gtotmtji JUfalh.

VOLUME 43 . EAST -JORDAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1939. NUMBER 8

East Jordan's Coasting-Hours and f Charlevoix Has "Jordan Inn" Seven Sales Tax Place Are Des- \ Branch Offices Independent Second Annual ignated and Supervised $25,000 Fire Opens March 1st Are Discontinued Basketball Winter Carnival George Walton, newly appointed MEYER'S GARAGE BUILDING MR.'AND'MRSTLOUTS R. BATHKE "Receipt of salertaxes at seven of League Organized local recreational leader is supervis- DESTROYED BY BLAZE GETTING PLACE IN ORDER nine district offices have been- dig^" EXCELLENT PROGRAM BEING jllg_±lu>_J!oagting—hill—on —Oarfteld_| ; -LAST THURSDAY - -- continued—by Oryille - E. Atwoodr "Itf-EXST-JORDAN, MONDAY. FijVE Managing Director of the State Board ARRANGED FOR SATURDAY, Street, which Jips_been set aside by TOP O' MICHIGAN TEAMS the local council for coasting pur­ The inn, corner Main and Williams of Tax Administration. . -" FEB'Y 18 A ¢26,000 fire destroyed the Mey­ poses. streets, will again be opened as a ho­ Taxpayers who have been making COMPETING. er's Service Garage building at Char­ tel about the first of llarch. their sales tax returns to district of­ All youngsters wishing to slidtf are levoix last- Thursday afternoon, -d*»- "Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Bathke of fices at TRAVERSE CITY, Grand East Jordan's Second Annual Win­ to do so at the designated hours, of troying two automobiles, the stock of At a meeting held in East Jordan Petoskey recently leased this pro­ Rapids, Saginaw, Flint, Benton Har­ ter Carnival will be held at -the State 4 to 6 and 7 to 9 p. m. and are to use the Foster Beverage Co. and the Ol­ on Monday, January 30th, several of perty, and, assisted by workmen, are bor, and Jackson are requested to Streei Municipal Rink the afternoon only this protected location, instead son Mattress Co. and all furnishings the strongest Northern Michigan In­ Jbusy these days giving the place -a mail the tax directly to ' the main and evening of Saturday, Feb. 18th. of coasting on any hill in town. This arid equipment of the three firms.' _ dependent Basketball Teams organ­ Plans aFP rapidly progressing for­ is being done for the protection of thorough renovating. It has been office at-Lansing, Atwood said? (Upper Beer bottles exploding—from—the Peninsula taxpayers should" continue" ized. as.The Top O' Michigan-Basket­ ward toward this highlight attraction the children and they are asked to e1os"e"cT"for" a "number' of years." Mr. ball League, elected Edwin K. Ruel­ he'at of the blaze made the scene of and Mjs. Bathke were East Jordan to make their returns as usual to the of our wintcrspor.s season. abide by the coasting rules and hours. ing of East Jordan as manager of the tho "blaze" sound like a battlefield with resraents some fifteen years ago, go­ district office at Marquette. Taxpay­ The committee of Abe Cohn, Mer- Remember use ONLY the Garfield league, adopted rules and arranged a Hill and that only from 4 to 6 and 7 machine-guns in full operation. ing from here to Petoskey where they ers in the Pontiac district should for­ --ton Roberts, Pcrey Penfold, Hector schedule for the balance of the sea­ to 9 p. m. The fire broke .out "about 1° :30 p. entered the grocery business and op­ ward the tax to Detroit district of­ McKinnon,' Gayle Saxton, Thomas m. and is said to have been caused fice, 200 Transportation Building. son. The five teams organizing the - Parents are once again urged to ened a rather large set of apartments Breakey and ex-officeo members, by an overheated stove in the Foster league are, The-Gaylord I.O.O.F. In­ see-to it that their children observe on the second floor of the block oc­ -The change will- simplify account­ Howard Porter, William Sloaii, Edwin Company's quarters. It quickly dependents; The Harbor Springs these rules. Only last Sunday a near- cupied. They are both familiar with ing procedure by elimination of dup­ Rueling, and Dr. Beuker met Monday spread, filling the building with Merchants; The Cheboygan Mer­ serious accident occurred at the in­ catering to the public's demand for a lication and will shorten the. time afternoon at the high school setting smoke and making it difficult for fire­ chants; The Boyne City Mayors; tersection of Main and Mary Sts. A first-class hotel service. elapsing between payment of the tax up the organizations and arrange­ men to locate the actuaT blaze. and the East Jordan Canners. A com­ young girl on a sled shot out onto the and the depositing of it to the credit ments for the occasion. Coach Cohn The "Inn" is being remodeled plete schedule of league games for intersection passing underneath a Forming a human chain, men car­ of the state's general fund. of the high school faculty was elected throughout with all new furnishings the balance of the season is as fol­ slow-moving auto. The driver did not ried ropes into the garage and towed o --^- chairman and Gayle Saxton . its sec- including inner spring mattresses. lows:— ..- re, ary. see. the children playing. about a dozeh cars into the'street. A new demonstrator and another car Hot and cold water will be available Feb. 1 — Boyne City vs *Gaylord. The following committees were ap- were not found by the men and were in each room. Home cooked meals_at Sentenced For *eb. • 8^ gheboygan vs./ «Gaylord. popular prices will be one of the fea­ pointed To build up and supervise the' destroyed^ Feb. 13 — Gaylord vs. "East Jordan. special attraction: Working For Com* - The Olson Company was located on tures. Auto Thefts Feb. 14 - H. SjDrings'.vs. *Boyne City.: Publicity — Gayle Saxton, George the second floor along with an apart­ Feb.-16 — Cheboygan vs/ *H.tSprigs, ; Secord, and Paul Lisk. munity Betterment ment. -New mattresses and materials - EAST JORDAN YOUNG MAN GETS Feb. 16 — East Jordan vs. *B. City. , Clerk of races and in charge of en­ in the co;upany's~quarters were lost Seed Dealers Warned 2H TO 5 YEARS IN PRISON Feb. 22 — H, Springs vs: *Gaylord. trants — Abe Cohn and the local rec­ and the furnishings of the apart­ Against Selling Feb. 24 — Boyne*City vs. *H. Spr'gs. reational staff. E. J, ROTARY CLUB TO HAVE ment were destroyed, ^, Feb. 28 — Gaylord vs, *H. Springs. Contest rules drafting — Edwin CHARGE OF ANNUAL F. & S. - Only the walls of the concrete Poor Quality Seed Ralph Richards, before a special Feb^28\-~r Cheboygan vs. «E. Jordan, -Jtueling. —-^-BANQUET n—7 block building remained standing. It session of Circuit' Court at Charle­ Mar. 7.— H. Springs vs. *E Jordan. Music —John Ter Wee.. was reported-that only $2,000 insur- Vegetable seed dealers of Michi- voix, Friday, was sentenced to two Mar. 8 — East Jordan vs. *Gaylord.- Queen Coronation Bi^Beuke-iv- aT-fr^Be^l-4g^ve-yeaTg4tt-Seut_ier^ J -At-its^week4y—meeting ^Tuojoday- ams_rw^ga^ed-OTi^h^-hlm-V-^-|-ean woro bojng^aailed war-nings^this. -%ueenThVitatK>»s -toward i nE MsrrlO —^E. Jordan vs "CfieBd'ygah. noon, the newly organized Rotary Petoskey News. week by the Department of Agricul­ Michigan prison on a farceny charge. ter. Club orthis-^ity, made , further ad­ The block destroyed was located ture that repeated sale of poor qual­ Richards was charged with taking Mar. 14 — E. J. vs. *H. Springs. ^Fancyand Figure Skating — Mer- vances toward community betterment between the Court House and the ity vegetable- seed will result in pros­ an auto off East Jordan's Main-st' one Mar. 22, 23 and 24 — League tourn­ ton Roberts.- with some of the business brought Postofflce. .-.<-.'' ecution in 1939. The^vegetsble seed night i4nd driving it to within three ament-at Cheboygan. Purchasing and. awarding of prizes -b-efflra. its members. y" -~. r- " ~°. o—— — law became effective in' .1938 and miles' of deritral take where' "he Note: Asterisk (*) indicates "where -^•—(ihrough fund set up..by tm*Tlo- a Dr. G. W. Bechtold was in charge dealers found violating the.law' last wrecked it. He then broke into an un­ game is to be played. cal Chamber of Commerce). Percy occupied cottage,-but' evidently took of a very: interesting meeting,, in Gets Ctee To Burglary- year wete dismissed with Warnings, While it is_rather late-in the sea­ Penfold and Edwin R'ueling. nothing.. Going" on into Central Lake 1 which Ralph Price of Ironton gave a Leo LaLonde, hands The Herald a according-to the department.. son, to! organize^a league -the teams Possibility-of business-places clos- he • attempted to steal another auto very appropriate speech, regarding picture and article in a recent issue represented at the meeting_were-of ingj3aturday. evening. Hector McKin- Tabulations showing the number of but was driven away* by owner who child delinquency. ' ' • the unanimous -opinion that such a "non. of a . Detroit .daily a'b.out Danv.La- samples of., various companies- tested gatis good look' at Richards with a A peti'.ion of some 25 boys of this league has tremendous possibilities Possibility of train excursions to Londe — a brother of Leo and other and the percentage of samples up to flash-light...Richards then stole an community, regarding a possibility 11 and would-not only improve Indepen­ Pine kidge and irom "BellaTr'e— Wil­ Lafcende^'boxs -in East Jordan. The standard have been mailed to dealers, auto, at Central Lake and drove back of a recreation hall was brought up dent Basketball in Northern Michigan liam Sloan.. with caution that to repeat sales of to East Jordan, parking it on the item is as follows :— but would provide more interesting . and favorably discussed: The possibil­ poor seeds in --1939 from campanies West Side. Snow was falling at .the - Many attractions will feature the "Datr LaLonde, an employe of Pqn- games for the basketball fans to ity'was referred to ~ -an appointed with sub-standard 1938 ratings will, time and Antrim officers easily traced afternoon and evening entertainment^ -iac Motors sheet hnetal department watch. The real purpose in starting GoiirinunTfy Service Committee of. Pr. make necessary enforcement of the the car here. Dashes, distance, and relay y. "races, Beuker as Chairman and V, White- in Pontiac, recently picked what was a league at this late date is to get or- seed law. '...""-.• lo/lhen, women, b'oys and girls, will ford. Dr TTsvi-inprtnn, " V F Wnrt»- 1pf--nf an pmbrniripTpH pillow case out It is to he hoped th>+ -1ft™ «pn.ani.» jjaniiiatiuii under way so tnat wnen • jjo tun ufT ifmllar -to latt yeaib buc- "of a rag bag in the plant. He recog- Reports disclose that ratings, rang- w-iUJje-a-Wlutary-lesson-tG-al-^oathfr thffTnext basketball-season-rolls- ar­ and • William Malpass^ , Any sugges­ -nizBd-it-through an embroidered "L"i Sd from six companies with 100 per "HBSsful"event™with—useftrW-^wiflter- tions to this" Idea" by the community when they""fee_ the urge to take an ound a full schedule caff be played be- . cent standard seeds down to one com- .sports togs going as prizes to the can be taken before the committee. as the one iri which_burglars carried auto without the owner's consent. In fore larger and more enthusiastic pany with as low as 16..8 per cent of winners. Outside talent in fancy (fig­ the Rotary. Club will . this year away silver and other loot from his the end,, old John Law will catch "up crowds. All Northern Michigan Inde-- ure and trick skating, are being ap- home 19 years ago. their seeds meeting state standards. with the culprits. pendent Teams who agree to com­ sponsor the Nineteenth Annual Fa- : •proacheci—to "give exhibitionsr Louise ther and Son Banquet. This affair has ' — 0-^ r <—— -• ply with the riles of the league are Bechtold, high school senior, will be for many years been handled by the eligible to membership. crowned as the highlight of the-eyen- Men's Fellowship- Club, who this Ironton G. of C. Appoint— — 'lfig^The high school —facuity~^witl" ^£ah*Jlate* Michigan4¥i*fc Schedule of E. J. Canners Games fegl that they are unable to take care play the Rotarians in (he novelty "Ferry" Committee *Feb. 2nd — Kalkaska. of the undertaking. The following game o.f broom ball. Efforts are be­ ter Carnival *Feb. 7th — Central Lake.- . committee was elected to set the date Sept. 5^6-7-8 ing made to have the high school band Feb.-8th — Potts Laundry1. and arrange for the banquet: C.""Wr "At a meeting of the Ironton Cham­ on hand. Invitations are being sent rr ber of Commerce, Monday evening, 'Feb. 43th— Gaylord I. O. Q. F. Sidebotham as Chfli nnn, anil E, Fn CHARLEVOIX CO. FAIR STARTS OPENS AT PETOSKEY THIS FRI- out to the winter queens of our neigh Feb. 15th—-Petoskey Merchants. Wade, Hollis Drew, Alex Sinclair, and DAT "= CONTINUES TEN- committee consisting of Marion Jack- boring cities-'of Marncelqna, Petoskey; -DAY AFTER LABOR DAY Feb.'20th — Central Lake. - Ole Hegerberg... , DAYS son, Frank Milward and Ralph Price Charlevoix, and Boyne ~City. Clown, Feb. 23-24-25— Tournament at Kal- Dr. B. J. Beuker will have charge was appointed to collaborate with the funfest, _and novelty acts are being Ironton Ferry Committee of the . kaska. arranged. There is a possibility "of of,the next noon day meeting. Some fourteen directors and offi­ u cers of the Charlevoix County Agri­ The Michigan Winter Carnival, Board of - Supervisors. " \ *Feb. 28th — Cheboygan Merchants. train'excursions to Pine Ridge and wMch>opens at Petoskey, Feb. 3 is •Mar. 7th — Harbor Springs Mer. from Bellaire. cultural Society met at East Jordan^- Supt. G. E. Ganiard Municipal Balding, Thursday night, the major attraction_fflr_th.e. winter, Mar. 10th-—-Cheboygan Merchants. The committee alsp brought up for Jan. .26, and made further plans for sports fans fprthe next ten. days. On Mar. 14th — Harbor Springs Mer." Dies At Mt. Pleasant that day the Michigan Winter Queen, discussion, the conduct at the rink, the"19.39-exhibit. A Boquet For Mar. 22-23-24 — League tourna-. Janna -May Locks of Grand Rapids, and it was' decided by all that" the * Dates of the coming exhibit were Gayle Saxton inent at Cheboygan. - • • - Supt, G. E. Ganiard, in charge of will be crowned by Thomas Read, *at- various games of crack-the-whip, Jtag, set for Tuesday, Wednesday, Thiirs- - * Indicates home games. - - the Mt. Pleasant public schools- for torney general of Michigan, in a cere I-got-it, pom-pom, etc. should be H»y, Friday, S pt R-fi-7-8 A apnrta writer in the Mancelo- 0 ' ' -' tho past 25 ycarsrjmssed away at~that P mony which will climax "kTi'plaTvvfatft -strictly forbidden-during the regu- na Herald of last week has the f of city, Wednesdays-Jan. 2eV- The Mid ySSrivillTie sup- fancy skating show, "A Fantasy in lar skating hours. lowing to .say relative to the ref e- New Frigidaire Line Mr. Ganiard, born at Concord, plied by the "World of Pleasure Eskimoland." The. various,.committees wjlL me£tr ,xe.eing..of .basket ball gftmeatherei. ^1^.7^3^.-28,^1873^^^40¾¾^ -Shows'-'-consisting-of merry-go.round,, —And Other G^M.-Products again'this Monday for further plan­ "'"Tfi'ff'fancy sfiaBng"'show~wiTr make- "Gayle Saxton of East Jordan at the Michigan Normal and the Uni- Ferris wheel, chair - plane, tilt-a- ning and hoping for ideal weather for use of the members: of. the Petoskey handle(Tboth games Friday night Are Greatly Improved versities of Chicago and Michigan. He wherl, kiddie ride, etc. Also a num­ the promotion we leave you till next If.ancy_-f5ka.ting club in.a colorful cos­ with great proficiency. He worked followed the teaching profession and ber of side-shows.; „ week's addition, when the outlined tumed event. under extremely trying conditions for one year, 1913-19_L4jgas Superin- . For Wednesday afternoon ahd-fat. Returning recently from Detfolt program will be announced. and came out still master of a hot­ tendent of the East Jordan Public ening — Sept. 6 — a well-known and AJI invitational ski meet on Sun­ where he attended the annual Frigi­ — O* ; ly contested game. Mr. Saxton is Schools. He was a member of the F. popular "Thrill Show" will be pre­ day, February 5, is a_big eyent and. "rat§d by conference coaches as one daire sales convention, Mr. Healey & A. M. and the Rotary Club. Sur­ sented. It c0nsisteof__ftBtDmobile this will bring out many of the out­ •""fThe maximum recorded age for of the foremost officials in the! expressed himself gs., highly enthusi­ viving are the widow and a daughter. stunts including jumps, driving standing skiiers of the state to take muskellunge is 20 years, " the top north. He will.handle the game astic about the 1939 outlook for re­ Funeral, services were held Friday. through a brick wall, and an auto part in the slalom & down hill events weight from 60 to 75 pounds. here tomorrow (Friday) night tail business and the major appli­ collision going at the rate of forty at-Wabmomo Hill, thfe new-ski layout ance business in particular. Mr, Hea- jniles per hour. This was a stellar fea-« when Mancelona meets Kalkaska of the Petoskey Winter Spprts" Club, ley is a dealer in the -local territory f.ure last year at the Traverse City for his last appearance here this where they, have installed the first ski for the Frigidaire line of electric re­ ^air, the- State Fair at Detroit, and season." MICHIGAN'S 1939 WINTER QUEEN lift, in the state. "".'... ' frigerators, electric ranges and elec­ he,.Qhio Sate Fair; It is considered ^—SpeeiaUevents-are planned for ev­ ine-of the best thrill attractions-^ tric water heaters. All ate made by ery day and evening for the visitors General Motors Corpo*ation.. 'Tf^"bnFrldayTiigh'-7'Febfua'ry.l0, the i-okay..'. ~~^- , "" "I have been in the appliance busi­ "rand Carnival Ball honoring Michi- Temple Highlights '- For the nigh'; attractions'on ThuJs- ness for quite a long period", said •rnn's Winter Queen-will be held. This- •Hy ard Friday, Sept. 7-8, the "Pine Healey, ''and I have seen refrigera­ ^idge Follies" have been secured is the'outstanding indoor event of the A grand .array of" entertainment winter season in northern Michigan. tors improve from-year-to year,but I ''ton the Gus Sun Booking .Agency. has been prepared by the Temple can say with all candor that I have "•his attraction consists of'sixteen Qh Saturday, February 11, an op- management for your enjoyment the never seen so amazing an innovation,, «op]e", including their own-band of el. house for the children of North­ coming-week. Four tojmotch produce as is being introduced this year in •v'dio • ar'ists" and, the program will ern Michigan is planned, with skat­ tions of varying themes are arranged connection_.with the 1939 Frigidaire 'in a trifle less than ,two hours of en- ing, skiing, jumper races, and tobog­ as follows: -i" _a f line. I heard some whispers about it T ainment. • ganing planned for the entertain­ Saturday: John Wayne, Ray Corr- hgfore,I_attended„the„meeting,-bUt I For IKe same two "days"—"Thurs- ment of iive juveniles and with a rink igan, and Sis Taylor in "Pals of the am now-entirely convinced that Hhe '"v, Friday afternoons — the Wells party in the evening. A special pro- Saiddle." Three _Staoges Comedy. new note in the Frigidaire offerings gram for the visiton Probers Trio will present a program oifc=Newsr thir year la unquestionably-the^most- if high-wire and platform ^BtmvtsT Sunday also Sunday; Monday: Errol Flynn, Ba­ pronounced forward step in food pre- This trio is a well-known attraction -• Although many other communities sil Rathbone, David Niveri in "Th« "servation, sinee the very first electric ,'ach year among the larger" circuses. in Western, Michigan, Charlevoix, Dawn PatroV' Technicolor Cartoon. refrigerator was ready for use. X Mistaken Apprehension Harbor Springs, Jraverse City,.Cadil­ Musical corrieay.' . know of nothing~6lse like' it any­ At this~ Board meeting a petition lac, Ludington;"St. Joseph, have their Tuesday, Wed.; Family Nites: Ter­ where. . winter sports programs during the vas presented, signed by 95 voters A ry Kilburn, Reginald Owen and Ann "1 believe also that it is genuine season most Of them plan to join with nxpayers of East Jordan, asking that Rutherford in Charles' Dicken's "A improvements like ,the one I have Petoskey in helping this pioneer win­ 10 beer,be sold on the fair grounds Christmas Carol." Hawk of the Wil­ just seen, not only in our electric re­ ter sports center in celebrating its liiring the 1939 exhibit. The Board to derness. • frigerators, but in other types o£pro- 12th Annual Michigan Winter Carni­ 'larify things,'passed a resolution to Th'urr, Fri.: The Jones Family star. . ducts ag-welj tha will go far in stim­ val,. f uJiia—effect. In t^ie phat-yeara^there ;g~Je*""Prouty, Louise Faze'ndg, ulating demand and increasing Icon- ' Has been some informal talk about Spring Byington in "D5wh on the sumers' orders. And' of course we ajl_ this matteT — but has never been for their new steel roofings. Farm." ' know that .customers' orders are the .cortsulerecr seriously by TmF =Tatr About three-quarters, of the fence factors which directly govern em; Board. posts ails ¾et in position. Married Nine Times But Hed Only ployment, and' through.employment, Rapai"-.Going Forward -—9oiii« 400 trees.....fn*- landscaping Two Husbands! Still Fighting Over national ptosperity." JANNA MAY LOEKS Extensive repairs are now under have been set-out in various parts of Pants for Women 1 Two of the Many Mr. Healey indicated that within a ON FRIDA 2VENING Attorney General TtTOfnas Read will crpwn way at the Fair Grounds with a crew the grounds. Interesting Features in The Ameri­ few days he will conduct a. public Miss Janna y Loeks7Tjf Grand Rapids, as MieKigan's Winter Queen of fifty WPA workers on the job fif- The race track is about completely can Weekly, the Magazine Distribu­ showing in which will be displayed the af'the openiftg outdoor function of the 1939 Michigan Winter Car- teeri days of the month. re-clayed how with exception of the ted with the Sunday Chicago Herald new development about wnicli he ap­ nical in the Wjnteif Sports Park at Petoskey, The exhibit barni are now ready Btrip known as the home stretch. and Examiner. pears so exultant. . ' ) THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EA8T JOBOAN, MICH.), FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1»J»

When Eyes Turn Westward^ WHO'S Europe Rushes to> Meti CrtsU A*Jjoy*• By Jweph W. La Bine—' maim in motion.« —By Dr. jam** W. Barton—— EARS ago in .lecturing on Yventilation to school teach­ ers I gave the old rule. "Every $: pupil should have an air space of 1,000 cubic feet—10 feet high, lOJEeetwide and10 feet long— EW YORK—Mrs. Ella A. Boole, afid the air should be changed -N ihe iron chance ,r tion, goes into action again, with three times in each hour, Sen. Morris Sheppard of Texas and Today, and for many ye%ra several other fa- pasiii,air space is not dis­ ^MrBsE.AiBopl* mous old-time cussed because, as long as air Gird* Sword in dry Jieaders wfib is' in motion.— carrying used DryComeback think they see a air away ~and allowing fresh* new_ and arid air to enter a room—proper ventila­ dajr dawning. A friend of this writ­ tion is being obtained. That the air er, scouting material for a maga­ may not be moving zine article on a trip through the too fast, thus caus- $!iddle -WestT-says the_drys_are«)ni- ing^jdfafts, is" now ing back like an army with banders. g carefully Too many saloonslnJog_ much co­ educational elbowJCending,- too Until this year, Germany's annual quota of immigrants to the atched. Map thaws haw/Hitler and Mussolini have built eastern European alliances t Siany tangles between-barleycorn ^Vmted"Sisterims~^5^St r^oo»ted-to 27,3JXUincejfirmoiay(gpfc: to protect themselves from Russia while pressing nejv demands against France and However, in add!-— •ni^irtomobUes, too much .cutting, r : : over Austria. As above figure* show, this quota teas never used up, ioff to moving air, of corners to me^rheavy-tax-ancl- Britain. (So, EUROPE.) ~- ~-~T:~s7:":zzzrz:—r--— —.th~ough:in3Jm1_2jmontfr July 1, German emigra- airinust be ol a cer- license coats—all this, and more, is rrriies^femg-and-W0 -miles. deep.—For- tion to America showed a decided uptwtng^^ln^r^^rmsmM^.1' faTn^ ternperaturV;: rallying the drys for a return en­ EDITOR'S NOTE—When opinions ere ; r expteued in these-aoluinnl.Ahey ere those newly inaugurated President Pedro has become even more marked, and today every westbound boat and ~mbTm&e~~ lat gagement, say the above and other ef tie news easfrst, end not neeesstrily Aguirre— CerffS, -reportedly Fascist detached observers. 6t the uewspeper. carries more refugees.—The current fiscal year's quota is already both health and bent, it presented the worst initia­ Hear.exhaustion. Most immigrants have been Jewish people. ' cqrnfort;^b^ixalnsf= tion under fire ever experienced by rs^/^ind, even - The massive and deliberate any Western hemisphere chief exec­ Mrs. Boole is 80 years old and Europe -.--- Dr. Barton busses, beside* utive. Total fatalities, which prob­ homes^ offices and t looks much less. In New York, Except for Spain, January found ably will never be determined, run she addresses the luncheon of all Europe immersed in an ominous from 8,000 to 11,000. Injuries run other buildings;—are now equipped the state W. C. T. U., commemo­ calm broken only by occasional una into even more thousands. Faced with whaHs well known as air cdn- . rating the centenary of the birth _ der-ebver whispers among democra­ with a stupendous reconstruction job ditioning. •f Frances E. Willard, founder In order that the general public cies on one side and dictators-_en_ :whieh—will require several years, of the-W. C, T.-V. Her firmly the other. Europe was a theater Chile will probably "need all outside shouIoTknOw more about air-condi­ set spectacles with gold bows, tioning, what is the proper rate" Of and Spain was its stage. By the financial assistance available to : her crown of abundant white end of the month the play on Spain's stave off nalional calamity. movement of air, and also the hair, the stern godliness of her stage was definitely approaching its proper .temperature and moisture, .-features all are as they were. climax because Fascist-subsidized Congress the American Society of Heating and Nothing whatever has been-re=— Rebels^ had put the communistic - Ventilating Engineers has made a pealed in Mrs. Boole's person Loyalist government to flight at Bar­ Last summer, Rep."Martin Dies code of minimum requirements for • •» ideas.— < C™ celona. This marked the beginning and his committee on un-American- comfort air conditioning. — _ .. „ ^-———=-4—| nf Tnynliat Spain's pnrf, snpn fa IPBVP ism unearthed dirt concerning Har- Refugeesjget their' first glance at the Statue of Liberty, wonder- Set .Ideal Conditions. For more than 50 years sheh&T -both StnlItalvy nriand aGermanermanvy frefree tto ry^Dridges, west count labor-leader | . "For winter air conditioning, 70 been fighting alcohol. With her hus­ nntn who is not a naturalized citizen but Inp Ulhat tlititifiwlund hold* in ilnra for th/>m. Once in New Yorfc, press new demands against Britain they are bundled off to refugee headquarters. "deg -{Fahrenheit) indoor tem- band, the late .William H. Boole, and France. • '."'•*". nevertheless guides the destinies of perature with 35 per cent relative l_pastor of the Wfllett Street Method­ many American laboring men as an The reason for this embarrassing humidity (moisture) wheiiTsutdoor ist church, she waged war against unofficial mogul of John Lewis' C. temperature is 30 degrees, is set as the Bowery dives, away back irr-the- situation is that Europe's democra­ I. O. This put "Madame Secretary a minimum design standard. •• eighties. She had-come from Woos- cies have followed a policy of non­ of Labor Frances Perkins on the j ' intervention in Spain, declining" 36 •*"Pnf mitnmer air conditionine an t«r, Ohio, an alumna of the Uni- spot, because ' the Dies committee Indoor design schedule of 'effective admit_that non-interventjonjs,really claimed Harry Bridges was an alien "." versity of Wooster, where-,^immedi­ a disguise for the now-discredited^ temperatures' (whidh are an index ately . after her graduation, she -and^a Communist^that he advocated of comfort based-en a combination had taken up her life-work for pro- policy of dictator appeasement. Re­ overthrowing the government by gardless of the moral issues re­ of_temperature, relative humidity,*" " hibition. From 1909 until 1919, there and air motion) is establishedjjrang- was no important piece of anti-liq­ portedly involved in Spain's—war, London and Paris must now realize ine from 71 degrees^ffectivelem- uor legislation in which she did not perature when it is 80 degrees out^ participate, ^,.„ ..... that their mistake has not been the p refusal to side with Loyalists against side.,to 75.5 degrees, effective tem­ In 1925, she became national the Rebels, but rather their permit- perature when it is 10S degrees out­ president.of the W. C-_X. U., ,-ting Germany and Italy to aid the doors. —. and, in 1981, world chairman. Insurgents. The tesult is that Fas­ "The code specifies the introduc­ • - During the prohibition years and - cist nations. How control Spain. tion of outside air for ventilating America owes many-laj_its - Edouard Benes, resigned ores, purposes at a rate of not less than in the preceding years of strife, France is therefore surroundeil__on_ most., prominent residents to^iderU^of Czechoslovakia, who is 1 three sides by potentially hostile na­ 10. cubic feef per hour per occupant the was the head of the com­ German persecution. Above: now a visiting professor at the bined prohibition board [of strat- tions, while the Mediterranean be­ or not"less than 15 cubic feet ifi ~egyr-slM?ewaV resourceful, tire­ comes predominantly dictator^coib Albert Einstein, famous scientist, University of Chicago. He was premises where smoking is permit- l less. Fittingly, her citadel is trolled - ; who has taken out cilhenship known as "Europe's smartest liu tearwth removal of 95 per cent of Still a lijtle Van Wert, OhioT .'Spain's War is not finished, but it papers here. lie statesman." ordinary dust particles to provide the necessary air purity;"" . hedge-borderedJhous£tjs,et_ down has been sufficiently localized to in Brooklyn, holding its middle- free Mussolini's handsjQrjther_pur-_ The rate at ..which air is allowed western ground far in the enemy suits. Almost every competent Eu­ Jto_fl6w_into the room should be total territory. As does Mrs. Boole, ropean observer has. predicted a more than SOJinear feet per minute. still standing firm and unshaken new crisis following Barcelona's col- * • * in her flat-heeled shoes. - lapse-and the whispers throughout^ -Europe have backed up that-pp Give Heart Chance . diction. To Fight Influenza "^_ TN THE last 14 years, Dr. Donald Most _ important fo'undation-jvork During the influenza epidemic of •*• A. Laird of Colgate University has for the new Italo-German demands 1918 the military hospital with which ' written 14 books and 500 articles, is the assurance that any resultant I was connected asked for volun­ but has inspired many more than conflict win be localized. This means J. PABNELL THOMAS teers 'from a certain unit to each that. He has peventing huge, mysterious Russia, s California also spoke up. give a few ounces of their blood as Novel Ideas been heaven's from aiding Britain" and France. they were leaving hospital after re­ of Dr. Laird blessing to the Therefore Rome and Berlin have force and that he had made dispar­ covering from influenza. Without aging remarks about the President Rate Display , make-up man, quietly established a solid bloc of exception these men of excellent needing a snap­ "neutral" states reaching from the of-the U. S. t Max Reinhardt, long an impor­ Lotte Lehman, star of New physique gave .the .amount "request­ py little box to!dress a page. As Baltic to the Adriatic (see map), Secretary 'Perkins has failed to tant figure on the stage, who York's Metropolitan opera, is ed. This blood (which had fought nr,, T nirri rptir^Sj^ta^ngagaan-re^ ^which will stand as sentinels against give Dies committeemen what they influenza successfully) was then in- nnrKMdor-n satisfaetoE; came" to the United States two herself "Aryan," but has two search at the" caUQW~age of'41,.here | RuTslan aggresBiuu while llatar-and- win directing: Her jected into the more serious cases are just a few of his stimulating any" turn their backs to face claim: That a court ruling is now of influenza jWith^txceBent xesults, finding**'. ,. ..„. „„.,. France and Britain, pending on-whether membership in a Broadway~pldy. He is frgconi; German and Austrian property the record for the.hospital standing ^ ing a citizen. seined, she became an American. Horizontal thinking is best. It The hcwlMiHs-wiUcSteY-aroma-t^* f^™*Wty ^ a 'deP°rta_ among the first half-dozen for the Is quite possible' thafr a new Italian demands against France, continent. .-•-'- ..._ Not since 1876 has an attempt stage of evolution is setting in though it may-be, enlarged through This blood, fresh from withstand­ which will take us back to all- new .declarations by Chancellor Hit been made to impeach a cabinet ing influenza, had developed so fours. i— T*„I„ ,,.rf.*,,«. r.«„Mi«» member, but that has not stopped many Mantibodies'^s-disease fighters When you feel jittery, snap up her to blockade the Mediterranean), ting a modern precedent. New Jer­ jfrj'esisters—that it was; of course, some red meat. control of the Suez canal, and owner­ sey's Rep. J. Parnell Thomas has a great'booh to the tirelreTTbd r worn Some cases of second sight ship of the Djibouti-Addis Ababa introduced a resolution calling for "blood of the patient. •re explained by an odorless railroad (providing an outlet from an investigation to determine wheth­ Notwithstanding that^iat\tt ii:s able to scent - which - almost, but not Ethiopia). These demands are vital er Secretary Perkins should be im­ reduce the power of influenza, this quite, wells up, into conscious­ to Britain, because Italian_control of peached, along with Immigration power in the blood does, not last for ness. the Mediterranean might cut off Commissioner James L. Houghtel- very long, according.to studies by - If you feel rotten today,' you, London's "lifeline" to India and the ing and .Labor Department Solicitor Drs. R. W. Fairbrother, and E. A. will be happy in just 28 days, east. Gerard D. Reilly.' Martin in the Lance't.TdnaoH. These- as that is the life-ordained cycle Probable dictator strategy will be That Madame Perkins' unaggxes=u_. physicians state that in view of the of hope and despair. for Germany to assure France she sive_interestjiLthe Bridges deporta- great number of antibodies in this The Dlonne quints are in dan­ will not help Italy, thereby~CB^ H6n~case"isTrot popular has been u>" loodTiTis surprising that it is not ger of growing up to be 'man- couraging Britain to stand aloof, dicated at Sacramento, Calif., where able to protect patients developfiqr- haters—on account of women Then Germany would aid Italy in a the state legislature may ask -her influenza as they may be again; at­ nurses and governesses. ' possible war. just as she has,_aided for an immediate, report on Mr. tacked With influenza within 10 Rebel Spain, with "volunteers." months or a year. Brains are sluggish in sum­ Whether London" and Paris will wait Bridges' citizenship status. ^So far mertime. " for such an eventuality is another as he had jieieir "" "__' Antibodies Soon Exhausted. Eat candy to fight off sleepi­ matter. Thoroughly scared by re­ blyman C. Don Field, the labor lead­ -Itirrlay-bfr that there -are-»-num- ness at work. ports that joint Italo-German de­ er has twice taken out naturaliza­ ber of "strains" of poison in influ­ Never count sheep to put your­ mands will be voiced by Chancellor tion—papers but has failed to file enza, so many strains to be con­ self to sleep. It doesn't work. Hitler before the Reichstag, by Ital­ them in the required time. Q trolled or prevented from causing 11 Noise makes city people small­ ian mobilization of her 1908 army trouble that the antibodies devel­ er than country peopier"" class, by threatened^ German mobi­ Aviation oped by the previous attack soon lization t)f 1,500,000 men by Febru- Man's top running speed is 21.7 gjt-nsed up or exhausted. Women employees are more . ,*f'As a number of recently infected adaptable than men and stay persons were available, Drs. Fair- longer on the job. &<^%rz^^ginning to wake up. Encouragingly , bile's, 357.5* and airplane's, 440,6, brother and Martin studied the fluc­ Great Britain has begun an intensive But at BTflTalo, NtrY.7'"a pursuit Many of these discoveries have army recruiting campaign. But al- tuations or changes in the number been made by Dr. Eaird in his re-. ,™ i tely off setting this' prac- monoplane being buiit....,.for .^Jjs. of antibodies in the blood over pe­ ost comp e JPrench_ government hss broken thie ; searches a consultant for concerns 4ieal gtep is the report tnat brime K riods of 10 to 12 months. The num­ '-in uheav y industries*•••*">• , -i n «'>-<-»which- "-"field^' Minister Chamberlain wiU B&£k- old airplane record by about 150' ber or proportion of antibodies in he has been busy and distinguished. vite Hitler, Mussolini and French m. p. h.-With motor wide open but the blbo* seems to tell the exact He is a world authority on noise Premier Daladier to a new "Mu­ engine speed held down (by an elec­ ability of the individual, to resist in­ and sleep. Fa*m-reared in Indi­ nich" conference, there to buy peace trically controlled propellor), H, fection; a large number shows high ana, he was_edubated'"-Bt-"theJftilver- • with more concessions. Lloyd Child began diving, at. 22,000 resistance and a small number sities of Dubuq]ie__and-^Iowa and feet, holding his vertical descent shows low resistance.. But whether until he reached 9,000 feet,—lb* high-or-tow, the body's ability., to taught at many universities before s • •••' jnlning the Colgate faculty 14 years ChUe graph chart chalked up his speed fight influenza. agafif. is back to ago. He has been out in front In; ffirthqiiaVi»« linnnlly H&me when ufltir-jt reached 575 m. p. h„ then where, it was (before the attack of the above novel ideas, with the ex- (tea bottoms sink, forcing up moun­ moved off the paper. Landing wifl i^withir^ie-tgja monfesj"- ;: Jceptlou uf the oiio ttbout_ouT: get- tainous areas and jarring the land no ill effects, Child estimated he had Tms mean* tnat if thesymptomsf- " ting back to -all-fours. That has •formttes around^—Squeezed along flown at 600 m. p, h.-; Since air head cold, headache, tiredness, sore been evident fpr. at least seven the rocky west coast of South/Amer­ reacts like solid matter at just over muscles, prostration — occur ,you -yearsr-*s- revealed by prejtailing. ica,, .Chile ' has often experienced 800_m. p. h., scientists explained should get .of! your feet at once afioT ttshds in world pblltiofe such phenomena tratTrever^iaHKlT: 4hat=efaHd-ahad protiaMy—trayeled give' your heart every chance to • Coo»olldat»d N«w« rt«(ut«. disastrous fashion «s the earthquake =+«lht=lt=«g«te !WNUS«rvlc«. _.^_ fast as a modern plane could ever J-whteh raceatly struck,..a.Jtoni „45JP_ «8. WhtV* can these persecuted men and women find a home? • BtU ST^iitS^WNy ferrlM.

.^: THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.), FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1939

-Weekly News Analysis tm WHO'S Europe Rushes to New Crisis As Loyalist S^ain Is Crushed • Proper ventilation is being NEWS obtained as long as air re­ "By Joseph W. La Bine-— H^H^^f%^B mains in motion. THIS By Dr. James W. Barton EARS ago in lecturing on Yventilation to school teach­ A- WEEK ers I gave the old rule. "Every mm pupil /should have an air space By LEMUEL F. PARTON of 1.0D0 cubic feet—10 feet high, 10 feet wide and 10 feet long— _. EW'YORK.—Mrs. Ella A. Boole, and the air-should .be_ changed ^N the iron chancellor, of prohibi­ three times in each hour." " .' tion, • goes into action, again, with Sen. Morris Sheppard of Texas and Today, and loTTnany- years ; several other fa- past, air space is not dis­ Mrs.E.A.Boole mous old-time cussed because, aj Jong asajr Girds Sword in dry leaders who is in motion.— carrying wfed DryGomebactt think they.see a air away and allowing fresh new and arid air to enter a room—proper ventlla- "Say 3Iwmngr"A friend of this writ­ TiSITls-bging -obtained That the-Titfe, er, scouting material for, a maga­ zine article on a trip through" the may not TseTnowng Middle West; says the drys are com­ too fast, thus" caus­ ing back like an army with banners. ing drafts, fe raw Too. many saloons, too much co­ ' EUROPE'S'WALL O^ NECTftAlITY' being carefully educational elbow-bending, too Until this year, Germany's annual' quota of immigrants to the Map shows how Hitler and Mussolini have built eastern European alliances United States was 25,957, boosted to 27,370since Germany took watched. .many .tangles, between barleycorn However, in addi­ —and—automobiles, too—mueh—euttirtg Jo protect themselves JnmKiissiK while 'pressing new demands-ugainst France andover Austria. As above figures show, this quolajtvas never used up, Britain,- (See EUROPE.) tion to moving air, oil co_rners__*t.Q__meei_heav-y__ tax and- though in the 12-month period ending last'July I, German.emigra>- air-must be of-a-eer-- license costs—all. this, and moire, is miles long and 100 mTtelTdeep. For tion-to ^merien-*hawpA-7nhmdpd uttsmng^-lrr-reeent months this tain temperature rallying the drys for a return en­ EDITOR'S NOTE— When opinions art expressed in these columns, they are those newly inaugurated President Pedro has become even more marked, and today every westbound boat and . moisture for gagement, say the above and other of .the news analyst, and not necessarily ^JVguirre Cerdo, reportedly-Fascist carries more refugees. The current fiscal year's quota is already both health and detached observers. _ of the newspaper. bent, it presented the worst .initia­ near exhaustion. Most immigrants,'h~ave been Jewish people. comfort, so trains, tion under fire ever-jestperiehc.ed "By The massive and deliberate cars, . and ,e'ven ' any Western hemisphere chief exec­ -Dr. Barton busses, besides Mrs. Boole is 80 years old and Europe . utive. Total fatalities, which prob­ homes, offices and looks-much less. In New York, . Except for Spain, January found ably will never be- determined, run other buildings, are now equipped . - she addresses the luncheon of all Europe immersed in an ominous from 8,000 to 11,000-, . Injuries run with what is.well known as air con­ '.the state VV.C. T. IT., commemo- calm broken only by occasional un- into even more thousands. Faced ditioning. — lating the centenary of the birth der-cover whispers among democra­ with a stupendous reconstrtfetionjob In order that the general public. of Frances E.WiHard, founder cies on one side and-dictators, on which.will require several years, --«heuld know more about air condi­ of the W. C. T. U. Her firmly the other. Europe Was "a theater Chile will probably-need all outside tioning, what is the proper -rate of «et spectacles with gold bows, and Spain was its stage,. By the financial assistance available to movement of' air, and also the her crown of abundant white end of the month the play'on Spain's stave off national calamity. proper temperature and moisture, hair, the stern godliness of her stage was definitely approaching its the American Society of Heating and features all are as they were. climax because Fascist-subsidized Ventilating Engineers has- made a "JfolEing whatever' EanSeerTrc- "Rebels -had put ~the communistic. Congress .Last siirhrneTT-Repr -Martin-Dies code of minimum requirements for pealed in Mrs. Boole's person Loyalist government to flight at Bar­ comfort -air-conditioning. or ideas.' celona. This marked the beginning and his committee on un-American- of Loyalist Spain'send, soon to leave--iSy2earthed_dh^ Refugees gel their-first glance at the Statue of Liberty, wonder­ Set Ideal Conditions;—^^" - •- - - • - ry Bridges, west coast labor reader For more than 50 years she has both Italy and Germany. free to ing whalHhe new land holds in store for them. Once in IVeiv York, "For winter air conditioning, 70 been fighting alcohol. With her hus­ who is not a naturalized citizen but : press new.demands against Britain they are bundled off to refugee headquarters. degrees (Fahrenheit) indoor tern- band, the late William H. Boole, and France.—:==?' nevertheless guides the destinies of perature with 35: per cent relative pastor pf .the Willett Street Method­ many American laboring men as an The reason fox.this_embarrassing humidity (moistiire) when outdoor ist church, she waged.,war against unofficial mogul of John Lewis' C temperature is 30 degrees, is set as the isowery dives, away baiik m the. situation-is that Europe's dembcra- I. O. This put Madame Secretary cies have followed a policy oi non­ a minimum design standard. .. . ;. ;< eighties. ,_She had-eome from Woos^ of Labor Frances Perkins on the "For, summer air conditioning an te'r, Ohio, an alutnna of -the Uni­ intervention in Spain, declining to spot, because the Dies committee admit that non-intervention is really i indoor design schedule of 'effective— versity of Woogter, where, immedi- claimed Harry Bridges was aft alien ! temperatures' (which are an index -—ately... alter her graduation, she * disguise for the now-discredited and'a Communist, that.he advocated policy of dictator appeasement. Re­ I of comfort based on a combination had taken up"~Fier life-work for pro- I o\ erthrowing,: the. government by gardless of - the moral~;issues re­ of temperature, relative humidity, hibition. From 1909 until 1919, there | and air motion) is established,, rang- - was no important piece of antUJiq,- j portedly™ involved in Spain's war, London and Paris must now realize ing from 71 degrees effective tem­ uor. legislation in which she did not J perature when it is 80 degree^, out--- participate. that their mistake has not been the refusal to side with Loyalists against side to 75.5 degrees effective tern- • the__Rebels, but rather their permit­ perature when it is 105 degrees out­ In 1925, she became national doors. president of the W. C. T. V., ting" Germany and Italx to aid, the and,, in 1931, world chairman. Insurgents. The result is -Slat Fas­ "The code specifies the introduc­ tion of outside air for ventilating During the prohibition years and cist nations now control Spain. America owes many of its -Edouard Benes, resigned pres­ in the preceding years of strife, France is therefore surrounded on purposes at a rate of not less than three sides by potentially hostile na­ most prominent residents to ident of Czechoslovakia, who is 10 cubic, feet per..hour per occupant she was the head of the com- German persecution. Abovei now a visiting prof.et\sor-ai Jhe bined prohibition-board of strat­ tions, while the. Mediterranean be­ or. not less than 15 cubic feet in egy, shrewd, resourceful, tire.-.. comes predominantly dlctator-con- Albert Einstein, famous' scientist, University of Chicago, tie was premises where smoking is permit­ less. Fittingly, her citadel is trolled; " ." '; "•" . •- who has taken out citizenship hnoicn as "Europe'ssmartest lit­ ted, with removal of 95 per cent.of little Spsin's-war is*-not finished-, -but it__U. papers here~. —* tle statesman," ordinary crust particles to provide ." ^still a little "VanrfferTrTOhT67 ; hedge-bordere'd house, set down has been sufficiently localized., to the necessary air purity." in Brooklyn, holding.its middle- free Mussolini's hands for other pur­ The rate at which air is allowed western ground-far ,in the enemy suits. Almost every competent Eu-; to flow into the room should be total territory. As does Mrs. Boole, ropean observer has predicted a more than 50 linear feet per minute. still standing firm and unshaken new crisis following Barcelona's col­ •* * . * in her fiat-heeled shoes. lapse and the whispers throughout Emupe have baqked up Give Heart Chance diction. y j To Fight Influenza TN THE last-14 years, Dr. Donald Most important-foundation work .During the influenza epidemic of •• *• A. Laird of Colgate university lias for the new Italo-German demands 1918 the military hospital with which written 14 books and 500' articles, is the assurance that any resultant I was connected asked for volun­ but has inspired many more than conflict will be localized. This-means 3. PARNELL THOMAS teers from a certain unit t.o each that. He has peyenting huge, mysterious Russia California also spoke up.^ give a few ounces of their blood as Novel Ideas been heaven's from aiding Britain and France. they were leaving hospital aftc^r re­ of Dr. Laird • blessing to the Therefore Rome and Berlin have force and that he had made dispar^ covering from 'influenza. Without, aging remarks about the President Rate Display ' make-up man, quietly established a solid.bloc of exception" 1rheSe~men of excellent needing a snap- "neutral" states reaching from the of the.LL.S- Max Reinhardt, long an impor­ Lolte Lehman, star of /Vetc physique gave the amount "request­ py little box to dress a page. As Baltic"to the. Adriatic (see map), Secretary Perkins has failed to tant figure on the stage, who York's Metropolitan opera, is ed. This blood (which had fought f-to-eafiagB._in_r£; which~will stand as sentinels against give Dies-.camrnitteemen what they = came> Jo the United States tjiio herself "Aryan?' but has two influenza successfully) was then in- search at the callow age of-41, here Russian aggression while~Tlaly and "f-yrrrrr"ftgfffHffn? is nnif^lrcTllnj; J'non-- Aryan?—step^sons;—' Her i-jeeted -fete -the more serious cases are, just a few of his stimulating ]• Germany turn their backs to face.. claim: That a court ruling is now 1 pending on whether membership in a Broadway play. He isTbecom- German and Austrian properly •of-ittfttteHzs^w*th=exG findings; I France and Britain. the record for the hospital standing j The new crisis will center around the Communist party is a deporta­ seized, she became an 4mprican. Horizontal thinking is best. It ble offense. " ' • arijong the first half-dozen for the Is quite possible that a new j Italian demands against France, continent. --- ...... „ '" stage of evolution is setting in i though it may be enlarged through Not since 1876 has an attempt J new declarations by Chancellor Hit­ been made to impeach a cabinet This blood, fresh from withstand-,, which will take us back to all- member, but that has not stopped ing influenza, had developed so fours. ... ——-~ ler." Italy wants Tunisia (enabling 7 many "antibodies"—disease fighters . When you feel jittery, snap up her to blockade the Mediterranean), one 'Dies comitiULeeman from set­ control of the Suez canal, and owner­ ting a modern precedent. New Jer- or resisters—thai-ite-was, of-course.; , some red meat. seSf's'Rep. J. Parnell Thomas has a great' boon to the* tired or worn Some cases of second sight ship of the Djibouti-Addis Ababa railroad, (providing an outlet from introduced a resolution calling for blood of.jtBe patient. are explained by an odorless an investigation to determine wheth­ Notwithstanding that it is able to scent which almost, but not Ethiopia). These demands are vital -^••Britain, beea««#-Italiari_cxui£l'oLof er Secretary Perkins should be im- reduce the power of influenza, this quite, Wells up into con»erotf5- j -peached, along with Immigration power in the blood does-not last for ness. .. ' ' ' . !; the Mediterranean might cut off London's "lifeline" to India and the Commissioner James L. -H'oughtel- very long, according to studies by If you feel rotten today, you j j east. ing and Labor Department Solicitor DriL. R. W. Fairbrother, and E. A. - will be happy in just 28 days, Gerard D. Reilly. Martin in the Lancet, London. These as .that lis Urelife-oidaiued cycle :j; Prr?hnHr> ^krtfitor fttrntpgy-will be HEhai-Madame Perkins' unaggres- physicians_slate that in view of.the • of hope and despair. •' *j fo"r*~Germany to assure France she sive interest in_the_isridges depoi'La- great number of antibodies in this ~$he Dionne quints are in dan- I will not help Italy, the*eby~-en- tion case is not popular has been in­ "btoTrctr^it-is-surprismg -that- rMs—net— i ger of growing up to be man- l couraging Britain to hand aloof. dicated at Sacramento, Calif., where able to protect patients developing i haters—on account of wpmen | Then Germany would aid Italy, in-a the- state legislature may ask. her influenza as they may be again at- - nurses and governesses. ! possible war just as she haB aided for an immediate report on Mr. tacked* with influenza within 10 j Rebel Spain, with ''volunteers." Brains are sluggish in sum­ Bridges'' citizenship status? So far months or a year. "Whetherfiondon-and Paris will-wait as he had determined,.-said-_Assem- mertime. for such an eventuality^-is—another Antibodies Soon Exhausted. Eat candy to fight off sleepi­ blyman C. Don Field, the labor lead­ —It-may-be-4hat--there-are- a-num.-. '' matter.. Thoroughly scared by re- er has twice taken out naturaliza- ness at work. ; ports that joint Italo-'German "de­ ber of "strains" of poison in influ­ Never count sheep to put your­ mands will be voiced by Chancellor tion papers but has failed to enza, so many strains to be con­ self to sleep. It doesn't work. Hitler before the Reichstag, by Ital- them in the required time. trolled or prevented from causing Noise makes city people small- ' iajljnobjlization of.her 1908 army trouble that the antibodies devel­ Aviation oped by the previous attack soon ef than* country people. class, by threatened German mobi­ Man's top running speed s 21.7 get used up ax exhausted. - Women employee's are more lization of 1,500,000 men by Febru­ hour; horse's ary 15, the two democracies are be­ mjles per 45.1;. "As a number of recently infected adaptable than men and stay train's, 127.1 boat's, 130.9; automo- longer on the job. ginning to wake up. Encouragingly, persons were available, Drs. Fair- bile's, 357.5 and airplane's, 440.6. brother and Martin studied the fluc- Great Britain has begun an intensive But at Buffalo,- N. Y., a pursuit ' Many of these discoveries have army recruiting campaign. But al­ taations or changes in- the number .. been made by Dr. Laird in his re­ morioplane rbeing built, for the • of antibodies in the blood over pe­ most completely offsetting this prac­ French government has broken the search as a consultant for concerns tical step is the report that Prime riods of 10 to 12 months. The num­ in heavy industries, in which field old airplane record by about 150 ber or proportion of antibodies in Minister Chamberlain will so'on in­ m. p. h. With motor wide open but he has been busy arTd^distinguished. vite ' Hitler, Mussolini and French the blood seems to -tell the exact He is a world authority on noise engine speed held down (by an elec- ability of the Individual to resiit in-, Premier Daladier to,a'new "Mu- trically controlled _propellor'i, H. —and—steeps—Farm-reared—in—Indi- nich" conference, there to buy1peace fection; a large number shows]high « ana; he was educated at the Univer­ with morel-6oncessions." Lloyd Child begancTiving at 22,000 resistance and a small number sities of Dubuque and Iowa and feet, holding his vertical descent, -gliows-tow resistance... Dut whether- taught at many universities before until he reached 9,000 feet. The high or low, the; body's ability to joining the ColBatg_facuIty 14 years Chile graph chart chalked up his seeed. ? fight- influenza again is back. to. Earthquakes usually come when until it I reached 575 m. p. h~ then •where it was (before the attack of "the above novel ideas, with the ex­ sea. bottoms sink, forcing up moun-" movedTTff-the-rjrrpeT;—Landing with- influenza) within 10 to 12" months." ception of the 6ne about our get­ tainous areas and jarring the land no ill effecits, Child estimated he had "Tliisi means-tha-t-if-the-symptoms ting back to all-fours—That has for miles around. Squeezed along ffowh arBOO in. p. h-. Since air head cold, headache, tiredness, sore _ been evident for at least seven the rocky west coast of South Amer- reacts like solid matter at just over muscles, prostration.— occur you year's, as revealed by—prevailing ica,_Chile_J;ias^ often ejroerienced 600- m. p. h., scientists explained should get off your feet, at once and trends In World politics. such phenomena but never TfTsuch that CtTiia^aar"proBaHy~trt[veled give your heart every chance. to O Consolidated Nowfl Fcaturei, disastrous fashion as the earthquake fast as a modern plane could ever - -frght-it-a Etrtrrr '.— .™ * WNU Service. go. which recently struck a zone 450 Where can these persecuted men and women find a home? C Bell SyndlcoW,—WNU 8«rvl». , v THB CHARLEVOIX COUNTY MIRALO, (rA8T JORDAN, MICH.), FRIDAY, r+MRUARY Sftflt ^Wl i sjrktkarft Washington Dig—t IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL ^Theory of Spending Ourselves Out UNDAY I : WHAT fc^EAT and WHY S gans, such as liver and kidney, Of Depression Seen Unwise Course C.J-foutton Gouditi Touch*s4Jpon the Food Values as a-source of three vitamins, A, B and G. CHOOL Lesson of FUh and Shellfish; Shows How They Can Help ofChlcaiA. . to Improve Nutritive Quality of the Diet Place of Fith m the Ditt Evidence iii Congress of Definite Determinaton to Cut Lesio, • Wulun nfo Ktwapapar Februarr Uniony, S . The most important contribution Down on'Appropriations; Sound Sense of American By C. HOUSTON GQUDISS of all forms of flsh is their pro­ Lcaaon aubjacta and Scrlptu*. text; M- teins, which as we have seen may XcMd and eopyrlshttd tw Intarnattonal PRESENT-DA¥ nutritionist might easily quarrel with the be used interchangeably with '- People Always Finds Answer to National-Problems. , •', Council of Kefifloua education; uwd br pemilvaion. ~ A traditional distinction between fish, flesh and fowl. For those of beef, pork, lamb, veal PETER BREACHES AT the flesh of flsh, cattle, swine, sheep and poultry is commonly and poultry. The iodine of sea­ _ --- PENTECOST referred to as V'meat;" and the nutritive values, of all these foods and shellfish is also ex­ '" By WILLIAM BRUCKABT'"" foods properly may be consideredjtQgeJiier^-Jheir. compost tremely important, and in some -WWtrSefvlce,~N»tion»I Press Blflf., Washingtonr, p.-O. —LBSSSW TEXT—Acti ,1:11-1¾. »•«,—__ varieties, the content of vitamins GOLDEN TEXT—Not by might, nor by tion is very similar, consisting principally of protein, water A and D. The more fatty fish, in­ power, but by my Spirit, salth th« Lord of WASHINGTON. — It always has curtailment of federal waste has boats.—Zecharlah 4:6. and fat, with the chief variation-occurring in the fat content, cluding mackerel, salmon, eels, been my conviction that the Ameri­ begun; that the national belt is go­ rhey also average about one» herring, catfish ancl-shad are com­ can people wiU.find a sound answer ing to be pulled tighter by a couple' paratively rich in energy values. -We..need_a_r_eviyal. With one ac: per cent of-minerals and con­ to every national problem, if they of notches and that, sooner or later, cord leaders of the Church agree used within "a reasonable time ate' The fuel value of cod, flounder, are given the facts and the time to even the beneficiaries of the federal on that point although they may dif­ tain some of the vitamins in er purchasing. Canned fish, nat­ perch, smelts and haddock, which ' figure out what those facts mean, cash will note the stigma and fer widely ~on" other matters.—So*- varying amounts. — - urally, requires no refrigeration, are low in fat, and halibut and ^hey may .be'swayed temporarily; slacken their demands. cial and civic leaders agree. One and a supply can always be kept whiteflsh which have a moderate : they rnay be led or herded or threat­ One of-the leaders in this direc­ prominent government official re­ on hand both for everyday use amount, may be increased through ened and these conditions may put tion has been Sen. Harry Byrd, the cently said that the only hope for Fish vi. Other Flesh Foodi and for' emergencies. the use of a rich sauce, or they them in a.wrong spot temporarily, Virginia Democrat, who is just as the world in this hour of conflict There is a wide variation among The most important canned flsh, may be cooked in fat. but I repeat that if they are given hard boiled in preserving a sound and.confusion was a return to the the different kinds of fish in the in terms of the amounts packed Taking into consideration its time, the national conclusion, the national government as his senior, Christian faith of our fathers. He amount of fat they and sold, is salmon. This flavor- food values and .economy, -and collective thinking, will be along the redoubtable Carter Glass. was but one of many outstanding contain. In gen­ some fish is an excellent and eco­ when the preserved forms are uti­ sound lines. Through thick and thin, Senator men who have expressed such a eral,-fish have less nomical protein food which is also lized, its ease of preparation, the -They are demonstrating these Byrd has been attacking the spend­ belief. - fat and more water notable for its energy value; its homemaker who desires to feed things as a fact, again. There is ing policies, calling attention to the How may such a revival of faith than other forms of calcium, phosphorus t and iodine; her family well should serve fish no doubt about it. For five or six dangers of an increasing National toward God (with its quickening of meat. Their tissue and as a source of vitamins A or—shellfish, in, some form, much years, a considerable majority of- debt-and-the certainty that the coun­ the- believer and the resultant sal­ fibers are also and D. Other canned seafoods oftener than once each week! the nation's citizenry was following try as a whole must bear the bur vation of sinners) be brought about? shorter, which that -are sold . in volume include the theory of spending ourselves out den of added taxation, He did this-|-Certainly it is not in the power of makes for ease of tuna, sardines, shrimp and of the depression. It .was an un­ the while administration sharp­ man to produce it, although he does digestion. In many clams, panned, crab and lobster Questions Answered sound course, obviously, but money shooters were firing one broadside have a vital part in surrendering cases, their flavor meats and oysters are also to be was mad,e to do a lot of talking—as after another at his head or hide. himself ..to God's plan and purpose is less pronounced foufld upon the shelves of most money in billions of dollars will so that He may work, again in the because there are grocers, 'together with other .va­ Mrs. M. McK.—It has been cal­ The other night, Senator Byrd got talk. Lately, however, hardy Amer­ midst of His people. Our lesson for fewer extractives. rieties of seafood, some packed in culated that the amount of vita­ on the radio and told the country ican thinking "has been-carrying the today clearly-^indicates_how _Go_d For this reason, fish is considered .tomato sauce. _ min G now believed to be neces- again what wasTIappening. He had worked on Pentecost, namely, less stimulating, and that is also sary""for helping to maintain good majority^ back to normal under­ When using canned salmon and some new facts and figures about through a Spirit-filled people, pro­ why it is often served with some health might be supplied by a pint standing; and the influence of "Spendr other kinds of fish that have been the situation. The Virginian asked claiming His own Word, with aston­ sort-of sauce, or with a lemon of milk, one serving of grape­ ing by the federal government is put into the cans before cooking, some rather pertinent questions, ishing results following. Will not garnish to point up the flavor. fruit, one whole egg, five slices sagging, distinctly. it is advisable to conserve the too, about the situation in England. God work in the .same way today if of whole wheat bread and one juices which cooked out during the Notwithstanding the statements, He pointedoutTKat England has not we only give Him, a chance? The proteins of fish are regard- serving of turnip greens. £een tunning deficit afterjieflcitrgndr HII us - equally -useful with othcr- sterilization process, as these con- frequently heard., from Republican Mrs." L. .Ci:ftT=There is abscKj" t that,-ss a matter-of cold factr while r.~An Amazing -spiritual fexperi- iorms-flf- meat for helping -to build tain valuable nu r -sni'irm-R,-that "yoii ffaiTt-beat Santa lutely no basis for the old super­ the United States was 'adding more ence (w. 12, 13).." 'and repair body tissues. Most lean Claus," or the variation that "you stition that fish and milk should than $21,000,000,000 to its national Read the first 11 verses of this fish are richer in minerals than can't beat $4,000,000,000," there is not be taken together. Some per­ debt, England was .balancing its chapter and you will learn of the fatty fish; in this respect, they plenty of evidence tp.shOW-that.there. Varieties of Shellfish.: sons might have been madeJU by budget and making some headway coming of theriHoly Spirit upon the resemblei le'ah meats, T'.. -. is quite a-xlennite determination to Clams, oysters, shrimp and scal­ taking fish and milk at one meal. quit that sort of thing. That is, in reducing its national debt. disciples—as the rushing of a mighty wind, in tongues of fire, and Salt water fish are notable as lops differ somewhat from other But in that case, we must con­ _jth.er.e-is a determination in most "irrthe abiUty^orproclaiiri-the^Wbrd _a_source of iodine, -required fer­ forms-of-seafoods ebtefly-irr^that clude thai" the individual must;:, places outside of the so-called inner States Take Heed and ~ of God to all men. ine proper functioning of the thy­ they contain some carbohydrates, have been allergic to -one of these circle of New,. Dealers. Especially Start Cutting Expenses __ roid gland. It is desirable that They have very littleJgt; Oysters There ig no use talking about an- fnnHg; nr pnggihly" fhfr' figh mna— is this true "in the halls of congress this_ mineral _be_lncluded in'..th* are^rich,in_iQxline^ncLthey might -^0t ^sh. - where, unless . there is an earth­ Due largely, the senator thought, -other- .Pentecost as:^though_-God to the fact that England'Tiad tried needs to repeat that marvelous day. dietary "TbTTielp prevent simple be compared to the glandular or- ®>—WNU--C. Houston GOI quake, many important steps will oltex be taken by senators and repre­ to live within its income as..an..in- But the essence of What occiirred-|-S ' sentatives in the direction of sound­ djvidual would .do, that nation had 6n Pente.cost is the deep -eeedu, of er government finance.., The old and a 'national income in 1937 that was both individual Christians and of the The Cattle of the Sea 118 per cent of its income in 1929. Church today. In much (one if al­ ' The most significant difference Fashion News in Patterns familiar American traits of initia­ - tive, of saving, of living within one's Which is to say that:, it was more most' ready ^Ja^gayirrgstr ot~~our between fish and most "other flesh income, are coming to the' surface prosperous than iii 1929., Senator" Christian work there is not" only a foods is 'that with the exception of very rapidly and the restoration of Byrd pointed out that this had hap­ failure to recognize the Holy Spirit, certain Shellfish which are pror does nice things to your figure, pened while our - government was and it's just about the most seduc- Vthese traits-to-places—e#-respecta­ but what appears to be an actual duced under government regula­ running from a billion, or su 10 five ignoring of Him. One'of the great tion, "crops".from the sea are ttvely" feminine fashion you can bility .¾ American life is. being re- chpose. Make it of taffeta, flat or six,, billions into debt each year. experiences of literally thousands of neither planted by man, nor, cul- ..: fleeted :on eapifol hill in Washington. He suggested, moreover, that if the crepe or silk print. -students who have come under the tivafedby him.- -' -•-•• •United States had' done as well this Opposition to Philosophy- - writer's care during the years is Skating Suit With Hood. country's national income would now JJnlike the. farmer filled man ural sources of vitamin D. This .quite acrimonious and various ing of a majority of his own peo­ if you make them at home, choos­ 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. should rejoice in the holy boldness vitamin is necessary for the prop­ -charges were hurled that the relief ple. If they believe that way about ing the fabrics yourself. You don't Price of patterns, 15 cents (in and assurance whicrrthe Holy Spirit er utilization af calcium and phos­ .-officials had tried again to "buy"' state affairs, there is no reason to need a lot of sewing experience to coins) each. - . -_•.:'•' gives. He will be delivered from phorus in building strong bones -•the election, thai., being why . the_ thMJk-they will take a contrary view work with these designs. Each in­ e BeU Syndicate.—WNU Servlca. any temptations to be extreme or and sound teeth. We prize highly ran short/ """" -cehcerning the national treasury and cludes a step-by=step sew chart to "^ufia funds which it must borrow to unkind^" but will at the same time the liver-oils-of-the~co"d,~halibut7 guide beginners. " — ••:•• Immediately after the house was spend. be led to Say those things which salmon, swordflsh and tuna for Ifcrough with the relief bill, the op­ will prick the hearts of peopleJand "theft" fine -amount of this precious The Petticoat Dress. ponents of spending in the senate 'Pump Priming' Gifts to cause them to turn to Christ. vitamin. ' If you want something just as Starred after the "appropriation. youthful and flattering as it is ex­ States Force Them to Borrow ' III. An Appropriate Spiritual R The body oils of certain fish are There were many in that body who •-—•-— i suit (vw-37-41). i also valued for their vitamin D. citingly new, make yourself the, lt>-tk£ . • .Wanted to appropriate only--for $wo Further, nearly all of the .feBeraL^ Weoftei, say thaFthereis very lit- Some varieties, that are notable charming petticoat frock. The . months, proposing that in the mean­ skirt is cut 'wflhTan exaggerated JrT+Trf/i* appropriations for "pump priming, tle old-time conviction of sin today, in this respect are salmon, her"- time'there should be a brand new ring and sardines. It is agree­ flare, so that you can wear a real when granted to states or lesser and alas, it is all too true. It is not frelref^aetup-dfivisedT-But-ti able as well as economical to ob- petticoat under it, or sew in petti­ >ffered-en-«©ai of many sp'iritu jority sentiment was swayed by the tion that the state, or city or county! ally-minded preachers who present--*ain vitamin D by serving seafood, coat ruffles, for rustle and charm. SoiiU^ general argument that, whatever must put up an equal amount. IrT because fish .supplies so many Above the doll-waist, the bodice is I Coats only-* few cent* an acre. I the shortcomings'of the Harry Hop- a true.gospel.to(see such a response gathered over the^bosonvand has I Produce! bigger cropa : : finer I hundreds of cases in the last six as Peter saw on Pentecost. 'But"1 other valuable nutrients at "the • quality. Inoculator easy to put on I • kins relief methods, poor people years, this policy has resulted in same_time. '.'- • " a—crisp little ..frill that simulates I alfflfa, cloven, all; other legume I .;' should- not be made the goats^ it that does not mean that the Spirit is the line of a bolero. HiglPshoul- states or lesser subdivisions of gov­ not working. • seeds. Ask .your aeed dealer or The I '•-was.no fault of the unemployed who' ernment-being, forced to borrow on dered sleeves complete its Vic­ I Albert D icfanaon Co»» Chicago*, III. | needed help that Mr. Hopkins, now God does not hold us responsible Fish Is Universally Available torian charmr The wjhole thing its own bonds- in ordeTTo get-hold-of for outward-evidence of results. He the secretary-Tit commerce, had the federal, cash. The result: new There are perhaps more varies :.l- ..- made a mess of the relief program. does hold every teacher arid preach­ debt. It becomes clear, therefore, er responsible for faithful discharge ties of fish than "any-other type that if the state executives insist on •Beginning Only Foretaste of his sacred stewardship. That'in- of flrst-oiSss protein food. A gov­ reduced expenditures, they are un­ cludes more .thjiarthe public minis­ ernment bulletin has- listed 40 :Of What Is Coming likely to accept these federal gifts try of teaching a Sunday School kinds besides smoked and salted because of the probable added debt class or preaching a sermon. It flsh and the various shellfish. :''•••- While it seems that a cut of $150,- burden, f^00,000-^which' is about-one-fifth the means that the individual's life is Thus the use of flsh provides -amount asked — represents sotne- "Another thing, likely to-happen in right with God—no trickery, no. dis­ ample opportunities _for varying •:ming substantial, this beginning is some of the states is added taxes. honesty, no double dealing with God the menu. Moreover, though flsh MANNERS only a foretaste of what is com- The state legislatures are "due for or man; a life yielded to the control is more perishable than other flesh JJL ing^._The spenders^ have hadltheir. an_ awakening as to the actual con- of the Holy Spirit. Next comes dili- foodsrit is available today in ev- It's bad manners to cough In public placet. Keep Smith Brothers -innings for- "five or Tsix years,' or dition; of their state flhancesr Some genceThsfudy of ,God's Word, and" *ery town anovnamlet, however re- Cough Drop* handy! (Two IciacIs-BIack"drTtfMthoijiprSJj^r^^ .since Mr Boosevelt'„s_."i iis year, tout -facts • willingness tgt. proclaim its whole- •mote from the waterways. , act" of 1933- was abandoned as a wili have to be faced. When new itruth with-it fear or favor, in sea- No matter where she lives, the 5MitBBra»CoiffPi^iaWtM6i»ijdrapic^ pattern of government. Thev have tttxeg come, what a howl there will son and out of season? ~~—-^- 4iomeauilter ean 'choose -ftcm This is the Tisaowa thst"rsim ihs^asiwiiw ef ihs miioa— used various names and descripT"iiel That howl wiU be heanl in con- wide variety of. canned; dried, membranes of the nose sad < t to cold infections. "tions, such as "pump priming" and gress, too, both concerning state •~ The Living Word smoked, .salted and quick-frozen •; spending to restore prosperity, etc^ and county^ and city taxes on the one - Christ is jheTaving Word; so it is flsh. , And both transportation and :'ft appears nowr however, that their hand and national taxes on the other the Word of God that, has come refrigeration have been so im­ ' • .-.:--.--1.. ••;;•• . .-••• ;••• days are numbered. I do not mean hand. It appears to me that taxes Iron* God, and has come into this proved ' that fresh-caught flsh arr • Our readers should always remember ." that everything in the way of gov­ will prove tb.be the best antidote world, and by which all and every distributed far.inland. that our community rnerchanU cannot for the poison of borrowing to spend operation of God Is effected. Where Advertised afford to advertise a bargain unles* it ernment cash sop is going to be The quick-frozen flsh should be that can be found. the Word of God is recaivd-the is a real bargain. They do advertise bar- thrown 'out Of" the windowj»t Jive.. handled as- carefully as fresh fish; gains and such advertising memos money :-1 believe I can seeVTioweveV/OiSf • Wiitarn Iftw»p«p«r Union. •oul if begotten of God. kept under refrigeration, and BARGAINS saving to the people of the community.

-,-.'{. s? THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, tUCfe) FR1 BAY, JEBRUARY J, mt.

Charlevoix County Herald PENINSULA NORTH WILSON C. A. LISK, Editor •M-EnibUkhM'. (IdlUd by Mrm. E> Haydn) (Edited by Mrs. August Knop) Michigan THE SHOW PLACE OF NORTH , Entered »t the JPostofflce at But EAST Jordan, Michigan, as second cl«« Clarence Jonea of Jones Dist. east Mr. Bennett* and Mr. Bowers of JORDAN mail matter. of Boyne City, who came to the home Traverse City called on Wesley Peck [TEMPLE THEATRE Mirror - - at his only child, Mr*. Bertha Staley one day last week. Non-partisan State New* Letter M ADVERTISING RATE at Stoney Ridge farm, Dec. 16th be­ Emmet Senn called on Mr. and | SAT. ONLY, FEB. 4 . g^^ "*»- IOS*-" ifcl Display, per Inch —J--—": 25c By GENE ALLEMAN - ' cause he was ill, passed away there B Mrs. Victor Peck, Saturday. JOHN WAYNE — HAY CORKICAN •— SID *M}M Readers in Local Happenings column: . Michigan Press Assaciation TlfQTsd'ay about 11 a. m. The remains Eldon Peck, who has been in the Three lines or less 80c were taken to the Stackus Funeral Lockwood hospital, Petoskey, the past Over three lines, per line 10c Parlors in Boyne City, where the fun- three weeks is getting along fine and PALS OF THE SADDLE Lansing —.Just one month old, the eral was held Sunday at 2 p. m.J In­ will soon be out of the hospital. 13 STOOGES COMEDY — CARTOON — * WEWSi TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION new administration at Lansing has re­ terment was in the old Boyne City Mr,- and Mrs. ' Walter Kerchner (Payable- in-Advance) vealed several significant policies. cemetery on Division St. __. and grandson Johnny were Sunday 1 - One Year r_^^. |1.60 First is economy.-Covernor Frank | SUNDAY, MONDAY ^¾ ¾^% . V Quite a delegation from the Pe­ dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Six Months'' .75 Fitzgerald has convinced the most A THUNDERING DRAMA WRITTEN IN THE SKY 1 ~ ninsula attended the funeral of Clar- Weldy. . - " Three Months __!__ .50 skeptical politician that he is sincere ERROL FLYNN — BASIL,RATHBONE ence Jones in Boyne Sity Sunday af­ The Wilson Township -Extension (Anywhere in the United States) in his efforts to reduce payrolls. Cre­ _ ternoon. • ., Club met-with Mrs. John Bricker last- _Canada - - — $2.00 per' year ation o_f_new regulatory bureaus, to Mr. and Mrs. Stibbits and two sons Tuesday (With 17 members present. A THE DAWN PATROL gether "with the natural desire,-of offi­ _ K All suppers, entertainments and and Miss Gladys Staley oT"T*av«Be"|TiaIanced ainner was ~s5rveir~at noon other meetings, .which are held to ce holders'to entrench themselves-jn^. ttended th(j funeta, of clar i and d the leaders gave the lesson in the I TUESDAY - WED. FAMILY NITES 2 for 2Se power have combined to boost stafg" Jones" E~Bo7n™Cit7-Suhday-pr IBt, raise money to promote some special ernoon 1 TERRY KILBURN — REGINALD OWEN — LYNNE- CARVER [ interest, will be charged for at our pftyroIta~.morpayr e than $11,000,000 in m. and caUed Rt the Geo.-Staley home * Dr. Jensen of Tetoskey was called regular rates, unless accompanied by two years. later. Messrs Lloyd and Lyle Jones twicejn the last week to attend a advertising or job work. By inducing the legislature to of Detroit came up Sunday a, m. -arid sick horse of Eugene Raymond. A CHRISTMAS CAROL 1001 THRILL'S "HAWK OF THE WILDERNESS" _ - wield an axe on the state public util­ attended the funeral of their grand­ Ernest Raymond and sister, Mrs. ities commission, "Fitzgerald intends father, and spent Sunday night with August Knop visited their parents, SOUTH WILSON % to reduce the salary of commission- their aunt, Mrs. Bertha Staley and Mr. and Mrs. E. Raymond, Friday. | THURSDAY AND FRIDAY — FEB. 9 - 10 I "/^^ll^V^^^^^^^^torrey^gWa^ Mrs. Ernest Raymond and children THE JONES FAMILY IN A NEW FUN FESTI (Edited by Mrs. Luther Brintnall) of State Harry Kelly believes he. can _ Mrs. Zola Mathews and children-of visited her-parentsy Friday. -JED-EROUIY_-^LOUISE FAZENDA — SPRING BYINGTON save ¢20,000 in February by putting Jones Dist. spent Sunday late after­ Mr. and Mrs. Russell Thomas of Joe Cihak and sons Ralph and Fred Detroit "Branch offices on a salary ba­ noon with her cousin, Mrs. Bertha Eveline Orchards were dinner guests DOWN ON THE FARM were Sunday afternoon visitors at sis rather than fees. Auditor General Staley at Stoney, Ridge farm. of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Raymond. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stanek's. Vernon J. Brown took time to hang Mrs. H. E. Gould of Mountain Dist. Mr. and Mrs. Milo Clute.took Mr. NEW HITS I — See Them At The TEMPLE - Juaeph Martinek called on Wm. up his hat this month before he an­ spent Friday morning with her cous­ and Mrs. V Peck to Petoskey, Sun- "JESSE JAMES." "TAILSPIN" Zoulek one day last week. nounced the discharge of more-than in, UrsrBeftha-Staley and family-at- ^ay> to visit the-latter's son. Mike Hitchcock was a caller at 60 employees on the grounds of econ­ Stoney Ridge farm. "IDIOTS DELIGHT." "HONOLULU" George Jaquay's, Sunday. omy. The Extension .club met with Mrs. The agricultural meeting scheduled It's all very distracting to county Loren- Duffy Thursday,- but owing to chairmen who think of Lansing solely SOUTH ARM for Jan. 25th to be held at Wilson the quarintine of two families and (Edited by Harold Goebel) Town Hall for the purpose of elect­ in term of jobs. the death of Or Jones and the severe ing a 3rd member on the Township illness of H. B. Russell,, only a few \ Committee also two alternates, was Spending Demandi could attend. Mrs. Clayton Healey Arnold Smith 'and his hired man, attended by 16 farmers. Walter Mc- ' Counter to the governor's economy Jack Rhinehart, are cutting wood SPECIALS for FEBRUARY gave the% lesson splendidly. Better - Bride was elected as a committeeman. program are the "financial demands luek next time. and hauling it to town. Hugh Graham - is busy putting TVni -UvnTidraTi vnA Wm. Guzniezak jusf submitted by department heads ,Mr. and Mrs. Leo-Beyer of the Co­ -siding orf hia new house, as alternates. It was reported that for the coming bienmum. " unty- Farm called on his sister, Mrs. the committeemen were to call on ev If the legislature approved every F. K. Hayden and they with Mr. and Walter Moore and Joe Murray are tBRABANT'S^ ery farmer in the near future and in­ request made, the state treasury Mrs. Hayden called at the Hayden's skidding logs for Sam Van Ree. Be­ MAIN STREET EAST JORDAN, MICH. struct them about the program for would be drained dry in 10 days. at Orchard Hill, Sunday afternoon. - cause of the condition of the roads the saw mill which has been engaged- 1939. State Treasurer Miller Dunckel, in Our .Faithful Pat got-hea^ed off by Mr. Van Ree had quite a hard time Harold Edwards of Grayling called the heroic role of Mother Hubbard, both Wednesday and Saturday by KALBORNIE GINGHAM, 6-yds for.^_- 98c. getting through. on Peler Zoulek last Tuesday. has been bemoaning the plight of drifted roads, but got us our mail LADIES WOOL JACKET, siSe 18 ^- $4.98 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Savage and state finances. Continuation of spend­ anyway. Beatrice Ranney has'been ill since the cold -day last Wednesday when son of Detroit spent a few days, at ing habits would make, him a fit can­ -T-he-«now-.plows opened up the Children's Fleeced Vest & Drawers, sizes 2=4-6".. 35c ~ she walked to school because th,e the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde didate for the mourner's benclu Ridge road early Monday morning, bus was unable to get through. Strongr Budget Director Harold Smfth an­ Wednesday, and late Saturday night. MEN'S SUEDE CLOTH JACKET, Lined $2.25 - -We finally have our road plowed Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zoulak called nounces that he is working on anoth­ Master Melvin Gould of Mountain out past the Ranney school. MEN'SCORDUROY COAT - ' d»0 AQ on Peter Zoulek's Sunday. er formula, whereby the day can be Dist. spent the week end with his sis­ Wm. Vrondran Jr. purchased saved. In this connection it will be ter, Mrs. Perry Looze and family at Harold, Ruth, Wally and Grjjce Blanket-ljined, sizes 36 and 40 «p^i.***7 horse of Walter Kerclvner. — Vnnnl1f.d +hn-h Frank MnVphv's last. Cherry Hill, Goebel attended an enjoyable night of winter pporto, held by the Luther, "Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zoulek spent act. as governor was the abrupt lop­ Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Gould of Mouiv, CORDUROY COAT, sheepskin lined, size 16 $3.50 Sunday evening at the home of Peter ping off of millions from department tain Wst. called on their daughter, an league of Boyne City, Petoskey, Zoulek's. „ appropriations, a gesturtt'that may Mrs. Perry Looze at Cherry Hill, and Wilson Township_£hjirch; at Pe­ .WATERPROOF COATS, sizes 44 and 46 $2.98 Wm. Vrondran and son Wm. Jr. have a political value in 1940. Bud- Sunday p. m. toskey, last Thursday night. The wea­ ther was perfect and a lovely time called on Luther Brintnall. Monday. geteer Smith, twix the proverbial de­ Mrs. Perry Looze of Cherry Hill : was had by all. 4-BUCKLE ARCTICS, all sizes $2.98 Clifford Brown of East Jordan was vil and the blue sea, cannot ~accomp entertained the-- - Extension "Club a caller at'thp home of Mrs.. GeoTge lish fiscal miracles for Fitzgerald any Thursday. There was" a pot luck din _. Word was received from Walter 4-BUCKLE HEAVY7WORK ARCTICS $2.50 'Brown, Saturday. more than he could for Murphy. ner at noon and Mrs. "Billy" Frank Gfcebel, Sr. that he eirjoyed a pleas­ BOY'S- FLEECED-UNIONS, sizes 11 to 16 79c Edna and Beatrice Haney spent, a Hence the importance of,the gov­ of Par View farm gave the lesson. ant week end fishing in the Gulf of BOY'S KNICKERS, sizes 11 to 15 _"____:__ 79c" few days at the home of their sister, ernor's economy delnands which have All had a very instructive time. Mexico. Mrs. Francis Bishaw of East Jordan. all earmarks of sincerity. H. B. Russell of Maple Lawn farm Clifford. Zimmerman was a busi­ is very bad off with-er-ysipelas on his ness caller in East Jordan, Monday. Home Rule Policy face and head. They had a doctor out Frank Schultz and children of East A second policy of growing signifi­ from Boyne City Saturday afternoon. Jordan called on Ernest SchuKz of cance in the present administration -3¾¾ swelling began Sunday, Jan. 22, N. Wilson, last Friday. is that of home rule. from a small hack which he gave him­ Thelma and Jeanne Brown of East It first came to head when gamb­ self on the face while shaving. Jordan spent the week end at their lers in Macomb county re-opened pal Mr. and-Mrs. Will Healey of Deer grandmothers, Mrs. George Brown. atial establishments arid sent printed Lake called ov their cousins, Mr. and After thp grange- -meetrng- at the- invitations to former patrons. De Mrs. Charles,Healey at Willow Brook Wilson Grange Hall Saturday even­ troit newspapers raised a front page farm Sunday. ing, Jan. 28, several of the members storm. Civic and church groups adop A beautiful -day and newly plowed went to the Deer Lake Grange and at­ ted resolutions, and there was a re roads gof out 26 to the Star Sunday Are You Behind tended the cake walk. Everyone re- vival of public interest in the duties school. -pnnrt-r s having had a fine timp nf sheriff and prosecuting attorney Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wurn and Mr, There were ten starlings flying The public hue and ery resulteU" V. WUJI; ,and—Kttte- about last week and we were in hopes a court injunction against Danny Sul­ daughter Shirley-of Star Dist. spent that spring was just around the cor­ livan's big place near Detroit, prompt­ Sunday at the Geo. Waller home near ner. Some also report of seeing a ing Governor Fitzgerald to point out Horton Bay. ' — Wittr ground hog( but the present weather triumphantly that:'homeTrule has its-f- Mr. and Mrs. David Gaunt of Three looks like we will have our share of merits and the state shouldn't be'a Bells Dist. were dinner guests oTTSIr. winter weather. big policeman over local morals, Gaunt's sister, Mrs, Jennie McKee Denzil Wilson from Echo is in this Last week the governor sent a let­ and the Geo. Weaver family-in East "7 vicinity operating a wood job in the ter to each sheriff and prosecuting at­ Jordan Sunday while Mr.'"affd Mrs. timber lot of Archie:Howe. torney, reminding them of their res- Will Gaunt and Mr. Henry Johnson Peter Stanek has purchased a hew I"""U*"Hty in "^forcing law. But if wen on to Norwood and had dinner —f-awn-her-se-recently- - 'gambling, .continues, the problem wilt rwith.the walt.pr +tesa_family^. • • . —, o- be back on the governor's doorstep, David Gaunt qf Three Bells home rule notwithstanding. Dist. observed his 81st birthday anni­ ^ytBJWEJiEADER FOR versary at his home Tuesday, Jan. 31 '"A WIDOW^WOWCD? Welfare aVTrlome" "" ~" with'a" family dinner as-has- been the Do you, knoitt^there is a_.ljttle hen­ Home rule for administration off-custom for a good many years. pecked midwestern town -where a welfare is another plank in the Fitz­ Mr. and, Mrs. Al -Kyes, who have • Arc you. one of the many -of our subscribers who have riot widow's mite pays 75 percent of the gerald program. And therein is an ex­ been on trie Mountain Ash farm since "kicked" through with your annual dues to The Herald? taxes- and her might "rules the com­ ception that the handling of- relief, spring are ltvTrig in Boyne City, now. munity 100 percent? There is, as if performed by persons of»authority. The young folks are taking care of you'll find described in a human in­ in their home communities, will save the chores, , - - Whire^fche amount is small, only $1.50 every 12 months, an terest article in The American Week­ a lot of money for the taxpayers, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crowell and Mr. ly with the February 5 issue of The Predicting drastic slashes in budget and Mrs...Alfred Crowell'and little amount that can-be-flaore than saved through the advertisements Detroit Sunday Times. Statisticians requests, Fitzgerald told township daughter Ruth Ann motored to.Gray, -— aay.,the whole country isj moving to­ supervisors meeting at Lansing that ling Sunday, to the home of Mrs. F, which appear in each issue. • '' - - wards this sort of matriarchy. Be they knew the needs of local people Crowell's niece,- Mrs.' Margaret Per­ ry Ingles, where they expected to be sure to get Sunday's .Detretfc-Times. better than anyone else, It was a left handed criticisim of professional wel­ joined by their daughters, Mrs. ''Ti­ While you may think the amount is small, the largenum- fare workers. ny" Warden-anifamily and-Miss-Eva- _ A deer is apparently unable to Crowell of Jackson who planned to distinguish colors. The- trend to favor home rule is al beF of "subscribers make the~totala sizeable' amount whicn-coulcL come up on the Snow, Train. so- shown by views'expressed by the auditor general who described town­ be used for quite ^ few things at,the present time by the man-* ship^ officials as the "last line-of de­ agement. , .,•,.. •[ fense." defy it, actually the_-idea was in.tros duced at Washington byTJew Dealers Labor Responsibility "in 1933 when they sponsored the rail­ Won't you, please give &e mattcr-^^ way labor act. It has worked well to The third policy to be disclosed is head off hasty strikes in that indus­ scription your earliest attention? — The label on your paper tells" that of responsibility for labor. try, so vital to the nation's econoriiic Legalizing picketing for the first welfare. First Insertion ' time in Michigan, the ptopOsed labor you just how your account-stands at The Herald office — vizj .25 words or less Zfo For strikes involving public utili­ relations act would outlaw-sitddwn John Dpe I Jan. 19,40- Over 25 words, per word lc strikes, an indirect issue in the\ fall ties — electricity, milk, and so on — : -the- Michigan^ bill- calls to Subsequent Insertions campaign, and wauRrprevide7(r"c6c-l 'Felix Doe-.__fi0-March '38 25 words or less '. . 15c ing dff" period of 10. days between waiting period. Over 25 words, per word . He the declaration..to strike and the a&, , Effectiveness of the strike notice 10c extra per insertion if charged. tual walkout. During this period method would depend on public opin­ mediation board .would try to. settle ion. Labor leaders now recognize i FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS differences, while the employer was that the 1937 sitdown strikes were qostly.to the cause of, labor, simply FOR SALE —White Pea Beans- at required to continue payment of ­ ges to the-workers. because public opinion was emphat­ $1.75 per lOOlbs, delivered. Phone ically opposed to them, • 118F12. LAWRENCE . JENSEN, Company unions would be forbid­ —.—— o jfiye miles west of East Jordan on den, and employers would be .requir­ The Charlevoix County -—Ellsworth"'B"AZI—Z" "" 3x3 ed to~fehirB"WoTkenC'engaged- in^le^ .Michigan's_deepest mlL J^lk-ne*r gal strikes. 'White Cloud In Newaygo eourity, peri- FOR SALE—Dry Mill Wood, all While some of the proposed etrates to a depth of 6,676 feet. ,' HUliitlUTig niay lie mudlflid bji legis­ 6-cord loads. Dry Soft Wood, 6 lators, the "notice of strflce" clause cords, $9.00 delivered. Telephone will likely be retained. It is viewed.by -2«4-F3l! Boyne Gity, Mich. M. C. the governor's advisor* as the* heart Constipated? BRICKER & "SONS. 8-4 of'the whole act. "F»r 10 r*n I had conatlpftton, « •"fl?**** MdT*ek " SIGNS ~For-SALE —"No Trespass­ AJtrita |Ml'p»J riani t an •anuct. -MMnM, ing," "No Hunting or Trespass­ "'*TUw Deal Precedent ing," "For Sale", .'"For Rent," Although the notice clause appears "Measles." at THE HERALD, to be drastic, threateni ADLERIKA office, phone 82. lOt.f. with low of seniority right* if the*/ iipjLKY * MAC, ..^:: '....*V -•' • -. ' ' ' i

All-Day, Convention Receivership of The Peoples iiiinitiiiii:i::iiiiiniiiiniMiiiMimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiMiiiiiiiNMiiiiiiiii Church of God ' State Sayings Bank Here Friday, Feb'y 10th Eut Jordan, Michigan, JToppeitinqA TO TERMINATE IN 1939 •An all day' convention of ' the' Church of God will be held at the The Receivership of the Peoples W, H. Malpaat i* * Detroit busi Wm. StreVter has returned from a church iirEast Jordan, Friday,'Feb-' State Savings Bank, of East Jordan; ne»«; visitor this wiel". "-_; . __ .,, visit at the home of his daughter and ruary the 10th. This promises to be a Michigan, is about to terminate and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Litner, great day of fellowship and spiritual we_are obliged to reduce all remain­ Harvey Harrington visited frienda ing notes iiito the form of a JuUge- in Detroit thU week. in Muskegon Heights. f easting. Congregations from Charlevoix,' ment. Mrs. Rex Hickox spent a few days Miss Gladys Bustard R.N., of Lan­ Boyne City, Petoskey, Bliss and'East If you have a note or mortgage in in Grand Rapids- this week" sing Is at the home- of her parents, Jordan are expected-to-participate. this bank, kindly_come in at once and Mr,—and Mrs. Pete-Bustard, caring All who are interested in work1 of pay said indebtedness, or make ar­ Bgrn to Mr. and Mrs. Dale Riser a for her mother who is ill. this nature are invited. rangements. '. Otherwise we .will be son, Ira Dale, Monday, Jan. 30. Therewill be sermons by the dif- forced to start legal proceedings Mrs. R. O, BUbeereturned to her -against 'you. . _7 home' in Jackson last week after "ferent pastors; Sunday echooV discus-- "Aprons, "suitable f or* Valentine adv. 8-,4 M. A. MUMA, Receiver. 7? arista at Mrs, Ida Kinsey's. adv. spending some time at the home of •sions, open discussions on vital sub- Thcwe who send money away like Bank -jeeis etc A prngr«"i haw heen -de­ her father,-W. P.-Porter. — Money-Orders. They are cheap—and Phil Ramerez of Lansing was week y signed to be jot. interest to all. • Skunks are occasional enemies of easy to buy. There is a receipt to prove end guest of Harvey Harrington. Mrs. V|esley Staley returned to A potluck dinner will be~served 'at pees, thumping their feet at entran­ her home in Traverse City last Fri­ n6on at the parsonage. payment. They are safer than currency Arthur Cronin spent the week end ces ta>- hives and eating the insects day after spending the week with The Program for the day is as fol­ "when they emerge. because if lost in the mails they can at his home, from) the C.C.C. Camp East Jordan friends and relatives. lows : be replaced .without lose.- * at Clarion. ' ' -10:00 a. m. — Address of welcome MaTy Jane Porter returned to her People who receive Bank Money Mrs. Henry Kahrs of East Leland by Rev. S. J. High of East Jordan! Orders like them, also, because they studies at Evanston, 111., Tuesday af 10:80 - 11:30 a. m. —; Sermon by is spending the winter at the home of ter spending the week end with her are easy- to- cash_any where upon the Misses Porter. parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Porter. RcvvB. Harris of Boyne City 11:30 - 12:00 m. — Sunday school identification. YOU, too, will like Bank Money-- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Russell of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Usher and discussion led by Rev Sanders of Pe­ St. Joseph Church Flint visited East Jordan friends and toskey. - •— Orders. Buy them here in any amounts ' children of Charlevoix were Sunday East Jordan relatives last week. guests'of Mrs. Uaher's sister and 12:00 to 1-JS0-— Dinner . without red-tape or delay. 1:30 - 2:00 -•*- Devotional service. St. John's Church Mrs. R. P. Maddock is guest of family, Mr. and Mrs. Ormand Win­ ston. 'V 2:00 - 3:30 — Sermon by-,Rev. H. Bohemian Settlement her daughter, Mrs^ Ben Powell and J. Pulsipher of Charlevoix. Rev. Joseph J. Malinowski,-Pastor -i»nnly;;at:.Betlaire^.„ \,."" The-ground hog saw his shadow if 30 - 3:45 — Intermission. \ he was quick about it —for about 3:46 -V 5:0O- —-'-Open discussion. Sunday, February 5th, 1939 Mrs. Charles Malpass is-guest of 8:30 a. m. — Settlement. her daughters, Gwendolyn and Eve­ three minutes at 9:00 a. m. The bal­ Subject to be announced. ance of Thursday was overcast with 6:00 — Supper hour. '10100 a.;m. — East Jordan. ' lyn, in Lansing this week. —1 1—i> STATE BANK of clouds. 7:00 - 7:46 — Praise service. Con­ Mary Brown, a teacher in Mance- ducted by Rev. A. Pulsipher. James Beardsley, son of Mr. and First M. E. Church EAST JORDAN lona schools, was week end guest of 8:00 p. m. — Sermon. Rev. S. J. Rev. J. C. Matthews. Pastor her father, Frank Brown. ' * Mrs. Wm. Beardsley, was here from High, pastor at East Jordan. MtM«ir-f€OE»"Al OEPOSIT INSU«ANCt COkrOIATION Midland this week renewing former Come for the first service and Marlin Bussler of Cheboygan acquaintanees^-TJifi family, left East Morning Service • - 11:15 spend the entire day • Sunday School — 12:15 P.M. Vketoe. U J\la SuUtoLvU spent the week end with his parents, JcHan in 1922. Rev. H. J. Pulsipher, the. Be Mr. and ~MTs~Tholna& Bussler: Chairman of Program Committee. Betty Harrington and friends, 11111111111111 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii t iiiiiiiirfiirmiimiiiiiiiiiniiiimiii The M. E. Ladies Sid' will be en­ Presbyterian Church Helen Carso and Peg Lee, students C. W. Sidebotham, Pastor tertained at the home of Mrs. Sher­ at M. S. C, were week end guests of SHERIFF PICKS WRONG CAR man Conway, Wednesday, Feb'y 8th. Howoll -— When Frank Anderson •C. R. Harper, Foreign Pastor ' the former's parents, Dr. and Mrs. H. "A Church for Folks." Jordan Tabernacle Latter Day Saints Church M; Harrington. noticed that his car was missing, he Wm. Swoboda, Jr., a student~air called the sheriff's department.1 A sto­ Rev. and Mrs.-jT~Sfeeltrowfl,^-P-astors. C. H. McKinnon, Pastor M. S. C, spfent last week end with his Mr. and Mrs. James Gidley and len ear message was broadcast. When 10:30 a. mi— Morning Worship 11:45 a. m. — Sunday School.- Sunday, .school -— 11 a. m. 10:00 a. m. -7-Church SchooLPro. parents,- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Swoboda. daughter, FaithT with son, Harold, of the car was found,"however, Ander­ Worship — 12-noon. :--7-0--- Petoskey, left Sunday for Florida son learned it had beenin good hands. 7 ;00 p. m. Young People's Meeting gram each Sunday except flrit Sunday •32mmaline Hosier was granted a Evangelistic service — £)fp. in. of month. • "'"•• where they will spend the next few Undersheriff Basset had taken the 8;00 p. m. Adult Bible Study, Tuesday, -Young PeopleF; meeting divorce from Dewey Hosier on Oct. weeks.. During "Mr. Gidley's absence, wrong car when he went oh a hunting '8:00 p. m. — Evening Services. 27. The final decree was-:signed Jan. — 8 p. rri\. . 8:00 p. m., Wednesday —- Prayer Clifford Dean will assist in ttie.-drug trip^with-a friends-—I.*—..'— --^ -_•_ —. — Thurs. Open-Service— 8 p. m. — 2?thv"..-'•""•- '"•" ::-'"'-" •'" "" " >•- 7™Church-t>f-God-—- Meeting. • store. . Everyone Welcome. : POLICE .- NOT COSSACKS .-1. Rev. S. J. High — Pastor All are welcomePto attend "iny of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heise and" ~~ these services. ' A'clipping from a Fort Wayne, Iron River , A stranger in Iron daughter, Juan, "of Charlevoix were Ind., newspaper states .that owing, to 10;00 a. in. Sunday School. Sunday guests of East Jordan friends River Jjhis winter/might" think some 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. Mennonite Bretheren In the pastor there having the mumps, Russian Cossacks had become strand­ and relatives. regular .M. E. vesper .services for 8:00 p. m. —. Evening Worship.. Christ Church 1 Christ Evangelical Lutheran ed here. However, th& men. in the _ 8=:00'p. m. Wednesday —-Prayer Garfield St J. C. Calhoun, Pastor Mrs. Anna Carr left this Thursday Jan.,24 were cancelled. The minister black sealskin, caps are not Cossacks", (German Settlement) is Rev. Warren W Lamport, 84, for­ meeting at. the church. V. Fel'ton — Pastor for Grand Rapids, where she will, be but officers pf the law. Winter is of 10:00 a. m.,-— Sunday.school. . -guest- of--her -daughter,- -Mrsv-JIaroicl mer -pastor-ot-the .ghurch-.-in -East-fidaiiy -recognized jierjr when— the Jordan. 'T, •— »'" '•• r- • • • — 11:00 B. m.—-preaching Service. 2 TOO" p. • m.—Sunday School and Usher and family. chief of ..police, and. his officers don Seventh-day Adventist 8 p. m, —; Evangelistic Service. the warin,- .furry headgear. Bible Study.. * -JTjmdr«ds_n£Jlillntorg im» Ending -•,:" S. W. Hyde — Pa -Mid-week-prayer meetingT-8-g,-m. -^2:30 p. m.—English Worship. RED CROSS-ROLL-CALL in their reports to the-department of Walther League meets every 1st conservaion at Lansing axe not filling — -NEW^BURD-VtSITS-STATE Sabbath School — 10:30 a. m. Sat­ urday. The walleye,' a member, pf .the and 3rd Thursday of the month. Presbyterian Ladies Aid _$ 5.00 in their report card's completely, ..Olivet'*=— A red-bellied woodpeck­ perch family, is.rficognized by 80 Ie- I The Subscriptions to, date . ,, er, -said to be 3 bfrd rare in Michigan, Ladies Aid meets every 2nd Thurs­ game division checkers report. In the Church Service — 11:30 a. m. Sat­ gitimateTiames. • ." day of the month. neTFed^.——--^--'—--';$208.50 majority of these cases, the address is a' daily visitor in Olivet. He comes urday. ; "'• . '. . ^7°-—'•—-[-~:~ side of—the card has been entirely to a suet box which Miss Mabel Li- gnian has at her bird feeding station. overlooked by the hunter. The woodpecker has a brilliant^ red Cohn's Thinclads Miss "Helen Malpass has completed head and is barred across the back •her course 4n Nurses Tfaihing^-at and wings.-- »'•• Snap Into Action Sparrow hospital, Lansing, and will GET BACK INTO WINNING FORM arrive in East Jordan, Friday, to SWEET SIXTEEN LOOKS DEFEATING HARBQR SPRINGS yend a couple of weeks with her par­ TO THE FUTURE ^f ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. "Malpass. A What is she like? What are her Coach Cohn's high school basket­ remarkable- feature is: the fact that hopes?. What are her ambitions? The ball aggregation scored its second yic- during her three years training she Detroit News polled 1000 school girls tory this season over Harbin 'Springs, has lost no time because of illness or to get a crpss~-sectional view of the 30 to 11 theTe last Friday evening. any other reason, therefore -had no coming generation -of American wo­ The record of the Cohnnien to date lost time to make up. manhood. The answers, which have shows i_wins and 5 losses. They hold been tabulated, will be published in The East Jordan Home Economics a series of interpretive articles on the two victories ever Harbor Springs Extension Club" No. 1, met at the 1 and one each over Bellaire and Gay- Woman's Pages . starting with next home of Mrs. Clara Hudson on Janu­ Sunday's Detroit News. Be" sure to lord. The Alumni, Manc.elona, Boyne ary 25th^ A lovely pot luck dinner read.this.interesting series. " ' ' ;i City, Charlevoix and Grand Rapids was enjoyed at noon by 14 members Union hold triumphs over the Crim- — O ; JUST RECEIVED. NEW SHIPMENT OF and two visitors. The business meet­ Except possibly for size, all deer sonites. ing was held anH the lesson on The The Harbor tilt saw the locals open make similar tracks. It is impossible FEDERAL'S FAMOUS — Hpmemaker was given by the leaders to distinguish between buck- and- doe up more with an offensive attack, as Mrs. Ida Kinsey and Mrs. Isabelle -•they- swimd frequently on "well tmed tracks. spot shots. Previously the Jordanites "Wld(!UtL_ An additional 98,000 acres of land ive had tried to work the ball in every _ The third meettnsr^-/., f the East in northern Michigan counties have time^ "andjas aresult their offenBiye Jordan Home Extension Club No. 2 been purchased for public- hunting Smart New Designs. Popular Color Harmony. Handy attack had been ;hamp"efed.'''"TaKing" met'at theTTYome" 'oTTBrsTTHarle' BoU purpoaes-during-the-last -two-years. -Bal^ite Knobs. Briliiant Chromium Covers.~~~— command with the-opening whistle ezel Jan. 26. The lesson on Home The catch-of whitefish from Lake the Red "and Black outscored the op­ Maker was given by the leaders, Mrs. Superior has declined 88 percent in Buy A Complete Matched Set position in every period. The score at Ethel Brown and Mrs. Dorothy Slon- the last 40 years, that of herring ' the intermission showed the • locals iker. Thirteen members and seven from Lake Erte"9S73"~peTcent since 5-qt.-Streamlined TEAKETTLE. Maple Handle. out in front 12 to 4. visitors were present. Refreshments 1926. ONLY Cihal&tB»fi12,-/Saxton and Bulow were served by the libstesses, Mrs. "'5-in-l" COOKER. 2½ qt. top. 2% qt. bottom. with 7 each were top scorers for the Marie Dolezel and Mrs. Otto Kaley. 6qt. Covered^COOKING KETTLE. Red and Black. Mosher with 4 top­ XLQSING-IIMEL -Shape DISH PAN, 17^x111/^x4% iirr ped the Harborites. E. E. Kirk, 64, of Sandwich,. 111., ON THE HERALD • "Birdie" febbetts, Detroit Tigers, passed away at that place Friday, • Round ROASTER, 11%-ih/x 6V in. overall. Jan. 20. He is survived by the wife 2 catcher, handled the game as an of­ • 6 cup DRIP COFFEE MAKER. ficial, turning in a first class perfor­ and two ' daughters, Ethelyn and "All contributors of copy for 89c mance. . _ - •'-:—v Edythe. Mrs.' Kirk was formerly Iola your Charlevoix County Herald • 1 -1½ - 2 qt. SAUCE PAN-SET. Coach Harry Jankoviak's Reserves Robb of near Ironton and they were should endeavor to "get. same Into were defeated 23 to 15 by the Har­ married at Charlevoix July 4, 1901. this orrice as early in the week of VALUES UP TO $2:56:-^ WHILE THEY LAST — EACH* bor" Seconds. Mr. and Mrs. Kirk and daughters, publication a-s-possible. Charlevoix will come here Friday visited- in East • Jordan at various FRONT PAGE — All articles $6.25 Hard Toe Skates, now __ $4.69 Ladies and Men's Hockey Skates. times, Mrs. Henry Sheldon^ deceased, intended for the first page must evening as theCrimsoniWikye will try be in the officei by Wednesday noon' 45.00 Hard Toe Skates, now—: $3.75 : "Aluminum finish. Jolmson, Wizard to avenge a defeat suffered two weeks Tjeirig' mothelTof Mrs.TCirk. ' __—Li2_o to insure publication. •' • • r n$4.50 Hard Toe Skates, now __ $3.33 and other makes. ago. The Boyne City Ramblers upset "• MAT SERVICE — Those hav­ $3.50 TOBOGGANS, now'—.$2.63 the Charlevoix men 37 to 25 last Fri­ Call For Spring ing mats for casting MUST have day evening and are now in first place Republican Convention these in the office Tuesday noon WASHBOILERS, Large Assortment , in the Conference standings. for the current week's issue. -A: as low "as -—!„_-- $1.12 BFTTF.R Charlevoix-County "LOCALS -- Please phone your E«.t Jordan (30) FG- FT: TIP. local items to No. 182 where Mrs. ;CLOTHES RACKS, 16-bar __ $1.49 Bulbw (ac) l.f. _ 2-3 7 We, the .undesigned, Chairrnan Sherman Conway — who covers Jjroning Boards —Clothes Baskets — Cihak, |r.f. 5 2 12 and Secretary of Jhe Charlevoix these columns, -^- will care for Isaman, c. _• 6 5~ T3ounty Republican Committee, here­ them. T!hese shdulfl be in not later 4—Hampers— etc. Saxton, l.jf. -T—-—- 3 x by make call for the Spring Republi­ than 10:00 a,-m, of Thursdays. CLOSING OUT Gee, r.g. :- 1 fl­ can Convention for Charlevoix Coun-. Your. Herald publisher Is en­ Four 32rpc7©INNER SETS. Former- ubs: V. Gee, l.f-.-_^— 0 0. tyfor Wednesday February 8th. A. deavoring 'to get each week's issue D. 1939 at 8 o'clock P. M. and here­ i. ly sold at $4.49, close„out at $3.37 Antoine, c. — 1 0 in the mails on Thursday after­ Closing Out_HARNESS REPAIRS^ Bartlett, l.g. — 0 0 by designate the High School Audi­ noons. Your co-operation in get­ One 5:25rl7 Sieberling Tire __ $6.68 torium at East Jordan, Michigan as ting newt, wnd advertising copy in . Now is a gotfd time to repair that har-~ . Totals 12 6 30 :he place of convention. our hands as early in the week as $11.50 Bench Wringer for only $7.95 -Hgrbor Spring! (11) FG. FT. TP. The purpose of such Convention is possible will be-greatly apprecia- $87.50 Perfection Superfex Oil ness at low cost as these itemsJ^UST alckus, l.f. -—' 0 ..J—^JL to elect Delegate* to the State Con7 ed •::•.. Heater for only —-— $59.95 . go. Harness, Breechings, Bridles, Mosher, r.f. V—£- 1 2 .4 vention fope held at Flint/Michigan on Thursday- February 23rd. A. D. 25 per cent off on all Skates, Skis, Straps, etc. Come early as-this line is Allenyc -J.—^= 0 : : Shepherd, l.gT'•"__"_... 1 1939 and forJhe Nomination of Can- Does Bladder Irritation 3 ;; Sledgand Toboggans! limited.--"—* — ————— pivtit, i.g: — didate as tywnty Sanaal Coitini'litlnn WAKE YOU UP 7 Its noUnormal. IU Subs: Cassidy - er in accordance.with the^grovision nature's, warning .''Danger Ahead." Hanna of Section 885 of the 1938. Election- Your(25c back if this 4-day treatment Squires Laws and for such other business as does not help nature"~fimh7excess acid may come before such Convention. and other wastes from the kidney*. | JEAST JORDAN LUMBER COMP^NY^ A a ,1 CLARENCE B. MEGGISON Excess acids can cause the irritation Totals -----T resulting in getting up nights, fre. Referee — Tebbetts of the Detail; Chairman quent or scanty flow, burning, back­ WE Tigers. AGNES LORCH ache or leg pains. Just say Bukets DELIVER Score*-™-E. Stanek 1 E. Jordan. „:.„Sec.rjeUry. ,„„_..„, *(£t^H0-»ny a™Wtl»t' Locally at Gid- Timer — Nenman ••-— H. Springi­ 8-8 lef« Mac, DruggfiU,—"^—— IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIJIIIIIIIIIIftllll

\"- ^ THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST.JORDAN, MICH,), FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1939 —ip^c -jSannet jSatial Tiction- Knitted Rag Rug to ( SAFETY TALKS ) Make in Soft Colors Crossing the Road By RUTH WYETH SPEARS ERE'S™ the ' modern counter- tJERE isJnews_Jor those .who part of the ancient, chicken *• * have been writlti^^me—for Hposer : itMKN rrreET •more rag rug designs. A special Why doe? a pedestrian cross the AUTHOR-©*- Rug-Leaflet has been,prepared for road~at the wrong places and you. irwiirBB~lrreluded-free-upon without looking? By SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS 'IT HAPPENED request with your order for the That's whatnhe-NBtional'Safety- two books offered herewith. If ONE NIGHT" "ysirslTeady haveHliese two Useful couneil is trying to find out after O SAMUft, ilOPKINS ADAMS WNU SERVICE an examination of jts records books, send '6 -cents in stamps for which proved that at least a third the Rug Leaflet. . i Wooden knitting needles %-inch* of the pedestrians killed in rural CHAPTER IX—Continued like a human being, after what yourself through college by selling mine. "He knows no more about i areas and 40- per cent, of those in diameter are used for this rug. _ —14-^ -. you've done?" an elegant and instructive^-set of this motion picture business that I Cut or tear the rags %-inch.. wid» _— killed in cities were crossiffg~at "Who? Martin Holmes? Not —^Not-by-your-darr-Ung retortid-4-JioJiirne^jiLeasy^instal-—" he's got into, than I do about the j places other than intersections. here?" asked Kelsey. -Kelsey with, his sunniest smile, "I have long since completed my NorttrfoieT"—-— •• In 1937, the loss of life from "Right here. And he wants to "Well, I guess that's that," com­ education," stated Mr. Gormine "Wouldn't you think that getting these classifications'.mpurtted over see you. JJey, Ulysses! This is your mented Gloria as the door closed stiffly. "Before you were born." He married and settling down would di­ the 5,600 mark. cue," called Gloria behind Kelsey's broad and ob added: "I am a lawyer." vert his interest from the screen?" JJcTmes~cafrre—in—-He stopped- -stinately—set_shouldfira^...... "Sorry, but I donM;_need one." inquired Gloria with a face of inno­ Hoboes of Today acroas the tablefrgm his tenant and "Jt's going to-be-a full house with "May I ask that you abandon"this cent candor.—She had the7satisfac^ regarded him with a. scowl, ignor­ two "Templetorr Say'leses,"' grinned attitude of levity,-. Miss Van Strata tion of seeing him wince. J ing his outstretched hand "I've got Holmes. ten,, and attend to what I have to "It may have escaped your at­ According- 4o .Jeff Davis, a prom­ a few things to say to you, Hare," —"You're sticking?" inent hobo, there are- 40,000 girl say?" "" • <-•••:. tention that he is already mariied." said he. ' ""I certainly am as long as you're "You may. Shddt." hoboes and 1,000,000 man hoboes "Say 'em." Kelsey looked at his here." ' "It hasn't. -Nor that he is getting on the road. Where these hoboes \ "I represent the estate of'the late _g divorce,..",. own hand as if surprised to see it Phineas Peckett." end up is a. matter of conjecture. Believe it or not," Gloria shouf "Trying to get a divorce. There It is likely that some of therit; be^ there and stuck it into his pocket. "Pills, pellets and persuasion?" '^ouTpci'rttTe fifteen the stairway to Marne, "the "Exactly." . ; may be difficulties." come disgusted with the life and sun's coming out." go into some form of business or 'Love Beyond Sin.' " "Well, if you're here to persuade "He says not," improvised Gloria> take up a trade. Others continue 'Tdid." "Well, I'm not,"" Marne called me; go ahftad and persuade." "I think I will sit down," said.; .,,., •- . , ,. , "My story. Do you happen to back, "if that's what you mean." Mr. Gormine, who had been"stand- andkmt them in strips lOymches the life until they die,a natural- "As you are doubtless aware"— :Wlde death or are killed in an-,acciden- know that the prize was awarded" "Ah, come on," invited the beau- there was a marked emphasis on ing stiffly. He parted his coat-tails . changing colors every 10 tal manner. before you bought it?" ty-girl. "There's'nethingjelse todo." the--"doubtless"-^"theJieir to that and settled himself gingerly into--ia-. inches by cutting the material "I do." "I've got some unanswered let­ estate is Mr. A. Leon Snydacker." ~tuffet. close to the needle and sewing a "Wait a second," put in Gloria. ters. ArttTfhis is my day to get 'em "Now you're getting interesting. "O-kay, Big Boy. You don't have new color~tb it.- -17" ~ "You're going at this wrong-end to. off-my hands." Let's, sit down here, side by each, te be stand-offish with little Glo— When three strips have been D'you want to split fifty-fifty, Tem- Belatedly she had recalled a prom­ on this missy, bank and you tell me with little Marion.". • knitted with the colors arranged py?" <— •_ all about/it," she suggested . with as shown here, sew them together ise to Liggy Morse that she would Fortunately he was too absorbed on the wrong side with heavy car­ • "No.?' - _ •• • "~~^ write him all abouv if. Good old ah e«eouraging smile in the difficulties- of his task to note DO THIS •-—AlP-Bg-UL—XijSl-win," __ This • froll? pet thread. Use a crochet hook of trggy-i—He— muslJiaye C^UM5(QTTS; "It lias cuiue lu my protess4e»al-|4ke strpcjriill be permitted." Holmes. "But I just wonder what a r about, the same size as the knitting TO RELIEVE PAIN AND bird like you thinks of "himself." lucky bet by this time^—She would ( arrentToTi7 "siKrMr. GoTTmne, "ttrat Jarjias this matterNeedles for th¥~id&T6" sJngle~cTo- "I wonder a little about that, my­ have loved to see him celebrating vouns Mr 5?"< dacker is in process gone chet. DISCOMFORT OF A COLD self," put in Gloria. ;. ; —: NOTE: Be your own decorator. "Oh, not so badly, if you ask me." Make new draperies"; curtains;" Follow Simple Method Below "Would you care to have my opin­ slipcovers; bedspreads and dozens Takes only a Few Minutes When ion of you?" queried the other man of other things for every room, Bayer Aspirin is Used silkily. '"-•'.-•". Mrs.i Spears' Sewing Book No. "Not before a lady," grinnedJCels- 1—^'SEWING, for. the Home Deed- r-^ sey. • fitM+1^—shows you exactly how, m 1. To eass pain am) "Don't mind, me," said Gloria. "I with step°by-step . illustrations. 1 discomfort and reduce guess I think-about the same." Book 2—Gifts, Novelties-and Em-' fever take 2 Bayer I ''You w-ound' me to tfre heart. In. broidery, shows you how to make Tablets—dfln|j_a. , other words, you make me sick. fascinating things, from odds and {lass of water. And that goes for. both of you. I've ends and Avftl save its cost many RBpeat In 2 I taken plenty from" this household, times. Books" are 25 cents each'; !— . . hours. J but I'm getting good and fed up," if you order both books, the'Rug •—"Calm—dawn. Big. Boy; calm Leaflet is included . FREE. Ad- ; down," soothed "Gloria, for his voice —rfrocg- Mrs Sppars, 210 S, Des- had assumed an-edge which.inspired plaines St., Chicago, 111. 2. If throat IS raw from ,. misgivings in her experienced soul.. cold, crush and dis­ ! The inside door opened. Marne, solve 3 Bayer Tab­ I clad in pajamas and dressing gown,- lets In 1/3 glass of !stood g-lonming at "them with-heavy- water... gargle. i eyes. ".Hasn't a half-pay star got NEVER SLEEP i any rights on this lot? "she asked j plaintively. . .. .: "WhatLs. your trouble,, kid?" coun- ON AN UPSET' Starts to Ease Pain and Discomfort | tered Gloria. ._.'. and Sore Throat Accompanying • ! "Sleep; You're making more noise Colds Almost Instantly •j than a cageful of hyenas. I don't The simple way pictured above I know what the debate" is, but why STOMACH- often brings amazingly fast relief ! not leave it to the League of Na- from discomfort. and sore Jlhxoat- "ftTefis?""-• • acrompanyirig colds:":"- JTry H.^Then]—see your doctor. j "Too'tough.-It'd bust the organi­ lie probably will telhyou—to-con— sation. What d'you think, kid; we've" tinue with the Bayer Aspirin be­ I got two~'Te7rTp1e~trjrr"'Sayleses—her*,- cause it acts so fast to relieve dis­ i Count 'em, two." - • comforts of .a cold. And-to reduce j "One is. too. many." fever. -~ i "This is 'the real one," said the "Something tells me that our triend, the ei-Templeton Sayles, is going to take a long-journey." This simple way, backed by | beauty-girl, with an indicative .wave -scientific authority, has 4largely- : of her arm. "And a pretty interest- his victory. Inspired of a touch of of being compromised—in short, of Gloria looked coy. "You might supplanted the use of strong medi­ say we're engaged. Practically, that cines in casing cold - symptoms. j jig specimen, if you_ask- me. An- homesickness, there crept into her compromising h-rrnself with you." Perhaps tli'e easiest, mo'st effective i jwers to the name-of-M-ar-tin-Holmea. -letter an implication that she would Gloria's^swift: mind began dimly is. As soon as he gets his divorce " way yet discovered. But make sure I in real life." " " not be averse to seeing him if he to perceive potentialities of profit: "Mm. So I fea—So I understood. you get genuine J "He's certainly an improvement happened to Be up-state "Compromising?" she : retorted. Then it is actually your inte.ntiorr"to BAYER Aspirin. i jn the other," opined Marne, ac­ Gloria went out alone. Strolling "What about- his .compromising marry Mr. Snydacker, Miss Van knowledging the introduction. "In lazily along beside the roadway, she me?- — Stratten?" I fact, he c'puldn't'help but.be." noted- with some surprise the ap­ "That also enters into it," he con­ "I should hope to kies a pig!" i "Thanking you on behalf of both proach of a large, sfrrange car, slow­ ceded. "In fact, I am willing to returned the false star with fervor. IJFOR12TABLETS : ?f us," said Kelsey evenly. ly driven. It c'ame'fyo a.stop oppo­ admit it as an element in our ne­ "May* I assume that nothing—er 2 FULL DOZEN ZSc "[ "Just another fake," said Gloria, site her. A small, prim man in black gotiations." -—nothing decisive has thus far tak­ -Neutralise excess stomach , egarding him sadly. "I thought leaned-out. Negotiations! Gloria's eyes were en place?" acids to wake up feeling like "I beg your pardon." veiled, as she did some hard think­ "Oh, Mr.. Gormine! I love him -' '• . All for All ! t knew something about-men But ing.. If negotiations didn't mean so," sighed tl;e girl. • a million "" No" man 'for himself,—btrt—evevy I he hart ixLe_ieafegV|_She outlined the_ •'.."What for?" asked Gloria; "FoT-addressmg-yett-on -. the-public. money, "she was an Alpine chamois! "Tut-tut! L am. pained Ito hear it. To relieve the effects of over-indul­ man for all.—William Booth. — ^financial deal ' a'ceoxding. to the ^Snd^fe-~c^narrfly--conside-red--tha t Very paired." ' gence — escape-i;f»eid-^ndigestion'.,. -[.'Holmes v.eislun. '•"Tliere's'ttie lay- iugbjsiayj npxt riny — do this: Take 2 table1- - I've been addressed before. Be-, You look 4tV ! out. Anything to add?" she inter- ey. ~~~ TheTa^wyertgUiid'"a giatcfulres——^oonliusiH^ ol_Mai -i-X.Sgated Jhe_aecused. sides, this.isn't a public highway."' "Do you draw Mr. Snydacker's pite in shooing away a persistent nesia in a • glass of" waler"- — '.^Che.n^I~am.,Ios.i.!', —..=»- BEDTIME. WT i "I'd"Tike"to speak"'t6"yoS"aTrjKeV"" een-tracts,—-ifc. ,.Gaxm)Xis]!',m^she horse-fly. Well; it must be finished _said the tenant.to his landlord. "Where do you want -to get to?" asked, lifting" limpid eyes.. somehow':" He-braced™himself—and While yoawsleeR, this wonderful Here's Quick Relief from i "Well, I don't want to talk to you "Maiden Effoffheadquarters." "I do." said: ' alEatizef" wiltlw-*weeterting--ytrar— .-_! ,-,. Their DISTRESS! "Check, professor. This is the Gloria lowered the eyes to prevent "That leads us to the next ques­ stomach ... easing the upset-feeling j alone or any._other way." rear entrance." and nausea . .". helping to bring The annoying discomforts of a _goId in "AH right."' The~I5wer part of Kel- his observing The murderous gleam tion." Jbackji "normal" feeling. By morn­ cheat or throat, generally ease when "Then I am not lost," pronounced in them. The game now was to "What? More?" ' '• soothing, warming Musterole is applied. ' sey's countenance took on a look as - ing you feel great. j if it had been -e-biseled, hollow and the stranger. He gazed about him draw him gently""Qji"." . "I regret that—my -professional-: Better than a mustard plaster, Mua- with a melancholy eye.', * —Then-—-whea you-jy.ake_—take terole gets action because it's NOT just filled with cement. "I can be just "A. Leon is very rich," she mur­ duty compels me to a course quite J 2 more tablespoonfuls of Phillips' ~7iR~8alm~ItI3H"**eotm*cr-frrtorn*"; 8tUnua_. |as unpleasant a^anybody else, if "Che«k again. But you don't look mured - as distasteful to me as it can possi­ Milk of Magnesia with orange juice.. lating, it penetrates the surface skin and ' necessary." ". " -happy__ahou-LjtJ'^ ._^_ , f "Nj2i_ajjrich_as_|s supposed," was bly be to you." That is one of the quickest, sim- . helps to quickly relieve local congestion, —He shut off his engine and gol —liknow^i-she conceded.,_not_.guite acnes and pains due to colds. I Marne nodded a sapient head. the cautious reply. lest,-easi£St_ways to overcome the Used by millions for 30 years. Recom­ | "What else would you expect of a out. "I am Mr. Gormine," he an­ "And such a dear!" seeing what was coming next. tad effects of too rnucTfeattng, siuok- mended by many doctors and nurses, ' face like that?" nounced: •—-- "Such a fool!" grunted Mr. Gor- (TO BE CONTINUED) ing or drinking. Thousands use it. In three-strengths: Regular, Children's "He certainly does jut a mean "How do you. do?" said Gloria But—never ask for "milk of— (mild) and Extra Strong, 40*. Approved politely. t - ~ magnesia" alone — always ask fori-^ by Good Housekeeping Bureau. jaw,""admitted Gloria. "And yet" "fM///>s"'MilkofMagnesia.f«gSi\ ' —she sighed—"I..dunno." "May I ask if you belong here?" Many Cactaceae Species From Mexico; "Temporarily." "Anyway I don't have to have him "In connection with the A. Leon One Grows in Clusters, Cloaked in Hair PHILLIPS' MILK OF MAGNESIA playing opposite me any more,"e,""re" re-­ Snydacker production of — er — * IN LIQUID ORJABLET FORM joiced the star. .Maiden-Effort?" From Mexico come many inter­ group. It is also referred to as.one "I dunno about that, either We'd "You guessed it." , esting species of the Cactaceae. of the torch cactuses, as it takes better wait on A. Leon. We• 'don't "Then," he decided after a slow Many of these have been discovered very little imagination to make-it Fate of Extremes want to gum the picture." scrutiny, "you must be Miss Mar­ only recently, writes E. C. Hum­ such,- when moonlight or-late, sun­ The fate of all extremes is such, "I'll settle that" point," put in ion Norman Van Stratten." mel in Nature magazine. light finds a reflector in the mass of men may be read, as well as Wingless Love Holmes. "Something tells me that True to her principle_qf never al­ One of the comparatively new dis­ beautiful white spines. In its nat­ books, too much,—Pope. Friendship is love without his our friend, the ex-Templeton Sayles, lowing her conscience to cramp her coveries is .MamillariS"- hahniana, ural habitat it reaches a height of­ wings.—Byron. is going to take a long journey." amusements, Gloria -smiled in a known as the Old Lady of Mexico. ten meters; in collections it is usu­ "Yes?" queried that gentleman manner which might have been tak­ This was discovered in 192$' in Cen­ ally found as a small or medium- interestedly. "Where to?" en to indicate assent. In fact, it tral Mexico, where it grows in sized plant-, raised from seed. Still Coughing? ' "Any place on a-one-way road." had that tentative purpose. There large clusters, completely cloaked Even If other medicine has failed,, "Too kind. But, a£t,ek- alJyjwhy was-also the'intention of playing for in long, fine hair. During, the bloom­ don't be discouraged, try Creomul- should I? Charming place. Con­ Hera 1« Amazing Relief for time. If this meant trouble, as it ing season it wears a crown of pink Language of the Gems slon. Your druggist is authorised to Conditions Dua to Sluggiah' Bowel* genial company. Atmosphere of or rose flowers. Little less con­ refund your money if you are not U-youthinit-ftHJMativci* might—for she distrusted the prim- Moss Agate—Health, prosperity——thorougnly_satisfied with'.the bene- ' net mkb'riust~tJT~thi^~--JrieTtrlly^waTrrrth;—Why-depart—so- "man's looks—she.,.w.ould.~stall. along spicuous is -the .crown aL_red ber- ill V*fl*tah1* Uiatlva. liaplpysTTffeT" >* "*"•* . and long life. Amethyst—Prevents ' fits obtained. Creomulsroirls one•*—= „_ 3t) mild, thorough, re- until _she could get warning to ries that is later pushed from be­ k Q 6 freahlng, invigorating. DcpcndnWo relief frorr violent passions?^Blod"dstone=-CoTrr- r^f?&^5, l ,F ^¾¾¾¾¾^¾^ Bick hcadnclicfl, bllioua RRpflfl, tired feeling when . "Because you're not wanted Marne. tween the flowering tubercles, to re­ age, •„.,VMwisdo—m nan„,di «-„,;,„,..firmness. .i„n „«•„affec„ ­ name on tho Dottle is CreoranMon, Associated with conntlpatlon. main for weeks like a crown of and you'll get the genuine product Without Dielr K°* » 2So box of NR from you' here," said Holmes tartly. "I be­ "So what?" said she brightly. tion. Chrysolite—Frees from evil and the relief you want. (Adv.) nilnulll HISR arugglst. Mako tho teat— thn lieve that's unanimous. Any dis­ rubies on a white-ljaired lady. II not dpllghtcd, return the box to ua. Wo wll. "You are pretty," he charged, as passions and sadness. Emerald— _J-c(un

Floating Log Bore His Weight, Color Is the Major Theme in .. Plaifl Face Is CLASSIFIED So IWFaii Developed a Curiosity Gay Spring Song of- Fashion Challenge to DEPARTMENT

By qfERIF NICHOLAS Eerson<^^ FINANCIAL By PATRICIA LINDSAY fFantai: Partial with investment represent "T CAN'T uudeiataiid it," wailed a Gambia) Btoraa In towns In Michigan. ~* requlr^. JBMI (H^BUh»r_tl», Qama-Ia * stupid mother to me, "Jenny is •tare WareneuV; ' St. Johns, Mi«k. so plain and her two sisters are so beautiful! I only hope some man will see something in her and marry TRADE SCHOOLS hei\__I'll have no trouble getting the WANT A feOOa'- PAY JOST - toed Tool and Die slak-ts, Other two married but Jenny is go­ fcjntsts._, aatomati--*— e icnw inafrntae ing to be a problem!" •art. as much M HMW P*r weefc. _ n at on* of America'sMtHgtou Jenny heard her mother and she shops. Training- work nfrwrlMd by • *-- Oaj-BvcnliiBelaHJw.LirirfaB, just laughed "It's too bad I am so MoptoyiMnt h«p. WrrU Norn .plain," she said, "and if no man tor titm hoojil*^'ft«tto»I will marry me when I grow up I'll AewJScm Bedew, O^i. (School DivMe*) be a nurse i" Jenny was 15 then. DwkWNI Five years later I saw Jenny; again Her mother had written that Jenny was to be married and-her two pretty sisters (still not rnar- Cross-Stitch and iie.d_!) were to attend her. I was amazed at this turn of events. •_•' Crochet for Linens ~\ When I stepped off the train there, was Jenny with frank lovely eyes smiiing'm'e a welcome. Her rather angular figure was becomingly at­ Prepared 6y National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C.—WNU Service. Old as water transportation, tired in—a simply cut sports frock What an eventful day when itself, but Mtill modern! Thu is and her long straight black hair Jiad a gufa, water transport on the been cut and waved. Now short , man first found that a floating Tigris river, which goes forward curls haloed her plain face giving log would bear his weight! by twirling in a circle. ~Stightly it the most fascinating piquant ex- What trial and error, what round-about, perhaps, but it gets iressipj wrecS and tragedy intervened there! From • that first moment it was even before the first dugout, or •fun to be with Jenny, to listen to he'r arms and clothes, and better navi­ wedding plans, to meet her young raft with clumsy sails of skins gation charts and instruments. friends and to watch, her easy, de­ ~or plaited "grass actually put to lightful poise. , "The Ugly Duck­ sea and finally reached a neigh­ Human Powerhouse ling's certainly made good," I mur­ boring shore safely! The Venetian galley was the flght- mured, and was curious to know ing craft when rihriatian pllips Jin. ""Imagine the "larjng sailors' what she had done during those five •der Son John of Austria defeated - iiilei veiiiiig-years;———.———— ~~return frontthat first uf aH- the Turks at the Battle-of Irfpanto It seems that at an early age j.voyages. Shouting fellow tribesmen la 1571. IrLthat battle larger ves­ fashion rings but the of the importance of color Jenny realized that beaux -and par­ crowd about as they beach their sels carried 100 crossbowmen, *40 ties and indulgence of whims were, cannon, and catapults for throwing coming modes. That which is craft, excited over the strange fruits destined to prove a dramatic not going to be hers easily, because* and weapons the .dusky Argonauts stones. Power came from 150 gal­ she lacked the beauty her sisters ley slaves, chained to their long color program starts out in -have brought back, and gaze curi­ midseason with handsome had, so she struck out for a life of ously at the lone woman captive, sweeps and whipped savagely upon her own and went to college. There their naked backs to make them woolens that are being tailored snatched from her coral-beach shel- alluringly into smart ouits and -she concentrated on "schooT-affairs" _ter as the^ invaders retreated to the pull hard, in steady rhythm. ensembles, also topcoats a as ardently as on her studies-=and sea. In Greek,and Roman .galleys oars u soon won an enviable place in the Pattern No. 1872. Till then that distant shore, its were arranged in two or more tiers. attractive as ere the light of - 1 fashion sKBwn upon. the two attractive models shown u. hearts of her classmates. Not ex-. Use this cross-stitctuand crochet peak dimly visible only on clear The Venetians abolished this sys­ the background. Crossbar plaid iif pecting much from life without ef­ days, had been a region of mystery; tem, installing all oars on the same If you are impatient to don color on scarfs, towels and pillow cases you do not have to wait for the blue and white imported--tweed fort she matured into an unselfish, and have linens you'll be proud of. now they had landed upon it, had level. The rowers, however, sat on makes the topcoat and jacket for thoughtful person and through tasted its dangers and delights. two or three different levels, with actual arrival of spring, neither are Pattern 1872 contains a transfer you called upon to travel to sunny the costume shown to the left With study, quite unconsciously devel­ pattern of eight motifs ranging "Let us return for more-wealth;" the benches inclined in such a matching blue monotone skirt. oped her personality. It was at a .—th« BKcited welcomerg urge. way an to leave each man's motions- nlJTYtpc in wpar nnp nf the new bright^ from 5 by 13% to 3½ by 7¾ inches^ Bright yellow, red, blue and. a nat­ school danca^ tlyit,Bill, her-grbom- directions and chart for the filet "Nay brothers," reply the sailors. woolen outfits, for at this very mo­ ural beige blend harmoniously in to-be, met her.. "The winds are evil and the waves ment fashion-alert women are ac­ the beautifuTplaid topcoat of import­ crochet; materials required; illus- . run high. We must make a bigger quiring tailleurs. of flashing, dash­ ed tweej-at the fight. It is lined trations of stitches. raft and take more fighting men, for ing gay wool weaves that forecast with matching blue silk crepe. State of Mind ' '.Send 15 cents in coins for this yonder they have mighty warriors the color-glory of suits,* ensembles, pattern to The Sewing Circle, to give us battle." dresses and coats that will enliven The task that fashion sets before Important Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave­ Contrast pirate pistol and cutlass, ther-ffityje scene throughout the com­ the designer of smart wool outfits nue, New York, N. Y. ing months. for spring is 4b so inter-relate colors, No, the girl over 30 who has let hand-to-hand sea-fighting; technique •herself down must pick her.ielf, up. Please write your name, ad­ with the Wofld~wsr Battlc-of Jut­ -Early spring tweeds "say it" ir­ that combined make "a-harmonious •Individualized- entity of their own. Perhaps she has to begin with think­ dress and pattern number plainly.- land, when armored giants, hurled resistibly via plaids and stripes that ing. She must think she is needed, tons of projectiles at each other with are _ superbly colorful, Playing up. it is not beyond the bonds of good -taste-^tb combine a. stripe, a plaid that she is good- at her work, that lightninglike rapidity over leagues bright' woolens™in trios"ls"orIe way there is a job for- her some place. of intervening' blue"-water. of showing enthusiasm for the. new and a plain. In fact, the-working,, of novelty stripes, plaids and. cheeks. novelty woolens in trios is on.e - of Then she must make herself just as Man Becomes Restless In such instances a stripe, a Plaid; the smartest newest moves among: lovely looking as she possibly can Fighting on the water, perhaps, or check and a plain are soTnfer- designers' whp notably lead in cos­ within her means. - TRUE! had less to do with, the development related in color vaiues as to make tume art. Any gui Ban exercise herself back "Like lemons, Luden's of ships than did 'man's peacetime a stunning costume such as any The dominant note in early spring to health, put color in her cheeks contain a factor Oiat pursuits, his restless urge always to lady of fashion might covet* -,. fashioning is,- as it has. heen for and a sparkle in her eyes. She can helps contribute to your find and see new lands, and to gain The tailored suit of plaid woolen some time past, the contrast jack- pamper her hair by brushing, sham- alkaline reseiVe»I-p're> wealth by barter- with-faras&ajLpea-. —in—the foreground ol our illustration et and skirt two-piece suit. The pooing-jt-at-home, -dr ying^it-^n-the- —fe| LudeoWyi^ pie for salt, amber, and slaves. in softest shades of rose and green stripes and plaids and n'ubby .Wool sun. She can keep her clothes clean, EDNA RIGGS, < One primitive craft, in use to this with wool jersey blouse of dusty weaves that go to make up these neatly mended and, if her funds are Ixtmtr, bit Ansutt ' day, "is the Polynesian . pink would sound a triumphant high youthful suits are more fascinating very low, rely on an inexpensive Anyone who* has lived in the Philip­ coloratura note under a fur coat in than ever. In stylizing these popu­ collar and cuffs to freshen the one LU DEN'S pines or cruised the waters of the. any clime where the thermometer lar numbers designers are making dress she wears job-hunting. , South Pacific know this persists in registering low or with a big play on pockets. Sometimes She must approach each prospec­ MINTHOL^OiUUI DROPS ^¢. sailing canoe and its age-olduse in light accessories it will prove ideal the.front of the jacket is fairly plas­ tive employer.with a feeling of as­ inter-island, traffic. on a southern cruise,. tered with innumerable decorative surance,- an-eagerness for_the job _ ' Aboard this catamaran— long, cen- as well as useful pockets. and make him feel she is capable, Heart to Heart turies ago, dusky adventurers from If Tl floats, it's a boaJT With From. Paris cojii.es the dramatic experienced and a person he needs A man cannot touch his- neigh­ Asiatic coasts, guided only by stars, canvas unfurled, Miami .-bathing sport ensemble, shown" to the left in Newest among woolens Irmse-foT to have around. It can Tie done^— bor's "heart—"witnr-anything less the flight of-birds, or instinct, sailed girls take advantage of both wind the group. Lucien Lelong creates spring are sdiagonal stripe effects you older girls—but if you don't take than his own.—G. Macdonald. foi^countless watery miles out into this style-significant costume of mul­ such as a gray wool with wide White yourselves in hand your future Is and waves in a new sport, surf ticolored .stripe tweed. The blouse stripes running diagonally across. the Pacific. , Easter island, sailing. not rosy. Just think of the thou­ and -were all colonized is in green jersey enhanced with a Prospects are that we will be see­ sands of girls over 30^who are hold­ brilliant studded belt. ing more of stripes this season than by these daring sailors. There is free from interference by the others. ing down jobs—how%lo-yeuwsup.ppse .'some evidence that a few of them The oars of each group of two or The oncoming rush for plaided or ever. they do it? NERVOUS? even reached the coasts of Mex-ico- three rowers projected through the striped woolens ii modishly told in G Western Newspaper Union. . © Bell Syndicate,—WNU Service. Do you feel strnerrous you want to acrfttmT same opening ori'rowlock," The Are you crMi and IrriuH5le7 Do you icotd and South America. — X thoM deareet to you? high bench ,was nearest the ftp.hter n—• ft your nw w «e. an 9&> "Egypt Started It ~ ; """ of the vessel and its occupant pulled you need ft good general system tonic, try HI.NT-OF-THE-DAY Lydi» E. Pinkh»m's Vegetable Compound, Though history records no famous the longest oar—sometimes meas­ Bows and Beaux Neckwear Means made eMpteioUp for women. voyages made by Egyptian naviga­ uring nearly 50 feet in. length. The For over 60 yean one .woman bas told u^ • other how to go "smiling thru" witbj*tfable " tors, it was from early Egypt that galleys themselves were ahout 150 Accessories Also The Use of Face Powder Finkham's Compound, It help* nature build shipbuilding ideas spread .^.Phoe­ feet long. Face powder is perhaps woman's up more physical resistance and thus helps Neckwear doesn't mean just pique calm quivering nerves and lessen discomforts^ nicia, Greece, .and later to Rome— We look now at models of the oldest beauty-aid. In Egypt, China from,annoying symptoms which oTtetr ac- -even—through-the Red—sea to-the-j~tiny caravels of-Colurnbusv^nd are- and hatistg nr nrgnnrlig nnllars, and-Jspairpowders have beeft-used- Neckwear (at least the items sold .. hy not give it a chance to help YOUt Orient. amazed that in craft so frail he at neckwear counters) doesn't for centuries. Rice, starch, clay, Over one -million women have written*In The Chinese junk bears- a strong" dared so much. JKe-mlght set.his- bismuth and almond meal were toi^ reporting wonderful benefits from ^inkham'fl mean just pique and batiste or or­ -CoTBpound.* resemblance to pictures of ancient whole fleet, the Pinta, Nina,- and gandie collars. Neckwear i% the let prerequisites before the days of Egyptian craft, especially in the Santa Marian.upon the decks of modern interpretation of the word Cleopatra. shape of the hull. Although sea- the new Queen Mary and still have means ruchingsrembroideries, stiff - .A high_grade powder is a many- goihg~sRips-grewup iirthe Mediterf-roonTto drffi -er regiment of infan" sided blessing. It protects the skin Patience Brings Peace • little Buster Brown collars, Irish Patience ought to be the first ranean, earlyChinese-Usedjthe com­ try. Yet, in their day, these were lace collar and cuff sets, little bows against strong sunlight, harsh winds pass.- Their junks, trading "Between stout little ships, developed by. man and atmospheric dust. attribute of the rnan who loves for your neck, with little lacy pock­ peace,—Paul Painleve. Cant6n and the Persian gulf in the after centuries of experience with ets to match. Neckwear may be in The woman who knows her beauty Third century, had magnetic iron Egyptian Nile and coastal craft, Chi­ velvet with mother-of-pearl flowers rules never grinds powder ipto the needles; also, their junks used a nese junks, Phoenician traders, and jewels. It may be of grosgrain pores. She pats it on lightly,'start­ rudder mounted on the sternpost. Children's Colds... Arab dhows, and Roman galleys, ribbon or of chiffon, or, it may be ing under the chin and 'not on the Traponrj Cotutipatifm mar la- Beyond the junk, however, Chinese nose, as was the gld-time-eustom. eruM thi discomfort of irspuw successive rungs of man's maritime Of velvet ribbon or of taffeta, satin, •f r«r*rlafcBW, Hmrfecfca, Up­ shipmakers progressed little. On ladder. lame or kid. It may be an elaborate After its application she taps her set ftamacfc which ftMnaallr canals, rivers,' and along coasts, accanpuy earlr ttaaes m colas. Caravels Seaworthy sequin bolero or it may be a wee face lightly with the finger tips: That , MOTHER QUAY'S myriad junks and -continue jacket of .ruffled ne'f. At any rate tends to make the powder stiek. ^IWIIT POWOIRI to haul much of China's colossal do­ Despite their small size, often less A Sftlla laxativ•ixatlve aad canalaatiT*earmlastfve.. Ai alslil ddraa > neckwear is a most featured theme It's important to be fastidious •ad totttm Samp* aad WmUdn* X mestic commerce than loTTtons, caravels became fa- for spring. Phoenicia, today, is a forgotten Tnous tofseawofthinessonTong voy­ about the powder pad; "since germT land. Yet "merchants of Tyre" cor­ ages; VasGO-da Gama used one in lurkon even a clean skin. Absorb^ nered the world, trade of their day. rounding the Cape of Good Hope; ent cotton is more sanitary^ though Personal Mastery They sent dried fruit and wine to so did Magellan. Squirrel Sets Off it doesn't spread the powder as nice­ He -that would ^govern others, the then remote British isles, and Opening the doors of a new world- ly as lamb's wool. Rouge pads are frowned upon because they are usu­ first should-be master of himself.— brought back tin and cloth. They -wide era of exploration, commerce, It takes a bow or more to catch .'- Spray of Orchids Massinger. are even believed to have sailed wealth, and empire,- the little-cara­ ally given such long service. a beau. With bows at her-waist, iJPoTrnight wear,"one of the more Many-ef today's powders contain around Africa centuries before vel poked its bows into harbors pre­ there's sure" toTSTbeauJc to the fore deUcate pelts should be chosen Vasco da Gama." viously unfurrowed by white men's starch talcum, also oxide of zjnc, ftlitYM Vikings, bold Bailors in their day, ships, and fled safely from unfriend- W^^&SS^you see here pictured. Naivel-ft£2y -orchid s like ^di^^^^i^^^^^^^^^^nobody's business. In help powders to hqld on lotions ar e COLDS ~r ravaged the coasts of. Gaul—and ly shores, easily escaping from the draped 'Off "the shoulders, the dress undyed squirrel look for clear gray, Spain in their stout oaken vessels canoes of warlike native tribes'; untinged with brown, and a close used, some being compounded of fl»t day. . in black velvet has as itsbnly adorn­ ; stearate of zinc and a bland-oil, centuries" before Columbus was' Among heroic pioneer navigators ment «v soft gold kid belt which f ven pile, "Flank" BquirreHa-usu- Headaches . born. Living on dried fish and such They should be rubbed into the flesh SL^ ^1-¾8 ^C°leJ? .especially designed by Criterion to ally dyed brown, and costs less than U0UID. TABLETS aad^Fever little grain as they could carry, they was Sir Francis Drake^^This Eng­ gray. until they'disappear, as you would SALVE, MOM PROM la M nlaaUa. enhance its richness. -Note the tiny with a vanishing cream. later explored the northwest Atlan­ lish sea hawk sailed around the bows frolicking.'round, adding a so­ Trr'mmfe-HT-TW- tic; about 1000 A. D., Leif Ericsson globe in the Golden Hind at the end phisticated air to" this girdle of gold. Old-Kashioned Slips v voyagedto North America through of the Sixteenth century, and was Silken Caracal Is Valuable The wee velvet hat with its twin . Slips have gone old-fashioned-i The value of the silken pelts of WNU—O 5-39 icy seas. * ""— —T"— -the-flrst-Englishman-to pass through tidws carries out the theme of this camisole tops with lace beading .and In each passing century, after the Strait of Magellan and to explore caracul from an unusual breed of dinner gown. \ baby blue' ribbon. Lace ruffles and nheep in southern Russia U de- Egypt' supplier! _A pattern for sea- Hie west coasts of South and North ribbon decorate the bottom of the GUIDE BOOK to ^-gomg-merehant-e-aftHfo-t the sea- -America, Drake .scraped his -shlp*s- slip, too terrrtined. by the regularity and CalotWIthEarmuffs beauty of their lustrous moire ma'£!c- farers of one nation, then of another, bottom hard by,what is now Sail, GOO• Wh« ToDn pla n VALUEa trip abroaa, yon aaSl -made improvements. Columbus' Francisco bay, crossed the Pacific^ The clever calot, favorite of ings. As, in all furs, the quality of taka • laM* beak, IH flaur* out ax. the skin is important, and the stipple astir what* yen want to a*, how loo* 7« schoolgirls the country over, re­ For Winter Wear ••try what* yan 7tn flagship, for example, was a "mod­ to the East Indies, and sailed home, • - softness^ But for caracul to achieve •tay« and.what SSff «!aat yan* ern" boat, compared with Leif's around the. Cape of Good Hope, turns this winter embellished with A white chiffon blouse banded ' .Tha anTartlaanmaw In this MM* •*• open "long ship." His crew had bet­ Rich with .spoils from Spanish ships, fluffy earmuffs and warmly lined with black val lace is shown in one its greatest lovelinessr-tbe-shilhrner*- lifally ar^Ma7Ba«VT«Toao-»ahiaaj-M- with bright plaid flannelette. The collation for wear with a black ing moire patterns must be care­ yaai aaaka a haMt of nadlni thana aafa- ter sleeping quarters, bigger water he reached England after an ab­ hfiy, yan aan jklan your »ha|i>li>« trtfa casks, more dried meats; better sence of nearly three years. earmuffs'can be wj0rn up or down. faille suit, - • • . r~— fully matched and harmonized. and aaTayanraalrtlnia. anariy and aaanay. •*,t. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY^HERALb, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3r 1939.

Notice of South Arni Township Annual QUEENS ON SNOWSHOES Primary Election

To Tie Voters'of. gouth^ATin>Twp.:—•' -—IChe_ Ajirtual Township Primary Election will be held Monday, March 6, 19¾¾ at the Township Hall. The EDITED BV CAROLINE HARHINQTON. following officers will be voted on:— Letters and questions 01V gardut) topics will hi- WCICOIIM Supervisor, Township Clerk, Treas­ They will be published aiid discussed in this Ou'luini urer, Commissioner of Highways, *h Justice of Peace.-(full term), and Member Board of Review. Dear Mrs. Harrington: The candidate receiving the great­ I have read Garden Gossip's Jan. The sycamore tree js found in est number oT votes shall be placed L'7 report of the latest -Arboretum the. rich ground along rivers and on_.._T.icJfet No. IV The candidate re­ _Cojnmittee meeting, and note that beside lakes. (Remember how the ceiving the next highest number of you wish comments~"oh~same frrrnr ~canrlte=digrrt—beameS—lt4mmgh-4ts- "votes shall mrplace^tTnTJricket"'NTjr-27T those of us whoTiire interested in hav~- branches on the banks of the-Wa-- "" the Polls of said Primary Election ' ^±Ug_an arboretum in East Jordan. bash far away?) It grows tall -— will open at 1 o'clock and will close With reft-'veniftno MT: Hemrn|r= -TO-to-i«0~-feet. (Jhildren.-like ._to at (i o'clock p m. ; wny^s suggestion, I think you should play among its branches for its be able to have an arboretum of Candidates for office must, have trunk quite often divides near the their petitions filed with the Town­ Michigan trees and shrubs, classified ground into ' 'several smaller and arranged as such, -and at the Same ship Clerk on or before February 14, Trunks, and it is tempting to 1939.' time have other groups, similarly climb. It makes a quick growth, classified and arranged, to include Persons who are not registered and and does not mind transplanting, wish to vote at the Primary must European, Asiatic and, other Ameri­ but it is sometimes attacked by a can species. It would be., a mistake, register on -Vv( before February 25, disfiguring fungus disease. Some 1939. however, to include these latter in people call it the button-wood 5-2 LAWRENCE ADDIS, what is supposed to represent a typi­ tree, or the Ijuttonball tree, from Clerk of South Arm Twp. cal Michigan forest. A comparatively is buttonlike fruit which hangs small space should' suffice fojc such tight to/thfe branches through ojd^r_£rjaiinjL most of the winter. The sycamore SEEN ON SNOWSHOES IN THE PETOSKEY WINTER SPORTS PARK are Janna May-Loeks, 1939 in Miffhiga-rr- State Press Association From the report, I am not "sure" is common .JffichiganJVVinter Queen, third from the left, and numbers of her court. The Grand_Rapids_girl will be ElecTRomaine McGall^—: just what species Mr. Hemingway north as Roscommon county.- crowned Friday evening at the opemjigTTf the Mfchigan^Wihter-earnival—with-the-other gii'ls serving suggested, but I- presume he'favored For President, 1939 as. members of her court. East Jordan's Winter Queen, Miss Louise Bechtold is shown'at the extreme the planting, of such..shrubs and trees shrubs {in their- natural setting,., and right of the picture. - •' as are fitted for .planting, both as 1 the foreign plants, too, "for to ad­ For the second time in a half cen-'' landscape and as educational fea­ tury the McCall family of Michiganj mire and for to see." At least we can ter of the Masonic lodge. He tures. If so, I agree with him. Df newspapermen has presented thej iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iniiiiii) course, for both purposes, it seems have those which thrive in our eli- member of Rotary, and the Presby- s- r\ "• •• J? • • ""5i • -A ' — Michigan Press' Association with a | —t^_mr<> it \yi)nld be desirabieto turyj[ stm told thafr many -for f4f«n plqnt° tnVo l-iijdjy t-p mir Win | of i president. terian chwch, • hdTir"attended Ai- = Our many years of service in this community assures = foreign trees and shruhp planted by f i-bioji-- callsKg., _ a Romaine McCall, one of seven.spus themselves for study and compari­ weather. t Conventmn-NSpeakersTn of the late J. N. McCall, former Eub- :£---yOT-eJ4h#-sameJi£l.pJM.assis^ are accustom- 5 son, rather than to have them scat­ I am glad you brought up the mat- | ei'.nor Fitzgerald; Sherwood Andet- lisher of the Gratiot County Herald tered through the entire area. Native tef-of- care for the new plants. Mr. .-son, novelist and country editor'from at Ithaca and past, president of the 5 Our business is built upon the recommendations of = Michigan trees desirable for land­ Eggert t&elhJFes that with eoopera- | Virginia;- Dusty Miller, daily pubhsh- state-publishers' organization, .was el­ scape planting could be grouped^vviTtr -4iim_from tfie" Garden; Club and the ' or from Ohio; J. J. HarUgan, adver­ = the people we have served. >.. = helVLiif- KFTtas^f.-lihej-iiew' plantings evated to the joffiee Friday, -Jan. 27, tising. agency_execuliv£ from Detroit; them. —•-~ during the~T?4Th"annual~n-reeting" at •—DJHM^-tll4l-i)!:?t..fcw_ years,, the can be cultivated to conserve mois­ S. M. Williams, national retail execTP trees' ""'1 ^Tn-uhg transplanted from ture. Pr/ssfirly—tHt-r-rrtg'—the' summer Lausing^aud Mjcmgan State College Uvo.-ifom Washington, D. C.fO. J. the woods will not make a very- im­ monthsTve"'KrrraT_sa.-eiilist-trh«-help-of of the. U.. S. Department ofr J R. G.-WATSON FUNERAL HOMEJ pressive showing, and, with .a. dry the Seoirf-Wgaaizations. I hope so. —a"Ti• '&•-' ;, % , • could be ijsj-'d, the., desired effect I never before realized Hre-yue of the : would be more quickly attained. evergreen family, nor the strange . Michigan, white and red pines are habits of growth of some of them, but then linn one of those who has NSW of. every day occurrence, and attract but little attention, bu very few are difficulty, in distinguishing a spruce familiar with the Douglas and Noi'd- "from a balsam, and it is only a short maim firs, the Color-ado and Engle- time since I learned the difference be­ man spruces, and other American and tween a white jiine and a Norway. Of European confers. • course TTvould not be confessing my "' "FTtiTnk I TciiTi get yoTTTT bulletin ignorance- if I did not happen !.t.o .that gives a. list of tree? aruk shrubs know that I have much compa'rty (lesjralitt1"—-fm planting in Michigan, among those who have had an equa wTttr their rorrett Latin names. chance to.learru, £.:>4k-Sf*#s-. •• •Among the bulletins you sent me'in the fall are Extension Bulletin No. "When I asked for comments from 152. Hardy' Shrubs for Landscape friends of the arboretum 1 hoped that Planting in Michigan and No.- 178 on you -wou'ld respond, Prof. Taft. In Evergreens''. I also _ have Farmers' with the NEW Safety-Lock Cord Body and NEW Gear-Grip Tread 7vT>rrr "iettcn it seems -Ui-rfl-e^-jani—ha-Yii. Bulletin No. 1087, Beautifying the^ ! r oCiTTnK'd'"Ti~ptan which-will make it Farmstead, - NjiXT¥ffrTSuraO Tah-i "-y "fT. possible lor us to have an arboretum nmg (.The Village), and No. 1481,: Lnthee" 11Ili C t'"'1-'?'' then father. -¾^. of our vcrv own native trees and PJanting the Roadside.. Most promt- rWebb McCall .is publisher nt the Isa "!>$*£** bella County Time-News at lit". nent among thosthosee shrubs and .trees 5¾ ^. recommended, I ani pleased to see our Pleasant.and Joseph N McCall is as­ 'j.-'r * w ^¾¾ own native varieties. Perhaps these sociated with hiiri; J. Watson McCall DRTFTP. RAMSEY^ are the bulletins, you had in mind to •is associated with Ernest J. McCall, .'" send us. If not, we_shov,ld much ap­ an uncle; publisher of the-Grand Hn- Physician and Sdrgeon preciate any a-dditional oneso >*ou ven Daily Tribune^; Duanc S. McCall • Office Hours: . have in mind.- is with the Oconto County Reporter Stronger Cord Body ! 10:00 - 12:00 A. M. at Oconto. W-is.consin; and ""George ^«i 2:00 - 4:00 P. M. Now _- th_ e. tirnoto'brin_ g ,.-..in twigs-. McCall is associated with" Romaine in More flon-Skid Mileagj Evenings and Sunday by of fruit trees and flowering shrubs-'..Publishing the Herald at Ithaca, Appointment. for forced blooming. They should be i Harlan McCall, the only brother FLOYD ROBERTS Office — Over Hite's Drug Store generously sprinkled every day with \ not in newspaper business, is princi- 1 - Phone — 196-F2 warm water, and kept in or near aJpaLof the Charlotte high schooTTT7 1938 Notional PUu FAMOUS Race Champion sunny window. Even-though, the win->i°n-W. McCall, a cousin, is with the. Champion race driven, "try wind's dti Wrrw-TTutsirle, spmg will: Grand Haven Daily Tribune, whole very Ifvei and seem near when the buds unfold, and The Michigan press leaderTiasTSeeTr 'chances of victory depend -s^rnrrt- TTTT'l'l nnd—ftHdf-gnd. active in community.-affairs at Ithaca, TRIPLE-SAFE on rire safety, fcnoti1 tire Dr. H. M. HARRINGTON white blossoms appear. having" served as president of the ;on»miciioti and that it Chamber of Commerce, high p'fi-esT keted and buy Physician and Surgeon "We had quite a garden of squash-,1 of the Royal Arch chapter, and mas-- Tirea for their ' / cwsifilRmoir^racing cani. e.s . . . the vines ran up-trees, through) _^ Office Hours: #'/ / ' / the fence, and over all the other CAR; NAG WINS Vtu-5-PrMr- 7-to-B-P^M,— vegetables -.-' . . - honestly—] — A car belonging to JTIRESTONE triumphs again! This time ••4* V / / / f Office in Lumber Co, Building .uch vines! Hadatwo different squash-; Kenneth Mills was taken to a garage^, A A jsdth the _nevy Ekestorne—Champion, the tire es that wcu'ghed a trifle less than 30,' here recently for repairs to the two /a^KaaaaHHa?Z ///f ^1^ sets the safety standards for 1939. This new Office Phone — 140-F2 lbs." . . j front fenders, hood, radiator grill, Residence Phone — 140-F3 This excerpt from a lette.r from a; and windshield, as the result of a tire provides a combination of safety features \VwJVork State gardner reminds me slight argument..with a'-horse.' When never before built into a tire. It is a completely (hat squash vines do more than grow!i Mrs. Mills was driving on a country m..4^m new achievement in safety engineering. ___„ ^ squash. They.quite effectively «moth-1 ,,„a(1 one niKht, a horse walked out of or weeds, even the persistent quack; , . Leaving the From the experience gained on the ;l ()iLch am] int() th( car »peedways of the world and in the Firestone laboratories, Firestone engineers have developed R, G. WATSON grass, and prevent them from going j eiu. va{h(,,. ba(1)y dented, the horse 'o seed. Where my squash vines fft'cw! walked on. a revolutionary new type of cord body called SafetyLack, which provides amazingly greater FUNERAL 'ast summer I have a plot, beautiful-] . '0 , strength. This outstanding achievement makes possible the use of a thicker, tougher,' deeper 4y weed free, on which to plant grass i tread which assures much greater non-skid mileage. Because of this new Safety-Lock Cord blRECTOR seed in the spring. Last spring it was PROBATE ORDER body and Gear-Grip tread, the modern streamlined Firestone Champion Tire establishes so infested with quack grass that we considered it useless" to plant any- State of. Michigan. The Probate completely new standards of blowout protection, non-skid safety, silent operation-and long •Phone —" 66 thingbut the'squash. ourt for the County of Charlevoix. mileage, "*/ In the Matter of the"-Estate of MONUMENTS J corgo Crawford, Jfecoased-.' The Firestone Champion Tire embodies the famous Firestone Triple-Safe construction EAST JORDAN, MICH. • Pht T-a-et-trs-has-found a rpon»a4U-lu- Arizona 800 acres have been set aside At a se.ssit)ir'o'r^!Vul~CTrur'rrrreW~nT- -yoa-Bet-the-exctusive-and^patenJed Firestone construction features-of Gum-Dipping, two for a. garden devoted to the study and the Probate Office- in 'the City" of extra layers of Safety-Lock cords under the treacTantT Gear-Gf"ip~rread design. N^ver in-all- conservation of plants found growing Charlevoix, in said, county, on the the history of tire building has there been such a triple-safe combination to protect you on the desert. It will be known as the 27th 'Itiy.of ."January, 1939. against the dangers of blowouts, punctures and skidding. - ,- .-- m Desert Botanical Garden of Arizona. L_Al?resent : Ervan A. Ruegsegger, PRANK PHILLIPS and will attract scientists and botan'-' Probate Judgt'. Come in todfiy and equip your car with a sef. of new Firestone Champion Tires — the„ ists as well as those inerested in the The above estate having been" ad­ only tires made which are safety_pjpved pn the speedway for your protection on the highway. Tonsorial Artist conservation of the beauty—txf.....t.lie mitted to probate and A. G. Rogers desert in its natural setting. having been appointed Executor. WHEN IN NEED OF ANYTHING It is Ordered, That four months firestone CHAMPION Tif««tone HIQH SPEED T*riinjj is good ""which V+H-X,-MUI -or before the 2nd dfty of TRUCK TIRES AND OTHER PASSENGER CAR SIZES PRICED PROPORTIONATELY LOW J3USTARD tends to conserve trees. Without .Tunn, -UKlU,..ut ten o'clock in the fore- >ecome General Building and trees our land would aT"rmrrm--4tt—^w4ric4i^Uiae--tlamis_wiLLJxej Usfaii^fo TJi« Vole* of flrestoni with Richard Crooks, Margaret SpeaJri and dreary waste. hctttx /o,0y*~eYC^^ Licensed Electrical It is Further Ordered, That public Mrs. Lisk reports that she has seen ; notice thereof be given by pubiica- Ll«*en *o The Firestone Voice or The Farm—Everett Mitchell Interviews a Champion CONTRACTOR a. cardinal in' her yard. I wonder if'-| tioji of thirt order for three succes- Farmer each weed during,noon hour. See local paper for station and time. NEW-^)R~RePA+R~WORK H\a nayAinn] in mnkinp. his Hojlie^Jilljuye weeks previous to said day of Of All Kind. the woods northwest of town, near Ilea ring Til the Charlevoix CoiinTy (he lake. When I walked there one Herald, a newspaper printed and cir- Reasonable Terms day~~tast spring (before mosquito oulfttpd—in unid-eoventy^ TTORTHERN^UTe COMPANY ADDRESS: R. 2, EAST JORDAN time) I_th"ought it "might be a finjv. EliV-AN. iU-JlU.EG&EGG,EIi, PHONE 9? EAST JORDAN, MICH. place for birds,. _ %. • . |T>-3 Judge of Probate.

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