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• k ,. ¢ ,: !" ": :i ~ ' ' VOLUME 28, NUM:BER 25. ' ~ ; .... . ~ CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933. EIGHT PAGES. ,. ,

rain Franklin. Colonial heroes were R[~[IV[D nish the secretary of state with F: " O ! TOSOLA " pro~pf of :his financial.! responsibib " ~ ...... - given in response .to roll call. Mem- bers will please no.re that the next ALLOCATIONOF HWY, ity to meet the costs of any future, - The Topic f Conversation ~. .I • -, -~l l l I I This can be done:in three ways. ) ~ ...... day, Oct. 10, wiii be at the home o~ Mrs. C. L. Graham. FU ....Nai ...... iRUN- G EAU ; with ,the state. He may file a s.ure-1 I WATC~IN(~ ~E/~ I ~ ~ xye 9=AVaO AFrsa ~AeK Invitations have been issued for ' OT'/~ ~((k } 0~5 NIGHT ~NO WATCHEO ~v05 I ty bond or a real estate bond with] ~SS~L~ T'HOS~ t? ~H~'.U~HT5 Go ON ~r the wedLting of Miss Alice Klump, Checks Totalling' $108,349 two sureties providing for a maxi-i ~0~0.~(fiR~ ~I(~H~- OOT OFT~AT YO0 VJ~O~J WASTHEMO~T • ~Aonm~.I daughter of Mrs. Frederick J. State Highway Commissioner ~LELT£~CAL I ~;pENTTWO -m~LU~O ~to~r Klump, of Saginaw and Rev. Geo. Says He Has Right to Di- Have Been Sent to 23 juries or death and a maximum of ~301LDING ALL 5SLID PAW I ~E~ SAW A'. Spitler, pastor of the Cass City vert Apportionment. Twp. Treasurers. $1,000 for property damage; or the "~[~%~OTIONRO~ ~-~TH5 NEXT (fl THF-~ALLJ Evangelical church, on Thursday, motorist may file a certificate LO~T OF 50ENC~-..- Oct. 12, at 3:00 p. m. The cere- ' showing that he 'carries .,motor re- ' L_~~I ~ ~F~N~T(O~\~ILL ~E O0/N~ A~O D)DN'T5~E ' mony will ~ be performed at the Michigan Avenue Evangelical A delegation of 30~ persons, rep- church at Saginaw. Members o~ resenting- several comv~unities in tha~ congregation as well as those Tusc,o[a county, visited the State ° of the Evangelical churches at Highway Department at Lansing struetion at Lansing, a statement Wo C. T. U. ELECTED OFFICERS. - Cass City and Bay City have been Monday for a conference with State .of the number of children of ~chool a ~ :~ invited to attend the wedding. Highway Commissioner Murray D. age listed in each township in the The Cass ,City society of the Rev. Mr. Spitler was pastor at Bay VanWagoner on the question of c°unty and the share °f eachTemperanCeof t°wn-pri- W°men's Christian /,~ ¢ City before coming here laat May. road projects in that county that ship in the apportionment Union met Friday afternoon at the 7 Mr. and Mrs. James A. Moore of might be built with funds from the mary school interest fund. home of Mrs. Stanley Warner. San Diego, California, came Satur- Federal highway gran,t of $12,- The sttm of $108,349.29 received During the business hour, officers day for a two months' visit with 726,000. by Mr. Whittemburg recently rep- were elected for the coming year l ~ ~ Mrs. Moore's mother and sister, In order to learn the opinion o£ resents a primary school interest as follows: President, Mrs, A.J. , MrsrEleanor Bader and Mrs. J. D. the Tuscola Road Commission re- fund payment of $9.33 for each Knapp; vice'president, Mrm W. R. Brooker. Mr. and Mrs• Y£oore garding the use of part of~he funds ct~ld of school age in Tuscota Curtis; recording .secretary, Mrs. made .the trip by auto and spent a he had allocated to Tuscola county county. An:other payment ,of $3.50 S. Moore; corresponding~secretary, ~~ few days at the Century of Prog- to be used to improve a further a pupil is expected next December. Mrs. A. A. Ricker; treasurer, Mrs. ress exposition in Chicago o.n their section of M-53, Mr. VanWagoner Checks mailed to township Mary Gekeler; chairman of flower ~~'~~-.. way here. communicated with them, asking their attitude. He informed the treasurers within the past week by committee, Mrs. Anna Patterson. Joseph A. Martin, Jr., is a can- road commissioners, who were Mr. Whittenburg call for the fol- Refreshments were served by the ~~ "~ didate for membership on the com- members of the delegation Mon- lowing avnounts: hostess, The next ,meeting will be mon council in Detroit this fall. day, that he ,took excep- Akron ...... $ 6857.55 held at the home of Mrs. James -~ Mr. Martin is the son of a former tion to receiving unfavorable pub- Almer ...... 4058.55 MECxea. ~ .~ ~ resident of Cass .City whose maid- licity and direct attacks upon him as Arbela ...... 3060:2~ en name was Miss Pearl Landon. a result of this courtesy shown to Her husband, the late Joseph A. ,ti~ them. The highway commissioner 3666.69 ) )) 1/ ~ Martin, Sr., was a member of the ...... made clear that Tuscola county is Denmark...... 5849.91 ~~ " council for several years and served o..o.'- HENRY WEDD,N not allocated sums of money by the Elkland ...... 5933.88 ~ ~ ~ as acting mayor of D~troit for some time. Federal government, but that the Elmwood ...... 5728.62 plan of allocation is the idea of Mr. Fair grove ...... 4795.62 -~~ ' VanWagoner himself. Remarking Fremont ...... 4907.58 ~' ( ~Y ~ ~ ' further that if, in order to benefit Gilford ...... 4730.31 the greatest number of people, it Indianfields ...... 10346.97 Over 100 Persons Present GASSCITYDEFEAIS seemed wise to divert Tuscola's allotment it is within his authority Juniata ...... 3340.14 Home Talent Play Here calls many happenings of year~ MILK ~COME DROP] DETROIT MAN CHARGED Kingston ...... 3657.36 Oct. 5 and 6. ago. WITH SNOVER ROBBERY so to do. Koylton ...... 3097.56 Mrs. Bardwell has "five living HARBORBEACH, 6-0 i At the same time, the commis- Millington ...... 4291.80 ~hildren: Mrs. Belle Lang, Coeur F[[D PRI F Jack O'Ne{1, 23, Detroit, was sioner stated that he is nat par- Novesta ...... 3610.71 An event of outstanding current d'Alene, Idaho; Mrs. Frankie Man- turned over to Sanilae authorities ticularly favoring the allocation of Tuscola ...... 2826.99 intereat in the community is the kin, Detroit; Mrs. Hattie Parma- Monday ]py Pomtiac officers and was Coach Kelly Substitutes Often Iifurther improvement of M-53 with Vassar ...... 8583.60!presentation of "Henry's Wed- lee, Pontiac; Sire and Levi Bard- arraigned before Justice Noal A. the Federal funds, although Watertown ...... 3200.19~ding," a play to be given Thursday well, Cass City. Mr. Bardwell Babcock Tuesday on a charge of in the First Victory of through the Earle Memorial High- Wells ...... 3554.73 and Friday, Oct. 5 and 6, by a cast passed away about 57 years ago. No Profit from Increased Re- robbing Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Blank the Season. i way, a great deal of sentiment in Wisner ...... 3386.79 of over 100 local residents under Mrs. Bardwell makes her home ceipts when Herd Ex- of Snover of $740 in money and favor of th~/t project has been i the auspices of the Cass City La- with her daughter, Mrs. Parmalee, approximately $I0,000 in bonds created in the Thumb district. dies" Band. Miss Edith Thompson hi l~.~ ~ ~*,~l*~,z- early in the mornhlg of J. 11~ { ill i~.tvii~ ~v (rail illviuo.bivil ±v± Farewell and of the Universal Production .~o. of The youngest person present at Examination was set for Wednes- football season for the Cass City ~discussion, several members of the high school team were greatly in- delegation presented their ideas° Welcome Reception IFairfield'Ia., is coaching the play. the dinner Sunday was Helen day, Oct. 4. N,o bond was set. During the performance three Rutledge, two-year-old daughter of Michigan dairymen are not sure The home of the aged couple was .creased Friday at Harbor Beach. County Road Commissioner G. F. couples will take the matrimonial Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Rutledge of wh~ther they should celebrate the entered by three masked and armed At least three scoring chances were Schultz stated that his commission Members Of the Bethel and Cass step. They are Guy Landon play- Caro. better prices, received by other robbers, who tied the couple in missed by the local eleven--two by lis opposed to paving M-53 in pref- (]ity Methodist churches met in the ing the part of Uncle Henry and Out of town guests present were farmers for feed or ~o griev~e be- their beds after which the robbers the i~nal gun at the half and the'erence to roads in Tuscola county, : League room of the Cass City' Mrs. E. Hunter taking the part of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reamer, cause feed prices have increased forced open a home-made strong" end of the game, and another by but that the commission is not an- church Friday in honor of Roy. and Samantha Green; Horace Pinney as ~Flint; Mrs. Jane Eckart and Mr. faster than those of dairy products, box hidden in a basement wall. an incomplete pass over the goal tagonistic to the highway depart- Mrs. T. S. Bo`ttrell, who are lear-i Jack Mccoy and Miss Evelyn Rob- and Mrs. Floyd Rutledge and fan- according to ,the dairy department The complaint charging O'Neil line. l mont. ing here for Davison, and Rev. and inson as Mary; and Tom Day as flY, Caro; Mrs. Frankie Mankin, at Michigan State College. as one of the robbers was signed During the first half, the Cass' M. C. Eveland, banker of May~ Mrs. Cha~ P. Bayless, who are lLawyer Brown and Mrs_. Zora Day Detroit• Recorc~-from the i0,000 cows in July 7. Two other men charged City team was kept in check by ville and Fostor~a, offered a plan coming to the charges here from!as Susan Christopher ..... • dairy herd ~m~provement associa- with O'Neil in the robbery are the hard, fas`t tackling by the en-'.for a north and sottth highway Deckerville. The room was nicely] "Henry's Wedding" is a story of I tions in this stat~ prove that the held in Detroit on a pistol toting tire Harbor Beach team. Only through Tuscola county, which he Clare Ballaugh was able to gain said was a rich agricultural dis- arranged to represent a living ta bachelor bridegroom o:C 55 get- Ask Stay in a )herdowners' net incomes were less charge, officers said~ Disposition room with lamps and baskets of tiny married L*or the first time to a any ground during this time. How- trier and put it in direct contact flowers. About 80 were present, widow of 49, who has twice been M~g, Foreclosure I lasthas monthbeen a thanslight previously. increase inThere ,the ofawaited. their cases in Detroit is being ever, the Beachers used only one with its market in Detroit throug~ During the evening a program married. This in itself brings price of milk and of butter but the The missing bonds, most of substitute and in the third period Lapeer. He proposed such a route' was given, opened by prayer by enough comical and funny situa- Lizzie McCrum, guardian of the ~c°sts of feeds rose so rapidly that which are registered, have no,t been the Hilltoppers were able to do al- from Bay Port to the Lapeer coun- Rev. Mr. Bottrel[, after which ;all tions .to keep the crowd in a~ up- Estate of Mat Nichols, was granted the dairyman's chance for profit found. most anything, ty line as an extension of M-24. In sang "Blest Be the Tie." Dr. Fritz, roar from start to finish. But what in circuit •court on Sept. -21, the decreased. Ed Graham intercepted a pass this connection, he called attention and ran 50 yards before he was to the fact that the town of Fos- in a few well chosen words, heart- makes the situation even more right to sell land in Millington Members of the associations Local Items ily welcomed Mr. and Mrs. Bayless. hilarious is the fact that Jack, township belonging to the estate, nearly all fed grain to their cows finally stopped. Don Kosanke toria has had its railroad service A piano duet was played by Eu- Uncle Henry's nephew, planned to A suit has been started in cir- when they were on pasture. When dropped a pass over the goal line, discontinued, and that it would nice Schell and Pauline Dodge. El- get married on the same day of the cult court in which John H• Dow- the pasture failed during ,the dry The Ellington Grange is plan- but on the next play, Carl Star- beneft immensely by such a route. ford broke through the Harbor Other railroad .service in Tuscola sic Mac Rawson, little daughter of show, and collect on .the next day, ker and Agnes L. Dowker are the weather, both roughages and ning a booster night program for Beach line to block a punt. The county is in dlnger, he stated, and Mr. and Mrs. Audley Rawson, sang his 25th birthday, $100,000 from plaintiffs and they ask the court grains had to be supplied. Both Saturday, Sept. 30, at the Cedar ball rolled towards and over .the every town in the county he main- "A Happy Greeting to Mr. and Mrs. his grandfather's will. However, to restrain H.T. PriestlJr from classes of feeds have ~ncreased in Run school. It is an open meeting goal line, where Kosanke fell on it rained would benefit by such a Bayless and a Farewell to Mr. and the :sudden announcement *changes foreclosing a mortgage on land in price faster than ,m.~ik or its prod- for every One. Attendants are re- for the local's only points. BaI- route. He suggested that even a. Mrs. Bottrell." She was accom- the will concerning this $100,- Akron township. Because of eco- acts. quested to bring sandwiches and laugh missed the try for point on small start on such a project would palled on the piano by her mother. 000 and gives it to Uncle nomic conditions, they desire to Dairymen trie(l to meet this .con- doughnuts for their own families a line buck. be welcomed. Mrs. Harriet Dodge recited the Henry and Jack immediate- take advantage of provisions in the dition by culling out their poorest while coffee will be furnished by The first hMf ended with the ball Commissioner VanWagoner, at; poem, "Two Builders" and dedi- ly, wiih his boy friends, Ted and Bischoff-Munshaw bill passed by cows and more .than 100 were dis- the grange. cated it to Rev. and Mrs. Bottrell. Harris, played by Marshall Burt in Cass City's possession on the this point, •called attention to ~h¢ the legislature which postpones carded from the herds for which The regular meeting of the Pres- Beacher's three, yard line, while it fact that Tuscola county is prac- B. A. Elliott and son gave .two so- and Richard VanWinkle, attempt mortgage foreclosure proceedings records were kept. Most of the byterian Missionary Society will be was the same situation, except with tically without eligibI~ Federal aid lections on their Hawaiian guitars, to :stop ,the wedding of Uncle Hen- until Mar. i, 1935, under certain cows sold were better producers held on Thursday evening, Oct. 5, the ball on the one foot line, when Iroutes , but .that it has been the Floyd Boulton joining them in ry. Persuasion fails and they turn conditions, than the average cows on Michigan at the church, when a missionary the final gun was heard. Harbor I policy of the department to on- songs. Little Miss Betty Jean to the attempt of kidnapping" and In the case of Roy Beyett and farms so it is not hard to tell what program and play will be presented Beach did no`t.~,threaten the goal courage all possible Federal trunk l~rofit sang a solo, accDmpanied on from :here the comical situations Helena Beyett vs. Zella Peterhans, l is happening ,to dairymen who have under the direction of Mrs. Harry line during the whole ga~ne. They projects elsewhere in the state be- the piano by her mother. Mrs. E. begin. O'Flarety, the hard boiled the plaintiffs seek to restrain fore-Ino record .of their cows" produc- Young. The young people's guild completed many short passes, but cause 75% of the entire allotment W. Douglas, in behalf of those detective, played by Andrew Bige- closure on a land contrac.t. I tion. will'be guests. A potluck supper failed to get inside the 30-yard to Michigan must go on such roads. present, presented Roy. and Mrs. low, and Mugs, his' assistant, I One item of optimism shown by will be served at 6:30. line. This means, he pointed o~t, that he Bottrell with ~ beautiful all-wool played by Willis Campbell, are ;the herd reports is the news that Miss Lucile Bailey entertained a blanket and also wished them great called in to help solve the rays- Fi The following was the local line- hopes to conserve the share of the success in their new field of work. and they give a lot of amuse- ne Spirit in the several o ers built afety bull number of little folks Saturaay af- up for the first game ,of the year: funds eligible for other projects to pens during the past month. These ternoon at her home on South ~e- Left end ...... Frederick be used in counties like Tuscola Mrs. Bottrell responded. Rev. Mr. ment and comedy to the show and Local School pens enable dalton to retain gar St. in honor of the fifth birth- Bayless closed the program with a keep the audience in an uproar. Lef~ tackle ...... McCallum which are without Federal trunk prayer. Later in the evening both Eliza, played by Mrs. Anna Kel- aged bulls without any danger of day of little Miss Janice McMahon. Left guard ...... C. Stafford projects. He called attention to ministers gave short talks, ley, the Negro. cook, and her lazy "While many schools are report- anyone being injured by the ani- The affair was a complete surprise Center ...... F. Withey M-46 which he declared is in such Ice cream and cake were served, husband, Rastus, played by Alex ing fewer pupils this f~l, Cass mat. State papers have reported to Janice. The afte~rnoon was spent Right guard ...... Davenport condition that it must either be • r" C two farmers killed in Michigan in games and refreshments were Tyo, affords much of the corn- City has more than last yea , . Right tackle ...... E. Martin improved or taken off the state edy of ~he production. One of the,=W.~Price, superintendent of schoolS, during the past week by bulls so served at a table 'having #or its Right end ...... D. Withey trtmk system. He characterized it To Keep Reckless ~big events is: when Uncle Henry, told Rotarians Tuesday. "Our :17 £he importance of safety measures centerpiece a three-story birthday Quarterback Ward a disgrace to the system at pres- hiding in the ash .can, is the v~c- teachers are carrying relatively can not be overemphasized, cake/with five lighted dandles. Left half ...... IIIIIIII:.IIIIIII~IIIIIIIRIQuick ont. Drivers Off Roads tim of a tremendous gasoline ex- heavy loads, the cost of education Guests received gum-drop men as Right half ...... Knight Senator Orr, in reviewing" the plosion, comes~up black as coal, and per pupil is the lowest here in corn- favors. Fullback ...... Ballaugh road situation in Tuscola county, mistaken for Rastus, Eliza's hus- parison to al~ local records avail- Ralph Raws n ~ Mr. and Mrs. Asher Tewksbury Touchdowns -- Kosanke (substi- said: "It must be remembered that The financial responsibility law band, is forced to do the menial able, and one would have to go a entertained 50 relatives and Turn to page 8, please. Turn to page 5, please. which becomes effective Oct. 17,' is house work, instead of receiving long way to find students of as fine Represents l~ich, friends Sunday at their home in

intended to protect persons and the prai,sesand compliments of his ci`tizenship and training as we have Kingston in honor of the 80th 4 property from the acts of irre- friends, as a bridegroom, in the Cass City school. Ralph Rawson, son of Supervisor ther,birthday Win. of Tewksbury, Mr. Tewksbury's who makes fa- Miss Cass City at Tax Penalty Goes sponsible persons on the highways. Turn to page 5, please. "We are trying to impress on and Mrs. Audley Rawson, expects his home with them. Mr. Tewks- From scores of letters sent to the. our pupils three things," he said. Big Fair This Week on November 1 Department of State, it is evident "To encourage and foster in them to leave Saturday morning f°r~bury has three sons and also three that many motorists 5elieve the Nonagenarian Is the spirit of service to others, to Waterloo, Iowa, where he will rep- brothers living. Mrs. Tewksbury Miss Audree Bliss, who won the new in- • - October is the last month in surancestatute compulsory. makes automobile Honored at Dinner build the best type of character; resent Michigan in a regional and one daughter died several title of Miss Cass City in the sugar The law proposes_ to keep off the and to encourage `the individual speaking contest for vocational~!years ago. Guests were present queen eontest in August, left here which eounty treasurers may col- highways reckless drivers, who are growth of the child mentally, phys- students. Twelve sta`tes will. be I from Detroit, Romeo, Clifford, Saturday to attend the Century of lect 1932 taxes without ~ penalty. involved in accidents or who fail to A family dinner was enjoyed ically and .spiritually." represented. Ralph, Who is a Kingston and Cas~ City. Those Progress exposition at Chicago "After Oct. 31, nine monthS' in- freshman at Central State Teach- from Cass City who attended were with expenses paid by business teresa ~ust be paid on 1932 taxes observe highway laws, and may not Sunday at the home of Mr. and ors' College at Mr. Pleasant, will. Mr. and Mrs. John Tewksbury and men of Cass City. Miss Bliss was besides the collection fee," says Ar- affect the vast majority of Michi- l~rs. Levi Bardwell on East Main speak on the subject, "The Scrub Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross: and thur Whittenburg, Tuscola county gan a~tomobile drivers. Similar St., in honor of Mr. Bardwell's Church Supper. Sire Must Go." accompanied to the Chicago fair by "If her sister, Miss Doris Bliss, of Port treasurer, paid in October, the laws are now in effect in 20 states mother, Mrs. Jerusha Bardwell, of Supper will be served at the M. Willis Campbell, agricultural family. Huron. taxpayer is required to pay the ta~z and several provinces in . Pontiac, who is spending a few E. church on Wednesday, Oct. 4, instructor in ,the Cass City high The Woman's Study Club held its only and escapes charges for inter- After conviction of a ~major rio- weeks in Cass City. Twenty-four commencing at 5:30 p.m. Prices, school, expects to accompany second regular meeting on Tues- eat and the collection fee." lation of motor vehicle laws or af- were present and spent a very 20c and 85c. Menu: Ralph, his former pupil, to Water- day, Sept~. 26, with Mrs. B. Be~kel- MANY STORES WILL CLOSE ter failing to ~atisfy a judgment pleasant day in visiting. Baked ham loo. The contest will be held Oct. 'man, Jr., as hostess. The program, ON WEDNESDAY NIGHTS of $350 or more growing out of a Although Mrs. Bardwell was 95 Escalloped potatoes 3. which was based upon the theme, MARRIAGE LICENSES. traffic accident, the motorist's li- years" old the sixth of last April, Beet and cabbage salad • "Our Civilization Established," was cense and all registration certifi- she is very active and is up and Brown and white bread opened with the reading of an ap- Starting Oct. 4, meat markets, cates of the automobile are sus- about the house" each day, receiving Pumpkin'and apple pie Mr. Prior has moved his barber propriate poem by Mrs. P. J. A1- practically all grocery stores and Wm. Vanwormer, 38, Yassar: pended. In order to rein.state the and entertaining her own callers. Coffee shop fixtures from Cass City to Bay lured. Mrs. Edward Baker devel- several other places of business in Daisy Tolsen, 38, Belding. license, the motorist mu~t settle She has good eyesight and still --Advertisement. City where he will open up a shop. i oped the s~bject, "Our Legacy Cass City will be closed on Nelson Collier, 49, Dayto~ tw-p; Wednesday nights until the pre-" Dorothy B. Williams, 19, Fair- " the judgment in the manner speci-!write~'all of her own letters. She He expects to move his family in from Colonial Life," and Mrs. L. " ~_ _ • l~ rV~ holiday season, grove. fled in the -law and also must fur-~ha~ a won~erlu~-"' memory and re- Aavcrtisc ~.,~, in the Chronicle. the near fnture ...... , ar,l ~e]] gave a study. of Benia-- CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933. PAGE TWO : ...... ~ .... ~ ~ CASS CITY, MICHIGAN.• • m| ,, i,, ~ , =.

says Sektne; "but there are many

people who would like to see such a ff News Review of Current ' war. I have read many books and Y magazine article& the aim of which v.ito=-'-=- -= I SCHOOLS===UND ":: =AY":"' , ] seems tO be to stir up bad relations Events the Wm'ld Over between Japan and America. l hope the people of America wlll not be misled by propaganda." ---lESSON-.- (By tl2EV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.. Member of Facult55 Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Senator Harrison Voices Demand for Monetary Infla, ESSE H..TQNES; chairman of the ~), 1933, Western Newspaper Union. J RFC, has told the bankers how fion ....Wallace Warns the Farmers~ .... Japan'a the government through his corpor- [' ~' Demands for Bigger Navy. , ation, plans to ~ain complete con- Lesson for October 1 -visit the , fro! of the ~atio~?.! ba~ks. '!'hi~ wi!! / ~be ob~ai,ned by RFC ownersi,ip of SAUL iN TARSUS the preferred stock of the banks, / By EDWARD W. PICKARD land the scheme envisages RFC LESSON TEXT--Acts 21:39; $$:$, l agents directing bank policies, elect- 27, 28; 26:4-7; Phil. 3:3-6. Cass City Department GOLDFMq TEXT--Study to show Store ]~ANKERS business men and not, even inflation will not save ing directors, hiring and firing offi- thyself approved unto God, a work- a_~ man Y oi'her ;ersons, especially] them. He said the production con- cers, directors, and employees, set- man that needeth not to be ashamed, southern politicians, believe rata" - / trol measures already adopted by ting their salaries, limiting their righ,tly divining the word of truth. tton soon will be here in full force./ the government , such as ,the plow " real estate investments and in gen- II Timothy 2:15. ~ \ Men's Wool Spun Union PI~IMARY TOPIC--A School Boy. MEN'S ~.,:....::..::::::.~...... :...... :...... : "-:I:'n.~ financiers are ~ ing under of cotton, the curtailment eral directing the operations of JUNIOR TOPIC--A School Boy of Suits ' ' $1.98 ~~:;~:;~:~> ,,.,~f~a~ ,a ~_no.~[ of wheat acreage, and the slaugh- banks. ' __ Tarsus. ~}:~-ii~i;::i::~4iii::! :::: ::i:: :::: :: :i:i~-.',~,i:: 3 W."~2~and~tn 11 en What" ter and total destruction o,f 5000,- INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ rm F will come 000 little pigs, will bring about a TOl~IC~Preparation for Lifd Work. Heavy Fleece Union Suits $1.19 ~}~'::,?[~?!:!:!:i:??}:'}i???~ii~>~i:!:i:I0 E " , I ~OLDIERS and civilians opposed YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT ~~::ii:: and the southern substantial ,rise in agricul~tural k) to Ramon Grau ban Martin as TOPIC--Training Christian Leaders. [lannsI .... ~ii~ i senators and con- prices soon after January 1, if not President of Cuba were reported Boys' Fleece Union Suits ...... 79c ~:~a~i~:. gressmen are urg-'! bef°re" ,, , to be mobilizing to drive him from 1. Saul's Birth (Acts 21: 39). ~;".:';:~ht~h.!:::}.i~!::,2:i~i:::~-~:-:.:~:~:;<~g:~<:~:m~<~:~:: in~~ strm.4nt-ou~ • o. - - cur- But this certainty , ' the ' secre " ~~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~ office and the new He was born at Tarsus, the cap- Children's and Women's ~!:::.i.i.i.}i renc:¢ i n f 1 a t i o n, tary added, had brought from the ~~ revolt was moment- ital of Cilicia. Tarsus was a gate- I Shirts C ~-~:~)i!i~ii hi "h latter Presi farmers a great cry for immediate way between the east and west, Union Suits ___:...... ,:_49c to 98c :i:??:::i:!::i: W C - " to ~ii:::i!::i::iii! dent Roosevelt has price .fixing to tide them over the .] break out in Ha- therefore a great commercial center. / ~!~::::::::ii::i~i! " ~ ...... ensuing three or four months The vana. In other parts It was a self-governing city, making N/g~'~/~-~:ii:.:::i:~ seeme(~ aemrous o~ ~ener 1 ...... avommg• ..... as rang as ~, a tenor of his remarks indi ~~ of the island the citizenship therein honorable. It was ~enazor, -)ossible Of course cated that he was ot~posed to tak- ~~{::;f:::::/;::::::::::::):::::{;:::::::::):::::::/:::::::::::}:::::oppositionists were also one of the great educational Men's and Boys' Pat Harrison ~'~e'al're:~d have a ingar/y such action, but that the i::i:!::iii::i::ii}ii::~i!::i::i::iii::iiiiiiiiiii::iiiiiii::i!increasingly active, centers Of the Roman empire. In the degre~ ~of inflation shown by the government was standing at the i~!!iiiii~ii::iiiiiiiiiiiii.:i~iand altogether af- providence of God the great apostle Sheepskin lined $ ~ .: -.. k ~__ crossroads of economic policy and i::iiii~i;::ii::i!!i::::::i!i::!::/:::ili~#:/!fairs in the repub- to the Gentiles was born in the city Men's Work Shoes $1.25 and up ~tecliniw~ price or tt~e oonar on tot- , ...... , ::::: :::::: ======:::: , . % .... r .... -~ m~gnt nave to Hsten to poddcm l i::i::!ii::ili i~':::il)i!::!i lie v:cre "in a sad where he would encounter men of ,95 eign excnanges---a few fla3 ~ ago t~ , every nation. reached the lowest level in fifty tremor. i::?}i~ili:::iP:~;::i:i:i::ii::i;s!ii::iiiiikmuac e. ,ks tim re- Men's High Tops ...... $3.98 and II. Saul's Education (Acts 22:3). GOATSand up years but this is not enough for . " " C - I" newest conflict be- Great ~a~S SUCCESSOR to Prof. Ray- ~... Lay =n came more immi- the downright inflationists. 1. In the home (Phil. 3:5). His Boys' heavy shoes ...... :..... ,_$1.69 pressure was bein~ brought on the mend Moray in the position of as- t nent the American warships drew parents Were pious people and President, the leaders in this being sistant, secretary of state, President in closer to the capital city, and es- i doubtless carefully cultured him ac- Boys' High Tops ...... $2.49 up JACKETS Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi, Roosevelt has turned to the ranks taMished hetiographic communion-; cording to Jewish standards. He of the more prac- was brought up as a Strict Ptmrisee~ chairman of the senate finance com. tion with the American embassy. f mittee; ~enator Fletcher of Florida, tical politicians and President Grau was concentrating Stern principles of integrity were of the banking and currency com- selected R o b e r t his cavalry and artillery about the inchlcated in him, giving him great mittee; Senator Thomas of Okla- Walton Moore, a presidential palace, and his oppo- strength of character. homa and Representative Byrns of man of long experi- nents were ~gathering arms and am- 2. In college at Jerusalem (Acts One lot Tennessee, house majority leader. ence. Mr. Moore is munition. At the National hotel, 22:3). About the age of thirteen, a native of Fairfax, Harrison predicted adoption of a where 500 army officers were be- as was the custom, he became a Men's Dress Shoes ...... $2.98 new administration monetary policy Va., where he now leaguered soldiers loyal to Grau child of the law. It was doubtless in the near future, indicating it resides, and is sev- were placing machine guns on adja- at this age that he went to Jerusa- Men's Dress Oxfords ...... $1.95 would be in full swing by mid-Oc- enty-four years old. cent buildings and training them lem and entered upon his course of ChQidrsn'8 tober when the movement of cotton By profession he is on the hotel. study under Gamaliel, one of the from the farms reaches its peak. a lawyer. He was John G. Laylin, a United Statgs most eminent teachers of Israel. His Boys' Dress Oxfords ...... $1.69 elected to the Sixty- treasury expert who went to Cuba course of study here, doubtless, was "If the administration does not R. W. Moore Uflderwe r act before congress meets," he said. sixth congress to fill with A. A~ Berle of the RFC re- largely restricted to the Holy Scrip- C Boys' Dress Shoes ...... 99c up "congress will compel adoption of out a vacancy and was re-elect- cently, returned to Washington tures. In this:school he was pre- an inflationary policy and not leave ed to each succeeding congress un- with a report on the financial sit- pared for the great work of a Chris- it to the discretion of the adminis- til the Seventy-second. He then uation on the island. What he told tian theologian. Included in his ed- tration as was the case with the retired to his home. During the has not bee}l made public, but it is ucation was : We have a large assortment of Rubbers, Overshoes, Felt Shoes Thomas inflation amendment." World war he was assistant gen- a certainty that he found condi- a. Patriotism. He proudly af- Declaring that the dollar is too era] counsel of the United States tions very bad and that his report firmed "I am a Jew." He was and furnishings to satisfy your needs for the coming high and the price of gold too low, railroad administration. He is also will have much to do in determin- brought up to love his nation. He the Mississippian proposed an in- a regent of the Smithsonian insti- ing the attitude of the American was a nationalist of the true type. winter months. flation program that would include tution in Washington. government. The State department b. A love for the Bible. To him some or all of these methods: Mr. Moore is an old friend of Sec- insisted there was no present in- the Scriptures were the very Word 1. Issue treasury notes. retary of State Hull, and presum- tention of landing marines or blue- of God, the final word of authority. 2. Raise the price of gold in the ably will be able to act in accord jackets, but the sudden sending of c. Zeal for God. The word "zeal- Cass City Dept. Store domestic market. with the secretary's views better four destroyers from Guantanamo ous" literally means "to boil." = 3. Purchase silver and issue than did Professor Moley. to troubled spots was indicative of d. He was conscientious. His su- treasury notes against it, regardless the serious situation on the island. preme aim was to have a conscience of whether French and British co- ~EPEALISTS captured two more Mr. Hull said that Americans en- void of offense. Because of the Might operation could be obtained. a~ states, New Mexico and Idaho, dangered in the interior should of sin conscience needs to be dis- 2 " I 4. Create a dollar stabilization these being the thirtieth and thirty- move toward the warships for pro- ciplined by the Word of God. fund to force the value of the dol- first to turn thumbs down on pro- tection, 3. A trade at Tarsus. Perhaps aft- lar down and to keep it there. hibition. By November 7 eight oth- er his college course at Jersusalem Washington correspondents, said er states will have voted, and there OTABLE among recent deaths he returned to Tarsus and learned the administration was planning to is no reason to believe that the N is that of Dr. Annie Besant, tent making. Thus in la}er life he act in accord with a report from the wets will fail to win in at least five leader of the Theosophists of the was able to support himself while President's secretly appointed com- of them--all that is necessary to world. She passed away in Madras, preaching the gospel. One rabbi mittee of monetary experts, which remove the Eighteenth amendment India, at the age of eighty-six years, said "lie that teacheth not his son a is opposed to radical inflation. Its from the Constitution. death being due to the infirmities of trade doeth the same as if he had proposal is that about November 1 In New Mexico the vote was old age. She cl,aimed to have been taught him to steal." an agreement shall be sought be- about three to one in favor of re- reincarnated many times since be- ill. Saul's Citizenship (Acts 22: FREE - FREE - FREE tween the federal reserve board and peal, only two of the 27 counties ginning life 12,000 years ago. Lead- 27, 28)'. the central banks of Europe for showing a majority in favor of the ership in the world Theosophists In the providence of God, the the immediate stabilization of Amer- prohibition law. Idaho. however, was attained _ following upon a apostle to the Gentiles was a free- One can Tomato Soup with ican, British, French and German was much closer, the drys there stormy life which began after she born Roman citizen. He was loyal currencies by a process of "pegging" making a showing of strength sec- was divorced from an English cler- to his country, "~vhile at the same Buick them at one another. The dollar ond only to that in Tennessee. The gyman. Deprived of her children. time strictly religious• Right rela- 2 25c would be pegged at a point between repealist majority in Senator Bor- she became the champion of Lon- tionship to God sanctifies loyalty to 70 and 80 cents. ah's domain was only approximate- don's poor, a leader in political and one's country. President Roosevelt maintained ly five to four. social reforms and a strike organ- IV. Saul's Defense Before Agrippa ° Marcaroni or ..:.3 ,~s 25c silence on the matter of inflation, Attorney General Homer Cum- izer. Her attention then was di- (Acts 26:1-27). Spaghetti but was especially concerned about mings handed down a decision in rected to the "eligious movemenL He expressed his delight that he the welfare of the farmer. By his Washington that permits bankers now could speak to tell his case to SuO direction the Reconstruction Fi- to finance the wholesale manufac- ERLIN was full of reports that one who could follow his line of ar- ar Oleo 3 lbs. for 25c nance corporation made available ture o£ liquor, preparatory to re- B there hjad been a split between gument, but doubtless, he was more at ...... to the federal land banks another peal. Chancellor Hitler and his right-hand delighted in that he Mould witness to $150,000,000 to assist in the immedi- man, Capt. Herman Wilhelm Goer- him of the Savio~ar. ate refinancing of farm mortgages HILE the statesmen of Eu- ing, premier of 1. His manner of life (vv. 5:12). Jewell Coffee 3 lbs. for 55C held by banks whose operations w rope and the United States Prussia. These ru- He had been in accord with the most at ...... have been restricted by heavy port- are preparing far reopening the dis- mors were given rigid sects of the JeWs. Therefore, folibs of such paper. This step, it armament conference, there is great body by the fact he possessed the common Jewish was believed, would help toward interest In the na- ~:,::. . :~,:::::::,:: that Hitler did not hope of a coming Deliverer. 10 Jewell Coffee 19c boosting prices for. farm produce. val plans of Japan. {~...... , attend the cere- 2. His supernatural conversion mony at which lb ...... (vv. 13-15). It was through the per- Goering installed in DMINISTRATOR 30 H N S O N val minister of the sonal appearance of Jesus Christ to office the new Prus- pounds[0r A and his co-laborers finally suc- island empire, has ...... ~: ...... !ji::iii:: him on the way to Damascus. sian state council French Brand 23C ceeded in producing a code for the announced that his 3. Oomm'issioned by Jesus Christ in the Berlin uni- Coffee ...... bituminous coal industry that was country will seek and sent to the Gout'lies (vv. 16-18). versity. accepted by all the operators ex- a revision of ra- ~~il 4. His consecration (vv. 19-23). The 71 counsel- cept two small groups and by the tips at the next in- ~ Upon receipt of his commission he ors who took the Capt. H. W. HEN SIZE GRITS miners' unions and was approved ternational confer- instantly obeyed. oath in unison in- Goering by President Roosevelt. The prin- ence so that Japan 5. His appeal to Agrippa (vv. 25- cluded leaders of the Nazi storm Takes the place of Oyster Shells cipal points in this code are: will be permitted 27). He was anxious to have troops, the army, navy, church, art, 49C Provides for fixing of minimum to build nearly up Agrippa act on the knowledge that commerce, industry, and also the prices; prescribes a maximum 40- to parity with MineD OsUmi he had. former ruling houses--Prince Au- 100 l s. 69c hour worR week. Great Britain and United States. V. Saui'e Ground of Confidence Sets basic minimum wages for He holds that under present condi- gust Wilhelm Hohenzollern and Prince Philipp of Hesse. The Im- (Phil. 3:4-6), nnderground workers ranging from tions the defense purpose of the He had everything a true Jew glor- HERE IS HOT ONE FOR HOT PANCAKES $3.75 to $5.63 in 16 districts. Japanese navy is impaired and that pressive; ceremony was witnessed by the crown pri=ce and crown ted in. 5 lb. Pail Syrup 25C Recognizes right of miners to or- more warshfips are required to pro- 1. Circumcised the eighth day ganize. tect the empire from outside attack. princess of Italy, the papal nuncio, Msgr. Orsenigo; Ambassador Wil- ~v. 5). Creates regional and national Counteracting this somewhat are 2. Of the stock of Israel (v. 5). ~f boards to govern the iendustry and statements from Koki Hirota, the liam E. Dodd of the United States, and other members of the diplo- 3. Of the tribe of Benjamin (v. 5). u,k Vineg • 23 Pure ~ettle labor disputes. new foreign minister, and Capt. Gallon ...... C matic corps; but both President Benjamin had always remained The sale of coal at less than Gumpei Sekine, spokesman for the loyal to the national customs. *'fair market prices'.' is forbidden, naval ministry. The former as- Von Hindenberg and Chancellor Sliced Bread 9 Hitler were absent. 4, A Hebrew of tile Hebrews (v. and these prices are to be deter- serts that Japan is striving for the 5). He was of Hebrew parentage, 1 lb. loa ...... C mined by regional marketing agen- best possible relations with all for- The new council is merely a con- sultativ~e body, having no voting not a proselyte. Lard cies and subject to government re- eign nations, especially the United Sliced Bread 6 power, because, as Goering ex- 5. Touching the law, a Pharisee view. The labor provisions pre- States, China and Russia. Captain iv. 5). The Pharisees were a sect 1 lb. loaf ...... C scribed by the NRA are contained Sekine declares Japan has no in- plained, "that is a relic of parlia- mentarism," which he declared had am'ong the Jews most zealous for !~ntact in the code. Also the w.ork- tention of challenging .America to a the rights and ceremonies of Juda- Michigan Made Flour 89 ors are given the right to elect their naval-building race, although it will been destroyed by Nazism, togeth- 24Vzlb. bag ...... ~ C er with pacificism. ism. own check weighmen, and are not ask permission to construct a 6. Concerning zeal, persecuting the 2 to be required by their ejnployers larger navy. The same day Foreign Minister i/ Von Neu.rath expresse~l Germany's church (v. 6). He proved his zeal to live in company rented houses "The Japanese navy is defensive, by the positive effort to stamp out Soap ...... 4 25c pounds for or to trade in company stores. not aggressive," Sekine asserts. "The determination to obtain security and equality in weapons of defense. that which was threatening 3uda- Japanese public does not want a ism. Canvas Gloves 10c war. We want honorable co-opera- In the representatives of PEAKING to the convention (ff 7. Touching the righteousness Pair ...... S tion. We do not want to be op- the United States, Great Britain the Grain and Feed Dealers' and held conversations pre- which is in the law, blameless (v. 6). National association in Chicago, pressed or disgraced. No happi- LET KRUGER SUPPLY YOU WITH ness comes out of war. But when !i,minary to the :resumption of the Secretary of Agriculture W~llace ut- disarmament conference, the main Like a Diamond 15c pressed to the wall we will fight." tered the warning that all plans for • he nature of a human being is He deplores propaganda asserted- topic being France's proposal for fixing prices of agricultural prod- like a finely-cut diamond; it reflects ly aimed at stirring up trouble be- rigid and permanent control of ucts must surely fail unless the law a multitude of color-flashes as the tween Japan and the United States. arms which must be tried over a of supply and demand is complied ! light of other personalitie~ Is Nayed "There is no real reason for a period of years lJefor~ she will con- " --'------...... J- • .... B with. Farmers. he declared, must [ upon it. II war between America and Japan," sent to disarm. control production, ~and, if they do ©, 1933, ~reslern New,paper Union° o CASS CITY, MICHIGAN. , _ CASS CITY CHRONICLE 7- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933. PAGE THREE. KINGSTON. Ancient Culture Noz Yet Regained Wolverine Ferocious I BREEZES FROM t And we think the ancient Egyp- Hunters agree that, for his size, tians weren't as civilized as we are. the wolverine is the most/~erocious THE HILL [ The Misses Anna and Ada Young ttowever, they minted a coin on and swiftest fighter of NOrth Ameri- T and Newton Youngs of Plymouth which was stamped: "Mind your can animals. Altl~ough he seems Cass City Schools, are spending a few days at the own business." -- Florida Times- rather clumsily built, he is incred- Kate Youngs t~0me, north of town. By Elaine Turner. .>>y~.,vm...,y~~x+x<.:.:.:.:<.:.:.:.:.:.:.x.:..:.,..,....:....~.,~)- trict around Ningsia. becomes a mo- Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cdwell and Mrs. Jessie Pettit left Thursday Miss Evelyn Schmidt of Port .¢..ii!!i!iE!ii!~iiii}i!i!ii}i i~ii ! i i ! i~iii~iiii~i!~i;~ii~iii!i~!iii!!i!iii!~!ii~iii~iii~!i!ii!~ii!}!~;i~}i~i~iiiiiii~i?.:i~notonous passage through desolate me a chance before you sell. i all or spare time, in your own family of Saginaw visited Mr. Col= of last week to spend a few days Huron spent Saturday and Sunday yellow wastes all the way to Pao- Phone 68-F-3. Clifford Secord. l locality, and be your own boss; welI's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. with her sister, Mrs. W. L. Harder, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. i...~...... ~.....~..+...~...... +.+..~.~+~..+~+~.~.~..+~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~+~+`i }}iiiii !! ii{ii!iiiii{i:!ili{ii! .: -..:,..:..+:.:,:+.~.v.N tow. 7-28-tf with something entirely new, a A. Schmidt. Miss Schmidt will iiiiiiili::i!i::iiiii::iii~::i::}i::i}::i):!i::::!::::i@iiiiii::i::iiii}iiiii!::!il/iii::iii::iiiii::!!!~-::i~.. "{iiii~) ~ ~~.?'~!~"."-'i Colwell, Sunday. in Bad Axe. Grilling Voyage. FOR SALE Extra good team, I household necessity that will leave Port Huron Sunday to spend The great loop ground the Ordos bring you a good steady income. three months in Herman Keifer {.::::{i!i i ::~ { i! i i~! .... ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::weight 1300 pounds; one mare See Mr. Rounds at~ the Gordon Mrs. Grant Smith and son, Lee, Mr. and Mrs.. Willis Campbell ...z.~...... "...... ~:~:~:~i{::~<:~:<:~:i: : :i~::~ desert is a slow. gmlhng voyage dur- 10 years old; one gelding 8 years Tavern, Cass City, Monday, Oct. of St, Clair are spending the week and daughter, Mary Jane, visited hospital in-Detroit, as a part of {~ i:!i ..... ii!!!i;~, ing the summer months, when the her training course as a nurse. old. Also a few young cattle. 2, b~tween 1:00 and 4:00 p. m. iAwith Mrs. Smith's parents, Mr. and relatives and friends in Detroit sun throuohout the day beats down •..:.,:.~.::...~:.,:::::::::: iii Thomas Humphrey, 1½ miles 9-29-1

Morning worship, 10:30. Ser- lesson courses of the fal! quarter. days or if. the. ground is very wet.] favor of improving M-81, and calle.d '2 v~ant to call your attention to Church Calendar. mon subject, "Worthy Disciples." The Christian Endeavor wili|~ID":.~ -- -'~'~.~ It is best to leave the potatoes on I attention to the fact that about 600 the fact," he said, "that the allo- meet at the church dt 6:00 p. m. | top of the ground~for an hour or so local residents had signed petitions cation of funds to counties is my Mennonite Church Riverside~ Sunday School, 11:45, promotion Joirtt evening service at 7:30 at I after they are dug. They ,then dry to this effec~t. He declared that an own idea, that it is revocable if it Prayer meeting Thursday evening day exercises. First quarter of the Methodist church. Rev. Mr. 1 enough so the dirt falls off and the investigation had beerL made show- seems advisable .and that it is not at the home of James Tracey. Sun- new iessons begins in all classes. The Sunday evening service at skin of the tuber is a better color, ing that right-of-way for the ira- l iron-clad." day morning, preaching at ten Bayless shares with us his gleam] Charles A. McPhail. o'clock. Sunday School at eleven. 7:30 will be a joint ,meeting- with ings from the great address of ~ Funeral services for Charles Ar- Running the plow of the potato provement would be donated by the the Presbyterian people in the Harry F. Ward at the recent Mizpah Sunday morning, ten- chibald McPhail, 46, were held Sat- digger too near the surface dam- owners. Prohibition Missed Them Methodist church. We will con- Methodist conference. ages a lot of potatoes ,that could The 'delegation left Lansing with I Butterflies are habitual drunkards ~hirty, Sunday School, followed by urday afternoon at ,the Angus lVi:c- tinue the plan of "informal wor- Thursday evening, Oct. 5, the. preaching at eleven-thirty. Sun- Phail home on South Segar St. be readily sold. Potatoes injured a clear idea of the attitude of the and dope fiends, says Pathfinder ship and ,conference." Discussion Missionary Society holds a joint day evening at seven-thirty, evan- Rev. Mr. Hitchins qfficiated and by fork tines when dug by hand highway commissioner as being Magazine. Decaying fruit, especial- will be led by Mr. Payless on meeting with the Guild. gelistic sermon. Next week, Tues- burial was in Elkland cemetery. are ruined for the table, and often disposed to treat all counties fair= ly grapes, have an irresistible at- day evening. ~raver service at the "What sort of person a Christian Ch~rb.~ MeP'hall wa.~ horn M~,r. damage other po.tatoes in storage ly, and anxious to obtain first hand traction for them. and they will S:A,:m E~a~;dkA C::mrd~ G. A. home o~ =~Irs. C'. E. C,tis~ 2% when Zile in]ureci.. spuds i-oz. , ':~,f'.rr~m'!.L.~ ~- ~., ~~J~'~'*~: ~'-]ea~. 1Teed un[i] comp]eie]y i~toxica[edo quest, a summary will be present- SpJ£1er, Pastor. 1337, i~ Austir~ township,-two G. D. Clink, Pastor. miles riorth of Argyle, and has Many potatoes are bruised be- I iVlr. VanWagoner made no corn- They also go for Indian Pipe weed, ed covering lectures as deIivered by Bible school at 10:00 a. m. Supt., cause they are tossed too far h~tol mitment, as to what action would which has a drug in the juice that Prof. Harry F. Ward at the recent Lawrence Buehrly. Rally Day lived near there all his life. He Novesta Baptist Church The was united in marriage with Miss crates when they are picked up. I be taken, but declared .that the aim stupefies them. In addition to this Methodist conference. Sunday. Bruised potatoes rot readily in l is to benefit the largest possible they are insatiable gluttons when church was filled Sunday night ,to Bethel Church Sunday School, Morning worship service ° at Margaret Jane Hub on, June 24, 1913. storage and are discolored eve~ if lnumber of people with the monies they can get meat. They will feed hear the Rev. Geo. Crook on the 11:00 a. m., with new officers in 11:00. Sermon theme is, "Labog- 1 Mr. MePhail held the position of they are used before they spoil, i expended' and to relieve unemploy- on a dead snake until so filled that great subject, "Signs of the charge. New lessons also. ers Together with God.'; The choir I treasurer of Austin ,township for Hauling potatoes bose in wagons (ment as soon as possible, they cannot fly away. Times." The interest is growing will sing a special number. Morning worship at 12:00, noon. I two years .and was a member of the bruises many more tubers than and every one seems very happy'as Feature, story for boys and girls. Junior and Senior Endeavor ser- Argyle school board at the time of would be injured if they were han- God's grace is preached. On Sun- The minister will meet all Bethel vice at 6:45 p. m. The subject for his death. dled in crates. I day, there is a great treat for Sunday School workers Tuesday discussion in the senior 'society is He passed away Thursday, Sept. those who attend the services. The evening at 8:00 at the church. "Why Should All Christians Be Stored potatoes need• air. Piles Quality ! Service ! Price ! I 21, in Tweedie hospital at Sandus- Should not be so large that part of Rev. R. J. Devine from Oak Park, Midweek service in town church, Church Members?" ky, following an operation. He had thetubers receive little ver~tila- WE DELIVER Chicago, will be the speaker and Thursday, 7:30, continuing study Evening worship service at 7:30. been ill b~t two days. tion. Doors and windows of storage every night ne~t week exoept Sat- of "Personal Religion" in New Tes- The pastor will speak on tt~e .sub- He is survived by his widow and urday. He will speak on a large tament letters. ject, "The Eternal Potter." Special cellars shouldtbekeptopenwhen- chart, "From Cradle Roll Harbor seven children, Archibald, Hutson, ever possible during the first few Independenl6rocory music. to Bible Ct~ss Bay." Pastor Bis- lV£arion, Euniee, Eula, Beatrice and weeks potatoes are stored. Tem- Decker M. E. Circuit~Shabbona Prayer service Thursday night at sett will assist him and there will 7:30. Jack, all at home. He also leaves peratures should run from 50 to 60 be good singing. All are welcome. --Church school at 10:30 a. m. four sisters and one brother, Mrs. degrees in the storage period. M.D. HARTT. Telephone 149. Morning- service at 11:30. ~Young Frank Darville and John MePhail, I people's service at 3:00 p. m. Nazarene ChurchSunday school Argyle Circuit Herbert N. Hich- Top- of Detroit, Mrs. Margaret Sim- ic, "The Value of Time." Leader, at 2:00 p. m. Preaching at 3:00. ALLOCATION OF HWY. ens. kins of Keego H-arbor, Mrs. Wal- Pastor. Mrs. Gilbert McKee. Prayer set- N. Y. Po services at 7:30. Leader, FUNDS NOT IRON-CLAD Cleanser ...... 2 cans for 17c Cumber--Preaching, 10:00 a. m. ter Walker of Cass City and Mrs. Wyandotte vice on Thursday ag 8:00 p.m. I Mrs. Casper Whalen. Sunday School, 10:45 a. m. Mac Roomsburg. DeckerChurch school at 10:30 1 N. Y. P. S. zone rally will be Ubly--Sunday School, 10:00 a. Those from a distance who at- Concluded from first page. Toilet Soap, Floating Castile ...... a.m. Evening service a5 7:30. Iheld at Cass City Nazarene church m. Preaching, 11:00 a. ;m,. tended the funeral were Mrs. Flora Prayer service on Tuesday at 8:00 Saturday, Sept. 30. Basket lunch. TuscC.a county has always been a ...... ½ lb. bar 5e Hotbrook Sunday School, 10:30 Darvil!e, Mrs. Robt. Heminway, rock-ribbed Republican county. It p.m. Coffee furnished by church. a. m, Miss Margaret MePhail and Mr. has always been 'good' consequent- Elmer--Morning service 10:00. Wickware Preaching, 2:00 p. m. at and Mrs. Peterson of De±roit, Mrs. ly, it didn't get its share of high- Candy Orange ~nces ...... per lb. 10e Church school at a. m. Sunday School, 3:00 p. m. ii:00 Baptist Church Preaohing Sun- Archie Bryce, Mr. and Mrs. Colin way money distribution in the Prayer service on Wednesday at Argyle--Sunday School, 11:00 a. day morning at 10:30. Theme, Bryce, ~r. and Mrs. D. Bryce, and 8:00 p. m. past." Wheat Hearts (Breakfast Food) m. Preaching, 8:00 p. m. "Why the Collapse of Cuba, or How Mrs. Fred Stanard of Almont, Mr. I Representative Hanna declared a. H. James, Pastor. Long Will the World Condone the and Mrs. Archie Bryce of Pontiac, Friday, Sept. 29, the Holbrook- that Tuscola county ~s m entire ac- _ ...... 5 lb. sack 32c Wickware Epworth League will Attitude of Capitalism ?" Mr. and Mrs. F. Simkins of Keego cord with the methods being pur- Sunday School at 11:45. Cecil Harbor. meet at the Holbrook !Yr. E. church Presbyterian Church--Paul J. sued by Commissioner VanWagon- May Blossom Mustard ...... qt. jar 14c at 8:15 p. m. Allured, Minister. Sunday, Oct. i: Brown, Supt. er. "We are not here to tell you Saturday, Sept. 30 The Argyle Morning worship and church Junior B. Y. P. U. at 3:00. Sen- . Mrs. Frank Eastman. ior B. Y. P. U. at 7:30. on just what roads to spend this Peanut Butter 2 ]b. can 23c Epworth League will give a Rally school, i0:30-12:30. The sacra- Funeral services were held Sat- money," he said. "Spend it on the ...... Preaching at 7:30: "How a Man Day program at the M. E. church ment of the Lord's Supper will be urday afternoon a~ 2:30 at the fam- roads in Tuscola that you think Overcame His Last Hindrance in at 8:t5 p. m. administered following a brief ser- ily home southeast of Cass City will We the best results and it will Ralston's Wheat Food, per pkg ...... 24e mon on "The Chalice of Antioch."- the Way Of a Full Victory in His please most of our people." Life." for Mrs. Frank Eastman, 77, who Methodist Episcopal Church-- Adult class lesson, "Saul in Tar- passed away Thursday, Sept. 21. Geo. W. West, president of Cass Assorted Cookies ...... i ...... per doz. 9c Prayer and Bible study Thursday Charles Payless, Minister. Sun- sus." Act 21:89, 22:8, Phil. 8:8-6. Row B. A. Sherk officiated and City, SlCoke in favor of improving evening at 7:30. day, Oct. 1: It is very important that every burial was in Elkland cemetery. M-81. He suggested that part of May Blossom Peas ...... 2 cans 25c Rev. Mrs. Sturtevant Cass City Church--Class meet- church school pupil be present to- and of Sarah M. Tousley was born on the Tuscda allotment be spent on Lansing, who ~ represent the head ing-, 10:00 a. m. John Mark, leader. day for the beginning of the new the shores of Lake Huron at what rice miles of the highway which he of the religious education in the Egg Noodles ...... 14 oz. pkg. 13c is now known at Kewahdin Beach called narrow and unsafe. state of the Baptists, were here on June 15, 1856. Her early life A. E. Streeter of Vassar called with the people of the Baptist was spent at Fort, Gratiot and at church last Sunday. Mr. Sturtevant attention to the fact that expert- ~~' We Will Have a Full Line of the age of 31 she married Frank diture of funds to improve 5~ • gave an excellent sermon in the Eastman and went to live on a miles north of Vassar would con- Sweet Potatoes, Celery, Cabbage, Head morning. During the Sunday school farm near Cass City. They have nect up traffic on M-15, M-23, It will be to your advantage to hour, they took notice of the work. spent most of their married life in M-38, M-46, and M-81. Lettuce and Squash for the Week-end. After service, a potluck dinner was Supervisor Audley Ra:w-son of ] wE Do ou~ this vicinity. PART o served, at which time the teachers read and buy these Though her heal.th has not been Elkland township also spoke int and officers of the school enjoyed good for several years, hers was a a d~onference with the helpers. It life of unselfishness and loving" was decided to use the New Key- ministry in her home and among stone graded series through all the her hosts of friends. Saturday Specials children's classes. Many changes Besides her husband, she is sur- were suggested and all believe the vived by one son, Elwood Eastman, day was a very profitabIe one. May Blossom Peas 25C of Kingston, one daughter, Mrs. Lay in a Supply of 2 cans ...... Mildred Jessup, Of Dryden, five "HENRY'S WEDDING" grandchildren, two brothers and oo. 24e TO BE STAGED three sisters. package ...... :...... Our Coal Concluded from first page. May Blossom Mustard The missing bridegroom causes Cut Potato Shrink Quart jar ...... 14C many comical situations and the by Careful Methods COAL is the dependable fuel. You boys, Ted and Harris, who attempt know what you are getting, you know Tea Siftings ~ Q~ to kidnap him, are shaking with 1 lb. package fear throughout the entire time due Income from potatoes on Michi- what the low cost of it is and you know to the fact that they are afraid gan farms can be increased this they will go to the penitentiary for year even with the unusually short that there are no mechanical tricks in Apple Butter 19c crop if extra efforts are made to Quart can ...... such an offense. order to get heat from it. You also know that when you buy Things go from bad to worse and avoid the usL~l shrinkage ~,aused it seems there will be no wedding, from careless ~harvesting, handling Premium Flake Crackers 25C and storage, according to the farm coal from The Farm Produce Company you get honest weight 2 lb. pkg. but a love affair between the old maid, Susan Christopher, and Law- crops depmlment at Michigan and fine quality at a fair price. yer Brown, ripens and at last there State College. Trixy Molasses 13 c is a triple wedding. One of the ,most common losses Large can ...... is incurred when potatoes are left Other characters who add much in the ground until ,they are dam- Farm Produce Company to the plot are Virginia played by aged by a severe freeze. Frozen Miss Marjorie Graham, Marie by potatoes rot in the field and in Telephone No. 54 , Cass City A. Henry Miss Lorene McGrath, Rev. Tur- storage. Those tubers which are nipseed by Dr. B. H. Starmann, and Cash Paid for Cream and Eggs, Telephone 82. only chilled are discolored and have WE DO OUR PART two gangsters, "Bud" Burt and Ed an ~ objectionable flavor when Baker. cooked. October 15 is about the Another outstanding feature is limit of safety for harvesting po- the 1890 guests at this modern tatoes even in the southern tiers of 1940 wedding. This group, called counties. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND "Beaus and Belles of Grandma's The appearance of the potatoes Time" are the laugh hit of the has quite an effect upon their mar- show. Thirty-five prominent men ket price. Cool, clear days are best "Henry's Wedding" of Cass City will take the charact- for harvesting if it is possible to ers of the olden times and repre- choose the time. Soil sticks ,to the Auspices of the Cass City Ladi& Band sent such people as t~he Bicycle potatoes if they are dug on rainy Girl, the Floradora Girl, Floradora High School Auditorium, Thurs, Fri. Oct° 5, 6~ 8:15 Po Mo Mar/, Driver of the Horseless Car- riage, Beau Brummell of 1860, the Adults 35e Children 20e Flashing Swain of 1870, Celluloid - All main fl,oor seats reserved for 5c extra charge at Henry's Grocery beginning Collar Bennie, and many other fun- Wednesday, Oct. 4, at 9:00 A. M. ny and amusing characters. Each Pastime one of the "Beaus and Belles of Grandma's Time" is to be intro- duced to the wedding to the ~une Theatre of a popular song of the o~den Cass City times, sung by the chorus and the ~entire group. Each will be dressed Sat., Sun., Sept. 30, Oct. 1 in an unusual and outstanding cos- tume, particularly fitting to the 10e and 35c that Gulf gasoline and lubri- character he portrays. The traffic The comedy drama supreme cop of 1890 acts as master of cere- cants are the products for Auction Sale! monies. "THREE You don't Another feature is the meeting CARLOAD OF MONTANA HORSES of the colored Brethren and Sistern CORNERED you, regardless of the make of the Mystic Shrine. Thirty prom- 30 HEAD inent men and women of the com- MOON" of your car. That Gulf dis AT DAWSON FARM AT WEST munity take part in this spiritua- with Richard Aden, Claud- have to be listic meeting and - sing" the old ette Colbert and a host of and gas have gone through CITY LIMITS OF SANDUSKY spiritualistic songs of the south- others. Also forty-five min- ern negroes. Sister Sadie and Sis- utes of short subjects. a process of refining that ter Eliza are called upon to talk to the spirits and find out where old to be Monday, Oct. 2' Tues., We&, Oct. 3, 4 guarantees more mileage at less Beginning at 1:00 p. m. sharp. Uncle Henry is. Songs such as "Lonesome Road," "Sing You Sin- ~- 10c and 25c This load consists of 11 work horses, 10 ners," "Hallelujah," and "Hear cost. That this is the place to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in mares and colts. Colts are extra good suckling Dem Bells" are given by the wise to buy your motor fuel. colts, Percheron bred. Horses are from 5 to 11 group. Girls' choruses are also high "THE LIFE Best Quality Gasoline Lubricants years old. spots in the show-. They will be OF JIMMY Terms Cash. dressed in brilliant and beautiful costumes and give snappy choruses DOLAN" the fact and singing to such songs as "The Cass City Oil and Gas Co, Dead DeShone, Manager King's Horses," "Smile Darn Ya Jammed full of comedy and Stanley Asher, Manager Worthy Tait, Auctioneer. Smile," "Yours and Mine," and action. • "Down the River of Golden I Dreams.' PAGE SIX. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29, 1983. CASS CITY;, MICHIGAN. Notice of Hearing Claims Before DEFORD. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Profit have kountie rode komishun, the hi-wa Starlings Numerous Court.--State of Michigan, the Pure Seed Needed named their baby girl Almeda is 32 to 36 ft. in width with a fine Although the starling was not Probate Court for the County of Christena. brought to this co~ntry until 1890, Evangelistic Services-- i DEER JIM grad, nicly graveled, and ampl Tuscola. when it was introduced into New In the mutter of the for Better Wheat Claude Root made a business trip ditches. I bet Audley Rawson, the Services are being conducted at to Pontiac Thursday. supervizer, has a big chest mezhur York state, it has spread and mul- Estate of Alice Merriman, Deer Jim: the Novesta Baptist church by the r~ow with such a fine boolevard tiplied so rapidly that tt Is becom- Sunday School officers were I havn't herd from you for so Deceased. Growers Should Test Va- pastor, Rev. L. W. Welton, and runnin pass his farm. ing a well-known resident of many elected at Bethel as follows: Supt., long that I'm ben wunderin if you Notice is hereby given that 4 Evangelist Crook, assisted by spec- You no, Jim, Cass City has an- of our mid-western~ states. It is months from .the 18th day of Sep- riety; Adopt Kind Suited Herbert Maharg; assistant supt., are sick. I spose its keepin you ial singers, Mr. and Mrs, Bissett. uther rode that gives me m~tch about the size of a red-winged tember, A. D. 1933, have been al- J,ohn Profit; secretary, Kenneth bust on the farm as the children to Community. Services every evening. The group plesure to driv. That's the one 4 blackbird though stockier and p'os- lowed for creditors to present .their held an open-air service on the Maharg; treasurer, John W. Mar- hay started skool and can't help as clMms against said deceased to shall, Jr.; pianisL Retta Charter. miles east of town. y,ou remem-! sessed of a short, stub~y tail. In By Dr. G. K. Middleton, Seed Specialist. streets of Deford on Saturday eve- mt~tch as durin the vakashun said court for examination and ad- North Carolina State College• The Ladies' Aid elected the fol- ber, of coarse, the corduroi rode f spring it is black, but ~hen it molts WNU Service. ning. munths. justment, and that all creditors of lowing officers at their meeting at from Elkland cemeteri to the East its spring plumage the new feath- ..; ...... ~ ~.,-, ...... ~ ...... +~ ~.. ! ers are tinned w'th white or b~ff. ~he home of Mrs. Alton Mark: sent ~heir claims to said court, at tion of seed ~nder ~he r~gu,a~,on~ Marriage Cere~mony~ £~H, ~d whH i culd hardHe ~parelold timers c~Id come back and see wi~ich gives the bird' a mottied ap- of the North Carolina Crop Im- Pres., Mrs.~ Audtey Rawson; vice the probate office, in the Village The marriage of Miss Mary Jan- h}m durra bean harvust, I.am hap-] Gene Schwaderer's job of pavin on pearahce. of Care, in said county, on or be- provement association has revealed pres., Mrs. John Profit; sercetary, kos 9f Deford and Floyd Reszka p~e ~na~ ne nas ~ne opormnm ~Oltha t strech they'd hav a hard time fore the 27th day of January, A. D. the fact that seed wheat in this state Mrs. John Doerr, Jr.; treasurer, of Flint was solemnized at ,the get a hi skool edukashun and may, it o believ they were travelin that 1934, and that said claims will be is badly mixed. Mrs. John Marshall. Crows Steal Eggs / Catholic church at Cass City by the be later go to kolej. You no, Jim, I swamp, rode, wuldn't they ? heard by said court on Saturday, We need some careful standardiza- Mr. and Mrs. Audley Rawson ac- During the months when young Rev. Fr. Fitzpatrick. The groom we missed a lot by bein urmbel to I We ar all wel, .thank you. Come the 27th day of January, A. D. tion done by communities, counties companied their son, Ralph, to Mr. crows are being hatched and reared, 1934, at ten oMock in the forenoon. Was attended by " Rudolph Jankos, go to skool like the yung foks to- I over sum Sunda. and even districts. It is entirely Pleasant Sunday where he will at- the parents are persistent hunters Dated, September 18th, A. D. brother of the bride. The bride was tend college for the coming year. da. But we're getin a lot of satis- CY BLINKER. for. the young and eggs of wild birds 1933. within the possibility of the grow- fakshun in givin our kids thes: ad- attended by Miss Walterina Mr. and Mrs. Earl Maharg and and poultry. The bureau of biologi- H. WALTER COOPER, Judge of ers of a community to test the vantajs. When I saw the list of Seiw, arga of Flint and was attired son, Bobble, spent the week-end in ~lardest Metal in cal survey states in a report on Probate. 9-22-3 adapted v~rieties of wheat, secure yung foks,goin to kolej this fall, I Tasmania in a dress of white silk. She car- Pontiac. crow damage at a federal waterfowl the one best suited to their commu- says to Lizie, "Muther, thes yung- The world's hardest metal, osmi- Notice of Hearing Claims Before ried a bouquet of white roses and Mr. and Mrs. Alton Mark were ridium, which is used for tipping sanctuary: "The chief enemy of the nity and to adopt this variety as the sters has one thing" that meny wis- Court.--State of Michigan, the lilies of the valley. A wedding Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. fountain pep nibs, is found in Tas- ducks was the crow. This bird de- on~ for all to grow. This will pre- er persuns hay not. They got Probate Court for the County of dinner was served at the home of Mark in Cass City. mania. stroyed 35 per cent of the eggs." Tuscola. vent mixing to a great extent and fayth, fayth in themselves, fayth the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Chgs. P. Bayless and Mr. In the m~tter of the assure the community of having in the world they liv in. Their Andrew Jankos, after which the and Mrs. Harry Russell and family Estate of Purley M,cRae, whea~ which will find ready favor aint sin-i-sizm in there Irrmk-up, but couple left for Flint where t~ey of Gagetown were Sunday dinner Deceased. among the millers. It is only by a belef that their;s beter days a will make their home. guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Notice is hereby given that 4 ~rowing pure varieties of wheat comin, and they're getin reddy for Delbert Profit. months from the 14th day of Sep- with good milling qualities that the them. Let's folow there egzampl." best grades of flour can be made. Business Men Entertain-- Berneice Profit fell from .the .t ember, A. D. 1933, have been al- You no, Jim, my beans is turnin lowed for ~creditors to present their Fifty fields of wheat were select- ~)eford was a busy little town on swing at school one da~v last week Y oat grand for this sezn. In Au- claims against said deceased to ed at random in the important Saturday when the business men and fractured her wrist. gest, I was so pesimistick I thru said court for examinatioR and ad- wheat growing counties of the state sponsored a team hauling contest, Alfred Maharg had a new spare TAKE MY away my kulerd glasses and was justment, and that all creditors of the past spring and inspected for va- amateur boxing bouts, and a h'ee tire stolen from his car in Cuss so blu I culd gaz at the sun with- said deceased are required to pre- rietal mixtures. Out of the fifty, show. In the team hauling, four City Saturday night and other peo- sent their claims to said court, at ~here~were twelve fields having over teams were present and competed ple in this vicinity report groceries out blinkin. "Bean stoks cover the the probate office, in the Village ground but pods are so skaterin of Care, in said county, on or be- 20 per cent of mixture and the McIntyre~ and ~iles of Deford, missing from their cars the same WORD counts in one field showed 56 per Wm. Kiteley of Wilmot, and a team night. and so smal that I'm plum diskur- fore the 26th day of January, A. D. tied," I told Lizie 6 wks. ago. But 1934, ahd that said Claims will be cent of bearded wheat and 44 per from Mayville. Every team pres- heard by said court, on Friday, cent of smooth-headed wheat. Only efit showed their willingness to do you no how kontrari women is. the 26th day of January, A. D. two fields could be classed as pure their best and some fine hauling WILMOT. "Don't count your beans befor FOR iT... 1934, at ten o'clock in the forenoon. and of the total, 76 per cent con- was witnessed. The main boxing their harvested," she paried back. Dated, September 14th, AL. D. tained sufficient mixture to make the bout of the evening was between Mrs. Chas. Clement of Winnipeg An betwen you and me, Jim, this 1933. wheat objectionable for seed pur- Joe Karpowski of Wilmot and Jas. was a caller at the E. N. Hartt was one more time she was rite H. WALTER COOPER, Judge of and I'm glad of it. You'll never get more down. Doges. Smetek of Deford, who was winner home on Wednesday. Probate. 9-22-3 right comfort and outsh~nd- In contrast to this, inspection was of .the bout. Della Chapin was on the sick list This is an off yere in politiks, ° Notice of Hearing Claims Before made of 19 other fields where the last week. but I here that Herb Orr says he ~g economy than you'll get when you burn Court.--State of Michigan, the owners were seeking to have their Drama to Be Given-- wont be star senater after this, his Probate Court for the County of Barton Hartt wen~ to work in CadaVer Coalo A true *'QuaH~y Coal'~e wheat certified, and it was satis- 2nd turin. Seems 4 yrs. out of 12 Tuscola. ° A dramatization of an actual Detroit last Wednesday. gen~e Consolidation Elkhorn. Supremely factory. we hav a scraper from Tuscola In the matter of the court rial, "Who Killed Earl Mr. and Mrs. R0ss Hart and chil- This proves that wheat seed can kountie, then one from Huron, and eAficient~makes heat even with the drafts Estate of Harry Cooper, Wright," will be given on Thurs- dren were week-end visitors at E. be kept practically pure. Most of then one from Sanilac kountie. Sort dosed~ needs less looking after at any time. Deceased. day evening, Oct. 5, at the Deford N. Hartt's. the mixing occurs because thresh- .of divid it up amung the faythfull Notice is hereby given that 4 M. E. church, beginning at eight ing machinery' and recleaning ma- • Mrs. Ben Clement, after spend- of the 3 kounties,, so to speke. You Always clean, unlforn~ even-burning. And every months from .the 14th day of Sep- o'clock. Admission is free. The ton is guaranteed to satisfy youX Read the Printed tember, A. D. !933, have been al- chinery ~re not properly cleaned. mg the past year with her son at no, Jim, that's a gud prin-si-pl if cast of characters: Guarantee on your weight certificate. Look also for lowed for creditors to present their Judge ...... Rev. W. L. Jones Winnipeg, is visiting relatives at we hav a poor one--even one turin Cuss City. claims against said deceased to Sheriff ...... Joseph Best wuld be to meny for such. But if the Trade Mark Tags in the coal--they're put there said court for examination and ad- Ohio Wheat Now Safer Defendant ...... John Marshall The heavy winds the past few we e lekt a good one, such as Herb to protect y0u~ to let you know you are getting the justment, and ~that all creditors of days have placed more apples on has proovd to be, I think he shuld From Black Stem~Rust Defendant's mother ...... genuine Cavalier. Burn Cavalier Coal this winter said deceased are required to pre- ,the ground than there are on the be kept their longer. What's the --take it from me--and you'll have more comfort sent their .claims .to said court, at Eradication of more than two ...... Mrs. H. D. Malcolm ~ trees. Mrs. French .... Mrs. G. M. Holmes idee of sendin down a new legisla- satisfaction than ever before. the probate office, in the Village milHom common barberry bushes Mrs. Will Barrens is visiting tor every 4 yrs. and just as soon as of Care, in said county, on or be- Bootlegger ...... Lowell Sickler in Ohio in the past decade has ren- friends in Minnesota. he lurns the ropes and bekums use- fore the 26th day of January, A. D. Coroner ...... Glenn Towsley dered wheat growing safe from Mr. and Mrs. Clark Ferguson !934, and that said claims will be Bailiff ...... Allison Green full .to his distrikt call him home black stem rus~ disease in practi- spent the week-end in Chicago. and send down a gTene man. Of heard by said court on Friday, the Court reporter...: ...... Phyllis Lester cally all of the important wheat Floyd Hawkins of Harbor Beach coarse, I adm~r Herb for kepin his 26th day of January, A. D. 1934, Defense attorney ...... Charles Hill at ten o'clock in th~ forenoon. producing sectibns of the state. spent Friday with his brother, elekshun promis and retirin after 2 A survey of the Ohio wheat crop Jur0rs--Chas. Kilgore, Howard Dated, September 14th, A. D. Robert. 'turms, but aint it the rong idee? Elkland:Roller Mills I by W. G. Stover, plant pathologist Retherford, Walter Kelley, James 1933. Elmer Clark and Miss Margaret I drov into Cass City from the for the Ohio State university, shows Green, Russell Patrick, Fred Telephone 15 ~ CERTIFICATEON WEIGHT H. WALTER COOPER, Judge of Shoemaker were quietly ~married north the uther day over the koun- Probate. 9-22-3 that rust epidemics are local and Hitchcock, Mrs. Chas. Kilgore, Mrs. tr TICKET AND TRADE MARK last week. tie rode from the Huron kountie Cass City, Mich TAGS~N ThE CO.U. few this year. H. Retherford, Mrs. W. Kelley, Sam Ferguson returned home af- line. Say, Jim, that rode's a wun- Mrs. Bruce Ruggles, Mrs. Amber Directory. Only in one locality was the ter spending some time with der. It's ben maid 66 ft. from fens Jones, Mrs. Fred H. H~tchcock. wheat crop ruined by black stem friends in Pontiac. to fens under the direkshun of the B. H. STARMANN, M. D. rust. Ten years ago fields lost from Physician and Surgeon infections of the disease were com- N. R. Kennedy spent Tuesday Office hours, 10:00 to 12:00 a. m., mon, Stover declares. and Wednesday at Detroit. 2:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. The common barberry is the host Mrs. Carrie spent Sunday with Telephone 189-F-2. to the organism that causes wheat friends at Care and Bay Port. :rust, in early spring. Eradication I. D. McCOY, M. D. @ of the bushes g}'eatly reduces pos- Kenneth Kelley and Robt. Kel- ]. A. Surgery and Roentgenology. COLE sibility of r~st et~id~mics. ley were businesw callers at De- Office in Pleasar~t Home Hospital. Wherever in Ohio severe local troit Wednesday and Thursday of GARAGE Phone, Office 96; Residence 47. outbreaks of wheat rust occur, a last week when they sold a truck- search will discover common bar- load of potatoes at the city market. L. D. McRAE, M. D. berry nearby. Funds for the de- Lloyd Warner is spending the Service on Office hours, 12:00 M. to 2:00 P. M. All struction of the bushes are pro- week at the home of his sister, 5:00 to 7:00 P. M. Morris Hospital. vided by the statue and federal gov- Mrs. Mabel Eurgam, at Detroit. Phone 62. Makes of Cars aim 11{ lOll ernments. ae Clayton Bitterling of Snover P. A. SCHENCK, D. D. S. spent the week-end with Bruce Electroplated Pistons run Malcolm. Dentist. Soybeans and Pork with less friction, increase Graduate of the University of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Kelley and speed and pickup, cut oil con- On account of poor health, the undersigned will sell at auc- The principal objection to the children of Gagetown spent Satur- Michigan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., use of soybeans in their natural sumption and put miles and Cuss City, Mich. day at the home of their parents, state as a fattening feed for hogs Mr. and Mrs. Win. Kelley. smiles in your motor. Add I tion, on her farm, 4 miles south and 1/% mile east of Cass City, has been that they produce soft DENTISTRY. Cecil Lester and Arthur Hender- new rings and a valve job tot I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. pork. As yet no methods have make the combination coro- the following property, on been evolved that will entirely son were callers at Saginaw Satur- Office over Burke's Drug Store. day. plete. We solicit your patronage when in avoid this result, although there need of work. seems to be evidence that when the Mr. and Mrs. George M cIntyre Plating costs less than half beans are fed merely {or g~row~h attended the Kentucky thorough- E. W. DOUGLAS an d the fattening process carried bred races at the Detroit fair the price of New Pistons. t Funeral Director. oat with Corn and tankage the un- grounds on Wednesday. Drop in and see us. Lady assistant. Ambulance ser- desirable effects of the beans may SUnday visitors at the Robert vice. Phone 42-F-4. be avoided. Horner home were Mr. and Mrs. George Arnot Don Skinner Soft hogs mean lower prices. Tuesday, Oct"3 Fred RickwMt of Care, Miss Edna Mechanics . A. McPHAIL One packing firm sta~eg that six Horner and Robt. Wethers oi: Flint, at one o clock sharp • FUNERAL DIRECTOR times_. as many soft hogs came into Mr. and Mrs. John Utley and Mr. Lady Assistant. the slaughter houses this year than and Mrs. Floyd Utley of Kings Phone No. 182. Cass City. three years ago, presuma'bly be- Mills and Norman Kitchen of Pon- Gray horse 8 years old Set double harness cause of the growing practice of tiac: E. W. KEATING feeding raw soybeans~ The results Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rether- T Dark brown horse 10 years old Half double harness Real Esta~ and Fire and Auto- of experiments with soybeans as a ford, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. hog feed are being watched with Holstein cow 5 years old, due Nov. 12 Set of dehorners Set bobsleighs ~ mobile Insurance. Robt. Brown and Pat Cody of Ca- interest by farmers and packers If You Want Red and white cow 7 years old, due John Deere hay loader i~:;' CASS CITY, MICHIGAN re, spent last Week at the Century alike.--Indiana Farmer's Guide. Dec. 24 of Progress exposition at Chicago Extra-Fast Relief John Deere manure spreader and also visited at the home of Mr. Holstein cow 5 years old, due Dec. 14 Deering grain binder R. N. MeCULLOUGH [ and Mrs. Mark Smith at Leonidas. Auctioneer and Real Estate Millet for Hay -- Demand and Get Roan cow 8 years old, due Dec. 29 Osborn corn binder Hay redder Miss Bell Vance of Clifford' is Tiger dump hay rake Dates may be arranged Like sudan, millet makes a hay spending this week with her grand- Holstein cow 5 years old, due Mar. 10 with Cass City Chronicle relatively low in protein content parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sole. Red cow 8 years old, due Apr. 2 McComnick mowing machine office, Cass City. Phone and has about the same adaptation. 134-F5. For best quality hay it shoul~l be Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Martin en- Dark Jersey cow 11 years old, due Parker plow cut early before the heads get too tertained for a few days, Mr. and Apr. 5 Steel spring tooth harrows plentiful and before they mature. Mrs. Earl Arnold and Mrs. A. D. Red cow 10 years old, due June 10 McPherson of Detroit. Wood spring tooth harrows The ffapanese varieties yield heavi- Hoistein cow 10 years old, due June est, but the foxtail types, like the Mr. and Mrs. D. Preston and Riding cultivator Germa~ and Hungarian, make a Mrs:. John Warnes .of Snover were 11 Walking spring tooth cultivator finer stemmed and more leafy hay. Thursday visitors at the John Da- !GENUINE BAYER Holstein heifer 11/2 years old, pas- Grain drill with grass seeder attach- From 25 to'30 pounds of seed are vis home. ture bred Mr. and Mrs. ° Roy Bunker, Mrs. ASPIRIN ment Wagon required. Seed should be planted Holstein yearling heifer from one-half to three-quarters of Del Bunker and Miss Ada Bunker ECAUSE of a unique process Caldron kettle of Port Huron were Sunday visitors B in manufacture, Genuine Bayer Yearli/lg Guernsey bull YOUR EYES an inch deep.~Hoard's Dairyman. ~i~ Tablets are made to dis- 30 to/is of hay at the Arthur Bunker and Win. Red heifer 8 months old Actual health depends up- h~zrate--or dissolve--INsTANT- Logging tongs and chain Patch homes. LY ~you take them. Thus the,~ start 2 brood sow, due now (Oct. 4) on good eyesight. Breeding Mares Mr. and Mrs. Julius Wentworth, to work ~ instantly: Start taking Forks, shovels and other articles too The wrong #asses are Breeding mares at ~e proper Ben Wentworth and son, Harry, b~ld'" of even a severe headache, 1924 Studebaker Light Six sedan numerous to mention. worse than no glasses at all. stage greatly increases the lfkelt- spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. neuralgia, neuritis or rheumatic pain Glasses which may have been hood of fertility. This is one very John Wentworth at North Branch. hfew minutes after taking. And they provide SAFE relief~ correct at the time of the practical fact emphasized by recent TERMS CASH. fitting--may now be mju''- for Geauine BAYER ASPIRIN does agricultural research at Cambridge \ rious to your eyes. Eyes not harm the heart. So if you _want university, England. These studies ELKLAND. QUICK and SAFE relief _see I~oa~ should be carefully examined show that the best time for breed- you get the real Bayer article. every three or four years ing most mares is the third or sec- The Bethel Ladies' Aid will meet for, the Bayer cross on ev _cry tablet throughout middle age. ond day prededing the end of a at the home of MI, s. Claud Root on as shown abSve and for the worct~ GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN o~ Mrs. Amy Holtz Sprague, IThursday, Oct. 5. Quilting will be Prop. period of heat. The significance of Let an expert optometrist every bottle or package you buy. serve you. this discovery is apparent from' the the work for the day. fact that, ordinarily, about half of Glenn Deneen ~of Gagetown has Member N. P.. A. ., T. B. TYRELL, Auctioneer PINNEY STATE BANK, Clerk A. H. HIGGINS the mares bred each year fail to rented .the A. H. Shier farm and -GEN'UINE I~AYER ASPIRIN r~produce.~Success Farming. DOES NOT ~ THE HEART ! =_ - _ - _ . -_ - , CASS CITY, MICHIGAN. CASS CITY CHRONICLE---FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933. PAGE SEVEN. GAGETOWN. ELLINGTON- day are: President,. Mrs. Roy Rus- I M.rs. C. E. Hartsell and Mrs. Belle sell; vice president, Mrs. Arthur I Coghlan spent Sunday evening at Magic M~untain at World's Fair Ellicott; secretary and treasurer, Wedding Anniversary-- NOVESTA. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Mrs. Twilton Heron; work com- Bearss of Gagetown. Mrs. Cogh- r t LTRv Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rocheleau mittee, Mrs. Riohard Cliff and Mrs. lan remained to spend a few days. celebrated their 38th wedding an- Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wanner Jos. Mellendorf. A~rchie MacAlpine, who has been niversary Sunday. A sumptfious spent a few days the first of the Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf ill, is reported slightly improved. FACTS@ dinner was served at noon to the week at Tawas City. Phyllis Wan- and sons were Bad Axe callers Sat- Mr. and Mrs. John Jeffery and following guests: Mr. and Mrs. ner of Cass City, who has been l HIGH FEED PRICES urday forenoon. Their daughter]daughters, Miss Florence and Mrs. Henry LaFave and family, Mr. and staying with her grandparents, is and sister, Mrs. John MacA1Nne, ! Gee. Bolderson, of are vis- CALL FOR ~ULLING Mrs. Alfred Rocheleau and family, with her aunt, Mrs. Clare Tuckey. and her son, Kenneth, returned iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Rocheleau, Friends of Mary Lou Wanner, who home with them for a few days'IF. Reader this week. Joseph Rocheleau, Mr. and Mrs. has been ill with scarlet fever, will visit. 1 Miss Elva Heron, who has been o~ ~i~ and *"~'P" fr~ Ca be ~lad to hear that she ~ ~uch re, and Frank }~ocheieau from Bad better.~o to services next Sunday as it is Early Attention. Axe. companied her grandparents, Mr. Chas. Wright of Lewiston, Mr. rally day. Come and bring some and Mrs. John Bowan, to her home and Mrs. Mark Wright of Mayville, one with you. A short program Careful culling of poultry ~locks Sunday. Haymakers Win-- and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wright of will be given and the installation fs imperative to the lowering of pro- Jacob E. Hartsetl, who has been The farmers (Haymakers) and Cass City were callers at the J. D. of officers will take place. Every- duction overhead in view ~of the ill, is improving slowly. the buMness men (Alley Cats) had Tuckey hotme Sunday evening. body welcome. increased price for feeds. Stanley 1KacAlpine is spending a a very interesting ball game Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tallmadge Sunday visitors at the Joseph "It should be the aim of the poula few days at the Alva MacAlpine day on the Gagetown diamond. A and daughter, Helen, of Sandusky Mellendorf home were Mr. and tryman not to have overcrowded home. houses at the beginning ,of ,the lay- large crowd witnessed the game. called on Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Par- Mrs. Levi Helwig and children of ing season," says Roy S. Dearstyne, The score was 18 to. 27 in favor of rott Sunday afternoon. Elkland ~and Mr. and Mrs. John head of the poultry department ,at the Haymakers. The losimg side Delmar and Stewar, t Winer of MacAINne and son, Kenneth, of I SHABBONA. North Carolina State college. ~He will entertain "the winners at a ban- Flint spent Friday night with their Bad Axe. gives five requisites for bringing the quet Thursday evening. aunt, Mrs. Fred Stine. Mrs. Da- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ashmore andt Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Ehlers of pullets to a profitable eonditio~ vid Justin, who had spent seven children were Sunday visitors near iDecke r were Sunday guests of Mr. this fall. These are: Mr. and Mrs. Win. Neddo and weeks here with her daughter, re- Pigeon. 'and Mrs. M. J. Ehlers. 1. Eliminate weaklings. In every two daughters, Hazel and Velma, turned to Flint with them on Sat- Miss Ercelle Cliff is working at i flock of developing birds there is a of Detroit spent Sunday with Mrs. urday. the Glenn Profit home. Hazen Kritzman of Detroit spent the week-end with his parents here. per cent that cannot keep up with Delphine Goslin. Mr. and Mrs. Mack Little and Fred Phetteplace and son, Fred- the majority. These should be mar- Mr. and Mrs. C. I3. Hunter and sons were Sunday dinner guests of t eriek, of Kern came Saturday to keted as early as possible to take sons, Carroll and Paul~ Miss Irene Mr. and Mrs. D.'E. Turner at Cass BEAULEY0 *spend a few days with the fm~mer's advantage of broiler prices. Dupree, Mrs. Anna Haidysz, son, City. Mr. and Mrs. John MacCallum, i parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Phette- 2. Cull the I~yers. Careful con- Chester, and daughters, Leona and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Tuckey en- sideration should be given to the Viola, and Miss Rosalia Maul spent tertained over the week-end Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold MacCallum, place. number of this year's birds to be Sunday in Adrian, guests of Misses Sarah Stetson and daughter, Mr. Nelson Fay, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford of carried over for breeders or layers Cathryn Hunter and Felieia Hai- and Mrs. Gee. Lorentzen and chil- Moore and son, Marvin, Mrs. Start-ICass City spen~ Sunday with Mrs. for next year. Boarders during the dysz. dren of Akron, Ohio. Mrs. Stet- ley Heron, Mr. and Mrs. Allen lCrawford's parents, I~[r. and Mrs. molt season yield little or no in- Phyllis and Elaine Williamson son is a sister of Mr. Tuckey. Heron and daughter, Audrey, Mr. !Sam Mitchell. come. are making their home with Mrs. and Mrs. Gee. Hartsell, Mrs. F.I Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Freese, who 3. Scant feeding is expensive. Anna Benniger and attending high Reader and Mrs. W. J. Moore were:have spent the summer in Flint, The feeding of mash on the "dole" school. Sunday visitors of Mrs. S. H. Her-Ireturned here Saturday. system is unwise and will show lat- RESCUE. on, who is ill. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Peterson and er in development. Thousands of grown-ups , as well as children, jam the Enchanted Is- Mrs. Margaret Crawford spent Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dulmage.l daughter, Mary, of Kinde were on- 4. Guard against parasites. The lafid, children's fairyland, at the Chicago World's Fair, which closes on the week-end with her daughter~ Mr, and MTrs. Hasket Blair and and Mrs. Lydia Russell were visit- tertained at the home of Mr. and spending of a few dollars for worm October 31. Above is shown a crowd in front of the Magic Mountain. Mrs. Harry Russell. daughters and Mrs. Jennie Mar- ors at the Henry Hartsell home Mrs. Clifford Furness Sunday. tablets may be the saving of a Word was received that as Miss tin visited at the Earl Beyette Sunday. Mrs. Ruby McRae of Detroit is great many birds later in the year. Maybelle Clara was being" rushed to home in Card on Sunday. spending some time with her par- Worm all developing birds at about GREENLEAF. a hospital in Detroit Friday eve- Mrs. Mildred Teller, who has The tone for the League next t4 weeks of age. Hens carried over ning, the car was struck by an spent a few days with her parents, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Mitchell. T~rning ~acN Sunday evening- will be "The Un- for next year should also be Miss Eleanor McCallum is in Mt. automobile, causing very serious Mr. and Mrs. F. Reader, has left Mr. McRae visited his wife here merciful Servant." Leaders Paul wormed, and poultrymen should be Pleasant where she is attending injuries to Miss Clara. She was for Detroit where she plans to se- Sunday. the Pages ~ Moore, Perry Mellendorf, and Eve- on the lookout for lice and mite school. taken to the hospital where-she is cure work. Mr. and Mrs. Don Lorentzen and lyn Martin. Mrs. John Lorentzen of Cass City infestation. Mr. and- Mrs. Will Jones of being treated. The American Legion of Bad Items from the files of Cass City visited Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Neville 5. Plan autumn grazing. The Care- ~larkston are visi.ting relatives Ray Weiler, who has spent the Mr. and Mrs. Ostrum Summers Axe sent a delegation of four to Newspapers of 1898 and 1908. Monday night. ful poultryman will have a definite hhre. past two weeks in Detroit, returned and sons and Mr. and Mrs. Milton visit Jacob Hartsell Friday eve- home Tuesday. grazing program as green feeds are Anna Marjory McRae, who is Woolner were Owendale callers on ning. They presented him with a Miss Margaret Wold of Saginaw Saturday evening. the cheapest source of certain .nec- Twenty-five Years Ago. training in Harper hospital, is beautiful bouquet of roses and as- The Reason .who took a motor trip through the essary vitamins. The early autumn home for the week. A nice crowd attended the Premo ,ters. There once was a man who never October 2, 1908. western part of Michigan and in is the time for seeding rye grasS, class meeting at the Luther Sow- Mr. and Mrs. Durward Heron spoke a cross word to his wife dur- E. A. Miller of Dei~roit was a Wisconsin, and attended the Cen- clover, rape and other crops which H. P. Lee lost his barn, two den home Friday evening. and family of Mayville spent the ing a period of ten years. Then he caller in the community on Mon- tury.of Progress exposition, spent may materially cut feeding costs horses, rubber tired buggy and The officers who were elected in week-end at the T. J. Heron home. returned home.--Worcester Tele- day. over Sunday with her mother, Mrs. during the coming year. three harnesses by fire early Mon- the Ladies' Aid Society on Thurs- Mr. and Mrs. Alva MacAlpine, gram. day morning. The origin of the Mrs. Archie McEaehern enter- Theresa Wald, returning to Sagi- fire is mnknown. Mr. Lee Was quite tained a few ladies Tuesday af- naw Tuesday. Egg Auction Does ternoon in honor of Mrs. Arthur Co-Op badly burned on both arms and one Francis, Hunter, who has been in ' aR ~at~sfac~ory Business foot. Millar of Detroit. Detnoit the past week, returned Ohio's first and only co-operative Mr. and Mrs. Howard Nitz of home Tuesday. A. E. Sleeper of Lexington was egg auction, located at Wooster and Freiburg were callers ~t the Ar- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Oehring nominated state treasurer at the chic Gillies home on Saturday. moved Thursday from east of town serving poultrymen of 12 counties, Republican state convention at De- sold to the highest bidders more to an apartment in the Purdy troit. Edanna Walker, Betty W'alk~r, than 20.000 cases of eggs in the first Jack Esau and Janet Esau are at- Block. A Super Salesman year of its operation. A ease holds Edwin Schwaderer has returned tending school in Cass: City. These 30 dozen. Total sales for the year from Buffalo, names should have appeared last Highest Honor for Frenchmav. ending July 6 were $122.766. The remains of Win. Wright week. i To be received among the 40 im- One of the chief benefits, of the were brought to Cass City from Mr. and Mrs. Leo Waterman of mortals of the French academy is co-operative auction, says R. B. Is at Your Service Toledo Tuesday evening and in- l Shabbona were visiting in this the highest honor Which can fall to Treat. manager, is that it places a terred in Elkland cemetery. Mr. community on Sunday. the lot of a Frenchman. premium on eggs of the better qual- Wright was formerly a resident of George Roblin threshed his beans p ities. Before the auction began Wickware. from the field Saturday. They there was a spread of one cent be- yielded more than fifteen bushels Stairs Made Her No matter what your line of business is, the best Marc S. Wickware returned ~ri- tween top grade eggs and current to the acre. Pretty good for .the day from his trip to the No~th- receipt eggs on the Cleveland mar- dry season. Gasp for Breath west. salesman you can obtain in the Cass City community is ket. The spread later was about Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clayton three anc~ one-half cents. Miss A:ddie Gallagher left Satur- Dew, at Dan McIntosh's, a daugh- Penalty of Excess Fat The auction does perhaps the only day morning to attend the Mr. ter, Mary Carmelita. mail order egg business in the coun- Pleasant Normal. Miss Eleanor Hoadley of E1- try. Business ,is solicited from buy- And this salesman is constantly at your servjee[ dridge, California, is spending" Although she has lost but 7 ibs. er~ in New York. ~ ennsylvania, and The A. H. U. recently elected three weeks' vacation at the home of her overweight, this woman New Jersey. Eastern buyers also the following officers for the next finds that 7 lbs. has made a/re- The Chronicle does not have to knock at the door; six months: President, Nettie M. of her parepts, Mr. and Mrs. Guy markable difference to her. attend the auctions, load their pur- Hoadley. ohq,¢es into specially insulated and Otis; vice pres., Bella Mark; sec., Her letter reads: "I am 53 years Mr. and Mrs. Orville Hoadley and it has been a familiar figure for 34 years, and enters the refrigerated trucks which reach the Grace Meredith; treas., Bertha old and my height is 5 ft. Last year two children of Lansing speng the eestern markets the following day. Wood; advisory board, James Mc- I weighed 154 lbs. I have been tak- a half teaspoonful of Krusehen T~e auction is incorporated as the Kenzie, Frank Henry and Robert week-end at the Guy Hoadley ing home as a welcome guest. home. Salts, making no change in my Wooster Co-operative Poultry asso- Seldom Mrs. James Mudge and Mrs. Ha- diet. Now I am less round the hips, ciation under state an~ federal co- The forest fires which have been Neither does it have to proceed slowly from door zel Watkins of Ypsilanti were at and only weigh 147 lbs. dressed. operative marketing laws as a non- raging south and east of town But I feel lighter and can now run profit co-operative. All eggs are the Guy Hoadley home Monday and upstairs, which before used to to door; it enters m~ny hundreds of homes in the Cass were quenched by the rain Monday Tuesday. gr.qded under the supervision of morning and those whose property make me gasp for breath. Every- ~be state-federal egg grading serv- was in danger were greatly re- one says how welt and fit I look." City trading area, at practically the same time, and con- ice. (Miss) J. H. lieved. EVERGREEN. Kruschen is an ideal blend of 6 Mrs. Janet Livingston, 80, died separate salts which help body or- ' veys its message to every member of the family, includ- Heat Checks Egg Production at the home of her son, Dougald Mrs. Ira Howey and daughter, gans to function properly and All poultrymen have found that Livingston, in Novesta township Iris, of Roseville are ,spending maintain a splendid degree of ing the hired man. their egg yield falls off during a on Sunday. some time with relatives in this heal.th it builds up energy and vicinity. strength while you're reducing to spell of extremely hot weather, rind normal weight. It doesn't antagonize your prospects, or talk a that there is a tendency for the Rev. and Mrs. G. D. Clink were Get Krusehen Salts at may live eggs to run smaller in size. The Thirty-five Years Ago. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and druggist in the world -a jar lasts sale to death. climate in some sections is ample September 29, 1898. Mrs. Win. Kitchin. 4 weeks and costs not more than protection for poultrymen, if they Talent in view for the lecture Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Colwell, Mr. 85 cents.Advertisement 3-G-6. Its salary is known to you in advance; it doesn't properly ventilate their buildings, course this season includes De- and Mrs, Roy Colwell and family remove the hot stagnant air, and witt Mille~, Col. Copelmad, Col. and Mr. and Mrs. 'John Kennedy keep the birds comfortable. Days Bayle, and a first class colored ju- and family were guests of Mr. and 1 charge you a commission, or turn in an expense account. may be warm, but, invariably a bilee troupe of singers. Mrs. Frank Auslander Sunday. breeze springs up towards night Mrs. Wm. Darling and Mrs. It isn't loafing when it should be attending to that cools off the air, and enables Mr. and Mrs. P. R. Weydemeyer Why f and Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Wood at- Maud Thomas were callers in Bad animals and birds to sleep In com- Axe Saturday. business. ~ort. tended the soldiers' reunion at C as~ville last week. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Harrison and Liquid Laxatives I Miss M. Caroline Fenn left here Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Harrison and You can count on its getting there every Friday Crooked Breasts Wednesday for Leavenworth, Kan- family were Sanday dinner guests are Back in Favor The bones of young poultry are sas, where she will sojourn indefi- of Mr. and Mrs. Jason Kitchin. I morning. very soft until the birds are near nitely with her brother, Rev. Chas. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller enter- full grown. The ridge on the breast, H. Fenn. tained Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tiferi Best of all, you can hire it when you want it, and called "the keel bone," is not much and son and Mr. and Mrs. Claud.i thicker than cardboard, and up to The tower of the opera house is now receiving attention and will Miller and family of Detroit as] just as long as you wanLit, without any arguments or several months of age Is quite as guests Sunday. flexible. In full-moated and full- soon be completed. The plasterers have been at work on the interior Miss Clarice Howey of Roseville ! The public is fast returning to the use breasted young chickens the flesh i of liquid laxatives. People have apologies. ~on both sides of this bone protects for some time. visited relatives here over the i learned that the properly prepared tt and keeps it straight. In lean Jarn'es J. Wallace has purchased week-end. I liquid laxative w~ bring a perfecl , Decide now to avail yourself of this super sales- and narrow-breasted chicks it is the harness stock of the Joseph Rev. G. D. Clink and Edmond I movement without any discomfort often badly twisted by the weight Wallace estate and has secured the Case were business callers in Card at the time, or after. of the body resting on it while the services of Win. Messner, a prac- and Saginaw Saturday. t The dose of a liquid laxative man of the community! Follow the lead of other local bird is quite small tical harnessmaker. Lewis Weaver and granddaugh-:~ be varied to suit the needs of the Wm. Miller re'turned to Alma ter of Marlette attended church' individual. The action can thus be and national advertisers who recognize its value and College on Monday. here Sunday. .re~. ated. A child is easily given the Eggs in Water Glass Mr. and Mrs. Frank Auslander _right dose. And mild liquid laxatives employ its services, some of them regularly each week. If your hens are producing more Neff MeLaren did well with his and Mrs. Rachel Kitely went to ~ do not irritate the kidneys. eggs that your family and neigh- 15oultry exhibit at Elkton last week and is showing at the Bad Axe fair Marlette Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Doctors are generally agreed that Let us help you plan your campaign and place its bors can use, lay down several doz- Kitely, who has spent several senna is the best laxative for every- this week. .ens in water glass against Novem- weeks at the Auslander home, re- i body. Senna is a natural laxative: It resources at your service! ber and December, when the chilly, Win. C. Baxter and John turned to her home there. I does not drain the system like the warmthless days discourage your Schwaderer left Monday morning Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kitchin had i cathartics that leave you so thirsty. flock from laying. Many a back- for Alma College. ~D~. C~dwetrs S~n~ Pep~ ~ a Yours for Better Business, .yarder plans to keep his spring Sunday dinner with friends at liquid laxative which-relies on senna Pearl Sehenek left on Saturday Wheatland. If dr its laxative action. It has the birds only until cold weather, and for Ann Arbor where he intends expects to kill them for meat I average person's bowels as re.at as taking a course in dentistry at the 11 Acres of Glass in . Building ! clockwork in a few, weeks' time. THE CASS CITY CHRONICLE. around Thanksgiving ~ime to avoid university. the ultra-burdensome bother of mon- ELeven acres of glass are used in I You can always get Dr. Cal~ keying with the birds in unpleasant the walls and roofs of one wing of ~ Pepsin at any drugstm~ ready winter co~ditiomso Advertise it in the Chronicle. factory at Beeston. England. ~Q¢~_ulm--_~ 1~. R. / \

~ . .. PAGE EIGHT • CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER:29, t933...... CASS CITY, MICHIGAN.

, ,r • v Dehorning Dairy RICE IS MAIN CROP Howe About: I," : .... ' iUncle Sam's Soldiers at World'S ,Fair Cattle Is Urged OF' EASTERN WORLD ,, ~iii~i~i!iiiiiiii!ii!~ii!ii~i!~iiiiiiii~iii~i!iii!ii~!~ii~iiiii~iii~ii!i!ii!ii~iiii~iiiiiiii!iiiiiiii~i~i~ii~i!i~i~iii~ii~i Neitzsche GrMn Called the Second iiiiii ii',',ii ',ili ii',iiiii', ,iiiii!iiiii'i',!iiii!ii',iiiii ',iiiiiiil !ii',',iiiii',',iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil,@i' i' Specialist Cites Method of Henry Ford Major "Staff of Life." lliiiiiiiiiiiiiii',~'~iii~,~i~iiii~;~~i;~i~i~ :~i~ii~i~i~iii~',i~,ii~,iiii!ii~N " " iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiii!iiii!iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiii ii~ili~;ii~iiii~i::i::i~i~i::ii!iii ~i::~i~iiiiiiii~i~:~ii~i~iii:~ii~iii!iii~iiiiii~ii~!i~i~i!~:iiii~i~i~i~i~ii~:~iiI i iiiii iiii! POOLTRY Operation on Animals The World Court \ iii',ii ~~~ H ~~i~ i~ ~~ ~~ ~i~ ',~',~ ~',~,~',i ~,~'//,!','(~'~ii~,i~,~i~i~~, Washington.--While the shifting F~;~*!~!~i~i~!~i~i~i~?i~i~!:i~i~i~i~i~`~.~i~i~i~i~i~i~i~`~ WORMS WILL CHECK When Young. ©, 1933, Be'll ~yndieate.~WNU ~ervtce. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliii iiiiiiiiii!iii iii l ~o.,o,,o..,~.,o,.o..o..e~o..~..o~o.o..o..o,.o*.e,.$~'.o"q~" of the world's wheat supply is spec- HENS' PRO'DUCTION By H. A. Herman, Del~artment of Dairy By ED HOWE tacular-millions of bushels carried iiii!iii!ii!?:::::i!::~i !::::::::ii::ii!!!!!i!!!!iiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiii;!!i!!iiiiiiiii!;ii!N:~ii~ Husbandry, University of MissOuri. thousands of miles across great i~@:::iii::i::i!iii!!::i::!i::i!}i~i~}:: i For kite ordinary dairy herd the i .a Freiderich Neitzsche, ib. wide- All Susceptible in also a major "staff of life," goes on Fowls Are I animals should be dehorned. The ly proclaimed as one of the great- Warm Weather. horns serve no useful purpose and more quietly in a smaller area, it is est books ever written. As a mat- pointed out in a bulletin from the i :iN!..... ~::ii~,iiiiii,.... ~ are responsible for frequent Inju- ~!~':""" "~':':""~ •" "~i" +"'"~ :':~ ter Of curiosity I lately looked over National Geographic society. A flock of hens infested with ries-often serious, and especially eight of its pages and noted the ~..ii~!~!:: ~:'~ '!~ ':i~::[~ £ ::::i~: ~i ''~ '~ i~ :~r:!~:::.::.... .~i "In China, canal boats and the worms will not lay nearly so many to the udder. Dehorned cattle may lines containing ordinary common backs of coolies spread the grain eggs as a similar flo~k free from be housed in a much smaller space; sense easily understandable• I into regions close to its growth," these ]~arasltes. As a rule, worms and when they are fed and watered found but five such lines in the ...... ~,~,~::~ii~:: says the bulletin. "In India, too, the do not affect chickens until they together in the ordinary manner eight pages. Neitzsche had enor- there is a material saving in la- hauls are short, and are made by •~i~! ~:i~ ~i~i~!i~i~!!~!!i~ii~i..,:!:~i!i~i~!i~: are two or three months old, but mous common sense, but it was so ...... ::: :~,{.:~:i:i:!:!: :i:i:.~?~:::i:~::::.¢i: bullock cart and railway. Barges from then on all fowls are suscep- bor. Horns on a bull are extremely corrupted by nonsense in the lit- .:.:.. ..x:i!i!~::.'.:!~!~ii!i!~ii:'.'~!ii~iii~!!!ii~!~ii~ dangerous. The only case where it float their loads down the streams tible, particularly in warm weather. erature of the past that in his most is advisable not t0 remove the horns of indo-China and Sieve, and solid It is easier to prevent chickens be- famous book the proportion of good ~!Z~i~i~i!Z~iZ~iii!~i~!~i~i!iii~!i~iii~iii!ii~i~%i~ii~{i~i~iiiiiiiNi~iii.~i~.;.iN}ii early is that of animals which are rice trains on Siam's modern rail- coming infested with worms than it to bad is five to two hundred and likely to be used for show purposes. ways help in the movement toward is to eradicate them later. seventy-t~vo. Guard mounts, parades and other military ceremonies are daily occurrences at the World's Fair, partici-- The best method of dehorning is the coast. Steamers and ocean The first and most important step "Thus Spake Zarathustra" is pared in by infantry, cavalry and artillery of the United States army. The first battalion, sixth infantry, to use caustic potash on the ex- Junks carry their grain cargoes up ,in ~he prevention~of worms, notes written in mongrel poetry, a weak- of the United States army, commanded by Maj. T. R. McCarron, is'pictured above in the court of honor, with tremely young calf. This may be the coast of Asia to China and Ja- a writer i~ the Montreal Herald, is ness the author certainly inherited the administration building in the background. obtained in stick form at any drug to practice strict sanitation in the from the past. The book is full of pan. poultry houses as well as tn the store. India an~l China in £ead. references to gods Neitzsche did ...... CASS CITY DEFEATS [ Characteristics poultry yards. ~Poultry yards should To use this method successfully, ~xcmsive of China, ior wnicn I Patlence of the Creator City Has Odd not believe in. The title is a trib- Water and silence are two out- be cleaned thoroughly at least once the calf's horns should be treated country no accurate statistics are HABOR BEACH, 6-0 I The patience of the Creator t~ ute to a tissue of myths originat- standing characteristics of Salt a week. Not only should droppings with caustic potash as soon as the available, more than 63,500,000 tons ~ [ seen in many of his creations. Time ing more than a thousand years Lake City. Most of the street cars boards and roosts be scraped, but buttons appear, which will be from of cleaned rice are produced an- Concluded from first page• ]seemed to be no consideration. before the Christian era. If Zara- run on noiseless pneumatic tires, they should also be disinfected with seven to fourteen days of age. nually. Toward this mighty rice ltute for Frederick)-• Referee Le_ l Mountains were worn down, and thustra ever lived, he was a type while the gutters of uptown streets a good disinfectant. Feeders and The small buttons are the future bowl India contributes more than lCronier. Timer--Soini. /seacoasts lifted up. Forests were of man utterly unknown in the time are filled with streams of rushing fountains should be washed and dis- horns and may be easily located 55 per cent of the total amount. Ja- Substitutions ~ Graham for ] planted, and vegetable deposits were by the fingers. The long hair is of Neitsche, hundreds of years be- water. Infected at the same time• If pos- pan contributes 14 per cent; French IWard; Mc,Naughton for McCallum; ] buried and placed under pressure clipped away from the buttons with fore, or in the present; a better sible, young stock should be on Indo-China, .Java and Madura, and l B. Quick for E. Martin', Kosanke for thousands of years in order to an 'Ordinary pair of scissors or title would have been "Thus Spake ground on which chickens have not Siam follow each with somewhat I for Frederick" A Battle for Day- produce coal, gas, and oil. Stalag- Indian Civil Service shears. A circle of grease should Freiderich Neitzsche." been for ~wo years° There is value in the book, but I less than half of that amount. Es- [el nport;_ Ward for F. Withey," P" I mites and stalactites ~were form- Britain's Indian civil service then be placed around the horn, It is not enough, however, to shall not bother to dig it out, as it timates indicate that China raises I Moore for C Stafford ing in caves for co!yntless centuries• which, aided by some 60,000 British making a considerable ridge above practice sanitation on your poultry may be' found in many short sum- about 25,000,000 tons each year, but, i The local eleven does not play I And the giant redwood trees now troops and 150,000 Sepoys lurking the eye so that none of the liquid plant and then just take it for as rice has been a forbidden item, until" a week from- toda.v (Friday). growing in California were at.re~dy in the background, rules some 350,- containing caustic potash will get maries. Neitzsche was highly edu- granted that your birds are not af- cated, but never learned to write of export from time immemorial,I At this" time" , they will" play the . old when King Tut was laid away 000,000 Indians, never contains more into the eye. The stick of caustic flicted with worms. If the laying no one worries about statist'los as ~r..... *~-~ " .... +~c~ll- ~he same in his famous tomb. than L000 Englishmen. potash is then moistened a trifle simply, naturally and properly ex- flock is producing poorly, if the long as hm daffy portmn of rice m and rubbed yigorously on the small cept in five lines of two hundred • team that finished second ,to Cass --: birds look tired, have sharp breast horn until the flesh is considerably and seventy-two of his best product. forthcoming. City last year in the county cham-I Old Gold Find bones and pale combs, or if the "Rice growing is not confined to pionship. The prospects for a vie- / Oldest Domesticated Animal reddened and at the point 'of bleed- Probably the proportion of nonsense Spanish gold coins, dated 1700, young stock looks unthrifty and is continental Asia and its adjacent tory were brightened by the return I The Peruvian llama is presumed ing. It is: not advisable to con- in the conversation and writing of to be the oldest domesticated ani- 1712 and 1734 were found by a thin, with lifeless plumage, it~is tinue the application after bleed- men les~daoted is greater. Islands; in Africa, Europe and the of John Kelly to the local team. l real because there is no record of placer miner under eight feet of quite likely they have worms. The ing starts. If sufficient caustic pot- United States rice fields also sprawl John is a stellar guard and his job l the animal in any but a domesticat- sand at Gold Beach, Ore. It :is be- only thing to do then is to cut ash has been ap.plied, a dent will A foreigner was quoted lately as over many well-watered aliens. With of running interference as a guard ed state• The most ancient traces lieved the coins were lost by Span- open one or two of the worst look, be felt in the skull after a few days saying a depression is about the the exception of Italy, European i,s: one which Coach Kelly has been show the llama as a beast of bur- iards, who prospected into Oregon ing birds and perform a post-mor- and no horns will ever develop. mos~ natural thing there is; that countries find the demand greater unable to fill successfully so far. den, while there is no record of it in the days when California was a ~. tern operation, slitting the intestines Care must be used to avoid get- he was born during a depression, than their production. But from the The advnission for ,this and all in a wild state• Spanish territory. their entire length• If you find ting too much water on the caustic and has lived in one ever since. fertile fields, especially in the Po the other three home games will be worms, you can be pretty sure that valley~ comes sufficient rice to place potash, or it may run down the AmeriCans will not accept any 25 cents. Season tickets may be ...... Italy in the group of rice exporting the rest of the flpck is also infested. sides of the animal's head, taking such reasoning; they demand a purchased for 75 cents from Coach countries. off hair and even getting into the boom all the time, and-failing to Kelly or at the gate. ALL PRICES IN THIS AD INCLUDE THE Hopper Feeding of Both ~;' eyes, with serious results. get it go bawling to the govern- "In the united States, mainly in On account of the teachers' in- 3 PER CENT STATE SALES TAX ment for relief• For many Years Louisiana, Georgia, and the Caro- stitute, the date of Caro's app&ar- Is Graln and. Mash O. K'd we have been breaking records and linas, there is harvested annually ance here has been changed to Hopper feeding of both grain and Worms Stunt Growth of astonishing foreigners. The action nearly 575,000 t'ons of rice. About Thursday, Oct. 19• ~ash the year round seems to be of the foreigners in laughing at us 14,000 tons of the cereal is import- SPARItLE increasing. Several exPeriment sta- ~ Both Pigs and Lambs now after robbing us, is very hu- Gelatin Dessert ed, but fully nine times that amount HOSPITAL NOTES. tions have found it to be satisfac- The idea of ra'ising pigs on clean miliating. is sent by the United States into [ tory, particularly so for the special ground--the so-called McLean sys- I once saw in the newspapers a the export market. Mrs. Elizabeth 0pperman of Wil- 6 packages 29~ laying breeds• It seems to be doubt- tem--fS a good one, By following statement credited to Henry Ford "In Minnesota in early autumn m~t was admitted Sunday and Un- ful whether it works as well for this system, one can practically be in the days of his greatest pros- one can witness the traditional har- derwent an operation Monday. the meat type of birds• Many poul- sure.that his pigs will be free from perity. He said the standard of vesting of wild rice by the North- Mrs. Nick Bowers of Snorer en- .trymen are hopper feeding corn and worms at weaning time. The same living in the United States should SPARKLE 4 pkffSo 25c oats, but not wheat, for the reason is true of lambs. If one can grow west Indians, an activity that orig- tered Sunday and was operated on be advanced until every man who WE DO OUR PART Chocolate Pudding that when wheat is fed with corn lambs on ground that has not been inated countless generations before Monday, wanted a job was guaranteed one white men ever set .foot on Ameri- and oats, the birds generally c0n- grazed by sheep for several .years at twenty-seven dollars a day as a same a greater percentage of wheat worm infestation can be largely can soil. Present-day methods do DIRECTOR OF JOBS Coffee Supreme minimum. Every American, he ad- not enter into the harvest. Two or TUB BUTTER than of the other grains. In that avoided. mitte~t, was so noble, so intelligent, event, because wheat brings the While we have advocated this sys- three persons, usually squaws, pad- BOKAR so much better than the people of dle the c'hnoes into the beds of rice highest price of common grains, the tem for hog, lamb and poultry rais- other countries, he could not live 24e tendency would be to increase the ing for many years, con~paratively which grow in the shallow waters fittingly on less. around the edges of lake% There Parrott's or Silverbrook 23c :feed cost. few farmers follow it. Using clean And you needn't laugh; probably Vigorous and Winey To obviate this difficulty, wheat is ground in raising live stock not they pull the heads of the rice over butter, lb, 26e yon read Mr. Ford's brag with ap- the side of the boat, strike them ¢ not hopper fed; from four to six only prevents worm infestation, but proval. sharply, and gather the grain in the pounds of this grain is fed daily in it also avoids disease infection of bottom of the canoe. Modern inven- the litter, per hundred birds• Hop- many kinds. Keeping live stock Nutley Oleomargarine_.• ...... 3 lbs. 25c Nothing astonishes me more than tions have been tried, but they de- per feeding of grain, except Wheat, quarters free from parasites and the incompetence of great men stroy the stalks and reduce subse- is liked for s~veral reasons. It sim- disease iS ideal but difficult, and as Canvas Gloves, durable ...... 3 pairs 25c when called upon to make de- quent crops, so haye been aban- plifies the feeding problem and it a matter of fact, never is carried cision in questions of a public na- doned: Nectar Tea, ½ lb. size ...... package 21c is more sanitary. Reducing labor out except to a very minor degree. tu.re. Men who in business ,life. "Contrary to the belief of some, cost is something upon which every- Worms are not difficult to get rid achieve reputation for sound sense, all domestic rice is not alike. In- Seminole Tissue, soft ...... ___3 rolls 19c body is concentrating, and may per- of if proper attention is given to honor and capacity, when asked to deed, there are some 4,000 var'ieties haps be th'e main reason why hop- the matter. Worms stunt growth consider questions affecting the Ralston Wheat Food ...... 2 packages 45c of rice in Japan• per feeding of grain is graduall.y and reduce the vitality of pigs and public at large, have in thousands gaining in popularity. lambs, and thus render them more of cases become pitiful fools and Wet and Dry Rice. Corned Beef Hash, broadcast____ ...... can 19e susceptible to disease, Young stock disgraced lbng lives of probity. "In general rice is classed into G should be kept as free from worms 8 O'CLOCK COFFEE ...... 3 lbs, 55v~...... :..lb. 19e }:. Eleven Breeds of Ducks There is in existence a world court two groups~ 'wet' and 'dry' rice. It as possible, and a good ¢ime to There are eleven breeds and fif- to which most nations belong, the receives these classifications from RED CIRCLE COFFEE, full bodied ...... pound 2tc drive out the worms is at weaning teen varieties of ducks. White membership made up presumably the manner in which it is grown. BOKAR COFFEE, vigorous ...... lb. tin 23c time or as soon thereafter~as pos- Pekin and Indian Runner are two of as capable men as can be found The 'wet' rice is grown in flooded sible.--Wallaces' Farmer. among the better classes. A book- GRANDMOTHER'S BREAD ...... 1Vz lb. loaf 9c of the most numerous and popular - fields, while the 'dry' variety, some- breeds. The Pekin, Aylesbury, tiouen let is available givingt its history, times also called .'hill' rice, is GRANDMOTHER'S BREAD ...... pound loaf 6c and Muscovy are ~he heaviest Feed for Work Horses membership and proceedings to grown in uplands where the water WHITE HOUSE MILK, tall size ...... 3 cans 19c date, and I have read it during idle breeds• The Cayuga and East In- Efficient work horses can be de- supply is limited. Hill tribes usu- time. The object of the world RAJAH SALAD DRESSING, quart jar ...... 23c dia breeds lay black, or almost ve!oped by~eeding less grain than ally grow the dry rice in jungle court, of course, is to get rid of The n~w United States employ- I black eggs~ When ducklings and many farmers a re inclined to use. At clearings on the mountainsides. war; of the expense of armies and ment service, created by the Wag- goslings are hatched they don't the Missouri , ,riment station it "Rice cultivation entails much navies during intervals Of peace• ner law, has opened its headquar- Big Feed Sale!! need to be fed until they are one was found tha~ One lot of colts back-breaking labor throughout the In most parts of the earth prac- ters at the Department of Labor. Daily Egg Brand .... the Scientific and Uniform Fc~l and a half days old. The first feed which had a total of 4,238 pounds Of East where most of the grain is first tical bakers, after hundreds of This is a new portrait of W. Frank may be made up of two parts rolled grain and 5,723 pounds of hay each, sprouted in nursery beds and grown SCRATCH FEED 25 lmUnd bag 45c--100 lmund bag $1.79 years of experience at their trade, Persons, named by President Roose- oats, or::~corn meal, two parts bread up to the time they were three years there to the height of about one have found it convenient to operate velt to be director of the service. EGG 5~ASH 25 lmund bag 55c ~--100 pound bag $2.15 crumbs and one part hard-boiled old, made just as good work horses foot. It is then, transplanted into night shifts, surely one of the sim- OYSTER SHELLS 25 pounds 23c- 100 p(mx~d bag 79c egg, with 3 per cent sand by weight• as those which had 7,638 pounds of fields which have been, flooded and plest and most unimportant ques- This is mixed with milk or water grain and 4,664 pounds of hay. They worked into a deep porridge of And while our stack lasts tions. Yet on page fifty I find the Harbor in Heart of City and fed moist four times a day. did not grow quite as fast, and were oozy mud. The grain is usually her. World c~)urt, considering night work Copenhagen, the capital of Den- Growing Mash or Chick Fee~I 25 lb. bag 53c---100 lb. bag $2.10 Ducks have no crops, like chickens, slower in developing, but "there vested by hand with sickles, and was in bakeries. Many have been pro- mark, is unique in that its harbor so their feed must be moistened, less difficulty in keep'ing the colts eventually threshed by hand or by foundly discouraged by the lack of 'tes in the heart ~f,the city. WE PAY I~ARKET PRICES FOR FRESH CLEAN EGGS as it goes at once to the gizzard.~ sound In feet and legs work driving oxen and water buffaloes and as intelligence in men. I believe Wisconsin Agri,culturist. horses they were just as satisfac- round and round over pries of rice statesmen are responsible for most Early Ohio Settlements tory as the ones that had more heads. ` The husking and polishing of the discouragement; any fair re- The second and third settlements grain.~Successful Farming. , for local consumption, too, is often Small Bird, Small Egg view of the situation clearly indi- on Ohio Soil were where Cincinnati done by hand or foot pounders. g With the price of eggs remain- cates that the common people in now stands, but neither was known "In Japan, Java, and many other ing low, but with the price of feed their private affairs have done very by that name.• Agricultural Siftings places rice fields resemble tiny gar- higher, there is a tendency to al- well. There are 1,500,000 stationary dens, rather than fields, so small is low the pullets on range to get gasoline engines on American farms. along the best they can. It has Most people will read only that the a~ea that is allotted to each ' - I farmer. been well proven that within the Vaccination against hog cholera with which tdaey agree. breed the smaller the bird the is a cheap method of insuring the I believe Oscar Wilde was mis- "In China and Japan the area, cultivated by one hand laborer is! smaller the egg. If pullets come herd against loss. taken in more ways than any other • ' k. Into production next fall small in man who ever lived, but have just usually about one-half to two acres, body size, you will have more than Properly distributed, Ohio womd read his "De Profundis" with in- while in the United States, where your share of small eggs. Young have enough rainfall to raise four terest, as I have read many of his modern, machine methods are em- Ncw Sh'p ment ployed, one farmer may handle as bi~ds on the range, pullets espe- corn .c¢ops a year. ether books and plays. cially, should not be allowed to * $ * He was the fSulest man of whom much as 80 acres. Under the latter of. shift for themselves. -- Indiana Proof of the longevity of aspara- I have ever heard, and possibly system the large, level fields are Farmers' ,Guide, gus beds is indicated in North Da- one of the most intelligent; cer- flooded daring growth• Before her. kota where beds have been produc- tainly one of the world's best writ- vest time, however, the water is drained off. The dried ground be- Women's Winter House Dresses l Trapnestlng ing annually~ for g0 years. ers. I cannot refuse to read such * * * a manY~b$cause I do not always comes firm enough for the use of Trapnests do not make a breeder; agree "with him. ordinary reapers which cut and bind SIZES 36 to 52 -- 16 to 20 they only help him. Because trap- To utilize sutp(us sugar, Czecho- and Smocks He wrote many plays that sparkle the rice as wheat is cut and bound. nesting is exl~ensive, its use is justi- is conv%rting it, mixed with intelligence and wit, but in "Although its use as food is lost fied only so far as it assists the with bran and other ingredients, his "Salome" I cannot see a single In the mists of antiquity, rice is be- breeder.in learning ~iacts about the into fodder for horses, cattle and reason why i.t should have been rieved to have been utilized first in Also a New Line of Women's and Misses' Hosiery. inheritance of the individual. The pigs. , $ $ written, or why anyone should wish ~ndia, the land which produces far total number of eggs laid by a bird WE AIM TO PLEASE to read it; fduL s~ll.y, bloody; and, and away the largest rice crop to- cannot be known certainly without Wktespread interest is being fortunately, a failure. He was that day. As early a~ 2,800 B. C., a cere- the ~se of trat)nes~s. Only by trap- shown by northern Colorado farm- uneven in everything. mony of the first planting was per- ping and weighing ~he eggs of l~e ors'in t.t% production of ~ane as a I have never known a single hu- formed in Chitin. The empexor, Son individual bird can her av.era~eo" egg "supplementary crop for alfalfa. Pinney Dry Goods Co. man being 'of whom I entirely apt of Heaven. sowed tl~e seeds of rice, weight be determined. The same Many Larimer county farmers have proved; ! have never entirely ap- • 9, thing is true of £ntensity, or rate grown ~ane a~d feed It tc lambs ~',~,,,~princes the lesser ~.~n~.~-~: proved of myself. of ~roduction. ." to replace part of the alfalfa hay.

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