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NO. 41 BUCHANAN, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936 SIXTY-SEVENTH YEAR COUNTY ION TO MEET HERE OCT. 16 Glenn Easton Buys Auxiliary To Here3 John Savoldi In Memory of the Sailing. of the Mayflower 7,000 Cows Get Incurs Injury Okeh On Records St. Louis Press! g j^ e r ta m W om ei! Glenn Easton, former publisher of the Berrien County Record, has Expect Attendance of 400 At Proposition Falls From Top Scaffold At if ^ Doan Straub Herd One of purchased the St. Louis _ Press of Veteran Meet New Galien School Friday High. Records in State St. Louis, Mich., west of ’Saginaw, The Ralph Rumbaugh Post of Records of more than 7,000 and has taken possession. Since j<> John Savoldi, builder and mason the American Legion will be host dairy cows in Michigan have just leaving Buchanan, Easton has suc­ who has done much construction cessively published papers in Ho­ Friday evening, Oct. 16, to the been approved officially by the work In this vicinity, suffered a bart, Ind., and at Otsego, Mich. members of the Legion posts of .serious back ihjury Friday after­ dairy bureau of the United States Berrien County, according to_ an­ Department of Agriculture, it is The Easton family have been mak­ noon when he fell from a second ing their hdtaie recently at Law­ nouncement by Arthur Johnston, story scaffold while working on announced, hy A. C. Baltzer, ex­ county commander. tension dairyman at Michigan rence, Mich., but will join Mr. the new Galien school building. Easton at St. Louis soon. ■The Legion men will be accom­ He was. taken to the Pawating State College. panied by their wives, who will he hospital, Niles, where examination In 44 associations for dairy herd guests during the sessions o f the revealed a fractured back. The improvement in the state, Baltzer Church Selects local Auxiliary, It is expected that spinal cord had apparently not finds that only 127 cows made less about 150 members and -their .been injured, and he is expected than 155 pounds of fat in com­ wives will be : present. CaptairP lo recover complete use of his pleting tests for the last current Officers For The Webb Kent will entertain during body, but will have to lie still' association records. Although the the social session by showing .his Some of these political hopes for several weeks. 44 associations cost approximately New Year views of the Panama Capal zone that are so green and flourishin' He had completed, a wall and $35,000 for a year of testing, they taken during his two years of ser­ right now are goin’ to be as: limp had walked to the corner and was prove their worth in bringing out Last Sunday Amsey Roose con­ vice In the army there. ez a squash vine hit by a dry standing oil the end of the scaffold production records. Records enable ducted an impressive installation frost in the dark of the moon, leaning over to loosen a line, when herdsmen to cull and permit them service for the new Sunday school about Nov, 4. to feed according to milk and fat he lost balance. He grasped for. Representatives of American and British societies celebrated the anniversary of the sailing of the May­ and church officers of the Church James Best Named produced and to find the most effi­ the top of the wall but the green flower in 1620 at the actual spot on the Barbican at Plymouth, Devonshire, England, from which the his­ of the Brethren. They are: Sun­ Well, folks, there is not a lot cient and low cost rations. morter would not hold and it toric craft set sail to toe other Plymouth in Massachusetts. day school superintendent, Fred New L. D. S. Pastor doing this week and about the In Berrien county, the South pushed away from him. He, man­ Hagley; secretary, Feme Dellin­ only big scoop we were able to Berrien Dairy herd Improvement aged to twist so that he struck on ger; associate librarian, Barbara register was the fact that the gov­ association is oredited officially James Best has been appointed one scaffold, breaking the force Wallace; music director, Fred ernment and the caterpillers both To Be Guests of with the following records of to the local pastorate of the Re­ of the; blow, and was caught by Hagley; pianist, Susie Plata; jun­ agree that we are in for, a mild an employee as he struck the end William Shinn, 77, Tells of His herds producing an average of 300 organized Church o f Christ o f the ior superintendent, Gladys Hag­ open winter with lots of warm of the scaffold below, preventing Notre Dame Univ. pounds of fat or above per animal: Latter Day Saints, who succeeds ley; cradle roll supt., Reda Ingle- weather, and if you don’t believe him frohi crashing to the ground, The following list consists of the V. L. Coonfare, who is soon to be Job in Rough Bros. Wagon Works right; messenger agent, Grace one, may be you will the other. in the basement. About 65 Girl Scouts, Boy farmers of the Buchanan and transferred to another I. & M. Weaver; treasurer, John Platz; For all we know they are one and Scouts and Cub Scouts from Bu­ Galien districts whose herds were territory. He will continue to Used to Trail “Buchanan” Then, as with automobiles, you clerk, Royden Ingieright; senior tee same. ' chanan will attend the Notre oredited with an average above live in St. Joseph, where he Is could pay out a lot for extras. A usher, Chalmer Conrad; junior The caterpillers have a widish, Charles Miller Wagons Up Days Avenue Danje-Wdshington University foot­ 300 pounds of fat per animal. The manager of an A. & P., store. , common brake cost $5, a Pennsyl­ ushers, Fred Hagley, jr., and Rus­ black stripe in front which indi­ To M. C. Depot ball game at South Bend, Satur­ figures refer to the average butter cates may be there will be a cold vania brake .$11, an Oregon brake fat per animal, the letters • refer sell Leazenby; ministerial cbm- Has Broken Leg $13.50. A top box was $4 more, day, the: guests of Notre Dame spell in the. early winter. Then They say that a main reason to the breeds, PB indicates pure mittee, Royden Ingieright, John Schools to Close a seat $5.50. You began to wonder University. . there is a wide yellow stripe in the that Michigan leads in tiie auto­ bred animals, Gr. indicates grade. Platz, Chas. De Lanter; trustees, Charles Miller is a patient at what the. original price included. middle which means a lot of hard mobile-making trade of the wbyld The final letters inciate the John Platz, Fred Hagley, Wilhur Thursday, Friday the Ingalls .memorial Hospital, : On July 4,'1881, a part of the luck for the winter sport fans, is that at one time this -section following: H for Holstein, G for Stroup, William Baldwin. observance of the day was a test Then there is a narrow black Harvey, 111., this week as a result of the cential west led in the mak­ Guernsey, J for Jersey. The list of a fracture of both bones of the of the strength of wooden and Coleman Trial The Buchanan schools will be stripe which probably stands for ing of wagons and carriages, and follows: Doan Straub of Galien, Tubular iron axles made by the closed for Thursday and Friday a couple of sugar snows, come lower left.leg'just above the ankle the shift from one vehicle to an-' PBH, 566.7; Charlie Smith & Son, Friday afternoon; Rough Bros. Wagon Works of Bu­ Grid! Oldsters Issue of next week while the teachers March or April. other was progressive. of Galien, GrG, 435.9; John Clark, Miller had driven to Harvey in chananand the Tubular Axle com­ On At St Joe are attending' the sessions of the In nearly every town where once of Galien, PB, GrH, 418.4; eGorge In another column of this paper company With his brother-in-law, pany of South Bend. They loaded Defi to Yoking Fry 8th district of the Michigan Ed­ there, was a large wagon or carri­ Opening Pleas of Attorneys Shafer of Berrien Springs, GrG, ,a bunch of doddering old gents, Floyd Morley, the latter wishing 17,600 pounds on a wagon with a ucational Association at KalaMa, age works there is now a factory 409.2; Glenn Kinney of Buchanan, ineltidipg Clem Savoldi, Loren to secure, sample sacks of a new tubular, axle, and 18,745 on a ..and State Witnesses Members of the Old Timers zoo. making automobiles or parts and PBG, 390.5; Douglas Dean of Bu­ Perry, Jack Burks and some more poultry feed from a mill there. thimble and skein axle wagon. Heard Wednesday Football Team would like to ar­ accessories. In this sense the old chanan; FOB, 376.5; Ralph Se* senescenbs seem to indicate that Miller was standing on a loading One axle on each wagon was range a game for any open date Rough Wagon works was the fore­ hasty- of Buchanan, GrH, 359.8; they Want to while away the time platform on which the . sacks wore slightly sprung by the load. It was As the Record goes to press this Chicago Swedish runner of Buchanan's present Beeson & Boles of Buchanan, with the newly organized Buch­ between their old age pension being delivered from a chute. One decided that the two wagons were end of the first day of the cole- main enterprise. RBH, 356.9; Roy Payne of Galien, anan Merchants football team. checks toy playing a little football, of the 100-lb. bags jumped over about of equal strength. The tests man trial is drawing .to a close, GrH, 328.1; H. D. Roberts of Ga- The Old Timers which have play­ Choir Here Sup. Among these now living who with indications that the case may so they challenge the Buchanan the bumper'at the bottom of the were judged by a committee com­ iien, GrG, 314.5; Stanley Clark o f ed semi-pro football within the were employed In the old Rough .he completed and passibly a ver- Merchants, calling themselves the chute and struck Miller’s leg, prise of the following: H. Johnson, Galien, PJ3G, 312.7,. last ten years under the names of The choir of the Swedish Meth­ works was William Shinn, who ob­ '.diot reached by the end of the Old • Timers. The Merchants say knocking him off the platform. It J. W. Tomlinson, Silas Cole, J, In suming up the production the Buchanan Independents and odist church of Chicago will pre­ served his 77th birthday at his week. they are going have an awful time is believed that the impact of the Mutchler, E. McCollum, E. Weav­ records o f the 7,040 animals com­ the Oriole club. sent a Vespers service at the local sack broke his leg. He is reported home Sunday. When he was a er, M. Hatfield. County attorney E. A. Westin remembering to pull their punches. pleting the tests, Baltzer reports The old timers are Burks, Eat­ Methodist church at 5 p, m. Sun­ to be progressing satisfactorily callow: youth back in 1880, just The Rough Bros, works also •and the defense counsel made their -that 3,737 cows were above the on, Hanna, Renner, Fittsimmons, day. The choir was secured and it is. believed that he will be getting to be his own boss, he made six sizes of heavy log trucks opening pleas Wednesday morn­ They say that as the result of state average of 336 pounds of fat Conrad, • L. Boyce, S. Boyce, through the agency o f Mr. _ and able to come home the first of the worked for a stretch at the wagon to use in lumbering. “At first they ing, following which examination too much leadership and pamper­ fo r 1984-35. For the last four' Dempsey, Montgomery, Perry, Mrs. Oscar Ericson, who formerly ing the modern youth is getting week. works, for a while inside and then made carriages also, but later of the state witnesses began. The years the state average of cows on Gregory, Chain, Wilcox, Savoldi, belonged to that church and pome's soft, but we never believed it until as a teamster, hauling the finished centered on. the heavy duty ve­ first witness' called by the state test has been 336, 335, 336 and Chubb, Furgeson,- Campbell, well recommended. The public is we heard about the Future Hus­ wagons to the depot to be shipped. hicles. ' was the county surveyor, who had Herman Keinke and 336 pounds o f fat. Letcher, Pfingst, Bristol and invited. ' bands Club o f the Buchanan high His first work with the team was mapped The scene of the accident Blanche Botts Wed. many others, school. This club is made up of the to plow and scrape out : the base­ BUCKS OPPOSE NEW and ascertained, distances. The sec­ Herman Reinlce, son of Mr. and J&bu-'. • This year’s team stakes claim 21 members of the boys, cooking ment for an additional building, GRID FOE; PAW PAW ond called was Mrs, Charles Ra3- Mrs. Otto Reinlce, and Miss, taetter of Buchanan, an eye wit­ To Attend Clinic that -the Old Timers are of no Ted Cramer Buys and housekeeping class. Last week how the' Russell Chevrolet build­ By Chuck Wcsner Blanch Botts, daughter of Mr. ness of the shooting. The wife of further use and are old and soft they came .to school looking cute ing. Buchanan’s football juggernaut and Mrs. Frank Botts, Middleton,. the accused was not in the court St. Paul Oct. 12-17 and, cannot take it. These boys Three Oaks Store as bugs in caps and aprons. Back After tliaat he trailed the wag­ Will encounter a new gridiron foe Pa., were united in marriage at room, but her father, Frank Rick want to' prove that they are as in our days a man never gave up' ons to the depot with his team of in Paw Paw next Saturday after­ TO a. m. Saturday in the parson­ of Baroda, was present. hal'd and tough as ever. his freedom until he was run chunky grays, Grey and Charlie- noon Oct. 10 at 2:30 on thi Buck's Dr. H. C. Fredrickson will leave Ted .Cramer, who has b ea r 'Sh age of the First Methodist church The two women who were first down,1 caught and hogtied. Now He would line Up a string of home greensward. Sunday for St. Paul, Mnn., whre We would like to have an an­ employe en -the local Sands Gro­ of South Bend, the Rev. Archi­ drawn were excused last night be­ he just walks up and reaches out six “Buchanan” wagons, with the In preparing for the invaders he will attend the international swer to this note from the Bu­ cery and Market took possession bald Holmes reading the marriage cause of the fact that the jury was his neck for the halter. tongues taken out o f all except the Coach Miller, Buck mentor, is Medical and Surgical clinic which chanan Merchant football team. o f the former Raymond Dietrich ritual. Ttiey were accompanied .to be confined to a closed room, lead, and short connecting irons sending his squad through tough will be in session Oct. 12-17. He The odds are ten to one they grocery and market in Three by the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and two men were drawn in their used to couple them. ' He would scrimmages each evening. He is will be joined in Chicago by Dr. will not play us. If they do, we Oaks yesterday afternoon, and is and Mrs. Otto Reinke. place to complete the list of Dinner Party Honors drive out the alley and up main also drilling the Buchananites in W. VanDuine, Dr. Raymond Elmer would prefer a winner-take-all planning to hold a grand opening The bride wore a royal bluo twelve jurors and one alternate in 33rfl Wedding Anniversary street, taking a big swing out. to passing, blocking, and tackling. and Dr. Karl Held. arrangement. a week from Saturday when he ensemble with light blue velvet case of illness. . the gutter to cut the corner at Some Buck men will be on the Signed, invites any of his local friends In. Coleman Jury Mr, and Mrs. Stephen Martin, accessories, and carried a bouquet Maiii and Front, so that George sidelines because of injuries and The Old Timers Football Assoc. All here wish him prosperity . iq Arthur D. Bison, 58, Benton Arctic St., entertained at a dinner of white roses and pompoms. Mrs. Noble probably got a little nerv­ due to the damp weather an epi­ Tuesday Bowling his enterprise. Harbor, farmer. party Sunday. The guests included Reinke wore a navy blue silk ous for fear he would drive in his demic of colds has. hit the squad John J. Rudniclc, 60, Stevens* Mr. and Mrs. George' Ernsperger crepe with a corsage of garden-, store. Up Days avenue he would thus forcing a few more to the League Opens Play vine, farmer, Veterans Make $200 and children, Charlotte and Glen, ias. They left to visit the bride’s go—there was no paving then but bench. Coach Miller, states there parents in Pennsylvania. The O. J. Miller, 75, Coloma, paint­ Observe Golden Mr. and Mrs. Fay Ernsperger and gravel filled the mudholes. At the will be changes in both line and The Tuesday Night League On Fall Festival daughter, Shirley Joan, Mr. and bride is a graduate o f St. : Jos­ depot the wagons Would be loaded, backfield. er. eph’s hospital of Lancaster, Pa. John Bundy, 57, Benton Har­ opened play Tuesday evening at Wedding Anniv. Mrs. Ellwood Ernsperger and son, 25 to a carload, and. shipped, us­ Paw Paw is known throughout the Buchanan Bowling alleys, for Mr. Reinke is employed at the bor, insurance salesman. The Veterans of Foreign War Donajd, and-Charles Rohen, all of ually for the trade. the state in athletic circles for its two teams from Buchanan and South Bend; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. High Grade Filling station1 here. Frank C. Arent/ 71, b=.,ton post report a net return of be­ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Llnsenmter A t first only the main building track, baseball, basketball and two teams from Galien starting. Harbor, farmer. \ tween $175 and $200 on the Fall of the Wagner district celebrated Kaufman and children, June and at the corner of Main and Dewey football teams. The Bucks have There is room fo r two more teams Jackie, of Buchanan and Mr. . John C. Kllpp, 60, Watervllet, Festival given under their aus­ housed the wagon works. The come in contact with Paw Pawites, which may qualify for the very their 50th wedding anniversary retired. pices, which will be expended in Charles Martin of Berrien Springs, lathes and planes were on the first In track and basketball' through handsome cash prizes, consisting at a family dinner for fourteen L oca l N ew s Henry Knlebes, 53, Watervllet. the purchase of colors and in oth­ The occasion marked the thirty- floor, where the parts were shap­ the regional meets but it will be of $40, $30 and $20 which will be Tuesday evening. The dinner was third wedding anniversary of Mr. their first f o o t b a l l struggle George Weinheimer, 51, Baro­ er post improvements. The fes­ served on their wedding dishes of 'Benefit dance, at Odd Fellow ed. In the east end of tlje first presented at the end of the season. and Mrs. George Ernsperger. da, farmer. tival was favored by good weath­ a half century ago. Mrs, Linsen- hall Saturday night, Oct. 10. Cards floor was the blacksmith shop. On against- each other since about The teams how entered are the Supper Guest Charles Davis, 57, Niles, labor­ er and godd .attendance turned and bunco. ■ the second floor was the wheel 1825. Beck's Tire and the Wilson's Dairy mier was able to be about for the Mrs. Sadie. Ingells was a supper out Friday and Saturday eve­ . Miss Marjorie Weaver’ a stud­ shop, where the Spokes and felloes Buchanan’s following IS decidely er. of Buchanan and the Galien bank iirst time after an extended ill­ guest of Mrs. Grace Kuhl and Jane ent at Western State Teachers were assembled. On the third floor small this year and with the win­ RoScoe Garrett, 43, Benton teams of Galien. nings, The high point of the ness. Welbaum Monday e vening. Harbor, bartender. college, spent the week-end with was the paint shop. The wagon ning team that they have they event was the appearance of the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray boxes were made of white wood, deserve, some loyal support. Paw Albert Tlllstrom, 60, Sodus, Twin City V. F. W. Bugle Corps Mrs. Stanley Hanover and Mrs. Weaver. spokes and felloes o f white oak, Paw will be one tough cus­ farmer. . Portage Orchestra Friday evening. The corps par­ Stephen Martin spent Tuesday in Mr. and Mrs. D. W , Hostetler the wagon poles of ash, the even- tomer and the Bucks will need a Clark M. White, 60, Benton aded the streets in striking uni­ Local News St. Joseph. ' ’ and daughter were week-end ers and single trees of hickory. little sideline support. Harbor, printer. To Present Concert form, and maneuvered at the in­ guests of another daughter, Mrs. The Rough Wagon Works made Paul Hasse, 68, St. Joseph, tersection of Main and Front. A Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rogers of Mrs. Frank Miller, Mrs. Fred George Breeding, Chicago. two sizes of one horse wagon farmer. large number remained to enjoy Springfield, 111., former Buchanan- Herbert Sands, Marjorie The Sunday school orchestra of Miller and Mrs. J. J. Terry were Mr. and Mrs. Ross Luke, who which retailed at $75 ’and $78.50 the evening. residents, came Tuesday evening Zimmerman Are Married the Portage Prairie Evangelical week-end visitors In Terre Haute, are making their home with Mrs. each; and Six sizes of two-horse for a visit of several days with church will present Its eighth an­ Ind. • i Anna Fuller a mile north of town, wagons retailing^ at from $85 to .Herbert Sands and Miss Mar­ The Misses Virginia Kirby and Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Alice, and jorie Zimmerman, both of Bu­ niversary program Sunday eve­ motored to Toledo, O., Monday, $110 each. Each size was rated by Ethel Nagle and Charles Shepard Mrs. Rogers’ mother, Mrs. Hub­ ning, Oct. 11, at T p. m. C.S.T. V. F. W. To Sponsor F. R. Montague and Ghauncey where the former underwent an the siae of the skein and the ca­ chanan, were united In marriage of Detroit were guests for the bard. Mrs. Rogers and Mrs. Al- week-end at the home of the lat- (slow) time. The program will Ernst left Monday for a trip to examination of a ieg injury. They pacity, and the ■ breadth of the at the Methodist Chapel, South lee are sisters. teris sister, Mrs,. Mary Flynn, consist of music by the full or­ Show at Hollywood , iBuckhamion, W est Virginia, the returned Tuesday. tires was according to size. This Bend, at 8 p. m. Tuesday, Rev. chestra, also solos, duets, ladles’ Miss Johanna Specht returned home of Richard Montague. Fred Palmetler has bought a price was for an unpainted wagon. Thomas Rice reading the mar­ to her home at Milwaukee, Wla., riage ritual. Mr. Sands is the quartets, male quartets, and read­ homo at 414 West Roe Street The cost of the paint job was Mrs. C, E. Koenigshof and Mrs. The Veterans of Foreign Wars after a Visit from Friday to Wed­ Son of Mr. and Mrs, George ings. An excellent program has will sponsor a presentation of Mrs. Girace Van Halgt was a from the Building & Loan. $8, with all the fancy stripes George ^toll of Grand Rapids been arranged and all are invited nesday at the home of Mrs. E, H. Week-end guest of Mrs. . Laura Mrs. James Williams and son, thrown in. The above prices were Sands, Buchanan. The bride' is j spent Friday afternoon at the ■'Rhythm on the Range,” starr­ Murphy. the sister of Mrs. Jack- Eklns of J to attend. There will be no admis­ ing , at the Holly­ Wager, Kalamazoo. Toddy, who have ueen spending for the “ thimble and skein Wagon home of Mrs, George Martin of sion charge. Mrs. J. F. Pehneli and daughter, several weeks here visiting the —one whose axle was of wood the Red Bud Trail. Dayton. wood theatre Wednesday and Marjorie Pehneli of Battle Creek, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Berry, spent former’s brother, K. A. Blake With an iron- “ th'mble” on the Mr. and Mrs, Fred Miller will Thursday evenings, Oct. 14-15. left Saturday for a motor trip of the week-end at the home of the and family, and with relatives outside The price of wagons with Benefit dance, ,;:at Odd Fellow spend the coming week-end at the Homer Cooper moved yesterday Tickets will be sold by the Cfirl two weeks, planning to go to Mon­ former's sister, Mrs. Art Kies, and frlqhds ih Niles, left'Tuesday tubular iron axle trees ran high­ hall Saturday night, Oct. 10. Cards home of relatives at Fort Wayne, to the new home which he lias Scouts and by the members of treal and Quebec, Can,, and * to Kalamazoo. , for their home In Hartford, Conn. er. . and bunco. Ind. built at 622 West Front street. the Veteran post, visit friends at’Utica, N. % E&.GETWO THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936

ning at the William Kell home. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Mitchell Miss Mary Austin of Chicago security act additional funds from The old age assistance board Portage Prairie and children and D. McNally and spent several days with her uncle Washington will enable the state for Berrien county is composed Miss Myrtle Mong Spent the le m im (County Sk rnrit Chas. Vinton to increase the pensions. of County'Welfare Agent Don R. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Baker and week-end on a fishing trip at published by Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kaiser, Mr, A number of persons believe Pears, James ' Clark and Judge son, Gene, and Mrs. William Eis- Wagner News Round Bake near Scottvillfe, Mich! THE RECORD PRINTING COMPANY and Mrs, Gilbert Kaiser of Ply­ the county old age assistance Hatfield. Inquiries pertaining to ele Have returned from a motor Mr. and Mrs. Loren Ayers and Mrs. Charles Mess and Mrs. Editor . . . . . W. C. I iawes mouth spent Sunday with Mr. and board has direct control over pen­ old age assistance should be ad­ trip to Ohio where they visited Business Manager . . A. B. McClure j baby of Delphi, Ind„ spent the Jack Harroff spent Tuesday af­ Mrs. Chas. Diedrich. sions, Judge Hatfield said, but dressed to Mr. Pea'ra. relatives at Troy, Dayton, Mi- Entered as second class matter November 20, 1010 week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Will ternoon in St, Joseph. Mr. and Mrs. Will Roundy, Mr, fimisburg and Waynesville. Buchanan. Michigan, Under the act of March 8. 1879 Whittaker. Mrs. Ayers is a niece The regular meeting of Wagner and Mrs. Orville Roundy and • The Adult League business of Mrs. Whittaker. They left Grange will be held this Friday daughter, Joyce spent Sunday jneeting of the Portage Prairie Tuesday for East Lansing for a ' evening, with election of officers THE SPEED DEMON DEFENDS HIMSELF with Mr. and Mrb. Carl Roundy in tshureh was held Wednesday eve­ Three Oaks. ! visit with friends. 1as chief business. A week ago last the Record carried a little story on the ver- ious road records which had been shattered by a local young bus­ Miss Gladys James entertained iness man who enjoys pressing a little heavier than the average the teacher's of the Galien school on the gas pedal. at her home Tuesday evening. And about two days after the paper was out an anonymous Mr, and Mrs, V. G. Ingles took correspondent proceeded to bum us up. When other papers were Mrs. Emma Edwards to her home campaigning for speed control we were acting as publicity agent at Winthrop Harbor Friday. Mr. for a speed demon—and then some more which we will not re­ and Mrs. Ingles returned home LOW PRICES produce here. Well, we just took the communication over to the alleged Sunday. “speed demon” to get his reaction. He admitted that maybe he Mr. and Mrs. Russell McLaren liked to drive a little too fast, but in his own defense he added: and daughter, spent Sunday in EVERY DAY “I’ve driven all over the country, in every state in the United South Bend at the home of Mr. States, and I’ve never had but one accident and that was when and Mrs. Frank McLaren. IS NOW THE POLICY OF YOUR another fellow let his ear get out of control and chased me clear • off the road, hitting me out in a'field. Where there are speed and other traffic regulations I try to obey them and I’ve never been & picked up by a cop. Sensational Savings — Certified Values A P FOOD STORE “What’s more, I keep my eyes right on the road and on the Co-Ops Weekly other ears. I don’t amuse myself by reading .the signs or seeing Ige, the sights along the road. I never see anything but the road and KROGER’S - TIMED FOR FRESHNESS Iona Pork and Beans 6 cans 49c what is on jt. When other cars are approaching I’ve got my eyes News Column 70-80 right’on them until I pass them." lb *. 25c There is something to his argument. Speed is probably one CLOCK BREAD 2 Prunes 10c Size 4 Lawrcnco Conner, of near 10c of the principal causes of accidents, but not the chief cause. The KROGER’S RAYS-N-DATE BREAD ll». loaf 12c Heinz*, Clapp’s cans indictment against speed is that it multiplies the results o f Three Oaks, is the most recent Baby Poods or Gerber'* 3 21c the disaster if and when it occurs. But the greatest menace to purchased of an Allis-Chalmers 3 -lb . the road, worse even than the speeder, is the man who is con­ tractor. This is the twenty-sec­ Blue Isabel sciously and flagrantly breaking such elemental roles of safety as c Karo Syrup coft 25c 1 ond one of these new power units TOMATOES 3 ’ll2 25 •passing on curves, on approaches to hills and in the third lane. RED RIPE - SOLID PACK N o. 1 K R ed H en SQc E And a close second is the driver who loiters and meanders along, to be put into operation through Molasses can depending on his slowness for safety, but taking advantage of it our organization since last March, AVONDALE EXTRA QUALITY MACARONI Oil SPAGHETTI q u a rt also to watch everything but the road and the traffic. Soy bean harvest will soon be Tomatoes No- 2 1 Qc Foulds 2 rks8- 15c A St P Ammonia bottle fOc 8 If the young man referred too really does keep his mind in­ on hand. We are planning to tently on the road and observes the rules and regulations of the combine several fields in this sec­ Sal. Iona Pork and Bulk Vinegar 19c j road with special regards to passing he must be at least two- tion. If you are interested in thirds of a good driver anyway. TOMATO juice 3 29c seeing this machine work on soy Grandmother’d 2 -lb . 5c COUNTRY CLUB (JUMBO 50-oz. FAMILY' SIZE 19c) Beans Salt b ag INDUSTRY AND EDUCATION beans let us know and we will direct you to the nearest demon­ AVONDALE COUNTRY CLUB FANCY No. 5 Ib*. Recent trends in student enrollment indicate chat a new type Dried Peaches mw Ct°p 2 25c of school which approaches in its method and curriculum the stration. The All-Crop harvester No. 2 Sweet Peas 2 cans 25c Sweet Peas 2 cam 33c ~ ' aeutal world, which it prepares for, is coming increasingly into sure does nice work on soy beans. 4 19 ta fis favor. , Campbells Soups C h ick en 3 25c | The fourth Plymouth car show­ N o. 2' Outstanding among such schools which draw on local young ed up in the Co-Op family this BANTAM No. 3 0 3 people is the University of Cincinnati, which alternates study GOLDIN 2 25c Larsen's Veg-Aii can 10 c 1 periods with periods o f factory apprenticeship. Another which week. Bob Koenigshof is now CRESCENT FANCY QUALITY CORN driving a new coach. These Chi. Ui 4 b . has local representation is the General Motors Tech, an institu­ Bread a & p, white lo a f 9c tion which has been set up by the General Motors Corporation to cago trips, so frequently, do wear CHOCOLATE COVERED REGULAR 20c CHOCOLATE Iona Spaghetti educate young men as it wants them educated. out automobiles. Mint Patties «>• buit 15e Cookies h>.m e 15c Rival, Red Heart, cans The old style colleges, which ^still lead in enrollment, have Correcting last week's item: It Sd'O g Sr w O vi Doggie Dinner, ICel-L-Ration 3 25c A REGULAR 20c VALUE MARSHMALLOW TOPPED been indicted as unworldly institutions where young men and was W. P. A. rat bait. Ask any women live sheltered from the storm and stress of existence In pair clerk about it. ' Canvas Gloves 3 25 c little backwaters of life. Increasingly in these schools the social 4 19 and the athletic eclipse the interests of education. It has been an W e have had to put on an ox-, 1 0 lb. WHIATSIS c Maxwell House Coffee tin 27 c open question whether they fvere fitted or unfitted for the tra truck the past week due to COUNTRY CLUB CORN FLAKES pkg. 10c struggle for existence which most of them inevitably faced when the large demand for Blue Bea­ lb. they left the cloisters o f the campus. con (Va. Lump) coal. We are ex­ COUNTRY CLUB Beechnut Coffee tin 27c I CHEESE SPREAD It’s different in these new schools. They are geared to the pecting another car in the first of Hi. lb. tempo of a rapid world, and a young man will step from them Pastry Flour 5 sack 21c Pabst-ett I,kB- 1 8c next week. Why not place your .Hills Bros. Coffee i tin 29 cJ into the employment for which he is very definitely fitted without a hitch. There m a yb e a little athletics and social life, but it is order now and let us fill your bin EASY TASK - CLEAN QUICK - SWEETHEART {Macaroni • i lb. direct from the car? . Del Monte Coffee tin 27c 1 not allowed to interfere with the serious business of tho institu­ tions, which-is fitting the student specifically to do something Due to the late rains and tho Ib; Spaghetti I specific. : , fine , fail weather up to date the SOAP CHIPS 5 L 27c 8 o'Clock Coffee l b ag 19c I The old fashioned college and universities had better watch ' Campbell Soup Co. is staying _ CHIPSO OR OXYDOL Large pkg. 19c lb. sharp, lest they degenerate into social clubs, while the serious open for a period of time extend-'1 Bokar Coffee tin 23 c I mined youth go to the schools that are about something and %-lh. that know what they are about. • ing into the month :qf October. Pepper 10c Soap Flakes “,7k"' 17c There is evidence that this tendency to link up the world The previous closing date was Avalon—.A -l-ox, holllc of Avalon Gold Medal or?££rtT \ ;!4&K$i.» ] Sudan — BJarl. - Regular 19c size of industry with the schools will work, on down to the high October' 1st. The tomato season j Bluing FURR with cuch package. Corned Beef 12-dz. "ISc 1 schbol, through the apprentice system. this year has been a little later I Can •than usual and by the factory SPLENDID NAPTHA SOAP bars Corned Beef Hash 16-oz* 15c f staying open the growers will not FILS | Q 41c can need to worry as to what they Pancake Floor Swansdown Cake Flour pkg. ,23c i are going to do with their ripe Twinkle 6 i>kss- 25c Waldorf TISSUE 5 rolls 19c tomatoes. GEL VTLN DESSERT SCOTT TISSUE 4 rolls 25c 2 pkg*. ISc I Some difficulty is being exper­ Morton's Salt ienced in getting the last of the ARMOUR’S STAR n la rg e 10c wheat crop in. A small applica- Post Toasties pkg. The Culture club opened its new mics Club No. 2. tion of nitrogen fertilizer and a 1 4 5 c season -Friday afternoon at the COftNlD BEEF 3 cakes Miss Alene Jones spent the little favorable weather should ’ home of the President, Mrs. G. A. ARMOUR'S STAR Woodbury's oi££™r Soap 2 ISc week-end with relatives at Kala­ make a fair chance for ah aver­ Jaunasch. cans c largO mazoo. age yield even yet. CO&NID BEEF HASH 3 45 Oxydol or Rinse pkg. 19c •Roll call, A Wish for the. club. Mr. and Mrs. Vere Blair, De­ E. E. Undrep, who edits the A 2 cup glass measuring pitcher with.a pur­ President greetings, Mrs. Jan- la rg e troit, were week-end guests at the Michigan Farm News at Lansing, chase _of 3 cans of these Armouq Products Chipso p k«. 19c nasch. i Charles Clark home. is to be the speaker at the Farm FREE! tlA b, Reading of the constitution. Crackers Soda of Graham Mrs. Bertha Hamilton returned Bureau meeting scheduled for FRESII MICHIG AN MAID b o * 15c “The Revolt ‘ of mother,” Mrs. home after several weeks visit Wednesday night Oct. 14th. Mr. R. Wentland. Jello All Flavors pkg. 5c with relatives in Illinois. Undrep is a very pleasing speak­ The hostess served a luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Renbarger, er and especially, well qualified BUTTER 2 Z, 67c cans The chib will meet this week with Sr. and family were Sunday to present the facts concerning Daily Dog Food 6 25c Mrs. C. Hohman. guests' of their son, Carlton Reh- the four proposed amendments to ' CHOICEST QUALITY MEATS barger, Jr. and family who cele­ be voted on in November. All Cigarettes Popular Brand* ca rto n $|.|5 Mrs. Manley Roberts entertain­ brated their daughter, Margaret's Farm Bureau members are ex­ 3 ‘ lb* ed the Childs Study Club at her fifth birthday anniversary. pected to attend this meeting. SMOKED PICNICS - 19c Snowdrift 1L 19c can 55c Mrs. Clemmie Roundy returned home Thursday evening. Mrs. Ed­ Election of permanent officers SIIANKLESS . • la rg e ward Howard had charge of the to her home in Ohio after visiting Will be one order of business. The Kellogg's All Bran Pkg. 19c meeting, and Mrs. Bernard Ren­ relatives and friends the past entertainment in charge of Noah week. LEAN lb. la rg e barger the entertainment. Anderson promises to be most in­ DRY SA’LT PORK 19c Instant Postum can 39c Miss Jean Fisk spent Thursday Albert Schaafsma spent the teresting. week-end with his wife at Holland, night with Miss Elanora McLaren, %-lb. 3 lbs. Who celebrated her birthday an­ Mich. SLICED BACON 1 9c Fig Bars or Ganger Snaps 25 c UY GRADE - FANCY. LEAN niversary; Mr. and Mrs. Doane Straub 644 Persons Now 3 -lb . spent Tuesday at Wakarusa, Ind. Argo Gloss Starch pkg. 21c Members of the German Luth­ Receiving Old eran church held a sewing meeting Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Omland lb. tall spent the week-end at East Jor­ Age Penson LEONA LOAF 1 5 c Pink Salmon 2 cans 23c Thursday afternoon at the home SWIFT’S GRADE 1 - SLICED of Mrs. Charles Hohman. don. Bl*owrt o r pkg*. Miss Mary Austin, Oak Park, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Renbarger Berrien county now has 644 4% Sugar W h ite 2 15c COUNTRY CLUB 111,, spent last week with her uncle spent Sunday afternoon in Chi­ persons receiving old age assist­ BULK lb. Corn Flakes Su nn yfield la rg e 9c Charles Vinton at the Slocum cago. ance from the state, Probate MINCE MEAT 1 5c pkg. Hotel. Mrs. George Oimstead and Judge Malcolm Hatfield declared . daughter, Mrs. Fanny Grooms and Grape-Nuts pkg. 16 c Miss Murnie Van Tilburg, and Wednesday. The majority re­ -FILLETS OF HADDOCK 2 '»’•2 9 c : Miss Mable Norris, South Bend, grand daughter and Mrs. Doane ceive monthly checks of $7 to lb. spent the week-end with their parf Straub were Thursday guests of $20, Judge Hatfield said, but when Calumet Baking Powder 21c Mrs. Louise Scott, Benton Harbor. eah .ents. the state complies with certain Whiling — Cleaned lb. 10c Marshall Renbarger, Miss C. PAN The Freshmen wore given an provisions of the national social FISH initiation party Thursday evening Anderson, Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. at the school house by tho Sopho­ Corwin Perry, Lakeside, Mr, and FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Mrs. William Clark, Rolling Brai- mores. W e still offer and sell Fresh Dressed Miss Bernice Green who is rie were Sunday guests of Mr. Beef and Mrs. Ellis Renbarger. Roast teaching school at Gary, spent the TEXT BOOKS HEAD LETTUCE - 10c week-end at the Harper Green Mrs. Ada Sheelcy and daughter, LARGE, SOLID HEADS Mrs. Frank Clark are both con­ CHOICE home. CHICKENS Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lutz and fined to their homes suffering And an immense line of LARGE SIZE CUTS for lb. . r 18c son, and Miss Nola Van Tilburg with severe colds. great values in GRAPEFRUIT FULL OF JUICE 17c Pontiac, were week-end guests of MICH. POTATOES U. S. No. 1 15-lb. peck c their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed’, School Supplies 31 “■ 2 0 c ward Van Tilburg. U. S. No. 1 BAKING Squash ib; 4c Mrs. George Seyfred was hos­ Olive Brajich W e also offer 0, fine new Potatoes 10 ihs. 33c llUBBAUD tess Friday to the Home Econo­ lino of 193? Mr. ames Barnes o f ’ Ord, Ne­ SWEET Rutabagas 3 10c Pork Liver braska spent Friday With Mr. F. Wall Patterns Potatoes 6 lbs. 19c CANADIAN GET UP NIGHTS? A. Nye and family. MICHIGAN GROWN Veal Shoulder Roast MAKE THIS 25c TEST Mr, and Mrs. Will Roundy spent Tomatoes lb. 13c If irritated or weak bladder,' two days last week with Mr. and and other worthwhile HOT HOUSE - NO WASTE New Cabbage «>• 2c HEARTS lb. 12 V? C Mrs. Wilbur Watkins In Osceola, causes getting up nights, frequent Home Shine desire, scanty flow, burning or Ind. B A N A N A S GOLDEN YELLOW FRUIT 4 ll,a; 25 c backache, drink lots o f boiled or Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith, Mr. Materials c distilled water. You know what and Mrs. Chas. Smith were Sunday Complete .Assortment of Apples - Eating or Cooking hard water does to a< teakettle.' dinner guests in the S. A. Rhoads Also help flush out excess acids, home, Berrien Springs, and were waste and deposits, with little out to the County Infirmary and t i m r m i c green Bukets, a bladder laxative. aaw the new buildings that are Two of the 8 tlmetested ingredi­ under construction. B IN N S ’ [* Tunc in Thursdays, A & P Band Wagon, Starring Kate Smith ents ate buehu leaves and juniper Mrs. Gladys Cotherman, Mr. and All PrlCos Hut 8% Sale* Tot Mrs. Leslie Smith of South Bend MAGNET STORE and a Blg^Cast of Entertainers, 8 to 9 P. M., Station WBBM oil. If you are not pleased in four - We Cash WPA Cheek* days, your druggist will, refund were Sunday visitors in the Dell your 25c, Corner Drug Store. Smith home. ’j * THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936 THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD PAGE THREE

Mrs, Rose Marrs left Tuesday lowing;; A. O, Spaulding, Master; Wednesday and Thursday of lust from Detroit Saturday accom­ for a visit at Lansing. BANKS OF AGING IN H. B, Wright’s Old Church Elmer Hall, overseer; Myrtle week visiting in South Bend. Her panied by several friends who Dr. E. T. Waldo was a business to Be Made Into Library Kinney, Lecturer; Bertha Dun­ daughter, Naomi, returned with visited here over Sunday. T caller in Lansing, Sunday. u NATION IS GROWING Pierce Pity, Mo.—Tlie Christian ham, Secretary; Clifford Hollen­ her to spend several days. beck, Treasurer; Lily Shafer, A party including H, H. Han­ Miss Lena Leiter of Hastings ehiireli here, when* Iliiriihl Bell Wright, novelist, held his first pas­ Chaplain; Ernest Dunham, Stew­ sen, Mrs. Maude Ecklebarger, spent the week-end with her par­ Trend Means More Older OCALS ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Leiter. torate, soon will become n library. art; A. S. and L. A. S., Walter Miss Naomi Ecklebarger of South Wire and Hazel Wire; Gatekeep­ Bend, Mr. Wayne Ellis of Mish­ Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Clarence Jones underwent an Workers in Industry Three trustees of the church re­ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barbour visit­ er, Donald Jewel; Ceres, Verda awaka, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Eckle­ ed Sunday with friends in Fort Hall, a son, at their home near | operation at the Pawating hospital cently gave the Parent-Teacher as­ New York.—Changes in the "age Clark; Pomona, Rose Wire; Flora, barger and family motored to Wayne, Xnd. Dayton Friday. . ; Monday morning. sociation n deed to the property. It's S o distribution” of the population that Funds supplied from the ltoeon- Eva Huger. Mt. Tabor Grange Dowaglac Sunday to be dinner Miss Donna Pears, St. Joseph, | Miss Dorothea Wessendorf and .Mrs. John Herman had as her are occurring as the immigrant por­ st ruction corporation and donations will observe Booster night Oct. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry visited last week at the home of Chester Wessendorf spent Sunday guest ! last week Mrs. Caroline tion ages soon will present a "new from 1’icrce City citizens will be 16th. Meeklenberg. her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. in Michigan City. sMuch Fun Wygant of Otsego, who returned challenge” . to American business used lor Its rchnlillllntlon. The Mrs. A da Kinney and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kann had Charles Pears. to her home Saturday. Miss Janet Kelley came from management, Dr. Robert E. Chad- pulpit and platform where Wright Ardell spent Saturday and Sun­ as dinner guests Sunday Mr. and To Cook With Gas .; Friday evening callers in the Mrs. Marie Bates left for her East Lansing ■ for a short visit dock, professor of statistics in Co­ preached Ills first sermon will be day with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Mrs. O. G, Ingleright and daugh­ Eugene Sprague home were Mr. home Sunday after spending two Saturday with her parents, Mr. lumbia university, asserted. repaired. Gunn and family at Elkhart, Ind.. ter, Donna, and Mrs. Minnie Hall. Declaring that older persons are Just think of the pleasure and Mrs. Chas, Schwandt and weeks at the home o f Mrs. J. B. and Mrs. Con Kelley. The church was closed 20 years Mrs. Maude Ecklebarger spent Mrs. Arthur Ruger ’ returned daughter, of Three Oaks. Currier. Mr, and Mrs. Jess Leggett, Sr., increasing numerically in propor­ ago and the congregation disband­ that Is yours with'an ac­ Mrs. Florence Shook and Irea- Mr. and Mrs. Joss Leggett, Jr., tion to the rest of the population ed. Since then It 1ms run down. Mr. and Mrs. Will Loiter had Dr. Chaddock estimated that the curate automatic G a s . as their guests for the week-end, nus Sparks had as their guests and Jack Leggett motored Sunday Citizens still remember Wright Saturday, Miss Helen Shook, a number of those over sixty-five as a tall and lank youth when he Range. Your skill i s a cook: their daughter, Mrs. Max, Cooper to Chicago and return. years old, now about 0,500,000, will Benton Harbor teacher, and eame to the 'church In 1800. He and husband, and two children. Mrs. Olive Brant returned Wed­ be trebled in fifty years. With the borrowed money to buy the first suit is multiplied many times. ' Richard and Joyce. Thurston Roberts, Chicago. nesday from Benton Harbor where population approaching a stationary Rollo and Rex Rifenberg were Mr. and Mrs. Max Smith left for she had gone for a week’s treat­ level, he asserted, the general death of dollies he wore in the'pulpit. called last week to Jones, Mich., their home in Reading, Sunday ment at a clinic. rate soon will begin to rise. Wright remained here a year ami And It Costs a half. lie also preached In Mount W e have been appointed Agent for the by the serious illness o f their fath­ after a visit at the .home of the Mr. and Mrs. Jay McPherson, Burden of Aged Grows er, who died Friday, The funeral former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon, Kansas City, Mo., and Pitts­ So Little ], Ann Arbor, were guests Sunday at “The period of youth in our in­ was held Monday. Glenn Smith. burg, Kan,, where he started writ­ % the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. dustrial organization is passing and ing novels, Wolverine Insurance Co. Buchanan's reasonable Gas*’ Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sprague Mr. and Mrs, William Gess, Jr., Froseus. our economic structure must be entertained the following guests, and Shirley Jean will leave Thurs­ of Mrs. Fred Miller, Mrs. Frank adapted to age changes,” he wrote. Rate and high heat content Sunday. Mrs. : Joyce Schultz of day for Toronto, Canada, to spend Nebraska Lawmakers Give Lansing, Michigan Miller and Mrs. J, J.' Terry were “Institutions and agencies for the Gas makes gas cooking air' Walkerton, Miss Majorie Sprague a week with a sister Of Mr.-Gess, care o f the aged, the burden of old- week-end guests ,of Mr. and Mrs. Innocent Prisoner $2,500 , And of South Bend, Mr. and Mrs. Fost­ They will return by the way of age pensions and the costs of de­ economy. E. L. Abell, Terre Haute, Ind. Lineulii, Neb. — Alvernon "I)oe” er Bowker and family of Galien. Niagara Falls. pendency will irferease rapidly. Mrs. Ted Siekraan spent from Lytle, who was sentenced and “The increasing burden of the Friday until Sunday in hCicago, served two years and seven days The Northwestern Mutual .See the new Gas Ranged called there by the illness of her aged upon the productive workers need not affect adversely the stand­ in the state penitentiary for a crime now on display father, Joseph1 Stein. lie /lid not commit, has been award­ Life Insurance Company ard of living, because the propor­ of Mrs, Louis Huff of Dow&giac ig tion of persons in the productive ed $2,oOO by the Nebraska legisla­ a visitor this week at the home . Fo* fthe mast who cares ages, twenty to sixty-four^,is not. ture. • Milwaukee, Wisconsin of her granddaughter, .,Mrs- E'.' t.. Lytle was charged with robbing decreasing and the burdeA-of sup­ Another bit of evidence that our agency Is regard­ about STYLUS and QUALITY Waldo. port for the young dependent group il bank and convicted on testimony Miss ..-Jattfi.':' 'Spears of ffie Bu­ is declining.” iiy witnesses who “ positively iden­ ed highly by the better companies. in his appearance chanan sefiodi faculty spent the Adaptation of the industrial struc­ tified” him as the bandit. Last week-end with her parents . in ture to employ the ever increasing year*,a robber captured in Illinois Kalamazoo. number of Older workers, forty-five 'admitted' Hie crime, not knowing Elec. Co.: Maurice Frank had as his guest to sixty-four, will be necessary if another was serving time for, his E. N. Schram Phone 4 for the week-end Redmond Dug-. thi high'American standard of liv­ theft. ' The Insurance Man and V A LU E gan, a Notre Dame, classmate ing is to be-maintained. Dr. Chad- from Colorado. j dock declared. Otherwise, an in­ For Lack of Dime Man Mr. and Mrg. Frank Rinker w ill! creasing number may become semi-, have as their guests for the next , dependent, he warned, thus increas­ Is Kept in Jail 10 Days Sunday the latter’s sisters,- Mrs." ing the total burden of support rest­ S'alhms. Calif.—Although lie was for his MONEY ing upon the productive workers. Stephen Nelson and Mrs. James] ni-qtiitted, James Mora spent ten McOaghie, Chicago. Aged in Industry ■days in Jail—all for want of a dime. See Cais-"new - group!.' \ The Misses Dorothea and Clara I Due to the restriction of immi­ Mill’ll made a O0-cent purchase in Wessendorf, St. Joseph, were; gration and to the aging of the a .Chinese'.'’ restaurant, leaving a guests for the week-end with theirj foreign-born here, the percentage cheek, for $10 as security. He re­ brother, Martin Wessendorf and of those who immigrated to this turned, the following day with 50 family. _ I country and are now over six!y-£v& cents. Pete Oft ex, Hie reslnurant .! Mrs. Emma. Brown has as her is twice as great as that of the owner, took the, fifO cents and then guests Sunday Mrs. Robert Colt] native Americans over sixty-five, lie had Mora arrested on a bad and son, Bobbie Eugene, and Mr. Dr. Chaddock observed. check charge. and. Mrs. David Molts, all of South The net result of all population Morn waited ten days in jail be­ : Bend. I changes,j he wrote, is a steadily de­ fore! his . case came tip in court. ,Mr. and Mrs. Bert Metzger and clining proportion of persons under This.:' charge against him was dis­ family were guests Sunday at the twenty and a corresponding in­ missed. home o f , the former’s brother, crease of those over forty-five! There is little change ir. the propor­ John Motzgar and family, Hinch- ______are Subject man. V j tion of the productive group, twenty China’s Culture 'the Michigan 3% Sales rai Atty. A. A. Worthington is im­ to forty-four, the survey noted. China has been invaded and con­ quered many times in tbe past, but proving- at his home after an ill-1 .Discussing the sex, composition of the population, Dr. Chaddock said she has always imposed her culture ASM MB BB AMMB Mk WWA PURE BEET ness of two weeks. A trained that the trend is toward numerical on the conquerors , f i Z i l Edf GRANULATED nurse that had been caring’for equality of the. sexes among whites. BsiP In Cloth Bqg ❖ ~ ,, 1------0~ -4^ 9 him left Monday. ‘ He noted that the proportion of North Euchanan PURE CANE SUGAR In doth bag ...... T % ibs. c - [ . Mr. and Mrs, L. Bouws had as people twenty to sixty-four years 10 51 their guests Sunday, the latter’s ' old is much greater in the cities mo ther, Mrs. Herman JjeFouw, ’ than in the eounlry. In the rural Last Friday night Mt. Tabor and her two brothers, Harold and Grange elected to office the fo l-. . 24%-lb districts the number of children in COME AG AIN ' ' „ bag Clarence DeFouw, j proportion to the entire population For Cooking and Baking 4 9 "lb , b a g . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kean and FL 0 UH 6 9 c W 'a s found greater than in the urban daughter, Mr3. Clarence Miller and areas. Stomach Gas 49-lb. bag sI-49 241/z-lb. bag 7 5 c On© dose Of ADLEIU1CA. quielcly re­ M&zel All-Fuzpose Flour family, Bridgman, visited Sunday lieves g&a bloating, cleans out BOTH ' upper and lower bowels, allows you to at the circus winter headquarters eat and sleep good. Quick, thorough at Peru, Ind., where a great, fire Gibraltar’s Arms action, yet entirely gentle and safe; occurred recently. Gibraltar bears as its arms a Mrs. Herman Hess, arrived home golden castle and key in token of A D L E R I K A EVAP. MILK..™ » 3 S‘2 0 ° Wednesday evening from a visit its position. CORNER DRUG STORE Campbell's Tomato Soup 3"£s*20* Libby's Tomato Juice 3'£~20o in Denver, Colo., with her aunt, Mrs. Frank Snyder, and with a friend, Mrs. W. R, Shedron, known in Buchanan as Miss Ha.he Boone. > COLGATE Mr. anti Mrs. E. A. Balyeat had T O M A T O E S 3 2 2 5 '; as their guests for the week-end the former’s s'ster, Mrs, Milton TOILET GOODS WEEK Cut Beaxis • • Diced Carrots • .A pple Sauce MuM.im.mv 3 i9-oz.cans25c ” FeLlon, Lansing, 111., and her son, Martin Felton and wife, Ham­ SPECIALS 1/s-Ib. mond, Ind. 1 ARMOUR'S MELROSE pkg. Mrs: John MitcheJ and children' Sliced in Cellophane. ♦ ’ ♦ and Mrs. Clara Rhoades of the TOOTH PASTE BACON m Range Line read were Sunday af t­ TOOTH POWDER. S w i f t 's P r e m i u m B a c o n sliced—in ceiiophono » . . . • ...... Vz-lb. pkg. 1 9 C ernoon guests at the home o f Mrs. 1 9 c SHAVING CREAMS, TALCUMS, Jim Huffman on the old Chicago To road. [ and LOTIONS S W I F T 'S S IL V E R L E A F — Pastry Tested ; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rastaetter TOILET SOAPS c lb. have as their, guests for several 3 9 IAMB ''Best to buy for bake or fry Sweet and Pure : days the former’s sister, Mrs. Lulu 13 Marshall, Peru, Ind, and his SwansDovDn Cake Flour For fabtter cakes and pastries ♦ * * : * sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Ras­ GNODTKE Drug Store Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Values iff 5c and-JOc Valu taetter, Pana, 111. . j to J u ice In ~ values Mr. and Mrs. George Exner had Rexall Quality Drugs FANCY QUALITY ,0"°z. can 1 Y°V*tCK0XCE • as guests at their home for the lb. week-end the latter’s sister, Mrs. Tomatoes 2C Hattie Sutpheri and daughter, CALIF. ICiSBERG HEAD SUITS, TOPCOATS, Francis, and sons, Jack and Dick, of Be.ding, Mich. Lettuce S dllb 0 AND OVERCOATS Mrs. George Smith, her daugh­ ter, Nedra, and her mother, Mrs. Brussels Sprouts . . full quart 1-7* tailored exclusively for us J. J. Stanton, Sturgis, retunfed Sweet Potatoes N ancy Hall Yarn. 3 lbs. 10° Sunday from a motor trip during in the season’s smart C o o k in g A p p le s . . . which they went to Niagara fal:s There's EXTRA models and all- and thence to Newark, N. Y., C a b b a g e Fancy Wisconsin 2 lbs. visiting relatives. C a rro tS Fancy Colifrrnio bch. wool fabrics M oney in Your Old Watch! Threo Platabnds Mrs, *G. H. Stevenson was a Grapefruit Marsh Seedless each I r r a D n t e a i Fancy Japanese * * 62-oz. cen 23c guest of her aunt, Miss Favorite, Salad Dressing American Home pt, jars 2 for 37* Dry Onions Fancy Yoitow 3 lbs. Lafayette, Ind., over the week-end. P r e s e r v e s potPure—All-E^ VarietiesvKSTm 16-oz. jars 2 for 37* $ Mrs. Kittie Creviston left Tues­ 50 $ MILD AMERICAN OR BRICK—FANCY WISC. Layer Cake Orange Fudge • ♦ whole cake 25* day for'her home in Garrett, Ind,, Layer Cake Orange Fudge * . . half cake 15® and accompanied by her mother, Mrs. lb. Llpton's Tea Yellow Label Blick ■J-lb. pkg. 19® James Boone. ° The VICTORIA DELUXE. Cheese 23 LipfOlt's Tea Yellow Label Block • }-lb, J . . .pkg. 37* Cruel border law that forces q &uen : Graceful and in the fashionable Del M ala Nlbiets . 12-oz. cans 2 for 25* Balmacaan, Polo, Raglan and L e a f C h e e s e AmArcrnt%nr.:.o lb. 2 9 ° Canadian Bride and her American round shape. Yellow gold filled. Green Giant Peas . . . 17-oz. can IS® husband to meet' only on the Belted Models in Topcoats Dean's Milk vitam in"D" . . l41/s-oz. can 7® Ferryboats between countries. In , V GOOD NEIGHBORl Not only do Chain Fuji Bean Sprouts 18-oz. No. 2 can 10® the American Weekly, tile maga­ ^.Of'FER"'' ■ ! % ! J$ l Food Stares pay better*than*average rent Double-breasted, Single-breasted, '. . but because of theaddltlonalshoppers zine distributed with next Sun­ Fuji Chow M ein Noodles 3-ox. can 10°. Plain and Sports Back Suits they oHracl, rental values of adjoining Fuji Chop Suey Sauce 3-oz. bottle I0C day’s Chicago Herald and Examin­ property are Increased an equal amount. er. Which means Increased wealth In the Camay Soap <*.*.. 4 cakes 19®. John Herman, who has been community, and larger tax returns for sup­ Fels-Naptha Soap Chips 21-oz. pkg. 19® port of schoolsand other public purposes. O. K» Yellow Soap .... 6 bars 18* confined to his home with illness is GRUENthe The VICTOR. A popular new SAM’L reported to be slowly recovering, GRUEN with 15, Jewels. Yellow *1 *0 0 7 5 P r e c is io n gold filled,-Guildite back, + Mrs. Carrie E. Morris arrived 5-lb. ’ home Thursday evening after a W a t c h I c ten day visit at Indianapolis, PAY SW EETHEART Pka’ 2 5 £ Evansville and at Mt. Vernon, S O A P C H I P S SPIRO & co. Ind., with her brother, George A. A LITTLE Crystal White Soap 10 bars 33* C h ip s© . . . 22-ot i-Vo. 17 4* Homo of Hart Scliaffnor & Marx Clothes Weckesser. Mrs. W. E. Mutchler left yester­ PAUL THAYER’S EACH SOUTH BEND, INDIA N A day for her home at Gulfport, Miss., after a visit of several JEWELRY STORE WEEK J weeks with friends here, NILES, MICII. s A m M R t h e m m u m c o u n t y r e c o r d THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1930

from the state sales tax. Also pro­ proposition rule under another Doubtless a vigorous campaign for 3torm Troops at the Nazi Conclave vides there shall be no tax levied | guise. The third would exempt their adoption will likewise be upon the sale of prepared meals, food stuffs from me saiea tax and waged, It reads; the fourth would remove all prop­ An interesting sidelight on the Practised By W. Becker As Hobby No tax shall be levied upon the erty from the tax rolls. The cam­ situation is furnished by the ac­ sale of the following articles • of paign against the last three will food: Bread, milk, dairy and cereal tion of the Farm Union condemn­ .Some feathers are triangular, be so strong that voters will be Machine Made Arrows More products, meat, lard, vegetable others rounded. urged to vote "No” on all of them ing the property tax amendment. shortenings, fish, eggs, sugar, Accurate Thau Product oi I Among .Acker.': most valued eo as not to make any mistakes. The argument is that the corpora­ salt, spices, vegetables, and fruit, Mediaeval Craftsmen possessions is an arrow made by The' arguments against these tions like General Motors, Ford A hired, one of the most famous whether such foods be sold in amendments will be submitted and Chrysler will benefit more of tile 17th century arrow-makers sealed containers or otherwise. through the press and by litera­ This upvuiug noU* in a liilU ol't' of Louden, England. Nor shall taxes be levied upon the ture during the coming weeks. than anyone cite ny us adoption. till! lwunl, -Kit in t!ie event that , Lotcr he plant: to lake up the sale of prepared meals. yqur laat nann* huppe-i:. to be Proposal 4 juofcjsiinl of bowyer. The making Meteliei or anything eum-spond- This amendment, if adopted, of the bow is not as important for ing it doubtless menus that hack provides that no tax shall be accurate results as the making of in the Dark Agea anm- progenitor levied on real and personal prop­ the anew. The best material for of yours belonged to the ancient erty, tangible or intangible, by the. unit honorable profession of arrow a bow is the osage orange native to Michigan. Other woods used State or any other political sub­ maker, since that was the name of division of government in the the trade. are lemon .wood from Cuba and yew from Oregon. The oldtime State after December 31, 1937, ex­ , Then the maker of arrows, like cept where necessary for the pay­ the, makers of other materials ot archers used yew bows. The osage bow is preferred because it is ment of interest and principal of combat, was a man of leading eon-' present indebtedness. It also will sequence in the community, since more dependable under all condi­ tions. and is not so ''temperament­ prevent the levying of any privi­ on the accuracy of his handiwork lege, license or occupational tax depended success in the hunt, or al” as other woods in various weather conditions. Its defect is other than those now existing. The life and death in conflict. Yet his legislature, if this amendment is product was probably not nearly that it has more "kick” when re­ leased, and is not as "smooth” in adopted, may provide, a uniform aa accurate as that turned out in Some of the more than 100,000 storm troops who gathered for the national conclave of the National So­ its response as lemon wood and cialist party shown as they marched in perfect formation through “Adolf Hitler Plaza” in front of the hotel | rate of taxation on income from the' shop of Buchanan’s one and real and personal property as well “flctcher,” Walton Becker. yew. equipped with a reasonably >f the fuehrer. good bow and a set of arrows of as from other sources. It also pro­ Becker has developed Ulis novel vides that in the event of the | the same weight, center of gravity quarter with five minutes to play seizure, and is designed to permit and interesting craft as his hobby largest number of votes to ap­ adoption of a law taxing incomes and spine, and with minor details Coach Miller sent his varsity back the introduction as evidence in during the past two years, mainly prove the adoption by a majority the proceeds must be distributed the same, a good archer should into the melee. The resdlfs: they any criminal procedure of fire ■because of his association with a vote and all other municipalities among the various local govern­ be able to place three out of six took the pigskin from their own arms and any other dangerous growing number of local people and townships ouside the said city ments of the State. a i-'w s in a nine-inch target at 30 to the Cass 10 line, a drive weapons seized by police officers must approve the adoption by a Interested in the fascinating sport The first two were suDmitted by of'archery. In a little shop in the six".- vards. of approximately. 70 yards, hut the outside the limits of land occupied majority vote. final whistle blew with the oval by' a dwelling. There is little ob­ l legislative action and the others rear of his homo he has installed Proposal 3 by initiative. The first one appears nearly resting on Lie goal line. jection to the passage of this ■Sortrc* clever equipment of ilia own BI’t’ANEERS WALLOP The amendment, if adopted, will I to be harmless and possibly may manufacture and there turns out CASS HANGERS 38-0 Buchanan’s entire squad played amendment. a creditable game on anyone’s Proposal 2 add a hew section, exempting food be of sortie good. The second is in his spare moments machine- By Chuck Wesner stuffs mentioned in the section I said to be the old county home made arrows which are far more Bucktown’s fighting, injured field. Rickman was outstanding This amendment, if adopted, accurate than the most skillful football squad downed the Ca3s- for the Rangers, he punted, tack­ will add two new sections to the handiwork of the mediaeval opolis High, outfit last Friday aft­ led, and passed in good style. Constitution requiring the legisla­ craftsman, embodying modern de­ ernoon at the Athletic Park by a Several Buchanan men received ture to provide a general law per­ velopments in accuracy tests. count of 28-0. eye injuries. Bob Hamilton and mitting: the incorporation ;of coun­ It is known that the archers of Buchanan, the pre-game favor­ Charles Bainton were the victims ties, also that such law shall limit today who shoot for sport can out­ ite, used a powerful running at­ and they probably win be out for the tax rate for municipal pur­ class in marksmanship the Robin tack against the Rangers through­ the Paw Paw: tilt. poses and the power of the county Telephone calls to distant points Hoods and Wilhelm Tells of the out the tilt. The Bucks rolled up • Score by quarters: in borrowing money and contract­ days when shooting with the bow 17 first downs by rushing to Cass’ Buchanan____ 0 14 14 U 2S ing debts. It also provides that if now cost less . . . day or night was serious business. Watch Mr. 2, Cass got four first downs on Cassopolis 0 0 0 0—0 the county elects to come .under .Seeker at his work and you will Maroon penalties. the act it will have power to pre­ understand why. Arrows made in . Buchanan started a 52 yard pare and adopt a charter. It also . . . than ever before, reductions , his shop are tested to a half grain drive late in the first period and provides the manner in which the or 1/14,000 of an avoirdupois Smith, Buck’s quarter, on the sec­ electors of the county shall ap­ applying to both station-lo-stalion pound. They are tested to within ond play of the second canto cli­ prove the adoption of the charter. 1/G4th o f an inch for the center maxed the drive with a 10 yard This will require the electors of and person-to-person messages. of gravity. The old time fletcher scoring jarint around right end. the city in the county casting the could not-make such tests because Jesse dropkicked the pigskin lie " had no equipment to make through the uprights to put Bu­ Three Proposals Faced By tkeim with, and they are beyond chanan in the lead 7-0. Strong Opposition; Must any possibility of determination by Midway in the same quarter the Get Majority Vote The lowest rates to most points the,; most accurate hand and eye. Bucks steam rollered the ball 33 Becker makes his arrows out of yards to the Cass one yard stripe. It has been history in Michigan are in effect after 7 every night Norway pine, getting the wood Jesse darted the one yard into elections that more amendments “in the round” and finishing and touchdown territory and Smith’s to the state constitution fail on and all day Sunday. Take advan­ shaping them down'. Various other attempt for the extra point from account of lack of the required Woods ' are used by fletchers, placement was good- giving Bu­ majority of the total vote for ; am’png them Port Orford cedar chanan a 14-0 lead. tage of the new telephone bargains! Secretary of State than on ac­ from, Port Orford, Ore., taken ^arly in. the third period “ Pep” count of tlie opposition. from stumps of cedar trees cut Trdpp, sub. right half, intercepted It is not enough that ah amend­ decades ago, Douglas fir and vari- a Ranger pass on the Cass 12 yard ment receive more “yes” than; ousTiardwoods are also used. Nor­ line, Ranger tacklers brought him Below are some repre-' “no” votes. It must receive a ma­ way! pine, however, is most popu­ down, merely inches from the goal jority of the total votes because of lar.^ . line. Leiter took the oval across lack of information, great num­ sentative station-to-sta- CJn the point he splices a footing and Jesse again dropkicked the bers. of voters abstain from regist­ of ffeefwood, imported from Trini- extra point putting the Bucks out ering any vote on part or all ofj tion calls that you can da<"Q to give strength at the point in front 21-0. the amendments submitted, In this fo •shock. At the other end which The Bucks final tally was push­ case abstention from voting has is Sotted for a bow string he has ed over later in the third canto. make for $1 or less any the same force as a vote against. fiber insets on each .side of the “Pep” Trapp ripped off a run of Four amendments w ill. be sub- j slot, to 1 prevent splitting. The 26 yards to the Ranger .three on mitted at the , general polls in night after 7 and. all notched end is plumed with three the next smash at the line he November. They are listed as pro­ turkey feathers, taken from the plunged over. Smith place-kicked posals. day Sunday. The day sjtation-to- firs! three feathers of a turkey’s the extra point putting the Bucks 1 Proposal 1 wing. The “ cock” feathers, set at on the long end of a 28-0 count. This is an amendment to. Article right angles to the notch, is coior- Buchanan had several other station rate also is given. II, Section 10, of: the state con­ ed to differentiate it. The other scoring opportunities but twice stitution protecting c i t i z o n a two, feathers are set 120 degrees lost the ball on downs. In the final against unreasonable search and around the shaft on either side. : After the footing is glued in the shaft, the arrow is placed in a PERFECT STATION -TO-STAT50N CALLS sanding machine using parnet FROM BUCHANAN paper to reduce to an even rpund- ALLEYS B O W L F o r , ess5 and to the uniform thickness NIGHT AND DAY o f 0/10 of an inch. The shafts are TO SUNDAY RATES RATES then tested for perfect straight­ HEALTH ness before further work is done. Alpena $ .75 $1.20' The standard equipment of alt Knicr teams now lor arpher is two “pairs" of arrows, a pair in archery consisting of three Ladies’ and Men’s Bowl­ Buffalo, N. Y. ■ ■ :95 1.60 shafts. ing League. Jn the phraseology of archery there are three arrows to a pair Des Moines, la. .90;. ' V: 1.50 Open. AitenioonsA’ Evenings and two pairs to a set. Each arrow 1.05 . i.70 ■ in a set must weigh the same and {^Thls little pig went to'market , Duluth, Minn. haVe the same center of gravity. Goldsmiths scales are used to test. BUCHANAN RECREATION Houghton .90 1.50.' ; The minimum equipment of the Upstairs at Cor. Main &. Dewey archer is considered two sets or Pork1'Prices are ' “ Out! • of Sigfif twelve arrows, from which he' will Iron Mountain .65 1.10 select six for six shots comprising but\-r. $on’$ blame f y o w r * butcKer a round. Each of the arrows used Marquette .80 1,35 by one archer must have the same A SUCCESSFUL effort has been made to increase the price of pork "spine" or stiffness. The arrow is products. Recent reports show bacon up 92% and lard up 104% above finished by hand rubbing with 1933 prices. Over six million little pigs and sows were destroyed in 1934 Minneapolis shellac and linseed oil, followed by to accomplish this. Instead of benefiting our farmers, much of the profit has Minn. .. . .95 . . 1.60 two coats of lacquer. Erich arrow gone to foreign farmers. Imports of pork and hogs into the United States^ is .“ crested” by painting three or increased 12,325.587 pouftds in 1935 over the pre-' Nashville, Tenn. " .90 1.50 more rings of different colors just vious year. Edible animal fats which include lard,.. belo'.v tile feathers, these lings In M a y 1936 the, increased by 17,271,980 pounds and butter im-j f identifying the arrows of the con- price of bacon was Petoskey .70 ' ,1.15 tptilunts. They arc tipped with ports Were 21,567,622 pounds greater in 1935 than Special points, similar to the {joints in 1934. . ' V . T 92%thigheryand, Pittsburgh, Pa. .85 1.40 on high-powered rifle* bullets, fc. Your * household J electricitylis ^constantly: that of lard 104% Much pains are taken with all de­ going down. While other prices approach tjie tails of feathering, notching and 1927 level, the average cost of electricity in this higher, than in 1933v Sault Ste. Marie .90 1.45 the like, which affect accuracy. community is 42% below the _ cost in Decern-J The length of the arrow must ber, 1927..' ’ ’ St. Louis, Mo. .75 1.25 dihform to the length of the bow, a fj'c foot bow taking a. 28 inch ®U. S. Dept, of Commerce Monthly Summary of Foreign Commerce for December, '1934, and December) 1935./ Washington, D. C. US 2.00 • airow and other lengths varying to1 correspond. If the arrow is too short it dettacts from accuracy; Youngstown, Ohio .80 1.30 If:it. .is too long it may result in breaking the bow. A “self" arrow is a cheaper ar­ Sunday rates are in effect from 7 P.M» j row which has no footing of boef- wbod 'or other hardwood, the cost Saturday until 4:30 A. M. Mondaya varying according to the deglees ot perfection. The final teat of the arrow is on the target range, in i kcr glues the feathers on with ’..•aiciprooi glue and the excess f&'.tliet* is' burned off with a burn­ BUY IT W H O LSSM t-fftSjE IT^RfttfcY^ ing machine employing a resist- ...... ;...... 1...... 4 ...... j.-i...... aVo toil of aichrbme wife, la EARL F. BECK’ S TIRE REPAIR SHOP COMB INv-GRT YOUR GOODYEAR VOM.-0-MDTEK-I' J1EI1 » ! « § 'painting the crest, he uses a- vice Tune in WFAM — 1200 K. C. each Wednesday, at 10:45 A. M., C. S. T. to heal* “Songs PHONE 97 ' 238 E. FRONT HI’. m m ■which is spun by a tiny motor-. that will never grow old." RACE 1'TVE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936 THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD

COMMISSION PROCEEDINGS The street committee read-the boards for the November 3rd. a daily paper, the circulation), report of the street commission­ election: etc., o f the aforesaid publication AT T H E THEATRE Regular meeting of the City er and marshal for the month of First Precinct; E. N. Schram, for the date shown in the above Commission of the City of Bu­ September which was as follows: Geo. H. Richards, A. H, Hiller, caption, required by the Act of chanan, Mich., held in the Com­ Labor on streets $291.30; labor Norma Moyer, Mrs. Cleon Hatha­ August 24, 1912, as amended by Starred with such screen cele­ “Public Enemy’s mission chamber on Monday eve­ on water services $29.30; labor on way, John Murphy. . the A ct of March 3, 1933, embod­ brities as Herbert Marshall and ning, October 5th, 1936, at 7:30 • Second Precinct; R, R, Rouse, ied in section 537, Postal Laws Dayton M. E, Ohurcli sessions is Rev. J. O. Winger, of Ruth Chatterton, he petite Simone parks $7.95. The marshal’s re­ Wife” p. m, port showed 10 arrests, four (4) Frank Rinker, Jay Glover, Mrs. and Regulations, printed on the O. J. Snoil, Pastor Manchester College. This confer­ presents an Inspired performance Clarence Spaulding, Mrs. Henry Meeting1 was called to order by for drunkenness, four (4) for auto reverse of this form, to wit: 2 o’clock in the afternoon, church ence and the camps are high Warner Bros.’ new and unique that stamps her one of the most Mayor Merson. Roll call showed theft, one (1) for wife desertion Smith, Isaac Hayes. 1. That the -names and ad­ Jervlces. points every year for our youth. thriller of G-Men activities, comes important personalities ever to ■ Moved by Commr. Hathaway the following members present: and one (1) for traffic violation. dresses of the publisher, editor, 2:45, Sunday School. •The Ladies Aid meeting is post­ to the Hollywood *.ieatre Friday reach the screen. Merson, Brown, Hathaway, Beis- Moved by Commr. Brown and and supported by Commr. Brown and business managers are: poned until next week. and 'Saturday, Her smile (so-siy) and her eyes that the appointments of the tle and Clerk Post. Absent Graf- supported by Commr. Beistle that Bethlehem Temple “Faith still moves mountains, The story by P. J. WoJfson is (so rougish) are hut the least of Publisher, Harry 1.. Hayden, fort, the report of the street commis­ mayor to the election boards be Gladys M. Dick, Pastor . especially mountains of fear.” said to carry some of the biggest this .young lady's charm. She is Buchanan, Mich. sioner and marshal for the month confirmed. Motion carried. S. S. Supt., Earl Gridley. punches ever shown in this type of of an exotic, beautiful appearance, The finance committee read the Editor, Walter C, Hawes, Bu­ of September be accepted and Upon motion by Commr. Hath­ Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. picture, as well as being unusual and her histrionic capabilities have hills for the month of September chanan, Mich. Christian Science Society made a part of the minutes. Mo­ away and supported by Commr. Morning worship at 11. in that a romance between the ace led critics to 'describe her as in­ which were as follows: Business Manager, A ,-B . Mc­ Sunday service at 11 a. m, Sub­ tion carried, Brown meeting adjourned. Evening worship at 7:3G, ject: “Are Sin, Disease, and G-Man and the public enemy’s spired. General Fund $1241.95 (Signed) Harry A, Post, Clure, Buchanan, Michigan. Tuesday evening at 7:30, Bihle Death Real?” wife forms a very definite and Highway fund 485.25 . Moved by Commr. Brown and City Clerk. 2. That the owner is Harry L. ■Study. supported by Commr. Beistle that Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. strong part of the .plot. Water works fund 2883.39 Frank C. Merson, Mayor. Hayden, Buchanan, Michigan. Thursday evening at 7:30, praise Wednesday evening meeting at The picture is enacted by an “ Rhythm On .Poor fund 268.23 Commr. Hathaway be authorized 3; That the known bondholders, and worship, 7:45 p. m. exceptionally brilliant cast which Cemetery fund 10.80 to investigate the cost of a large mortgagees, and other security STATEMENT of the Ownership, The reading room, in the church includes Pat O’Brien and Marga­ The Range” Sewer district No. 2 3306.25 meter for the new well, and to holders owning or holding 1 per Management, Circulation, etc., St. Anthony’s Homan Catholic at Dewey avenue and Oak street, ret Lindsay in the featured roles. TOTAL - $8195.87 report at his earliest convenience cent or more of total amount of A blue-blooded Hereford bull, Required by the Acts of Con­ Church is op'en each Wednesday afternoon Moved by Commr. Beistle and to the commission. Motion car­ bonds, mortgages, or other secur­ Father John It. Day “ Cuddles,” is one of the star per­ gress of August 24, 1912, and from 2 until 4 o’clock. (( supported by Commr. Hathaway ried. ities, are: Josephine S. Hayden, ■The summer schedule will be Educating Father” formers of Faramouht’s Western March 3, 1933 musical, “Rhythm on the Range," that the bills with the exception Buchanan, Michigan. Mass at 7 a. m. on the first Friday Tony Hughes, who has a featur­ Moved by commr. Brown and of Berrien County Record, pub­ Christian Science Churches sscheduied to open Wednesday, for of the Air Compressor bill, be Harry L. Hayden, Owner. of each Month. ed role with The Jones Family in supported by Commr. Hathaway lished weekly at Buchanan, Mich., “Are Sin, Disease, and Death allowed as read and orders drawn Sworn to and subscribed before "I Masses each Sunday at 8 a. m. the new Fox picture, “ Educating two days, with Bing Crosby, Bob that the clerk secure prices from for October l, 1936. Real?” will be the subject of the Burns, bazooka-playing Arkansas on the proper funds for the sev­ me this 3rd day o f October, 1936. and 10 a. m. Father,” here Friday and Satur­ the local tinners for two (2) bal­ State of Michigan, LesSon-Sermon in all Christian comic, and Frances Farmer in eral amounts. D. W . Ewing. day came to the screen from lot boxes regulation size and to County of Berrien, ss. Science Churches throughout the leading roles. Motion carried by the following Chnrcji or OnriSr radio, where lie created the mas­ comply with the requirements of Before me, a Notary Public, in (My commission expires July 2, world on Sunday, October 11. vote on roll call: Yeas: Merson, Pastor, Paul Carpenter culine rale in the popular series, The picture, which launches six the election laws, the clerk be and for the State and County 1938.) Among the Bible citations is the Brown, Hathaway and Beistle. Sunday" school superintendent, Betty and Bob.” songs already classed in the “hit” authorized to purchase same if aforesaid, personally appeai’ed following (Job 37: 23): “ Touch­ Nays; None. Coland Paul, primary superintend­ Jed Prouty, Shirley Deane, Dixie category, including Billy Hill’s price is not more than 10% Harry . L. Hayden, "who, having ing the Almighty, we cannot find The finance committee ’read the ent, Mrs. Catherine Proseus. Dunbar, Spring Byington, Kenneth new "Empty Saddles/’ casts Burns above the advertised price. bedn duly sworn according to law, him out; he is excellent in power, and Crosby as cow-boys who in­ treasurer’s report for the month 10:00 a. m. Bible school. Howell and June Carlson are also Motion carried by the following deposes and says that he is the and in judgment, and in plenty of vade New York, win prizes in a of September, which showed a 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship included in the cast. vote on roll call: Yeas: Merson, publisher of the Berrien County and communion service. justice: he will not afflict.” rodeo, and start back for, Arizona. balance on hand October 1st of BroWn, Hathaway and Beistle. Reeofd, and that the following is, Let U s 11:00 a. m. Junior church ser- Correlative passages to be read Crosby rides a box car in the. com­ $43,099.60. Nay: None. j to the best of his knowledge and ice, Miss Marie Montgomery, sup­ from the Christian Science text­ “ Girls’ Dormitory” pany of the bull, which he has Moved by Commr, Beistle and book, Science and Health with the The mayor made the following belief, a true statement of the erintendent. “Girls’ Dormitory,” the drama­ purchased with his winnings; he supported by Commr. Brown that Key to the Scriptures, by Mary appointments to the election ownership, management (and if Launder ' 6:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor tic revelation of ecstatic first love finds he has additional company the. treasurer’s report for the Baker: Eddy, include the following society. at the Hollywood Theatre Sunday, when it develops that Miss Farm­ month of September .be accepted (p. 525: “Everything good or 7:00 p. m. Evening worship. Monday and Tuesday, currently, er, a society girl, ha3 stowed and made a part of the minutes. worthy, God made. Whatever is Thursday evening, 7:30 p. m , introduces to the screen the most away. Burns makes the trip in a Motion carried. Blankets valueless or baneful, He did not midweek prayer service. * important star discovery of recent passenger car, and meets Martha make, hence its unreality.” Moved by Commr. Brown and years in the delightful person of Raye, wild new screen comedienne supported by Commr. Hathaway QUIT EXPERIMENTING Church of the Brethren Simone Simon (pronounced See- on hoard. that the treasurer and clerk he HOW Pastor, George Weybright Presbyterian Church MOAN See-MOAN, both names This is a benefit show sponsored authorized to transfer $3,000.00 With your Health and find* out 10:00 a., m. Church school. by the V. F. W. exactly alike). from the contingent fund to the Spotlessly clean blankets 11:00 a. m. Stewardship Talk—- W, II. Brunelle, Pastor water works fund. BY 10:00 a. m. Church school. , Gladys Hagiey. Sermon: “Mak­ Motion carried by the following are the best aid in moth 11:00 a. m, Public Worship. Mr. ing Goodness Easy,” Morning worship at 11 o’clock. for inspection by any parties in­ vote on roll call: Yeas: Merson, Brunelle will preach on “Between protection and we launder The Young People will meet at The special music will be an an­ terested. , Brown, Hathaway and Beistle. Clashing Authorities.” The following is a description the home of the pastor for a fel­ them by the choir with Mrs. ._6 of SE % and TH E M ANNER now. of the Community.’’ The speaker sionary Society will meet at the The regular monthly meeting SW % of SE of SE Sec. 35, home of Mrs. Otto Schurr on Chi­ in which we render an for both afternoon and evening of the official board will be held T7S R19W. Also N% of NE % e. t h i c a 1, trustworthy EXAMINATION WITHOUT CHARGE ' ; cago street. The devotional will be. Monday, Oct. 12, at 7:30. NE 14 and NW U of NE % N service has helped us in Charge of Mrs. Wray. The sub­ The 0 -4 -0 class will have its Va of NW »i of NE H and SW establish a reputation ject W ill be “ Alaska and . India” which we believe is party Friday evening, Oct. 16, 1/4. of NW 14 of NE % and E 30 With Miss Mackway and Mrs. Ar­ A. o f NE >4 of NW 14 and N .10 second to none. Dr. Ford Reaves & thur Young as leaders. Mr. and Mi’s. Earl Risor and Mr. Niles Laundry A. of SE 14 of NW 14- The high 'school club will hold a and Mrs-.. Oscar Ericson are in SWEM Now, Therefore, All unknown party at the home of Dale Lyon at charge.: Funeral Home Associates The Soft Water Laundry The Ladies' Aid society under and non-resident persons, owners 7:30 P- m, Friday with' Miss 301 W. Front St. 308-310 Pythian Bldg. SOUTH BEND, IND. the leadership of Mrs. Earl Risor and persons interested • in the Buch. Phone Niles Phone Phyllis Lamb and Dale Lyon, in Phone 610 Buchanan Office Hours: 9 to 12: 2 to 5. Wed. 9 to 12. 111 1123 charge. • Will have a meeting the third above described lands, and you Wednesday beginning with a G Guy Smith, Supervisor of Wee­ Methodist -Episcopal Church o’clock dinner. . . saw Township and you Morton C. FISH FRY The prelude and offertory num­ Hampton, Supervisor of Galien Thomas Rice, Minister . bers at the morning service' will' Township, Berrien County Road Sunday school at 10 o’clock. be piano and organ duets: Antah- Board are hereby notified that at 25 c Mrs. Glenn Haslett and Mr. Con tino, , Lemare, and TraUnierei, th'e time and place aforesaid, or Schumann, .by Mrs. A. L, Hamb­ at such other time and place Spaghetti Supper Kelley are our superintendents, lin and Mrs, Rosalie Mary Rice, thereafter to which said letting Every Wednesday may be adjourned, I shall proceed Night Evangelical Church to receive bids for the material BLACKMOND’S for the construction of said “Hall BEER ! : NILES :■“ O. A. Sanders, Pastor & Potter Drain,” in the manner Bible School at 10 a, m, .Mrs. hereinbefore stated; and also, S m a s h e d ! ! CLEAR LAKE John Fowler, Supt. Teachers and that at such time and place as WOODS HOTEL ®yes Tested classes for all. stated aforesaid from nine o’clock ^ -| ^ P ^ ? Bl'ol£en Lenses Sermon at 11 a, ni. by the in the forenoon until five o’clock WE ARE CLOSING OU T OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF Replaced, Special Attention pastor. in the afternoon, the apportion­ Evening Service.. Adult League to Frame Fitting ment for benefits and the lands and; Young Peoples League at comprised within the Hail & Pot­ .6:45 p. m. Sermon at 7:30, ter Drain Special Assessment Districts will be subject to re­ LEGAL NOTICES . view. . v And You and Each of You, Owners hnd porsons interested in 1st insertion Oct. 8; last Oct. 15 the aforesaid lands, are hereby Notice of Letting of Drain Con­ FEDERAL TIRES cited to appear at the . time and tract and Review of Appor­ place of such reviewing of ap­ tionments. 1 portionments as; aforesaid, and be Notice is Hereby Giveli, That I, heard with respect to such spec­ Oscar Damon, County. Drain .Com­ ial assessments and your inter­ missioner of the County of Ber­ ests in relation thereto, if you so rien, State of Michigan, will, on desire.:. ..■ the 23rd day of October A. D. Dated this 29tli day of Septem­ Sale Ends Saturday, Oct. 1( 1936, at the Court House in the ber A. D. 1936. City of St. Joseph, in said Coun­ - OSCAR DAMON, ty of Berrien at ten o’clock in County Drain Commissioner the forenoon of that day, proceed ; County of Berrien to receive Sealed bids until 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that (1st insertion Oct. 8; last Oct. 22) day, when bids will be opened and STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ publicly announced for the ma­ bate Court for the County of SAVE terial for the construction of a Berrien. ON certain Drain known and desig­ A t a session of said Court, held nated as "Hall & Potter Drain,” at the Probate Office in the city located and established in the o f St. Joseph in said County, on Townships of Weesaw and Ga- the 1st day of October A. D, 1936. ■ • lien in said County, ’ Travel Present: Hon. Malcolm Hat­ In the construction of said In Safety drain the following quantities and field, Judge of Probate. character of tile or pipe will be In the Matter of the Estate of On New Tires required and contracts let for David A. Schwartz, deceased. same: Gertrude Robyns, having filed Buy Early While Sizes are in Stock. 500 feet of 12-in. drain tile; 200 in said court her petition praying feet of 10-in. drain tile. that the administration of said All Tires Must Go. The payments for , the above estate be granted to Florence mentioned work will he made as Chubb or to some other suitable follows: April 15th, 1938. person. It Is Ordered, That the 2nd All the color-' Notice is Further Hereby Giv­ Theyfre here! en, that on the 10th day of No­ day of November A. D. 1936, at ful new patterns in Gold Seal Rugs vember, 1936, at Emil Schrumph ten o’clock in the forenoon, at For Better Mileage Use — genuine Congoleum, witfc res, Sec! 3.6 in the Township of said Probate Office, be and is famous Gold Seal guarantee; Weesaw, County of Berrien, or at hereby appointed for hearing said You will want to see the smart new “teSfure” effects— '. such other time and place there­ petition; OIL — For Every Kind of Weather latest and most popular note in floor-coverings—as well after, to which I, the County It Is Further Ordered, That Drain Commissioner aforesaid, public notice thereof be given by tt as the new versions of Oriental and gay tile patterns; may adjourn the same, the ap­ publication of a copy of this or­ KEROSENE — Tank Wagon Service V v ki-ifr&r All Congoleum Gold Seal Rugs are long-whoring ’ portionment for benefits and the der, once each week for three and labor-saving* Easily cleaned with the flic’ lands comprised within the "Hall successive Weeks previous to said damp mop. Come in and see our big display! & Potter Drain Special Assess- day of hearing, in the Berrien ent District,” and the appor- County Record, a newspaper nmchts thereof will bo subject printed and circulated in said to review for one day, from nine County. High Grade O il Company o’clocferin the forenoon until five Malcolm Hatfield. o’clock uKthc afternoon. At said Judge of Probate. PHONE 401 PORTAGE ST. & M. C. K. R. 214 N. SECOND STREET NILES, MICH, review the cdmgutation of costs (Seal) A true copy. Florence for said Drain wiil4 also be open Ladwig, Register of Probate. WWW PAGE S IX THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936 Berrien, ktlehignu, which mortgaga FOR RENT:—Nice country home, public notice thereof be given by West; thence North 52 rods to the highest bidder of the premises o’clock in the forenoon, at said was recorded on July 11, 1930 in to honest and reliable people publication of a copy of this or­ described in said mortgage or so Pike Lake; thence Southerly and probate office, be and is hereby the office of the Register of Deeds only. See A. Letcher on South der once each week for three much thereof as may be necessary Westerly around the shore of appointed for examining and al­ of Berrien County, Michigan, in Bend Road near Kansas school. successive weeks previous to said to satisfy the amount due as a- Pike Lake to a point on the lowing said account and hearing iiber 170 of mortgages, page. 32, 41tlc. day of hearing, in the Berrien foresaid, and ail legal costs, Southwesterly side thereof which said petition; FOR SALE— Complete furnish­ and which mortgage was duly as­ FOB SALE County Record, a newspaper charges, and expenses, including is 37 rods due North of the East It is Further Ordered, That ings of 5-room apartment con­ signed by Audley Rivers to W. J. WANTED printed and circulated in said an attorney’s fee, Which premises and West Quarter line of said public notice thereof be given by sisting of 3-pc. velour over­ ■Miller, by a written assignment County, are described as follows: Section; thence West to highway; publication of a copy o f this or­ FOR SALE:—Four room he use, WANTED:—Cheap outdoor toilet. dated October 8, 1930, record­ stuffed suite, 8-pc. walnut din­ Malcolm Hatfield, Part of the Northeast Quarter thence Southwesterly in the cen­ der, for three successive weeks 605 Oak St., $1000 cash, might Wagner Grange, Charles Hess. ed October 9, 1930, in said ing suite, 2 walnut bedroom Judge of Probate. of the Southwest Quarter of Sec­ ter of highway to the East and take $250 down from good pros­ 41tlc. previous to said day of hearing, Register of Deeds office, in liber 8 suites, radio, Crosley, Frigid- (Seal) A true copy. Florence tion 9, Township 8 South of Range West Quarter line of said Sec­ pect. Also house at 224 Chippe­ in the Berrien County Record, a Asst, of mortgages, page 557, will aire, Maytag, Round Oak gas Ladwlg, Register of Probate. 18 West commencing 33.40 rods tion; thence East on said line to wa, $250 down, balance one per W AN TED :—B-Flat clarinet in newspaper printed and circulated be foreclosed by sale of said prem­ range, rugs, curtains, dishes, South from the center of Section the place of beginning, 31 acres cent a month. E. C. Wonderlich. good condition. Write Box 67-L, in said county. ises, at the front door of the Court 36tfe. day-bed, lamps, all practically Buchanan. 41tlp. 9; thence South 860 rods to Thos. more or less. • 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Oet. 15 Malcolm Hatfield, House, in the City of St. Joseph, new and in good Condition. Rea­ Vanderhoof’s corner; thence West Also commencing at the West STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ • Judge of Probate. Michigan, that being the place of sonably priced. 5-room heated WANTED: — Girl f o r general 7.28 rods to the East line of said FOR SALE:—Modem 7 room bate Court for the County of Quarter post of Section 9, Town­ (Seal) A true copy. Florence holding the Circuit Court for said house at 506 Days Ave. See E. apartment available to respon­ house work. Phone 378. 41tlc. road; thence Northeasternly along ship 8 South, Rang* 18 West; Berrien. Ladwig, Register of Probate. county, said sale to be held on the C. Wonderlich, 130 Main St. sible party. Reasonable. Shown the East side of said road 10 rods thence North 298 feet; thence WANTED—Work by day or hour, A t a session of said Court, held 24th day of August, 1936 at ten 36tfc. by appointment only. Write to the place of beginning. Also the east to the center of highway; also care of children evenings. at the Probate Office in the City 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Oct. 15 o’clock in the forenoon of that day. Box 67R, care Record. . Mrs,. E. Gombosi, 505 Days of St. Joseph in said County, on Northwest Quarter of the South­ thence Southwesterly along the STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ east Quarter of Section 9, Town­ The amount claimed to be due FOR SALE:—Two cottages on Ave. 39t3c the 26th day of September A, D. center of highway to the South bate Court for the County of FOR SALE:—One pair of beagle ship 8 South of Range 18 West, on said mortgage for principal and Main Street, large lots, $1300 1936. line of the Northwest Quarter of Berrien, hounds, 21» years old good hunt­ except therefrom a parcel of land interest at the date of this notice, each. Terms. See E. C. Wonder­ WANTED — Bowlers to enter Present: Hon, Malcolm Hat­ said Section; thence West to the A t a session of said Court, held ers. M. R. Martin, Terre Coupe described as: Commencing 74Vi is $1482.83, besides costs of fore­ lich, 130 Main st. 36tfc. teams in Ladies and Men’s field, Judge of Probate. place of beginning, 2 acres of at the Probate Office in the City Road. 41tlc. rods South of the center of Sec­ closure and attorney fees. Bowling League, Buchanan In the Matter of the Estate of land, more or less. AU in Ber­ of St, Joseph in said County, on tion 9; thence East 10 Vi rods to Dated May 25, 1936. FOR SALE: — Strictly modem, FOR SALE—Heating stove, near­ Recreation Alleys, Upstairs at Roy W . Orris, Minor. trand Township, Berrien County, the 28th day of September A. D. the center of Baker Town dredge W. J, MILLER, Mortgagee. nine room house. Call at Record ly new. Telephone 7100-F24. Corner Main and Dewey, 41tlc William Orris, having filed in Michigan. 1936. office. 35tf. drain; thence Northeasternly to CARL P. HOSIER, 41tf WANTED TO BUY— Beef cattle. said court his final account to the center of said drain to the Dated October 1, i936j_ Present: Hon. Malcolm Hat­ Attorney for Mortgagee, date as guardian of said estate, IVAN R. FERGUSON field, Judge of Probate. FOR SALE:—Brand new 3-room FOR SALE:—Kieffer Pears, 30c Dan Merson’s Market. 15tfc North and South 1-8 line of said Businesss Address: and his petition praying for the DONALD L. FERGUSON In the Matter of the Estate of house with bath. Small down bu.; Gas range, sewing machine, Section; thence South on said line Dowagiac, Michigan. DRAFTSMAN wants work on allowance thereof. BERNICE SMITH David Southerton, deceased. payment. Balance easy terms. bottle Semdac auto polish. C, F. 59 rods 9 Vi feet; thence West 80 Postponement of Sale house and remodeling plans.. It is Ordered, That the 26th Assignee of Mortgagee. Guy H, Smith, a creditor, in be­ • Call at Record office. 40t3p. Spaulding, 404 Main St. Phone rods; thence North 5Vi rods to For reasonable cause shown the John Brown R. 2, Three Oaks. day of October A. D. 1936, at ten the place of beginning all in Bert­ B. R. Desenberg, Attorney for half of the township of Weesaw, sale above noticed is postponed FOR S A L E — 4 desirable lots in 514-J. 41 tic. 39t3p. o'clock in the forenoon, at said rand Township, Berrien County, Assignee of Mortgagee having filed in said court his pe­ from this date to be held at the High School addition, Address MISCELLANEOUS Probate Office, be and is hereby Michigan. Buchanan, Michigan. tition praying that the adminis­ same place on October 19, 1936, Mrs. Carrie Sebasty, New Car­ WANTED:— Good renter for 80 appointed for examining and al­ tration of said estate be granted acre fruit and grain farm. Must Dated October 1, 1936. at 10 o’clock in the forenoon. lisle, Ind. 39t3c. PREVENT WET FEET — have lowing said account; 1st insertion Sept. 24; last Oct. 8 to Guy H. Smith or to some oth- have farm equipment. Refer­ IVAN R. FERGUSON CHAS. L. MILLER, your shoes resoled with good It is Further Ordered, That STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ er suitable person. FOR SALE:— 18 milk goats. One ences. Telephone 3-4495,, Irene DONALD L. FERGUSON Sheriff Berrien County, Michigan. reliable Rock Oak leather soles. public notice thereof be given by bate Court for the County of It Is Ordered, That the 26th Dated: St. Joseph Michigan, Toggenberg ram. Early kids for We dye shoes. Modern Shoe Cooper, 1315 N. Olive St., South BERNICE SMITH publication Of a copy of this or­ Assignee of Mortgagee. Berrien. day of October A. D. 1936, at August 24, 1936. meat. Prices reasonable. Toma­ Repair Shop, 107 Days avenue, Bend. : 40t3p. der, for three successive weeks B. R. Desenberg, Attorney for A t a session of said Court, held ten o’clock in the forenoon, at toes, 50c and $1 per bu. Call Buchanan, Mich. 41t3p ' after 6:00 P. M. Gillman E. CARDS OF THANKS previous to said day of hearing,' Assignee of Mortgagee at the Probate Office in the city said Probate Office, be . and is ! 1st insertion Sept. 3; last Nov. 19. in the Berrien County Record, a Bucbanan, Michigan. of St. Joseph in - said County, on hereby appointed for hearing said I NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Annis, R. 3, Buchanan. 39t3p. FREE:—Knitting Instructions for CARD OF THANKS:—We wish to newspaper printed and • circulated the 18 th day of September A. D. petition; ’ j Default having been made in the any garment with yarn order. extend oUr sincere thanks to the FOR SALE— Wood, one 22 cal. in said county, , 1936. . It is Further Ordered, That ] conditions of that certain mort- Mrs. Frances Pfahler, 107 S. friends who were so generous 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Dec. 24 target pistol, one 12-gauge shot Malcolm Hatfield, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Present: Hon, Malcolm Hat­ public notice be given by publica- j §-af?e dated the first day of May, Portage St. 40t3c, of their aid and sympathy and gun; oak barrels for scalding, Judge of Probate. Default having been made in field, Judge of Probate. tion of a copy of this order, once 1934, executed by Hale Tennant etc; bed spring. Wm. J. Gom- WHEN YOUR EYES need glasses, to the donors of cars on the oc­ In the Matter of tne Estate of and Olga M. Tennant, as-his wife casion o f the passing of our be­ (Seal) A true copy. Florence the conditions of one certain each week for three successive bosi, 505 Days Ave. 4Qt3p C, L. Stretch, the Optometrist, Ladwlg, Register of Probate. mortgage made by PERRY , Earle DeGroot Baker, deceased. weeks previous to said day of and in her: own individual right, as at Root’s News Depot every loved father and grandfather, Joseph A. Baker, having filed mortgagors, to the Land Bank FOR SALE:—'Household furni­ George Meffert. SOUTHERTON and CLEO A. hearing, in the Berrien County Thursday, 44t4o SOUTHERTON, husband and in said court his final administra- Commissioner, acting pursuant to ture, odd dishes, at former Al­ 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Oct. 15 Recoi'd, a. newspaper printed and Beulah Nelson and family. tion account, and his petition the provisions of Part 3 of the Act fred Richards home. 41tlc. FOR RENT 41 tip. STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro-' wife, to IVAN FERGUSON, ad­ circulated in said County. hate Court for the County, of ministrator o f the estate of SYL- praying for the allowance thereof Malcolm Hatfield, of Congress known as the Emer­ gency Farm Mortgage Act of FOR SALE:—String beans, 50c FOR RENT:—Modern 5 room (1st. insertion Oct. 8; last Oct. 22) . Berrien. VANUS A. FERGUSON, deceas­ and for the assignment and dis­ Judge of Probate. 1933, as amended (U. S. C.. Title bushel, pick them yourself. Bill bungalow with bath. Completely STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro-: A t a session of said Court, held ed, dated August 22, 1927, and re­ tribution of the residue of said (Seal) A true copy. Florence furnished. Mrs. Jane Kelley, 113 12, Section 1016-1019), as mort­ Rozell, 1 y« mile south of Day- bate Court for the County of at the Probate Office in .the city corded in the Office of the Regis­ estate, Ladwig, Register of Probate. gagee, filed for records in the of­ ton, 41tlc. Maple St. 41tlc. Berrien. ter of Deeds for Berrien County, I It is Ordered, That the 19th of St. Joseph in said County, on. fice of the Register of Deeds of A t a session of said Court, held the 23rd day of September. A. D. Michigan, at liber 161 of mort- ^ay ° f October A . D. 1936, at ten FOR SALE: — Remington 12- FOR RENT: — Furnished rooms a Berrien County, Michigan, on the at the Probate Office in the city gages, page 299 oil' August 24, ’ o’clock in the forenoon, at said 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Dee. . gauge pump gun. Cost $65.00 in and garage. 410 Main street. 1936. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE first day of August, 1934, record­ of St. 'Joseph in said County, on 1927, which mortgage* was duly probate office, be and is hereby 1931. Mrs. Win, Parker, 705 S. Everett Geary. 40t3p. Present: Hon. Malcolm Hat­ Default having been made in the ed in Liber 190 of Mortgages on the 6th day of October A. D. assigned' to IVAN R. FEP.GU- appointed for examining and al- Portage St. 41tlp. field, Judge of Probate. ' conditions of that certain mort­ Page 27 thereof, and which mort­ FOR RENT:—Sleeping rooms, on 1936, ■ SON, DONALD L. FERGUSON, lowing said account and hearing In the Matter of the Estate of gage dated the first day of May, gage was thereafter and oh.the FOR SA LE:—Kindling and wood first ■ floor, also fine modern Present: Hon. Malcolm Hat­ Arthur Belmont Curtis, deceased. and BERNICE SMITH, by as- said petition; 1934, executed by William G. 21st day of July, 1936, by an in­ for sale. Alfred Deeds, 503 Days 8-room •house. C. F. Spaulding, field, Judge of Probate,... Carrie Cui'tis, having filed: in signment dated June 23, 1928, and ! is Farther Ordered, That Schwark and Dorothy Schwark as strument in writing, duly assigned Ave. 41t3p. , 404 Main street. Telephone In the Matter of the Estate of said court her petition praying recorded at liber 8 of assign- public notice thereof be given by his wife and in her own individual to the Federal Farm Mortgage 514-J. ; 41tlp. Ida L. Emerson, deceased. ments, page 349 on June 26, 19'2S, publication of a copy of this or- FOR SALE;—Tomatoes, 50 cents th at. the administration o f said right, as mortgagors, to the Land Corporation, a corporation, of ... Audrey Wideman, having filed per bushel. LeRoy Spencer, two FOR RENT:—6 room modern estate be granted to Florence ■in the office of the Register of der> for three successive weeks Bank Commissioner, acting pursu­ Washington, D. C., and which as­ in said court : her petition praying' Deeds for Berrien County, Mich- previous to said day of hearing, miles south of Buchanan, east apartment on ground floor, Franklin or to some other suit­ a n t to the provisions o f Part 3 of signment of mortgage was filed of Howe school. 41 tip. with garage, at 111 W. Front that, the administration of said able person and her petition pray­ igan; on which mortgage there is In the Berrien County Record, a the Act of Congress known as the for record in said office of tho St. Phone 7104-F-ll. 41tlp. estate be .granted to Audrey ing that said court adjudicate and claimed to be due and unpaid at -newspaper printed and circulated Emergency Farm Mortgage- Act j Register of Deeds of the Count j FOR SALE:—20-acre farm four Wideman or to some other suit­ determine, who were at the time the date of this notice for princi- *n sald county, of 1933, as amended (U. S. C. j of Berrien, Michigan, on the third ROOM AND BOARD:—-For two acres alfalfa, 1-4 mile west able person. of his death the legal . heirs of pal: and interest the sum of six j MALCOLM HATFIELD, Title 12, Sections 1016-1019), as] day of August, 1936, recorded if in private, modern home. 301; ■Clear Lake Woods. Four tons it is Ordered,. That the 2nd day said deceased and entitled to in­ thousand, three hundred and six­ Judge of Probate mortgagee, filed for records in the j Liber 12 of Asst, of Mortgages, on River St. 40t3e. hay f o r ' sale. Joseph Hetu, of November A. D. 1936, at ten herit the real estate of which said ty dollars and one cent ($6,360.- (Seal) A true copy. Florence office of the Register of Deeds of j Page S3, Clear Lake woods. 41t3p. FOR RENT— Small house, most­ o’clock in the forenoon, at said deceased died seized. 01), and the further sum of sev­ Ladwig, Register of Probate. Berrien County, Michigan, on the NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Probate Office, be and is hereby enty-five dollars and ninety-nine 13th day of June, 1934, recorded in that said mortgage will he fore­ FO R SALE:—20 acres cheap if ly furnished, for family of 2 or It is, Ordered, That the 26th 1st insert.on Sept. 24; last Cot, 8 appointed for ■ hearing, said peti­ day of October A. D. 1936, at ten cents ($75.99) that being the un­ Liber 185 of Mortgages on Page closed, pursuant to power of salq taken at . once, also heating 3. Five minutes drive from STATE OF MICHIGAN, The tion; o’clock in the forenoon, at said paid taxes , on the lands and 471 thereof, and which mortgage and the premises therein describe stove like new. Ned Shafer, town. Inquire G. E. Annis, Rte bate Court fur the County of It Is Further Ordered, That premises described in said mort­ was thereafter and on the 21st day ed as: . Range Line Road. 41tlp. 3, after 5 p. m. 41-tlp Probate Office, be and; is hereby Berrien, gage for the year 1935, which of July, 1936, by an instrument in | ParceI A ;_ The weat fractional appointed for hearing said: , peti­ At a session of said Court, held said taxes the undersigned paid writing, duly assigned to the Fed- half of the northwest quarter of tion; • at the Probate Office ill the city arid which amount is added to eral Farm Mortgage Corporation, Section Twenty_tw0i Township It is Further Ordered, That ,, , , . of St. Joseph in said County, on public notice thereof be given by the principal sum owmg on said thaU6th day of September A. D. a corporation, of Washington, D. Fiv e South, Range'Eighteen West, C.; and which assignment of mort­ publication of a copy of this or­ mortgage, as provided therein,.1-ji ggG except the north fifteen acres easl: gage was filed for record in said AND THESE ATTIC STOW­ der, once each week for three making a Total amount of eix I Present. Hon. Malcolm Hat- of the River Road, and except Office of the Register of Deeds of AWAYS ARE AS GOOD ‘ successive weeks previous to said railroad right of way sold J. G. thousand, four hundred and tin.- Seld, ;juclge of Probate. 'the County of Berrien, Michigan, AS OLD GOLD WHEN day of hearing, in the Berrien ty-five dollars and no cents ($6,- McMichael in deed recorded in In the Matter of the Estate of on the third day of August, 1936, DO YOU KNOW OF A IT COMES TO BEING 435.00) due and unpaid thereon, Berrien County, Michigan, Regis­ County Record, a newspaper Sylvanus B. Smith, Deceased. recorded in Liber 12 Asst, of Mort­ BETTER PLACE FOR TURNED INTO CASH. and no suit or proceedings at law try of Deeds in Book 148 of Deeds, printed and circulated in said It appearing to the Court that gages on Page 32, TREASURE HUNTING? haying been instituted to recover page 135. County. .; Y ’ Y the time for presentation of the NOTICE - IS HEREBY GIVEN WE WILL ADVERTISE the said mortgage, or any part Parcel B:—The northwest frac­ Malcolm Hatfield, claims against said estate should that said mortgage will be fore­ tion of the Southwest Quarter of THESE IN THE WANT Judge of Probate. thereof: be limited, and that a time and closed, pursuant to power of sale, Notice is hereby given that on Section Twenty-two, Township ADS. (Seal) A true copy. Florence place be appointed to receive, ex­ and the premises therein described Monday, December 28, 1936, at Five South, Range Eighteen West, Ladwig, Register of probate. amine and adjust all claims and as; ■ 10 o’clock in the forenoon of said ■being all the land in the Southwest demands against said deceased by Part of the northeast quarter 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Dec. 24 day at the front door of the Quarter of said Section Twenty- and before said Court; v Of section five, township eight V NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Court House in the City .of St. It is Ordered, That creditors of south, range twenty west, describ- tw0 ^ north of *** s t JoaePh Default having been made in Joseph, Berrien County, Michi­ River; said deceased are required to pre­ . ed as follows: Commencing on the the conditions of one certain mort­ gan by virtue of "the power of east line of said section five at a Parcel C:—Part of the northeast gage made by Perry Southerton sent their claims to said Court fraction of Section Twenty-one, sale contained in said mortgage at said Probate, Office on or be­ . point forty rods south of tho and Cleo A. Southerton, husband and the statutes in such case northeast comer of Said section; Township Five South, Range Eigh­ and wife, to Ivan Ferguson, ad­ fore the 1st day of February A. teen West, situated in the Town­ made and provided, the said mort­ p . 1937, at ten o’clock in the fore­ thence west one hundred sixty ministrator of the estate of Elsie rods; thence south sixty-six and ship of Sodus, tc-wit: Beginning at gage will he foreclosed: by sale at noon, said time and place being E. Ferguson, deceased dated Au­ public auction to the highest bid­ one-third rods; thence east one a point one hundred feet south of gust 22, 1927, and recorded in the hereby appointed for the exam­ der of the premises described in hundred sixty nods; thence north the northeast corner of.said sec­ Office of the Register of Deeds for ination and adjustment of all tion; thence west two hundred said mortgage or so much thereof sixty-six and one-third rods to the Berrien County, Michigan, at liber claims and demands, against said thirty-three feet; thence south one as may be necessary to satisfy place of beginning; , ■161 Of mortgages, page 298 on deceased. hundred fifty-six feel:; thence west the amount due as aforesaid, and lying within said County and State August 24, 1927, which mortgage It is Further Ordered, That five hundred ninety feet;- thence all legal costs, charges, and ex­ will be sold at public auction to was duly assigned to Ivan ’R. public notice thereof be given by south twenty-six degrees forty- penses, including an attorney's the highest bidder for cash by the Ferguson, Donald L. Ferguson, publication of a copy of this or­ five minutes east five hundred fee, which premises are described Sheriff of Berrien County at the and Bernice Smith, by assignment der for three successive weeks front door of the Court House In fifty feet; tnence south ten degrees dated June 23, 1928, and recorded as follows: Y , previous to said day of hearing, fifteen minutes east three hun­ The South half, of the ‘South­ the City of Saint Joseph in said at liber 8 of assignments, page in the Berrien County Record, a County and State, on Tuesday, De­ dred thirty-nine feet to the north east Quarter of the Southeast 349 on June 26, 1928, in the Office newspaper printed and circulated cember 29, 1936, at two o’clock P, line of land owned by Gustav Pu- Quarter of Section 5, Town 8 of the Register of Deeds for Ber­ in said County. M. There is due and payable at the dell; thence south eighty-four de­ South, Range 18 West, 20 acres rien County, Michigan, on which MALCOLM. HATFIELD, date of this notice upon the debt grees east ninety-four feet; thence mortgage there is claimed to be ffiore or less. Also Commencing Judge of Probate. secured by said mortgage, the sum south fifty-one degrees east five due and unpaid at the date of this 10.10 yz chains North of the (Real) A true copy. Florence of $2,723.44. hundred forty-six feet to the east notice for principal and interest Southeast comer of said Section Ladwig, Register of Probate. Dated September twenty-sixth, line of said section; thence north the sum o f four hundred and 5; thence West 80 rods; thence 1936. one thousand three hundred thirty- eighty-eight dollars and fourteen North 6.50 chains; thence East 1st insertion Oct. 1; last Oct. 15 ' FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE two feet to the place of beginning, CASH WILL GLADLY BE PAID cents ($488.14), and the further 80 rods to Section line; thence STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ CORPORATION, a corpora­ subject to right of way referred to sum of eight dollars and sixty- South 6.50 chains to the place of bate Court for the County of tion, of Washington, D. C. in deed to Lange recorded in of­ seven cents ($8.67) , that being the beginning, being Lot 5 of the Berrien. Assignee of Mortgagee. fice of Berrien County Registry of FOR THINGS YOU DON’T W ANT ____ unpaid tax.es on the lands and Commissioner’s Plat of the Es­ A t a session of said Court, held GORDON BREWER, Deeds in Book 203 of Deeds, page premises described in said mort­ tate of Amanda E. Wilson, de­ at the Probate Office in the City Atty. for Assignee of Mortgagee, 114, and in deed to Pudell recorded gage for the year 1935, which said ceased. Subject to a " right of of. St. Joseph in said County, on Bronson, Michigan. in said office in Book 205 of Deed3, Every month . . . ever year . . . every house cleaning .... taxes the undersigned paid and way 2 rods wide over the east 2 the 28th day of September A. D. page 116; 1 • which amount is added to the rods of the $wo parcels of land 1936. lying within said County and you’ve been putting something else aside in the family store­ 1st insertion Aug. 27; last Oct. 15 principal sum owing on said mort­ described above. ' Present; Hon. Malcolm Hat­ MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE State will be sold at public auc­ room, intending to “ get rid of it,” or “ give it away,” or maybe gage, as provided therein, making Also Commencing at the East field, Judge of Probate. Notice is hereby given, that tho tion to the highest bidder for cash sell it to someone in need. But you forget. And it keeps accumu­ a total amount of four hundred Quarter post of Section 8, Town In the Matter of the Estate of mortgage dated July 5, 1930, given by the Sheriff of Berrien County and ninety-six dcdlars and eighty- at the front door of the Court 8 South, Range 18 West; thence Charles L. Bainton, deceased. by George L. Richards and Flor­ lating. And you have nothing but a crowded storeroom! You can one cents ($496.81) due and un­ House in the City of Saint Joseph West 4 rods; thence South 40 Amy L. Bainton, having filed in ence R, Richards, husband and paid thereon, and no suit or pro­ in said County and State, on Tues­ convert all those things into IM M EDIATE CASH . . . . or may­ said court her final administra­ Wife, aa mortgagors, to Audley ceedings at law having been in­ rods; thence East 4 rods; thence day, December 1, 1936, at two be exchange them for things you need. Use the Classified tion account, and her petition Rivers, as mortgagee, covering the stituted to recover the said m&rt- North 40 rods to the place of be­ o’clock P. M. There is due and praying for the allowance there­ Columns because they spell M ONEY for you . . . ADVERTISE gage, or any part thereof; ginning. Also the North Half of lands described as: ' payable at the date of this notice Notice is hereby given that on the North Half of the Southwest of and for the assignment and Commencing at a point on tho upon' the debt secured by said Monday, December 28, 1936 at 10 Quarter of Section 9, Township 8 distribution of tho residue of said east line of Days Avenue fifty-twi, mortgage, the sum of $8,185.42. o’clock in the forenoon of said day South, Range 18 West, except estate, and her petition praying (52) feet south, of the south line Dated August 29, 1936. at the front door of the Court 36-100 acres in the Southeast that said court adjudicate and of Front Street; thence east forty- FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE House in the City of St. Joseph, comer thereof. • determine who were at the time five (45) feet; thence south eight CORPORATION, a corporation, Berrien County Record of his death the legal heirs of Berrien County, Michigan by vir­ Also the Southwest Quarter of (8) feet; thence east fifty-five (55) of Washington, D. C, Assignee tue of the power of sale contained the Northeast Quarter of Section said deceased and entitled to in­ feet; thence south four (4) feet; of Mortgagee, Phone 9 in said mortgage, and the statutes 9, Town 8 South, Range 18 West, herit the real estate of Which' thence west one hundred (100) Gordon Brewer, in such case made and provided, 40 acres more or Jess. Also com­ said deceased died seized. |feet; thence north twelve (12) Attorney for Assignee the said mortgage will be fore­ mencing at the center of Section It is Ordered, That the 26th I feet to the place of beginning, in of Mortgagee. closed by sale at public auction to 9, Township 8'South, Range 18 day of October A. D. 1930, at ten j the City of Buchanan, county of Bronson, Michigan. SEVEN ^ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936 £ ftj& S s the limtball team) b r i g h t s a y i n g s o f ON SITTING-Ul* EXEX1MTSES MR. lUZOlt ' lfi ;" v tlie out ol town ganTOJj W h o ’ s W h o HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS The seventh grade in beginning , on .'tti "Success sonsists not so much •and I hey arc also playing iur3ft$ 1. Art Trapp, Tom Yurkovic, in sitting up nights as being to study the nuauiimneat u <« eh-. -, tricity and how liguiv the cost ol ti." hu.-'.e >’■■■ 'l '« ’ Bo.Vd’ aTl.f SENIOR and Don Virgil—“Let’s cut corn awake in the daytime.” This ar­ v’luiiM sang .-:ejiarnt:'ly ...... Robert Stevens, known to his today.” , , various elec tric appliances.. tiiii!.’ ««.'■’ THE MICROPHONE ticle only takes up one phase of) I'i■>■ a:» eiiibiy Fr'd iy. Toe ur- teachers as . Bob, and to most of 2. Maxine Shaffer—“Today wept sitting up nights. Many young j They are also studying the male-j r'.U'-'L'U i’-:< ; I-i --n organized with News of Buchanan Schools the student body as Stevie, is very fast yesterday.” “Romeos” make a habit of this to j ing of bills. ' thirl j - livt- iin n i’.iei.--. tall, has dark hair and brown eyes. 3. Daisy Reamer— “Let’s you endear themselves in the hearts of | The, eighth grad- in star!ing i Collected and Edited By Members of the Student Body Bom eighteen years ago on Feb­ and her fight.” work on commercial intuir- and their beloveds. Ah love is grand if HISTORY ruary 22, he sincerely believes In 4. Bessie Crothers— “Kiss me, you call it that,'but an education tracing the travels ol' if t-ne.b. i 'lin­ ■,,i-liia grade history ctoi- FUTURE HUSBANDS — the adage that all great men are ‘papa.’ I’m gonna faint.” will do more for you in the next They are also studying how u \ Editorial Grade News born in that month. Stevie is very 5. Clyde Chaffer—“Why do cheek is made, and arc having a es are h.-gbriing the .study of i WE HOTE few years, fro.'.Ti-. s. Mrs. Heims second grade has fond o f football, basketball, and, teachers always have to ask me general study of negotiable instru­ 'Ionia By Keith Dalrymple Being awake in ■ the daytime is dr .story clH;-‘-es \ OBJECTIVES the following pupils on the Dental track, and has been out for these questions I can’t answer?” much more beneficial than catch­ ments. The It surely looks, as if we had the tlie ly history of Just What benefits are you numbers on that. Future Husband’s Honor Roll: Billy Forgue, Robert sports all during high school. H e’s ing- up on the sleep you lost when The Commercial Law clus:.; is getting out of school? Can you gang. Why last week they were Gridley, Barre Heim, Evelyn Lee, a smooth^ dancer, sees a lot of ENGLISH you called on your “heart-throbs” studying the Hide of personal prop­ i-n.-v. ui! vine jot them down in two minutes, seen prancing about the halls Bonnie Lolmaugh, Betty Paddock, movies, afid his greatest heart Mrs. Dunbar the night before. Even if you do erty and lavra governing tb«.-e »in ", community. or would it require considerable; decked out in girls’ apparel. Billy Thomas, and Jeanne Will­ interest at the moment resides in The senior English class is start­ stay awake, it takes all your ef­ sales, also the effects of i.outra .fs !i- effort and time to accomplish “Toad” Smith, the Andrew Brown iams. Other pupils are having South Bend, ing the study of Bibliographies, fort to keep your eyes open, let on sales, , . .this? In other words, do you have of the outfit, says, “It’s a keen their teeth taken care of and we JUNIOR how to make and how to use them. alone pay attention in class, The C.I:.,! -■:!( I any definite objective in your mind idea, boy," and we believe him, hope to add more names to our Betty Semple is one person who They are also studying the Dewey only, thing one can learn by sleep­ NEWS: MIL l-'.'YARIt The anrestorr. Governor 'Alf as to why you are spending five the way he has all those “wiin- honor roll next week. I’m Sure is equally well liked by Decimal System. ing hi class is that the desks arc Mr. Stark, Mr. Warrst’ ."’!, .o. -i ■m.io , Ilcpiibii: eorcid.ilo for - days of the week in an educational men” hanging around his neck’ The following people in Miss students and teachers, Her good The junior English class is read­ very uncomfortable for such sport, Miss Bender attended an I-L;'re­ ide- ’onroimiUon of institution? “ Snipe” Weaver hands them a line Bohl’s third grade are on the Den­ marks are i envied by many of her ing a portion from “The Faerie and zero's are hard to take. live Committee meeting of the 11 iisji, ■i raid .Dutch. Every person attending high o f his “ apple pie” and they cer­ tal Honor Roll: Albert Bonner, classmates, and yet she is an all- Queene” by Edmund Spenser. Also - -Max Beadle. E. A. at Eerflen Springs hist School should have some definite tainly eat it up. Something ought •Marjorie BouWs, Billy Burk, David round girl,- specializing in soccer the period of Shakespeare as an week. There was a discussion on purpose in mind as to why he is Gombosi, Betty Gowland, Nelson and tennis, and is a fairly good to be done about this unfair ad­ introduction to his tragedy “Mac­ TIIE BIG QUESTION the coming amei'idmcali, to the Glasses Properly .FiHedl there. It is vital to yourself as a vantage the Future* Husbands Hawkins, Billy Jerue, Maynard swimmer. Betty is of medium beth,” Constitution., person. During this period in your Why have all of our home have. Are they trying to “pull Martin, Jeannette Pitts, and Birdie height with very, black hair and The tenth grade English class is A board meeting was held An- _}ife you are formulating the per­ the wool over,our eyes?” Lou Schiffman. eyes. During her sophomore year completing their work on para­ games been on Friday? gust 29 at tins high school. sonality and habits which will Who is going to win tile Paw She was vice-president of her class graphs and are writing different Installation of ‘ stokers at ill-1 EST, characterize you the rest of your and this year was elected presi­ Faw-Buchanan football game? DOPE ON B, H. S. ATHLETES • FIFTH GRADE themes on sentences and para­ Dewey Avenue and the high ..'iiodi life. dent. Who will qualify as the Wives By Chuck Wosner Miss Ekstrom graphs. buildings has been completed, T b s If you allow yourself to slip SOPHOMORE of the "Future Husbands’ Club?” W . G. ’ ■iohar;k:H, O. Robert Liska, jean Blake, and Miss Bulla makes it possible to keep an ever, through high school without any Don “Rodeo” Virgil, now a Has anyone any money left aft­ Masonic Temple Bid,-. * (Betty Baker are absent from Lewis Pasepe, a rather solemn In freshman English the pu­ temperature throughout t h e visible effort on your part, won’t senior who stands 6’ 1” tall, er taking his girl friend to the iWoi-i SO. Main sv. ".Niics school. person with mischievous eyes hid­ pils have been doing interesting rooms. you be apt to do this same thing weighs 155 lbs. (dressed), has carnival? W cdutbtki.vs— ’jl'li-r.'HiV.ivs Arlean Maxsoh brought a lovely ing behind glasses, has brown hair work to learn the use of capital > when you are out On your own? sandy hair and freckly complex­ and isn’t very tall though growing What class will give the first From 9 to r> bouquet of fall flowers to school letters and the identification Of MUSIC d e p a r t m e n t For, while laxity may be tolerated ion, has been out for football four high school party? Monday, all the time. He was horn May 1, nouns and pronouns. Theme work The band under the direction of in school, it is most emphatically years, two of ..which were spent on 1921 and is fifteen years old. Driv­ How many seniors will gradu­ XBURKE: v the first , squad,. He is the first Miss Spear has been on topics that touch the M r, Robinson has developed sev ­ absent in the ’business and social ing a c’ar seems to occupy a great ate ? 228 H. Michigan St, string signal caller this season. Two of our girls won prizes in everyday life of the studets. eral new drills. This year the band world. deal of Lewis’ time, He's playing Will the. seniors have a skip K o r T n jiB M i. IN'I). When Don came out as a freshie the: “Hobby Exhibit.” Janet Has- UO&4N ■Get out and make an impression his baritone in the hand for the day? he tipped the old Scales at 98 lbs., lett won first and Willa Miller MR. ELBERS ■ on people. Accomplish something first time this year. He acts as u r n s 332ES3: and was B ft. It inch tall. Look won second. Ths seventh grade geography * by yourself and know how self- secretary of his class’ and was at him now, though, classes .are beginning the study of satisfying it can be. If only every­ vice-president last year. BOY’S GYM Electric Wirrag —- Plam'bimg Heating- ' So far he’s been out for. basket­ China. The seventh, grade class under one could realize that it is just as SIXTH GRADE FRESHMAN ball three seasons and' two years The eighth grade history classes the direction .of John Miller is a imperative to study if you do not Miss Abell Margaret Miller, tall and slim, ;KOUND OAK' FURNACES — •MG'r’FCiNT' RANGES i: have been spent on the varsity. He are completing the study of the large one, having fifty-four mem­ intend to study further, as it is if We are starting scrap books with very light hair and big blue was one of the leading and most founding of the United . States bers. They are Studying funda­ CON^RAipilNG •— "!Ie'iii*y - ia.-Charge, •' you. know definitely that you are about Egypt. We have had two eyes has her birthday on May 7, consistent scorer's the Bucks had government. mentals of tumbling and marching going to college, it is your last travel letters from Marooco. and she is now fourteen. Very last season. This year he is co- The government classes are drills. The high school classes have ■ chance. Schools are run for your . Miss Reams • thrilled, about her first year in Ask us for free rjUtaates! captain with Bud Jesse and it will studying the organization of Con­ ■been divided into squads, and then benefit. Let "them help you.: We are making a movie this high school, Margaret goes in for bo liis third, year on the first five. gress. ■> they choose, captpinS. and have a '« Marion Miller week, illustrating the' story of activities. She played French horn As a sophomore he Went out for 1 The, speech class is continuing robin Schedule of indoor and “Robin Hood.” . in the baud for the past year, and track but gave it up in his junior speaking by planning and telling soccer. The loosing team has to Twenty one children in our room before that played the cymbals. TSie Kerr, Hardware Co. year to play baseball. In baseball Some experience they have had. clean the locker room. Hygiene is G. A. A.. have their names on the Dental Practically all. summer, when slid he earned his letter and held studied once a week. NILES, MICHIGAN Honor Roll. wasn’t riding horses, which seems down the first sack very capably. LATIN CLUB : Members of the G. A. A. held a to be her hobby, she' swam. She He led the Buchanan batters with The first meetig of the Latin meeting Monday, September 28, in DEWEY AVK. NEWS , will eat almost anything with the an average of Over .400. He’s play­ Club, . Legio-Decima, . was held Miss Henry's office. The present enrollment of the exceptions of carrots, cauliflower, ing -again, next spring and he Monday, September 28. Howard president Margaret Huso was in Kindergarten is 89. The children and tuna fish,. She wears a ring should go to town. Dillman and Henry Knapp were in charge of the meeting. Each girl would appreciate any used or east and medal belonging to a certain Art Trapp is a senior who has charge. Howard gave a talk on was allowed to look up her ath­ off- toys that'are usable, •boy' scout who is also a member of spent four years out for football,, Roman streets and transportation. letic : record to' find out how many The following pupils In the the freshman class. j three On the first eleven. He’s 5 ft. He also showed folders of Greece points she had earned during, her Dewey Avenue 'second grade- are 9 Inches tall, weighs 140 lbs., has .hnd .Naples.' The story, “The high school career, . on Die Spelling- honor roll for “snake-hips,” and is a shifty ball-, TEACHER SEZ— Broken Wall,” by Mason, was Girls who had earned letters September: Kenneth Martin, Den­ toter. Art holds < down the right Today I resolved to get rid of read. This dealt with the time last year, but' had not received nis Smebdley, Robert Surch, Lau­ half back post and pn defense is rence Banks, John Van Deusen, the lost a n d , unclaimed articles of Rome when Hannibal and his them Monday. none other than the Bucks No. 1 which have found their. Way to hordes poured down from the Alps. ' They also discussed the pur­ Georgine Chain, Chrystil Kent, safety man. He’s earned two major this office. One of the articles was Several. Latin conundrums were chasing of more club pins for the Shirley Mitch, Nofine Fuller, Lu­ letters in football. cille Shaver, Janet and ean Han­ a "Literature and Life.” Boole One. ''given. new members, but nothing was For the past two years in bas­ I examined it for a few- moments. decided. over, Melvin Backus, and Jim ketball he’s been a regular on the Harvel. -• The Perusal of this book recalled n FRENCH CLUB second squad. This coming Season • The Dental Honor Roll in the to me Henry W. Longfellow's', ” The' French Club held a meeting WHAT MAKES ‘he’s going to take a crack at the Dewey Avenue thircLgrade has the poem, "The Village Blacksmith,'1 Thursday; October 1. Ruth Bab­ TEACHERS GRAY? first squad, and with his speed following names: Kenneth Dunlap, Which' a great many people have cock, Eva Kovich, and Sarah Le­ Students still getting into wrong and shiftiness he has. a fine Dale Florey,. Howard Goodrich, read,. vin were in charge. -Eva read classrooms ; after a month of chance of landing a job. Mary E. McKinnon, Max Policy, I can. now remember but a few “ •France,” Sarah l-ead “How .school.' In track he has been out three Alene Raueh, Virginia Ovington, words from this poem. These ■France was Made,” and Marshall ■ Students insisting on getting years and ran the high and low Sammy Rosetta, Nayme Small, were: “A mighty man was he” and (Doak read “Viva La France.” The into a class Without an admit hurdles and tlie relay. At the state and Gene Spatta. "he looked the whole world in the meeting was followed by a tea to When they are tardy. . ' ‘ meet he brought, home two medals, The Opportunity Room is doing face, for he owes not any man.'! which the entire faculty was in­ 'Students talking in fifth 'hour a fourth in the low hurdles, and a form project. If there. are any All of us hope to be mighty vited. This was held in the sewing history class. a third in the relay squad. He’s parents that have magazines they some day. Some of us will be room of the home economics de­ Students . ill band who won’t managed to cop two major’ letters would like to give away, the Op­ Wealthy. Some will be famous. partment. "step- high’.’ during march prac­ in this sport. This year lie, will be portunity Room would like to have Some will be comfortably situated tice. ’ lost to the track squad and some­ them. Some, perhaps may not get as far What Do You Think Of The Bu­ . Students arguing over who' will one will have to be found to take Joyce Morley has had her name up life’s ladder of success as oth­ chanan- High School Microphone? wash dishes in home economics his place in the hurdles and the- added to the Dental Honor Roll. ers. However, all of us may look Ruth Babcock, senior — "It’s classes. relay. The fourth grade is beginning the whole world in the face, if we ‘swell’ and fun for everyone to Students who pretend to have an imaginary trip to Belgian, owe not any man. read,” their lessons and haven’t even SPIRIT OF JOURNALISM Congo. Most people think of a debt in Norma Bromley, freshman — •looked at them, . By Daisy Reamer First grade Dental Honor Roll terms of money. Many o f us think “It’s a lot of fun, if you take it News, News, is all yod hear, includes: Ruby Mikesell, Dolores that we are not in debt. Yet we right.” ■ MATHEMATICS For tlie high school paper this Sherwood, and Herbert Ochenrid- are telling that which is not ours Mary Cripe, sophomore.—“It’s The algebra classes are having a coming year. er. when we run our cars faster than a grand idea nad I’m for it.” test' over formulas and expressing A little or a lot, its all the same. the speed limit on the road, drive Alice Sharp, junior—"It’s the recklessly, or put so many in a tops because it gives us tlie low .rule's1 .algebraically. If you take journalism, you play AGRICULTURE CLUB The geometry, classes are study­ car that the driver cannot work down on B. H. S.” the game. The Future Farmers of America ing, methods of measuring angles Latin club, French club, or G. efficiently. Many accidents result —Inquisitive Kitty. pm nsM . held a meeting Thursday evening, ing to work to get on in the and triangles. They are also hav­ from these causes. Also, we aren’t t have a oi the 23,000 A.. A ., Oct. 1, in Mr. Washburn’s room. . Above is one ing a test which will cover the careful where we throw papers LANGUAGE—MRS. WEAVER ■woild. Usher club. Home Ec. club, Us all Vice president Ivan Price welcom­ Standard Bealeis in the wA- The truthi?, he is a repre­ methods of proving triangles to be and rubbish. We carve or write The eleventh grade French the way. ed the following new members: West, who arebiddinq idi ypm ' congruent. . our names on property which is classes are studying personal pro­ sentative Standr-rdDealet * * • Teachers’ news, students’ opinions Charles Hess,: Robert Bennitt, gasoline and oiltinde onthe , The advanced class is solving not ours. Hastly,, we waste our nouns, definite articles, and form­ an American hnEinc5s _ mesa, or hikes, - James Housman, Robert Olson, , basis ol the unexcelled prod­ problems by the use of equations. own time When we should be ing of plurals. They are also doing husiness in the 5°°“ It’s all news to the Buchanan High Ted Upham and Donald Wall- 6t Standard Oil and the ' General mathematics, class is working. . Studying the early history and ucts “Mike.” quist, The remainder of the meet­ taexoeUedsemceihey render. bidAmehcanvvay—'strivingpo studying measuring large dis­ Can many of us “Look the whole geography ot France. gain andholdyour badeby de­ So say your knock, knock, and ing was spent in basketball prac­ tances by “pacing off.” They are world in the face” and say we French twelve is studying the He is a iaxmly man—am- come on in, tice. The next meeting will he held livering value and satisiaclion. also studying the history of com­ “owe not any man?” administrative divisions of French b iiib h s arid dependable—w in­ If you take journalism, you’re in two weeks. Initiation of mem­ mon units of measure. agriculture, commerce, and French sure to win. bers will be held at this meeting The algebra class is studying money. STAND-INS graphing. at which refreshments will be Latin nine is studying “In the served. James Cagney—“Toad” Smith. PERSONALS Peristyle of the- Roman Homes,” “Kissey” Jerue—Working at Cary Grant—Bob Stevehs. GIRLS’ HOME EC. CLUB “ Toga,” and “A street scene.” Mcrson's Meat Market. , Jean Harlow—Carol Dunlap. The Home Economic Club scorns FAVORITE HAUNTS They arc also studying second de­ Karol Dunlap—Soda-jcrker at Helen Morgah, Pnyllis DeNardo. to be a very popular club, over Wisner’s, Football team. clension nouns. the Cornel* Drug Store. Jack Cakie—Keith Dalrymple. Iv one hundred girls signed up for it. Hollywood, everybody. • ■ Latin ten is studying the story, Rex Hiingerford and Victor Vi- Sue Carol—Catherine Wynn. Miss Krebs, domestic science Niles, '"Kissy” Jerue, Ross “.Perseus Kills the Sea Monster.” ganslty — Ushers at Hollywood Joan Crawford—-Betty Burgoyne .teacher, has divided it into two Loazenby, Chuck Wcsner. Adverbs of place, past perfect, fu­ Theatre. Tom Brown—Ben Harvel. groups. The high school composes Dayton, Ruth Babcock, Bed ture perfect, active and passive Junior Bromley, Jack Hess, Har­ Eleanor Powell—Maxine Shaef- one group and the seventh and Harvel. are being studied also. fer. eighth grades the other. vey Hiaman, and Gordon Snyder— New Carlisle, Joe Bachman, Working at bowling alley. Rudy Vftllec—Jerry White. Officers chosen for the high Gallon, Arthur Trapp, ' Clyde COMPETITION Clyde Shaffer, Bob Squire, and Claudette Colbert—Bessie Croth­ school group were: President, Shaffer, Tom Yurkovic. The teachers of Buchanan High Max Beadle-Taking care of their ers. • • Ruth Montgomery; vice-president, Marsh’s Shoe. Repair, “Doggy” ■School have had plenty of stiff paper routes. . George Raft—George Ernst. Katherine Hess; treasurer, Marion Luke. competition from the high school Don Bennitt—Working ‘at Hotel H ansen; secretary, Monabelle “ Chain” gang on Main Street, band and the W. P. A. project ma­ Rex. Drietzler. Officers for the seventh John Schultz, Verne Longworth. MISS MCNEIL chine, which was working on and eighth grades are: President, D ale Boyce — Employed a t The seventh grade English Chicago Street. If the noise had Swem’s Funeral Home. Geraldine Padzer; vice-president, ART DEPARTMENT classes are studying "The Sen­ continued much longer the teach­ “Toad” Smith—Being useful at Lorraine Morley; secretary, Elean­ The high school art class is do­ tence.” ers would have cultivated louder Smith’s Meat Market. or Ingleright; treasurer, Marjorie ing extra study on color and de­ Each Friday the English Speak­ voices, because the students could W Kelly. sign, making color wheels, and ing Clubs conduct an oral discus­ not hear what they were talking The purpose of this qlub is to do MISS QUADS color and harmony correct for lin­ sion. about. Some teachers gave it up social welfare work and to spon­ The typing classes are learning oleum and cloth. The seventh and The seventh grade Geography as a bad job and assigned lessons sor social parties. the fourth finger keys which com­ eighth grades have finished their classes are studyihg about China. in advance to be recited when the plete the keyboard. monograms. Grades have been The eighth grade English class­ noise had stopped, but the ma­ USHER CLUB The office practice class is typ­ painting fall objects. es ate studying the1 use o f capitals. jority "held the fort.” An Usher Club meeting was ing various style letters and study­ held Tuesday September 29, to ing letter personality. HOME EC. DEPARTMENT MIL WASHBURN CITIZENSHIP elect officers and to welcome the The shorthand class is having The seventh grade girls have Biology: In biojogy tbe classes ■The citizenship class held a de­ 'new members. The officers chosen a test over rules and principles in finished their towels which were are studying how plants obtain bate in class Wednesday, Sept. 30, were: President, Eva Kovich; head Chapter I. They are also beginning their first assignment. The eighth their food. Which roused a great deal o f in­ usher, Virginia Wright, and secre­ tile study of downward characters. grade class is making quick Horticulture: The horticulture terest. The question debated was tary, Rose Bachman. The uniforms In Bookkeeping they are com­ .breads and simple desserts. The class is judging apples and identi­ “Resolved, that it is better for: were discussed and it was decided pleting the ledger and a .test is ninth grade is discussing and mak­ fying the different varieties. children to grow up in a rural ot wear white skirts and blouses, being conducted over the first four ing cream dishes. The boys’ class Animal Husbandry: The animal community than In a large city,” a maroon tie,' and the hand coats. chapters. is making drop cookies, and the husbandry class • is learning tlie ’ The leaders were, on the affirma- Tlie subject of club pins will be They will also start the study of tenth grade gins are completing dlfferent breeds o f horses and how tive side,- Billy Gregory, and' on decided at a later meeting. credit sales. their unit of work with the house. to pudge them. | the negative side, Eleanor Naugle. PAGE EIGHT THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936

Wegota Bridge Club Evening Bridge Club Install at Three Oaks Mrs. L. E. Stevens will be hos­ Mr. and Mrs. L. E, Stevens en­ Twelve members of the local Hot Water Bottle Trail tess .this evening to the members tertained their evening bridge Auxiliary post motored to Three o fthe Wegota Bridge club. club at their home last night. Oaks Tuesday evening to Install Ends in Man's Arrest # * * « « * the officers of the Couchman post Washington,—A trail of 24 hot B, & P. .W. Boole Club No Name Club there. Mrs. Edith Willard was the water bottles brought about the ar­ Miss Ethel Beistle was hostess Mrs. Kenneth Gamble entertain­ team captain. rest here on an arson charge of # l Monday evening to the members ed the members of the No Name * * * Santo Pennestri. The bottles, filled I f of the Business & Professional Bridge Club at her home yester­ Pine Cone with gasoline, were found In the fire Women’s Book Club, who heard day afternoon. The men teachers of the Bu­ damaged house of Pennestrl’s wife. (Thursday Afternoon Club .Jolly Pour Club Mrs. G. H, Stevenson review a .■*'■** chanan, school faculty attended a Suspecting arson, police traced the Mrs. J. C. Strayer will be hos­ The Jolly Four club was enter­ bottles from a New Haven manufac­ current book. Dempsoy-VV’hite Reunion meeting of .the Pine Cone at ML tess to the members of her Thurs­ tained yesterday at the home of * * ■* turing company to a Washington de­ The animal Dempsey-White re­ Tabor farm near Eau Claire last day Afternoon Bridge club today. Mrs. N. S. Smith at in afternoon partment store. Detectives said ASK FOR DAN Anthoniau Club union will be held Sunday, Octo­ night. Claude Carter was taken , * * * of pinochle. they discovered that Pennestri The Anthonlan Club met Thurs­ ber llth at the home of Mrs, into membership at that time, Ladies Bridge * * » * # * bought them. day evening in the parlors of St. Norah Miles on West Fourth St. - • Mrs. Edward Johnson will en­ Anthony’s church, Miss Teresa Mothers Club Helpers Union # * « tertain the members of her ladies’ White being the chairman of the The Mothers Club comprising A Buchanan Man The Helpers Union met Wednes­ Trout Devours Rattler bridge club this evening. entertainment committee. Mono­ Bend of River Home Ec. Club mothers of children of the third, day afternoon at the home of Miss * » * poly was played, prizes being won The Bend o f the River Home fourth, fifth and sixth grades, will and Then a Salamander AT SOUTH BEND’S Helen Weaver and Mrs. Alice C, C, Business Meeting by Miss Rebecca Zachman and Economics Club will meet at the meet at 3 p. m. today, Dr. Gamble Bend Ore.—Warm Springs Indians, Tourje. home of Mrs. Floyd Smith Friday famous for their story telling, swear > The Church of Christ held its * * * John Zachman. will speak on infantile paralysis, LARGEST STORE quarterly business meeting in ui« afternoon at 1:30 p. m. Everybody A business meeting will,-be held. the following yarn is true, as do Entretain For Daughter church Monday evening. 80 Club Holds Michigan Day .come. Mrs, Maurice Dalrymple is the Harry Kellar and J. Parker, of Mr. and Mrs. Elmon Starr en­ * » * FOR MEN The Thirty Club met Monday president. Bend. tertained at dinner Sunday honor­ afternoon at the home Of Mrs, Al­ C. C. Prayer Meeting . * * * An Indian caught a nine-pound ing their daughter, Helen, who ar­ Attendance Contest fred Hall for a Michigan Day pro­ Prayer meeting will be held this Hostess at Dinner Dally Varden trout, Upon opening rived last week from Los Angeles, Awajds were made at the gram. Mrs. Fred Moyer was in evening at the Church of Christ, Mrs, Grace Kuhl had as dinner the fish to clean it, he found a rat­ Church o f Christ Rally day Sun­ Calif., to spend a vacation of a charge of' the program which con­ The topic will be "The Epistle of guests at her home Sunday, Mrs. tlesnake and a 10-Inch salamander month with them. Guests were day to the two members who sisted of. an interesting talk by the Ephesians." All are cordially Anna E. Lauver and son, John and in the stomach. The snake had two Qm TUdwOdfo C^wtft&i/f Mr. and Mrs. Orville Starr, Ber­ brought the largest number of Mrs. Ira Sizer, Sawyer, on “The invited. , , family and Mrs. Bessie Gondar of rattles and a button. attendants to the Church school. rien Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Will­ Lore of Lake Michigan.” Tea was ■ m w + Buchanan, Mr. and Mrs, Rosooe Ruth Montgomery received a iam Thimm, Glendora, Mr, , and served by members o f the hook Pres. Mission Society Smeltzer and children of Highland, Light Color Affects Plant Growth e r n t m . jj'ble and Pansy Maxson a testa- Mrs. Frank Straub, Dayton, and committee, Mrs. it. E. Doak, Mrs. The Presbyterian Missionary Ind., Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Echert of Different colors of light not only Snent. their families. 4i3i8i5 s. Michigan st- Glenn Smith, Mrs. Fred. Moyer, Society will meet Friday after­ New Carlisle, Mr. and Mrs. Archie produce different rates of growth in plants, but in some way seek or Mrs. Harold Stark and Mrs. R. B. noon at the home of Mrs, Otto Schoff and children of LaPorte, shun each other. Franklin. The club will meet next Schurr on Chicago street, Mrs. and Miss Mildred Johnson of Chi­ Monday at the home of Mrs. R. Charles Pears acting as assistant cago, Home of Society Brand Clothes ; * * * l l B. Franklin. hostess. Origination of the Wheel * V • - * * • Auxiliary, Installs The wheel was conceived in Eu­ Monday Literary Club Fbrtnightly Book Club Installation of officers was held rope or Asia Minor relatively late in the prehistoric era/ It is not The Monday Literary club held The Fortnightly Book Club met at the regular meeting of the Record Ads Get Results its opening meeting this, week at Auxiliary Monday evening, Mrs. i possible to give the name of the yesterday afternoon at the home person who first conceived it. the home df Mrs. A. Hi. Hiller. o f Mrs. R. E. Doak, Terre Coupe N. S. Smith was the retiring presi­ Two new members, Mrs. Julia Road, Mrs. G. H. Stevenson re­ dent. The installing officer was WHERE THE JUDGES OF GOOD PICTURES GO. Burgoyne and Mrs. Lillian VI- viewing a current hook. Mrs. Carl Schrumpf of Niles, re­ gaasky, were admitted. Mrs. M. « ■ * » tiring state president and now Redden read a memorial resolu­ Past Matron’s Club membership chairman for Area D, LITTLE FOLKS EAST TIMES TON1TE tion for the death of Mrs. Ruth The Past Matrons of the East­ comprising several midwest states. Roe. Mrs, Rose Stevens read a ern Star of Buchanan will go to The following officers were in­ poem. Mrs. W. F. Runner read the Coloma this evening lo attend a stalled: president, Erma Wright; W A R M TOGS following original poem on the meeting of the County Past Ma­ first vice, Mrs. Warren Juhl; sec-- His Brother s W ife death of Mrs. Roe. tron’s club. ond vice, Mrs. A. P. Sprague; Yes, Ruth is gone— to be with * # s= secretary, Mrs. Edith Willard; with ROBERT TAYLOR those Dinner Guests' % treasurer, Mrs. N. S. Smith; chap­ She knew and loved so dear; lain, Mrs. Charles Pears; histor­ Winter Goat Sets for Little Mr. and Mrs. Loren Perry had 95 vJ BARBARA STANWYCK To dwell in heaven's harmony as their guests at dinner Sunday ian, Mrs. Oscar Schwartz; ser- Girls, Coat, zipper leg­ And with loved ones ever near. geant-at-arms, Mrs. Guy Eisen- Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Perry, Mrs. gings, h a t______1 0 How quietly she slipped away— Henry Perry, Allen Perry and hart. Don’t spend high In silence, and alone! prices on pre­ All wool, water repellant material, and Miss Meda Butler, Mishawaka. up FRIDAY — SATURDAY OCT. 9 — 10 While loving ministries would hers * * * scriptions — when Sizes 1 to 6. have been, Rides for Miles Before A BIG DOUBLE FEATURE M. E. Mission Society you can get them If only we had known. The Young Women’s Missionary Finding His Arm Is Off accurately a n d The cares of life pressed heavily Serial and Cartoon All For 10c, 20c Society of the Methodist church Oakland, Calif.-—Henry Helmnr, economically fill­ Upon her heart and mind— Other Coat Sets. Sizes 1 to 3 »PTj50 met Tuesday evening at the home twenty-eight years old, of Klamath ed here. And only in life’s last release ■; M ATINEE SATU RD AY A T 2 P. M . 10c, 15c of Mrs. E. T. Waldo, Mrs. James Palis, Ore., rode for several min­ Pastel colors____ ■;______:____ w Was she her rest to find. Semple was in charge of the pro­ utes before lie- knew that Ills arm No struggle seemed, in evidence - Free Candy Bars to the Kiddies at the gram. had been severed above the elbow. up With her last parting breath, :. * * * 1-Ie was in an automobile driven Our prices are Saturday Matinee And so with calm and peaceful­ Mission Society by Axton .Tones, twenty, of Alameda. mainta in eil ness, The Presbyterian Missionary A passing truck struck his right lower, without, Toddler’s Snow Suits, Ilel- She met her sleep in death. Society wih meet Friday at 2:30 sacrifice o f arm as It rested over the car door. mels to match. All wool, pas- ™ / The guardian angels must have p. m. the home of .M rs.' Otto He complained of being hurt. quality. come Schurr. Miss Mackway and Mrs Several, miles beyond the. Spot,'-He tel colors, sizes 1 to 3 ™ "Public Enemy’s To bear her spirit home, Arthur Youttg will be in charge of turned and said: “Jfy right arni Is Where her lonely heart could.find the program. gone." its jo y ■. ( * * * •Tones raced to Highland hospital, And where sorrows never come. Evan. I-cague where Heimar walked unaided to the W ife ” We miss her in • the church and The Young People’s eLague of operating room. There lie fainted. club, ' the Evangelical church met Tues- A lilood transfusion apparently LITTLE FOLKS SHOP with PAT O’BRIEN And where’er she had a part, evening in the church basement, saved ills life. CORNER DRUG STORE 208 S. Michigan St. SOUTH BEND, IND. For progress in life’s better .things planning a box social vvhich was THE JONES FAMILY IN Held an interest in her heart. held last night to raise money for And now she’s gone;—we some­ their mission fund. Too Highbrow times ask. ■ . * ■' '*■ Jud Tunkins says as soes as a If we really understood; Evan. Mission Society man says “ psychological” you can ’’Educating Father” For He who understands, has said, The Women’s Missionary. So­ make up your mind that pretty “She hath done what she could.!’ ciety of the Evangelical Church: soon you are not going to under­ with SHIRLEY DEANE will: meet at the parsonage for stand what he is talking about. . WYMAN’S is THE Store their rally and guest day Tues­ day, Oct. 13, at 2:30 p .m. Mrs, Kuip Of Niles will be the speaker, SUN. — MON. — TUES. OCT. 11 — 12 — 13 MODERN * & „ ‘ Continuous Shows Every Sunday From 2 P. M. Terre Coupe Club to buy GOOD COATS V The Terre Coupe Home Econo­ THE SEASON’S ENTERTAINMENT SENSATION Dry Cleaners mics club will meet Friday after­ noon Oct) 9, at the home of Mrs, Bud Leach, Prop. Mabel Smith, Terre Coupe Road, COMMUNITY PLATE for the opening meeting of the Now is the time to have your feature group at year. Members will please be pres­ offers Fall clothes cleaned, ready to ent. wear, Lot us clean your sum­ ...» » * mer garments before storing Ii. N. Lodge CORONATION them. The Royal Neighbor Lodge will a new design Our untiring efforts to serve hold its regular meeting Friday AT THESE LOW PRICES .75 you and. the community makes evening of this week, with the fol­ us worthy of your confidence. lowing entertainment committee: *29 Mrs. Florence Wooden, Mrs. Mar­ G / K fS ECONOMY SERVICE garet Myers, Mrs. D. E. Hinman. When‘ you are ready to select your new winter . 3 plain garments _ $1.25 - * - coat— shop first at Wyman’s. Let us show you F. D. X. Club our large and varied selection . . . . the fine ma-‘ DELUXE SERVICE The F. D, I. Club will meet this terials and workmanship that go into every coat di*cove»Y Single garment___ 75c evening in the odd Fellow club . . . . the exceptional quality of the furs— and of Inlroduclnn th» rooms, the committee in charge course— the smart, new winter 1936 styles you’ll B E PARTICU LAR and use being Mrs. Leo Dalrymple,. Mrs. i l A O N E oar Deluxe service. Warren Willard, Mrs. Effie Hatha­ be proud to wear. And RIGHT now is an especial­ way, and Mrs, Florence Wooden, ly good time to select your coat, for our stocks PHONE 164 Beginning with Oct. 1, all meet­ are most complete. f o X (Pf«n©wr,<*' Office at 226 E. Front St. ings are to be held at 7:30 p. m. insiead of at 8:00 p, m, You’ll find some especially good values among ■ * * our $29.75 coats. New ways of using furs ...... Also The Following Featurettes Sorority Entertained new princess lines . . . . new nubby woolens— Mrs. A. B. McClure was hostess with 8 kinds of fur trimming to choose from. Comedy— “ False Alarms” McGraw’s Suits to members of Epsilon chapter, Sizes 12 to 44. Black, and a few green and brown. Wear, Keep Their B. U. U. sorority Tuesday evening Pop Eye Cartoon— “Brotherly Love” at the home of her parents on Fitch Caracul Original Shape, and Portage road. Following the bus­ Fox Chinese Badger Must Fit iness session bridge was played, Latest Paramount News high score being held by Miss Lapin Marmink before they leave our shop. Mary Franklin. Miss Rebecca Marten Kit Fox New all-wool fabrics for Zachman will be hostess at the WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY OCT. 14 — 15 In a New FREE fall, of the very latest de­ next regular meeting, with Mrs. Jack Boone as assistant. TARNISH-PROOF OtherW inter Coat s Veterans of Foreign Wars Benefit Show signs, <* m m CHEST New Sports Coats Jane Addams Circle 26 or 29 Piece Set* $ 1 9 - 9 5 The Jane Addams Circle of the WITH HOLLOW HANDU $39-75 $ * $69 75 DE LUXE STAINLESS 49 *23 to *35 Child Conservation League met KNIVES "R hythm Monday evening, Oct. D, at the Lovely all wool fabrics, luxurious W arm untrimmed coats— swagger If your clothes don’t fit home of Mrs. Earl Derflinger. Mrs. Crowning achievement o f the w orld’s furs, warm interlinings, beautiful or fitted—perfect for street, leading Silversmiths . . . in the m ojt »> bring them to us. Kenneth Gamble read two papers, tailoring— make these coats a school, sports, travel. Sizes for “Childish Creations In The desired o f ail Silverware, The World’* misses, women and juniors. T he Thought World and Their Value finer silver p la te. . . yet at these low pleasure to wear. When Properly Directed’’ and prices, , , with a smart new chest FREE with BING CROSBY The McGraw “The Tragedy of the Misunder­ with the Service. Come in and see itl Store Hours: 0 A. M. to C V. M. Saturday 9 to 9 Central Standard Time. stood Child." Mrs. H. Swank read FRANCIS FARMER Tailors two papers, “Value of Accuracy Are Tailors of Statement in Developing Obser­ Added Short Subjects Cor. Main & Second Sts. vation and Concentration” and GEORGE WYMAN & CO. Shows At 7 — 9;15 Upstairs "Truthfulness ancl Imagination.” Admission 10c, 20e JEWELRY & OPTICAL STORE COME AND SEE US SOUTH BEND, INDIANA NILES, MICH. The next meeting will be held Mon­ day, Oct. 19, at the home of Mrs, 216 E. Mala St. NILES, MICH. “We F it’em” O. L. Donley.