufiity offers. The 'favorite" pas- but not enjoying it. They died in or- ties that m~e'very strong :a~id very ten- mont, Furthermore, 'he helped pay " gover,nment v~Tfl pay the ° ?pe~le a -~ime on sunny daFs 'is for the boys to der to mgke this the g~'eat land of lib- der. for "it--and the ~eost of £~e "ad" for substantial rate df interest for the °st/'ip to ~he waist, Sit in the sun 'and BOARD "It has been my very "great prNi- the s.~ngle issue':was $10JN~0. Continued on page eight. use of their money. The plm~ :is dif- endeavor to rfd ffnemselves of ihe lege to p~eaCh "God's h-u£h to you, ~: The advertisement asks for 50,00~ ferent from the ~l~ber~y loan. sale .only :pests. "t~eading ftreir shirts" is %he In Each County as Measure to Stop' be, to many 0~ you a counsellor, tobe: men, ?~,etween 21 'and 30, :bgc~ service "in became it is ~more ,demo~catie--it ,express~o'n used ~by the boys in ~de- in ~our~ h:emes in times o~'great rejoic~ the new Merchant Marine. In the ]an- Waste through Machinery. .~ touches every man, woman :~nd ~tdild ..scribing ~his activ%y. A story is ~tdld ing to share in your joys, and in times ~0f one 6~ the lads on sentry duty "who guag~ Of its'hea'~iIine, :it ~oN'ers "50,0~ ItlAN CHILD NARROWLY in the country. ~veryone can lend at of g-rest ~mw to weep ~ffih yo u an~ 'had been looking "ower the top When ~6bs a',g sea" t~ :~ean-cut young Amer- For the purpose of securing an im- least ~ 25-ce1~t ~iece to the ~eause ,of to bring to yofi the blessed message of he rec@ived a big'gfte on the leg'. He ican~ It states thkg {he TJ. S. Sldip- ESCAPEDBOWNIltG proved condition among threshers and demo~fcacy; and ~/lmost eve~ibody can eomfoffc, te ,see you grow :in ~grace and ~eaned over to scratch the .afl~icted ping Board Wil'4 ,give ~ffl~em special helping to save large quantities of save a trifle mo~e th~n $4.0t) d.uring efficiency and to welcome many of ~rou spot and lhe next-iz~stant the enemy trdi~ingbefore 'trotting :~bem into a~c- grain are often through the co:nrse of f2~e year for ~he pur~- into the Church of our Lord. During Elbert ~Bearup and Step-daqghter which lost ~hred a machine gun which swep:t ~Ne tuat ,~ea serfd~ carrbiing suplJIies ~o poor threshing methods, the state food chase ,~f an interest-bearing ~mr sav- these yea~ ~God's ~blessing ~t~as~ been Thrilling Experience in gravel anti dirt over his head. "If it our ~iies an~ -allies in the fighi~g H~ administration has organized a ings stamp. upon us. The progress of this .church fields Europe. So mudh importan'ee "Mic~iigan, the eighth s~ate 5n the h-adn't'been for youbiting down ~he~e, ~f t ~ording Cuss River. "threshing board" in each county, has not been phenomenal bu~ it has is attached to f~4s work ~at men ~c- ~. Union, ,and one of the first in ~1! pa- I 'might he dead, s~ I guess ]IN] ~put which is to consist of the county food been continuous, and. that duiing the cepte~ Torit are ,exempt~ from a ,e~'ll triotic movements, !is rated 47th :in her y~u back," the fellow :said as he c~Im- administrator, the county agricultural most terrible and awful war known to to military,duty:. sale of ~ar saving~ :stamps. ,~e have ly replaced the little one on ~ =jdb. An 6bedient disposition is a valu- agent in counties having such an of history. ~e manifest power of the The adve~is~ment rglates further, been asked to raise !$.70,000,000 before "The Frendh are o~t to win 'and ev- able trait to cultivate ~ children and ganization and a retired thresher. ~Spirit of God ~has kept us in hm~mony that %he RexiIl ~stores ~h,,.oughout 'ftie end the yea~ ~through fire sale ew man is on the job. One never see~ one w~/idh will frequently keep them This board is to list all threshers in ;the ~sf ~n the unity o~ ~he Spirit. He has led United States, nea/qy ~00 of ~hem, of thrift stamps ~nd war sa~vmgs a man near ~che military age in Franee from harm. So argues Elbert Bearup each county at once, to provide for an you to co-operate gladly'in every good have ;:~en desig~mted by ~he Govern: stamps. ~WJth four r~nths of the ~ear why is dressed in ci,gflian clothes un- and he furnishes ample proof in an inspection of threshing outfits with word and work, to be WflIing to re- less he is incapacitated for service. ment as enrolling statim~s for 'the ~. incident ~hich occurred Decoration gone, we have sold }ess than $3~000,- spond to every call, to be patient and View of having them put in first-class Women, old ,~mn and b-.~ys do the farm S. Shining Bom,d. At '~ese st6res" Day and which he and his step-daugh- condition prior to the harvest, and if ,000. kindly, and to meet, With effidiency, tight'ira tLeir own home towns, young "This dues not mean that we ]~ave work and ~hey do s~rrprisingly wdIt ter, Bertha Benalen, a child of about there is not sufficient threshing capac- every emergency. ~nen ~m~y now ~sign on' '~;or traiNng :~ailed. 'It ~eans that ~p ~o this tJ~ne, too, eveh cultivating the soil wit%/in six summers, will long remember. ity in any county to take care of the "It is a great ~oy to be aMe to leave :and sttbsequent sea duty ~ the3U. !:~ the people of Michigan have: :~mt two and three miles ~ the basle Mr. Bearup was driving" a pair of year's crop before it suffers loss, to to my successor a fine, un~fied, har- lines. Women in France also work Merchant Marine?' three-year-old colts and attempted to ~wakened to :their duty, ,their respan- monious' well organized for~ard-lo6k, arrange to increase the capacity. around the freight sheds and in many The :personal 'i~,%erest oT :Mr. Wo~it, ford the~Cass river at the TuscoIa- Boards are instructed to organize at Mbility nor t~eir strength. ing clrarch. For a'tl of these blessings ;in common Wi~h ~ther Rvxall drug- "~Within ~ast two weeks, a cam- other ~ccupations have taken the Sanilae county line. When they once and to call a meeting of all the I iam deeply grateful to God and to g6:sts, in ~his StriMng war announce- . paign has been launched that Wir~ men's places. One of ~he saddest reached the middle of the stream, he threshers as early as possible in order :ment, ig contained in the ~oncluding bring the war savings menage to the sights in France is small boys of eight lost control of the horses and they to learn from them the exact condi- Ym°Ude ~Yl m a e ~°~de ~:s words 6f gtae adver~isemet, ~which are: attention of every person in tim state. :and nine years whose ~i.ght hands started down the ri~er dra~'ging the tions and what, if any, impyovements come for .me to lay down this work "Th~s use .of the ~stores a:red the ex- • The ~eaditig men and women ;are rally- were amputated by the enemy early surrey and its occupants after them. are needed. and take n~p another. I am, therefore, pense ttfi~s advm~:isement ~are a con. ing to the cause, and we are bending i in the war.' I saw a number of these of When the water reached up to the lit- It is claimed that large quantities asking th~s congregation to take ac- tribuY;ion by the RexaI1 store~ to the every effort to carry out the :govern- li~le feIlo~'s mysdif. The t~5:ench, no tle girl's chin as she stood on the sur- of grain have been lost annually t:ou joining" wi~h rne in asking the matter how poor, will share their com- cause of Liberty." merit intention that of intOXicating xey's seat, Bearup decided it was time through poor threshing, the loss in Presbytery to dissolve the pastorat forts with the refugees. They don't rl~ o the habit of thrift among" the peopte to move. telling the child to put her some instances, running as high as 7 relationship to take effect on J;ane know when their tm'n will come to aizns aronnd his neck and hold tightly, as a war measure, and advising the 30th." CASH WOOD ENTERS per cent due largely to the use of worn people to lend every cent of their .sav- endure similar suffer}ng. Our Cana- fhe man started for the shore which out. or poorly kept up machinery. Great Opportunities in West. dian soldiers found the French people Y. IIV[. C. A. ~ F O~ IN FRANCE both reached in safety. The Ii~tle ~irI Continued on page 8. After a month s absence, Rev. Ham- very kind. did not cry, but frequently called, "0 blin returned on Saturday from Santa "Woman has also taken man's place Cash Wood left Detroit last paps!" as they made the perilous trip. Fe, where he has supplied ~he pulpit in England. Few men of military age Wedees&ay morning" o~ his way to After saving" the child, Bearup weng RECEIVE COMMISSIONS. of the First Presbyterian church. He are working in England and those who France where he will on{or the Y. M. lback to release the horses from the There ai'e many ways which school says that the opportunities for are are employed principaity in mines, C..A. work in the army. Previous to surrey and found to his surprise that Butt and Hugh Gardner have boys have in earning" money with Mead Christian work in the West a~'e great, ~nd chemical and a;mmunition fac- his entry into the :ministry of the M. one line was snapped into the ring on received their commissions as second which to buy war stamps and help and the church which has given him tories. The Women's Land Army is E. chm'ch, Mr. Wood was engaged in hame which accountec for him not be- lieutenants for which they have been whip the kaiser. Some of the boys a call, being the leading Protestant doing" a big work in that nation. Y. M. C. A. work as physical director ing" able to guide the team. The hor- studying. They are now at Camp Lee, wash dishes for their stamp money° church in the city, gives him an op- "Canadian women have done noble in the west and for the past year has ses were cons{surly striking with their Virginia. Other enterprising boys polish their portunity for aggressive leadership work for the boys through the Red been in the Y. M. C. A. army service feet and the man had a difi%ult time neighbors' automobiles, mow the Cross. Through the generosity of throughout the state. at Pt. Townsend, Washington. At in unhitching the tugs. Later he se- lawns, carry newspaper routes, polish THUMB CREAMERY CO. There are many state institutions farmers much fresh fruit is donated. this camp, he realized fhe great good cured a chain, hitched it to the surrey sister's shoes or press big brother's STATION OPENS MONDAY at Santa Fe and the public schooI This is preserved in the various Red he could accomplish in bettering the and fastened tlie other end to a tree clothes. One youngster, so the story Cross headquarters in the many system has a large staff of highly spiritual and mental condition of "the on the river bank so that he could re- goes, got his first stamp money for towns and cities of ~,;~;here it We wili open our cash cream buy- paid inst~:uctors. The buildings are boys," and accordingly offered his cover the vehicle M~en the water taking" a dose of castor oil. ing station in the rear of Wood's drug modern in architecture and equip- is prepared with that delightful home- services in the work overseas lowers later in the summer. store building on Monday, June 10th, ment. flavor and sent across through the Mr. Wood's family will continue to When Bearup started back to re- and will be pleased to receive the Contrary to the general idea the Red Cross in England to the hospitals reside at Pt. Townsend and his moth- lease the horses after saving tlie child, WARNER A CANDIDATE. patronage of our old customers and climate of Santa Fe Is not hot but and to the transports bringing the or, Mrs. O. C. Wood, is with them his daughter eried many times for al~ those having cream to selL Out" inVigorating and sunshiny. The sum- wounded men back home. While the L. I. Wood was in ,Detroit the first him to come back, but when sne saw Fred t%{. Warner, formerly governor motto is a square deal and prompt mer nights during whieh blankets Red Cross does its greatest work in of last week to visit his brother, re- he was determined to finish the job, of Michigan, has announced his can- service. are in demand alter,rate with summer the hospitals and in first aid work, turning to Case City last Wednesday she sta~.ed for her home 2½ miles didacy for the republican nomination --Adv. THUMB CREAMERY CO. Continued on "page eight. still the many manifestations in sup- evening. iaway to call her mother. for United States senator. .... ~' CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGE TWO.

CASS CITY CHRONICLE Florence Hartwick stayed until Sat- Published Weekly. urday. ' ', Susan Powell is teaching school at IJ-BOATS CROSS FOCH'SRESERVES The Tri-County Chronicle and Cass Shabbona. (3iVy Enterprise consolidated April 20, Miss Mac Wright is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Wright. ATLANTICOCEAN, NOW THROWNIN 1906. Mrs. Ernest~'Ackins in spending a Subscription price--One yr., $1.50; few days in Detroit. 8 months, $1. All past due subscrip- SINK SHIPS TERRIFICBATTLE Steve Decker has an automobile. 11 tions up to Feb. 1, 1917, will be figured at the old rate of $1.00 per John Souden started to work for year. After that date the rate of $1.50 Chas. Bond Monday. HUNDREDS OF WARSHIPS AND FRENCH ARMY STRIKES BACK AT is effective. Canadian subscriptions, Mrs. Andrew Seeger spent the SUBMARINE CHASERS ON LOOK- ENEMY AND RETAKE FOUR $2.00 per year. week-end with her daughter, Mrs. Advertising rates made known on OUT FOR ENEMY SUB- ViLLAGES~FOE ARMY : Chas. McCaslin at Cass City. application. MERSIBLES. i REACHES MARNE. Entered as second class matter Apr. 27, 1906, at the postoffice at Cass City. Michigan, under L}m Acl, vf C.,:~- gross of March 3, 1879. ~EW JERSEYC6AST $CERE ,W i ~ERNAR$F.~iL iN T~,EN H. F. Lenzner, Publisher. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Andrews visited EFFORTS TO CONQUERRHEIMS Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. An- GERMAN U-BOAT SINKINGS drews at Caro. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley McNeil, Albert No Loss of Life Has As Yet Been Nowhere Has the Enemy Crossed the Gistick and family, also Mr. and Mrs. Reported~Although Exact Anxiety River Marne~French Counter-At- DaFoe and Rev. and Mrs. Fred Tra- tack Wins Back the Vittage vet of near Kinde visited Sunday at Has Been Felt for Many the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Passengers and Crews. Fort de la Pompeile. Phelps. Mr. and Mrs. Traver re- mained for a two weeks' visit. New York--Reports received late Paris The strength of General Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fader and son, M[onday night indicate that four Am- Foch's reserves has been felt by the Tressle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fader erican coastwise passenger steamers, armies of the German crown prince and children visited Sunday with Mr. ane steam tanker and seven schooners in the "battle for Paris." and Mrs. Jos. Kirkpatrick. have been sent to the bottom by the East. of the line running from Sois- Born Thursday morning, May 30, to German sea raiders off the United sons to Chateau Thierry, where the Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Muck, a baby ~tates coast. Germans in a continuation of their daughter, who has been named Mada- No loss of life has been reported, mighty strokes gained several addi- line Mary. ~lthough anxiety is felt for the fate of tional villages and then attempted to .[ GREENLEAF. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Andrews and several hundred persons, passengers proceed further westward, magnificent Henry Dram of Caro and Mrs. H. C. ~nd crew, known to have been on the opposition was imposed by the newly strengthened lines an d , with terrific Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ors Hatha- Denoyelles were entertained Wednes- ~wo passenger steamers believed to ; tJ smashes, the French forces recap- way Monday, May 17, a 10% pound day for dinner at the home of C. D. ~e victims. tured Longpont, Corcy, Faverotles and daughter. Sine has been called Esth ,r Andrews. The eleven vessels known or be- Troesnes, vantage points in the center Mildred. M~;. and Mrs. Bert Southwm~ch and lieved to have been sunk are: of the line leading to the forest of Mrs. D. Black of Sheridan spen~ Mr. and Mrs. C.D. Andrews spent Carolina, plying between Porto Rico Monday afternoon at Unionville, Se- Villers Cotterets, which seems to be last week with her daughter, Mrs. ~nd New York. Carried 220 passen- the present objective here of the en- bewaing and Rose Island after which gers and 120 in crew. Wireless calls Charles Roblin, who is ill. Mrs. Hollo- emy. way of Bad Axe is earing for Mrs. they returned and had supper with heard early Monday. Roblin this week'. Mr. and Mrs. Andrews. It was Bert's City of Columbus, plying between Enemy Reach the Marne. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Powell enter- birthday. Savannah and New York. Due at The Germans, however, still have in tained a number of relatives Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Livingston and Boston early Tuesday morning, but their possession the ~¢illage of Vaure- children autoed to Cass City Sunday During Friday's electric storm, the cot reported. zis, lying to the west of Soissons, and and spent the day with relatives. Winneconne, steam freighter, 1,869 barn of Alonzo Hill was struck by further south Saconin-Et-Breuil, Chau- lightning and badly damaged. Mr. A number from here spent Sunday tons. dun, Liey and Bouresches, the last Herbert L. Pratt, oil tanker, sunk off Hill, who was milking at the time, Was at Rose Island. named directly west of Chateau Thier- .,-.-...-.-.v...-...... -...-.-.-.....v.....~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: stunned and did not recover for a E, A o Dillon has exchanged his Cape Henlopen. ry. A little to the southwest of Cha- Steamer Texet. couple of days. Buick Four for a fine Six of the same l teau Thierry the enemy has roached The following schooners are known Sehoot in the Tanner district dosed make. the Marne. to have bec~n sunk: Nowhere has there been any attempt iiilA Cozy Fire in a Favorite Wednesday with an entertainment Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kirridge and Edward H. Cole, in ballast, crew of Mrs. A. McLellan went to Rose Island by the invaders to eros sthe river, and which was much enjoyed by the visi- 11. tors. At the dose of the program, Saturday for a few days' stay. at,all points east of Chateau Thierry Hattie Dunn, bound from Rockland they are hugging the northern bank iili gaseburner Miss MeElroy served ice cream and ~o Charleston in ballast. cake. Miss MeElroy expects to return of the stream. It is not improbable, l~bell~, D Wiley~ i~ ballast, crew however, the tactics of the Germans iii is sure a pretty sight bub--there is a certaJ~ l.mcertaintyas :.:.!ii~ :here next year as she has given uni- ELLINGTON. af 8. versal satisfaction. have in view the fording of the river to getting Chestnut coal most any year and particularly iii~ Jacob H. Haskell, brand from Bos- when the time is more propitious, for We are pleased to learn that Miss Amos Green, Frank Oesterle and :.:. during the war. ton to Norfolk, crew of 11. in the center of the line between Cha- !!i Joanna MoRse is recovering from her Wilber Dorman are driving new Fords. Edna. teau Thierry and Rheims they have ii'.(: This uncertainty caused the Favorite people to get iii~ operation at the hospital. Hauppaug. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Seekings and pushed back the Allied front across iiii out the :+ Road work commenced Monday. It daughter, Wands, and Mr. and Mrs.r Another tanker and an unknown the Rheims-Dormans road between has been difficult to secure men and Arthur Deneen of Gagetown called at schooner also are thought to have fall- Olizy-Violaine and Ville-En-Tardenois teams thus far as everyone is busy the home of Norman Emmons Friday. en victims to the raiders. and are pressing toward the Marne. farming'. Mr. and Mrs. Evans Rose, Mr. and Germany's Best Troops in Battle, Robt. Spencer is the new milk haul- Mrs. Fred Green, Howard and Miss Warships On Trail of U-Boats. er from Holbrook to Ubly. Lizzie Fadie spent Sunday at Rose This is the only point on their left Washington--Germany at last has FavoriI8 PipoJessFurnaco i The L. A. S. were entertained Tues- Island. wing, however, where the enemy has brought her submarine warfare to the day at the home of Mrs. R. Cletand. My. and Mrs. George McDurmon been able to make fresh gains, not- iiii IT BURNS ANYTHING. :.,~ shores of the United States. appar~nb Sewing' carpe¢ rags was the work for and children of Caro spen5 Sunday withstanding the tact he has-thrown :::: :i:i~ ly in a forlorn hope of striking telling the day. with Mr. and Mrs. Win. Fisher. new divisions into the battle, some of blows on this side of the Atlantic and of them the best trained troops in "!i-:: As good a furnace as the Favorite Baseburner was as ~:~=":i:~ A large number from here attended A large crowd attended the Me- of drawing home some of the Ameri- the German army. Memorial Day exercises at Cass City. a stove. We have sold one to someone you know. iili morial exercises at the cemetery can naval forces from the war zones, Having failed in all their efforts to Stanley Jackcon is again in the em- Thursday. where the U-boat menace is being conquer Rheims by direct assault, it Ready for your order. ploy of the Page Milk Co. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hendrick and slowly but surely strangled to death. now seems to be the intention of the The Holbrook Red Cross sewing daughters of Cedar Run spent Sunday Scores of United States warships Germans further to widen their occu- eirete met at the home of Mrs. C. W. with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Campbell. are ranging the waters off the North pation of the territory lying south of Hubbard Tuesday, June 4. Next meet- Mr. and Mrs. Abe Medcalf and Atlantic coast in search of the Ger- the Rheims-Dormans road and thereby N, gigelow & Sons ing June 18. daughters, Wilma and Lueile, visited man submarines, which made their outflank the cathedral city and bring A pie social was held at the M. E. Mr. and Mrs. John Medealf Sunday. long expected attack on American about its capitulation. shipping in home water~. ~ ~::.~:::::::'A:::g:: ::::: :::: :::::'J 5: :: :::::'2:: :: :: ::::: :: ::'A:: :::: :: :5 ::::: :'.'-::'2 ::: :::=::::: ::: ::: :::::::5: ::::: .~ ::::: :: :: :::: :::::::::::::: :::: :: :: :": :::: :::: :::: :: :: :::::: Y.:::::::: ::::'~ church Wednesday evening. Proceeds The dance of the home of Wm. La- In the figh ag in the immediate vi- In the attacks upon coasting vessels to apply on the pastor's salary. joie Tuesday evening was well attend- cinity of Rheims the enemy won Fort almost in sight of the New Jersey ed. de la Pompelle, but his tenure of the shore, navy officials see a frantic ad- position was short-lived, for the CENTRAL GREENLEAF. mission from Berlin that the subma- French troops in a counter attack re- ELKLAND-ELMWOOD rine has failed. American armed pow- conquered it. Fine weather. TOWN LINE er is rolling overseas in ever-increas- Miss Loots Hewett school closed ing force, despite the utmost exertions Friday. Miss Edith Evans sewed two days of the undersea pirates off the coasts Counter-Revolutionary Plot Bared. of Eurpoe. The ice cream social Friday eve- for Miss Leanore Linck last week. Londol>--Discovery in Moscow and ning" was well attended. A good time Mr. and Mrs. C. Hobart and Flor- Petrograd of a large counter-revolu- is reported by all. ence Smith were Caro callers Friday. • U. S. Transport Sunk. tionary plot which stretches through- out the whole of , is announced The Baptist ladies' aid will meet Robert Russell was hurt quite bad- Washington--Three officers and 23 in a Russian wireless message. To this with Mrs. Howard Law next Thurs- ly when the team he was driving ran enlisted men of the navy were report- plot is attributable in part the mutiny day, June 13. All welcome. away and dragged him. He is so~e ed missing from the torpedoed Ameri- of the Czecho-Slovak troops which better at this writing. can transport, President Lincoln. One Miss Helen Wright returned to her have captured several important rail: home Saturday to visit her parents Word has been received from A. officer was captured by the submarine. way junctions and lines. before going to Pontiac. Ewald saying he arrived ~afely in None of the survivors was seriously The soviet executive decided May injured. The loss was confined fro the Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hartwiek and France. 29 to undertake the partial calling to crew of the ship. children, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Thomas Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Livingston and arms of several classes of workmen and Miss Florence Hartwick spent George Livingston attended the play and the poorer peasants in Petrograd Wednesday night at George Seeger's given by the Owendale high sehoot LINES ASK INCREASE IN FARES and Moscow and the Kuban and Don then returned to Bay City Thursday. gTaduates Friday evening. regions. A Good Barn, a Mr. and Mrs. C. Bingham and fami- At the same time Moscow has been ly visited at Fred Patmer's home in Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo and Bay declared in a state of siege. Counter- Patriotic Duty Owendale Sunday. City Petition for Raise. revolutionaries have been arrested in l Delbert Auten's family are under considerable numbers and energetic I-~EED is expensive nowadays. Every possible ounce of measures have been taken against the quarantine for diphtheria. Grand Rapids--The Grand Rapids it must be converted into beef or milk or working press. These measures are necessary, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Livingston, Miss Street Railway company has petitioned energy for the teams. it is announced, owing to the situation F Cass City " Edith Evans, Ira Evans and George the city commission to increase its in which the Russian revolution has Stock lacking the protection of a good barn consume most i Livingston were Bad Axe callers Mon- fare rate from five to six cents. The been placed. day afternoon. company showed the following in- of their feed in fighting the cold--or lacking the cool refuge Bank.... creases in expenditures during the last of a properly insulated barn during the heat of summer, become indisposed and lose weight. Dry Town and Dry Vegetables. year: Enemy 'Planes Hit Hospitals. A dehydrated or dry vegetable is one Materials, 20 to 400 per cent; wages, With the British Army in France Feed converted into animal heat doesn't make beef or milk of I. B. AUTEN from which all the water has been ex- 30 to 98 per cent; operating expenses, British Red Cross hospitals again have or money--it doesn't help to win the war. tracted, but a dry town is a town 11.2 per cent; taxes, 46.8 per cent. come under the German b~rnbarding The essentials of a good barn are good materials, proper Established 1882 where there's nothing but water.~ The net income of the company has scourge. Hostile airmen raided the Portland Press. fallen 21 per cent during the same same group of hospitals which suffered construction, light, air and insulation. period. A similar increase in fare has May 19. Several hospitals were hit, Other materials than wood have [oeen used in barn building been asked in Kalamazoo. Capital, $30,000.00 and the casualty list among patients but nothing has yet been found that makes as warm and and workers is c°nsiderable" dry a barn as a well built wood barn. And for long life Bay City Lines Ask Increase. One hospital was almost demoIished and minimum of repairs, your barn should be covered on Bay City x,~e s~reet railway com- when an enemy aviator dropped an ex- the outside with pany petitioned council for permission plosive on it after getting his bearings Interest to raise fares to six cents. Action by letting fall a brilliant flare which Pays 4 % was deferred. lighted up the whole district. WHITE PINE Practical working plans, specifications and bill of Ordered to Bath~May Sue. Wants Wood to Head 85th Division. material for the above type of barn, or any other Port Huron--George Baldoek, Clyde t farm building~ will be furnished on request, together township, about to be released from I Washington.--Senator Hiram John- Money to loan on Real Es- quarantine for smallpox, informed I son, California, voiced an energetic with our estimate of the cost. We will gladly arrange , protest on the floor of the senate Fri- the floor plan with you to suit your indivlduat needs° i tare. Prosecuting Attorney Stewart that if I day afternoon against the action of the his death resulted from' an order to war department in depriving Major- In terms of farm produce a barn is cheaper now than it has take a bath, relatives ~vould sue the'Genera I Leonard. Wood o]: his tom- ever been before. Comc0inand let us show you, i Safety Depesi~ Boxes for county for damages. Baldoek stated mand of the Eighty-ninth division on Rent. he took Ms tast bath last summer and the eve of its departure for France. that one a year was sufficient. Health Senator Johnson expressed "very CASS CITY GRAIN COMPANY offieiats insist on him bathing before great regret", that General Wood was being released. The prosecutor order-not to be sent to France and insisted DEFORD, MICHIGAN er Baldoek to go ahead with the ira-there was "dire need of such soldiers mersion and report on results, as he."

9 CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN,, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGETHR]~h

H. D. Schiedel went to Detroit Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Jones were vis- Wednesday on business. itors in Caro Tuesday evening. John Rogers has accepted a position Mrs. B. E. Smith of Detroit is visit- as helper in the G. T. depot. ing relatives here. Mrs. John Agar is spending the Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hempton of week with friends in Shabbona. Pontiac spent Saturday with Mr. and Anna Belle Tibbals visited Miss Mrs. L. E. Delong. FANCY DRESS SHIRTS Grace Cummins in Caro Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Spencer of De- D. H. Dorman from Marlete visited Miss Diantha Rogers le£t last Sab- troit visited with Cass City friends Mrs. J. N. Dorman on Thursday. 'urday to visit at the home of R. J. several days last week. Rogers of Gagetown. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wolfe and fam- Mrs. Bert Clara from Gagetown Miss Mary Willerton of Argyle ily of Pigeon spent last Thursday at The Famous "Arrow" Shirts was in town Monday on business. spent Tuesday and Wednesday with the Andrew Muntz Lome. i H. P. Woolman of Pt. Huron visited her sister, Miss Mabel Willerton. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Corkins and The Famous ~.~ the T. L,,.*u~.,.~b,a~y hvme 'op, Decora- ! Children s i)av servicea wii~ be held family were guests at. the F Ho ~'luck '] tion Day. in Bethel church Sunday, June 16, at. home at Colwood Sunday. Mrs. C. Hiser ef Firewood came Sat- 2:00. A special program has been L. A. Hildie of Cleveland, Ohio, was i urday to visit her mothm5 Mrs. T. i prepared. the guest of his sister, Mrs. A. W. $1.50 -:- $1.25 Lounsbury. t and Mrs. Samuel Linebaeh and Muntz, on Decoration Day. Miss Niva Gable, who has been children, Iva and Etril, of Pigeon Mrs. C. W. Hildie of Kingston spent teaching near Pinconning, has re- spent Sunday at the home of H. D. Decoration Day as the guest of her turned to her home here. Schiedel. daughter, Mrs. Andrew Muntz. While present stock lasts, absolutely fast colors--- Mrs. F. Hunter of Cass City visited 1 The annual Children's Day will be Dan Delong of Cumber visited Mon- her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Mc- [hMd in the M. E. church on Sunday, day evening- at the home of his par- Intyre, of Greenleaf Sunday. June 9, at 10:30. A good program and ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Del0ng. special music is promised. perfect fitting. Mi~s Miriam Fritz of Detroit visit- Joseph Braun of Caro was a busi- ed her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I.A. Mrs. F. J. Mash, jr., and daughter, ness caller in Cass City Monday in the Fritz, Saturday and Sunday. Janet, retrained from Pontiac Satur- interest of the county campaign for day, where they have been visiting the the sale of War Savings Stamps Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Landon and chil- former's sister, Mrs. Timerson. dren, Delbert and Margaret, visite& Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor and Cotton goods are advancing, buy now and get the relatives in Silverwood Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Austander and daughter, Betty, of Yale and Mr. and Miss Theo Carman of Lapeer visit- Mr. and Mrs. John Kennedy and chil- Mrs. D. M. Graham and son, Freder- best for the least money. ed at the home of Mrs. F. E. Kelsey dren of Shabbona visited at the home ick, of Caro were guests of Mr. and of Isaac Agar on Decoration Day: from Sunday until Wednesday. Mrs. E. W. Jones Sunday. Miss Mamie Hennesey and Mrs. W. J. Sugnet a~d son, John, of Gagetown were in town Monday on business. @ Mr. and Mrs. George Cooper from #, Women's Deford were guests at the home of Shoes Mr. and Mrs. J. Cooper on Sunday. O°o We Have A Surplus of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Rittenhouse, from "U~z C~ Dunn " iMrs. J. L. Parry and Miss Mary Me- iintyre motored to Caseville Sunday. Qual teed Hog Feed I Mrs. Warner Kelley and son, Archie, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Archie The best fitters. The best shape keepers on the McPhail of Novesta for the week-end. e. on hand and are going to cut prices in order to ge~ our Mr. and Mrs. Ritter and Miss Mar- -:. stock down. market. Low shoes of the latest design. garet Banfield of Owendate spent Dee- oration Day with Nit. and Mrs. George @ West. @¢,* THIS FEED IS EXCELLENT FOR "~* Dr. F. L. Morris of Cass City and Dr. Sugnet of Gagetown went to De- ~- HOGS AND SMALL PIGS: ":* troit Monday to attend the spring ¢, FARRELL clinics. A. C. Hayes came from Elmdale @~. INGREDIENTS -- Hominy feed, barley @";* Monday to visit his mother, Mrs. J. F. . Feed, Linseed Meal, Gluten Feed, Palm * Emmons, and his sister, Mrs. Chas. D. . Nut Meal, Salt, Middlings, Calcium ¢~ Striffier. ~1 Phosphate, Flax Screenings, Pal- .@ $ i I Mrs. Herbert Bensgton and son, e. IMitton, left Monday for their new ¢+. verized Oat Feed. "~¢* Ihome in Detroit, where Mr. Bensgton **** ¢+ '...... " ~ ...... ]is employed. .:. r cwt. at Cuss City .* Mrs. M. M. Wickware returned to ¢.-:- T y it at $2 * 50 or Deford. ,:~ her home in Detroit on Monday after spending two weeks at the home of 7~ We also have at Cass City some Choice Dr}, Culls :~ her sister, Mrs. P. A. Schenck. ,**+ ¢~ FORD C/%RS . at $2.00 and $2.25 per cwt. * Miss Lillian SchroCer returned to g. ¢* her home in Farmington on Tuesday ¢+ ¢* after completing her work as trimmer in Mrs. Geo. Land's millinery estab- lishment. ,."-" Cass City O ra i n Co ,. enl oi% ¢.. @ You Run Mr. and Mrs. Stilson Rulable of Dec~erwne came Sunday to wmt a~ the home of the tatter's mother, Mrs. Catherine Yakes. Mr. Rumble re- Kerosene turned to Deekerville on Sunday. Cheap Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Patterson and g daughters, Margaret and Alma, of Detroit and Miss Helen Hitchcock of Highland Park were guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Tennant Saturday and An attachment for your Ford guar- Golden Horn Flour ? Sunday. Miss Lena Tewksbury, Mrs. Edith Y8 Barrel Sack $1.50 Turner and Mrs. Andrew Cross were anteed to Cut Your Fuel Cost 5096 called from Detroit ]~viday noon by ? %. the illness of their mother, Mrs. John Rye Flour, no subsitute required, ~ barrel sack $1.60 ? Tewksbury. They returned to Detroit o & o YOU DO NOT HAVE TO THROW AWAY YOUR FORD CARBURETOR on Monday. Barley Flour, Corn Flour, Corn Meal 7~c pound Mr. and Mrs. George Vfest and chil- You have one of the world's best car- once done away with the day you buy a dren, John, Alfred ar_d Lottie, and Mr. Rolled Oats 7c pound Rice llc pound & buretors on your Ford now. You under- BURN-OIL Device. It has been demon- and Mrs. D.G. Schnelder and "chil- stand thoroughly this carburetor and its dren, Richard, George, Ethel and Mar- Q strated that with a BURN-OIL, using guerite, motored to Elkton, Pigeon adjustments. The BURN-OIL Device is kerosene as a fuel you can go farther per designed to attach directly to and operate and Owendale on Sunday. gallon than you can with gasoline. James Walters, who is engaged in Bran 100 pound sack . $2.50 in conjunction with the standard Ford G. W. Landon, carrier on R. R. No. 5, carburetor, exclusively. Buying" a new constructing a large drain just north Cass City, makes his route covering over of Imlay City, came home Saturday Middlings 100 lb. sack $2.60 carburetor is an expense and a difficulty at 30 miles on 1~/~ gallons of kerosene. to spend Sunday with his family here. He returned Monday to Im!.uy City, ac- companied by Mrs. Walters. Ground C & O Chop 100 lb. Sack 2.90 Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Andrews and The Saving in Fuel Pays Your Tire Expense sons, Edwin and Stephen, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hyde, Mrs. E. J. Usher, Shelled Corn Kiln Dried per bu. $1.82 Sold on a Money-back Guarantee Mrs. A. Schmidt.and daughter, Eve- lyn, attended the funeral ef their Nothing to Get Out of Order. Device running your Ford car on cheap cousin, Mrs. W.A. Forbes, in Caro Dried Beet Pulp 100 lb. sack $2.00 Look it over carefully. What is there kerosene. Your motor will start just as Saturday afternoon. to wear out? Nothing. It will last a good easy when equipped with the BURN-OIL Mrs. Ida Geno returned home Fri- deal longer than the car, in fact it ought to Device as before. day from Dayton, Ohio, where her be just as good for the next car you get as son, Malvin, is stationed at the Wil- For Late l You Save Money Every Time You Fill bur Wright Aviation field, as he can- it is when you buy it. The original cost is not get home before going to the At- low, and the upkeep a saving to you. the Tank. lantic coast on his way to Fr'ance. She Rape Seed 15c pound Millet Seed 8c pound This makes your Ford pay you divi- spent several days in Detroit with The Coldest Frosty Snowy Zero ,Weather dends every time you buy fuel. Begin friends on her way home. does not interfere with the BURN-OIL this saving today. Tuscola was the banner county in the Thumb in the Third Liberty Loan FARM PRODUCE drive and was far above the average i for the state which is around 130 per REMEMBER, when you get a BURN-OIL and gasoline you wish to use. Then you can also cent. Final returns from Tuscola COFIPANY Device attached to your Ford motor, you are im- get considerable extra mileage running on gaso- show an oversubscription of 52.93 per cent. Huron is second best in the t mediately freed from gasoline slavery. Not only line of the lowest grade. Hence, when once the BURN-OIL DEVICE is attached to your motor, Thumb with 125.96 per cent, St. Clair can you operate your car efficiently on kerosene you will not have any occasion for removing it. ran 122.60, Sanilac was 102.59 and La- peer 105.81. and low grade distillate by following instructions as the above mentioned various fuels can be used Mrs. J. H. Scott and daughter, Pau- sent out with each equipment, but you can also in your car after the device is attached, -without line, of Detroit, G. L. Martin of Cadil- operate it nicely with any mixtur~ of kerosene I any change° lac, Mrs. L. Billings of Mt. Pleasant and Mrs. J. H. Bohnsack and two sons SEE THEM AT THE of Detroit made the latter part of last -Bulk and Package week a happy one for their mother and grandmother, Mrs. Geo. Martin, when they made her a visit from Dec- oration Day until Sunday. Mrs. Mar- FORD GARAGE, Cuss City tin had been quite ill for over a week. Her condition remains about the same. COTTAGE CHEESE , Mothers' club met Tuesday at the ALL KINDS OF POULTRY AND CHICK FEEDS home of Mrs. T. L. Tibbals where a delightful afternoon was spent. A Don't forget our Cream business. ,? photo contest was much enjoyed and SELL YOUR BUTTERFAT AT HIGHEST MARKET PRICES

& -the hostess, assisted by Mesdames " and raise your pigs and calves. o Townsend, Wager and Schell served a : This paper travels over every street in town, and delicious lap luncheon. Mrs. Wm. Wel- don and daughter, Grace, were guests. • C.W. HELLER The July meeting of the club will be a Phone 5--3 shm't. i road in the country. Let it carry your message. picnic on the pretty lawn of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cooper with ~rs. Walter Schell as hostess. PAGE FOUR. CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. :~"

I A. D. MaeIntyre went Tuesday to fit, the new wash dye, at Cass City Have yea t~ied ""Jonteet", toilet Mrs. Win. Ruhl and son, Billy, went[ Buy War Saving Stamps. Harper hospital a5 Detroit for treat- Drug Co. Just the thing for summer preparations. Wood sells them. to Saginaw Monday. I Thee. Hennesey received a card tast mehts. silks and crepes. 10c a package. Wednesday annotmeing the arrival 0f Quantity of choice dry hand-picked Jos. Morris of Ubly was a business Miss Dm~othy MeKim is now'a mem- eat!or in town on Monday. h{s son, Patrick Henne~se~/~'?{n:Fra~e. Wanted. beans guaranteed to test 98 per cent ber of the Chronicle.staff;: having ac- germination. Price $7.50 per bushel. sasEs£'S/5t F. E. Kelsey went Wednesday to Recent Ford pin'chasers froM/"the Cepted the position as reporter. Male and female attendants, steady Robt. Warner. 5-17- Auten & Tindale agehcy are Clarence position, with chance for advance- Detroit on a business trip. A. C, 'Edgerton of Detroit was the Vorhes, Win. Hoagg, John Sugden and mont. Males $42.00 per month to Miss Frances McGillvray visited guest of his mother, Mrs. A. Edger- See Wood about wall paper and ala- Vernon Stewart start, females $29.00 per month to friends in Saginaw Sunday. ton, the latter pa~'t of last week. start, with board, room and washing. bastine. L. H. Wood went Monday morning William Bien left Monday for Ak- " Mrs. Lucy Holmes, Mr, ,an~.M/S~ Apply Dr. E. A. Christian, Medical Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. err and Card of Thanks. to Ionia on business. ron, Ohio, on a business trip. Albel't Holmes and" children; Mr. ~a~:d daughter, Ethel, of Pigeon spent Dec- Superintendent, Pontiac State Hospi- tal, Pontiac, Mich. 5-24-3 We desire to express our sincere Harvey Hyde was in Pt Huron Miss Gotts is the guest of Mrs. Hat -~ Mrs. Albert'Cobb and ;chitdren?~<;M~l= oration Day With Mr. and Mrs. W. D. gratitude to friends, neighbors and Tuesday on business. men Endersbe in Grant township. lington visited at the home of Mri' and Striffler, Odd Fellows for the assistance 'and Mrs. George Kolb Sunday...... ~:; Panama Hats Cleaned Made like many kindnesses shown during the Mr. and Mrs. Henly Brandon mo- Arthur Fritz of Detroit is visiting" W. Q: R'awson has moved from new. Bring them now. Farrell. at the home of Miss Hoagland. Mr. and Mrs. Lesi;er Bailey ,and Gagetown to Case City and is now re- illness and at the death of our hus- tored to Bad Axe Tuesday. dm~e-hters. Katherine and Lucite. and band and father. Mrs. John Whale and ramily. ~dr. -~::d ~3,irs. !!. !". T_:en.:'_:v:,' ~ .*~d is visiting a~ the i:ome o: w. D. mrriff- u, Thkd Sheet eas:. Mrs. Charles Rogers Friday. daughter, Phyllis, visited at the R. H. bies ag Jones'. ler. . Miss Eleanor Nique of Decker vis- Orr home at Pigeon Sunday Seed Beans for Sale. Mrs. C. D. Striffter and son, Ken- John Goodwin 6f Ann Arbor is the ited her grandparents, .Mr. and Mrs. Any lady that wears a s~oe or ox- 1916 seed beans for sate at $7.50 The Presbyterian Missionary socie- neth, were at Caseville last Thursday. £uest of his sister, Mrs. Fred Heat- J. Hi Striffler, last week. Her par- ford from 2½ to 4~ can finli them on per bu. Henry Blades. 6-7- ty will meet on Thursday, June 13,'at Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kennedy left land. ents; Mr. and Mrs. O. 7W; Nique, came Crosby & Son's b~.:rgain counter a£ the home of Mrs. A. D. Gillies. All Sunday to spend the day. Mr. and $2.50. Lost--between Dorman's and M. E. Thursday for their home in Veteran, Mrs. Ads Beach of Battle Creek is members will meet at Crosby's store Mrs. Nique and daughter returned to church pair bow glasses. Return to Alberta. visiting Mrs. F. E. Kelsey for a few where conveyances will be in readi- their home in Decker Sunday evening. The original Hard Pan Shoes at Mrs. J. N. Dorman. 6-7-1p Mrs. Lyle Fox of Deford visited days. ness. Misses Gtadys Hitehcoek, Morea Crosby & Son's for $5.00. HMf price Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Warn- Miss Lena Brown went to ~Detroit. License Number Lost. Mr. and Mrs. William Wil:sm~ Mr. Kamilton, Lena Brown and Kathryn because double the wear. er Kelley. Monday to visit her sister, Mrs. Alber~ Auto license No. 142020 lost be- and Mrs. Lafayette Sargeang a~:two McLarty and Cameron Wallace, Har- tween Cuss City and Deckerville. Alber~ Rohrbach v/ent to Bad Are Light housework wanted. Phone Goff. children, Orlean and Lero°y, of ~oyal Finder please leave same at ChronG Monday on business. He returned old Benketman and William Walters 178. 6-7-1p Miss Laura Gallagher will spend Oak and Mrs. Sargeant of Silvm~ood were entertaine'd by Miss Lulu Barnes ete office, t3-7- Thursday. the week-end at Lake Orion with were guests of Mr. and 5Its. ~Mason at the home of her parents, Mr. and All kinds of useful commencement Mrs. Janet Rampton of Utica visit- Detroit friends. Wilson on Sunday. ~Irs. John Barnes, in Gr~nt Sunday Wanted~Girls and Women. ed last Saturday with her brother, J. gifts at Cass City Drug Co. Miss Adelaide Wallace g'oe~ to The Cass City Band elected, the 'fol- evening. Steady work, $1.25 per day to be- B. Cootes. ginners, with advancement. Piece Boyne City today to work in the Ex2 lowing officers Wednesday evening for 1917 Ford Coupe For Sale. Dan Strifffer went ~o Detroit Tues- workers earn $2.00 to $3.50 per day, press office there. the ensuing six months: President, Equipped with four new tires according to ability. Many of our ex- day afternoon to Harper kospital for OrigPn of. Dover's Powder. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gallagher vis- John West; vice-pl'esident, Howard "Dover's powder," an old-fashion~l (vacuum cup in front and Goodyear pm:ieneed machine operatOrs earn treatments. Lauderbach: see'y-treasurer, Clayton ited at the home of Ed. Gallaghe~r i9 remedy stiIt to be found at most drug- non-skid in rear). Engine good as enough in one day to pay board and Schenek; instructor, Frank Lenznet'. new. Pre~ent price of this style car Miss Bell McGinn visited her par- Gagetown on Sunday. gists', is named after Captain Dover, a room for one week. Board and room is $625.00. Will sell car and equip- with all modern conveniences, includ- ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. 51cGinn, of Mr. and "Mrs. Lester Bailey, Mrs. Miss Johanna Hummel is spending worthy of the seventeenth century. Gagetown Sunday. the week With friends in Snorer. Miss ment for $450.00. Dr. 1. D. McCoy. ing use of laundry, at the Company's A. J. WalIaee and Mrs. G. A. Tindale Captain Dover's other claim to fame 5-24- boarding house for $3.00 per week. Mr. and Mrs. I. B. J~uten and Dr. were in Care Friday. Hummel will finish her work as is that he rescued Alexander Sell:irk. trimmer in Mrs. M. J. McGillvray's Come at once, or for particulars write and Mrs. I. D. McCoy were callers in Mr. and Mrs. Peter Rushlo and the castaway Of the island of Juan Western Knitting Mills, Rochester, millinery store on Saturday and will Black or white tennis oxfords at Vassar last Thursday. Ferna:uh,z. and thus was instrumental Crosby & Son's for the w1~.ole family. Michigan. 6-7-13 family of Elmwood visited Sunday at then return to her home in Saginaw. Word has been received that Frank the home of Clem Tyo. in giving "Robinson Crusoe" t:) the Mrs. Salerno Bien and son, Win. Beard of Review Notice. Herr is seriously ill in the hospital at Mr. and Mrs. C. Phelps of Detroit world. Captaiu Dover practiced :nedi- For Sale. Camp McArthur. Texas. Bien, of Kinsman, Ohio, arrived here cine in an in{lepon,qent w::y--('i:ieffy Choice seed beans. Phone Frank Notice is hereby given to all thxpay- visited at. the Geitgey home from Saturday to visit with relatives. Mr. ors thab the Board of" Review of the Mr. and Mrs. FraM~ Ward and son, on his mvn men :tnq in tbis w:ty came Hotter. 5-24-tf Wednesday until Friday. Bien, who has been superintendent of Township of Elkland will meet at the Loral, and Mr. and Mrs. Edo Dewey to concoct the powder which boars his Miss Kath@rine Miller visited her schools at Kinsman the past year, has For Sale. Town Hall, Cass City, on Tuesday, Sunday at Bay no.me, spent Port. sister, Besse, and brother, William, in been re-engaged for that position. Af- One Durham cow and calf two wks. June 4, and again on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 11 and 12, to review Mr. and Mrs. John Jaus and ~r. Dehoit on Decoration Day. ter leaving" Kinsman, they both visited old. Phone 148 E. A, F. Jones. 6-7- and Mrs. John Nuntz, and son, Ches- the assessment roll of said township Mr the 3Irs. Win. Cliff and Richard Mrs. Bien's sons, Paul at Carnp Cus- Clever Youngster. for the year 1918. The board wilt be ter, spent Saturday in Caro, Wanted--t5 or 20 boys to work in Ctiff of Owendale visited Mr. and Mrs. ter and Stanley at Lansing. A little fellow whose father is con- sugar beets; good wages. Apply to in session from 9 o'clock a. m. until Mrs. A. "I% Hi£~'ins, Miss ions CaI- Charles Kosanke on Sunday. Wednesday was registration day for nected with a railroad has picked up Levi BardwelL 5-31-2p 5 o'clock p. m. of each day. Atl per- kins and Miss JewN Sparlin~ were at Mr. and Mrs. F. Walsh, Mr. and young men who had reached the age many railrohd phrases° One day while ~sons deeming themselves aggrieved by Caseviile on Decoration Day. Mrs. George Finkte and Miss Sophia of 21 years since June 5, 1917. Among" Dwelling house, deep lot with tots said assessment may be heard at dais waiting with his n:other in a large sta- meeting. Mrs. Eugene Derragon of Pontiac Finkle motored to Caseville Sunday. those from this community who were the youngsi:er rode about on his i of fruit, barn and garage for sale. tion $800 cash wi]~ gwing the deal. Bal- J. A. CALDWELL, Supervisor. visited her sister, Miss Elsie Sadler, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smith returned enrolled at Care are Leo Quinn,; Clair little cart. Suddenly a man blocked Dated this 1st day of June, 1918. from Saturday until Monday. Profit, Wm. Donnelly, Lester Patter- ance $100 a 5ear with ~ per cent in- to Saginaw Saturday after a two the little rider's w'~y. _The latter, lus- terest An excellent bargain for some Miss Ersel ~'Wallace returned home weeks' visit at the home of George son, Stanley Muntz, Nielo Hitehe0ek, tily shouting "low bridge,'.' passed safe- one who wishes rooming house. At Lost between Ford Garage, Case from Bad Axe on Monday where she Finkle. A. C. Farrell, Stanley Hall, ~Floyd ly between the man's legs. • present this prope~y provides nmne City, and James Maharg's farm 6½ Moore, Russell Gillies, Floyd Rushlo was visiting Miss Gala Folette. B. L. Middieton has rented the for owner and brings him 821.00 ten- miles north, on June 3, a rolling" ,ou, oe~ and jointer combined fd:" Oli- Harry Crandeil motored to Detroit Warner Kelley house on Houghton and Joseph Spencer. Michigan has been allotted 1,122,000 lone year. Dr. I. D. McCoy. 5-24- ver Chilled gang plow. Finder please Sunday. From there he went to Ohio street. He will take possession with- Immense Wealth From Iron Ores. leave same at Ford Garage. 5-%1 by train, returning Tuesday evening. in a month. ons of anthracite coal for domestic The foundation of the wealth of the use by the national fuel administrator, Biscayan provinces of lies in For quick sate cheap--40 acres, John Dickinson has sold his resi- Miss Beatrice Koepfgen, who has Nurse's shoes at Crosby & Son's for W. K. Prudden, federaf fuel a.dn~i~is- the large deposits of high-grade iron house; stable, flowing we!t. W. H. dence property on Woodland Ave. to been attending Alma College, returned .- Anderson. 3-29-tf $2.00, plain toe or tip. trator for Michioan,~ was advisect~ Fri- Ephraim Reader of Grant township. home last Thursday to spend the sum- ores for which the section is famous. day morning. This is about half ~ of Mrs. Van Horn ~s recovering from mer vacation. These deposits have been immensely ~" the amount needed, the state admin- profitable, with the result that , serious injuries received in a fall Mrs. Fern Page, who has been the istration declares. The cut, however, which is the center of the industry, is while engaged hanging wail paper, guest of her sister, Mrs. A. E. Good- in is less than any other state in the Cen- reputed to be the wealthiest city of its Mr. and Mrs. C. W. HeminwaF of all, returned to her home in Kalama- tral west, according to Mr. Prudde n. size in Europe. E Detroit were guests at the home of G. zoo Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Caldwell re- L. Moore from T!-ursday until~ Men- 1 M. F. Rittenhouse was the chum- Commencement Gifts turned Friday from a trip t6 .and day. tpi0n fisherman at Caseville on Sun- BaY. City. Mr. Caldwell atfiendedthe Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holler and son, ,day, bringing, enough fish home to session of the Michigan ggand ]pdge, • CHRONICLE LINERS Graduation time' is with us once more. No doubt Clifton, Miss IsabeJl~MaeIntvre and t treat many of his friends. F. & A. M.,' at Grand Rapids '~ last you are puzzled to know what to give and We admit that in Alfred Farrell mot~red to B~ay City 1 Mr. and~Mrs. E. Eyler of New York week. In the election of grand lodge L ' Rates--Liner ads 5' cents per most cases it is hard to decide on the proper gift. How- Sunday. have recently moved here Mr. Eyler 'Officers, Clark W. McKenzie of Kala- line, each insertion. No ad ac- ever your troubles are short lived if you but come here and i Mr. and Mrs. R.G. Ottoway of ~s a bacteriologist at the Hires Con- mazoo, formerly of Cass City, was cepted for less than 20c for first Gagetown and Misses Lillian and Di- !doused Milk Company's plant. elected to the position of senior grand insertion; if less than four lines, allow us to make suggestions. Look at the list of useful antha Rogers motored to Rose Island Miss Frances MeGillvray went to deacon and Rev. Wm.,H. Gallagher of subsequent insertions, without gifts. Sunday. ~ Gagetowm Tuesday. While there she Care, grand chaplain. change, may be made at the rate Miss Tillie Willerton of Colorado is attended the commencement exercises, The rostrum of the Presbyterian of 5 cents a line. visiting" laer sister, ])firs. Isaac W,alk- which were held on Wednesday eve- ehur.eh presented a pretty woodland For Him For Her :The Red Cross lunch will be given U or. She will be here about two ning. scene with a c/~nopy of greenlboughs at Mrs. M. g. McGillvray's millinery mont%s. and bridal wreatb, on Tuesday eve- Miss Seva Withey, who has been store on Saturday, June 8. Mrs. A. J. Safety Manicure Sets Agnes Comment, Mabel Luther, employed in Detroit, came home Tues- ning when the school children of the Knapp, Mrs. F. A, Bliss, Mrs. F. J. Ward Benkelman and Russell Gillies day and expects to spend the summer first grade presented an entertain- Nash, sr.; and Mrs. HartselI wilI Fountain Pens Ivory Goods ~' motored to Gagetown and Unionville here wisiting her parents, Mr. and ment under the 'leadership of ~their serve. Satin*day. Mrs. Jesse Withey. teacher, Mrs. Nell H. Beyette. Ev- ery number in itself was a complete Man wanted to work on dredge. En- Leather Purses Box Candy .... Ge0rge Burr and children,, Mary, Ni- Mmand Mrs. A. Doerr, MissEliza- :$ success and much enjoyed bythe large quire of Fred Ball, 5 miles south of l'0.~and Marshall, were :guests of Mr.~ beth Doerr and Miss Frances MeGill- audience present. The entire program Cass City. Cameras ..... and Mrs. William Lowney ofHay vray motored to Detroit Saturday Military Sets reflected much credit on the ability of night to visit Mr. and Mrs. Herman For Sale--Extra good driver, sound • Creek on Sunday, Mrs. Beyette as an instructor. Fountain Pens and 5:irs. Andrew Wooley, ~:rs. Doerr. They returned Monday. and fat, 8 yrs. old, weight about 1,000. Traveling Cases : u~,. Miss Gladys Hitehcock and hel" Brooks and.daughter, Thelma, Mrs. E. M. Allen and ehildren~ Ar- Chas. McCaslin. 5-24-2p friend, . Miss Morea Hamilton, came Sunday at the home of lington and Elizabeth, leave today for Cameras Toilet Waters their home in Lake City, after a visit from Detroit last Wednesday to spend Books make fine graduation gifts. m of Deford, a few days with the former's parents, Get them at Cass City Drug Co. and Mrs, P.A. Donaldson .mo- of two weks at the home of her par- Brushes Kodak Albums ents, Mr. and Mrs. Elias McKim. Mr. and Ms. G. L. Hiteheock. On Fri- te Care Sunday, l~r. and Mrs. day evening Miss Hiteheock enter- Parties still having Open accounts Mrs. P. A. Donaldson, Mrs. John George Donaldson returned oath them. tained a Company of young people a t or past due papers kindly settle with Shaving Sets Perfumes They witl reside here. McLean, Mrs. Lewis Brooks, Mrs. dinner in honor of Miss Hamilton. Cass City Bank. A: A. Hitchcock. 5- Elder and Mrs,~Ai ~B~ Monison and Henry Brandon and Mrs. Agnes Par- Covers we/;e laid for ~he following" 31-2 These are only a few of the many articles. Come in sell motored to Gagetown Thursday daughter, Pearl; le~t Tuesday to at- guests: Wilbert Bruce, Wm. Walters Hes~ Poult~w Panacea keeps young and we'll suggest more. Books make excellent gifts for tend the Seventh Day Adventist camp evening to attend the Nazarene Harold Benketman, Frank Champion, church. (;hicks healthy. Get it at Cass City either the boy or sweet girl graduate. We are well stocked • meeting at Holly, Michigan. Benj. Benkelman and Niclo Hitchcock Drug Co. Mrs. ChristOpher McRae of New The anniversary services of Cass and the Misses Anna Pettit, Lulu on both fiction and classics, Prices are low. Greenleaf in a fall Monday struck her City Lodge, I. O. O. F., will be held in Barnes and Isabell MacIntyre. Splendid line of stationery at right arm and hand on a broken creek, the Presbyterian church next Sunday "Use ali the fresh perishable food Wood's D~g Store...... She was injured so badly that several morning, June 9, at 10:30. Members products." This is the appeal Food stitches were necessary to close the of the lodge will meet at the lodge Administrator George A. Prhseott " Men% Elk skin outing s~oes at Crosby & Son's for $o.00. Before the W. SiS. Cass City, Drug room at 10:00 a.m. Imi~kes to the housewives.0f Michigan. wounds. war .price. . . ~ -: Mr. and Mrs. David Ty0, jr, and "Michigan hasbeen blessed With a : Mr. and Mrs, G. A. Stevenson and .... Clair and Miss ~Fern Stevensofi of three children motored to Cass-City most remarkable planting and grow- Ge~ a hammock for the Warm weath, Company Vassar and Miss Alerts Trace of Bay where they were guests at the home !ing spring and every section is going er now. All prices at Cass City Drug .... • : City visited Sunday at the home of of Mr. Tyo's parents, Mr. and Mrs. to have an abundance of eariy g'arden CO...... Dr. I. D. McCoy. David Tyo, sr., from Thursday to truck" said Mr. Prescott, "which fact Sunday, returning" to their home in If it is not an Eastman it is not a Mrs. Archie McGregor New seems almost providential, as this ex- of Detroit on the last named day. tra large supply will liberate the more "Kodak." Get the Eastman kodaks :" Greenleaf, Mrs. Roy Powell of At- @ " . , • ~,÷ Mrs. Floyd Mellon and Mr. and concentrated and staple foods for our and cameras at Wood's Drug Store. water, Mrs. Annie Walker and C;:fas. Walker visited at the home of Mr. amd Mrs. Bert H. Ward of Pontiac spent soldiers and our allies. The usual wastage of a large volume of these Cass City Drug ~o. for croquet sets Mrs. James Watson on, Decoration Decoration Day at the home of Mrs. products should be overcome in a and hammocks. Day. Mellon's sister, Mrs. John MaeKichan. Mrs. Margaret Campbell returned to critical crisis like the present. If " Wall Pape d " Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lamb, Anna Pe~- Desirable rooms to rent, also good Pontiac with the party and is a guest every householder will can a few house and three acres of land withor- tit and W. A. Bruce motored to Deck- at the home of her daughter, Mrs. quarts of this immediate supply of chard. J. C. Corkins. 6-7-- orville Sunday. 5[iss Mary Randall, fresh vegetables the suppl'y can be •I:* ¢. Mrs. Lamb's sister, returned with Mellon. "" Alabastine ,." conserved and the prospects for waste Paper Baler For Sale. ¢* O them and is visiting at the Lamb G. W. Peters of Chicago, F. A. Page O -I* of Lake Odessa and A. Scott of New almost entirely eliminated." All steel paper baler, small size, for O . home. sale. Practically good as new. En- ~** 4* York visited the t/ires Condensed Warner Kelley left Friday for his The Home Guards attended the quire at Chronicle office.--Adv. o are indispensible in Housecleaning time. We have a nice * Milk company plafit on Decoration new position in Detroit as city carrier o @ Evangelical church in a bod~g Sunday. Day. Mr. Scott remained here for at the North End postoffice. Mr. Kel- Take your films to Wood for print- 00 variety of Independent papers for wall or ceiling, and all "*~.:. morning when Rev. S. Cormany pre- ley has been one of the rural carriers two days. ing and developing. sented his ideas regarding various at Cuss City for thirteen years, start- :~: shades in Alabastine, the best water color wall coating .:. Bey. J. W. Hamblin, J. L. Cathcart, •I. 4, present day problems. Patriotic se- ing" when the fourth and fifth routes Alfred E. Goodall and James J. Spence Don't hoard money in an old tea p?~. • made, easy to put on, it's rich, soft and velvety tints make * lections were rendered by both the were,instituted. A party was given o "1" band and the choir. composed a party that drove to Flint Throw the tea pot in the ally and o your home attractive and sets off pictures and furnishings * on Tuesday ko attend a meeting of in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Kelley at the invest in one or more of Crosby & A dinner was held at the S. Blades the Flint Presbytery. At this n:eet- home of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Landon, Son's all wool $15.00 suits. Liberty farm Sunday in honorof D. H.MeCrea o to the best advantage. * ing the pastm:al relationship of Mr. on Friday evening. Mr. Kelley, being" bonds as good as . of Detroit, who expects to enter into Hamblin was dissolved and he was called unexpectedly to'his new pota- ~1 Bring the measure of your rooms and let us figure $ the service of Uncle Sam, but has dismissed go become a member of tion, was unable to be present. The For Sale. been delayed on account of an injury party was given by the mail carriers Threshing outfit in good condition, . with you. - *¢, f Santa Fe Presbytery. to his hand. Tables were spread on and postal clerks of Cass City, Mrs. W. one Osborn side delivery rake, one 3- Mr. and Mrs, Daschke of Detroit the lawn. The guests were: Mr. and F. Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hall, inch tire wagon, one hay and stock Mrs. John MeDurmon and ehitdren of motored to Cass City Saturday to vis- rack. Will sell on easy payments. Ap- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sche!l, F.J. ply to John A. Seeger, Cass City, R 1. ++ w.s,s. .:+:+ Care, Mr. and Mrs. James Ligingston it the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nash,jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. M.:Dodge, Fred Hoagland. They returned home 6-7- • ® ® ® ~:* and Henry McDurmon of Colwoocl, Mr. and the Misses Iva Kolb and Florence i L I Wood & Co• :!: Sunday accompanied by Mrs. Hoag- and Mrs. Win. Turner of Ellington Bigelow being" present. A delicious For Sale: ¢+ and daughter, Emma, of Detroit, Mr. land. On Monday, Mrs. Hoagland vis- supper and a good time was enjoyed Quantity of fence wire and gates at ited with her brother, Joseph Good. • and Mrs. Ray Hulburt and Mrs. Henry by all. cost. ~J. S. Parrott. 6-7-1p Blades. win, in Pontiac. CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICNIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGE FIVE. I " I ~ I ~ '111 • I I I' I I t CASS CITY MARKETS. ISCHOOLS COIIUlI wm THE WhR Cass City, Mich,, June +6, 1918~ Buying Price-, t Wheat 2.00 Oats ...... 67 The enemy is out-eating us in Iota- i Beans, per cwt ...... 8.50 toes--out-potatoing us. Here are the Rye, bu ...... '.. 1.65 :SUPT, OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION figures--per capita weekly consump- SANDUSKY--Jno. H. Miller, a well- Barley, cwt ...... 2.50 Peas, cwt ...... 5.00 KEELER NAMES DETROIT MAN known and highly respected farmer of tion. United States, 2.3 quarts, Aus- Buckwheat, cwt ...... 3.59 TO HEAD MICHIGAN OR- tria-Hungary, 8 quarts, Germany, 16 Watertown township, was suddenly Eggs, per doz ...... 29 killed on his farm, 3 miles south and GAN IZATION. quarts. Butter, per lb ...... 35 la~ miles west of this city, late Thurs- Fat cows, live wt., per lb.,,... 7 9 We can beat them at their own food day afternoon, when he was thrown Steers, live wt., per~]b ...... 9 12 Strenuous .Efforts Needed to Get Mich- --which realIw ~sn't theirs; it's a from his wagon headforemost, break- Fat sheep, live wt., per lb..... 7 8 native American crop. We must eat ing his neck. Death was instantaneous. Lambs, live wt., per lb, ...... 11 12 igan Out of Stamp Slump, Ho~s, live uer lb ...... :14 15 Mr. Millcr war drzv:ia~ m=nurc from wt. ~tate D,:essed h o~r~: ...... (;lose to the ~otiom inach u£ our record c~op of t~s[ ~ear 19 i;he barn to his iields when a coi6 in Dressed bee;" ...... 15 16 in Sales. witt be wasted. Potatoes are plentiful the barnyard ran up behind the team, Calves ...... 19 12 and getting cheaper. Eat them instead startling them. When the team Hens ...... 20 Lansing, June 1. Hen, Fred L. Kee- of bread. Fight the enemy with pota- started up he was violently thrown Broilers 30 ler, superintendent of public instruc- toes. from the wagon, striking on his head. Ducks .20 22 tion, has been commissioned by the The wagon ran over his body break: Geese ' 10 ing his ribs and dislocating his hip Turkeys ...... 20 22 War Savings Board of the United have purchased $1,200 worth of Liberty and otherwise injuring him internal- Hides, green ...... 12 States treasury to institute a war sav- Bonds/ Counting both in our per ly. When found by his ~amfly" his neckr ~ing stamp ¢ampaign among the mhool capita is about $12. Sales will steadi- children of Michigan. The program wffs broken. Republican. To buy or sell, use Chronicle liners. ly rise." as outlined by the school leaders has This letter contrasts with several SANDUSKY The following seven- already produced excellent results which seem rather, proud of sales teen were made citizens in Judge ~dverLise it in the Chronicle. but the vacation period, now at hand, which are $2.50 per capita. Beach's court Monday., There were means extra effor~ if Michigan is to Reports briefly stated from among eighteen applications, but one appli- come anywhere near making its quota the first reports received at the state was unable to have his witnesses of $70,000,000 by January next. office follow, showing patriotic ac- present: Chris. Brinker, John Kipp, "The state has been a leader in all tivities: :- Jacob Richter, James Hoagg~ Frank Pastime work, official and charitable, withthe Charlevoix high school, 100 per cent, Smalldon, Arthur P. Wedge, Archfe exception of buying the little war grades' fast approaching; Calumet, Bays, James Pritchard, jr., VVflt • stamp," said Mr. Keeler. Michigan's total sales $10,827.54, per capita $2.07; Wedge, Jasper Eagle, Will Merchant, feeble response to this activity has Boyne City, teacher,~ are telling pupils Alfred Bays, Jordan Wedge, James Saturday ibeen such that the school officials about stamps; Republic township, Scarborough, Thomas Isles, James were appealed to organize a systema- Marquette county, sales average $2; Burns, James Hamilton. tic drive among the schools. Ethel Barryrnore public schools of h'onwood, total sales CARO•W. J. Spears of Vassar, DETROIT MAN HEADS DRIVE, $5,789.58, one club having 100 per cent county food administrator, was in Ca- ---- in---- "From National Geographic Magazine, mission to use granted the IJnite4 States re Friday on official business and Mr. Keeler named Edward L. Miller sales; Iron Mountain public schools, Foe4 Administration for Niichigan by ]Na- ~)f Detroit, president of the Michigan "have been putting great stress on Washington, D. C, -- copyright 1918 -- tional Geographic Society. Washington, called on Joseph Pettiprin on the Col- State Federation of Teachers' clubs Junior Red Cross work and have paid Photograph by H. i~ Blanchard. Per- D. C." umbi~-Almer town line, to investigate to organize the drive and he has money enough for us to be entitled to a rumor he had 1,800 bushels of wheat "The Lifted Veil" in his granary. The rumor, as usual, been meeting with splendid success, i00 per cent membership"; Western 15c and 20c through the personal co-operation of State Normal, War and Thrift Stamps, IItlEIIfl itl t I=iY £ilLL ItLY proved an exaggeration. There were ~ractically the entire school organi- $839.55 ; Liberty Bonds, $15,600 ; about 300 bushels which Mr. Pettiprin zation of the state. The sales of French Orphans' Fund, $139.36; Y. M. tt;th II PtYIItY$ IElltl liNE readily agreed to market, reserving / stamps by school children have . ent C. A. fund $260; flag pole, $202.41; 50 bushels for seed. ~p the Michigan average but even this Montgomer~y high school, "We are al- ELKTON A rural lady was pricing The call for wheat grows more and FARMERS WHO MARKET WHEAT ,campaign has not, as yet, put the most 100 per cent. The contagion is some dishes in an Elkton store, and more urgent and Americans now rea- NOW ARE HELPING NA- ~state where'it belongs in this war ac- spreading through the grades and when she found the price had ad- Wednesday lize that wheat is as much a part of the ,tivityo The main feature of the cam- many younger children are buying TIONAL DEFENSE. vanced wanted to know if dishes were real fighting program of the country as paign are outlined in ~he first three Thrift Stamps°" being" used to shoot Germans. "No, June 12 " ships and guns. It has been said that I~aragraphs of the official circular is- neither are eggs," was the reply. NORTH COUNTRY STEPPING brains will win the war. Thinking "Humanity and Patriotism Combine in sued by Mr. Keeler and are ~,s teL ALONG ahead on the wheat question has led Making This Appeal," Says MARLETTE--James B. Cawood of tows: many citizens to demand that wheat Prescott. Marlette is the seventh in the family She Ruled A King! "Uncle Sam must have raised on In McMillan township, Lure county, be taken over by the Government and of eight to secure a teacher's eerti~- January 1, 1919, at least two billions the drive has been launched with a Daughter of the common people, held in hand to meet any shortage care and commence the work of teach- ;of dollars by the sale of War Savings school demonstration and addresses "The Allies are still hungry and if that may arise from submarine sink- ing" the young ideas how to shoot. An- Madame du Barry rose to be .Certificates. 5lichigan's share is by outsMe speakers. The English de yon ca~ .~pare a little more flour for ings. That would be Germany's meth- other one of the family is being LaughL $70,000,000. Since December 1, 1917, partment at Montrose is drilling Four God's sake send it," was the plea made Favorite of-Louis XV, and held Od, the brains of the rulers in that case how to shoot at Camp Custer. Michigan has taken $1,800,000. Among Minute speakers. recently by a British officer to an Am- her hand above the destinies of would win; but America is depending BAD AXE--Some of the younger lhe states Michigan stands today in William Balte, writing from Hough- erican audience. on a democracy to win--the brains of set have been having whooping" cough France. forty-seventh place. Uncle Sam is ton, says: And who, having heard it, having all her people. Your brains must wi~. of late. One of them is Septimus Ir- ~larmed at these facts. He now re- "You may rest assured the people realized the necessity for the cry from Thousands of men and women have win, who recently ~urned his 84th WILLIAM FOX ,quests the schools of the state to save in the schools in Houghton and Ke- the brave nations of Europe, can help given up the weekly allowance of a birthday anniversary. He is such a :the day for Michigan. weenaw counties are working hard to saving wheat presents pound and a half of flour, and are trav- "kid" that this child's disease just "We are requested, first, to con. do all they can to win the war." There are two definite appeals to us elling a wheatless road to victory° couldn't miss him. Tribune. tinue and intensify the sale of War At Prattville plans are being made voiced there. Those housekeepers who make good ,stamps to children, and, second, to to organize in the fall as soon as The one is to patriotism and to com- HARBOR BEACH The Board .of " Theda Bara use of this allowance in loaf bread ~arry it through them into every nook schools open. "Every school in the mon sense. The Allies' cause is our Commerce of Harbor Beach has deter- and biscuit hesitate to turn even a ~und cranny of the state. There is n.~ city has been organized," is the mes- cause; our men are fighting shoulder mined to send one of the local papers dust of wheat flour into pie or short- • . -in ---- limit to the field of our activity. Sub- sage from Muskegon Heights. In to shoulder with their men. If fffod to all soldiers, who before the war, re- cake and such extras. To these the ~criptions of all sizes from 25 cents. Clare sales have netted about $1,000 fails the fighters must fail; the war ceived his mail from the Harbor Beach recipes for shorgcake @orked outl in io 1,000 dollars are wanted. according to the last report. must be lost. None of us are too ig- postoffice. the Experiment Kitchen o~ the Food "This task, however, in comparison In Washtenaw county sales were norant to know what a Germany vic- CARe Within the past few weeks DU BARRY Administration will be most accepts- with the Liberty Loan work is sim- stimulated to $5,000 by the offer of tory would mean, especially to the we- 14 men who had been sent to Camp ble. ple. It does not involve at all the books for the libraries for the best rec- men and children ,of the land. So, Custer from Tuscola county have been The story of the greatest adven- handling of money. Uncle Sam has ords made in 129 schools. Twenty- BARLEY SHORTCAKE our love of country, our love of our rejected and returned home. These turess in the history of France. provided PAY NO MONEY UNTIL three volumes were awarded for per 1 cup liquid homes; our every instinct ~of self-pres- are all for physical disabilities, most 4 to 6 tablespoons fat ervation must. make us do each thing, STAMPS ARE DELIVERED franked capita sales and 20 for the largest 1 tablespoon sugar of which were valvular heart trouble, Scenario by Adrian Johnson postcards. These are ordered con- aggregates. 1 teaspoon salt whether great or small, towards vic- but some were for minor disabilities iracts for stamps. They will be de. 6 teaspoons baking powder tory. Staged by J. Gordon Edwards 4 cups barley which may be removed by medical livered in ample quantities to each "CHARLOTTE SHOWS A:SPIRtT. The other appeal is that of human- treatment or surgical operation. •Af- CORN FLOUR SHORTCAKE ;'~' Standard pictures. ,superintendent, who will in turn dis- In Sebewaing both public and pa- ity. Who can refuse to deny himself ter recovery is complete they will be tribute them among the pupils, • who 1 cup liquid rochial schools are devoting one day 6 to ~ tablespoons fat because of his greediness, his love of called for training. They are: Glen 15c and 25c "will return them to the principals a week to sales of Thrift and War 1 tablespoon sugar his own food habits, when the thought Burse, Bernard Notorangelo, George ~fter they have been filled out by Stamps. In C~arlotte, where sales I te~.spoon salt comes of the Allies suffering? Wood, Merritt Howley, Walter L. Bar- ~ubscrlbers. The principal will then 6 teaspoons baking powder Can any one with either sense or des, Elroy C. Faust, Alvin B. Green- average about $2.50 per pupil, sales 2 2-3 cups corn flour make a record of the amount sold by were nearly $500 one week. sensibility keep on eating wheat pro- field, Leo J. Kehoe, Lee D. Belles, RiCE FLOUR SHORTCAKE his school upon a form provided for Pupils at the Trufant schools bought ducts in the present need? Does it Leonard J. He;hie;n, Harry Arm- that purpose and will put the post- Follow directions for corn flour, using $50 bond, which at maturity is to be not seem a pe.tty disgusting weakness strong, Rollin G. Streeter, Walter cards into the nearest mailbox. The 2 1-4 cups rice flour instead of corn invested in new books for the school to insist upon having food requiring Imerson, David H. Sole. letter carrier will do the rest." flour. library. War Stamps are being boosted BARLEY-CORN SHORTC.~KE white flour? VASSAR George Sopfetare, 23, A FEW OF THE REPORTS. ~nd purchased by the "Loyal Reserve" I cup liquid Let that cry sound in your ears: who deserted from Camp Custer in Per capita sales of $6.50 are reported of Trufant. On two days a week at 6 tablespoons fat "If you can spare a little more flour, January, was arrested on the Spauld- 1 tablespoon sugar for God's sake send it!" ing farm, three miles south of town, ~y Litchfield public schools in a letter Battle Creek the Junior Council of 1 1-3 cups corn flour that is a bit apoligetic. "One reason National Defense members acted as ! teaspoon salt - _ _ - by Deputy Sheriff Ed. Humes. He was our sales are not higher," says the salesmen for stamps visiting the 40 6 teaspoons baking powder taken to Care by Sheriff Brainerd and superintendent there, "is that our folks rooms in the high school building. 2 cups barley flour lodged in the county jail there. Sopfe- BARLEY-OATS SHORTCAKE if You THESE YowEat tare, who was at Custer for six :Follow directions for Barley-Corn Flour, CONTAIN months, said he deserted because he using 1 1-2 cups rolled oats ground in Eat Wheat food shopper instead of the corn flour. WHEAT did not like it there. His brother, who CORN-OATS SHORTCAKE deserted at the same time, was arrest- 1 cup liquid White Wheat Bread, ed a month ago in Detroit. WHEAT 4 tablespoons fat made from flour refined from the 1 tablespoon sugar MARRIAGE LICENSES. A Kernel of wheat has three parts: ...... 1 1-2 cups ground rolled oats starchy white center of the wheat kernel. 2 i. THE OUTER COVERING, or bran, made up of several!ayers, •i. teaspoon salt 6 teaspoons baking ~ powder Ors Franklin Coanes, 18, .Carp; Comb|natlon from which is obtained the brain, shorts and middlings. This is rich 1 1-3 cups corn flour Whole Wheat Bread, in important mineral salts, but is largely cellulose. Margaret Shauger, 18, Midland. The same weight of flour is used in made from flour made from the Storm and Scree~ Do~ Alfred A. Dickson, 27, Akron; Orva 2. THE GERM, the small part of the seed from which the new each recipe the measures differ ac- starchy center and some of the M. Loom;s, 24, same. ~lant develops. This is where the greatest .~mount of fat:is stored. cording to the kind of flour used. All outer brown layers (bran) of the Why You Should Use [asy 3. THE ENDOSPERM, the largest part ot the kernel. It contains measurements are level. Mix dry in- wheat kernel. Glenn W. Owen, 21, Carp; Hazel Jane Parcell, 21, same. "- nourishment used by the plant as it begins tode~el0p. This ismostly gredients, cut in the fat and add the Graham Bread and Graham Change Combination starch with protein and some mineral salts and a little fat. liquid. For individual servings, place Crackers, Lewis Riekwalt, 25, Care; Euniee Wentworth, 18, same. GRAHAM FLOUR is made :from the entire wheat kernel withot~t re- dough on slightly floured board, pat made from flour' containing all the moving any part. This process gives a dark flour. to 3-4 inch thickness and cut as for wheat kernel, including the bran. Lloyd Osborn, 27, Deford; Ruby Doors. WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR is made from the wheat kernel with only biscuit. Ira large shortcake is want- Mae Funk, 25, same. You get two doors in one, both a Macaroni, Spaghetti, Noodles, a small portion of the coarsest bran removed. This also gives a dark ed, place dough in well greased bis- Roy G. Dawson, 19, Cr0swell; Ber- beautiful storm and screen door for flour. cuit tin and pat to desired thickness. made from wheat flour. tha Wittsie, 16, Croswell. lless money than you will have to pay These shortcakes are light and ten- WHITE FLOUR is made of wheat by a process of grinding and sift- Wheat Breakfast Foods, Andrew Pearson, 26, Shover; Ida M. for separate doors of equal quality. der. An egg added to rice or corn ing, which removes the pater covering and germ. The resultant flour sold under various names, not ad- Vandeveer, 17, Snover. Once hung they are always ready. permits of longer storage than flours from which the outer covering flour makes a softer dough. The slight- and germ are not removed. ly acid taste of barley may be over- vertised as wheat products made Jos. Guigar, 28, Tyro; Mary Fro;- Only one door to fit. from the whole or part of the burger, 26, Tyro. The terms "Graham" and "Whole Wheat" flour are often used in- come by using 1-4 teaspoon of soda Only one set of hardware required. wheat kernel. Floyd Rushton, 21, Applegate; Es- terchangeably. Graham flour as now milled under the rules of the dissolved in one cup of liquid. The All you have to do to change from a ther Cudney, 17, Applegate. United States Food Administration contains 74 per cent white flour flavor of oat and corn is especially Victory Breads, Summer to Winter door is to remove and 26 per cent of bran, shorts and middlings. Gee. Kelly, 48, Marlette; Mary Wen- good. The shortcakes made from corn contain 75 per wheat. the screen section and replace with cent gert, 34. Decker. The white flour now on sale is what is known as "I00 per cent mill- or rice flour are very white and flakey storm section or visa versa. Leonard Graham, 25, Sandusky; ing of 74 per cent extraction," that is, 74 per cent bf the wheat kernel and similar in appearance to wheat Only a moment's work. is extracted and such extraction is then all used to make flour. This flour. if You TtESE Gertrude Burgess, 20, Sandusky. You Eat Tools not necessary. flour contains most of the endosperm and practically none of either Do not split these cakes as they CSHTAIH the outer covering or the germ. Thus 74 per cent of the wheat ker- Eat No climbing around with a step crumble easily. Pile strawberries or NoWheat No Wheat RED CROSS I~OTES. nel is made into a straight flour, which is the standard grade of the ladder. , Food Administration. other fruit on shortcake. Add whip- ped cream, if desired, and serve. Oatmeal, potatoes, riee,~barley, The matinee given by the Kelley No bother with lost screws or brok- Before the war, in some cases, white flour was made by a 70 per cent These shortcakes can be used instead and 100 per cent substitute bread. company for the benefit of the local en hinges. milling of a 70 per cent extraction, that is, 70 per cent of the wheat of pie crust in a great variety of des- Red Cross society netted the sum of No heavy door to handle or store kernel was extracted and was then milled so that only 70 per cent of !00 Per Cent Breads, $25.00. Mrs. Sam'1 Champion, chair- guch extraction was left for what is known as a "patent flour." A serts. away. Corn pone, muffins, biscuits, nit man, deshrves great credit for her "patent flour" represents the whitest portion of the endosperm milled able management in directing the af- AI,1 expense and trouble experienced TAKING IT FROM BABIES. kinds of bread made only from to an even antl extreme fineness. By that process only about 49 every Spring" and Fall taking down per cent of the wheat kernel -.'as made into the particular kind of corn, oats, barley and aI! the other fair. Every ounce of wheat products in ex- Mr. Middleten, manager of the Pas- Patent flour desired. The balance of the 70 per cent extraction of the wheat substitutes. and putting up screen and storm doors cess of six pounds per month, that you time theater, gave a benefit matinee Wheat kernel was used to.make lower grades of flour, the brans, shorts These are usually made with is entirely done away with if you put recently for the Red Cross society. and middlings. eat, Mr, American Citizen, is that baking powder or soda and sour on our EASY CHANGE Combination The amount raised was $9.00. Mr. The following preparations contain wheat: much 1iteralIy taken from the mouths milk instead of yeast and are Storm and Screen Door. of the starving women and children: Of Middleton has certainly shown his pa- Macaroni, Noodles, Spaghetti, and the many wheat breakfas~ foods sometimes known as "Quick triotism, this being the third benefit sold under various names. France. The armed Allies may go Breads". ]he has given for the Red Cross socie- without wheat, but these innocents Cass City Lumber & SAVE WHEAT EAT OTHER Eat No Wheat. ty. • , : EAT POTATOES will actually die Unless we give them of ours in generous proportion. Advertise it in the Chronicle, Coal Company CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGE SIX ? I ' I , ' ...... " ~, ,.l' ' 'II,I II i k ~1 ' -~-- '1"1 ' ' '11 I~1'[ . III1' ' /I i

thing, with every evidence ,of having utterly cast off the ethics and stand- ards of civilized races. The entire trousseau had been torn f;iThe , Lbnycs• <: ) .~ ns from the drawers and thrown partly Drought Is Only Thing Feared; Beans on the floor. Pictures, photographs, Can Be Gotten Rid of Before Frost. mirrors, everything was in pieces. The three of us who had entered the room Lansing--Crop reports, unofficial clenched our fists with impotent wrath. anes which come to Lansing by tet- We received orders to remain in ~er and by mouth, are so good that Suippes until further notice and the state officials are sitting with their next day witnessed the return of many finders crossed, hardly daring to hope fugitives. They came in great throngs l!tatio,al and Local ~hat the conditions which have already from the direction of Chalons-sm'- appeared will continue throughout the Marne. They found instead of the ~umnler peaceful homes they had left a wretch- .... Do=vn to cases. ~oth'n= bzt a Neat Business drought LS feared, it conditions continue here- dealer returned to his store, as we inafter for the rest of the summer as stood in front of his house. He broke have obtained during May, Michigan The meat business of the down when he viewed the remains of will have bumper crops. Even early his enterprise. Everything had been country is conducted by various taken away. We approached the man. ~rosts are not fared much, for with a agencies-- He was a JeW and spoke German. continuance of the present good weath- When he cahned down a little he told er nearly all the crops will have ma- ~ured long before the frostscome. Another instance requires me to run "Soldiers,~ his majesty the emperor, us that his store had contained mer- By small slaughter-houses somewhat ahead of the sequence of our supreme war lord, 'thanks the sol- chandise worth more than 8,000 francg. Even beans, always a dangerous crop, can be gotten rid of before the first eve~ats. As I talked to a comrade of diers of the Fourth army and sends to "Had the soldiers only taken what in villages-- my company the next day I askeff him them his full appreciation. You have they needed for themselves," he said, ~ouch of cold weather comes. Last for a pocketknife and in reaching into saved our beloved Germany from the ,I would be satisfied, for I did not ex- year lateness in the start of the sea- By local Abattoirs or small his pocket he pulled out three car- invasion of hostile hordes. We will not pect anything else. But I never would ~on put practically 75 per cent of the Packing Houses in towns-- ~ridges. I was surprised that he should :~est until the last enemy lies on the have believed of the Germans that bean crop so late in maturing that the carry cartridges in his trouser's pocket ground and before tl~e leaves fall from they would have destroyed everything." early frosts nipped them. both and asked him if he had no room in the trees we shall return home vic- Not even a cup and saucer were his belt. torious. The enemy is in full retreat left in this man's house. He had a NRSo STOKES GIVEN TEN YEARS "I have," he said, "but these three and the Almighty will bless our arms wife and five children, but had no idea Using only a part of the have a special mission. There are further." of what had become of them. And local live stock supply names of the intended victims on these After this talk we gave three cheers, there were many more like him. Found Guilty On All Three Counts bullets." something which had become routine The following night, remaining ia New Trial Overruled. and Some time later after we had be- for us. And then we resumed our Suippes, we were again obliged to camp march. We now had plenty of time in the open "because it swarmed with come good friends I asked him again Kansas City, Mo.--After conviction Furnishing only a part of about the three cartridges. He had and opportunity to discuss the grati- frank-tireurs." Such were our instruc- tude expressed by the supreme war of Rose Pastor Stokes, Judge A. S. the local demand for meat. only one left. I thought about it a Van Valkenburgh, in the United States great deal and in my mind went over lord. We could not make out just what ~istrict court here, overruled a motion the noncommissioned officers, who, be- fatherland we had to defend so far in got a new trial filed by Seymour Sled- These slaughtering and distributing fore war was declared had treated us France. One of the soldiers expressed man, her attorney, based on the con- like animals and whom we had hated the opinion that the Lord had blessed agencies fill a well defined but neces- tention that the court had failed to as only human fien(ls can be hated. oar arm,% to which another replied: sarily restricted pla~:e in the distribu~ aistinguish between motive and intent. Two of these had found their grave in "A religious man repealing such silly The court also overruled a motion for lion of the products of live stock. France. sentiments is guilty of sacrilege, if he speaks seriously." arrest of judgment. The murder of Frenchmen who had The case was based on a letter she But on~y packer~ like Swift & surrendered continued as tozlg as an Everywhere, on the march to Suip- wrote to the Kansas City Star, in enemy was alive. Then we received pes, in the fields and in the ditches, Company, organized on a national which she declared she had asserted: orders to determine if the enemies lay dead soldiers, most of them with scaIe, are able to undertake the ser- "No government which is for the lying on the ~round were all dead and hideous-looking open wounds. Thou- profliteers can be ~or the people, and vice that is more vitally important, unable to fight. If anyone was found sands of Imge files swarmed on the [ am for the people." simulating death it was ordered that corpses, partly decomposed, and giv- involving The Star, which had used conserva- he be killed. But the soldiers I~ad lost ing off a fearful stench. Among these tive headlines on the interview she some of the fever which had seized corpses, unsheltered under a blazing had given eritieising the government An Obligation to the Producer them during the battle qnd refused to sun, were encamped wretched fugi- she afterward said she meant the obey this order. How they felt about tives, because they were forbidden the To purchase for spot cash all the administration, instead of the govern- it was illustrated by the remark of a use of the roads while the armies need- live stock the producer may send ment supposed to be satisfactory to member of my company: ed them, which was practically all the Mrs. Stokes; for she had no further to market for slaughter. '%Ve b~d hotter h)ok nnc~ more and time. complaint o~ lack of puDlicity. see if the two officers are really dead In the evening, after a 10ng march, At that point the government step- and if not they ought to be killed with- we rehched the town of Suippes. Here An Obligation to the Consumer ped in. , out mercy for a command is a com- our captain told us we would find nu- The result was her indictment un- To make available to every con- mand." merous frank-tireurs. We were or- dered to bivouac, instead of being as- der the. espionage act. sumer, everywhere, in season and We now advanced quickly but o~r Mrs. Stokes was given l0 years on part in the battle was over as the en- signed quarters, and all going into the out, the full supply and variety of each of three counts, the terms to run tire French line had retired to make village were obliged to take guns and meat products, of the highest concurrently and the defendant not a fresh stand, two kilometers west of. cartridges wigh them. After a brief being subjected to a fine. standard that the market affords. Sommepy. The city was mostly in rest we entered the village in search of flames. The enemy artillery bombard- food. Dead civilians lay in the middle of the streets. They were citizens of ed the town without intermission and Devastated Everything. BOILER BURSTS; MANY' KILLED Year Book-of interesting and shells burst all around. the village. We could not learn the reason for their having been shot. The instructive facts sent on request. Several hundred prisoners were eor- tions. In reality nothing was seen of Reports Indicate That !0 Workmen only ~nswer to our questions was a Address Swift & Company, ralled in the market place. Several frank-tlreurs, but by this method the Were Killed ~y the H__xp]osion, shrug of the shoulder. Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois French shells stru(k the prisoners but enmity toward the people living in the The village itself had not suffered the5, were obliged to remain where towns along our line of march was Sault Ste. Maf, ie, Mieh.--~Vith re- to any noticeable degree as far as they were. An officer of my company, maintained. The Germans practiced ports indicating as many as 10 work- destruction of buildings was concerned, Lieut. A. g. Neesen, remarked that no the theory that the soldiers fight bet- men may have been killed in a boiler but never in the course of the war had Swift & Company, U. S. A, harm was done as the prisoners knew ter and are more amenable to dis- explosion at the plant of the Bartlett I seen a more complete job Of plunder- at least how their own ammunition cipline when filled with hatred of their Lumber company, at Shelldrake, in an ing than had been done in Suippes. enemies. ta~ed. isolated section of Chippewa county, That we had to live and eat is true, Toward one o'clock the battle south The next day we were obliged to Sunday morning, the sheriff is prepar- and as the inhabitants and merchants of Sommepy reached its climax. When march to Chalons-sur-Marne. This ing an expedition to that point to ca- had flown there was no opportunity to ~he Germans advanced to make storm- was one of the hardest days we ever pay for our necessities. Tlmrefore we certain the extent of the damage and ing Sttacks on all points the French had. From the very begimfing, as we bring relief to the injured. Meager simply entered a store, put on stock- began our journey, the sun blaze[l gaYe up their positions and retired in information concerning the mishap, ings, Iaun(lry, and left the old things, ] down upon us. It is about 35 kilome- the direction of Suippes. Whether our coming by indirect route, variously then went to another place, rook what- ters from Suippes to Chalons-sur- company was no longer considered fit places the death list at from two to ever food looked good to us, and then Marne. This distance would not have to fight or whether we were not needed ten. proceeded to a wine cellar, there to been so bad, despite the heat; we had any longer I do not know. We received Communication with Shelldrake in- seize as much as our hearts desired. already made longer marches; but the ~rders to go into quarters. But neither volves a boat trip of almost 50 miles. <.'+ tteller's BaRery The men of the ammunition column, beautiful road from Suippes to Chat- el. a barn nor;a stable could be found so One report, received by a Sop insur- located in the village as well as the ons goes with unending monotony with- that nothing remained but to camp In ance agency, declared two were killed sanitary soldiers and cavalry by the out so much as a curve or a bend to the open. The houses were all filled and seven injured, while the Sop hos- hundreds, searched the houses and took the right or left. As far as we could with wmmded: Citizens of the town. pital received a report 10 were dead !! 5till sells Conners' Ice Cream whatever they liked best. ~t~e finest ¢. who had not fled were all gathered in see it stretched before us like a?long and largest business places in Suippes and almost a score injured. a large barn. Their houses were most- white snake. served a very large rural district sur- Since first reports of the accident ly destroyed so that they had to make Many soldiers fainted or were strick- rounding and therefore were stocked were received, officers have been unsuc- *g, THE BETTER KIND use of what shelter was offered them. en with sunstroke. They were picked up on almost everything. Within a cessfully trying to get into direct com- There was one exception to this ar- up by the infirmary columns which fol- short time these places had been munication with Shelldrake, and a re- rangement and that was a very old lit-. lowed. That the troops who had trav- cleaned out. The munition drivers lief expedition is now planned. fie motherly woman sitting, bitterly ersed this road before us had fared and train columns carried away old crying, by the debris of her late home worse was evident from the many dead pieces of silk, ladies' dresses, linens, Germans who lay along the road. The and nobody co~d induce her to leave. ARMY BANDITS ARE TRAPPED o shoes, dress goods and every other ar- commander feared that he could not In the barn, which served as a shel- 8 ticle imaginable, and stored them away get "the machine in motion again if it ter to the Civilians, were thrown to- Heavy Military Guard Placed Around , I am still selling the in their ammunition cases. They took was halted, and permitted to stretch gether men and women, youths, chil- Jail As Extra Precaution. childcen's and women's shoes, and its weary limbs on the ground for a dren and old men. Many were wound- everything else they could lay their brief rest. And so it crept along like ed by shell splinters and cartridges Sault Ste. Marie. Mich.--Heavy mil- hands upon, although many of these a snail. Only, instead of having a and others had suffered burns. Every- Itary guard I~as been placed around i Chevrolet and Maxwell articles had to be thrown away short- snait's shell on Its back, there was a where was the most ter?ible misery; ly afterward. Later, when the field the county jail here as extra precau- .i leaden burden. tion against any attempted jail deliv- sick mothers and half-starved infants post was developed and gave regulax The monotony of the march wa~ ery by friends of George DaM and Automobiles for whom there was no milk were service, many of these things ~,ere sent obliged to perish here; old people died home. broken when we reached the enor- Harry Powell, who were taken in am- mous camp at Chalons. This is one buscade early Saturday. " Chevrolet 490 Touring Car, f. o. b. Flint, - $702.50 from the excitement and fright of the A large chocolate factory was robbed previous few days and last of all men of the largest of the French army No chances are being taken that the completely, and chocolate and candy and women in the prime of life slowly camps. We saw Chalons from the dis- men may make a third escape and ' Maxwell Touring Car, f. o. b. Detroit - $825.00 In heaps were trampled in the ground. died from wounds because there was tance. As we halted about an hour each has been handcuffed and placed Empty houses were broken into and later outside the city in an orchard, in solitary cell pending action by the nobody to care for them. wrecked, wine cellars cleaned out and without a single exception every man court martial which may decree pun- A company of Hessian reserves, windows smashed, the latter being a I il Waidley, ¢ass City fell to the ground exhausted. The field ishment by death. every one a veteran, passed with special pastime of the cavalrymen. As Ii kitchens were soon brought up, but the The capture of the deserters was bowed heads and tired feet. They must we had to pass the night in the open, men were too tired to eat. We did eat without bloodshed. Sheriff Wallace have had a very long march. Their of- we tried to find some quilts and en- later and then wanted to go to town to Lundy and four soldiers "had the ricers tried to make them move nmre tered a grocery store and a market purchase some articles, particularly drop on" the two men before they lively. They ordered that a song be place. The store was partly demol- tobacco, which we missed most. No- knew that they had walked into a sung but the Itessian.~ were not In the ished, but the apartment upstairs was body was allowed to leave camp. We trap and they submitted to having mood. as yet intact with all the rooms locked. |' Attention Farmers were told that entering the city was their stolen guns taken from them "Will you sing, you pigs?" cried an It was evident that a woman's hand Who wish to dispose of your Farms, large or small, improved or un- strictly forbidden. Chalons had pai(] without resistance. " " "S" had worked in this house, for every- officer and the pitiful-looking [ng, a war contribution and therefore no improved, to exchange or sell for cash; tie to a large firm doing a tried to obey this order. Faintly soursd- thing was neat nnd cozy. P,ut all this one was permitted in tt~e city. Bride Drowns in Bath Tub. large business. We have hundreds o f inquiries for Farms all over tke ed from the ranks of the overtired order was still surpassed by the ar- We heard the dull sounds of the country. Write us; we will be glad to communicate with you and men : "Deutschland, Deutschland rangement in a large room, which ap- Grand Rapids Mrs. Loafree Wen- cannon in the distance and suspected have one of our competent representatives call on you. Ueber Alles, Umberv Alles in Der Welt." parently had been inhabited by a zel, a bride of less than two weeks, that our rest would be brief. The Despite their broken strength, their young woman. We were ahnost was drowned in her home when she rolling of gunfire continued to grow TROMLEY WILSON COMPANY tired feet, disgusted and resentful ashamed to enter the sanctuary. 3"0 fainted and fell into a bathtub. At- stronger. We. did not know then that Michigan's Largest Farm and Acreage Brokers. these men sang their symphony o£ su- OUr astonishiuent we s~tw hanging,o cr Oil temps at resuscitation failed. a fight had begun which was destined 1(}15, 1916 and 1017 Chamber of Commerce. DETROIT, MICH. Der-Germanism. the wall opposite the door a picture to become fatal to the Germans. E. A. W. ENNEST, Manager, Cadillac Exchange 6909. Several comrades who like myself burned h~ wood and under it a German House Passes Largest Budget. I The first day's battle of the Marne B. 0. WATKINS, Division Supt., Cass City, Michigan. had watched this trbop pass came to verse : "Honor the women, they weave ~Vashington.--The largest annual a braid of heavenly roses in their had begun [ me and said, "Let us go to the camp army appropriation bill in history, earthly life." (Schiller). The owner and try to sleep so that we might for- Continued next week. carrying $12,041,682,000 and authoriz- apparently bride, get all this." was a young for in ing the president ~o call into military the wardrobe was a trousseau, fled We were hungry and on the way service all men who can be trained and Electricity on Submarines. with neat blue ribbons, carefully lint As He Understood It. home caught several chickens. We equipped, was passed by the house All submarines are operqted by elee away. All the wardrobe drawers lay Consider Others. John was trying to be unusually ate them half-raw and then laid down and sent to the senate. Tire house tricity, as obviously they could not be open. Nothing was touched here. Look pleasant, even though you are nice to a man who was visiting John's in the open and slept until four o'clock ~brc)ke its record for speed on an army operated by steam', when submerged. When we visited the same place the behind your own face and can't see it. big sister, Clara. When things be- In the morning when we had to be bill by taking the final vote after In addition to its use for propulsion, next morning, impelled by some im- came dull inside. Jobn invited the vis- ready to march. three days of debate. The measure electricity is utilized on submarines pulse, we found everything in that itor out in the yqrd. Seeing one of Our destination on this day was ¢ is framed to provide for an army of for lighting, for fans, for wireless com- house destroyed. Barbarians had gone The Dih erc.ace. his playmates, little John called him Suippes. Before the march started the 3,000,000 men during he doming munications and to cook all meals for through this home. and with bitter A soldier marks time with his feet, over, excl*aiming: "Charlie, come on following arm $ or_d.er was read: YOII1L the crew. ruthlessness had devastated every- a clock with its hands. over and meet my sister's finance." CASS CITY CHRONICLE, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. PAGE SEVEN, " ' "" ...... ------~ ...... - r: >~,¢,;! '~i / c d DEFORD, Any person who can donate pop RESCUE. corn to Red Cross ladies, please leave Chas. Kilgore spent over Sunday it at the post office or with Mrs. NeiI MAY PUT 80i Mrs. John Ashmore, William Ash- with his brother, Roland, at Avoca. Kennedy. It will be very much appre- more and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellen- t(! doff autoed to Bad Axe Tuesday Chas. Osborn, Russell Bettes and ciated as the ladies are selling pop ;i corn every Saturday to help swell the morning to see the soldier boys leave 1898--1908--1918 Forest Day are victorious over TAXOHPROFITEERS for Camp Custer. 2Tlumps. funds, l- Three Signal Years ~n American History Miss Marion Mellendorf returned ! A large crowd at~ende~ Decoration The Red Cross ladies serve ice =ream and cake every Saturday after- SENATOR BORAH, OF IDAHO~ home Saturday evening after staying ~898---War with Spain'. HummatW and liberty Day exercises at the cemetery o n Dec- with her aunt, Miss Lydia Parker, the ;: '. oration Day. noon and evening. A committee is so- SOUNDED THE OPENING brought by America to oppressed Cuba and Philippines, liciting four cakes from the ladies of ] past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Nell Kennedy expect BATTLE iN SPEECH, the United States taking its firm place as a world power. the township. Everybody responds, Miss ~Belle Briggs from near Ubly] to leave this Friday for Detroit to l~08--Peace and secretary became f which shows the spirit. Everyone is spent Sunday at her home here. ] Secretary of the % visit over Sunday. prosperity i Ameri- ( contributing to so worthy a cause, so Earl Webster and Ralph Britt vis-[ ca's battleship fleet, Navy in the Roose- < Norman Bentley sl:ent from Friday PROFITS LIMITED TO 20 PERCERT i every lady who can please continue/ ited friends in Detroit from Saturday I .UReady for a fight velt cabinet. until Monday night visiting relatives the work so well begun. until Monday. , [ or a frolic/' as Ad- i ~i.~ :.~ In1918,TRUMAN and friends at Flint and Imlay City. Large Number of Senators ,Getting miral *'Bob" E.mac Vernon Everett has been re-en- A number from here were callers in I H, NEWBERRY, Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Spencer and son, Iff~.ff~d ~ ~,pm~i~to~do~ of th0 Deford Ready to Back Up Borah in HIs again a volunteer, & ~.~ ~~ C~mmander in ti~e A]vah~ ~p,d g'rand,~on, K;ery~ Franklin bCIIUOI~ &[]~ ~%*i.tL ~,~v~ tWO assist&alga visited Sunday at the home of Neff Mrs. Henry Eastman and children, [ l Third Naval District, next year instead of one. They will Grace and Guy, of Pontiac have been l oruise, pointing out ' including New York Kennedy. to&il nations the fact be Miss Gaff Sharp of Deford and Washington~A revenue bill that will visiting" the past few days at the home t City and Rrooklyn The baccalaureate was given Sun- that we had become navy yard, the most Miss Nellie Peter of Kingston. The take up to 80 per cent of all war pro- of Burdette Webster. { day evening by the presiding elder. A • a power to be reck- important naval dt- school has recently been made a grad- fits is the aim of the group of senators fine sermon which a large audience ap- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf and 1 oned with, and Msion in the country. ed sehoot. who have made up their minds to go cruise which Euro- lareciated. children attended Decoration Day ex-I A man of national The commencernent exercises at the after the war profiteers. • They intend ercises at Cass City Thursday after- pean experts said School closes this week Friday. A Deford school will be held Friday could not be completed. But distinction, of unflagging devo- to bend every effort to have the new noon. tion to his country, of able ,sgr* very successful year will close with evening', June 7, at the M. E. church. it was ! measure include provisions which will Earl Webster and Ralph Britt spent vice in peace and war, of high Vernon Everett and Irene Retherford Lola Kilgore, Beatrice Cooper, Mar- the Great allow not more than 20 per cent of the a few days in Detroit the first of the 1918--Americain character, genial, approachable as teachers. garet Phillips and Catherine Gillies 1 war profits to go into the pockets now War, throwing its every energy and sympathetic, TRUMAN H. week. into the combat to make the The Deford Farmers' club will meet are the graduates and the commence, [ claiming them. NEWB]ERRY is a man on whom Mrs. Raymond Webster and son, world a decent place to live in. with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hegler on ment program is as follows: March, [ speech by Senator Borah, Idaho, not only all ]Republicans but all Max, and Mrs. William Parker and the p~ople of Michigan can unite. June 10th for dinner. A special invi- Mrs. C. J. Maleolm; invocation, Rev. I recently sounded the opening of tile In 1898, TRUMAN H. tation is extended to all. Austin; "Star Spangled Banner" by I daughter, Vega, were Cass City cal- NEWBERRY, one of the organ- In this CriSiS, the office de= battle that will b~ made agMnst ex- tffd~ 6~ the Michigan Naval audience; • address of welcome, Bea- [ cessive war profits. Tuesday he will lers Friday afternoon. mands the ablest and most Reserves~ served through the experienced man available to trice Cooper; class colors, Margaret l call UP his resolution calling on Sec- Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Jarvis and Spanish war as a lieutenant on daughter, Ardis, and Mr. and Mrs. help conduct the nation's affairs. Dircctor . Phillips; duet, Mrs. Gee. Cooper and / retary McAdoo to give the senate al the "Yosemite," ,w~tch was TRUMAN Ho NEWBERRY is Miss Martin; class prophecy, Lola information regarding swollen profits Burdette Webster attended the Kelly mannedby Michigan s Reserves° such a man. Every Michigan Kilgore; valedictory, Catherine Gil- in possession of the treasury depart- Show in Cass City Thursday evening. voter can ~upport his nomination L D. McCOY, M. D. In I908, TRUMAN H. lies; solo, Rev. Austin; class address ment. A number from around here attend- NEWBERRY prepared the ~nd election with cOnfidence in Office in Pleasan~ Home Hospital by H. P. Bush; "America," audience; He will ask for immediate action ed the play of "Tempest and Sun- battleship fleet for its famous his r~cord, his abttity and his Phone 80~3S. aenedietion. on the resolution, so the senate may shine" at Owendale Friday evening. cruise and from assistant I00percent Americanmm. have ground work for its action in ap- Mr. and Mrs. John Forshee and F. L. MORRIS, M. ]K plying suitable taxatifn to the profi- KINGSTON-NOVESTA children attended church in Elkton Phone 62. teers. Sunday. T0WN LINE. A large number of senators are get- NEWBERRY tiny ready to back up Senator Borah Visiting Cards. in his demand for action against the go, DENTISTRY. Miss Jennie Thick is visiting at Get *hem printed at the Chronicle I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. Spring Harbor. profiteers. It will bring a renewaI of print shop in 50, 100, or larger tots. the fight started last fail, when the United States Senator' Office over Cass City Drug company. Mabel Thick is visiting "~eff grand- We solicit your patronage when in revenue bill was being considered, thzbIfshed by The 2V~wberry S~atorlal Co~m~tt~ parents near Lure. A. A. Templates, ~ge'ral Cha, rmar* need of dental work. when Borah, Johnson, of California, Pau~ H. Ktng, Ezaem~tive Chairman The Coleman young people have and other senators tried to have the P, A. Sehenck, D. D. S., been having" the meaMes. excess profits and war profits scales Dentist. Myron Retherford of Detroit is revised upward• At that time they spending a week at his home kerr. were unsuccessful, but now with the Graduate of the University of Miehi. igan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., Chss Miss Gaff Sharp of Deford spent president openly supporting the issue, City, Mich. Tuesday with. Misses GoIdie and Lil- they believe they well have small trou- lie Martin. ble in wnning their fight. A. J: Knapp, Funeral Director Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Cooper and Miss "I think almost anyone would admit and Licensed Embalmer. Mrs. Knapp, Myrtle Kregor was in Cass City Sun- that during times like these 20 per to cent of war profits added to the nor- Lady Assistant with License. Nigh¢ day afternoon. ~nd day calls receive prompt atten- real excess profits should be enough tion. City Phone. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis P~etTaerford at- for any man to take as the profits of tended the funeral of their aunt near his business. Senator Borah continued. Our New Four-story, F±re-prdofl @at- Care Monday. age, storage capacity-600 automobiles, REAL ESTATE Roy. and Mrs. T. J. Stubbs and ba- by of Yale spent Sunday with George DESTROYER BUILT IN 17 DAYS completed. Competemt mechanics both Martin and family. If you want to buy or sell, farm or Secretary Daniels Said the Average day and might. One block from the Mrs. Arthur Bishop of Detroit is Time Before War Was 11 Months. residence property call and see us. visiting" at the home of her aunt, Mrs. leading hotels. Try our accommoda- J. D. Funk, and other relatives here. "Washington~The United Stages de- The young people gave a miscellane- stroyer V/ard was successfully launch- tions for ??iy;zt Storage FRITZ & WAIDLEY ous shower to Mr. m~d Mrs. Lloyd Os- ed at the Mare Island navy yard, Cal- Office with I. A. Fritz, Dentist. burn at the home Of Mr. and Mrs. J. ifornia, 17 and a half days after her 208-21~ ?,r. Washington Avenue D. Funk Monday evening. keel was laid. The nearest approach CAR~ER BUICK C0. The Leek Ladies! Aid will meet to this record was the launching of ~a with Mrs. Win. Coleman Thursday af- 333 foot cargo vessel by the New York Ifiernoon. Members are requested to Shipbuilding company, Camden, N. J., I come early to quilt. An invitation is ~,,=J~DEL$ gF PERFEGT[~R,, in 27 days. I extended to all. Before the United States went to ~ PERFECTLY war, Secretary Daniels said the aver- SIMPLE To buy dr sell, use Chronicle liners. age time for a destroyer on the ways Advertise it in the Chronicle, was II months. The ,~ecretary term- ed the Mare Island ~cord a remark- able one and declared that it probably PERFECI'o NOTICE OF HEARING would not be equalled for some time• / CLAIMS BEFORE COURT. As much structural work as possible Needles Oili Belts and all kinds of ~ewlng State of Michigan, The Probate for the Ward was prepared in advance Machine supplies, Repairing a specialty. @ Court for the County of Tuscola. ready for erection and assembling be- C. D. STRIFFLER, CASS CITY In the Matter of the Estate of fore the keel was laid. Bulkheads, Alice A. McKenzie, Deceased. sections of the keel, deckhouses, bridge Notice is hereby given that four State of Ohio. City of Toledo, months from the 12th day of April A. structure and a section of the destroy- Lueas County, as. er's stem were riveted up ready for Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he D. 1918, have been allowed for credi- is senior partner of the firm of F.J. tors to present their claims against assembling in pIace on the ways. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City said deceased to said court for examm- Launching of 16 vessels on the Pa- of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, ation and adjustment, and that all cific coast, July 4, is planned, in re- and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each creditors of said deceased are required sponse to the appeal of Chairman Hur- and every case of Catarrh that cannot be to present their claims to said court, ley, of the shipping board, to the coun- cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH at the probate office, in the Village of try's shipbuilders, to celebrate Inde- MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Caro in said county, on or before the Sworn to before me and subscribed in pendence day with a heavy output of my presence, this 6th day of December, 12th day of August A. D. 1918, and A. 1). 1886. A.W. GLEASON, that said claims will be heard by said tonnage. (Seal) Notary. Public. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken In- court on Monday the 12th day of ternally and acts through the Blood on August A. D. 1918, at ten o'clock in the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Send the forenoon. TRIAL 0F LW. W. UNDER WAY for testimonials, free. Dated April 12, A. D. 1918. F. ft. CHENE¥ & CO., Toledo. O. Former Chief Tells of Driving Spikes ' Sold by all drug~sts, 75c. O. D. HILL, Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Judge of Probate. |n Logs to Wreck Machinery. Copy. 5-24-3 Chicago--Private Prank ~¥ormkee, alias Frank Woods, testified at the YOU Don'tHave State of Michigan, in the Circuit trial of 152 Industrial Workers of the Court for the County of Tuscola, in World that he was asked by members , p to Suffer - Chancery. At a session of said court, held in of the organization to teach sabotage the court house in the village of Caro, in the American army. This sabotage, I)ACKACHE ? in said county on the 7th day of May Wormkee said he was informed, could War-Time Responsibility-- L} Feeling tired? A. D. 1918. include placing a foreign substance Shooting pains in Present--the Hon. Watson Beach, in food to Cause illness and the cutting and Ours Mdes? Ankle~ swollen? Circuit Judge. up of clothing. Yours Joints stiff?. Muscles sore? Charles C. Ashby, Plaintiff, vs. Min- Wormkee's tale of violence by mem- than making good in this time Do you feel bilious and nie E. Ashby, Defendant. bers of the organization spanned a National necessity has put a out of sorts? Have you In this cause it appearing by affida- period of nearly t~vo years, during a • new responsibility on every of stress. vit on file, that the defendant Minnie dark pouches under your part of vhich he worked as an or- motorist. eyes? Do you feel that E. Ashby is not a resident of this They are setting new mile- you are growing old? state but is a resident of the state of ganizer in the harvest fields, the big Utmost service is demanded age records--establishing new Are you annoyed at night California. lumber camps, the shipping districts standards of continuous with sleep disturbingbladder irregularities? On motion of John C. Corkins, Esq., and the orange belt of California. --the highest usefulness of Would you like to know of a good rem- attorney for the plaintiff, it is ordered He admited committing acts of sa- yourself and your car. ¢ service-- effecting greater edy for kidney trouble, the cause of most that the appearance of said defendant, economy by reducing tire botage while an I. \V. ~,V. delegate, Service and, economy are of these symptoms and ailments ? Minnie E. Ashby, be entered in said and said he received I. W. g~. liter- cost per m~eo The best good-health insurance cause within three months from the ature in at least one instance after he 3rout only considerations. known is to keep the kidneys and urinary. date of this order; and that in case There is a United States Tire of her appearance that she cause her entered Jefferson barracks. Our responsibility goes tract in the proper condition to do their He told of deserting from the Colo- for every car--passenger or answer to the bill of complaint to be work of filtering and throwing out from rado national guard, of enlisting last hand in hand with yours° the blood stream, uric acid and poisons filed and a copy thereof served upon commerciaI--and every con° that settle throughout the system when the attorney for the plaintiff within summer at Minot, N. D., under a fic- As the largest rubber man- dition of motoring° the kidneys flail in their work. fifteen days after service on her or titious name to obtain release from her attorney of a copy of said bill, and charges preferred by state authorities ufzcturer in the world, it is The nearest United States in default thereof that said bitI be and testified that he, as a delegate, our duty to supply you with Sales and Service Depot deMer taken as confessed by said defen- had been instructed to encourage vio- fires of unfailing reliability will cheerfully aid you in dant, Minnie E. Ashby. lence. will tone up and inm~ora~e your kidneys. It is further ordered that said and extreme mileage. fitting the fight tire to your They banish backache and other symptoms plaintiff cause this order to be pub- needs° e of weak and disordered kidneys. They start you Osborn Seeks Reforms After War. United States Tires are more , right toward good health. They soothe and heal lished in the Cass Cit,~ Chronicle, a the bladder and regulate the liver. newspaper printed, published and cir- Lansing, May 30.--Former Governor Why suffer when such a welI- culating in said county, that such Chase S. Osborn, of the See, urged a "Chain known remedy can be had with publication be commenced within Tread United Stat s so little effort ? revolution in the public school system Mrs. Effie E. Kteppe, AveriiL twenty days from the date of this or- after the war in an address last night Minnesota, writes: I was at der, and that such publication be con- Fargo Sanitarium for three weeks the forty-fourth annual meeting of the are Tire s o tinued therein once each week for six Good ,.~ _. ~t one time and two weeks at Michigan Pioneer and Historical socie- ~ another time for rheumatism weeks in succession or that d~e said and kidney trouble and got no plaintiff cause a copy of this order to ty. He declared the present system is • relief. And on my return home be personally served on said defen- patterned after the Volkssehule sys- I began using Foley Kidney Pills and found immediate relief and dant Minnie E. Ashby, at least twen- tem of Germany which aims to keep about half a bottle completed ty days before the time above pre- the cure. [ always have them on hand and use the common people down and prevent them when I feel any pain in my back. scribed for her ~appearanee. the lower classes from raising their WATSON BEACH, Circuit Judge. standards of education to that of tile In two sizes, 50c and $1,00. J. C. CORKINS, L. I. Wood & Co. CJass @ity ~Drug ~o. Attorney for Plaintiff. 5-10-6 aristocracy. , EIGHT. CASS CITY CNRONICLN, CASS CITY, It~ICHIGAN, JUNE 7, 1918. ~,PAGE ...... :" ...... ~'-' ...... ! q, I I I I ' I II I III II I i I I SHABBONA. REV. HAMBLIN ACCEPTS days and are up to work nine hours a ocean; it is so wide that seagulls can- CALL TO SANTA FE day, seven days a week. not fly acrozs it vrithout rest. Upon ! sOLDIER BOYS' LETTERS I have seen where the big guns hit either shore there are great nations; Oat fields are looMng fine. Potatoes they are sO close that their hearts Continued from first page. and bombs from air planes too. This Farmers are busy getting their Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Spurgeon have sure is some war and we will have a touch.' E a t one The Michigan beans planted. days when the thermometer never has received an inspiring letter from :coupie of years of it yet, I think. Well, "How true it is th:~t there are great more pOtato potato is trying Mrs. Louise Parrott of Flint is indicated as high as 98 degrees. The their grandson, Arthur W. Wright, the first two years are the worst I armies close togetL.er, and yet far a day, uni- to help you win spending the Week here. winters are comparatively mild. Zero of Hinsdate, Montana. Mr. Wright was guess. Let Herb have this and tell apart, a~ far apart as right and wrong. form and all this war, weather is the exception. The even- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Meredith were formerly an Elk]and township boy, everyone to write but I can't answer There are great nations on either side ness of temperature results from the callers at Cumber Monday. residing here with his parents, Mr. as we don't have time or disposition of the ocean, but not far apart; they altitude which is 7,000 feet. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Wright, until about 15 to write now. I will ar~swer all when are so close that their hearts touch. Potato Soup Roy Phillips of Marlette spent the Hamblin says he is a booster for the years ago when the family moved to I get back where I have more time.~ They age fighting for the same princi- 2 cups hot riced or mashed potatoes. week-end with his parents here. worgterful: c~mate of the northern Montana. Knowing that the letter will ~! We are having cold and wet weath- ples, dear and precious possessions of 1 quart milk. Some from Wickware and Cumber part of New Mexico. be interesting to the young man's l er. We can't buy much here to eat humanity. 2 slices onion. attended quarterly meeting here Sun- Santa Fe is the great tourist cen- many friends in this vicinity, the land there are a lot of people living "The final blow to this plot is 3 tablespoons butter. day morning. ter of the southwest and like Rome Chronicle prints it in the following ]onty three or four miles from the America. Some one has said 'They 2 tablespoons flour (rice flour or ¢or~ flour.) Mrs. Alice Leslie and daughter, cannot be seen in one day. It is the paragraphs :o t fighting line. They won't leave you to mistook our love of peace for love of Dear Grandpa a~d Gray,alma: eaF, e~ ~UY ¢Ievoz,~(~:" ~.Q F~USY~eS~4 LO SOP- StaLes and is next go St. August, the, CMery saIt. :2y rives here. My waiting patiently these last five just when we are trying to take rare didness, our patience for fear, our Florida, in point of age. It has been Pepper. : ; ~ Harvey Fleming of St. Anne, Ill., is long months to enter the service has of ourselves. idealism fro:, hypocrisy.: They thought occupied by a succession of almost one Cayenne. i ~-,.~ .,~. spending a few weeks with friends not been in vain, for I have received In another letter, Jacob says: "I am that they •could bluff us, that they hundred governors, Spanish, Pueblo, 1 teaspoon chopped parsley. ~ :..~ and relatives here. my call to report for Ground School at seeing some of France and am taking could frigh~n us. They thought that Indian, Mexican and American, begin- Mrs. Thod:Z~agg and daughter, Joy, Berkley, California; on May 4th, (my my car. Car fare is no{ ~much. I went we were "too busy to fight, and they ning before 1620. The museum of 28th birthday). My call came Sunday of McHugh were callers at Frank Me- 300 miles on about $2.50. The U. S. knew that we were ~ot prepared. But Melt butter, add to it the flour an~ Santa Fe houses the collections of the and my transportation arrived today Gregory's Monday. pays all hotel bills and the Y. M. C. A. when the U. S. of America has mil- seasoning, stirring the mixture until New Mexican Historical society and so am leaving in the morning by the Mrs. A. Lorentzen is spending the gives us everything. We are treated lions of soldiers crossing the French smooth. Add gradually to this, ona here also is the school of American way of Portland, Oregon, thence down week visiting at the home of her son, as if we were heroes. They say noth- frontier, marching through Belgium :cup of milk and boil for one minute. Archaeology. The new Art Museum the Pacific coast. ing is too good for us and they are and striking at the very frontiers of Add the potato, mix thoroughly, then John L., at Cass City. is the center of some forty artists of This has rome at a most opportune very fine people. It seems so good Germany itself, the German leaders #dd the rest of the milk and the slic~ Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Robinson and national and international note, whose time, for I have been very busy for that it could not last even one day this will realize that of all the failures the of onion. Heat to boiling. Remov~ daughter, Edna, of Cumber spent Sun- paintings have already been displayed the past three weeks helping Nels put time." enmity of America was the worst. For the onion, strain the soup if necessary, day at Wm. Meredith's. in New York, Philadelphia and Chica- in his crop. He will finish tomorrow when we begin a thing we finish it. add the parsley an~ • serve. Wate~ John Parrott and daughter, Margar- go. Santa Fe is sm'rounded on three and will have in about 300 acres of There is a great difference between saved from cooking celery is a good et, of LeGrande visited at the home of sides by snow-capped mountain ran- wheat and a few acres of oats. I was IMPRESSIVE SERVICE this nation and Russia. We are a addition to potato soup. Two cups his brother, George, last week. ges over 12,500 feet high. planning on going over into Canada eaee loving" people and do not like On his return trip Mr. Hamblin DECORATION DAY of tomato juice and 1-16 teaspoon ot Mrs. Vern Nichols left Saturday to help dad if this call had not rome ~o have anything" to d<. with war, and spent a day in Denver, Colorado, du- soda may be substituted for two cups~ morning for Oxford where she would along, but now t cannot get to train- it takes us a long" time to prepare but ring which time he took the famous of milk. meet her husband, who expects to ing quarters too quickly. Continued from first page. when we begin we mean business; auto trip through Denver's mountain leave for France any time. You have no idea of the keen desire erty. But the day has in it more than when we begin a thing we finish it, and park following the winding mountain I have to be in the service of my coun- the celebration of a single event. It if it takes ten years to do it! We love highways to the tops of Mrs. Lookout Potato Puff try and especially in the division that is a day sacred to the memory to the to talk about the men who fought du- and Gennesee. NOVESTA CORNERS. I have chosen to try for. Why, if I unnumbered hosts of the heroic men ring the civil war; we meet yeaf" after Add beater~ whites of eggs to mashe~ can only get an opportunity to fly, I who through toil, suffer~ing and defeat year to describe their deeds of hero- potatoes (2 eggs to 6 medium-sized Mrs. Wm. Johnson of Detroit called NOT ALARMED OVER will consider it one of the happiest and victory and death have made our ism. And it is no more than right potatoes.) Pile the mixture lightly in on aid friends here last week. a baking.dish and bake it in the oven • ADVANCE ON PARIS moments of my life. And with the nation great and free. This land which that vce honor the defeeders of the Elmer Collins of Pontiac called n thorough training" tha t the U. S. gives we love is a part of our inheritance. flag, for they fought, struggled and until it puffs and browns. The yolk~ his sister, Mrs. John Wentworth, Mon- her aviators, what chance wilt a Hun "ShaIl we these faithful sol- died to make this nation free and of eggs and one-fourth cup of grate¢l Continued from first page. forget day. haye against a whole fleet of us? diers, God forbid. Bug let us forget g'reat. But let us remember we have cheese also may be added. Miss Tressa Sangster of Sandusky can be made at home," he said, "and a They say they are going to have the that there is a north, a south, an east men today just as true, just as noble spent the week-end with her parents picture from a calendar often makes band out when I leave in the morning. Or west, but to know only that we are just as ready to and die for a nice cover. Paste in the book clip- here. V~ron't that be some class ? You would all one people, we are all Americans. the same principlec for which our fa- Scalloped Potatoes and Cheese pings from newspapers and other think I was the Governor of the state. thers died. These principles are dear The heavy rains of the past two "America has its place and mission Arrange a layer of sliced raw or sources which you know will interest And really there are few occasions and precious possessions humani- weeks have caused many potatoes to ;~.q .perform. The worst thing on the of boiled potatoes in a greased baking: the man for whom you are preparing' whe~, an ordinary citizen would get so ty." in the ground. sea is a useless ship that drifts and dish and sprinkle with grated cheese. rot the book. 'Make it small and con- much consideration. I'll tel1 you; it Another song by the sckooI children floats with every current. The worst Repeat until the dish is nearly full Many from here attended Deco- venient to carry and he will prize it makes a felIow feel like a real man and a selection by the band conclud- thing in history is a nation that has Pour milk over the whole, about one- ration Day exercises at the Church of more highly than he does any book or and he is going to do something really ed the program which was given at the not become conscious of its place and half cup to every three potatoes. Skim Christ Thursday. periodical. When within the regula- worth while. I feel that I am going' intersection of Main and Seeger purpose. Our fathers' gift of freedom milk may be used. Bake in a moderate M. and Mrs. Edwin Sadler enter' ti0ns, send a package. I for one know to live more in these next few ~,ears streets, tlie speakers giving" their ad- weare to preserve and transmit; and oven until done. The length of time ~ained their daughters, Miss Elsie of how eagerly the boys awaited the than I have ever tived before during dresses from the balcony of the Sheri- if~we can add to it; if we can make required depends upon whether the. Cass City and Celia of Pontiac, over box from home containing dates, my whote existence, or probably dan Btdg'. any man or etass of men or women potatoes are raw or boiled and wheth- Sunday. chocolate bars, salted peanuts, or ever wil! live in the years to come. Uncle Sam, fittingly impersonated free whom they did not make free, we er the baking dish used is deep or shal- Mr. and Mrs. ~A. ~. Bartlett and tinned salmon or sardines." These are truly big" (lays for the young by Grey F. Lenzner, a high school stu- ase to do it. low. Boiled potatoes baked in a shalo dm~bter% Miss Iris and Mrs. Wm. The service-aids advocated by the fellow who is ffoino~- into it and to miss [ "Not ~i~ee the civil wa~. wbe~ the dent. led the procession to Elldand ~ow dish will ~ake only 20 minutes.. Darling', were callers in Cass City Ladies' Home Journal are: them, is to miso the bi~o'est art of a ' ' :~ -. ~ - • , ~-- cemetery. The City Band, the Home , , ~ P ~ lumon v.as threatened t.as ou~ country Raw potatoes in a deep dish may take, First: The great need of every ,wonderful life. ' l Witnessed days so darl~. History hoId s Guards company, members of the Io- Nonday. as much as 1 1-2 hours. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Soules, Wm. man in service is a frequent and ~!other and Helen,, have entered in-i~I~e story of many wars, but history cal war board and workers, Red Cross Patch, jr., Anna Patch and Lena Went- a cheerful letter from home, from to my sp~z;~"'" of ao" Y arm " tl ~e affair"" ....and t~s. Us that this is the first war that workers under the leadership of Miss a relative or a friend. This dis- worth visited Sunday with friends in ar~ truly g'~ad to see me have ttns op-Ihas involved so many natmns. H~ther- Lure DeWitt, veterans of the Civil TI~{E TO PREI ARE FOR tinct and valuable factor in a Sandusky. portunity. 1'1t toil you &at sure helps, i to the greatest conflict was the Civil War, school children and citizens FALL VEGETABLE CROP soldier's and a sailor's life the were in the line of march. At the sol- Mr. and Mrs. George Coltins and It would be mighty poor spirit for a iwar, and its greatest battle, Gettys- Government cannot supply, and mother to weep and wail over giving burg. diers' monument, the band opened the son, Floyd, left Friday for Pontiac If gardeners will make plantings every man in service concedes her to the g'reatcst, g'randest, and "Is God responsible? It is unthink- service with the selection, "Nearer ~[y where they will spend a few days with son during late June and July £t will be that it constitutes his greatest most noble service that any man can l able that He should be the author of God to Thee." Rev. ~. Cormany of- •possible for them to keep the home ta- relatives and friends. need and brings him the deepest go into. But you know there are those fered prayer and gave a brief address, lwar since His other name is Iove. He bles supplied with vegetables until fat" Mr. and ~/~rs.Harry IKeCaughna and satisfaction. who cannot see what a grand thing it foIlowed by the singing of the "Star {came all the way.from Heaven to say into the autumn, according to word children and Mr. and Mrs. James Rod- Second: The sending of cur- is for a young fellow. Spangled Banner" by the school chil- lso,: and on the Mopes of Olivet he i from the department of horticult~ra gers spent Saturday night and Sun- rent magazines not old--and the Tbb~gs here are showb~ much evi- dren. i taugh% it and ol~ the cross hc exempli- The Home Guards 6red three of M. A. C. day at Lake PIeasant. , most cheerful books to the men dence that spring is with us. Aiready fied it when he said, 'Father, forgive volleys as a salute ~co the dead, the "Many gardens which start very through the regular indicated grain is coming up, and the grass is them for they know n'5't what they bugler sounded taps and the service favo~'abiy with the first eariy spring channels. big" and green. Everything points to do.' was ended by the Star Spangled Ban- crops g'radually become patches of ;k WEST BROOKFIELD. Third: The providing of ef- a good year, and we all hope that a "The responsibility of conditions is nor played by the Band. Following weeds as the season advances," the ficiently conducted, moderate bumper crop materializes, for we, as with the wrong doer, and not with the the service, graves of departed veter- bulletin declares. "There are many James Crouch and Misses Ethel and priced and sensibly supervised wetl as the whole country, need it. defender of truth and justice. The na- ans were decorated by the G. A. R. vegetables, however, that may be Eliza Crouch visited Sunday with Mr. places in those renters adjacent They had a big snow storm over in tion that will not stand for principle planted in late summer especially for and Mrs. Thos. Harris. to camps, cantonments and naval Canada and dad is set back about ten and justice is not ordained of God. fall use. These can be used to replace The class play, "Tempest and Sun- bases, where men on leave can go days in his work. They witl have "The Kaiser doubtless planned to W. S. S. DRIVE early peas and other crops that have shine," was reported as being extra as they would to a dub: find abundant moisture to start things and conquer the world. As a matter of NEXT COUNTY EFFORT tbeen removed. good. A large crowd attended Fri- rational amusement, diversion, a time will help some. In a recent let- fact the great scheme took form in "Planting of string beans and Got- day evening'. good meal and a dean bed. ter from dad he stated he had about the brain of Bismark. He planned to Continued )~rom first page. I den Bantam sweet'corn may be made- Fore%h: The giving of all the School closed at Brookfietd No. 6, 400 acres ready to put to wheat, and push Prussia to the .front by three ag- l ings s~o government carry on I as late as July 1; Chinese cabbage Ju- mon.ey and serv~ we can toithe the to after a very successful term. We are that he is going" to start breaking im- Igressive wars. The great military ma- I ty 1 to 15; potatoes late June; beets Y. M. C. A. or the Knights of this war. glad to have Miss M. Taylor as our mediately for 300 acres of flax. chine was brought to perfection, and "The purchase of war savings ~and rutabagas, June 15 to July 1; rad- Columbus, so that the best and .~eacher again next year and wish her Hoping that you are M1 in the pink then first hurled at Denmark. A lit- stamps is everybody's duty. It is not, ishes (summer and winter), turnips, wisest forms of entertainment success. of condition, and with a promise of a tle later in 1866 Austria was humbled. as many have supposed, a system to endive, spinach and leaf lettuce, Jul~¢ may be provided for the men in Mrs. George Ricker and daughter, letter as often as I have time, I will And in 1870 this military machine was get small amounts of money from 15 to August 1. Plantings of late "huts" where they can congre- dose, with love to all. :Beryl, and Mrs. D. E. McDonald re- hurled at France. The military spirit children. It is the rich man's duty to celery, cabbages and cauliflower gate and enjoy themselves, not turned home Saturday after visiting ARTtE. became dominant in the Empire. The buy war savings stamps as well as it ~hould be set during the first two by pleasures or forms of enter- friends and relatives in Detoit and Kaiser thought of himself first as a is the poor man's opporttmity. The weeks of July." tainment imposed upon them, but Nillington. soldier. Military ideals were cultivat- raising of $70,000,000 is not an easy as they naturally and instinctive- From Corp. Orton W. Spencer. Iva Sheufelt, Aletha Ross and Leona ed in the schools. We did not under- task, when we consider that much of •Valuable Traveling Hint. ly prefer. These org:anizations Cm~poral Orton W;, Spencer writes Wing of Owendale and Parker Grant, stand it; we did not take the Kaiser it will rome from the sale of 25 cent If bottles of medicine, perfume or, will keep the men happy if we will from France under d~te of May 5 to Willard Gerfain and Orville'Beaver of very seriously with his divine right, stamps, and that there is a limit of other preparations are to be carriec~ only provide the money. his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob W. Bay Port autoed to Cass City Satur- shining sword, and national brag'. But $1,000 placed upon each holder of when traveling, dip the tops in melted Fifth: The giving of work and Spencer, as fol!ows: what took ptaee in the Kaiser was day evening. these securities. paraffin to avoid the danger of Ieako money to the Red Cross, so that Well, I received the letter you wrote working in the Empire. The good "There is also another important F °'' i~ age. the men may find, when they are March 28 and was very glad to hear book says, 'A little leaven teaveneth point to be considered. No matter ill or the time comes when they ~ ~" CEDAR RUN. from home. It was the first mail I the whole lump.' This little leaven how difficult the task may seem~it are wounded, abundant help and have received over here. began to work until the whole German can be done, and it must be done. material to alleviate pain and Have you heard from Earl or Leo Esther Stella is the name of a sev- Empire was leavened. This poison Michigan's failure to supply this suffering. yet? I haven't run across either of on-pound baby girl, born to Mr. and spoiled everything that was great and money to the United States govern- them. You said Earl expected we Mrs. J. D. Turner, May 28. noble in the nation. Statesmen, sol- ment would seriously hamper the war .1 would be together. Well, I do hope we diers, philosophers, poets, and preach- Mr. and Mrs. Gm~field Leishman and URGE GLASS CANS activities; and, to bring the matter FOR MAPLE SYRUP are for 1 would like to see-him and I ers were dreaming of a Germanized nearer home, might mean that many children spent Decoration Day with would like to see Leo too. I am going world. The great military machine George McCreedy at Fairgrove. of our own sons, now fighting in Michigan maple syrup, which here- to keep looking for both of them as was to be used to bring the world to France, would perish at the hands of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hammond and tofore has wended its way the long- a's I am over here. I haven't the Kaiser's feet. A spy system was the enemy because we, who are privi- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dodge of Caro to breakfast tables of the nation in tin heard from either of them for six perfected such as we never dreamed leged to stay at home in safety, have spent Sunday with John Leishman. containers, will do its travelling in weeks but I hope to hear soon. of, and these Spies were s~ationed in failed to supply the protection that M. and Mrs. Garfield Leishman en- glass bottles if recommendations of So they have my picture up in every earner of the world, and they they have a right to demand. These tertained Mr. and Mrs. George Mc- members of the Michigan Maple Syrup school now. Well, I wouldn't mind if are at their posts today. are serious thoughts. We should not Creedy of Fairgrove and Walter Max- Makers' association are heeded by pro- I was up there for about three days. "Such was the stupendous p],ot talk of sacrifice. Lending" money to well and family of Flint one day this ducers. The association, speaking I bet there would be a hot time. planned in this modern day when peo- the government is no sacrifice. It is week. through the forestry department of I am corporal now. Everything is ple were talking about universal an investment and I hardly need to Clarence Jones, Stanley and How- M. A. C., is asking the producers to fine here and pretty hot. Sometimes peace. Ministers of the gospe! talked add, the safest investment that will ard Asher, the Misses Elsie Burton order bottles for nex~ year so that tin it seems hotter here than it is over of universal peace; they told their ever be offered to any man in any part and Lorena Stone and Miss Sara Rob- can be saved for war work. there in the hot weather. This is a people that there wou.-d be no more of the globe. If it means the curtail- inson of Cass City motored to Bay "If glass bottles are used a serious big letter for me so I will say good- war. But while we were talking ing of luxury, or a more frugal finan- City Sunday. waste can be eliminated," according" to bye for this time. peace, they were making elaborate ein.a" of our homes, or the sacrifice of Prof. F. H. Sanford, secretary of the CORP. ORTON W. SPENCER preparations for war. The military a few of the things that have made association. "The fact t~at the bottles Truck Co. !0, 23rd End'., machine was perfected so that at.her life easy for us--what is that com- ELMWOOD. will make the syrup visible to the pur- American Exp. Forces. nations might be humbled and con- pared to the sacrifice of a human life chaser should also raake for better quoted. We did not understand it. that democracy may be preserved?" Hiram Youmans, jr., was a Cass saIes. The German leaders just told enough From Jacob A~thes. City visitor Saturday. "The objections that it will be much to interest their own people, and oth- HOSPITAL NOTES. Mrs. Brock and daughter, Mrs. Met- more difi%uIt to prepare the syrup for Under date of April 15, Jacob An- er nations did not know much about the sweet girl it. vin Southworth, visited friends in shipment in bottles is offset by the thes writes from France to his father, Foagraduate whom you Martin Anthes: "Today the plot is revealed. The _Mrs. John Tewksbury underwent an Caro Thursday. fact that the o~'tass containers have a want to remember and I am up at the front again; for the plot has failed. The first cause of its operation Saturday and is gaining Mr. and Mrs. George ¥oumans were market value in every household. If finely. -, whom you want to remora- quart jars are used they can be emp- first time behind the English front. failure was Belgium, then France, .: ber you, here you'll find gifts the guests of their daughter, M~'s. We ran hear the guns and aeroplanes then' Great Britain, then Italy The Mrs. Charles Osborne from Deford tied and made ready for the house- underwent an operation Tuesday. She to her liking. Delicately James Grice, of Caro Sunday. going all the time and it doesn't wor- fifth cause of the failure of this p!ot designed brooches~ exquisite wives' canning season. The gallon is doing" nicely to date. Class Six of Sunshine Sunday school containers can be made use of in "a ry us. Only when they come over our was, in the efficiency of Democracy. 'lavallieres; bracelets; rings; L0retta Wood of Gagetown was at ornaments; and a will entertain Class One at the Isaac similar fashion." barn do we rare and then we get out The democratic nations aroused them- Thane, jr., home Friday night. and watch them. I have seen as many selves to act, and today they are fight- the hospital Wednesday for the complete showing of famous Mr and Mrs. B. J. Bentley and son, as 30 or 40 English planes at one time inff for the same principles. It makes removal of adenoids and tonsils. ELGIN WATCHES Kenneth, visited Mr. and Mrs. Hiram and they are everywhere we are when me think of an essay written at school Robt. Warner was brought to the --trust-worthy, time-enduring MeKeIlar and daughter, Bernice, Sue- the drive has been the hardest. I have by a French girt only twelve years hospital in the ambulance Wednesday timepieces -- a life companion seen people gassed and it sure does of age. 'There is a river in France so evening and the next morning under- of the recipient. Let us. ~how day. our suggestions to you. Frenehtown school dosed Wednes- get them hard. n~rrow that you ran talk across it; went an operation for an acute attack ~rds ran fly over with one sweep of of appendicitis. day. Miss Florence Smith finished the I am sleeping" in a barn and we don't A. H. HIGGINS have things very rosy~Iots of work their wings; great armies are on eith- term for Milliard Fillmore, who re- Jeweler and' Optometrist- sigr~ed, o17: account of sickness. and slim on eats. We have a lot of er bank, but they are as far apart as Visiting Cards. Chinamen here. We are working 900 the stars in the sky, as far apart as Get them printed at the Chronicle right and wrong. There isa great print shop in 50, 100, or larger lots. Advertise it~ in the Chronicle. or 1,000 of them. We move every few • : 2.~JZ,~d