# CASS C ITY CHRONICLE

VOLUME 28, NUMBER 42. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. EIGHT PAGES.

NA HOi!RSARE ed upon by the president and Sales CHURCHES CHOOSE and Schmuk did likewise for the LENTEN THEMES NARRATIONSOF Elkton five. RgJRGNN!ON Hunt each sanl~ three sho,ts Irom MXCfMenKay~g%kt aItrrip%°~d~gre~nd- A straw vote is being taken this TUN LA week in the Presbyterian and Meth- the side court, while Kelley added cry foi~ a fu~her week's schooling i VOLLEYBALL RANKIN6 odist constituencies to determine 30GTOGENARIANI;two from mid-floor. MahaJ~g, Kil- FLAN APPFEOVED which will consist of a trip into the themes which will be studied bourn, Wallace and Tyo also scored the oil fields, discussions on oil in the vesper fellowship which for the locals, while Elkton's scor- Survey of Business Places in field operations, and a trip through Diaz Holds Top Position as meets each Sunday at five o'clock. In which Are Told Early Ex- ing was limited to three baskets by Cass City State Bank to the Lincoln up-to-date refinery at A check-list of twenty-five sub- Carr and six charity tosses by Five Villages Will I Robinson, II1., and three or four Other Teams Fall periences of Cass City Resume Regular Business jects has been prepared and circu- Hutchinson. days' schooling on salesmanship Back. Citizens. Cass City showed a strong de- Start Soon. land petroleum products, finishing lated among the adults of each March 12. church to guide the steering-com- fense, as they limited .the visiting team to five field goals. The ath- Ernest Haas, county CWA ad-I the week with Lincoln's usual Hen- mittee in making the schedule for Another article giving brief tales . erous banquet. Diaz defeated Hutchinson 45-22 letic club also failed to ,score a the period from February 4th to regarding three octogenarians of M. B. Auten, conservator of the inistrator, received word Friday "The S., T. & H. Oil Company Monday evening and maintains his basket in the opening period, but April 15th. The first Sunday in Cass City is printed this week. Cass City State Bank, received om Fred R. Johnson, state ad- is proud to have two young men lfirst place in the local volleyball Lent is February 18th, and several they missed over 25 shots. word Tuesday afternoon from the ministrator, that CWA employment who finished with high marks and i league. The defeat puts Hutchin- Mrs. Dunca~ R. Graham. of the proposed subjects are in- The summary: State Banking Department at outside of Caro would be limited tO'wh o are able to attend this fine I son back into a tie for sixth rank- Born in the Highlands of Scot- tended to be helpful in the observ- Cass City Athletic Club-- Lansing- that plans for the resump- two d~iys per week and in Caro .the school for the week," said Clair ing, quite a fall for the third place land, February 7, 1853, Christina ance of the pro-Easter season. G FT PF TP tion of regular banking business at maximum is three days. Mr. John- Ross, president of the S., T. & H. I team. While this drubbing was go- Campbell came with her , The straw vote will be closed Gowen, f ...... 3 0 1 6 that institution had been approved Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell, to On- son's telegram read: Oil Co., "and we know the, commu-Iing on, the Keppen aggregation next Sunday at 6:30 p.m. Mean- Ehlers, f ...... 0 0 0 0 by the department. Monday, Mar. tario when eleven years of age. In "Order received from Hop- nities these young men serve as won a prolonged engagement from .time, anyone interested is welcome Maharg, f ...... 2 0 1 4 12, is the date set for the plan to 1873, the family moved .to Detroit ki~s, Federal administrator, well as our company will profit by the Knapp boys 45-35. These to express a choice of themes as Kercher, f ...... 0 0 0 0 become •operative. where she lived until May, 1880, that beginning Jan. 19 all per their efforts." scores left Knapp in fifth and listed, or to write out a subject for R. Wallace, f ...... 1 1 0 3 The plan adopted is that 50 per when she was united in marriage diem workers in cities over hoisted Keppen into the second consideration. Hunt, c ...... 5 2 3 12 cent of deposits will be made avail- ~ with Duncan R. Graham and they 2,500 must be placed on maxi- place draw. Luther, c ...... 0 0 0 0 able a~d that 50 per cent of de- came to make their home in Cass mum of 24hoursperweek. In NFWCHO0[ Although Gallagher again led his )J Turn to page 8, please. posits are waived and will be rep- cities under 2,500 and open group to victory the margin, 35-22, . City. resented by certificates of partici- country is 15 hours per week." did. not give him sufficient points to , Mrs. Graham tells of her first pation issued in accordance with a Survey of Business Houses. AR[ ]MPORTANT ] stay at the t°p and he dr°pped int° CHAN6EIN P. H, glimpse of Cass City. Driving over trust agreement to be executed by Mr. Haas received word recently a tie for second position. McCon- from Caro, they stopped near the the bank and certain trustees. that Albert Lyons, district superin- ~key held the short end of .the score Tennant and Mr. Graham HI6H I;[HOOL BR[AKII Details regarding the plan, giving ~endent, would call on the county t and remained in a tie with Hutch- HOSPITAL[ONTROL said "Well, here is Cass City." Mrs. information about deposits which inson, but this time instead of a Graham, looking, asked "Where?" administrator soon to arrange for Many Are Noted by third place tie they drop to sixth. will be available for payment in a survey of business places in Tus- Mr. Graham, who was a carpen- [V[N IN WEEK'S PLAYfull and other facts are printed in cola county under the U. S. De- Assistant Superinten- It the closing contest, Schwaderer Misses Freiburger of Argyle .ter, was building the house now the legal "Notice of Plan to Re- partment of Census. The plan is to dent Thompson. . turned back Atwell 42-29 to gain Have Taken Management owned by Mrs. Agnes Cooley on sume Business" printed on page 7 ascertain the trend of business and ]the first division. South Segar street, and until it was Vassar Is Beaten and Saginaw of this number of the Chronicle. to give employment to several / Tuesday, Jan. 30, Atwell meets of Local Institution. finished they lived in a house just women under the CWA. The in- The following are some of the McConkey while Schwaderer meets north of where the A. Doerr house Hands Cass City First fqrn)ation secured will be held in most important changes in Michi- Diaz at 7:30. At 8:30, Hutchinson now stands. A few years later, Miss Irene Freiburger, R. N., and Defeat of Season. tChildren's Division stric.t confidence and will be simi- gan school laws passed at the last plays Keppen and Knapp goes up they moved to the house on East / tar to a census taken in 1929. It is session of the state legislature, as against Gallagher. Miss Reeva Freiburger, both of Ar- Houghton ~street where Mrs. Gra- understood that this survey in Tus- outlined by Paul Thompson, as- The standings: gyle, have taken over the manage- ham still lives with her son, Stan- The Hilltoppers brought home a Conference Here ment of Pleasant Home Hospital at cola county will be confined to sistant superir~tendent of public Jan. 22 To- ley. 42-12 victory from Vassar, then I business places in Caro, Cass City, instruction, a~ the Huron county No. and Capt. Score tal Cass City. At the time of the second big fire played loose and erratic basketball I Two experts in religious and rots- Akron, Fairgrove and Vassar. meeting- of the school board mere- 5 Diaz ...... 45 90 The Misses Freiburger are sisters which swept the Thumb district in to suffer their first setback of ,the sionary instruction, Miss Florence bers held recently: 4~Gallagher ...... 35 80 and both are graduates of the Cass 1881, Mr. Graham, by tireless year's competition, 20-13, at the Norton of Philadelphia and Miss Repeal of poor district law, which 8~Keppen ...... 45 80 City high school, Miss Irene finish- fighting of fire, was able to save hands of the Saginaw Reserves. Mary Moore of New York, will ing in 1929 and Miss Reeva, the Get-together Meet gave $200 where a full term could 3 Schwaderer ...... 42 68 their home and their only loss was The big siege guns of the Maroon have charge of a children's division not be maintained with a tax of 6--Knapp ...... 35 67 following year. a cow. Mrs. Graham and their twin and Grey that functioned ,so well !c°nference at the Presbyterian for Co. Republicans more than 12 mills. 1 Hutchinson ...... 22 64 Dr. I. D. McCoy and Dr. H. T. boys, John and Alex, were visiting" at Vassar were most notable by church at Cass City Monday after- I School board no longer has pow- 7--McConkey ...... 22 64 Donahue will continue their offices relatives in Canada at .the time. their silence against the fast mov-]noon and evening, Jan. 29. This in the hospital and will have the Republicans of Tuscola county er to establish a high school. The 2--Atwell ...... 29 51 Not many mothers have the dis- ing Saginaw cagers. The local B' is one of five such conferences to same office hours as before. Dr. are to have a "get-together" some- vote of the people now governs. tinction Mrs. Graham has of being squad played only one game, de- be held in Michigan. McCoy and Dr. Donahue will be in time during the week of February Amount of money for agricul- the mother of four sons, three of feating Vassar B, 51-20. , The following is the program: partnership after February 1st. 12, to celebrate the birthday of turaI rural school reduced from Eight Admitted them having seen active service in The Vassar game was almost a Afternoon. Abraham Lincoln and to lay plans $1,000 to $800. foreign lands. John and Alex .saw field meet with the Cass City quin- Devotions, introductions, expla- for the fall campaign, it became General sales tax giving 15 mil- tO Citizenship Woman's Study Club active service during the Spanish- tet scoring almost at will. Gra- nations. known at a meeting held at the lion appropriation for schools, any American war and Stanley, a third ham, Ward, Vyse, Kosanke and Demonstration period, using courthouse in Caro Monday after- deficit to be taken from general Elected Officers son, was in active service in Russia Stafford divided the greater share about 15 primary children from the noon. fund and liquor tax. Eight were admitted to full citi- during the World war. Mrs. Gra- of the point-getting fairly even, local Church. State Senator H. P. Orr was Repeal of Turner act, which for- zenship in Tuseola county~ this ham. has ano.ther son, Chester, a with Stafford being ahead of the Talk and discussion. "Presby- The annual election of officers charged with the job of securing a merly appropriated money for the week. On Jan. 22, those admitted barber in Cass City. Mr. Graham race by ringing up ten. There was terian Age Group Programs for was a feature of the meeting of speaker, and will try to persdade schools. This had appropriated included Rose Vampell, Joe Vain- died May 23, 1928. no particular quarter in which the Children." the Woman's Study Club which was United States Senator Arthur H. two million, poll and Wm. Roth, all of Deford, Mrs. Graham says that she has scoring was heaviest, but each peri- Informal time, viewing exhibit, held on Tuesday, January 23, Vandenberg to address the meet- Decision of Wayne county court Aaron Elek, Jr., of Akron, Christ always liked Cass City and never od received its share. The last etc. with Mrs. G. A. Tindale as hostess. ing. as to constitutionality of chain John Horst of Fairgrove, Glenn since coming here has she ever quarter could have been styled as a i Evening. A banquet will be held at seven store revenue act. This raises Jackson and Alexander Krause, and Mrs. R. A. McNamee was chosen wished to make her home else- footbM1 game, but the players did Supper. Fellowship. Talk on her president for the coming year. She where. o'clock on the night selecte8 and about two million for district on Jan. 24, Daniel McGillvray of not wear pads. Four of the Vas- 'missionary experiences in .China will be assisted by the following She is a member of the Baptist tickets will go on sale through- schools. Cass City. Turn to page 8, please. by Miss Moore. staff: first vice president, Mrs. church, where she has always been out the county as soon as the date Turn to page 8, please. I Six petitions for citizenship have Talk and discussion: "Missionary is decided definitely. Men and been filed recently with County Warren Wood; .second vice presi- an active worker in all departments Mrs. M. Hartt; secretary, Education of Children." women will be equally welcome and Clerk S. W. Morrison and will be dent, of the church and Sunday School. Mrs. R. S. McCullough; corres- Inspirational message and clos- John Kenney. plans are being made to serve be-0X[N MULES HOR~[~ heardTuscotaatcounty.the May termThe petitioners,°fc°urtin ponding secretary, Mrs. Roy Tay- ing service. tween 200 and 300 persons at the ~ John Kenney celebrated his 80th ,NEWS OF [HE All local people are welcome. school auditorium at Caro. their birthplaces and their present lor; treasurer, Mrs. S. E. Heron; librarian, Mrs. L. Bardwell; and re- birthday Tuesday, Jan. 16, and was Further details of the banquet WILL ~[TTL[ Gi~PG~[ addresse~ in T~scola county are: porter, Mrs. H. F. Lenzner. Mrs. the guest of honor at a supper at and meeting will be released ne~t Peter Baber, (Poland), Mayville. the home of his son, M. E. Kenney. / Edgar° Percy James Bennett, McNamee was elected delegate to NEARBYS[@ONS New "Chevie" Is Mr. and Mrs. Kenney came to week. fl (England), Fairgrove. the state federation with Mrs. War- T V ren Wood as alternate, ]Cass City from Flint about two on Display Here Gaget wn Couple Unique Pulling Contest to Be~ grove.Henry Beller, (Russia), Fair- The program for the afternoon years ago and made their home on Happenings Here and There West Pine St. A few weeks ago Held Joseph SZeki, (Hungary), Caro. centered about the states of 0kla- On another page of this number at Michigan State Mrs. Kenney fell, breaking her ' Garnered from the Chron- homa and Texas. Interesting facts of the Chronicle will be found a Married 50 Years College. Win: P. Freeman, (England), right arm, and since .then they have about the Indian population of icle's Exchanges. large "ad" of the Chevrolet Motor Millington. been staying at their son's home these states were given by Mrs. H. i Car Company, announcing the first By Gagetown Correspondent. Harry Young', (Canada), Cass here. F. Lenzner in a paper on "Indian showing of the 1934 Chevrolet in Fifty years ago Friday, Miss A unique pulling contest will be City. Mr. Kenney was born in Hamil- Reservations." The magnitude of A dividend of 16% was declared Cass City. The car was received Carrie• Wood became the bride of staged as a feature of one of the ! ton, Ont., and was united in mar- the state of Texas, both as to phys- for stockholders of the Thumb Oil here the first of the week. Isaac MontreuiL To commemo- evening programs during Farmers' riage with Miss Mary O'Connor. ical characteristics and industrial and Gas Corporation at its annual It is on display at the local rate this occasion, the sons and Week at Michigan State College, Start Action to They came to Michigan over 50 development, was brought out by meeting at Bad Axe. agency of the A. B. C. Sales and Jan. 29 to Feb. 2, to settle an an- years ago. Mr. Kenney has spent (laughters planned a sur£orise on cient and heated argument about Lower Au o Costs Mrs. M. C. McLellan under the Pigeon business men are already Service, who invite the public to most of his time in farming and he their parents and came Saturday various types of farm power units, i topic of "So Big Texas.'" Mrs. .planning for the Pigeon home com- call at their display room and look thinks he could still show some of with well filled baskets. A sump- An ox team, a span of mules and Morley Smith gave an interesting ing which will be held early in it over. the agriculturalists how to do tuous dinner was served at 2:00 p. a balanced pair of lightweight The first step toward allowing study of the Mexican population of August. It has all the 1934 improvements, Turn to page 8, please. m. for the jubilarians and their horses will fight it out in this voters of Michigan to express our country from the industrial and i The U. S. Civil Service Commis- including "knee action" and other immediate family. social viewpoints. The lesson on t features. Mr. Montreuil was born in York three-corner contest Wednesday themselves as to lowering license / sion has announced an open.• cora- evening, Jan. 31, in Demonstration plate costs and gasoline taxes, was synonyms and antonyms, prepared l petitive exam,'nation to fill the po- state and came to Michigan when Hall on the campus, taken last week when officials of the by Mrs. Warren Wood, was pre- Fire Destroyed k/ sition of third class postmaster at 18 years of age and Miss Carrie The oxen, owned by F. B. Martin A~tomobite Club of Michigan filed sented by Mrs. L. I. Wood. Two Kinde, Port Hope and Ruth. Sal- LOCAL BREEDER TO JOIN Wood was born in Canada and came of Battle Creek, weigh 5,000 forms of two petitions with the I.numbers by the Girls' chorus of the Houses Wednesday aries are $1,700, $1,400 and $1,200 HOLSTEIN ASSOCIATION to Michigan when seven years old. pounds. They are red five-year-old Department of State. high school under the direction of respectively. On January 19, 1884, three couples, Shorthorn twins, and are worked The petitions were submitted at Mrs. g. I. Niergarth, added pleas- Fire destroyed the residence on Frank O. Watrous, 82, retired mer- W. M. Merchant, R. R. No. 2, Isaac Montreuil and Miss Carrie regularly" on the Martin farm. this time in order to obtain appro- ing variety to the program. In- the Langworthy farm, three miles chant and resident of Caro for Cass City, is one of 89 new breeders Wood, Jarvis Wood and Miss Udaile An outstanding mule team which val as .to their correctness in form. dian names were given in response southeast of .Cass City, Wednesday. more than 54 years, died at his of purebred Holstein-Friesian cat- H~ol and Hambert Post and Miss weighs slightly more than 3,000 The first petition would add a to .the roll call. Shortly before midnight Wednes- home in that village after a pro- tle to be recommended for member- Louise Wood, were united in mar- pounds and has competed in pulling new section to the state constitu- The next meeting will be held on day, fire was discovered in the res- longed illness. Born in Port Wash- ship in the Holstein-Friesian Asso- riage at the same ceremony at St. contests will be one of the oppo- tion prohibiting the gasoline tax Tuesday, February sixth, at the idence on East Houghton street, ington, Wis., in 1852, Watrous ciation of America during the first fl~gatha's church by the late Rev. C. nents for the oxen. A team of collected by the state from exceed- home of Mrs. M. C. McLeilan. owned by I. W. Hall. The fire was moved to Caro to open a hardware part of January 1934. At the next T. Krebs. brown Percheron geldings which ing two cents a gallon. At the well under way. by the time the store in 1880. He was the oldest meeting of the board of directors The guests who ~.ttended the an- weigh more than 3,000 pounds will present time the state gas tax is fire department arrived and the member of the Caro Presbyterian his name will be added to the mem- niversary celebration were: Mr. and round out ,the three-way battle for three cents a gallon. "Butter Only" building is practically destroyed. church and was a Sunday school bership roll of over 32,000. This Mrs. Dorus Montreuil, Mr. andpulling supremacy. ~ The second petition also add~ a It was insured. teacher in that church for more is five times the total membership Mrs. Herman o Montreuil, Mr. and i Because the mules and horses on- new section to the constitution fix: Campaign in Tuscola Rain early in the night soaked than 50 years. of the other four dairy breeds Mrs. Ed. Ross, Mrs. Dorothy Rec-! tered have had experience compet- ing the amount `that can be charged the roofs of near-by houses and The second annual Thumb dis- combined. tor and Mrs. Gertrude Geroux, ~11 ', protected them from sparks which of Detroit; Mr. ~nd Mrs. John Mort-" iing on a dynamometer, the contest for automobile license plates. In- Plans are made for the appoint- trict high school orchestra and band during Farmers' Week will be held stead of 55 cents per hundred ment of a county committee to fur- were driven a long way by the festival wilt be held in the high ART CLUB PLANS HOME treuil of Bay City; Lester lV[ontre- with all three ,spans hitched to a' pounds as at 'present, the petition ther the "Butter Only" campaign high wind. school at Elkton Wednesday after- uil, and Mrs. Delphine Goslin. stone boat, in order to give the ox calls for a maximum rate of 35 in Tuscola county. This is a part Milton Hoffman and family noon, Feb 21.Marius Fossenkemper, EXTENSION COURSE STUDY Their many friends extend their team a fair chance, cents per hundred or a reduction of a nation-wide movement• in all moved from .this residence within director of the symphony orches±ra congratulations. " The heavyweight ,team which of approximately 36 per cent. dairy states to increase the use of the past week to their new home of Michigan State Teachers' Col- Mrs. G. W. Landon was a host- t holds the present world's record In Order to place the proposal butter and other dairy products and on the Hoffman farm, three-quar- lege at Ypsilanti, will be guest con- ess to the Art Club Wednesday af- ters of a mile north of Cass City. Edward Goldmg will be a competitor in one of the before ,the voters, 161,000 signa- thus reduce the tremendous .surplus ! ductor and critic. Orchestras will ternoon. The club is planning to l horse pulling contests during tures must be otained and filed with of butter now on the market and play at 2:00 p. m. and bands at take up some line of the home ex- 7:30, each group to play two selec- tension course and Miss Lura De- in Oil F*raids IFarmers' Week. This span, con-',the depaztment. aid in increasing milk and dairy ' sisting of roan and sorrel geldings, 1 Secretary of State Frank D. Fitz- prices all along the line. C. C. A. C. Defeats tions of its own choice. The massed Witt was present and explained the weighs 4,300 pounds and is owned gerald has been -advocating sub- Plans are being formulated to Elkton 37- 18 orchestra~ will play "The Siren" work. Supper was served by .the Edward Golding of Cass City and by the Statler farm at Picqua, O. stantial reductions in license plate start a campaign in Tuscola coun- and the bands will play Colonel hostess. Ernest McK@ of Unionville were These horses have never been de- costs for several months. His plans ty .to have farmers sign pledges to Minor." The drum and bugle corps chosen to go to Lincoln Oil Refining ]feated, and set the world's record l call for amendments to existing By Lewis Pinney. of the Bad Axe American Legion use "butter only." A county-wide DENTAL WORK EXCHANGED Co. s refinery at Robinson, Ill., be- i with attractive pull of 3,850 pounds laws by the legislature rather than meeting will be held in the near Showing a burst of speed and Post wilI take part in the night cause of their high average of el-I on the college dynamometer which, by mandate of the constitution. The future at which workers will be ap- sharp shooting in .the last half, the program. Orchestras entered up to FOR BEANS AT $3.00 CWT. ficiency in competing on a sales, I is used in these contests. I fact that 33,000 fewer license plates pointed to distribute pledge cards. Cass City Athletic Club won the this time are: Sebewaing, Bad Axe, , lubrication engineering and general The Ohio team will be pitted~ had been sold on Jan. 17, 1934, Members named for the county fir(st game it has played this sea- Cass City, Unionville-Fairgrove, Dr. P. A. Schenck of Cass City than on same date in 1933 is offers $3.00 a hundred for Michi- oil station, mana~,ement course, of , against the C. C. Schmucker team i evidence ofthe the necessity for reduc- committee are: E. L. Hammond; son on Tuesday. Playing manager Kinde and Sandusky. Bands en- study prepared by the Lmeoln i from Watdon, Mich., which holds i county agricultural agent, chair- Hutchinson, of Elkton, brought a tered are: Harbor Beach, senior and gan pea beans in exchange for aU company, in which all the era- the state record with a pull offing ,the weight tax. On Jan. 17, man; Rex Gunnell, Vassar, dairy smooth passing quintet to face the junior; Pigeon, Bay Port, Mayville classes of dental work or old ac- ployees of the S., T. & H. Oil Co. 3,635 pounds. This span has been lonl5r 60,836 of the 1,300,000 motor farmer, secretary; E. J. Riley, locals, but the fas.t breaking proved and Elkton. Other musical organi- counts. Beans may be delivered participated, defeated only once in pulling eom- i vehicles in Michigan had obtained creamery operator, Caro; Mrs. Geo. too much for the stars from Bad zations may enroll for .the festival at either elevator at Cass City. Mr. MeKay and Mr. Goldin~ fin- p.et£tion and is composed of a gTey 1934 license plates. Foster, leader in women's extension Axe and Elkton. Hunt and Kelley later. Advertisement. ishcd wkn an averaee of 9~ per Percheron gelding and a roan Bel- work, Fostoria; H. F. Lenzner, ' did all the the scoring for the locals The village of Aimont is work- cent and were especially commend- gian gelding. Advertise it in the Chronicle. Turn to page 4, please. in the first half, while Hutchinson Turn to. page 8, please. Advertise it in the Chronicle. Page Two. CASS CITY CHRONICLE,-FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, i934. Cass City, Michigan.

¢¢-- g, Bacharach declared, would lighten materially the tax burden of the New Knee-Action'' Chevrolet Gives Passengers News Review of Current small salaried class without seri- T~rning BacR ously cutting into present income Ride Like a Glide Events the World Over tax revenues. ~] ~he Page~ ~ ~e ENATORS BORAH of Idaho, Items from ,the files of Cass City Newspapers of 1899 and 1909. S Norris of Nebraska and Nye of , ,, North Dakota, all independent Re- President Asks for Nationalization of Gold Supply~ publicans whose support has been counted on generally by the admin- Twenty-five Years Ago, Not Yet Ready to Fix Exact Value of Dollar~ istration, have started a concerted Jan. 29, 1909.

Caries !~,'iendieta Civen Cuban Fresidency~ iL~ codes fu~ter monopolies and re- the Carp Farmers' Fair Association sult in forcing the small dealers is free fro~ debt. The reports of out of business. Their fight is not 1908 read at the annual meeting By EDWARD W. PICKARD against the President and his poli- gave the to,tal receipts at $3,084.11 cies, but against Gen. Hugh John- and total expenditures were $2,296- that he resign his military post; a son, NRA administrator, upon .24, including cash paid for pre- RESIDENT ROOSEVELT sent strike to force this was started by whom they place the blame for the p miums amounting to $669.50. to congress his long-awaited mes- Antonio Guiteras, late secretary of faults they say have developed. sage on monetary matters, and it war and navy, and Herin ordered The officers and directors of the sh6uld be in a measure reassuring Cass City Fair Association gave that Fulgencio get out. I[TALO BALBO, the bearded Ital- ~ -~.~.~::::..:: to business a n d another surprise party Saturday But the army leader promptly I inn air marshal who commanded i•.•.::•• .~!::" ";::~!'~ finance. He aske0 and on this occasion Jas. Allen, brought :4,000 of his troops from the great mass flight from Italy to ~..:-:.{~!~..:.~:.:.!~:.:.~:.:.:.~.i~:~-: that the gold sup- who has been associa~ted with the ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Santa Clara-province to reinforce Chicago and back last summer and ig-:.'.:.!~i~:.~;~:.'.~:~:::::'::::::i~..PlY of the country society for many years, was the the 5,000 at Camp Columbia, on ...... ::!9~ t h e r e b y became •. ~ be nationalized and "victim." the outskirts of Havana, and com- • too popular to suit }i~":}:':'~jiii~ that his p o w e r s Plowing in January is rather pelled Herin to resign. He then de- Premier Mussolini, be redefined to en- unusual in Michigan, but in the clared that Mendieta was the only has made his peace able periodic re- past week many have witnessed man capable of continuing the with the Duce and valuation of the farmers on all sides of Cass City junta's revolutionary program with- has assumed his dollar within a doing that work. out the extreme measures that had new duties as the range of 50 to 60 After a lingering illness of two prevented ~'ecognition by the Unit- per cent of the pres- years' duration, W. I. Frost died ed States ; that he, Batista, ~~ in north Africa. ent gold content. at his home in Armada, Michigan, President He already had the recognized the costly mistake the He crossed the .:i~!i ::i. : Mediterranean in on Tuesday. Mr. Frost was the Roosevelt power to devalue junta had made in installing Grau state on the new senior member of Frost & Hobble- the dollar down to 50 per cent, but and would now rectify it. He or- cruiser Alberto di white, a well known business firm he does not do so yet, saying that dered government employees to re- |tale Balbo Giussano with an- of Cass City several years ago. "because of world uncertainties, I main at work on pain of losing their jobs, but the strike went into effect other cruiser in escort, and when Mrs. Martin Dew, formerly a do not believe it desirable In the resident of this place, died at her public interest that an exact value far enough to tie up Havana's pow- he landed was received by all the er, light, gas and transportation sys- Italian officials in the colony and home in Elkton Tuesday morning. be now fixed." He added that care- Miss Olive Brown returned to her ful study had led him to the con- tems. Batista ordered the arrest a colorful gathering of the native Of Guiteras, whom he held respon- troops. home here Friday ,after spending clusion that any revaluation at several months at Caron, Sask. more than 60 per cent would not sible for this. A~ bomb exploded near Balbo, who is just thirty-seven Mendieta's residence but no one was years old, replaces Marshal Pierre Miss Lucinda Parr has returned be in the public interest. to her home here after spending The President asked full power injured. Badoglio as Libyan governor. While three years at Edmonton and ather to take over the last outstanding Mendieta was assured the sup- a new line of activity, it will be a places in Canada. uupplies of gold in the country, port of the Nationalists he leads, job with an opening for him, for Mussolini wants to make Africa in Andrew Walmsley was thrown completely enclosed in a weatherfight housing; the cell springs and much of which belongs to the fed- the political societies ABC and I In the design and development of the new 1934 Chevrolet, time an outlet for Italian emigra- from his buggy Tuesday morning particular attention has been given to driver and passenger comfort, shock absorbers ride in a bath of oil. William E. Holler, Chevrolet's eral reserve banks. The legislatio~ OCRR and the newer revolutionary all annoying sensations of disagreeable ~ound and feeling having general ~des manger, is shown at the left holding a chart whlcJ~ by a spirited horse while turning he requested, he explained, "places organizations. Moreover, he had tion. been eliminated. The upper photo shows the new Chevrolet coacla shows the internal construction of the system. the corner at the cemetery. While with its long~ sleek lines. Wind rush has been eliminated by the [ The radiator of the new car has added beauty through its graceful the right, title and ownerships-of performed the highly ,difficult feat Balbo will keep up his interest in Fisher No Draft Ventilators and the new streamlined bodies. and sharply pointed design. Smartness has been the theme i~ he is much bruised and very sore, every line of this year's Chevrolet. our gold reserves in the govern- of reuniting the army and the navy. aviation, even though he iu Just i hevrolet's "Knee-Action" wheels enjoy the advantage of being ment itself; it makes clear the gore They had been split apart previous- governor of the sandy North Afri- no serious results are anticipated. ernment's ownership of any added ly over the breach between Guite- can coast. O. Hulburt is the new barber at The driver and passengers in the new 1934 Chevrolet springing, the wheels and spring mechanism are rigidly dollar value of the country's stock ras and Batista. Fred Hemeriek's barber .shop at • get a ride like the glide of an airplane° One of the main attached directly to the frame and there is no front axle. of gold which would result from UERTO RICO has a new gover- Gagetown. factors in improving the riding qualities of the new car By relieving the front springs of the task of carrying p g, ,, wheels and axle, therefore, it became possible to make any decrease of the gold content ERMANY'S great church quar- nor who may pIease the island- Mrs. A. J. Knapp's Sunday to such a great extent is the Knee-Action ~or inde- pendently sprung front wheels, to use the technical the front springs as "soft" as the rear springs. When of the dollar whicN may be made G rel goes on unabated and the ers better than did Robert H. Gore. School class mat at her home and He is Gen. Blanton Winship, form- term. the new Chevrolet strikes an irregularity in the road, In the publ~c interest." Evangelical pastors are still de- organized, elected officers and chose So much has been written about independent spring- both front and rear move up and down with the same The profit that may result from termined that their religion shall er Judge advocate general of the the name, "Sunshine ClasS." The ing that the public has doubtless concluded that it is frequency--there is no inclination on the part of the cutting the gold content, the Presi- n o t be nazified. army, and a man of experience in officers are: President, Helene something too technical to understand. As a maiter of rear end of the car to leap into the air and throw the dent proposed should be used to insular affairs. He served in Cuba Janes; vice pres., Belle McDermott; fact, there is nothing complicated about either the passengers forward and upward. ::!iiiiiii Reichsbishop Lud- set up a two-billion-dollar fund for : and the Philippines as an adviser secretary, Anna Pettit; treasurer, principle involved or the construction of the system. Chevrolet's "Knee-Action" has additional advantages all contributing to a comfort in riding never before purchases and sales of gold, for- ~.:~i~i!iii~iii~!i~ii!!ii~i~i i iiiii!iiiiii!i Is a confidant of to the highest American officials In Irene Renshler; flgwer committee, Chevrolet's Knee-Action enjoys the advantage of i those, parts. Also he was a mili- being enclosed in a welded weathertlght housing in thought possible in a motor car. There is a decided eign exchange and government se- }i .J~::{i::!}}!i::ii::ii::::ii::::i::i::i::ii!::ili::iChancellor Hitler, Belle Parker and Doris Palmateer; improvement ir~ hand!ing, steering~ safety at high tary aide to President Coolidge. which the entire spring mechanism and shock absorb- curities. issued a decree for- social committee, Lela Gemmill, ers ride up and down in a bath of oil. speeds and tire economy. No further recommendations con- i His home town is Macon, Ga. Mr. Beatrice Koepfgen and Allison An automobile gives a perfect ride when both the In design, the front spring is a neat, compact and [iiii:.. ~.!::::::!!iii}iii~iiiiii~iiiiibidding pastors to Gore, whose administration was cerning silver were made in the ~!iiiii:::. :i::!::iiNi::i::ii!iiicriticize the Nazi Spenee. front and rear springs have the same "frequency," or efficient unit, as Mr. Holler points out in the above message, the President saying he bitterly and constantly attacked by tension. Actually this has been impossible to carry out picture. The entire spring mechanism is attached believed "we should gain more ii!iiiii!ii::~:....';i~iiiiii~iii!iiiii::::~i!!administrationPr°testant churChfrom I island politicians, resigned, stating in the past because the front springs had to be over rigidly to the frame. From this enclosed unit the wheels Thirty-five Years Ago. spring vertically at the ends of strong, steel horizontal knowledge of the results of the his reason was ill health. twice as "stiff" as the rear springs in order to hold the front axle, wheels and brakes in place. In independent arms. London agreement and of our oth- pain of dismissal President Roosevelt also selected January 26, 1899. er monetary measures." from the church, i a new chief of the weather bureau A deal has been consummated Immediately after the reading of Dr. Ludwi9 But the rebellious in Washington in the person of Wil- ~this week whereby the old Tennarrt Muelle~ the President's message, Senator ones, organized as lis G. Gregg. He succeeds Dr. I House property becomes the prop- NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN" Duncan U. Fletcher of Florida, the Pastors' Emergency league, de-i Charles F. Marvin, erty of A. H. Ale, our genial post- N chairman of the senate banking and fled Doctor Mueller and for the see-[ master. The consideration was N currency committee, introduced the end time read to their congrega-i ~-sWO thousand or more persons $5,500.00 and includes all buildings N administration's bill to effect the lions a manifesto demanding his J[ were killed and 10,000 injured and lots from the corner to C. N monetary changes proposed. He resignation. It was up to the council by violent earthquakes that shook Speneer's store. Besides other N N called his committee together the of the churches to enforce the reichs-i all parts of India. The full meas- real estate which Mr. Heartt re- @ next day to consider it, and Sec- N bishop's decree, but several of the I ure of the disaster will not be ceives through ,the deM is the fine otor's N° retary Morgentbau was the first to councils declared openly they would i known for some time, but airplane residence property now owned by N be heard in argument for the legis- not do so. t surveys revealed that many cities E. A. MeGeorge, at the corner of N lation asked. Bishop Mueller showed some in-! and towns had been virtually de- Segar and Third Streets. N Only two Democratic senators clination to recede from his posi-' stroyed. In%some regions the de- One of the handsomest weddings N came out in the open promptly in tion, but the militant Nazi German vastation was increased by floods of the age was celebrated at St. opposition to the President's pro- Christian pastors brought great resulting from the temblors. Com-Ignacius church at Freiburgers on Best N gram, Carter Glass of Virginia and pressure to bear, telling him they munication systems were shattered the 23rd where Peter McCarty and N Thomas P. Gore of Oklahoma. Both would Support him only so long as and there was great danger of lMiss Mable Peters, solemly prom- N @ dec]'~red that the appropriation of he stuck by his decrees. The bish- pestilence and starvation among ised while kneeling" at the altar to the reserve banks' field was unlaw- op also seeks to annul all church the survivors. love and cherish each other, as ful and immoral. Most of the Re- laws passed in 1933 so he can pro- husband and wife, in sickness or N publicans were cautious in their N claim new ones. IRTH control has been put up health, poverty or wealth, until Friend @ expressions of opinion. Reverend Doctor Richter, who is B to both congress and the Pres- death do them part. However, Attorney General Hom- N highly considered by President Von ident. A bill designed to promote Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Truscott er Cummings rendered to the sen- Hindenburg, declared in the Berlin it by repealing certain clauses of N ate banking and currency commit- arrived here last week from Pin- N cathedral that "a storm is brewing the penal code has been introduced HEN weather is cold, engines tee a formal opinion upholding that nebog where the doctor has been N in Germany--a fight between Chris- and hearings started; and a com- section of the proposed bill.~ practicing for two years. They N tianity and heathendom." In this mittee headed by Mrs. Thomas N. will spend some time with friends W must work under entirely "The monetary gold stock (of the contest, however, Hitler appears to Hepburn of Connecticut and Mrs. in Farming, ton before settling here. N N federal reserve system) may be tak- have much more influence than the Margaret Sanger carried to the different conditions than in more en by the government in .the exer- The officers elected for the cur- N aged president, who is more and White House a resolution from the N cise of its right of eminent domain," rent year for the M.E. Ladies' N more becoming a figurehead. birth control and national recov- N moderate temperatures, of course. the attorney general's opinion de- Aid Society are: Pres., Mrs. H. T. N ery conference in Washington ask- Fritz; vice presidents, Mrs. E. Mc- N clared. "Such power," he went on, ing Mr. Roosevelt's support for the But they must have proper lubrica- "extends to every form of property ESIGNA~IONS from the Demo- Kim and Mrs. O. C. Wood; secre- N e y y measure. N required for public use.,' cratic national committee seem tary, Mrs. R. Young; treasurer, N tion if they are not to be seriously N Gov. Eugene Black of the reserve to be in order and some have al- Mrs. T. H. Hunt. f CAMILLE CHAUTE~IPS, fighting N board was heard bY the committee ready been received. The President The opera house is now being N desperately to sa~e his French harmed, They need a winter oil that In closed session and Senator let it be known that he did not ap- wired for electric lights. The N government after the great Bayonne N Fletcher said Black was unchanged prove of members of that body open- scenery has been ordered and the N pawnshop scandal, promised the N will give them ease of operation un- in his opposition to the seizure of ing law offices in Washington and seats are expected next week. chamber of depu- N the federal reserve gold and the apparently trading on their sup- Rev. Gee. R. Jackson, the colored ties to clean up der coldest, conditions, yet adequate N loss of th~ profit which would ac- posed influence with the adminis- evangelist, of Co!dwa£er, is ex- N that affair, and crue from the devaluation of the tration. Robert Jackson announced pected, here next week to assist in thereupon was giv- N lubrication when hot. Let us assist dollar. his resignation as secretary and a series of special services at the en a vote of con- N Senator McAdoo of California was committeeman from New Hamp- M. E. church. N fidence, 360 against you in prescribing the proper winter N veraciously reported as sharing the shire, and Fran~ O. Walker said he N 229. The vote came views of Senators Glass and Gore, had resigned as treasurer in order N on the govern- N oil for your engine but later sought to silence the ru- to devote full time to his work as SAND VALLEY SCHOOL. ment's opposition mor, asserting that he had not yet chairman of the President's na- N to the creation of N made up his mind. tional executive council. J. Bruce Eva Marble, Teacher. N @ Kremer, practicing law in the Cap- a parliamentary We have enjoyed playing N ital, resigned some weeks ago as commission to in- Dunce this week. ~fHO iS president of Cuba vestigate the col- N v • this morning?" asks the man member for Montana. Postmaster Premier Grace Harrison decorated our General Jim Farley, it is said, wants lapse of the Bay- N tn the street, and there is rea- Chautemps windows with pots of geraniums. N to quit as national chairman, but onne institution, the We drew winter scenes for art Gulf son for his uncertainty. At this death of Its founder, Serge (Hand- N Mr. Roosevelt may not permit this. work this week. N writing the head :~:~:;~:~:~...... :::.:.::::!:!!i~;~i;;i-'..:.~. Arthur Mullen, committeeman from some Alex) Stavisky, and the part N of the island re-~ ...... !!i~i!~i~...:.:~, The fourth grade made a store Nebraska and vice chairman of the[ several deputies have accused high N public is Col. Car- and we have greatly enjoyed "play- N committee, and Orman Ewing, mem- officials of taking in the affair. The N los Mendieta, con- ing store." ber from Utah, both have estab- premier insisted that such a com- servative leader of Shirley Sowden visited our school lished law offices in the Capital and mission would not get to the bot- N ants Thursday. Lubric t h e Nationalists ~i:::::!: tom of the charges. N it would not be surprising if they We have our picture of George N and presumably ac- ~ ~ The premier promised to investi- resigned from the national com- Washington framed. ceptable to the ad- ~ii:::: gate the affair personally and to N mittee. We are practicing deep breath- N ministration i n ~ spare =o names. During the heated N ing exercises daily. EPUBLICAN members of the debate he admitted there had been Reporter, Betty Oldenburg. N on Grau San Mar-i:::::::::::::::: R house ways and means com- looseness and poor functioning of N N tin, unable to hold :::::::~i!!i!i mittee proposed two important tax various services, but denied the N Brain Deteriorating Gas on any longer, re- Carlos Hevia charges of g3vernmental and po- N Cass City Oil and reforms. A constitutional amend- signed and some of ment authorizing the taxation of lice corruption. The opposition According to the University of N the factions united in choosing as N federal and state government bonds deputies were furious and there Illinois, the human brain has de- N N his successor the youthful Carlos was sugo-ested by Representative were open declarations that the creased about 50 cubic centimeters, N Hevia, secretary of agriculture in Allen T. Treadway, with the stat~ country faced a dictatorship. Chau- or 3 per cent, in the past few thou. N Grau's cabinet and a graduate of Company ment that there are now some $40,. temps replied vigorously and made sand years. N Annapolis Naval academy. Hevia 000,000,000 of such securities out. the assertion that a coup had been N N actually was sworn in before the standing and free from taxation. prepared several days previously Current in Lightning Flash Sl~anley Asher, Manager Telephone 25 N Supreme court, but he lasted only Representative Isaac Bacharach to put the government in the hands N A flash of lightning carries ap- one day. Then Col. Fulgencio proposed the restoration to the fed. of a few "energetic" men to act as N Batista, powerful commander ot proximately 25,000 anaperes of elec- N oral tax laws of a credit agains~ a directory. N the army, took command of the earned income. His plan, Mr © by Western Newspaper Union. ~ituation. There was a loud demand ments ma4e by electrical engineers. NNNN~N~NN~NNN~N~N~N~N~NNN~NNN~NNNNNNN~ Cass" City, Michigan. CANS CITY CHRONICLE~ FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. Page Three.

Mrs. G. Jeffery and Mr. and Mrs...... L_...... KINGSTON. Sol Morse Sunday. Feeding Plays an Celebrated 81st Birthday-- Mr. and Mrs. Basil Moore of De- Important Part troit visited his father, C. L. Moore, The children and grandchildren Sunday• in Poultry Profits ~ of C. L. Moore gathered at his Mrs. John May is ill at the home home west of town Monday eve- John Martin gave a very inter- Few have thought of what ,a of her daughter in Leslie. ning to help celebrate his 81st esting lecture accompanied by mov- chan~ge there has been in £he poul- birthday. Those attending were ing pictures, taken when he was on Mrs. H• P. Lee spent the week- try industry and the hen; from the Mr. and Mrs. C. Hill and family of his European trip. It was given to end with Mr. Lee in Detroit. bird that naturally foraged her Marlette, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore the P. T. A. Wednesday night, Jan. Andrew Champion is spending . own food, provided her own housing " and family of Lapeer, Mr. and Mrs. 17. the week in St. Louis on business• Eor~ to Mr. and Mr~ H~ro.ld ;a,:iiiti-c~, alu~ ia~;d a~,at two ,.}.eze~ Lylc Titus of )iayvi!!e, Mrs. 21ar~ i-i@i@ii VVi l~illb VI i~gbiVi~ Colts.n, a son. eggs per year, hatched them, and vey VanWagoner of Ann Arbor and raishd the chicks, to the 200 eggs spent the week-end at her home Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Moore and fam- Mrs. Carrie Stone is the guest of here, Mrs. Mary McCormick this week. per year bird. This is indeed prog~ ily of Kingston. ress. Many of the be~ter flock Mr• and Mrs. Clifford Secord and Miss Eleanor Rohlf of Nkron vis- owners are now approximating this son, Billie, visited relatives in Flint Mr. and Mrs. Howard VanCamp ited Marjorie Denhoff from Friday amount. 'Sunday. and family of Croswell were Sun- until Sunday. All this has not come about just Miss Waunetta Warner was the COUNTRY CLUB AVONDALE (lay guests of her mother, Mrs. An- E.R. Hartt and Lillian Hartt of by chance. It has taken years of guest of friends in Detroit over the na Best. Pontiac spent Monday night and study and experimenting and the week-end. Tuesda, y with their sister, Mrs. D. Sinclair is in a marine hospi- fundamentals of good poultry man- Mi'. and Mrs• Kenneth Striffler Thos. Everett. FLOWJR tal in Detroit where he submitted agement, of the proper breeding FLOUR of Detroit were week-end guests of to an operation. SpeCial revival meetings in the program, of a balanced ration feed- Cass City relatives. M. E. church closed Sunday night Mr. and Mrs. Leland VanHorn of ing schedule, have been materially Harold Secord of Columbiaville 24Vz lb.~ but Miss Richards remained for ,the i. Waterford spen,t the week-end with simplified• ~s spending the week with his 24½1b'87~'Bag his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin week and PraYer meetings are :con- The United States Department of~ brother ' Clifford Secord. Bag ~~Je VanHorn. tinued at the homes each afternoon. Agriculture and the Poultry Exten-i sion Departments of our state t Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Townsend 49 lb.. bag $1.49 ..... 98 lb. bag $3.45 Avoadale Pbur ...... barrel $5.95 Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Jeffery of schools cooperating, have rendered !and Miss Genevieve Sehwaderer Bloomfield Hills visited Mr. and Advertise it in the Chronicle. the producer service of untold spent Tuesday in Saginaw. value. Up to date, authentic poul-! Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Weaver and GOLD MEDAL PILLSBURY try information can be secured two sons of Flint spent Saturday from these sources at comparative- and Sunday with relatives here. ? ly no cost. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Seeger of Hens, like other animals and Detroit are visiting" friends and rel- FLOUR FLOUR birdS, are intended to reproduce a ati~es in and around Cuss City. certain number of times. The hen's • Stanley Striffler and Keith Me- natural reproduction capacity is Conkey attended an A. & P. Co.'s from two to three broods (abov~t meeting in Saginaw .Tuesday eve- 24 to 36 eggs) per year. In addi- ning. tion to laying this number of eggs, Milton Hoffman and family are she stores up in her body a num- nicely settled in their new residence ber of additional yolks, in all prob- three-quarters of a mile north of ability to help maintain her body town. during the winter months when Friday and 2aturdag Onl;y Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Champion feeds would be scarce. Because we visited Mrs. Champion's parents, wanted more. eggs and fresh eggs Mr. and Mrs. James Parsons, at the year around, it was necessary LARD 4 25c .to force production. Car. Sunday. We have several brands of coal We decided to feed the year Mr. and Mrs. James Doerr and around and give her warm quar- family of Sandusky spent •Sunday LAYING NASI-I suited to different uses. Our coal is ters; this added some to produc- with Mr. Doerr's parents, Mr. and tion. In .addition we found by feed- Mrs. A. Doerr. One BarofIvory Soap an economical fuel. It contains high ing- .certain materials we could George Swafield and Mrs. James FREE with the purchase of 7..rP. &of G. SOAP., 25c make many more whites for these Mann, both of Sterling', visited their stored up yolks, and this further daughter and sister, Mrs. Clyde heat unit average and is a dependable increased production. Quick, Sunday. \ COCOA, Our Mother's ...... 2 lbs. 19c FRUIT SPECIALS While we say this increased pro- Wesley Dunn of Ubly, a student fuel. You make no mistake when duction, it may not be true,, for if at Central State Teachers' .College, COUNTRY CLUB CATSUP 2 for 25c CAULIFLOWER,. "1 l~,r6 given time enough it appears that Mt. Pleasant, visited friends here Each ...... Jk ¢) you phone us for one or several tons hens will lay a total of almost ~s. over the week-end. BABBITT'S CLEANSER ...... 3 cans 10c GRAPEFRUIT, A] for ~ P,r many eggs on one system of feed- Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Champion DRIED PEACHES ...... 2 lbs. 25c Now selling ...... '-~ J.'~ C for your coal bin. ~Tell us what you ing and housing as the other. How- / returned Saturday after spending DRIED APRICOTS ...... lb. 15c STEMPLE FLORIDA ~ lbs. for ¢~" ever, by proper housing and feed- the week with their son, Frank need and we will ~i!l your order to ing, the hen lays these eggs over a Champion, in St. Louis. CLABBER GIRL Baking Pwdr can 10c ORANGES ...... ¢) ~)C period of 18 months to two years as Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lorentzen HEAD ~ for 1/I against 5 ,to 7 years under the ,old RAISINS, Seeded or Seedless 4 lbs. 29c LETTUCE ...... ¢'~ _Ke-~ satisfaction. visited Mrs. Lorentzen's sister, Mrs. or normal way of feeding and hous- JEWEL COFFEE ...... Jb. 19c BANANAS ~ lbs. 17~. ing. ~.From this it can easily be Win. Smith, at Jewel, from Satur- seen that a great deal of feed and day anti! Monday nighh FRENCH BRAND COFFEE ...... lb. 23c Now se'lling ...... ~.p J.e ~.~ time can be saved in the new meth~ Ca~l Zinneeker and Gas Harry of FIGBARS ...... lb. i0c o CELERy ~ for "~ Detroit spent several days the first od and incidentally we have fresh A STALKS ...... ~ J-~ e eggs the year .around, also when we of the week with the former's par- BABO ...... can 13c C LIFORNIA ~ lbs. ¢~= ents, Mr .and Mrs. Wm. Zinnecker. THE FARNPRODUCE CO. decide to kill the hen she is edible. CARRA NOUGATS CANDY ...... lb. 19c ORANGES, Seedless .... Z~ ~e To accomplish this, we find it Mrs. James MeKenzie of Kala- necessary to feed not only scratch mazoo spent from Friday until MAZOLA OIL ...... pt. 19c NEW-CARROTS, feeds, (starch and sugar; whole Sunday with friends and relatives ARGO STARCH ...... 3-lb. pkg. 25c Bunch ...... ~)e

grain feeds) but we must feed egg here...... ~ - L mash (protein; ground grains, Mrs. Glen Folkert and little son, ~•~~•~e~.~°@~e~°®~.~•~$•~°~$•~@~.~.~.~.~.•~.~••.~©.~©~.e~•©~e•~.~©~•~.~.~ grain by-products, meat, fish and Robert Clare, were able to be taken i milk feeds). ~to their home on South Segar Sti'[ Proper feeding has played quite Monday, from the Morris Hospital. "::' It' N D tens Ti me at: ' an important part in this proces- Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crafts and sion of progress in the poultry in- Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Crafts, all dustry. The reputable commercial of Detroit, were entertained Sun- ] feed organizations have made it day at the home of Mrs. Eunice ] possible for more and more pro- Crafts• WHAT KIND OF ducers to secure scientifically com- "" STUNNING STYLE-FRESH FROCKS " pounded, uniformly mixed" feeds, i Mr. and Mrs.. Herman Doerr, I • producing a balanced ration. , Mrs. A. N. Bigelow and Mrs. Willis Priced at $5.95 and $7.95 , It has long been a question',!Campbell were guests of Mrs. Nor- whether the hen is actually work- man Fisher in Royal Oak Sunday They'll be out of the door before we know it--these first ing for the producer, the question, and Monday. " style successes of the 1934 crop! They have the lines . . . the of "Layers or Loafers." They will i Michael Seeger is quite ill at his Priniing colors • . . the new details that will appeal to every woman. .~ :". work if given a ~chance. Not just home west of town. His daughters, Q DO YOU MAIL? ? a chance feeding--but a definite Mrs. George Muentener, of Saginaw Smart New All-Over Prints~Clever Print Combinations~ program of feeding the best." That I and Mrs. Atwater Beach, .of De- The personality of a business New Solid Colors of Navy and Spring Shades. Sizes 14 to 44. troit, are .caring for him. is quite often established by 6 is, feeds made of grains, meat, fish I 6 FIRST SHOWING OF SPRING MILLINERY, products, and milk in proper bal-] The Happy Dozen club met Mon- the character of its printed mat- © ance, with .the essentials of sun- i day evening at the Nome of Mrs. ter, such as letterheads, folders, priced at $1.95 and $2.45. shine in the form of tested cod liv-] 1 Stanley Warner. The time was billheads, mail enclosures, sales NEW SPRING WASH FROCKS, priced at $1.00. o-~ er oil ,and minerals. Nothing is so! spent in' stitching and chatting. A productive as this type of diet for luncheon was served by the .hostess. bills, etc., etc. . . . Building JANUARY CLEARANCEPRICES ON ALL FALL. AND laying hens. C.od liver oil is equal- business personality through . Stanley Reagh returned Sunday WINTER COATS AND DRESSES. ly essential in starting and grow- from Ann Arbor where he under- printed matter has been our job ing mashes fed to baby chicks. One went a successful operation on his for 30 years. Our quality print- interesting way to determine feed eyes. He had been a patient in ,the ing costs no more tha~ inferior ?- Berman's App arel Store costs is by .the use of the Quick University hospital .:for two weeks. work. Let us assist you i~ the Method of Calculating Cost of Eggs creation of business stationery KINGSTON MICH - Mrs. Jane Leitch and Mr. and as shown in University of Illinois Mrs. Lester Carpenter of Pontiac and other, printed matter. There Circular No. 275. Fundamentally :•••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••e•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••..o..e..o..o..o,, spent Tuesday at the Edward Mark is no extra charge for such ser- the real test of any feeding pro- home. Mrs. Leitch is Mrs.. Mark's vice .... Simply telephone No~ gram is its results measured in mother and Mrs. Carpenter is her 13-F-2. costs per dozen of eggs and its sister. effect "on the birds. It is no secret Friends of Edward Kosanke will that birds bred to lay 200 eggs per be pleased to hear that he has been If You Want- year will not accomplish this re- able to leave Highland Park ~Hos- sult unless, among other things, the i pital in Detroit where he has been feeding program is correct.--Con-I a patient for five months. He is at tribute& the home of his sister, Mrs. James BUSINESS STATIONERY MAIL ENCLOSURES Extra-Fast ..Relief Cole, in Detroit and from there c~n return to the hospital for treat- PERSONAL CARDS Typhbld Bacteria Very Small ment. SOCIAL STATIONERY The bacteria that cause typhoid Pink and white was the color SALE BILLS Demand And Get fever are representative of those scheme at the birthday dinner given FOLDERS that are rodlike in form. They are Thursday .evening by Mr. and Mrs. so small that 12,000 of them laid Win. Schwegler at their farm home BROADSIDES end to end would form a line only northeast of town in honor of the BOOKLETS .GEl ltlIN[ an inch long. It would take 9,000,- birthdays of Mrs. Schwegler and MENUS 000,000,000 of them to occupy a cu- Mrs. M. E. Kenney. Guests besides LETTERHEADS bic inch. Still these are by no Mr. and Mrs. Kenney and sons were BLOTTERS me~ns the smallest bacteria. Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Spurgeon and BAYER Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bohns~ck. ENVELOPES PLACARDS : POSTERS Oldest Map in World Drink Water With Meals A©PIR|N In. a temple shrine at Nazi, about Good For Stomach half way between Babylon and I Nineveh, a clay tablet, three "inches .Water with meals helps stomach a juices, aids digestion. If bloated Because of unique process in square, has been found on which with gas add a teaspoonful of Ad- manufacture, Genuine Bayer Aspir- is a map of a large private .prop- lerika. One dose cleans out poisons in Tablets are made to disintegrate erty with rivers and place names. does not harm the heart. So if you and washes BOTH upper and lower Phone, No. 13-F-2 and a Representative will call. ----or dissolve---INsTANTLY you want QUICK and SAFE relief see This is said to be the oldest map bowels. Burke's Drug- Store.--Ad- take them. Thus they start to work that you get the real Bayer article. in the world. vertisement J-4. instantly. Start "taking hold" of Always look for the Bayer cross on even a severe headache; neuralgia, every tablet as illustrated. Stiff Joints Quickly Healed neuritis or rheumatic pain a few above, and for the words ~N.~...~ White Man Most Respected Wounds by minutes after taking. GENUINE BAYER~ Men who have had to deal with Cuts And they provide SAFE ~elief~ ASPIRIN on every bottle ~ native races in tropic:a] countries Cass Cit:y Chronicle for Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN or package ...... know that the White man who is most respected is he who never _ GENU|NE GAY|~ ~P|RIN DOES ~OT HARM THE HEART -~ raises iris voice nor Ivses his tem- WARe per. ALL DRUG STORES ' ' ,, ,rr,r, r 'tJ " ' i < r I,I I I I1 ~Page Four. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. Cass City, Michigan.

George Moore, ,Care druggist, $ CASS CITY CHRONICLE. was the speaker before the Rotary Athletic Club ii Chronicle Published Weekly. Club here Tuesday and spoke in- W i n s f r o m F a i r g r o v e t .:: +: Liners,, .:..:.., i terestingly on ,the subject, "Pre- historic Pharmacy." The Tri-County Chronicle and Wednesday night, the Cass City RATES--Liner of 25 words or FOR SALE Stockers and feeders Cass City Enterprise consolidated A~thletic Club journeyed to Fair- less, 25 cents ea~ch insertion. and milch cows. Z. J. Putnam, April 20, 1906. Win. Muclge, 74, passed .away Thursday morning, Jan. 25, at his grove with only ten players. A Over 25 words, one cent a word ColHng. 9-29-tf occ l ttappemng'S_ double bill was played. In the for each insertion. home in Evergreen township. Fu- IF YOU HAVE calves, cattle or Subscription Price in Advance. first game Don Kilbourne and Fer- Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Barnes neral services will be held at the CATTLE BOUGHT or shipped hogs for sale, phone Grant Pat- In Tuscola, Huron or Sanilac Clark Zinnecker spent several 1 ris Kercher led the Cass City were business callers in Forester family residence Sunday at 2:30 through the Elmwood Shipping terson, Cars City. 1-26-1p counties, $1.00 a year in advance, days last week with relatives in "Grey" scorers with 12 and 10 Tuesday. p.m. points r~spect.lvely. The. Cass City Association, buyer, or trucker, in other part~ ~)f ~ichigan, $1.50 D~roit. ~ouis Darowi~z. Joe ~eisnman, OdSH PAID for crearn at K~u:~cy%, ~:~ jumped to a I0 +~. 3 lead ~o+ a year. in United States (outside Mrs. i. D. McCoy spent from Phone 132-F-32, Cass City. 2-3-tf Cu~s City. $-Z4-tlf of Michigan), $2.00 a year. ¢ Garrison Moore of Detroit spent Miss Audrey Bliss entertained a Sunday until Tuesday with her sis- the end of the first period,°~,and the week-end with his mother, Mrs. number of friends at her home ter, Mrs. F. D. McIntyre, in De- were always at least seven points WANTED--Old horses for fox Advertising rates made known FARMERS I will buy livestock M. M. Moore. ahead from then om Fairgrove feed. Must be alive. Send card on application. = Tuesday evening, troit. Her father, P. S. McGregory, for shil,ment to Detroit. Give accompanied her to Detroit and is showed class in the third quarter, me a chance before you sell. to Otto Montei, Fairgrove, Mich. Entered as second class matter Ernest Ertel of Colling visited Andrew Barnes and son, Victor spending some time with his daugh- but the locals held them to two Phone 68-F-3. Clifford Secord. 12-8-`tf April 27, 1906, at the peat office his mother, Mrs. Gertrude Ertel, Barnes, were business callers in ter, Mrs. McIntyre. foul shots in the final and went on 7-28-~f at Cass City, Michigan, under the Saturday evening. Port Huron Monday. to win by a score of 34 to 22. FOR SALE Twelve head of horses weighing from 1200 to 1800. Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. The WOman's Missionary Society The final game started out slowly, FOR SALE10 Guernsey heifers John McGrath. Barn, 1 mile H. F. Lenzner, Publislter. Mr. and Mrs. Grant VanWinkle Mrs. Harriet Boyes, Frank Reid of the Presbyterian church will but Humt, Gowen and Maharg each and cows, registered bull, five west, 1 north of Cass City. spent Saturday night and Sunday meet at the home of Mrs. P. A. made good on short shots to put months old, 2 side delivery rakes. and Miss Dorothy B oyes were Sagi- 1-12-tf. with relatives in Flint. naw visitors Saturday. Schenck on Thursday, Feb. 1, with the Cass City "Blue" squad into a Have your choice. J. E. Bukow- Mrs. P. J. Allured as assistant 6-2 lead at the quarter. Horace ski, R2, Ubly, ~/~ mile east. Carl Reed and family have 1-5-4p. MAN WANTED for Rawleigh Mr. and Mrs. Frank Skinner of hostess. The election of officers Pinney and Gowen each cashed in Route of 800 families in South- moved into the Isaac Cragg resi- will take place at this meeting, ion two tries in the secofid period dence on Garfield Ave. Detroit were callers at the' Frank HORSES--I will have in my barns east Tuscola county. Reliable Diltman home ~onday. Care land Kelly added a charity toss to from 10 to 25 horses from now hustler can start earning $25 , ~ut the locals in front 15-9 at the 1 Fourteen ~eachers were at until seeding time. Come in and weekly and increase every month~ Mrs. Harvey Clark is seriously DEFORD Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Knapp and Saturday for the first meeting of half. look them over. If you find one Write immediately. Rawleigh Co., ill at her home on ,the Beebehyser the new extension course on the In the final half, Maharg cashed place, southwest of town: son, Clark Knapp, visited friends to suit you, don't buy him but Freeport, Ill., Dept. MC-86-OD, Club Elects Officers in Argyle Sunday afternoon. subject, "The Science of Living~in on four shots, which with a free take him home and try him. If or see E. W. Lewis, 111 Saginaw ...... Things," which is in charge of throw, made him the Cass City The Farmers' Club met on Friday Mr. and Mrs, R, A, Rich Deck- he suits you, then buy him.[ St., Vassar , Michigan. 1-19-3p of Prof. Loesell, formerly a Tuscola high scorer. But Kubitz of Fair- with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kilgore. orville visited the latter% mother, Leslie Townsend has purchased county boy. The second meeting grove also was good, and his 14 Where can you buy any fairer~HEL P WANTED Representative A large company was present. The Mrs. H. McColl, Sunday. the Mellick house, is having it re- of the group will be held in Care points were three better than Ma- because every horse in guaran- with car to sell our high grade following officers were elected for decorated, and expects to move into teed satisfactory or no sale. Mil- 27. harg's total. The final score was baby chicks on commission basis. the year: President, Mrs. Thos. Mr. and Mrs. Blake Gillies of it in the near future. on Jan. ton Hoffman, ~/~ mile north of 39-21. Prefer one with selling ability Colwell; vic~e pres., H. D. Malcolm; Plymouth visited the former's Cass Ci~ty. 1-19-tf Mrs. A. A. Ricker was genuinely 1 Both were somewhat an~ poultry knowledge. Must be sec., Mrs. Frank Hegler; pianist, mother, Mrs. A. D. Gillies, over the Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Atwell en- surprised Wednesday evening when rough. Fairgrove proved to be the RADIO ACCESSORIES--All kinds reliable; references requested. Mrs. Alice Stewart; program com., week-end. tertained Mr. and Mrs. George Mc- the members of the Ev.angelical best on free throws .sinking nine of radio accessories at the May State age. Write Lakeview Mrs. Douglas. The February meet- Intyre of Deford and Dr. H. T. church choir of which she is direc- out of eighteen in both games, & Douglas furniture store. Cass Poultry Farm, R R. 8, Box 4, ing will be at the home of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Fader of Donahue at dinner Monday evening. Mrs. Walter Schell. Colling were visitors at the home tor entertained in her honor at the while Cass City could register on City. 1-17-tf Holland, Mich. 1-19-2 home of Miss Laura Jaus. After only eleven out of thirty. Both of of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward Sat: Division No. 4 the Methodist YOUR "OLD" Winter Suit--~Maybe Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Sickler are of the regular practice a,t the church, the teams from .the half missed FOR SALE--Two sets double work urday evening. church will meet with Mrs. Mason it just looks old. Perhaps the parents of a fine baby girl, born Mrs. Ricker was enticed to the Jaus plenty of shots. harness. Want to buy buzz saw for a seven o'clock potluck there's a lot more good service She home and almost immediately the Summary: and mandrel. Frank Hutchinson, at North Branch on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Heath and supper Monday evening, January in it and all it needs is a thorough choir arrived in full number. Games Cass City "Blue." R1, Cass City. 1-26-1p will answer to the name of Ellen Miss Laura Bigelow, all of Ypsi- cleaning. If so, you can save Lou. 29. provided enjoyment and ice cream FG FT PF TP lanti, visited Cass City relatives I I WISH to thank my neighbors money by sending us this suit C. J. Malc61m has been quite ill and cake were served as refresh- Gowen, f...... 5 0 2 10 over the week-end. Week-end guests at the home of and friends for their kindness now and you can stay "dressed for the past week and is still con- ments. Maharg, f ...... 5 1 1 11 during my recent illness. Mrs. up" until time comes for the new fined to the bed. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wiley and Mr. and Mrs. George Palmer were Those from a distance who at- Hunt, c ...... 2 5 1 9 Stanley Fike. spring togs. Robinson's Laundry The "Gospel in Songs" will be two children of Detroit spent Sat- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Breish and son, tended the funeral of Mrs. Win, G. Kelly, g ...... 1 1 1 3 I and Dry Cleaning. 1-26- given at the M. E. church on Sun- urday night and Sunday with Mrs. Frederick, and Miss B. L. Carpen- LOST--Pock~.tbook with milk check MacKenzie on Friday were: Miss Pinney, g ...... 3 0 1 6 day evening by .the Young People's Wiley's mother, Mrs. David Tyo. ter. for $13.13 and some change. Re- SECOND-HAND heating stove for choir and the Song Birds' choir, all Mary MacKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. -- - ward for return of same to Win. ! sale. Will burn hard or soft Win. McGee and son, Bernard, of 16 7 6 39 under the supervision of Mrs. D. P. The Misses Lucile Bailey and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schwegler en- Lapeer, R. R. 5, Cass City., coal or wood. G.E. Reagh, R Detroit; Mrs. John MacKenzie, Fairgrove "First." Merriman. Georgine VanWinkle were guests of tertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. and 1-26-1 ', R 2, Cass City. 1-26-1p Ray Boughton of Detroit spent Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Bailey at Vas- Mrs. Fred Buehrly and family and Mrs. Robert MacKenzie, son and FG FT PF TP Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. sar from Friday until Sunday eve- Fred Jaus and daughter, Miss daughter, Beryl and Robert, Jr., Hall, f ...... 2 0 2 4 FOR SALE--one pair of sorrel FOR SALE A complete outfit for Boney Daugherty. Other guests ning. Laura. and Arnold Kells, all of Port Hu- Kubitz, f ...... 6 2 2 14 Belgian colts coming three years i fishing through the ice, shanty on Sunday were their daughter, ron; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beach Profit, c ...... 1 1 3 3 old, weight 2800. One mile south l and sled, two spears and all oth- Mrs. Maggie McCaughna, and John Mrs. L. V. Mulholland returned The Epworth League cabinet met and Mrs. Minnie° MacKenzie of Cramer, g ...... 0 0 1 0 and two miles west of Gagetown. ~ er equipment costing. $100 new, McCaughna of Pontiac. to her home in Sand Lake the last at the Methodist parsonage Monday Kalamazoo; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner, g ...... 0 0 2 0 Earl Russell. 1-26-2p will sacrifice at ~A price. En- Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sole were of the week after spending two evening. A cooperative supper was MacKenzie of New Baltimore; Mr. quire of Mrs. J. H. Bohnsack at and Mrs. John Muntz and Mrs. Ma-I 9 3 10 21 I WISH TO THANK my friends Folkert's store. 1-26-1 business callers at Care on Mon- weeks with her mother, Mrs. David folbwed by group singing, business - and neighbors for fruit and tilda Bills of Elkton; Joseph and day. Tyo. and sociability. flowers sent me, and the doctors FOR SALE Stack of corn, not Miss Norma Young of Owendale. i800 ATTEND MEETING Duncan McArthur and Sarah and nurses for the good care I husked. There are 120 shocks. Gillies spent Sunday with friends Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Dickinson en- Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Turnbull and OF SEBEWAING LOCAL A good attendance was present. received during my illness at the Loyal Boulton, 3 miles north of at Wilmot. tertained the B-D club at their home sons and Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Stalk- Morris hosp£tal. Mrs. Lawrence Cass City. 1-26-1p The W. C. T. U. will meet with evening. The time er and Son of Deckerville were at the meeting" of the Woman's Mis-! Wednesday was sionary Society of the Evangelical Bruce Brown of Cass City was spent cards and refreshments Buehrly. FOR SALE 100 cedar posts. Mrs. Phebe Stenger Thursday af- in guests at the Methodist parsonage church at the home of Mrs. B. F. elected president; Arnold Gremel CLOVER and .timothy hay for sale. Levi BardweU. !-26-1 ternoo~ Feb. I. were served. here on Saturday Benkelman, Sr., Friday afternoon of Bach, vice president, and J. C. Thomas Keenoy, Cass City. -.... Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Locke and to hear Miss Hazel Ryckman of Gremel of Sebewaing, secretary- children were Sunday evening visi- Mrs. P. J. Allured entertained a Mrs. Harriet Boyes of West Main treasurer, at the annual meetin~ of Phone 14-F-4. 1-26-2 I WISH TO THANK my many friends and relatives who sent tors of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Titus of number of young people Wednesday street was a delightful hostess to Saginaw relate her experiences as the Sebewaing local of the Michi- a missionary in Nigeria, Africa. STRAYED to my premises, a hound me fruit and helped in many near Mayville. evening at a chop-suey supper in the Jolly All Club Thursday. A gan Milk Producers' Dairy Co., held Miss Ryckman has spent twelve dog. Owner may have same by ways (luring my illness. Mrs. Alton Lewis returned to Johan- honor of the birthday of her son, dinner was served at noon and the at Sebewaing Thursday, Jam 18. proving- property and paying ex- John S. Bali. nesburg" after spending a week at Robert Allured. day spent in visiting, l years in the dark continent and at Dinner was served at the Hotel - present is at home on furlough on penses. Eugene Strickland. his home here. Hannah a~d 800 attended the meet- Week-end guests at the Clarence " the Epworth account of ill health. Her address 1-26-1 FOR SALE--A few good work Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kelley and ing at Arbeiter Hall when "Jimmy" I horses; one fresh cow with calf Quick home were Mr. and Mrs. The officers of e FOR SALE Two horses, 2 cows daughters were Sunday visitors of Quincy Morley and son, Gramt, League enjoyed a potluck supp r! Friday was most interesting. She Hays gave a talk on general dairy- by side (a good one). Want to and farm tools. Mike Smith, ~A ~ Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Stokes at Miss Beatrice Quick, Mr. VanCon-i Monday evenin~ at the home of also exhibited photographic pic- ing, and Howard Simmons on ~en- buy wagon. Elkland Roller mile north, 1~ east of Wilmot. East Dayton. ant and Mr. Tawsley, all of De- Rev. and Mrs. Charles Bayless. Af-,tures and answered many questions. oral conditions. James A. Rich- Mills. 1-26-t Miss Ryckman and Mrs. G. A. 1-26-2p Elmer Bruce was a business call- troit, ter the supper, Mr. Bayless gave, mond, manager of the Flint local, er at Bad Axe, Wednesday. an outline of the work planned for Spider, who was the leader of the w,~ also a speaker. WE WISH to express our sincere - meeting, have been friends since WILL HAVE another car of Cava- Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Kelley and J.me~ A. Richmond of Caseville, thanks to our friends and neigh: Mr. and Mrs. Sam Blades and J. the league. young girlhood days. Mrs. F. lier coal Jan. 29 (next week). children of Gagetown spent Sunday B. N. Baur of Bay Port, Arnold bors for their many acts of/kind - S. ~McCrea attended .the funeral of Klump of Saginaw, mother of Mrs. Let us have your order to be de- with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gremel of Bach and Joe Bell of ness and sympathy and the beau- Mr. McCrea's brother-in-law, Hen- Rev. and Mrs. G. A. Spitler will SpitIer, and several members of.the livered off car. Elkland Roller Win. Kelley. Unionville were re-elected as direc- tiful flowers; to Dr. Donahue and ry McDurmon, at Care Tuesday. leave Saturday for Detroit where ' Butzbach Mission Circle were Mills. 1-26-1 Miss Ruby Kelley and Miss Eve- t~~, for three years. Dr. McCoy, .the nurses and Mrs. Mr. McDurmon was the father of Mr. Spitler will be the speaker at ~'uests of the afternoon. Mrs. Ben- lyn Retherford were guests for a Mr. and Mrs. Morton err, Mr. WE WISH to express our thanks Rena White for their kind care the late Orlo McDurmon. the anniversary banquet at the kelman served delicious refresh- week of Miss Norma Retherford at Cross Street Mission. On Monday, ~nd Mrs. Bruce Brow,n, Mr. and to kind friends and neighbors for in the hospital; to Roy. Bayless ments. for his comforting words and the Saginaw. Mr. and Mrs. John West enter- they will go to South Rockwood Mrs. Emery Lounsbery, Wallie their many acts of kindness dur- singers for the beautiful songs; Mrs. John Davis left Sunday to tained at dinner Thursday evening where they will assist in special Ball and Mr. Peddle attended the ing our recent bereavement. Al- BEEKEEPE R'S MEET. all of which were rendered dur- spe~d an indefinite length of time Dr. and Mrs. Floyd T. Armstrong services for two weeks. Roy. Spit- meetin~ from Cas City. so to Dr. Morris and Mr. and ing the illness and at the death with her mother, Mrs. Sheppard, and Mr. and Mrs. Clare Burnell of ler started the church at the Cross Mrs. Douglas for their services. At the meeting of the Tuscola and funeral service of.our lovin~" near Snover. Care and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Street Mission and his father DIVORCES GRANTED. Gustave Zapfe and Family. Harry Pugh of Port Huron spent founded the church at South Rock- County beekeepers in the honey wife and mother. Win. G. and McCullough of Cass City house of the Commercial Beekeep- FOR SALE--BeautifuI bronze tur- the week at the home of Mr. and wood. Divbrce decrees were granted Marie MacKenzie. ors at C. O. Keinath's at Millington keys in A1 condition, one tom and Mrs. George Spencer. Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Landon at-' in the Tusco!a county court the Harry Kilos made a business trip last Friday the leading topic of seven hens. Mrs. Sylvia Treff, BOX SOCIAL at Sand Valley tended a meeting of the Huron Roy. and Mrs. P. J. Allured very first of the week in the following to Detroit Thursday. discussion was the proposed nation- R1, Decker, '4 miles east, School, Wednesday, Jan. 31. Old County Rural Letter Carriers' As- graciously entertained their fellow- Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Drace were cases: Maida P. Wooster vs. Lynn south of Deford. Phone 162-F-3. time music. Everybody invited. sociation and the Ladies' Auxiliary workers in the ministry of Cass al honey marketing agreement Wooster; Marion H. Bauer vs. week:end visitors at Rochester. which proposes to enable beekeep- Robt. A. Bauer: Josie Vansteen- 1-26-1. Eva Marble, teacher. 1-26-1p at ,the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Mrs. G. A. Martin attended a City at their home Tuesday eve-lers to regulate their business so Burgess in Bad Axe Friday eve- ning. The following enjoyed the~ kiste vs. Victor Vansteenkiste.... _ meeting of the executive board of 'that they can get a price above the ning. hospitality of the Presbyterian I " " " ~ e Tuscola county W. C. T. U. held in manse: Roy. and Mrs. Charles Bay- cost of production Ior their non y. French First in Vermont the courthouse at Care on Tuesday less, Rev. and Mrs. G. A. Spitler Inasmuch as Tuscola county is in Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Ward and Vermont was first settled by the Quality , Service ! Price .T afternoon. and Rev. and Mrs. Win. R Curtis. i`the heart of the best honey produc- niece, Elizabeth Moore, visited in French and ceded re (~ea Britain Rev. and Mrs. Peter Bissett were The evening passed pleasantly in i ing region in the United States and WE DELIVER Canboro Sunday evening. Mrs. called to Grand Rapids Iast week games and in planning cooperative i pr°duces carloads of fine-flavored Myrtle Jarvis, who had spent the where their brother-in-law is seri- work in the village. Mrs. Allured and superior quality honey every week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Ward, ously ill. , summer, the cost of production and returned to her home in Canboro served dainty refreshments. !sales price for such a vast amount Mrs. Win. Patch returned home Indepsndent Grocsry with them. Friday after helping to care for her ' of honey is a vital topic for these M. D. HARTT. Telephone 149. Roy. Paul Allured was the guest- beekeepers. PASTIM[ TH[ATR[ sister, Mrs. Fred Palmateer, of Mrs. Pearl Strickland" was called leader of a young people's round' Cass City :Dryden, who is ill. to Kingston Wednesday, Jan. 17, table conference at Huron City l Mr. Keinath was elected vice because of the severe illness of her community house Friday evening, president of the Saginaw Valley Sat. - Sun. Jan. 27 - 28 Jan. 19. Epworth Leagues from 'Beekeepers' Association, represent- Northern Michigan Pe as ...... per can 10c ~BUTTER ONLY" mother, Mrs. Matilda Weaver. Mrs. ing Tuscola county beekeepers. THE 4 MARX BROS. CAMPAIGN IN TUSCoLA Strickland returned home Sunday Port Austin, Port Hope, and ,the i This association recently held their --in-- Molasses Fruit Cookies ...... 2 doz. 15c evening leaving her mother a lit- Argyle parish met at the call of hey. Charles Bayless, youth" coun-! district meeting in Saginaw and "DUCK SOUP" Concluded first page. tle better. from seller for Methodist Episcopal~the beekeepers of the entire Sagi- Boy, how they dish,it out: Mustard ...... qt. can 15c newspaper man, Cass City. This =churches of the Upper Thumb. This saw valIey organized at that time. Gags ! Girls ! Songs ! committee is cooperating with the The Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Baptist church met is the first of a series of group Tues. - Wed. Jan. 30 - 31 White Naptha Soap ...... 10 bars 25c state committee, of which Vernon rallies for 1934. The next meet- THREE NEW BOOKS J. Brown, Mason, is chairman, in Thursday afternoon at the home DOUBLE PROGRAM of Mrs. Frank Benedict. Devotion- ing is scheduled at Elkton for Men- FOR SCHOOL LIBRARY Marion Davies and Bing Candy Pellets ...... per lb. 9c the "Butter Only" campaigm. The AND ENGLISH CLASSES organized dairy interests of Michi- als were in charge of Mrs. W: R. day, Feb. 12. Crosby in gan, including the Milk Producers' Curtis. The program, prepared by Crystal Wedding Oats ...... 55 oz. pkg. 18c Dr. I. D. McCoy has purchased " GOI N G Excha.nge, are very active in this Mrs. Pearl Strickland, was in I A most enjoyable meeting was three books, entitled "Looking For- campmgn. I charge of Mrs. Curtis in the ab- I held Thursday afternoon when the HOLLYWOOD" Staley's Gloss Starch ...... 3 lb. box 19c i sence of Mrs. Strickland. The next I Woman's Home Missionary Society ward," written by President Frank- also-- lin D. Roosevelt. One book is placed MARRIAGE LICENSES. Imeeting will be held with Mrs. 1 of the Methodist church met at the Alice Brady and John Barry- in the public library, one in the Our Mother's Cocoa ...... 2 lb. box 23c 'Omar Glaspie home .of Mrs. Angus McPhail on more in Herbert E. Parsell, 59, Care; --__ I South Segar street with Mrs. Kent- school library, and one to be pre- Sarah Ann Lockwood, 55, Care. I The ladies of Bethel Group of ing as asMstant hostess. Twenty- sented.to the high school classes in "Should Ladies Dill Pickles ...... 1 qt. can 15c Wilbert H. Merry, 44, Akron; Home Extension Work have been four members and three visitors English. Reviewers state it .sets forth in Behave" Mildred Barker, 45, Akron. very busy on the lesson, "The were present. The program, in a Tomato Soup ...... 3 cans 17c Ross Davison McCormick, 37, Home Maker's Clock," given by the charge of Mrs. A.. H. Higgins, was very readable manner the presi- EXTRA SPECIAL government and the Flint; Martha Hyslop, 24, Milling- leaders at Mrs. John Guisbert's given mostly by children. A play, dent's ideas of Thursday, Friday, Saturday Lipton's Japan Green Tea ...... per lb. 36c manner in which he wishes to con- ton. home, Jan. 5. The ladies have been "Children of the Way," was given Feb. l- 2- 3 Norman Summerfield, 28, Mil- keeping tab on their time spent by girls and boys representing the duct his administration. It is non- MARIE DRESsLER in lington; Clara Kinney, 19, Milling- from five in the morning until nine different nationalities under the partisan, being simply the clear, in the evening for seven days. In protection of the Woman's Mission- straight-forward common sense as- "Dinner at Eight" ton. pirations of an extremely honest with Wallace Beery, John and RA~k~ CELERY HEARTS ...... 9c Norman VanCleve, 18, Vassar; this lesson they expect to know ary Society. A trio, Coleen Moore, and farsighted president. All will Lionel Barrymiore, Edmund Nina Elsie Colman, 19, Vassar. where to make improvements in Lena May Cross and Jean Bigelow, -HEAD LETTUCE ...... large and firm 9c find it profitable to read this book Lowe, Jean Harlow, Jean Bern Kelley, 21, Deford; Polly their work and in planning work sang "Jesus Loves Me" and "Fa- TANGERINES ...... 15c with other members of the family. ther We Thank Thee." Bobby Ry- for very .surely the fate of our Hersholt. Baxter, 19, Silverwood. The Biggest Event in ScTeen Lyle K. Dome, 23, Akron; Esther In the "tardy" contest, the mem- land recited "Your Flag and My country and the fate of each indi- wE ooou. pA.T GRAPEFRUIT ...... 4 for 25c vldual doT)ends in the next few History. R. Gebauer, 23, Elkton. bers of ~rs. ~/[cCau]ey'~ .~de were Flag" am4 led ~he ~ag salute. Re- Chester R. Schlott, 30, Detroit; all present and with no tardy freshments were served by the years on intelligent and honest Mary Ag'nes Murphy, 24, Vassar. marks. hostesses. government. Cass City, Michigan...... CASS (~TY CHRONiCLE--~FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. Page Five,

SUIT DESIGNS IN Current Comment. I cause of the Conditions i~ the neg-~ There are many good movie~ and lear of parents, i many good radie programs just as Hot Stove Center PLEAS~HG VARIETY : Those few counties in the ~outh-I there are many good books and , i It Is Hard to Understand. western part of Michigan are no i many vicious ones. Most of us con- Clirtton Co. Republican-News. i different than other counties in ,the l cern ourselves over what our chil- Spring Styles t~Satisfy Ind|-] People who have worked hard, state except that they are nearer tel dren read. But we are too shiftless vidual ~ aste: saved carefully and consistently, populous centers and possess hun-I to stand up and fight for radio and Vb--LL IAtdl'S¢¢N NOTHIbl6 1 o met the-emergenCies of life, always dreds of lake resorts. The girls and I screen decency. We have tolerated If you are anxious to go shop- paid their debts, educated their boys are no different there than l radio and screen garbage because WE SeNr To ping for .your spring suit, there iml children and endeavored to dis- they .are in Ingham county or any we have" been told that it is smart V4Ag 601 6 a variety of offerings right 'now, ] charge the duties of good citizens other county of the state. They i to be sophisticated. But it isn't COORESS-t4?-. from the light-weight tailored jacket 1to their community and their state will go as far as their parents will smart when ,that sophistication w N ',qA 5 B i ,,'4 N k P ..... ~ _2_ ~,,~e]~. peep]% ~9.y xv% are }~av!ng' &llow i;i~em to ~o. crops ou~ m ,:~ur own ~a~iiv, o now, to the more formal style which difficulty in understanding the pol- ' Parents have not been assertive A man's home is his castle. It -ca 60Ve NM r you can practically order to your icy of spending ourselves into pros- enough in the face of the compe- should be a place where decency own design, It's like that this year perity and borrowing oursdves out tition that movies and radio pro- and manners prevail. It has always coaoz s5 P V5 You t0 --no fixed set of rules for suiting of debt. It is contrary to the life- grams offer home influences. Most been the keystone of character. It s %lON NOV4 this season. teachings and life-experiences of of us tolerate radio programs and still will possess those attributes if The women who forget to diet most of us. It is a distinct depar- movies that are suggestive, vicious parents do ,their duty. will be happy to hear that this sea- ture from every rule and every past and sinister. We would forbid OUrr The grand jury will return some AOa- son's array of suits includes sev- experience of either individual or girls or boys to associate with boys indictments against careless par- eral that give a slenderizing im- state. It is, in fact, just exactly and girls or men and women who ants if the evidence is properly pression. There Is the suit with hip what President Roosevelt branded talk and act like characters of ra- studied. length coat, two-thirds, three-quar- it at the outset--an experimertt. We die programs or characters of mo- ters and seven-eighths variat:ons. are in it. This policy of spending vieland. But we allow these same The long reefer silhouettes are trim and borrowing is launched. There boys and girls to come under the~ Trees Shrink and Stretch and do not make you look your is no turning back at this point. influence of gangsters, harlots and l During clear days of the growing size. The best and only sane thing for moral perverts of ,the air and period tree-trunks shrink in the The more fortunate members of people to do is to go along with screen. daytime and expand at niaht. It the suit-seekers will find themselves it--give iL all .the support gney are is atl caused by the sun drawing shown boxy types of jacket suits, capable of. The boys and girls are not to moisture from the tree during clear sponsoring just-to-the-hip, or finger- blame. Boys and girls of 20 years days. On wet days, there is no This country was dangerously ago would have used no more judg-i shrinkaa-e tip length jackets. The classic near to something unthinkable--no merit or discretion than do some tailleur is shown, principally in one knew exactly what. It had to present-day juveniles had their l single-breasted types. be turned. People had to be given a parents furnished them with high- Fossilized America Practically all the skirts are cut ray of hope; started back at habits powered cars and no admonitions as Not excluding the vast bone de- on slender lines and have a formal of work and self-sustenance. Zt had to behavior. Youth would have posits of giant prehistoric animals waistline. Hemline flare, if you like, to be done quickly. The regular flamed 20 years ago had parer~ts al- in Argentina, Bolivia and Mongolia, or you can have kick pleats. avenues of employment were closed lowed juvenile minds to become pol- the United States contains more fos- For material, the effort for slen- to millions. Only government had luted with the filth of the radio silized remains of dinosaurs than derness prevails, bringing ribbed the power, the resources and the and the screen. any other country in the world. woolen mixtures to the fore. authority to accomplish this. It is being done. The cost is staggering.' We are spending our future income. HOSTESS GOWN 1 There will be new and greater By C/~IE~,I~ NICHO]L&S .taxes. The cost will have to be GAGETOWN. Imet Vhelan of Port Huron were WICKWARE. paid. Further, new drastic and Monday callers at the home of Mr. revolutionary laws and rulings will Save With Henry's " " ]and Mrs. Jules Goslin. be made and enforced to prevent On Monday, January 22, nearly School News-- t Mr. and Mrs. Win. Johnston, Jr., either recurrence or a breakdown @ thirty of the friends and neighbors The second semester begins ,the rejoicing over the arrival of a in the campaign that has started. of Mr. and Mrs. Asa Durkee gath- week of January 29th and alt chin t arebaby girl who came to gladden Agree with this plan or noV--it is I ered at ,their home near Wickware dren starting in the kindergarten t their home Thursday, January 18. the plan of the national govern- grocery peclals [ for a farewell before they leave for ment. Its scope and its cost are so should enrolI during, this week...... r.. --~-::--:::r=~, _~_ ======-:=-: =::. basketball I Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Purdy were their new home in Wilmot. Mr. tremendous that it binds us to a The results of the I hosts last Wednesday to a large •games Friday with' Owen4ale are, Durkee, who is 81 years old, and long-time policy and program of number of Masonic and Eastern I ROYAL pkgs. as follows: Gagetown boys 14, Mrs. Durkee, who is 72, were mar- expense which we must carry for Star friends. Owem,lale boys t8. Gagetown girls ried 56 years ago the thirty-first many years to come. In It are ...... 3 21c 11, Owendale girls 10. The next Miss Ina Walrod entered Morris of December. ~htrty-~ix of these _grave abuses, inequities and mis- , One Package Royal Pudding Powder for One Cent :game is played with Ubly at Ubly, hospital at Cass City last Monday years have been spetit oti the farm takes. It is not perle&. It could and was operated on the same day where they now reside. During February 2. not be. It is an emergency .meas- for appendicitis. The operation their stay here they have won the Semester examinations are being] ure of the greatest proportions this was successful and the patient i~s on friendship and respect of all who given this week. "! country or the world has ever Mrs. C. P. Hunter, assisted by. the way to recovery. knew them. seen. It is fully as significant and Crystal Wedding Oats ...... 55 oz. pkg. 18c Mrs. Patrick Kehoe and Mrs. Mar- At noon a potluck dinner "was[ comprehensive as the changes tin Walsh, entertained at the Hunt- served after which they were pre-[' brought about in Russia, Italy and Pioneer Tomato Soup ...... 3 cans 17c er home last Tuesday at a six o'- SHABBONA. sented with some very nice and use- I Germany, but w~th infinitely ~reat- clock dinner, the members of the t ful gifts. er concern for the welfare and con- Corn Syrup ...... No. 1½ can 1Oe [ basketball and football teams, also The rest of the afternoon was sideration for the spirit and pride Duncan Crawford, superintendeht, Robert Sharp spent Saturday spent by singing the old favorite of the people than any or all of May Blossom Mustard ...... qt. jar 15c I and Alexander Good, principal. night and Sunday with Emil Rich- Wi.ckware hymns. the other named countries. I ter. I The last hymn that was sung ::: ...... 2 lb. 2a I Death of Former Undertaker-- Robert Burns is visiting relatives was "Blest be the tie that binds." Responsibility of Parents. in Flint. Mr. Hichens dismissed the meet- | Roland Bolton, 75, died at the Ingham Co. News. John Wells of Deekerville was aing by a word of prayer. home of his son, glinton Bolton, There is now a great hue and cry caller in this vicinity Monday. I The friends then left wishing Mr. near Care on Jan. 17, following" a in the southVvvestern counties of I La FRANC E 3, ..25c ! i Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGregory and Mrs. Durkee a long and happy cerebral hemorrhage. Funeral ser- Michigan regarding" conditions sur- [ POWDER ...... i ! and daughter, Lucy. visited at Hat- life together in their new home. vices were conducted in the Bolton rounding lake resorts and dance vey McGregory's Sunday. home on Friday afternoon, Jan. 19, halls. A grand jury is investigat- and entombment was made in Hill- Charles Sharp is visiting his Valuable Tusks ing charges brought by five school side cemetery. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jobe, I Because of their finer texture and girls. Moralists are blaming flam- I Mr. Bolton was born on April 10, at Clawson. distinctive "old ivory" pallor, the ing youth, dance halls, automobiles, R 1859, at Crampton, Ont., and came Mr. and Mrs. Thos. McHugh have' well-preserved tusks of the ancient good roads, the failure of the ~o Tuseola county at the age of 16 moved back to Detroit. hairy mammoth are more valuable church, moonshine liquor and about A. Henry [ Mr. and Mrs. James Cooley at- / than elephant ivory. ~- Telephone 82. Cash Paid for Cream and Eggs, years. For several years, he was every other thing" except the real w~ oo oua PAn'r ~ _ -. . ,~ . ! an undertaker in Gagetown and in tended the funeral of Mrs. Cooley's reason--the failure of parents. recent years was employed at the brother, George Brown, in Detroit The Pony Express Youth, dance halls, automobiles, carpenter trade here. He was'a Saturday. The pony express was started in good roads and liquor are contrib- resident of Gagetown until a. few The friends of Miss Lticy McLar-, 1860, when an impending crisis urine- factors, it's true, but the real years ago. He leaves two sons, Li- ty gave her a surprise in honor of. made the rapid communication of nus Bolton of Detroit and Clinton her birthday Saturday evening. I news between the older states and ScMaparelli creates a charming Belfort of Care. One daughter, Mrs. James Burns entertained far-distqnt California a national me- hostess gown for the woman who C!eta, prededed her father in death her cousin of Sioux City, Iowa, a~ eessity. The animals used were, of receives her friends at home for tea. three years ago. few days last week. , course, not ponies but fleet Ameri. The simple model of plover's egg can horses. Mrs. Irl Coltson, who has spent blue treebark (a rough crepe which Mrs. French Died in Pontiac-- the past week visiting relatives in ~ is perfectly stunning) has a band of Mrs. Alice French, 75, passed Flint, has returned home. CASS CITY MARKETS. mink running from the sleeves so away at the home of her son, Chas. as to form a collar, as Its only trim- Announcin@ Mrs. Anna Silvernail of Detroit ming note. Wilson, in Pontiac on Jan. 22 after is visiting her parents, Mr. and Jan. 25, 1934. a three weeks' illness. Funeral Mrs. Sam Mitchell. Buying price-- services were conducted at the M. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Kirkpatrick Wheat, No. 2, mixed, bu ...... 80 Angora Is Important in the arrival of a complete line of new P. church on Thursday afternoon, entertained their daughter and Oats, bu ...... 37 Lady's Winter Wardrobe Jan. 25, by Rev. L. Burch. Burial husband, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Mil- Rye, bu ...... 56 was in Hillside cemetery. You can't go far this winter with- ler, of Detroit, Saturday night and Beans, cw~c...... 2.35 out your herd of angoras, be you A. B. C. and Loom lewd Born in Brighton, England, on Sunday. Peas, bu ...... 1.00 sporting, socializing, or just a timid The Best Aug-. 11, 1849, she came to Tuscola Mrs. Voyle Doeman entertained Light red Kidney Beans, cwt...4.00 little home body. A smart combina- county in 1865 from Toronto, Ont. Percales the Women's Department at the Dark red Kidney Beans, cwt...4.25 tion of a skirt and three-quarter ShoW Window Her marriage to oc- home of her grandparents, Mr. and Barley, cwt ...... 1.25 coat of angora and tweed (like reg- in a variety of plain colors curred in 1869. Mr. Wilson died in Mrs. Thos. Brown, Thursday alter- Buckwheat, cwt ...... 1.00 ular tweed with a fuzzy surface) The best show window in 1895 and two years later she mar- noon. Lunch was served. Butterfat, lb ...... 19 and a sweater blouse of pink angora the Cass City community is and patterns. These are tied Stephen French, who passed B~tter, lb ...... 17 Mrs. Lena Leslie will entertain wool the Liner Ad department of away in 1918. Eggs, doz ...... 19 This has clear crystal buttons the best quality and at the Bridge Club this (Friday) eve- Cattle ...... 3 3% the 'Chronicle. Read the Mrs. French was the youngest of ning at her home here. All mem- straight down the front and a soft a family of 14 children and spent bers are requested to attend. Hogs, live weight ...... 3~ t bow tie at the thPoat just under the Liner Ads . . . if there is prices that are reduced. most of her life in this part of the Calves ...... t ...... 5~A I chin. Th~ sweater is worn over the something you want to buy. state. She leaves four sons, Ar- Herbert Parrott, who is employed Hens ...... 7. 10. i skirt and comes to the hips. A nar- Use the Liner Ads . . . if Now is the time to get your Spring chic, James, Albe~ a~d Charles, : in Flint, spent Sunday with his Broilers ...... 7 11 I row belt confines it to the normal there is something you want and two daughters, Mrs. Hattie family here. White ducks, 5 lbs. and up, lb...... 8! 'waistline. Sewing started. Gloughie and Mrs. Anna Honey. • i Mrs. A. L. Sharrard visited her t The coat has deep square pockets, to sell. Liner Ads cost only son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. wide cuffs and a simple turnback 1 cent per word. Sharrard, and family at Birming- Several from here attended the collar with one end becoming a ham Saturday and Sunday. annual banquet, of the Michigan scarf which wraps the throat or Read and Use Pinney Dry Goods Co. Milk Dealers' Association held at Mrs. Heletha Minnie of Port Hu- hands down at the side. ,qebewain~ last week Thursday. ron spent Sunday with her parents, Cass City Between 700 and 800 persons were Mr. and Mrs. Win. Phetteplace. the Liner Ads in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Ctaud Kirkpatrick FLASHES FROM PARIS Rev. and Mrs. Leo Burch will ae- attended the funeral of Charles com~aany some of the youn~ people Schrader at Care Wednesday after- New under brims are flower noon. "Disputing and borrowingcause.grief and faced. to Mawille where they will attend sorrowing." a Methodist Protestant rally on Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kritzman Metal capes match the trim- ming on evening gowns. Saturday. and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Kritzman JANUARY The all-silk ensemble or suit Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Leipprandt of visited their brother, Hazen Kritz- .~z~29--William McKinley( 25th President, born 1843. is in promise for spring. Detroit s~oent the qaast week at the man, in Detroit Saturday and Sun- day. Latest decolletage calls for home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Purdy. ~'~e 30--France recognizes United extremely low cut in front. Robert Burns is spending this States' independence, Flour Change Miss Beatrice Freeman, who has Price First call to the colors for week with Mr. and Mrs. Clare e.~t-~ K'~" 1778. been spending the past month with spring ts answered by navy blue. Burns in Flint. f her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ~a_$~ 3I--Canada's War Time Pro* Tiara cuff theme is exploited Freeman, returned to Grayling on Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Cook and hibttion Act in force, 1918. for hats both formal and infor- Saturday where she will resume Harold Cook attended .the funeral mal. ~eaching: o ~of Mrs. Gus Zapfe in Cass City FEBRUARY "Doll up" your midseason aft- 49 pound bag, now ...... ® Mrs. Howard Loomis and baby Monday. ]~ 1--Watch for the groundhog ernoon dress with a perky collar daughter spent the past week in t Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Neville vis- and his shadow tomorrow. of glistening metal weave. "Cass City at the home of her par- ited at the D. C. Sinclair home in Instead of $1.49 as stated in our adv on Page 3 of this week. cuts, Mr. and Mrs. Henry McCon- Kingston Saturday night. ;~ ~ 2--U. S. ends its war with Mexico victoriously, 1848. key. New Necklines II ...... ' [ ..... Miss Ruth McCarthy, Who was a] In addition to the high front neck- guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence i Just Noise L 3--Woodrow Wilson, war- line for evening, a low, wide front . time President, dies 1924. and family the past week, returned i "Some men," said Uncle Eben, "is decolletage is being shown. Furs home Wednesday. like de horn on de automobile. Day are used at the neckline in a square ~/ 4--Charles Lindbergh, great effect on some evening jackets. ;ldhn Phelan, Emmet Phelan and don't push nuffin along, but dry Lone Eagle, born 1902.

-Frarik ;ldhn-ston dfDetroit and Era- sounds like de wholo works." q3WNU Page Six. CASS C1TY CHRONICLE~FRiDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. Cass City, Michigan.

Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Henderson were ~~1~ [~ ~_~.~ ® ed and burial was in Elkland ceme- the wall. They are "Thd Old Ore- RESCUE. i Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Goodall of' tery. gon Trail," "Shoeing the Bay Cass City, Mrs. R. F. Homer and Those from a distance who at- Mare," "Off for a Winter Hike," The class in religion will meet at daughter, Maxine, of Novesta, and Fred McEachern, though still tended the funeral were Mrs. Era- and "The Spring Song." the home of Mrs. Eva Moore on Mrs. Fred Rickwalt, of Card. confined to the house, is improving ma VanCise and granddaughter, The teacher is reading; us "Westy International SCHOOL from his recent illness. Wednesday evening. Mrs. Gustave Zapfe. Mrs. Lawrence VanCise, Mrs. Ma- Martin and The Old Saute Fe A nice crowd attended the Premo Mrs. Archie McLachlan and lit- mie Casdorf and Albert Callow, all TraiL" She is reading to the first ":" L E S S O N ":" class meeting at the Martin home t!e son are visitors at the Archie Clara Louise Christian, daughter of Capac; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd three grades, "Nixey Bunny in ELLINGTON AND of Martha and Isadore Christian (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., on Friday evening. :Gillies home. Zapfe and family of Owendale; Mrs. Manners Land." Member of Faculty, Moody Bible Mr. and JArs. D. McColl and son, was born in Saginaw December 29 Harry Kennedy of Point Edward, The seventh grade made maps of Institute of Chicago.) Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Mellendorf NOYESTAo ~), 1934, Western Newspaper Union. and son, Wayne, were Callers in Hugh, were Sunday Visitors at the 1870, and passed away at her home Ont.; Mrs. William McClinchy of South America. Cass City and Car6 Saturday af- Win. Kittendorf home. corner of Church and Leach streets, Bayfield, Ont.; Cyrus Green and The seventh and eighth grades Mr n~d Mrs, ~d Gin~'rich were i- C~s~ City, Frid~y morning ,Tan- Lesso~ for january 28 Lerlioom. ~on. Henry, cf Grand ~end, Qnt; Arthur Ellicott, John Combs and o~ account of illness. Gus Rolls of Pontiac. We had. such a good ~ime a% our Mr. and Mrs. Harve O'De]l are three weeks. STANDARDS OF THE KINGDOM Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mdlendorf Evangelist Devine closed a two hot lunch, we are planning to have and sons were business callers in the proud parents of a son, who v:e~ks' series of meetings at the On October 26, 1890, she was CEDAR RUN SCHOOL. one every month. : LESSON TEXT~Matthew 5:1-45. ~Bad Axe Thursday. was born on Sunday, at the home Erskine church. Quite a number united in marriage with Gustave A. Reporters, Alexia Bayley and (]OLDEN TEXT~Blessed are the of Mrs. 0'Dell's parents, Mr. and Zapfe, who with the following chil- Leland Hartsell, from near Elk- ~o!u this community attended the The second and third grades Phyllis Hendrick. pure in heart for they shall see God. Mrs. Fred Stine. dren survive her: Floyd of Owen- ton, was a week-end guest of Billie u~eetings. Mr. Devine expects to made a poster. It was about Es- Teacher, Marion Leishman. Matthew 5:8. dale; Lyle, Owen and Mrs. Oscar PRIMARY TOPIC~Jesus Teache~ Tebeau. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Parrott and return in the near future and hold kimos. th~ People. The Ladies' Aid will meet tl~s family of Bad Axe attended church Hendrick of Cass City; and Ivan of Market for Old Paper ;.~ne/:her series. Last week the fourth grade JUNIOR TOPIC--Jesus' Rules for week with Mrs. Manley EndersBe on Sunday at the Riverside church Argyle. One daughter, Vera, pre- Many of our old newspapers and Right Living. James Sweeney had a bee Satur- through the eighth grades had their for dinner and work. and visited with the former's par- ceded the mother in death at the magazines are shipped to India INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR by afternoon to cut logs for barn mid-term tests. TOPIC~Following Christ's Ideals. Marvin Moore is very poorly ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Parrott. age of ten months. She also leaves where they'are used by the Hindus timber. " We have made a desk from an YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT %hose days. Mr. and Mrs. God. Mercer and twelve grandchildren; one sister, to wrap and pack various articles, TOPIC~A Christian ~Aceording to Miss Eleanore Hoadley and Mrs. orange crate, for the lower grades Mr. and Mrs. William Severn of i family, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Good- Mrs. VanCise of Capac and many includin~ foodstuffs. Christ. Te:i Fe!mlee left Tuesday for their to put theiJ~ books and playthings Elkton were Sunday callers at the I all, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Par- other relatives and friends. :Y)mes in Eldridge, Calif., and Le- in. We are making a book corner. |. The Characteristics of the Sub- Ostrum Summers home. l tridge and sons of Cass City were Both Mr. and Mrs. Zapfe have ~:ueur, Minn. The fifth grade is liaving history Glacier 750 Feet Deep jects of the Kingdom (vv. 1-12). A number of relatives and friends I Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. been faithful members of the Re- ~obt Hoad!ey and Angus Mc- with the sixth grade. Palisade glacier in Inyo county, Those who are members of helped Lula Ashmore celebrate her Christina Cooda!!. oro'a~ized Church of Latter Day Christ's kingdom must possess Leod were in I)etroit on business The higher grades made country Calif., the most southerly ice moun- fourteenth b~rthday on Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Neiman have Saints for forty years. character consistent with the na- ?ues(lay and Wednesday. scenes for drawing. We have some tain on the continent, is seven miles January 18. moved onto the former Ed Knoblet Funeral services were held Mon- ture of the king. very good drawings, long, a mile and a half wide and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf farm. Mr. Neiman is employed by (.lay afternoon from the home. El- 1. The consciousness of utter We have some new pictures on is estimated to be 750 feet deep. and sons and Mr. and Mrs. John Rinerd Knoblet. ~.lverti.~e it in the Chronicle. ,. der Sheffer of McGregor officiat- spiritual poverty (~. 3). "Poor in MacAtpine and son, Kenneth, were! spirit" does not mean to be with- Sunday visitors at~the Levi Helwig out money (Isa. 66:2), but to come home in Elkland. to the end of self in a state of ab- Donald William is the name of solute spiritual beggary, having no the eight pound son born on Sun- :i:i:i:;:i!!:i:i:i:i:::i:iii:7~(! ::::::::::::::::::: i~:i::~g power to alter one's condition or day evening, Jan. 21, to Mrs. Hazel to make oneself better. Atkinson. ~o Profound gri@f because of spir- Basil Hartsell was a business itual insolvency (v. 4). The mourn- callers in Cass City Monday after- ing here is not be(muse of external noon. I grief but because of the keen con- Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Tebeau and sciousness of personal guilt before son, Billie, and daughter, Marie.,} a holy God. were Sunday visitors at the Roland 3. Humble submission to God's Hartsell home, near Elkton. j will (v. 5). This meekness is an Mr. and Mrs. John O'Rourke and outgrowth of mourning over spirit- children were business callers in ual insolvency. Cans City Monday afternoon. 4. An anxious longing to conform to the laws of the kingdom (v. 6). The one who has received the NOVESTA. righteousness of Christ as a free gift follows after the purity of Mrs. E. Simson was taken to character wh'ieh expresses itself in Pleasant Home hospital at Cans deeds of righteousness. City on Friday for an operation. 5. Merciful (v. 7). Subjects of Henry Hergenreder was also taken the kingdom now take on the char- to a Ca ss City hospital on Sunday. acter of the king. He was the pre- Arthur Henderson was a visitor eminently merciful one: 6. Purity of heart (v. 8). Since in Detroit on Wednesday of last Christ the king as absolutely pure week. his subjects must have purity in or- Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fenner of der to enjoy fellowship with him. Gilford were Sunday visitors at the 7. Peacemakers (v. 9). The one home of the latter's sister, Mrs. who has received the peace of God Phebe Ferguson. through Jesus Christ will not only Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Preaton of be at peace with his fellows but Snorer and Mr. and Mrs. George will diffuse peace to others. McArthur of Deford visited Friday 8. Suffering for Christ's sake (v. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. W. I0). The world hated Christ the Bridges. king. Therefore those who reflect Sunday company at the home of his spirit in their lives shall suffer persecution (II Tim. 3:12). 9. Suffer reproach (vv. 11, i2). To have ali manner of evil spoken against one falsely for Christ's sake is an occasion for glorying. IL The Responsibilities of the C ARACTER] '.Subjects o~ the Kingdom (vv. 13- ~t6). The subjects of the Mngdom are NEW GLASSES ...... '',*.:.:::.:: to live such lives as to purify and enlighten those around them. In the many new designs of Their responsibilities are set forth glasses there is sufficient under the figures of salt and light. 1. Ye are the salt of the earth (v. variety t0 find precisely the 13). The properties of salt are (a) penetrating; (b) purify'ing; (c) pre- right design for every type serving. of face. Let us show you Since salt only preserves' and purifies in the measure that it pene- the new models. trates, so Christians only, as they enter into the life of the world, can preserve it from decay. A.. H. HIGGINS 2. Ye are the light of the world Jeweler and Optometrist. (vv. 14-16). The subjects of the kingdom should so live as to pre- vent the unwary from stumbling and falling. Ill. The Laws of the Kingdom DOCTOR'S ANSWERS (vv. 20-48). To uestions ~ii.l~~ 1. As to deeds of righteousness By S. C. Babcock, M. D. Q. I am in , rundown :i:. """::i:~""'i:;iii;;:;:!:~: (v. 20). The deeds of the subjects condition due to a fro- ~~~ of the kingdom must spring out of que~t bad cough and stomach trouble. What can natures which are like Christ's. I do to hel!) this condi- 2. As to sanctity of life (vv. 21- tion ? Ans.~This is not an un- 26). The duty of the subject of the usual condition. You can help yourself by kingdom Is to conserve and sustain a diet which should include plenty of milk, fruits and vegetables. A good medicine like "j$ his own life and the lives of others. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, 3. As to organized life (vv. 27- which any good drug store can supply, has 32) The family is the unit of so- my greatestconfidence. ,ciety. The two awful sins against ",,the family are: a. Adultery (vv, 27-30). ' b. Divorces (vv. 31, 32). 4, As to oaths (vv. 33-37). Speech "is the absolute test of character. Why The truth, and that alone, is to be uttered by a subject of the king- L'iquld"Laxatives dom. 5. As to behavior toward those who do mot recognize the laws of are Back in Fav0r the kingdom (vv. 38-48). It's here now, for the first time: the car that all America has been standing a. Not revengeful (vv. 39, 40). Turning the other cheek after being ~by to see and drive--Chevrolet for 1934! And if you aren't among the first smitten, means, after one insult pre- to attend the gala introductory showing, you're goi=g to miss one of the biggest, most pare for another without revenge. b. Willingness to do more than exciting events of the whole motor car year. There never has been a new Chevrolet The public is fast returning to the use is required (v. 41). Rather than model with so many basic and sweeping advances as this one. Its different--totally quarrel with a man for causing you of liquid laxatives. People have to do that which you cannot help, learned that the properly prepared unlike anything you've seen or anything you w///see in motor cars for 1934! liquid laxative will bring a show willingness to do more. perfect movement without any discomfor~ c. Be charitable (v. 42). Our CI~EVRoLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT. MICHIGAN, Div~ion of General M~otors at the time, or after. hearts should always be open, ready to give to all, worthy or unworthy. The dose of a liquid,laxative can d. Love enemies (vv. 45-48). Love be varied to suit the needs of the A . B.C. Sales and Service to our enemies consists in: individual. The action can thus be Cass City. regulated. A child is easily given the (1) Blessing them that curse us; right dose. And mild liquid laxatives /Vv 5 ~~¢'~ Comment Chevrolet Sales, Gagetown, Associate Dealer. (2) doing good to them that hate do not irritate the kidneys. us; (3) praying for those who de- W -spitefully use us. Such behavior af- Doctors are generally agreed that fords the positive proof that we are senna is the best laxative for every- body. Senna is a natural [axativm It ~~/Gnd ,oull nero, God's children. does not drain the system like the ~cathartics that leave you so thirsty. be satisfied wi,h any The ~reat Secret Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a To the man without faith the uni- liquid laxative Which relies on senna • o?her Iow-prlced car verse seems to be a gigantic, mer- for its laxative action. It has the ciless, grinding machine, but to us average person's bowels as regular as who have learned the secret of the clockwork in a few weeks' time. Lord it is our Father's House, in You can always get Dr. C~ldwetrs which not a sparrow falls to the ground without his notice. x / i Cass City, Michigan. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRiDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934. Page Seven.

next evening she wore. for a reason don't you {'or'get that, Cynttffa Ayfes- to a man. Stiil., i:f Cj:nthia's u!ti- be released and made available to] Progress of Italian Language best known to herself, the black : bury F, m'tte hat)i)iness depended on it--! depositors, as follows: The amount] Italian was by far the earliest of ' chiffon with the tiny pink ruffles. "t3ut if I really and truly don't "()h, your knowin/ about the f [li bk OF PLANTO available under this paragraph or modern languages to assume a final "Going somewhere, Cynthia? Or h)ve Mm, Fh)ssie?'" she said with a household bills, and Miss N(ma's under the opening on restricted and organic smlcture. basis plan shah be represented by ...... is all that grandeur for me?" new Ineekness. eimrging things she (.mHdn'l afford," time certificates of deposit issued Mortgage Sale. I' "I felt like dressing up a bit." ~ Fh/ssie smiled. "You h)ve him all she said. ]IjslNEss to each depositor, maturing in from Default having- been made in the I! she answere(1 .omItosedly. right, only you just ilaven't found "\Veil, })lit g:.;.l hP:tVellS, lqa[OS- or~e to five years in equal amount His eyes brio~htened. "What about -- oF-- terms and conditions of a certain it out yet, But be careful while SiC' There w.~s tu~th~ng in that that per year. Such time certificates of mortgage made by Stephen Nemeth i goin~ out and dancing a [)it?" he reflected on her'" deposit to be issued in five series; your~e finding it out that you don't and Sophia Nemeth, his wife, of ~Y'- i { inquired, "There's a party on at the lose him altogetherF' "She's a ('ary.:-' she said sinlI)ly, THE CASS CITY one serie~ to each year from date club--semi-formal. Come on, Cyn- 3268 Military Avenue, in the City Flossie's native shrewdness was "They stand together like all get hereof. Such time certificates of ttfia, do !" STATE BANK of Detroit, Wayne County, Michi- equaled by her determination. She out. And then 5'ml were ahvays deposit to bear interest at the rate gan, Mortgagors, to Wilhelm Dies- "Tenny--" sho objeeted. -- OF-- Copyright by the attacked with humnlingbird persist- right in every sinffle argtlnlell[ 3'otl of 1% per annum, payable semi- i~g and Augusta Diesing, his wife, ~ebb~-Merr!]! C~ .:i~; i ~:i<:i tv , ..... , t: i: I\VG [it/(~. .N~; V£(HIIIlII ('g}Hi{i i(;F~!VC- 'LA;:~=~ CI'i'~. 3ilCHiGA~< -f the ~ame plat% }do~cgagees, kit('hen, (]()eSIl'[ she-,': ~il9 ('()tli(] i()()k an/lum pahab]c scliii-an/luaJ.ly ~"~-~ii~ terest. ()ary's amusenlent and be- that," she ext)bined earnestly, dated the thirtieth day of March, afte:r the child if" she woke." Notice is hereby given that the seo)nd year; 2% per annum' pay- wilderment at this trait grew in- lte rose and t~.)k Ihe three steps A. D. 1928, and recorded in the So (%,nthia went into the bedroom above named Bank will resume able semi-annually the third year; stead of lessened as he came to f(wward and the three steps back office of the Register of Deeds, for for her eveninff eont and a last lteep business on the 12th day of March, 3% per annum payable semi-an- the County of Tuscola and State recognize its potency. Someimw tie the tiny :~l)ariment pern!itled. "I i934, or as soon thereafter as li- nually the fourth year; and 3% per CHAP+ER Xli| into the mirr'or. She was little of Michigan, on ,the 16th day of • t a diseovered that he followed docilely sul)i)ose the idea then is for me to cense is issued, under the following annum payable semi-annually the p'de--tired-looking. A touch of rou~,~ September, A. D. 1930, in fiber 163 where Flossie led. be so wrong in the next argunlent plan, in accordance with the provi- fifth year. Flossie Gives Advice. and liI)stick remedied that. of Mortgages, on page 431, on She had married off "our first that iI will tip the scales heavily in sions of Act No. 32 of the Public (b) Such time certificates of de- After the excitement of moving But afterward she uqshed she which mortgage there is claimed to wife" successfully, The Cary Ayles- her favor !" Acts for the year 1933, and Act No. posit shall be redeemed at the Bank be due, at the date of this notice, ~nd adjusting herself in the new hadn'/ ~one. The nmsie was flood. !8 of the Public Acts for the year burys' purse would be the heavier She sighed. "(~h. no, no! You must on the date of maturity. ' for principal and interest, the sum :~ ,:~rtnmnt (-'ynt!

| ...... -~--I Wickware Sunday school, 10:30 Hertzberg, g ...... 2 0 3 4 ~~ ~' lng The Blade issues only four days last week at the homes of his

a. m,. Qualman, g ...... 1 4 2 6 pages this week. We hope this ar- sons, Clair and Glenn Profit. RELIEF IN SIGHT Argyle Sunday school, 11:00 a. rangement will be only a .tempo- The Bethel Home Management .~i ...... $ m. Preaching, 8:00 p. m. 7 6 6 20 rary one, but due to the stress of Group meets today (Friday) with Tuesday Cottage prayer meet- Cass City. the times, it becomes necessary. Mrs. V• J• Carpenter. ing at Wickware, 8:00 p. m., at the Player - Pos. G FT PF TP David Gray. Advertising is the life blood that Miss Elaine Turner of Cass City home .of Mrs. Masters. Graham, f ...... 0 0 0 0 allows a newspaper to thrive, and was a Sunday visitor at the Her- David Gray was born in Laurel, when this falls to a poin,t that .re- bert Maharg home. It Wednesday Cottage prayer Hyatt, f .: ...... 0 1 0 I meeting at Argyle, 8:00 p. m., at Ward, f ...... 1 .0 2 2 Ont., Aug. 29, 1865. He cane to sults in financial loss week after Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Maharg and the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jones. Karr, f ...... 0 0 0 0 Michigan and was united in mar- week, retrenchment is an inevitable son, Lewis, went to Pontiac Wednes- Thursday--Choir practice at Ub- riage to Miss Maiinda Tanner in necessity. As soon as conditions day morning to attend the funeral Vyse, c ...... 4 0 2 8 1890. To this union six children ly, 8:00 p. m. Stafford, g' ...... 0 1 3 1 were born, one child dying in in- again warrant it, the paper will re- of Mrs. Maharg's brother, David '. Friday E~worth Lcag'uc at thc Kn, i~-h-, a ...... ~O i 0 turn to its regular e "~'~ 'Poach." r, .... The body was ~".... ~ t~.. Holbrook enuren, 8:30 p. m. Kosanke, g ...... 0 0 0 fancy. }'Jr .c.rny p~od ~w~y 3a~:. Many papers throughout ~ne state Cass City Wednesday afternoon/or A I7"I~ Saturday--Epworth League at 22, 1934. have been forced to do likewise, and burial• Kelly, g ...... 0 0 0 0 Both Mr. and Mrs. Gray were 7"//W~-- the M. E. parsonage, Argyle, 8:30 charter members of the Pontiac the Monitor has been contemplating Mrs. D. Profit and daughter~ rOAoT/ p.m. 5 3 7 13 Church of the Nazarene. t for several weeks on taking" the Jeanne, called on Mrs. Archie Mc- Herbert N~ Hichens, Pastor. I Score by quarters: Mrs. Gray passed away April 11, same step. Mayville Monitor. Lachlan and baby, Archie Angus,. Saginaw ...... 2 4 7 7~20 Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Profit's I Methodist Episcopal Parish~ 1923. mother, Mrs. Margaret Crawford,. C~ss City ...... 4 5 0 4--13 Those surviving are four daugh-]NEW SCHOOL LAWS I Charles Bayless, Minister. Sunddy, spent the time visiting with Mrs. I Jan. 28: ters, Mrs. Chas. Wilson, Mrs. Laura' ARE IMPORTANT L. Connell. Mrs. Crawford and" NARRATIONS OF THREE Tallmage, Mrs. Orval Motley' and i Cass City Chureh~Class meet- Mrs. L. Connell were girlhood!. ing, 10:00, John Mark, leader. LOCAL OCTOGENARIANS Mrs. Alvin Motley, and one son, ~ Concluded from page one. friends about fifty years ago. Scott Gray, all of Pontiac; three Morning worship, 10:30. SpeciM sisters, Mrs. James Maharg and Repeal of law requiring district service with all Sunday School of. Concluded from first page. to have plans for a school ap- HOSPITAL N,OTES~ ' I ricers, teachers and helpers as spec- their farming. Mr. and Mrs. Ken- Mrs. James Dobson of Casa City proved by superintendent of public ial guests. Sermon, "Life"~ Great- ney observed their 54th wedding and Mrs. Hiram Stinson, of Orange- instruction. est Fact." Piano prelude at 10:25. anniversary in October. ville, Ont., .and two brothers, Wil- Escheated estates and bank Geo. Jefferson of Cass City and Sunday School, 11:45, Walter Until the last two years, Mr.! liam Gray and Robert Gray of funds (being bank funds and es- Fred Trost of Pigeon are still I)a- Schell, supt. Capable, devoted Kenney was hale and hearty but he Orangeville, Ont. totes unclaimed for seven years) tients. teachers. Studies in the life of has suffered several sick spells of add one million ,to primary fund• Mrs. J. A. Sandham was admitt- Christ. Your presence will be late. He possesses unusual abil- NEWS FROM THE Banks not required to give de- ed Friday, underwent an operation helpful and you are sure to be bene- ity in drawing contrasts between NEAR-BY SECTIONS pository bonds for municipalities Saturday, and was able to leave the fited. Come! the present day habits and modes or school districts until July 1, hospital Sunday. Vesper fellowship at 5:00 with of living and .those of 50 years 1935. Donna, Emma and David Kitchen, Concluded from page Jason Presbyterian folks in Methodist ago. 1. School district may take in its children of Mr. a~d Mrs. building. Theme for study, "Self- Mr. and Mrs. Kenney have four ing to get a branch national bank bonds at par on delinquent ta~es. Kitchin, underwent operaffons for control in speech." Bring Bibles. children, three sons and one daugh- which would no,t require any pur-f Delinquent taxes for 1931 and removal of tonsils and adenoids. This subject ranks among the three ter, M. E. Kenney of Cass City, of stock by Almont people. ] previous years may be paid in 10 Mrs. Elizabeth Gurdon was ad- highest in early returns of straw John W• Kenney of Kingston, Leo There are now 98 children in the installments, the first one due and mitred Sunday and was operated on vote being taken. of Carp, and Mrs. John McMam- American Legion Billet at Otter payable in 1935. Monday morning. Epworth League, 7:45, for all mort of Detroit. Lake. Lapeer organizations gave School district and municipali- Henry He~genreder of Deford young people over 15 years of age. Mrs. John Karr. i a birthday party for children ties are empowered to buy stock in entered Sund~y and was operated Margaret Patterson, leader. Top- whose birthdays fall in January. l reorganized banks up to the on Monday morning. • Taking keen pleasure in attend- ic, "Today's Youths and Tomor- Organization of a young demo- amount of deposit in the bank. Relief from excessive motor taxes is demanded by the Automobile mg church and reading her Bible, row's Church." cratic club for Tuscola county was School district may buy its bonds Advertise it in the Chronicle. Club of Michigan which will soon begin circulation of petitions through- Mrs. John Karr, 8.1, is still as in- out the state to bring about a reduction in the weight tax of approxi- Bethel Church--Sunday School, effected at Carp last week with 51 back below par. terested in ways of making the mately one-third, and limit the state gasoline tax to two cents a gallon. 11:00. Herbert Maharg, Supt. Rec- world better as she was when she ch~r,ter members. The first proj- " Notice of Hearinig CIaims Before Pointing out that automobile registrations have decreased annually ord attendance for a January Sun- ect will be the sponsoring- of a Court.~ State of Michigan, the first took her stand for Christ in since 1929, the Motor Club seeks to keep automobile taxes in accord day last week. Come and share Roosevelt Birthday dance, the pro -! ELKLAND, Probate Court for the County of with the times. It is pointed out that the state can operate with one- the little schoolhouse near their the good things of this service with ceeds of which will be used to aid Tuscola. third less automobile tax monies and still maintain its present road home, where meetings were held us and stay for church• in the support of a home for erip- Clinton Helwig of Pontiac and In the matter of the system, build a liberal portion of new roads and make such alterations, until the Bethel @tlrch was built Morning ,worship, 12:00 (noo n) pied children at Warm Springs, Ca. Marion Helwig of Bad Axe spent. Estate of Bessie Malcolm, wldenlngs, etc., as are necessary. ._. in 1888.. She has been a very help- with story for children and sermon The dance will be held 5an. 30 in the week-end with friends here. Deceased. ful member of the Methodist church school, 10:30 to 12:30. This third for all. Subject, "Repentance unto since that time. conjunction with a series of such David Murphy and Clinton Hel- Notice is hereby given that 4- sermon on a rededicated church programs throughout the country. Life." Mary J. Downs was born Novem- The officers .of the newly elected wig" went to Sandusky Saturday months from the 20th day of Jan- i membership will discuss the val'ue ! Monday, Jan. 29--Bethel neigh- uary, A. D. 1934, have been allowed ber 5, 1852, at Hamilton, Ontario, i of regular church ~ttendance and borhood family program with the elub are as follows: Dr. R. R. How- afternoon to visit John Murphy, for creditors to present ,their and when fourteen years of age ~lthe duty Of every-member enlist- t 5~arshall's, 8:00 p. m. Features of lett, president; Jack Stringer, who has been very ill. claims against said deceased to said came to Michigan with her mother meng in service. The adult class interest to all from toddlers to Reese, vice president; Miss Mar- Mrs. Margaret Craw:ford of court for examination and adjust-- and stepfather, 'Mr. and Mrs..,. H. garet Jaeoby, Carp, secretary; Gagetown is spending .the week merit, and that all creditors of said Novesta Free-Will~~~i Baptist--Sun-! lesson: "Standards of the King- grandparents. Bring Bibles. Moshier, and settled on a farm near Franeis Fritz, Cass City, treasur- with her daughters, Mrs. Win. and deceased are required to present day services: ~dom." Matt. 5. Thursday, Feb. 1, eottage prayer North Branch• Two years later er. Donald Ellwanger was named Mrs. Delbert Profit• their claims to said court, at the. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. ~ Jfinior Endeavor, 4:00. meeting in town. Place announced they moved to Brookfield township. probate office, in the Village of Ca- Sunday. chairman of a committee to arrange Mrs. Ray Hulbert and Mrs. John ro, in said county, on or before the Morning worship at 11:30. Sub- Senior Endeavor, 6:30. She was united in marriage with jeer, "Book of Beginning." , Vesper round _table, 5:00, at the for the Roosevelt Birthday dance. Doerr attended the class in Home 25th day of May, A. D. 1934, and John Karr, October 23, 1880, and He will be assisted by Miss Jacoby Economics Extension Work at Carp that said claims will be heard by Evening service at 8:00. Gospel Methodist church. Last call for HIGH SCHOOL BREAKS they made their home in Cass City message by pastor• your questionaires on vesper ser- and W. R. Bush. Wednesday. said court on Friday, the 25th day l EVEN IN WEEK'S PLAY where Mr. Karr was employed in a The young people's society will vice themes. The Sebewaing Blade appeared Miss Beatrice Severn of Elkton .of May, A. D. 1934, at ten o'clock sawmill. last week as a four page paper, is assisting Mrs. Claude Root, who m the forenoon. meet Friday evening, Jan. 26, at Monday, Jan. 29~Children's Di- Concluded from first page. The following spring they pur- Dated January 20`th, A. D. 1934. the home of Mrs. Elmer Collins for vision Institute for Flint Presby-] The editor said in his editorial is in poor health at present. H. WALTER COOPER, sar men were put out on fouls• The chased a farm four miles north and "Due to extremely light advertis- Jas. Profit of Yale spent a few 1-26-3 Judge of Probate. the monthly business and social tery, 3:30 p. m. Fellowship sup- I one mile west of town. Here they gathering, per, 6:00, at the church. Evening B team.registered 25 points in the last quarter to build their total to made their home. Back in the days P. Bissett, Pastor• session, 7:30. when welfare problems were Thursday, Feb. 1, 7:30 p. m., mid- 51 as against 20 for the Vassar B. un- as community burdens, Mr. Salem Evangelical Church G.A. week church conference at the Last Tuesday evening, the Ma- known and Mrs. Karr shared their bless- Spitler, pastor, manse. roon and Grey played the role of ings with others. Mr. Karr passed . Bible school at 10:00 a. m. Supt., gracious host to the Saginaw East- Annou dng A & P's Anr ual January away October 19, 1918. A daugh- Lawrence Buehrly. Baptist Church~Preaching Sun- ern Reserve squad by losing 13:20 ter and .three sons have also passed Morning" worship service at 11:00. day morning at 10:30. Th~me, in .the dosing half of the game. to the great beyond. The last ten A. B. Haist of Saginaw will bring "The S. R. A." or "Spiritual Reaov- Vyse, of the locals, dominated the years Mrs. Karr has lived in town the morning message• The chbir ery Act." scoring honors by gaining eight. with her daughter-in-law, Mrs. R. will sing. No Christian Endeavor Sunday School at 11:45. Cecil He started the scoring for the eve- D. Keating. at 6:45 p.m. Brown and Mrs. J. Bigelow, super- ning by sinking" a dog shot. Ward Although lame and unable to The Junior Christian Encteavor intendents. put the locals four up by making walk far, because of rheumatism, ~dll have charge of the evening Junior B. Y. P. U at 3:00. Ruth good a moment later• Saginaw she is very. active and helps with worship service at 7:30. A special Jean Brown, president. closed the scoring for the quarter by sinking a follow-in shot. The the work about .the house. She has 011Jail ile program,by the Juniors has been Senior B. Y. P. U. at 6:30. Start- three daughters living, Mrs. Walter arranged, ley McArthur, president• second quarter was abmzt even as Mark, Mrs. R. J. Knight and Mrs. Cottage prayer service Thursday Evening .service at 7:30" Service far as scoring was concerned. Sagi- Frank Reid• The Market on Flour Has night at 7:30. of song and message, "The Exceed- naw could not seem to fathom the ing" Righteousness." local" defense while on the other Been Advancing ! ! It will Erskine United Presbyterian Prayer and Bible study, Thurs- hand the Hilltoppers were too hur- C. C. A. C. DEFEATS Church--The two weeks of special day evening at 7:30. ried, held back by careless indefi- ELKTON 37 - 18 be to your advantage to . . . nite play, to gain an edge on the evangelistic services which closed The mid-year Huron Baptist As- WE DO OUR PART last Sunday are said to be the best sociation will convene Friday, Feb. score sheet• At the half the home Concluded from tirsg page• STOCK UP NOW ! ! " meetings held in this church for 2, in the Baptist church at Bad team was leading 9-6. Kelly, g ...... 3 2 2 8 many years. For the success of the Axe. Joseph L. 'Smith of Burma Saginaw came back after the in- Kilbourn, g ...... 1 0 0 2 campaign credit is to be given to will be one of the i~rincipal speak- termission a new team. Their fast H. Pinney, g ...... 0 0 0 0 Evangelist R. J. Devine as a ca- ers, while over a hundred young passing offensive not only con- Tyo. g ...... 1 0 0 2 pable and spiritual, man, also to the people will gather for the evening trolled the ball, but also found open- o 57 BAG 79c ings in their opponent's defense 16 5 7 37 Iona Flour members of the church for their banquet• faithful attendance and coopera- which they used to a good advan- Elkton Gold Medal Flour, 49 lb. bag $1.97 ...... 24½ lb. bag 99c tion. Mr. Devine left Monday to Argyle M. E. Circuit Sunday, tage. And their own defense was G FT PF TP conduct a similar series in Clare, Jan. 28: tightened so well ,that the Maroon Carr, £ ...... 3 0 4 6 Pillsbury Flour ...... 241/2 lb. bag 97c Mich. Cumber--Preaching service at and Grey did not get a point in the H~tchinson, f ...... i 6 3 8 Henkel's Family Flour ...... 241/ lb. bag 99c On Sunday, the regular 3:00 p. 10:00 a. m. Sunday school, 11:45. third quarter. Shortly after the Marceina, e ...... 0 0 i 0 m. service will be resumed. Sub- Ubly--Preaching service, 11:00 a. second period started, Saginaw Burzyk, g ...... 0 0 1 0 Sunnyfield Family Flour ...... 241/ lb. bag 89c ject, "Righteousness and Self- m. Sunday school,' 10:00 a. m. took the lead and held it. A~belat- Schmuk, g ...... 1 2 0 4 ed spurt staged by the locals could ] Velvet Flour, lb. bag 20c_ ...... 5 lb. bag 29c righteousness." Union church and Sunday school p, r i P. Bissett, Pastor. with the Presbyterians. The Rev. do no better than come within four 5 8 9 18 R F. Ogle Will preach in the M. E. points of the Class A aggregation, Score by quarters: Chief Pontiac Pancake Flour " . 5 lb. bag 19c and then fall back in the closing Elkton ...... 3 3 6 6~18 Presbyterian Church--Paul J. A1- church. Cheese, American Full Cream ...... : ...... : .lb. I7c ~:: lured, Minister. Sunday, Jan. 28: Holbrook~Preadhing, 2:00 p. m. minutes. Cass City ...... 2 7 17 11~37 Morning worship and church Sunday school, 3:00 p. m. Coach Kelly hopes .to reassemble Next Wednesday, January 31, Soda Crackers, Fresh Baked ...... 2 lb. pkg. 19c ,. his team after their first defeat in Wahjamega will bring two teams Worthmore Chocolate Drops ...... lb. 10c I1",: time to "hang it on" Bad Axe to- to Cass City to face the Athletic 4 Waldorf Toilet Tissue • • 6 rolls 25c • night (Friday) at the local gym- Club. These teams are composed nasium. Lasg year Bad Axe was of the attendants at the colony and Do You Remember ? one of the two teams to beat him• include four players from the 1930 The summaries: 'Caro high school team. This team CASH FOR YOUR EGGS Grandmother's Bread Vassar. l won the regional Class B tourna- We pay market prices for fresh Player- Pos. G FT PF TP ment at Sagir~aw that year and clean eggs. 5c refund on all empty NEW TWISTED,, :l~t, Loss, f ...... 1 0 3 2 went on the quarter finals of the "Daily" Feed bags returned in good 1Vz lb. loaf ...... L. Miller, f ...... 2 0 4 4 state tournament. condition. O. Miller, f ...... 1 0 4 2 These games which will be pre- Daughterty, c ...... 0 0 4 0 sented to the Cass City fans every Perry, g ...... 0 0 1 0 two weeks, are made possible by Ajax Soap ...... 10 bars, I9c Willert, g ...... 1 2 4 4 the members of the Athletic Club. Michigan Beet Sugar ...... 1{) lbs. 47c Cutler, g ...... 0 0 1 0 Games will be at the high school Sparkle Gelatin Dessert ...... 2 pkgs. 9c gym and an admission fee of ten Sunnyfield Rolled Oats, large 15c ...... Small 5c 5 2 21 12 cents will be charged• This. is an Sultana Red or Kidney Beans ...... l-lb. can 5c Cass City. amateur organization and the ' money collected will be used for .the "DAILY EGG" FEEDS made with scientific uniformity. Player - P0s. G FT PF TP I traveling expenses of the club. The Graham, f ...... 4 0 0 8 manager of the club hopes to be Ward, f ...... 3 2 I 8 able to present the Carsonville and Hy.att, f ...... 0 2 0 2 1 2 7 Sandusky All:Stars to the Cass Vyse, c ...... 3 City fans at a future date. This SCRATCHFEEB =42c 00.a;U $1,59 Kosanke, g ...... 2 2 2 6 1 10 team has lost only .to the Port Hu- Stafford, g ...... 4 2 ron Y. M. C. A., State "Y" Champs Growing Mash 25 lb. bag 49c ...... 100 lb. bag $1.85 2 1 Knight, g ...... 0 1 for two years• Your backing of the Chick Starter, 25 lb. bag 55c ...... 109 lb. bag $1.95 team will be appreciated by each 16 10 8 42 ~and every member. Oyster Shells, 25 lb. bag 29c ...... 199 lb. bag 73c Score by quarters: Fine Chick Feed, 25 lb. bag 59c ...... 100 lb. bag $1.95 Vassar ...... 3 4 3 2--12 1 Melons Once Grew Wild Cass City ...... 8 12 10 12--42 Egg Mash, 25 lb. bag 49c ...... 10O lb. bag $1.89 Muskmelons, watermelons and cu- ._ , ~ ...... i cumbers first grew wild. All three ' All prices in this ad subject to the 3% state sales tax. Saginaw. of these plants are probably natives The Cass City Chronicle has through the years stored away pic- Player - Pos. G FT PF TP of Africa and possibly also of tures of local people and buildings, some of which date hack many Romanaski, f ...... 1 0 0 2 neighboring portions of. western years. The Chronicle will reprint some of these from time to time. Thompson, f ..2 ...... I 0 0 2 Asia. They have been known to No names or stories w~tl appear under any picture and it will be left ~orr~£o~, f ...... ! ! 0 3 native p-~,ifie~ ~i..uce prehi:~t-~ri¢ for the readers to think back through the years and search their mem- Daniels, c ...... t 1 3 times. ~%%%%==%p=,==% ~'~P-,%%==%%~,~='%%%%%' ories for identification. I