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VOLUME 51 EAST JORDAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1947 NUMBER 37

Mrs. SEILER — 2nd Grade Township Snow Removal Dairy Herd Improvement (Same room as last year) Merchants Win Calvin J. Bennett School Begins Program Threatened Association Is Planned Keith Ogden Beverly Braman Dies Suddenly Next Monday Diane Whiteford Ray Welsh At the regular meeting of the Three Games If farmers desire they may have a Louise Donaldson Rhea Zitka Charlevoix County Road Commission KEEPS RECORD CLEAN DURING cow testing association. Mr. Lee Cook 1947-48 SCHOOL TERM OPENS Lucille Haney Gene Richards held Monday of this week a decis­ of Levering is taking the testing WAS ACTIVE AS SECRETARY OF MONDAY SEPT. 15. TEACHERS Charles Kamradt Glendara Hunt ion was reached by the members of SEASON'S CLOSE course at Michigan State College CHARLEVOIX CO. AG'L. SOCIETY AND ASSIGNMENTS Judith Taylor Wendy Knudsen the board to immediately meet with from September 8 to 18th. He is in­ AT TIME OF DEATH Wanda Gilkerson Joseph Leu the various township boards of the The East Jordan Merchants won terested in testing in this County in The 1947-48 term of the East Jor­ Diane Taylor Linda Bustard County and place before them the three games in as many starts dur­ order that he will he near home. Stricken with a heart attack dur­ dan Rural Agricultural School opens Albert Hayes Judy Shedina drastic condition of maintenance ing the past week. The first two wins Charlevoix County already has the ing an early morning trip to the Fair Monday Sept. 15 at 9:00 A. M. Pre­ Linda Raymond Armand Drapeau funds with regard to the township gained them the baseball champion­ needed equipment and all we lack is grounds Thursday, Sept. 4th, Calvin liminary schedules will be until Donald Russell Marion Edgar roads. ship of the fair, while the third mov­ 25 farmers who want to know the J. Bennett, secretary of the Charle­ noon. In the afternoon schedules Dennis Archer Terry Healey In the course of the past years ed the locals nearer to the Top-of- production of their cows voix Agricultural Society, was able will be corrected and students will Annora Dougherty Fred Sever these funds have been steadily de- Michigan League championship. At By testing and weighing the milk to drive to his home f»rom where he have the opportunity to secure books. Mary Martinek Gerome Sulak pelted through rising costs of labor, the Fair, East Jordan won from Man­ from each cow, a farmer can pick out was taken by ambulance to Petoskey The buses will leave at 12:00 Re­ Rose Mary Partee Dale Looze materials and equipment and with no celona 1-0 and Bellaire 6-1. the cows that are keeping him and but passed away soon after reaching gular classes will begin Tuesday Karen Touchsone Grover Bundy new revenues received and the Gaso­ , The Mancelona game was a pitch­ can cull those that he has been kep- Little Traverse hospital. Sept. 16. James Raveau Fred Kamradt line and Weight Taxs from which er's duel all the way with Louis ing. With feed prices the way they Mr. Bennett had recently suffer­ The following teachers have been Allen Ingalls Clare Crawford County Road Commission derives its (Monk) Cihak on the mound for the are, cows that don't pay for their ed attacks but concealed them from employed for th coming school year. Mary Detloff Ivan Pettifor income, still remaining the same locals and Reverny for Mancelona. board should be removed from the the family until the finaj. one deve- Robert Crowell level as before the rise in costs, the Monk gave up 6 hits and struck out herd. Also D. H. I. A. records are lopmed. Elementary School situation has .become not only serious 3. Deverny gave East Jordan 6 hits official records and may be used in Cal, as he was familiarly known, Frank Malone — Principal — 6th MRS. HAGER — 3rd Grade but 1 almost phopless unless he and struck out 9. Monk was tough the sale of a registered animal. was born July 7, 1885, the second ia grade. (Same room as last year) comes in the very near future. With men on base, and East Jordan If you are interested in cow test­ a family of ten sons born to Mr. and Alma Larsen — 6th grade. James Barnett Fay Bennett With the Governor's veto of the played air-tight ball. C. Saxton and ing and desire more information,- Mrs. William J. Bennett. AIL with Elizabeth Dhaseleer — 5th grade. Milton Bulman James Craig one-cent gasoline tax measure that Sommerville each had two hits in drop a card to the County Extens­ the exception of George who died at Sadie Liskum — 5th grade. Lynn Bartholomew Alma Moore was passed by the legislature the last this game. Batteries for Mancelona: ion Office. The plan is to hold a the age of five, grew to manhood and Lois Snyder —- 4th grade. Gilbert Arnott Gerald Carney available source of incolhe from Devernp and Ladd; East Jordan, L. meeting to fully discuss tlHs pro­ rmained residents of this vicirtity, Grace Galmore — 3rd and 4th Stephen Brennan Lavina Bowen States Revenues was lost. Cihak and Crowell. gram during the last week of Sept. Cal being th© first of the nine fero- Betty Detloff Sharon Hayes To explain this condition to the With Vale Gee leading the way o———— thers to pass on. The father and &» Jessie Hager — 3rd grade. James Donaldson Lee Thomas various townships of Charlevoix with 5 hits for 5 times at bat, the boys formed a ball teem in the «arl$r Agnes Johnston — 2nd and 3rd Mildred Handy Fritz Healey County the Commission decided to Merchants defeated Bellaire 6-1 Fri­ part' of the century that was fanWQ grades. Bonnie Lou Hawley Sonja Olson meet with the respective boards and day to cinch the fair championship. FarmTopics throughout northern Michigan. Cora Seiler — 2nd grade. Jack Ingalls Gladys Ingalls place the matter before them to at- Monk Cihak -took up where he left Mr. Bennett was active fo* niat^ Margaurite Stokes — 1st grade. August Knop Lyle Howard temp to work out a solution before off Thursday and pitched 6 innings of COUNTY HOST TO FOREIGN years in civic and fraternal circles. Marion Brooks — 1st grade. Shelby McClure * Betty McRoberts the coming winter season. scoreless ball,. before he retired in STUDENTS While serving as Master of CharleA favor of Charles Saxton, who pitch­ voix County Pomona Grange he svtar- *• Helen Severance —; kindergarten. Richard Nelson David Nachazel The Commission will receive the "&- Elizabeth Downing.— kindergarten. Donald Peters Jean Partee ed the last 3 innings of the game. Charlevoix County and praticular- ted the movement that resulted in representatives of the townships at the formation of the Top' O' Mich­ Melva Pardee Fredick Palmiter meetings to be held in Charlevoix, East Jordan got 12 hits with Chuck ly East Jordan will be hosjt. to twenty Junior and Senior High School Connie Russell Todd Reuling Saxton and Bulow getting 2 each. students from twenty different coun­ igan Electric Company ten years ago East Jordan and Boyne City on the and of which he was secretary from John B. Smith — Principal. Ralph Shepard Bonnie Snyder dates of September 17th, 19th and Vale Gee got 4 singles and a . ties of the world. Dr. O. Ulrey^ of Max Damoth — Coach and Social Allen Skinkle Raymond Walker Batteries for Bellaire: Schoolcraft Michigan State College is in charge its inception until the recent change 22nd respectively. of personnel. Science. Rachel Webster Margie Wright —o and Deverny, Huminston and Scho­ of this group. John Downing — English. Buayne Evans Kathryn Balliett olcraft; for East Jordan, L. Cihak The students will arrive in East He was supervisor of South Arm Alta Drapeau — Music and Eng­ Terry Meyers Patricia Von Soosten State Ferries at and C Saxton and Crowell. Jordan at 4:30 pm on Tuesday, Sep­ twp. for twelve years and served two lish. Howard Donaldson The Straits Home runs featured the game with tember 16. In the afternoon they two-year terms as chairman of the Harry Jankoviak — Shop and A- At An Ail-Time High Cheboygan Sunday, which was play­ will inspect" the Jordan Valley Co­ Board; was president of the East rithmetic. ed there. Al Dougherty got one for operative Creamery and the East Jordan Chamber of Commerce in MRS. GALMORE — 3rd 4th Grade 1943; and was the present chairman Mildred Karr — History and Eng­ (Sam? room as last year Labor Day week end business of East Jordan with no one on base in Jordan .Cooperative Company. At lish. the second inning, while Beauchamp 6:30 they will be served a dinner and of the northern district (comprising Third Gradb the State Ferris at the Straits of seven counties) of the Michigan Leatha Larsen — Geography and Mackinac set an all-time record for and Zyble accounted for Cheboygan's a short program will follow. They Arithmetic. Joanne Bader Richard Bayliss runs. Zyble's came with 1 are making a tour of Michigan's Far- Table-top Licensee's Congress. Sandra Boswell Karen Bradshaw this period, according to Highway In fraternal circles he was- a mem­ c-v- Kenneth Leckrone — Agriculture. Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler. man on. Howard Sommerville pro­ er Cooperatives. Charles Michaels — Science and Betty Czykoski Cal Darbee vided the important blow as he drove Ed Rebman ber of Peninsula Grange, serving as Deanna Derenzy Judy Dressel During the four-day period starting its Master for a number of years; Math. August 29, the ferries transported out a single with two men on in the County Agr'l Agent Vaun Ogden — English, General Marian Donaldson Betty Fisher eight inning to drive in the tying the Odd Fellows; Knights of Pythiaa; Larry Ingalls Vera Judy 19,680 vehicles between Mackinaw and Moose- lodges. FOE the last six Science and Biology. City and St. Ignace, compared to 17,- and winning runs. Michigan Canoe Mary Osier — Homemaking. Nacy Kidder Carol* Klooster ' Chuck Saxton was the local pitcher years he has been proprietor of Judy Lilak Martha Lord 135 in the same period of 1941, the Championship Race Cal's Tavern on the East Jordan - Rennie Sue Savage —Commerce. previous record, representing a gain and allowed 6 hits and 3 rums as he Donald Winkle — Music. Janet Malone Alva Noirot struck out 8 and walked 5. Crist, Is Grueling Affair Boyne City road. Larry Woodcock Judy Lick of 13 per cent. This year's total also In February, 1928, he was, mar­ To eliminate confusion I should eclipsed the 1946 Labor Day week Cheboygan pitcher, allowed 6 hits like to have the following pupils re­ Fourth Gradia and 4 runs while striking out 17 and First annual 240 mile canoe race ried to Mrs. Rachel Trimble Webster. end by 3,101 vehicles, or 18.7 per­ Surviving are his mother; the widow; port to the rooms and teachers listed Janet Bennett Fred Clark cent. . walking 3. Bulow got two hits to from Grayling down the AuSable below: Emily Gibbard Donna -Gilkerson lead the locals. Batteries for Cre- River to Oscoda was won by Allen a stepson, Thomas Webster; a step­ During the last week end, an in­ daughter, Mrs. Minnie Webster Des- Joan Hawley Jon Jankoviak dividual day record also was estab­ boygan: Crist and Beauchamp; East Car and Delbert Case. These two vet­ Kay Klooster William Kolker Jordan, C. Saxton and Crowell. eran Grayling canoeists copped the Jardins; eight brothers, Delbert, MARION BROOKS — First Grade lished. On August 29 the ferries car­ Henry , Frank, Bryan, Daniel, Sam­ Darrell Kortanek Marilyn -Looze ried 5,766 vehicles. The previous re­ If Cheboygan defeats Alpena Sun­ $500 first prize by paddling the river (Same room as last year) Frances Martin Shirley Misner day, EaSt Jordan will be undisputed in the amazingly short time of 21 uel, John, and Louis, and a large cord for a single day's business was number of nephews and nieces. Sharon Walker Jerome Chanda Sharon Moore Adele Nasson» 5,374 vehicles set July 4 this year champions of both rounds of league hrs. and 3 minutes. A distance which Rex Bennett Eleanor Myers Leon Nemecek Elaine Petrie play. If Alpena wins, a play-off vacationing eanoeist required 6 days Funeral services were conducted Through August 24 the Ferries by Rev. Scott Bartholomew Suaday Robert Healey Jackie Gee Robert Prebbles Yvonne Rouse this year had carried 312,656 vehi­ game will be necessary between East to navigate. Dorothy Miles David Damoth Reva Skinkle Frances Welsh Jordan and Alpena. The Cheboy­ afternoon at the Watson mortuary cles across the Straits, a gain of 39,- Six prizes totaling $1000 were where hundreds of friends stood on Bonnie Barnett Lanny Hott Mary Jo Wheaton 274 or 14.4 per cent above the same gan game, however, is the last sched­ given together with $20 consolation Keith Danforth Ernest Handy uled game for the locals. the surrounding lawns durtfxg t&e period in 1946. Last year was the prize to each canoe team to cross the ceremony, only a small portion of Karen Jackson Robert Detloff MRS. SNYDER — 4th Grade biggest in the history of the State Batting Averages finish line. Earl Donaldson Robert Smith AB H Ave them being able to find* room i» the (Same room as last year) Ferry business. Prizes, amojunt of prize, winners, mortuary parlors whose walls w«re Robert Shaw Barbara Ager V .Gee 85 32 .371 time and place of residence are as William Bisfhaw Ulaine Allen Gacy Bartlett banked with the profusion of floral Barbra Kerr Paul Bergman John Brock Marjorie Scott Shirley Shaw F. Crowell 54 19 .352 follows:—• : Thelma Zoulek Richard Sloop H. Sommerville S3 28 .336 tributes. ' Patty Cihak Thomas Cosier Virginia Severance Larry Spence First prize, $500, Allen Car and Bearers were Leon Miller, Har­ Bruce Healey Robert Johnson Thomas Sheridan Orpha Spence C. Saxton 87' 29 .334 Delbert Case, 21 hours, 3 min., Gray­ Janet Handy Barbara Fisher Martha Galmore old Lees, Henry Bos, Peter Weilaad, Dorothy Peck Bobby Halladay Bernard Hammond Roger Stokes Gary Whitaker L. Cihak 42 14 .833 ling. Judith Ecker Herman Prevo M. Cihak 85 27 .316 Clinton Blanchard, and Ray Diebert. Mary Ann Hayden Everett Ingalls Richard Barnette Suane_ Arnot Second price, $250, Jack Davis, Burial was at Sunset Hill. Jimmie Galmore James Addis D. Gee 66 21 .316 Jay Stephan, 21 hours, 27 min, Gray­ Mary Ann Moblo Dick Johnson Gerald Kinner John Zoulek Daniel Bennett Gene LaLonde David Lisk C. Bulow 64 18 .281 ling. William Dunson Carol Johnson R. Gee 26 7 .269 Third prize, $100, Albert Gierke, Beverley Pearsall Paul Liskum Sandina Liskum MRS. LARSEN — 6th Grade The Sister Kenny Sanford Sweet Darlene McRoberts Harry Misner (Room 11 High School) A. Dougherty 85 22 .261 Arnold Hubbel, 21 hours, 39 min., Gary St. Charles Ronald Bryzik B. Saxton 73 16 .219 Grayling. Polio Drive Is On Hope Pardee Wayne Murphy Mary Lou Nyland Catherine Antoine James Blaha Robert Winstone Patricia Barnett Herman Bergman F. Morgan 6 1 .166 Fourth prize, $75, Bernard Fow­ Kathleen Nemecek Walter Olson The drive for funds to the Billy Pardee Shirley Peck Glenda Derenzy Ru$Sr Dirks G. Gee 27 3 .111 ler, James Wakely, 21 hours, 49 min, Team average 126 Grayling. Sister Kenny Foundation to continue MRS. STOKES — First Grade Arthur Prevo Phillip Rayniond Tedsdy Ecker Kieth Evans their work with crippled children. i« (Same room as last year) Patsy Rebec Edwin K. Reuling Joyce F,yan Ray Gee Fifth prize, $50, Hugh Bissonette, Gene Lavaek, Oscoda. being sponcered by the Rotary Club. Jackie Kraemer Jon Bos Frank Russell Jean Ann Sherman Dean Gilkerson Joan Kenny THE WEATHER Karleen Larsen Arthur Lundy Sixth prize, $25, Chris King, Ho­ For your convenience, official can* Patricia Porter James Kenney Frances Smith Lee Spence Max Min Snow Wind Cond'n are in all business places, or you Chontill Sommerville Wm. Rebec Irene Lundy Jean McDonald mer King, Grayling. Gary Chiak Kenneth Crawford Temp. Rain or Weather Five of the six prizes were won by can leave your contribution at the Joseph Pienta Anita Petrie Peggy Walton Walter Murphy Carol McPhersbn Jean Nachazel Sept. bank. Walter Steuer Richard Streeter Marcia Nachazel Elizabeth Nemek 3 84 50 SW clear Grayling men using 42 magnesim Carol Ann Hale Mary Balliet canoes. Their knowledge of the river One half of your contribution Jerry Burk Paul Bowen Ruth Ann Kratochivil Peter Nemecek Eleanor Raymond 4 87 52 SW ptcldy Louise Olstrom Lula Mae Ruekle of the five dam backwaters and stays in the State to fight polio, and Donna Jean Neumann Linda Skop 5 84 60 SW clear the other half goes to the Elizabeth Frank Rusnell Janet Rusnell 6 90 58 SW K- clear portages showed to thedr advantage Marilyn Halladay Perry Bennett MISS DHASELEER — 5th Grade over the other 80 contestants. Kenny Instijtiijte. in Minneapolis, Carolyn Stokes Alan Shepard Demar Skinkle Alison Sloan 7 81 57 SE pt

FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS been a useful citizen. WITH THE PENINSULA... Mr. David Gaunt, wlio has been WANT AD RATES FOR SALE — two single unit Milk­ (Edited by Mrs. E. Hayden) visiting relatives in Eastern Michi­ ANTRIM COUNTY ers, $100.—ELLSWORTH FARM gan since July 4, came to his home, STORE, Ellsworth. 37-2 N. D. Bailey, D. V. M., will be on AGR'L AGENT 2c per word — minimum charge 40c the Will Gaunt Sr. home, Sunday. . Kirkpatrick, Extension Agent the Peninsula, beginning Monday, His sister, Mrs. Martha Earl of w Subsequent insertions FOR SALE — No. 1 Hay, Baled. 30 Sept. 8, at Orchard Hill, to give the tons at the "farm. — WILBUR D'- Boyne City also came for an indefin­ HOME EXTENSION OFFICER'S cattle the T-B test, until all cattle ite visit. David Gaunt and Mrs. Earl (If ordered with first insertion ONLY. If not, above rate applies) WATER, R. 2, East Jordan. 37x2 are tested. TRAINING SCHpOL HELD are the only surviving members of TUESDAY .lc per word — minimum charge 20c CUSTOM SILO FILLING. Taking a Mr. and Mrs. George Katzenmeyer the John Gaunt family, pioneers of few jobs filling silo. — E. C. of Bowling Green, Ohio, came Sat­ what is known as East Shore Acres Twenty-two officers representing 10c EXTRA PER INSERTION IF CHARGED MOSHER, R. 3, East Jordan. 37x1 urday to visit their daughter, Mrs. about 1868. David Gaunt has been a eleven of the fifteen Home Extension Charles Graham and family at East resident of the Peninsula ever since. Groups of Antrim County attended This means all phone-in orders. NOT RESPONSIBLE for any ANNOUNCING a new dealer. Ful­ Shore Acres, Three Bells Dist., until He is in his 90th year while Mrs. an Officer's Training School on Sep­ mistakes in ads telephoned in. ler Brushes sales and service. Con­ Wednesday, Sept. 10. Earl is a few years younger but still tember 2 in the Court House at Bel- tact J. B. FEAR, Rt. 3, East Jor­ Mr. Bernard Pearce Graham, son well along in .the 80s. laire. dan. 37x1 LOST AND FOUND FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Graham of Mr. and Mrs. Lance Russ of Lake It was decided that in the future, Three Bells Dist., who will be in the FOR SALE — Silo Filler, McCor- Shore road caught the limit of bass, die representatives of this Executive LOST —• Asthma and hay fever neu- FOR SALE — Silo Filler, $75.00 — tenth grade when school starts, has Saturday. Mrs. Russ' brother, RoL- imick - fleering. — HEALEY'S : Council would be elected at the tralizer (badly needed). Reward. Inquire at COUNTY-FARM. 37x1 been chosen as the delegate to rep­ land Baxter of Flint, who is visiting Achievement Day in the spring. How­ — ED. FAUST at Jordan Valley DAIRY FARM, phone 240-F2, resent Charlevoix County at the 4-H them, also has excellent luck fishing. Boyne City. 37-1 ever, to get started this year, the Creamery. 37x2 MINNOWS, All Sizes for sale at Club Conservation Program, and left Grandma Hayden of Orchard Hill i!ollowing people were appointed as JACK'S, across from Co-ops. 37x2 Monday, Sept. 8, with Mr. Festerling, received a birth announcement last representatives on the Council: Mrs. AUCTION SALE IN STOCK — A quantity of 10x15 COLLIE PUPS For Sale. — HARRY Metal Clasp Envelopes for sale Dist. 4-H Club Agent, for Higgins week telling of the birth of Miss Sal­ Alic Nyland, Central Lake; Mrs. Ef- SATURDAY, Sept. 13, 1:30 p. m. — HAYES, 3½ miles east of East at 5c each at THE HERALD Office. Lake, where he will spend a week. ly Jan Beyer, daughter of Mr. and fie Essenberg, Ellsworth; Mrs. Pearl 10 miles east of East Jordan on Jordan; Boyne City, R. 1. 37x1 East Jordan. 37atf While there he will help count deer, Mrs. Rolland Beyer (Zepha Faust), Kube and Mrs. Roy Dunson, Bellaire; M-32, or 10 miles south of Boyne fight forest fires, study soil minerals, in Detroit, August 28, which brings Mrs. Maud Phillips and Mrs. Gor­ City. Complete furnishings of a FOR SALE — y2 acre Lots on Sixth FOR SALE — International 6 h. p. fish, etc. Between hikes and studies her igreat-grandchildren up to 27. don Larson, Alba. large house all in excellent condi­ St. Level land. — ELMER Engine. Log Trailer suitable for there are many recreational facilities The Sam Kamradt family of Tra­ Districk Home Demonstration A- tion. — GEO. MOWAS. John Ter- GREEN, corner Division and tractor. — FRANK ATKINSON, for him to avail himself of. It is a verse City visited Mrs. Kamradt's geht, Virginia Vance announces the Avest, Auctioneer. 37x1 Sixth Sts. 36x4 R. 1, East Jordan. 37x2 great privilege for any farm boy. parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Russell schedule for Leaders Training Meet­ Mr. and Mrs. Ora Howe of Spring at Ridge way Farms, and other rela­ ings for Antrim County as follows: " — WANTED FOR SALE — Old frame house to be FOR SALE — 1940 Harley Davison Lake, who are camping at Whiting taken down. Bids asked for one 61-OHV Motorcycle. In good con­ tives over the week nd. September 10, 1947 — "Up to Park over Sunday, were Sunday din­ Kenneth R(ussell, who has been Date Finishes" WANTED REALESTATE, Especially week. With right to- reject any and dition, lots of extras. — LEON ner guests of their cousin, Arthur all bids. — MRS. ELSIE TAYLOR. PETERSON, East Jordan. 37x1 across the Straits, spent the week October 21, 1947 — "Handmade Farms. The old reliable Strout Nicloy and family at Sunny Slopes end with his family at Maple Lawn Agency. — W'M. F. TINDALL, 37-1 Rugs" FOR SALE — 1936 Chevrolet and a farm. Mr. Howe will be remembered farm. November — "Christmas Work­ Broker, Boyne City. Write or as the young man who suffered a phone and we will call. 5-tf HOW'S YOUR RADIO? Now is the T-20 model International Tractor. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Healey of shop" time to get ready for the winter. Tractor in good condition. — stroke some 30 years ago while visit­ Willow Brook farm spent Thursday February 24, 1948 — "Save Time WANTED — Clean rags for cleaning We fix all makes. — BOB'S RA­ HOWARD DONALDSON, R. 1, ing his aunt, Mrs. James Nicloy at night in Petoskey with Mrs. Healey's and Engergy" purposes. Urgently needed NOW. DIO SHOP in the Firestone Bldg., Ellsworth. 37x1 Sunny Slopes farm, and has been mother, Mrs. Rengold Deitz, who, is October 5,. 1948 — "Legal Phases Will pay 5e> per lb. for rags free East Jordan. 35-tf confined to a wheel chair ever since, very ill at a hospital there. Masters of Home Management." from buttons, etc., and not less FOR SALE — Kalamazoo Emperor but in spite of this'handicap has sup­ E'ritz and Terry spent the night with November3, 1948 — "New Tex­ than 1 sq. foot in size. Cannot use WIRING SUPPLIES — Complete Range with hot water front* Good ported himself, raised a family, and their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. tiles" heavy material like overalls, etc. assortment on hand including met­ condition. Reasonable. — LUD- Charles Healey at Far View farm. Plans for the Apple Pie Baking al and porcelain switch and outlet WIG LARSEN, phone 153-F21, R. THE HERALD OFFICE. 3- NOT RESPONSIBLE ' Lyle Wilson, who has been em­ Contest to; be held November 11, in boxes, duplex recepticals, Romex 3, East Jordan. 37x1 ployed at Willow Brook farm, has connection with the Northern Mich­ FOR SALE ilSCELLANEOUS wire, all sizes. — SHERMAN'S FIRESTONE STORE. 16-ti. FOR SALE — '37 Ford, good tires-, At the public library, a small boy been obliged to quit by doctors or­ igan Potato, and Apple Show at Bel­ FX)R SALE — Beet rack for truck, needs a paint job; radio and heat­ presented a well-worn, dirty vol­ ders. laire were discussed. Each local 6 ton cap. New last year. FRED WOOD— Green Mill Wood For er. $300.00 Can be seen at the Ed. ume at the return desk. The libra­ A cool wave struck this section group is going to be responsible for MOORE, R. 3, East Jordan. 37x1 Sale, $15.00 for approximately six Portz farm, or call between 4 and rian glanced at the book, leaned Sunday, for which everyone is grate­ having at least three apple pies en­ cord load delivered. — M. C. 7 p. m., phone 153-F5. 37x1 fofward to take in the size of the ful. tered in this contest. Some very fine FOR SALE — Evinrude Outboard BRICKER & SONS, phone 264- boy, and then remarked, "This is Some very interesting items were prizes are to be awarded the winners. Motor, 2½ h. p. Price $25.00. — F31, Boyne City, or write J. H. DRY MILL WOOD, dry enough for rather technical, isn't it?" mailed in for .this week for which I Pies entered in the contest will be HARRISON RANNEY, 207 Echo Bricker, R. 3, Boyne City. 46-tf kindling. Come and get it at whole­ Planting his feet firmly on the am very thankful. If everyone would used at the Tuesday evening Banquet St., West Side. . 37x1 sale price. If you want wood deliv­ floor, the boy, half defiant, half call or write in when there is no tele­ of the show. ANTIQUE and MODERN Household ered see Ira Bartlett. — FRANK apologetic, said, "It was that way PAINTING — Am prepared to give phone, this column would be very Articles Repaired. Wood turning, ATKINSON, R. 1, E. Jordan. 37x5 when I got it." much better. I always have a pencil Avoid Shock your house or barns a good coat­ band saw and shaper work. Win­ ing at reasonable price. Write us and paper handy and take news any Do not stand on damp ground or dow Screens made to your size. FOR SALE — A wheat straw stack LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON? time, night or day. I am nearly al­ a wet floor while attaching, detach­ and will give you estimate. — Acetylene and Arc Welding. Braz­ of about 5 tons. Also a small bean v CLARENCE HOSLER, R. 3, East ways near the phone, especially at ing or using electrical appliances. ing and Soldering. — HARVEY'S thresher in fair shape. Will sell at meal time. Jordan. 32x6 SHOP, Water St., west of M-66. a reasonable price. — FRANK 32-tf REBEC, R. 1, phone 212-F13, East A Reich of Lone Ash is erecting a Christians Called Atheists ARE YOU IN-NEED of repairs for Jordan. 37x2 cement block hen house to replace Early Christians were called athe­ your Kalamazoo range, heater, or FOR SALE — 80 acre Farm located the one destroyed by fire in April, ists by their enemies because they furnace? WE CARRY large stock on Highway 131 four miles north PERMANENTS — Bfochfae] ma- 1946. did not believe in the heathen gods. of repairs for your convenience. of Mancelona. Some buildings and chineless, cold waves and Elasti- ALSO TAKE ORDERS for other some timber, two wells. Good for Curls. Special prices for perman- makes of ranges, heaters and fur­ cottages, garage, road stand or any ents for school girls. — Phone 173, naces.—KALAMAZOO SALES & business. ' Electricity and tele­ STILES BEAUTY SHOP, City SERVICE, 211 S. Lake St., phone phone. Will sell cheap. Inquire of Bldg., East Jordan. 35x3 456, Boyne City. Open daily, Sat­ WILLIAM YOUNGSTER, 3 V2 mi. urday evenings till 9:00. 27-13 north of Mancelona on 131. Ad­ FOR SALE — My farm on Sec. 12 dress, Mancelona. 36x2 in Jordan Twp. 169 acres, 10-room ^ house; barn; 10 acres orchard, 35 "Pop, why do you always sign my FOR SALE — Allis Chalmers 60 acres timber. Electric Lights. Mail report card with an 'X'?" combine ready to go $500. Farmall route on M-32. — MRS. GEORGE "I don't . want your teacher to F30 Tractor $900. International W. BROWN, East Jordan. 35x3 think anyone who could read and 22-38 Grain Thresher ready to go write would have a son as dumb as FmiMW SMOPPiKS $90. 1933 Ford tudor $175. 1930 FOR SALE — We can make deliv­ you." East Jordan. Modern, excellent Chevrolet Truck needs small am­ ery on Johnson 5 h. p. motors. Al­ location, 2 bedroom bungalow. 13 ount of repair $125. 1932 Inter­ so have boat trailer, one fuel oil Pleading Guilty acres of land with private fish national Truck $200. 1935 Inter­ tank 160 gal. cap. for sale, some The justice of the peace in a.small KALAMAZOO BOTTLED GAS STOVES pond. national Truck $300. 1936 Reo used motors on hand. A good stock Southern town had to hear and of parts for motors. — F. E. judge cases that were brought be­ HKALAMA^^ 43 acre farm 2 miles from East Truck $300. 1928 Dodge Coupe $75.00. 1928 Chevrolet Doodlebug CLARK, phone 321-J, 407 E. Main, fore him, and he also performed Jordan, good land, ideal for com­ 'Boyne City. 36x2 occasional • marriage ceremonies. mercial cherry orchard $1800. $50.0,0. 1931 Model A Ford Pickup XISTAPAS™ $150. Massey Harris Side Rake This made it difficult for him to dis­ BATTERIES, BATTERIES, BAT­ sociate the various functions of his Large new 32 x 36 factory $35. International Grain Binder TERIES — Wholesale and Retail. office. During the course of a wed­ ~~~~~~~CO^ built log cottage on Lake Charle­ $35. Several horse drags, potato Bowers and Universal. The best ding service one day, he asked the voix. $4000. sprayer, gas engines, mowing ma­ buy in the North. A brand new bride: "Do you take this man to be PRESStfl^^ chines, etc. Make us an offer. Hea­ fully guaranteed battery as low your husband?" The bride nodded 2000 feet of lake frontage near vy tractor trailer, 18 ft. rack Ellsworth with small cabin $9000. as $9.75 exch. A good allowance emphatically. "And you,'' said the $150. Light tractor trailer $35. " for your old batteries. — EAST justice, turning to the bridegroom, ELEcrmc^LOciiTAii^^ 20 acres near East Jordan with Wood frame buzz rig $15. 18 in. JORDAN AUTO PARTS. 37x2 "what have you to say in your own old house and barn. $1350. x 10 ft. Metal Lathe motor drive defense?" ifLECTRIcT^^ with most attachments. $250. New 16mm SOUND PROJECTOR avail­ Also lake and river frontage, all metal saw mill husk with heavy able with operator. Also accomo­ ] Appreciative Listener ELECTRIC IRONS _ ^^77^95^ and good farms. arbor $50. New 3 /2 cu. ft. Cement dates 16mm. silent films. Reason­ 'Just listen to that man talking to Mixer with electric motor $65 or able rental rates. Just the thing himself," commented the wife to ELECTRK^HOTI*^^ $50 less motor. Lincoln" Electric for your meetings. We can assist her husband. An elderly man, walk­ Welder, 300 amp., gasofme driven. you in selecting from wide range ing in front of them, was talking to RADIOS ____ -<__ 19.95 up $300. A real buy. — EAST JOR­ of subjects through our catalogs. himself in a very serious and ad­ : Real Estate DAN AUTO PARTS. 37x1 For further information call monishing tone. Apparently he BOYNE CITY 331-J. 35-4 overheard the remark for he slowed f Phone: down, and lifting his hat, bowed ««« *m» I* E. Jordan 259-F3 Charlevoix 263 deeply and with a twinkling light in Lighthouse Mission his eyes said: "Pardon me, mad­ K. DRESSEL, Rep, SMITH "BASEMENT CHURCH" am, but it is necessary to talk to Corner Fourth and E. Division Sts. someone sensible sometimes." REAL ESTATE Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Holborn, Pastors NEEDS all Types of PROPERTY Very Sad Story Hundreds of our downstate and Sunday School — 10:30 a. m. The young girl came home from x 16 SNOW TIRES.__ $10.45 (also other sizes) out-of-state clients will be driv­ Worship Service — 11:30 a. m. the movies, and her mother asked: ing up to Inspect our offerings. Evening Service — 8:00 p. m. "Was it a verv nice story, dar­ UP LAMPS, Large Assortment 3.50 FOR SALE FOR A FAST DEAL Young Peoples P.Y.P.A. service — ling?" Tuesday evening, 7:15 o'clock. The youngster said: "A lovely PLUGS 39c each 7 room house, bath, wired for Call Prayer Service, Wednesday even­ story, mother, But I don't think stove, 2 lots, garage. $3150 ELMIRA ing, 8:00 o'clock. you'd like it, the ending is so sad." SEATJCOV^ Bible Study Sewice, Friday even­ "How is that?" asked the mother. 4 room house, 10 acres land, 5-F22 Today ing, 8:00 o'clock. "Well," sjaid the youngster, "you just outside city limits. $2,500. see, she dies, and the poor fellow I want to marry your daughter, has to go back to his wife." 100 acres on Jordan River, sir?." TS^YCLEiTTITZirr^ 10,000 ft. lumber, V2 mile river frontage, 1 mile frontage on old "Have you seen my wife yet?" Clinical Appraisal WANTED "Yes, sir, but I prefer your daugh­ There was the amateur painter BICYCXES^^ M-66. $2,000. ter." who called in a doctor friend to look 48-acre Farm, 7 room house, at the painting he had just finished. STEEL WAGONS Large 8.95 Small 2.50 Business Places America's now the land of the It showed a man who was appar­ bath, Deer Creek runs through ently in great agony. property. $5,000. I have buyers with good finan­ free with no home of the brave. ~™~nFOlTLA^^ cial and business background that After the doctor had looked at his masterpiece a few minutes, the WIRING SUPPLIES AND FIXTURES, SEE US 5 room house in East Jordan. are waiting for me to locate good, painter asked': Bath, electricity, oil heat, fully lively, going hardware, drug and MAIL AT "Well, what do you think of it?" furnished. $5,000. grocery stores; restaurants, beer EAST JORDAN "It looks like pneumonia to me," gardens, boat livery, cabin site, the doctor replied. Lake and River Property lake properties. INCOMING 7 a. m., 2:50 and 5:00 p. m. Petunia Jackson remarked, when shown her new-born infant, "He OUTGOING looks jess lak his pappy, if ah remem- Realtor -- YANSON 1:40, 2:50 and 5:20 p. m. bahs right." o FRANK NACHA^ZEL, Salesman. ALBA, Mich., REALTOR Lobby open 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. "I guess I've lost another pupil," Phone 73 — East Jordan Phone 24 Closed all day Sundays. said the professor as his glass eye rolled down the sink. isiL CHARLLVOiX COUNiY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1947

PROBATE ORDER WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS FARMERS' Ail): Appointment of Administrator Opportunity State of Michigan. The Probate Farmers, hard-pressed for ca^h to Court for he County of Charlevoix. Stress U.S. Power for Peace; buy live'stock or machinery, and oth­ icto At a session of said Court, held at ers who want to buy their own the Probate Office, in the City of farms, will have improved opportu­ Stern Rations Curb Britain; nities to fulfill their aims next year Charlevoix in said County, on the through an $84,500,000 fund re­ 5th day of September A. D. 1947. Labor Hits Taft-Hartley Act cently authorized by congress. Present, Honorable Rollie L. Lewis, Estimated to meet the needs of Judge of Probate. m Released by Western Newspaper Union 130,000 farm families, the fund has In the Matter of the Estate of (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of Dorothy Roberts Kinner, Deceaser. Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) been set up primarily as a source for loans for purchase of machin­ Irving Kinner, widower' of said ery and livestock, although 15 mil­ deceased, having filed in said Court STRENGTH: lion dollars is earmarked to help his petition praying that the admin­ To Keep Peace families buy farms of their own. istration of said estate be granted" to It was more in sorrow than in Backed by this money, made himself, or to. some other suitable anger, reflecting nore brooding1 de­ available through the Farmers person. termination than optimism, that Home administration, a borrower ft is Ordered, That the 29th day of President Truman told the final ses­ may approach a bank, financial in­ September, A. D. 1947, at ten o'­ sion of the inter-American defense stitution or even an individual for a clock in the forenoon, at said Probate conference at Quitandinha, ^Brazil, loan up to 90 per cent of the reason­ office, be and is hereby appointed that the U. S. would go the limit able value of the farm. FHA in­ for hearing said petition. sures the lender against loss. It is Further Ordered, That Public in its efforts to preserve peace. Agriculture department estimates Truly a wonderful Instrument. . . . You will American strength is the key­ notice thereof be given by publica­ that 19,000 needy borrowers will be tion of a copy of this order, once stone of world harmony, Mr. Tru­ able to get money for livestock, say so too when you hear the glorious tone of the man said, and all our resources— machinery, seed and other operat­ each week for three successive weeks industrial, financial and military— ing uses, while an additional 71,000 previous to said day of hearing, in will be devoted to the maintenance loans will be made available to those the Charlevoix County Herald a GOLDEN THROAT of a peaceful equilibrium. who already have borrowed funds newspaper printed and circulated in Why not listen to one in your own home? "Our military strength will be re­ but need more. . said County. tained as evidence of the serious­ Graph indicates why the U. S. ROLLIE L. LEWIS, ness with which we view our ob­ farmer has a right to feel that, TWO BILLION: 37x3 Judge of Probate. R. G. and H. E. Watson ligations," he said, making it clear for the present, at least, he has For Survival ^also that the U. S. will do all it can more security than any other com­ Call Phone 66 or 96 — East Jordan, Mich. 'to give economic aid to those na­ parable class. In past year, the That "national survival" may de­ PROBATE ORDER tions which are willing to help them­ purchasing power of his dollar has pend upon the expenditure of two Account selves and each other. risen almost four cents, while billion dollars a year by 1957 for wage earners have seen their pur­ scientific research is the hypothesis State of Michigan. The Probate In his address, the President chasing power drop about three advanced by a presidential scien-' Court for the County of Charlevoix. made one frank admission which, tific research board after a 10-month coming from the head of a state, cents. At a session of said Court, held at survey. the Probate Office in the City of ; possibly will do much to clear the The board, headed by John R. jair and help many worried Amer- Charlevoix in said County, on the 8th LABOR: Steelman, laid infinite stress on the day of September, 1947. iidans face the inevitable conclu­ fact that any ^nation handicapped by sion: Present, Honorable Rollie L. Lewis, 6:00x16 — 6:50x16 Rally Day a lack of scientific knowledge would Judge of Probate. The postwar period, so far, Benignly referring to the throng be at a severe disadvantage "in any future war." In the Matter of the Estate of has been a "bitter disappoint­ of 110,000 persons who jammed into Charles W. Sidebotham, deceased. ment," mostly, he implied, be­ Chicago's Soldier Field on Labor Steelman said that development Front End of electronics and completely auto- Isabel C. Sidebotham, having filed cause the Russian policy con­ Day to hear him speak as "the in said Court her final accounts as tinues to espouse the kind of greatest labor rally ever held in the Executrix of said estate, and her peti­ tyranny and foreign domination United States," AFL Pres. William Alignment Green then proceeded to fly at the tion praying for the allowance there­ which was supposed to have of. been rooted out by the war. Taft-Hartley labor act, tooth and nail, hammer and tongs. It is Ordered, That the 29th day of Wheels How much the United Nations can He exhorted the nation's working September, 1947, at ten o'clock in do to ease the situation is problem­ people to defeat all legislators who the forenoon, at said Probate Office, atical. U.N., now greatly over­ voted for the bill and other so-called be and is herby appointed for exam­ Balanced taxed by the difficult trend of "anti-labor" measures. "Labor's ining and allowing said account. developments, was set up to main- leading enemies," he called them. It is Further Ordered, That public tah\ the peace, not to establish it, Organized labor, he said, should notice thereof be given by publica­ Mr. * Truman cautioned. not give way to the "spirit of re­ tion of a copy of this order, once in Wrecker ANYTIME They Agreed taliation," but should "keep the ' JOHN R. STEELMAN each week, for three weeks conse­ spontaneous surge of that spirit •.". . . knowledge precedes cutively, previous to said day of hearing, in the Charlevoix County It might have been a conspiracy within disciplined bounds." pushbuttons . . ." ANYWHERE Service the way the nation's top military Dripping vitriol, Green called the Herald, a newspaper printed and leaders chimed in powerfully with Taft-Hartley act "the most offensive matic weapons makes it entirely circulated in said County. WE NEVER CLOSE the President's call for peace and reprehensible law ever enacted possible that pushbutton warfare is ROLLIE L. LEWIS, through strength. against the nation's workers," and "within the realm of the ultimately Judge of Probate Their main theme, more domestic he reiterated his warning that the practicable." 37-3 in scope than Mr. Truman's, was federation will, "if necessary," call "But knowledge precedes push­ i universal military training. Gener­ a holiday next election day to get buttons, and theory precedes its ap­ D-X GAS STATION al of the Army Dwight D. Eisen­ out the full labor vote. plication. . . ." FASCINATING READING! Corner of Antrim and State Streets hower, Fleet Admiral Chester W. All in all, it was a great show of Government, industries and uni­ MIRROR OF YOUR MIND |Nimitz and Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, muscles, and perhaps another sig­ versities now are spending an ag­ AAP commander, went to bat for nificant step forward in the AFL's gregate 1.1 billion dollars a year for Can small children be psychoanlyz- i their favorite plan in the friendli­ campaign to unify the vast voting research and development. Boost­ eded? Do some wives deliberately Walter Moore est of atmospheres—the American power of American labor. ing that sum to two billion—1 per provoke their husbands to mistreat :Legion's national convention in New cent of the national income—would them? See Psychologist "Lawrence iYork. BLOODSHED: be a sizeable task, Steelman ad­ Gould's plain-speaking answers to Calmly pointing out that he does And Fasting mitted. these questions in pictorial review, Buick-Pontiae Service not think another world war to be India's newly granted independ­ Taxes, he said, would have to sup­ the magazine with the all-star cast, .imminent, General Eisenhower nev­ ence apparently meant, more than ply a substantial part of the money with this Sunday's (September 14) 103 Antrim CHARLEVOIX Phone 31-J ertheless asserted that universal anything else, freedom to shed for such a .^project. The federal gov­ issue of he Detroit Sunday Times. muaammmuEummm training would assure the U. S. of blood. ernment fvould have to finance at I a reservoir of trained manpower One week after the teeming na­ least half of the research budget, i in the event that a blow is struck tion, divided now into Hindu and he added. i against this nation in the future. Moslem states, cast off British do­ ; Tenor of the remarks by Admiral minion, it plunged deep into civil jNimitz and General Spaatz was sub- war' and carnage. Here's how big your enjoyment will be Yes, in addition to giving jstantially the same, and Gov. In the Punjab, Hindus, Sikhs and you ail the Big-Car ad­ [Thomas E. Dewey of New York also Moslems were slaying each other, and here's how small your cost! j added his voice to the throng. including women and children, in­ vantages described here, ! To make it completely unanimous, discriminately. First reports said the new 1947 Chevrolet ithe Legion adopted a peacetime that 13,000 were feared dead. | conscription program as the theme And in Calcutta where violence BIG CAR QUALITY saves you money on all jfor its convention. also was rampant, Mohandas K. items of purchase price, Gandhi celebrated advocate of operation and upkeep— IANOTHER NOTCH: passivism, was preparing to embark AT LOWEST COST on a new fast, to continue "until san­ gives you BIG-CAR QUAL­ \The Breach ity returns to Calcutta." ITY AT LOWEST COST! | "Once more unto the breach, dear Said the aging Gandhi: "The friends, once more." weapon which has hitherto proved Britishers again heard an echo of infallible to me is fasting. What that battle cry of Shakespeare put my word in person cannot do, my IN NEW YORK . . . Mrs. Thomas into the mouth of King He*nry V, fast may. A. Edison (above), widow of the in­ but now there was in it nothing of "If my fasting touches the swarm­ ventor, died at the age of 82, of a danger and glory—only hunger, sac­ ing elements of Calcutta, it will do cardiac condition, after lapsing into rifice and deprivation. likewise in the Punjab." a coma from which she never re­ The breach this time was Brit­ His friends and advisors, fearful covered. ain's still-crumbling, dollar-starved of what a prolonged fast might do IN TUPELO, Miss. . . . Rep. John economy. The challenge hurled to to the old man, attempted to dis­ Rankin (Dem., Miss.) announced his the nation of shopkeepers was a gov­ suade him. But Gandhi, who had candidacy for the senate" in the No­ ernment .order reducing already renounced food before for the sake vember 4 general election to choose scanty food rations, baraiing pleas­ of his country, would do so again. a successor to the late Sen. Theodore ure motoring and outlawing foreign G. Bilbo. Rankin, like Bilbo, is a travel for most persons. AGRICULTURE: long-time advocate of white suprem­ "Pretty grim," was the phleg­ New. Problem acy in the "south. matic response of Britons who saw IN ST. PAUL . . . Rep. Vito Mar- their weekly meat ration (about two Without seeking to minimize the plight of Europe's displaced persons, cantonio (A.L.P., N. Y.) trumpeted pork chops apiece) cut by one-sev­ a call for a third political party to enth and their much-prized tea held a house agriculture committee has You'll enjoy the Big-Car luxury of this smart, streamlined, reported that the United States has "do battle for the people, peace and to two ounces a week—hardly democracy," characterizing the Re­ style-leading Body by Fisher—with genuine No Draft venti­ enough for a spot. a "displaced persons" problem of its own which is rapidly assuming publicans as "industry - monopo­ lation, extra-comfortable seats, and every facility for your Government officials estimated serious proportions. lized" and the Democrats as "me- comfort and safety—for Fisher Bodies are the finest bodies, the cuts would save about 912 mil­ too-ers." and they're found only on Chevrolet and higher-priced cars; lion dollars in the next year, more The problem is simply this: What is going to happen to the millions of IN SAN FRANCISCO . . . W. M. than a third of Britain's 2.4 billion- Ringen started excavating on the dollar deficit between exports and farm laborers who are being shoved aside by mechanization and other lot he had chosen for his new home, imports. When he dug up an old Indian burial You'll delight in the Big-Car com You'll thrill fo the Big-Car performcuMe of But these were negative meas­ agricultural developments? The an­ fort and road-steadiness of the a lively, powerful, dependable Chevrolet swer is not yet known. ground, complete with skulls- and Unitized Knee-Action Gliding ures, and as such, not entirely suf­ bones, he felt more at home than Valve-in-Head Thrift-Master Engine— ficient, said Prime Minister Clement According to the committee, last Ride—giving that smooth, the type of engine found only in Chevrolet ever. Ringen is an undertaker. safe, perfectly balanced feel­ and higher-priced cars. Attlee's office. year's record-breaking crop produc­ ing which makes it seem that tion was achieved by a farm popu­ IN ARLINGTON, Vt Artist Nor­ "The positive side of the program man Rockwell threw his weight be­ car and road arev one—an­ is to increase home production of lation of 26 million persons—three hind a drive for vari-colored cur­ other advantage found only goods hitherto bought abroad and million fewer than in 1940. in Chevrolet and higher- rency, said scarlet two-dolla'r bills priced-<:ars. Be sure your^car is ready for winter! During September and to expand our export trade." It is %"one of the most serious would shock people into spending How the Labor government could human problems to be faced in our October Chevrolet dealers are making a special point of fall more efficiently and would confuse service to demonstrate the excellence of our service facilities, manage to do this was, perhaps, the agrisultural program," the commit­ counterfeiters. biggest problem, of all. tee pointed out. and quality workmanship. So bring your car in soon and let us get it ready for the bad weather days ahead. You'll feel perfectly safe, per­ Better Building Bricks fectly secure, thanks to Fisher New Homes Construction Advances 50 Per Cent Unisteel Body, Knee-Action Hitherto worthless waste products Ride and Positive-Action Hy­ Construction of new homes in 115 with 101,511 in 1945«, now may be used to make building draulic Brakes—features CHEVROLET key metropolitan areas of the Unit­ Also shown by the survey was a found only in Chevrolet and bricks as a result xof anew process ed States last year was more than sharp swing away from apartments developed at the New Jersey ceram­ higher-priced cars. 50 per cent greater than in 1939, it to one and two-family homes. While ics research station at Rutgers uni­ has been disclosed by an annual i in 1946 there were more than twice versity. The new brick is said to survey of housing construction. as many homes built as in 1939, be cheaper and stronger than those The increase over 1945, when ci­ there were 30 per cent fewer apart­ made from clay. It is manufac­ vilian home building got under way ments. tured from fly ash, a precipitate of late in the year, was 410 per cent. This fact was taken by the survey soot, and slag collected from fur­ Total hew housing units built in to indicate that rental restrictions A. R. SINCLAIR SALES naces in which powdered soft coal PHONE 184 these key communities in 1946 was have had an adverse effect on con­ has been burned. EAST JORDAN, MICH. approximately 412,455 as compared struction of rental housing.

y*H*?#&9Sm!i~Wt>**Ji*!** Ml THE CHARLEV61X COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1947

• 9 • • • • • • • #•#•• 0 • • « 4 • A LJSK. LJ'-tot and Publisher

Entered at the Postoffice at East Jordan, Michigan, as second class Presbyterian Church mail matter. Rev. C. S. Hastings —- Pastor

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 10:30 a. m., Morning Worship. County Fairs (Payable in Advance Only) 11:45 a. m., Sunday School. 6:30 p. m., Young People's Meet­ One Year $2.00 There's an air of .nostalgia about MICHIGAN Six Months 1.25 ing. a fair, something that lingers in 3 to 5 months — 25c per month your memory. Maybe it's the clat­ ter of hoofs on the racetrack, the ^Believes in Less than 3 months — 10c per copy Mennonite Church colorful midway barkers, or per­ Cultivating Good Will Single copies 5c. By mail 10c haps it's the sight of appetizing LESSON TEXT FOR SEPTEMBER 14— Rev. P. I. Rouse, Pastor canned fruits, fancy needlework or Proverbs 3:30, 31; 15:1, 18; 22:24, 25; 25:18, TSlpt Jjetting Epidemics Happen ADVERTISING RATE the showbarns filled with prize 21, 22; 26:20, 21; Matthew 5:9; James 3:17. Readers in Local Happenings column: Preaching Service — 11:00 a. m. farm animgls. It's a place where ^MEMORY SELECTION—Blessed are the Three lines or less 30c Sunday School -— 10:00 a. m. oldtimers meet and where -young­ peacemakers: for they shall be called the Michigan communities seldom make the headlines with Over three lines, per line 10c Evening Service 7:30 p. m. sters get their first rides on the children of God.—Matthew 5:9. tragic stories of disease epidemics. Such scourges have Display Rates on Request Thursday Prayer Service _ 8:00 p. m. merry-go-round or ferris wheel. been practically eliminated in Michigan — because the EDITOR'S NOTE: Lesson subjects and medical doctors of Michigan were among the first in the Member Michigan Press Association ^Ofe-QgL Scripture texts selected and copyrighted Member National Editorial Ass'n by International Council oi Religious Edu­ country to advocate preventive immunization. Today, in Church of God cation; used by permission. Michigan, immunizing against specific diseases is taken for Ora A. Holley — Pastor granted as the enlightened way of not letting epidemics By WILLIAM CULBERTSON, D. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago. happen. However, the cooperation of the people in your Sunday School 10:00 a. m. community is the most important factor in the success of J.VanDellenM.D. Church Service 11:00 a. m. TT IS true that the Christian life this medical program, especially in immunizing school Sunday Eve 8:00 p. m. A EAST JORDAN, MICH. gives offense on occasion. When children against certain diseases. . OFFICE HOURS Friday evening Prayer Meeting at a controversy exists between men j 2 to 5 p. m. Daily :00 o'clock. More than 50 district and coun­ and God, the Christian has no other Except Thursday and Sunday You are invited to attend. ty fairs have been scheduled for course of action than to align him­ MICHIGAN STATE Michigan this year, with a few of self on God's side. As he takes 7 to 9 p. m. Wed. and Sat. the best still coming up. There's MEDICAL SOCIETY Sunday by appointment or the Lapeer County Fair at Imlay his stand in such cases, he should in case of emergency. St. Joseph Church City, Sept. 15-19; Gladwin County do it in love, but nevertheless with PHONES: Office 132, East Jordan East Josdan Fair at Gladwin, Sept. 16-20; St. firmness. tiev. Joseph J. Malinowski, Pastor Joseph Grange Fair at Centreville, Residence, Ellsworth 8 The Bible nowhere commends a Sept. 17-20; The Sanilac 4-H Fair critical spirit or a perverse attitude. MASSES ».t Sandusky, Sept. 20-23 and the Kalamazoo County Fair at Kala­ It rather emphasizes the necessity Sunday, Masses at 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. mazoo, Sept. 22-27. of firmness in the course of right, Holydays, Masses at 6 and 7:30 a.m. Whether you're going to a fair a firmness that loses nothing of its John H. Savory, M.D. for relaxation or because you're an intensity through being tempered in wi/mc/- exhibitor, remember to drive safe­ the fires of.love. ' East Jordan, Mich. Meihodist Church ly and you'll arrive safely. The The Christian beyond all others Howard G. Moore, Pastor county fair is Older than the.auto­ Hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 mobile — it'll be there even if you should give himself to a life mani­ take those extra few minutes on festing sympathy, kindness anfi ©••••••«••#•#••••••••• Daily except Wednesday & Sunday Morning Service — 10:00 a. m. the road. Reckless driving nevor charitableness. Thus he will open Sunday School — 11:15 a. m. determines who is right but who avenues of opportunity, of wit­ Telephone is left. Careless drivers sometimes ness, and of service in which the Office 47 Residence 72-XR get there, careful drivers always Lord may, be greatly magnified. Full Gospel Church do. I. Contributing Factors to the A= B. M. Dirks, pastor, 506 3rd §t. Marring of Good Will (Prov. 3:30, Sunday School ^ 10 a. m. 31; 22:24, 25; 25:18; 26:20, 21). Gen'l Garage Work Morning Worship 11 a. m. V ARIANCE and strife mar good Evangelistic Service 8:00 p. m. SJ3GAL will (Prov. 3:30, 31). Notice that IGNITION - BRAKES - MOTOR this strife is unoccasioned. When Prayer & Praise, Thursday, 8 p.m. GRADE SEPARATION (HIGHWAY TUNE-UPS our SPECIALTY we strive with men to no purpose; UNDERPASS) CARRYING THE when men have not harmed us, and Gas, Oil, Tires, Batteries, Parts TRACKS OF THE PERE MAR­ with bitterness of spirit, we turn We appreciate your business. QUETTE RAILWAY OVER US-31 upon them, we of course forfeit ev­ (RELOCATION) 1.5 MILES WEST ery opportunity to influence them Body Fender OF BAYSHORE, CHARLEVOIX for good. Back again on the Electric Hour Cliff Ayers & Sons AUTO COUNTY The man of variance similarly MANCELONA should be passed by. We are not REPAIRING REFINISHING FG xl of 15-7-11, c2 (FG-158(9)) to emulate him; we are not to Net classification required for this envy him; we are to choose none THE HOUR of CHARM project is 12-Fa with Railrbad Ap­ of his ways. FRANK PHILLIPS proval. Request Railroad Approval A wrathful spirit also mars good from Mr. H. J. Bogardus, Chief En­ will (Prov. 22:24, 25). A man of featuring Phil Spitalny gineer, Pere Marquette Railroad anger is not to be followed by the BARBER SHOP. 2 Blocks West of M-66, near M-32 Company, General Motors Bldg., De­ Established 18350 ohild of God. This passage enjoins and his All-Girl Orchestra troit, Michigan. us to have no friendship with such YOUR Sealed proposals for the construc­ that we shall learn their ways and tion of this project located in Char­ their ways will then be a snare to 4:30 p.m., EDST, Sunday, CBS PATRONAGE APPRECIATED levoix County, will be received from our souls. Sponsored in their Service Area by — SATISFACTION — W. A. Porter contractors having 1947 Michigan Another way \n which we mar State Highway Department prequal- good will is to be the purveyors of — SANITATION — Plumbing — Heating ifications, in the Veterans Memorial untruth (Prov. 2^18). The false wit­ MICHIGAN PUBLIC SERVICE CO. HARDWARE Bldg., 213 South Capitol Avenue, ness is characterized as a large Lansing, Michigan, until 11:00 A. M. hammer or a sword or a sharp ar­ SUNBEAM FURNACES Eastern Standard Time on Thurs­ row, for he wounds his neighbor, STREETER'S Estimates Cheerfully Given on day, September 18, 1947, and will often grievously. Any Job at No Cost to You. then and there be publicly opened The man or the woman who in SHOE -SHOP PHONE 19 — WE DELIVER and read. Proposals may be mailed to gossip has maliciously wounded ENDICOTT-JOHNSON SHOES Main St. — East Jordan. Room 424, State Office Building, another loses all opportunity to Retail Distributors for men, women and children Lansing, Michigan. influence him for God. The culti­ RUBBER FOOTWEAR The proposed work consists of the vation of good will involves the SIDING — FLOORING — ROOFING construction of a connecting road to speaking of truth. Peter Pawneshing — Cobbler R. d WATSON be used as a temporary road, the con­ Let us with all diligence, with LUMBER — SHINGLES — SASH — DOORS Ed. Streeter — Proprietor struction and removal of a run-a­ the help of God, banish from our INSULATION — PAINT — PLYWOOD 139 Main St. East Jordan FUNERAL round track on the south side of the hearts and minds all of these present tracks, the removal and re­ attitudes which hurt and mar. CELOTEX WALLBOARD DIRECTOR construction of the existing tracks, II. Contributing Factors to the the construction of and underpass Making of Good Will. Guaranteed Business Ph©ne — 66 railroad grade separation, including 'N THE first place, the soft answer MILL WORK Machine Service erection and field painting of struct­ I of the controlled spirit will estab­ ural steel and a limited amount of Rebuilding - Repairing - Cleaning MONUMENTS lish good will (Prov. 15:1, 18). The Complete Line of Building Materials EAST JORDAN, . MICH. evcavation and drainage work on the soft answer does turn away wrath. Typewriters — Adding Machines US-31 approaches. Structural steel Calculators The man who is slow to anger ap­ Ellsworth WE DELIVER Phone 40 is being furnished F. O. B. cars at peases strife. the site of the work under a separ- CLINTON Let us not confuse a soft answer at4e contract. All ties, rail and other with an unconvincing one, or with SALES & SERVICE track material, including ballast, are Traverse City; Mich. ELECTRICAL that mealy-mouthed procedure to be furnished by the Pere Mar­ that we commonly caH double Phone 879 315 Vine St. CONTRACTING quette Railway. talk. Happy is that man who Completion date for entire pro­ FREE ESTIMATES knows how to present the truth NOTICE TO FARMERS ject October 1, 1948. convincingly, who can make men, The Department's Standard Spec­ despite his opposing standards, Get Home Comfort ifications (1942 edition), its current understand that he has their good WE PAY TOP DOLLARS THAT LASTS A LIFETIME C. GIBBARD Soils Manual, the plans for this pro­ at heart. Of course, there is one Route 1 — East Jordan ject, the special provisions govern­ absolute requisite to such a tes­ WITH CELOTEX 6½ miles south on old M-66 ing subletting and assigning the con­ timony, and that is a life wholly FOR DEAD STOCK ROCK WOOL tract and the employment and use of lived for God. labor, and the proposals blanks (all of BLOWN IN Another factor in making good will which are essential parts of the con­ is the act of kindness (Prov. Phone Collect 186-J Carpenter and Painting tract) may be examined at the dis­ 25:21, 22). This passage, you will DR.ENTH'S trict office of the Department at Ca­ remember, is quoted in Romans 12. Paperhanging dillac, Michigan, and at the Mich­ Here is the opportunity for us, in Insulation Service igan Road Builders Association, Lan­ all matters or"personal injury, to sing, Michigan, but may be obtained place our case in the hands of God Darling & Co. All work must be satisfactory. East Jordan, Michigan only at the office of the Contract- rather than to seek revenge. By Phones 35M or 268M Estimate Engineer, Room 424, State such acts of kindness, as we trust GAYLORD, MICH. Lock Box 451. Orval Davis, Representative Office Building, Lansing, Michigan, God, we shall be obeying'the Lord; A. F. Warner up to 5 P. M. of the day preceding and who knows but that our ene­ 105 Union St. East Jordan the opening of bids. A fee of three mies may thus be turned to him. dollars will be charged for furnish­ A third contributing factor in ing plans or proposal blanks. making good will is that of making We Buy Full cooperation in carrying out peace (Matt. 5:9). So often this the special provisions will be requir­ business of attempting to make Herman Drenth ed. Minimum wage paid to labor em­ peace is a thankless task, but that Dead Animals ployed on this contract shall be as thanklessness is only from human JEEPS Federal Trucks &SONS follows for Zone 3: Skilled labor sources. So far as God is con­ TOP PRICES PAID $1.50 per hour. Intermediate labor cerned, he has placed his seal of A complete line of $0.90 per hour. Uuskilled labor $0.80 approval upon every child of his FOR who seeks to lead men into peace GUNS — AMMUNITION LUMBER — SUPPLIES per hour. 6therv rates as listed in the proposal. with God and to make peace be­ tween men. WESTERN CEDAR PANELLING Phone 111 — East Jordan A certified or cashier's check on HORSES an open, solvent bank, in the sum of God speaks of them as being MITER BOXES and (Successors to E. J. L. Co.) $6,000.00, payable to Charles M. "called" sons of God. It is one Ziegler, State Highway Commission­ thing to be a son of God; it is an­ other thing to be acknowledged as STORM SASH — PLYWOOD er, must accompany- each proposal. a son of God. COWS All. such checks will be returned BARN PAINT promptly after the bidding, except III. The Source of Good Will Insurance that those of the two lowest bidders (James 3:17). DOOR CHIMES — GAS PLATES Call Collect AUTOMOBILE, LIFE, FIRE will not be returned until execution TpHAT wisdom will be character- and delivery of the contract to the and WINDSTORM *• ized by purity, peaceableness, GAYLORD 123 State Highway Department. gentleness, approachableness, CITY and COUNTRY The right is reserved to reject any mercy, and will be without par­ RELIABLE COMPANIES or all proposal. tiality and without hypocrisy. This Valley Chekiical Charles M. Ziegler wisdom which is from above is GEORGE JAQUAYS State Highway Commissioner guaranteed to those who know AL Thorsen Lumber Co. EAST JORDAN, MICH. Dated: 8-27-47, Lansing, Michigan him who has been made unto us Phone 244 MHF:ag. wisdom (I Cor. 1:30). East Jordan WE DELIVER Phone 99 37-1 Released by Western Newspaper Union. THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1947

Mrs. Holly Bayliss is a medical Miss Florence Mettler and friend Mr. and Mrs. Wm, J. Swftboda St. Vafonffno-Observanees patient at Charlevoix hospital. of Detroit were over the week end were Traverse City visitors Tues­ guest of Mr. and Mrs. Richard- Ham- day. Laid-to Roman Custom City homes for rent, trade, or sale erski. Mrs. Hamerski accompanied Thore lacy cards and red heart- on installment plan. C. J. Malpass. ad them home for the week. Elder Allen Schruer, Elder Elmer shaped boxes of candy sent on Val­ Mrs. Raymond Codden of Cadillac Parks and son of Gaylord attended entine's Day have nothing to do Robert and Helen Trojanek left David Wade is vititing relatives Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Hampton of the aaanual meeting and election of with St. Valentine, according to the was guest last week of Mrs. Maud Ann ArBor are visiting the latters officers of the L. D. S. church Tues­ Kenny. Monday for a trip through the East­ in Louisville, Ky. . , Britannica Encyclopaedia for chil­ ern States. brother and w,ife, Mr. and Mrs. day. The officers elected are: — Pas­ Frank Phillips also her sister and dren. Although there are seven St. Mrs. Mary Settum is spending the Mr. and Mrs. John Hodge are tor, Ole Olson; Branch Clerk, Mrs. Valentines listed in the "Acts of the Mr. and Mrs. Fred Errington of spending th'e week visiting relatives husband, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Swaf- Gladys McKinnon; Treasurer, Vern week visiting Mrs. Elian Olson at Elk f ord. Saints" and February 14 is the' Rapids. Battle Creek were guests last week in Detroit. Whiteford; Musical^ Mrs. Clifford saint's day for them all, no connec­ of Mr. and Mrs. Al Thorsen. Bradshaw; Adult Supervisor, Mrs. tion has been found between the Mrs. Ray Bullen of Mason spent Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bradshaw Mr and Mrs. Andrew Nelson and had as guests last week his sister, Yet-n Whiteford; Young Peoples saints and the holiday as it is cele­ the week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Malpass is visiting his daughters Mrs. C.(Normia) Ray­ Mrs. Alice Nordholt and daughter supervisor, Ray Olson; Junior super­ brated today. Walter Davis. brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and mond and Mrs. A. (Gladys) Husby Mrs. Ted Malpass in Detroit. Phyliss of Ludington. . of Flint were over the week end visor, Mrs. Hugh Whiteford; Church It is thought that the customs of School Director, Mrs. J. K. Bader; Mr. and Mrs. Jess Robinson and guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Lar­ the holiday are, instead, a continua­ The Lutheran League • will meet Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Nesman and sen. Janitor, Harry Whiteford; Solici­ tion in modified form of an ancient family spent Sunday at Sault Ste. tor, Natalie Whiteford; Librarian, Marie. Sunday, Sept. 14, with Mr. and Mrs. family of Benzonia visited the lat- Roman festival called the "Luper- Perry Moore at Mancelona. ters mother Mrs. W. E. Malpass and Miss Julia Stone of Grosse Point Hilda Lou' Olson. ,calia," which occurred on Febru­ Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shedina were in other relatives last week. visited her sister, Mrs. W. E. Mal­ ary 15 and was something like a Mrs. Emma Walker was taken to pass and family last week. She re­ carnival. Grand Rapids on business Monday Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stallard and and Tuesday. Charlevoix hospital last Wednesday turned home Friday, Mrs. Malpass In the 1700s the customs of Valen­ Sept. 3 when she fell and broke her family of Lansing spent Labor Day and Children accompanied her for a tine's Day were indicative of seri­ Fred Loveday of Mt. Pleasant and hip. week end visiting the former's par­ weeks visit. ous romance. It was a general Wm. Loveday of Detroit spent the ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stallard. belief that the first person of the week end in the city. Mrs. Gail Krause and daughter Robt. Phillips of Grand Rapids is opposite sex whom one met on that Mary Elizabeth of Petoskey are vis­ De Wayn Braman and friend of visiting his grand parents, Mr. and day would be one's Valentine for Mary and Dorothy McKenzie of iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Freemont, Ind. spent from Monday Mrs. Frank Phillips. Donald Phillips the whole year and perhaps for life. Detroit are spending a few days at Hickox. to Wednesday visiting the formers and three friends of Grand Rapids One young damsel, says Britannica the Loveday home. - uncle B. G. Braman and family. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Derrick of were over the week end of Donalds Junior, wrote in 1754, "I lay abed grand parents. and shut< my eyes all the morning Mr. and Mrs. Ausin Ashbaugh of Traverse City spent the week end at Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Bretz and son till he came to our house, for I Alba visited Mrs. Ida Kinsey Thurs­ the home of Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Bob and Miss Marrietta Nesman of Miss Mae Stewart returned to would not have seen another man day and attended the fair. Bechtold. Lansing visited Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Oshkosh Wis., and Miss Aurora Ste­ Malpass and other relatives last week. before him for all the world." Roy Gunderson of Detroit was Mr. and Mrs. Dick Moses and wart returned to Detroit last week Sometimes the young people held a daughter of Royal Oak are guests of Jos. Nemecek of the Jordan Fro­ after spending their vacations with lottery on St. Valentine's eve when guests last week of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gunderson. their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. zen Food Locker Co., attended a their mother, Mrs. Josephine Stewart the names of the girls were put into convention of the Michigan Locker and other relatives-. a box and were drawn at random Sammuel Colter. Mrs. Maurice Gee returned to her Ass'n at Grand Rapids the past week. THAN CJSTERM by the young men. Then each pair home from Little Traverse hospital, You get 12 pictures from a stand­ - The Past Matrons of Mark Chap­ would exchange gifts and each "Sunday where she was a medical ard 8 exposure 620 film with Univer­ Mrs. Minnie Crum and Henry ter O. E. S. will meet with Mrs. would be the other's "Valentine" patient. sale new "Meteor" camera. See it at Pringle returned to Flint; Monday, Marjorie Smith at their cottage on for the year. The Camera Shop. adv. after visiting their brother and sister- Lake Charlevoix f«or a 6:00 o'clock Mrs. Al Johnson of Shakopee, dinner an,d a business meeting Wed­ V in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pringle. Ojdager Ss-vit necessary |o Minin., is. visiting hfir sister and For Sale — New brooms 35c, fish nesday September 17. i N^ dfpfer#upon Mh piU %f£ Here's Way fo Estimate brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Archie poles, new and used furiture, stoves, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Albin and ionectclsl&tfn Wi$i its uns,ai>karvv, Pringle. hardware, lumber, roofing, paint, family returned to Detroit Wednes­ Mrs. Roscoe Mackey and mother StagnailfcpbTol fox soiUwateSv Live Weight of Deer glass, - mirrors, cars, repairs for day after spending a month visiting Mrs. Thomas Bartholomew of Grand tyijfc tftfe riev/^YT^N'Wate* ^ Spftfejferf$y"o& caft "How much did that big buck The birthday club met Monday for everything, for sale on easy pay- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Montroy and fam­ Rapids were calling on East Jordan t a 6 o'clock dinner at the Gidley cot­ friends Tuesday. They also visited ' draw soft wat,er weigh when he was alive?" is a rrtents at Malpass Hardware, adv. ily. froiti t>K& kfeiile question which puzzles many deer tage. Mrs. Frank Crowell was the Mr. Bartholomew's sister, Mrs. Em­ fai$£et that is"-soft- hunters. But there is a way to honored guest. Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Sherman and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Hickox of ma Walker at Charlevoix hospital. >^>' ervth.ari cisttejfri determine the "live" "weight of a Mr. and Mrs. George Sherman and Lansing are spending their vacation watei> ^lean, odor­ dead deer, according to Henry P. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Goodman arriv­ family attended the wedding of Miss visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. The Friday afternoon Circle of less, and sparHEUfjg ed from Chicago, Monday to spend a Alex Sinclair and Mr. and Mrs. Rex the Presbyterian Ladies Aid Society arid? suitable %fr Davis of the Remington Arms com­ Vivian Sbuise Proctor, daughter of bapv laundry anti pany. while visiting old friends and relativ­ Mr. and MES. J. C. Proctor of Cale­ Hickox. will meet September 12 with Mrs. es in the city. Mae Healey at her farm home. Mrs. kitcKen. >* "Few deer hunters have facilities donia to James Sherman, son of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Peterson at­ l£asy to install, to weigh their kills immediately and Mrs. LeRoy Sherman, Sunday Eva Rogers will be co-hostess. JMrs. simp!fe in opera­ Mrs. Emma Sutton, of Charlevoix tended the funeral Tuesday at Char­ Jennie Beuker will lead the devotioii- after the deer has been bagged," spent last week visiting her son and Sept. 7, at Caledonia. tion, 'thoroughly levoix of his brother Martin Peter­ als. dependable and says Davis, "and all are anxious, daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clif­ son who passed away at Charlevoix Mr. and Mrs. Vern Whiteford and rripderate in pfice. and properly so, to 'dress out' the ford Sutton. hospital Saturday. Word has been received from Mm. ^ Let us tell yop a^Bout it, animal as soon as possible. How­ daughter Ann and Betty Scott, Mrs. Huybert Owen of Chicago that her ever, there is an old rule which will Mr. and Mrs. Archie Graham,Jr., Kenneth Isman and son Tuffy, left Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jas Gidley mother, Mrs. John Roy suffered a Can be installed as lojv as $98.00 allow one to easily compute the announce the birth of a daughter Wednesday for Mt. Ayr, Iowa, to last week were their daughters and Will operate as low as 30c month. 'live' weight of a deer by weighing born at Charlevoix hospital, Sun­ stroke while visiting her over Labor visit Mrs. Whitefords sister and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer D. Brudy Day and will be at her daughters the dressed animal. Naturalists day, August 24. brother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Wbffett. biologists and ornithologists, have Mt. Pleasant, Faith of Detroit and home 6458 Dante Ave Chicago, 111. Gabriel Thomas The Girls will enter Graceland Col­ Harold of Petoskey. for some time. Phone 279-J East Jordan found, through extensive experi­ Make your snapshots better and lege Monday at Lamorie, Iowa. ence, that a pretty safe rule to easier to take with. UniversaPs new follow is to consider the weight of "Meteor" camera, 620 size for only a dressed deer as .78612 of the $15 at The Camera Shop. adv. 'live' weight of the same animal. That's drawing it down to a fine Jassamine Rebekah Lodge will *6 point, but those figures can be de­ celebrate their 96th anniversary with pended upon. a birthday party on Wed., Sept. 17. Pot-luck supper at 7:00 o'clock. "For example, if a buck 'dresses' two hundred pounds, you can bet v'Mr. arid Mrs. H. B. Hipp and fam­ that the big fellow weighed a small ily of Pontiac visited their parents, slice of venison less than two hun­ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Montroy and dred and fifty-five pounds when he Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Hipp last week. roamed the woods. No one can prove you are wrong, anyway." Mr. and Mrs. John Olson and daughter Mary Joe., returned home Monday from Petoskey where they Hybrid Corn spnet two weeks visiting relatives. What is. hybrid corn? The various factors that, make corn what Jt is Miss Lois Robinson is spending a MI HALL !M" M IPilTIfli are carried by tiny determiners week's vacation from her work in called genes; These genes are car­ Caro,, with her parents Mr. and Mrs. ried on the chromosomes of the Jess Robinson. She came Saturday. ('mssd A &-P knows how ti<> 8&ti$£?j ^am) plant cells and are so small that you can put a handful of them on Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pettenaude the point of a needle. There are tv/o returned to their home in Allen Park, genes for the same factor in each Thursday, after spending a month at 'When it conies fo building bodies and pleasing palates, A&P it In g seed. If they are alike, we say that the home of her father Ashland Bow- class- by itself. And no wonder J For experience is the best teacReY the seed is pure for this factor. If en. . . . and we've had 87 years of it. Consequently, wje Icrfow^ouf they are unlike, we say it is im­ pure. Should the seed be impure for Miss Ethel Vance returned to groceries . . . and what's more, which foods youngsters fieeo^ and like a certain factor, it will show the Washington, D. C, Friday after So why not make A&P your headquarter^ for the nutritious, defjcioui character of the dominant one. By spending her vacation with her foods that will help keep ypur children healfhy and happy from k|,n,der* inbreeding corn for five generations brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ver­ "A & P Certainly Knows What we get all the factors in it approxi­ non Vance. garten through college? (It's a good way to save money for thaf mately 95 per cent pure. Then, Qood for After-School Snacks college eafcucation, tool) when you plant two of these purified Rev. and Mrs. Wirth Tennant of strains next to each other and cut Traverse City and Mr. and Mrs. the tassels off one, the seed that Vernon Vace spent a day last week N.B.C. you. get^from it will be a hybrid at Tahquamenon Falls, in the North­ (garden Fresh Fruits and Vk corn. Since 95 per cent of -the genes ern Peninsular. are pure, the corn will look very Mrs. Inga Smith and daughter, TZ CRACKERS CALIFORNIA RED ^ much alike as far as its character­ r PACK — HALVES OR SLICED istics are concerned. Carolyn and Bonnie, of Charlevoix spent last week guests of her sister No. 2V: * and brothef-in-law, Mr. and -Mrs. can TOKAY GRAPES 2 - A PEACHES MICHIGAN HALE HAVEN — TIME TO CAN Cabbage Cousins Ludwig Larsen. BREAKFASAST OF CHAMCHAMPIONP S Two vegetables, cauliflower and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Schneider of 5ibs 3 c broccoli, are-similar in food value Ann Arbor is spending the week at PEACHES' < - * > . b«. and texture. They are cousins to the home of his Uncle and Aunt, Mr. Kit 11 Eil the cabbage. Cauliflower forms a and Mrs. Ray Dennison. Mrs. Sch­ SWEET CALIFORNIA _ head of white blossom clusters and neider came earlier. DEE-LISHHI,, PLAIN OR KKOSHE l broccoli forms smaller heads of dark blue-green blossoms. Unlike For Sale — Nice 20 dairy, chick­ ORANGES 2 ' cauliflower, the stems and leaves of en and fruit farm with six room L PICKLES the broccoli are cooked also. A NEW CROP ' ' JH house, close to city limits, for sale on A&P UNSWEETENESWEETENED large bunch of broccoli or a me- payments or to trade for cars, trucks, dham-sized head of cauliflower, or what you have. adv. weighing two to two and one-half SWIIT POTATOES 3 '* pounds, should serve five to six Frank Rebec returned home Sun­ PEFRUIT JUICE people. The secret of making well- day, from Lockwood hospital where liked dishes of both of these vege­ he has been a patient two months as tables is not in over-cooking them. a result of a fracture that he received . "Oh, Boy/ Jane Parker Baked X^oods! The water from both vegetables in a fall from a tree. "R'ey Kids.' Come On Over—Mom's \should be brought to the boiling APPETIZING MARVEL point before the vegetables are Mr, and Mrs. Russell Eggert and added. They are usually cooked in son Dean of Ames, Iowa, were guests Making Sandwiches/" sai^fekl SamiHl WMHi ImmI BaSU Wmr imwmf an uncovered vessel. Twenty min­ last week of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Pluns- vn i» mw ww i w utes boiling time should be allowed berger. They met and were enter­ SULTANA JANE PARSER * whole heads of cauliflower, and ten tained by many of their old friends. to twelve minutes if the head is divided into- flowerlets. Mr.' and Mrs. Guy Hunsberger have returned from Sault Ste. Marie, OTATOC where they attended the funeral^ of HOME ST¥EE—- PLAIN OR Hunting Accidents the former's brother's wife, Mrs. Compilation of statistics on acci­ Clyde Hunsburger. Mrs. Olive Sriook dents released by the Inland Fish­ of Flint also attended the -funeral. eries and Game department' of Maine offer some interesting infor­ Mr. and Mrs. "Walter Burden of mation. The report indicates that Stanton visited their couins Mr. and there were 12 non-fatal shootings in Mrs. Theo Scott, Tuesday, and left which hunters were mistaken for Wedijesday accompanied by Mr. and whitetails. Of the total accident Mrs. fh-chie Howe for a trip through cases ,,(18) under "mistaken for the Upper Peninsula and expect to deer" 12 were wearing red clothing. return Saturday. Another hunter wearing red cloth­ ing was mistaken for a fox and fatally shot. Two hunters, mistaken Boy, does my butcher charge high .for partridge, both survived bar­ prices! I asked him for a 15-pound rages of bird shot. They wore con­ turkey and he said: "Okay, how do ventional khaki hunting clothes. you want it financed?" THE CHARLEVOIX COUNTY HERALD, (EAST JORDAN, MICH.) FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1947

county -and municipal governments, kept at home and put to work. In East Jordan Library chambers of commerce and civic or­ the past the U. P. has been a two-in­ ganization, to get action from the dustry region, logging and mining. LIBRARY HOURS state, particularly on the highway Communities are asked to take an in­ Mornings: 10:00 to .11:30, Mon­ From the Herald files of Forty, Thirty and Twenty Y«ara Ago situation." ventory of their resources and then days, Wednesdays-and Fridays. Mr. Noyes concludes: "If any ad­ to invite industrial concers to open Compiled fey Mr«. Mat>«l ®OOOIH1 Afternoons: 2:00 to 5:00 every ditional proof of neglect of highways branches in the Upper Peninsula. day except Sundays. in the western part of the Upper In the opinion of newspaper pub­ September 7, 1907 Lieut. Joseph Cummins is, home Evenings: 7:00 to 8:3S0 Tues­ Peninsula is needed, it is found in lishers who attended a two-day con­ Eva, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. from Fort Wayne for a few days. days and Saturdays. the fact that Ontonagon county is ference at Ontonagon last July, this Ribble, was quite badly burned last Miss Esther Porter left Thursday the only county in the state that does economic program is one of the best week by her skirt igniting from a for Pittsburgh, Pa., where she will Mrs. Will Hawkins has completed not have a single mile of concrete bets for the future growth of the bonfire. attend college. the 1947 Better Homes and Gardens highway. This sort of neglect should region. It is now being handled by W. H. Thompson sold his West Miss Vivian Wing and Arthur through July and Mrs. Sidebotham not be permitted to continue for an­ Ben Clark, formerly of South Hav­ Side grocery to Paul Bros, of Thomp- Miles were married at Frederic, Aug. is continuing the years subscription. other generation." en, and it is sure to be continued by sonville last Saturday, then on Mon­ 30th. Since Our last book list was printed For some time we have sensed an the new state department of econ­ day Mr. Tihompson bought Ben Miss Myrtle Walling and Norman we have received several gifts: intangible "chip-on-the-shoulder" at­ omic development soon to be set up G. Rice were married Saturday, Aug. Schroeder's restaurant and lunch- Mrs. Blanch Thomas — Better "Why doesn't the Upper Penin­ titude in the U. P. This region tends by Governor Kim Sigler. .31. in Petoskey. counter. "" Homes and Gardens book on R©T sula secede from Michigan and join to think of itself as the underdog, Mr. W. S. Coates, aged 66, a na­ modeling your Home. This book deals the state of Wisconsin?" the forgotten child who is forever Don't believe any ^eport that the tive of England and resident here for September, 9, 1927 more with interior changes than ex­ C. W. Brown, publisher of a week-/ getting a raw deal. Such an attitude U. P. will be a "ghost area" of a- 33 years, died of paralysis at the ly newspaper at Oconomowoc, Wis­ Miss Phoebe Boyer, aged 15, of ternal. is a natural reaction to the basic bandoned mining towns. Facts are Poor Farm Wednesday. consin, taunted us with this inquiry. Ironton was drowned Saturday af­ Mr. C. E. Buchman — One book trouble of the region: It has been quite to the contrary. John Andrew Boosinger, aged 38, ternoon while bathing near Ironton. and 21 Pocket books. We happened to be members of a acutely exploited by absentee owner­ Recent explorations in the U. P. prominent East Jordan business William Stanek was badly burned board of directors and were visiting Mrs. Maude Porter — Eight books. ship. It has been a colony whose nat­ indicate a mas« of low grade copper man, died September 1st after a Saturday night when he started to together at the Commodore hoted in Adult Books ural resources have been stripped for ore at least six miles long and two long illness. Burial at Mt. Pleasant. fill the gas tank of a Ford sedan, un- Then and Now —- Maugham: Italy New York City last June 29 and 30. the profit of the people who liv© else­ He continued: and one-half miles wide. It holds ware there was a lighted lantern in in the 16th century; political intri­ where. Even its raw timber and ores enough copper ore to permit mining September 7, 1917 ^ "My friends in the Upper Penin- the near end of the car. He had run gue and romance. Principal charact­ haye been transported outside of the at the rate of 7,500 tons daily for 50 x sujla tells me they are not getting a School was to open Sept. 10th with in a gallon or two before the explos­ er, Machiavelli. region to be converted into wages and years. The ore is probably the largest fair deal from Lansing and are for­ ; the following faculty members: Geor­ ion eveloped him and the car occup­ Driftwood Valley — Stanwell- stockholders profits through indust­ known copper reserve in the United ever being neglected. This area is ge B. Crawford, Supt.; Ada M. Cole­ ants in flames. He ran to some near Fletcher: Account of the life and ad­ rial processing. States. How to utilize tihis low grade right next to Wisconsin. Its people man, prin., math.; Otto Pino, Sc. & by sand and with the help of another ventures of a British naturalist and We can't agree with our Wiscon­ ore is a technical problem yet to be trade in Milwaukee and other cities. agr., Edith M. Sprague, Eng. and man extinguished his burning cloth­ his American wife during the years sin newspaper friend that a solution solved. history; Paluine Munson, Latin and ing, then returned and pushed the spent in the British Columbia wilder­ It is logical that they should be a of all this is for the Upper Peninsula German; Katherine Cooper, commer­ burning car clear of the gas station. ness. part of Wisconsin, not Michigan." to secede from Michigan. We do feel We have been told by good auth­ cial; Bernice Horton, home ec; A. E. Those in the car were able to put out Touchstone — Janet: Setting is We relate this -conversation be­ that the region has a good case, be­ ority that hmgh reserves of valuable Wells, Manual Arts; Lola Stuart, the fire in their clothing. California during the gold rush. cause our mail has been running cause of its exploitation, for a great­ high grade iron ore still exist in the Junior High; Grace White, Penman­ Miss Emma'Beyer left Tuesday to The Chequer Board — Shute: heavy with clipped editorials and er share of improvements which will U. P.; that Gogebic range is good for ship; Grades: Nell Maddaugh, 6; Mrs. take a nurse's training course at the Four men were placed in the same personal comment, most of them ap­ assist the local people to help them­ at lest 25 years at the present rate Frank Porter, 5; June Hoyt, 4 and 5; State Hospital, Traverse City. room in an Englsh hospital. What proving our observation that the U. selves. What are the prospects in the of production. This region also pos­ Mrs. D. H. Fitch, 4; Marjorie Hoyt, Paul Franseth, who has been on a happens to these men as the result P. is lagging behind the Lower Pen­ Upper Peninsula? sesses millions of tons of low grade 3; Mrs. Ella Harrison, 2; Eva M. motor trip through Canada and New of war-makes a powerful story. insula in state highways and state iron ore, and eventually a way will Hoyt, 1; Martha Freiberg^ kinder­ York returned Saturday. He leaves Three O'clock Dinner — Pickney: parks. If the Upper Peinsula is the "pro­ be found whereby this wealth can be garten. West Side school: Frank E. Monday for Ann Arbor where he is Life in Charleston. Story of the con­ Harold Earle, president of Blaney blem child" of Michigan, as some tapped profitably. Osborn, prin., 5 and 6 grades; Gud- taking a law course in U. of M. flict between two families; the cli­ Park, writes: "There is no question writers have charged, it is not due to run Hastad 3 and 4; Mrs. Theresa max came with an announcement but that the development of the Up­ failure of local people to try to work Whiteford, 1 and 2; Ruth Weston, She had absolutely nothing to made at a formal dinner party. per Peninsula has been retarded by Any munition of the U. P. self-im­ a lack of improved highways. There out their own salvation. kindergarten. wear and six closets to keep it in. Besides book of famous French provement efforts must include Geor­ really is not much po,int in improve­ It is rather the peculiar inherit­ stories — Edited by Becker and Lin- ge Bishop's Upper Peninsula Deve­ ment of state parks until they are ance of this region which sets it a- scott. Twenty-three stories by 17 lopment Bureau which promotes made accessible by good? roads. Even part from the remainder of the state. celebrated French authors.. Bio­ both the tourist and agricultural in­ our two main U. P. highways con­ The history of this northern penin­ graphical notes. dustries there/Success of the Kewe­ necting the principal larger com­ sula, 326 miles long from Sault Ste. enaw county park hotel at. Copper The case of the fan-dancer's horse munities are not yet completed." Marie to Ironwood, is one of exploita­ Harbor has won over many private — Garden: Mystery. Mr. Earle adds: "All during last tion of natural resources by absentee resort owners to support a move for The sage of Halfaday creek — week people stopping at Blaney Park ownership. Not only have most of the a state-owned, privately operated Hendryx: Western. have reported having to wait from profits from the sale of timber and chalet at the Porcupine Mountain two to four hours to get a boat either ore gone into the bank accounts of State Park and perhaps a similar BIDS WANTED ON SCHOOL way between St. Ignace and Ma?Sn- people living elsewhere, but the tim­ facility at the Tahquamenon Falls PROPERTY aw City. Apparently, inadequacy of ber and ore have been transported State Park. These parks now lack the ferry service is to become a com­ out of the region to b processed in­ facilities to attract and serve tourist. On authority granted the Board mon and chronic condition." dustrially into labor wages and stock­ Perhaps the only unexploited nat­ of Education of Banks Township at Frank J. Russell Jr., editor of the holders profits for thousands of ural resource of the U. P. is its mar­ the last annual school meeting we are Iron Mountains News and Marquette people in cities of the U. P. velous climate. You sleep under offering the following properties for Mining Journal, observes: "With the The Upper Peninsula, treated like blankets both summer and winter. sale. excepticfi of US-41 and US-2, the U. a colony, deserves a helping hand. The air is cleansed and cooled by the B'ormer Dist. No. 1, known as the P. has nothing to boast about in the Great Lakes. When you are in the Antrim City School: -— School build­ way of good roads. For the most One of the significant trends to­ U. P., you are in the North. ing, woodshed, and one acre of part network of secondary roads is day in the U. P. is a program of econ­ As we see it, the U. P. needs better ground more or less. pitifully inadequate and is a deter­ omic development, originally spons­ access through highways, airports Former Dist No. 2, known as the rent to tourist travel." He proposes ored by the old Michigan Planning and perhaps ultimately a Bridge over Atwood school: — School building, an Upper Peninsula highway con­ Commission. It has been termed by the Straits. It sorely needs modern two outhouses and three acres of ference for coordinated, concerted an official of the U. P. Department tourist facilities at the two key state ground more or less. action. of Commerce as "unparalleled any­ parks. Porcupine Mountains and Tah­ Former Dist. No. 4, known as Linwood I. Noyes, editor of the where in the country." quamenon Falls. It deserves a chance "Bearss' School: — one-half acre of Ironwood Daily Globe, suggests that The quest is for new industry whereby its people, ever resourceful, ground more or less. Gogebic and Ontonagon crfun^ties whereby some of the profits of raw can solve their own problms in an Former Dist. No. 5, known as "should work together, through their materials especially timber, may be American way. "See" School: — School building, and one and one-half acres of ground more or less. Former Dist. No. 6, known as Mitchell School: — School building, well house, and one acre of ground more or less. * Greyhound service is ramify service Former Dis. No; 7, known as Pleasant Hill School : School ar$ m building, and one acre of ground .".... Convenient as 5 ^ the Family Garage more or less. Former Dist. No 8, known as Dutchtown School: — School build­ ing and two acres of ground more or less. Further information can be obtain­ ed from the Secretary. Sealed bids will be accepted up to and including Oct. 15, 1947, and can be filed, with William. Petter, Secy, of the Board of Education. The Board reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. William Petter, Secretary of Board Ellsworth, Mich. Top Cotton Values I 37-3

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