HEADQUARTERS FOR.FIRST CLASS JOB PRINTING mxxxxn Roxholder SIXTY-FIFTH YEAR BUCHANAN. MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932. N U M B E R 24 EVROLET Local Merchants To Hold Three-Day Selling Campaign This Week GUN BATTLE ON FRONT STREET Now Here’s MERCHANTS HOST FARMERS HEAR PLAN FOR REDUCTION TAXES FRIDAY MORNING the TO PUBLIC AT Burglars Interrupted by Alva Bates, Escape with $1,000 Proposition 1 Car at THE PRINCESS NILES-BUCHANAN I MICH. TAX GEORGE FOULKES KEROSENE STOVE in Ladies’ Silk Wear. Moccasin and 3d The usual peaceful quiet of FOR FEMININE HIGH FLYERS Free Show Tickets to be Giv­ Front street was punctuated early en to Every Purchaser; Mo­ ROAD BIDS ARE Street Monday __ Bi Haws PAYERS EXPLOSION IS Friday morning by a rapid stac­ tion Film of City Activities Mrs. Howard Gilman crashed cato of shots in the course o f a When ladies hop into their planes to be Exhibited. $16,000 LOWER to soar o'er the Atlantic, into a tree at the corner of Moc­ CAUSE OF FIRE gun battle between A lva Bates, casin avenue and Third street on Though surging thousands rave merchant police, and two un­ "The show will be free and the Monday afternoon, when she at­ and roar in demonstrations Road Board Gets Bids for known miscreants who were de­ goods as near free as we can tempted to turn the corner at too George Foulkes Delivers Mrs. Grace M. Rogers Badly frantic make them,” is the challenge Both Black Top and Con­ tected in the course of a.raid*'on I sing the men they leave behind high speed to avert a crash with Smashing Attack on Ex­ Burned When She Rushes which the local merchants are crete at $20,000 Mile. another car driven by Clem Binns. the silk goods in the Boardman with anxious hearts and ach­ placing before the public in the Mrs. Gilman was driving west on travagance of Govt. . Into House to Save store, and who escaped with goods ing whose value is estimated by Mr. three-day sales campaign which Low bids for the construction of Third street and Binns was driv­ Pet Dog. The guys that stay at home to opened this morning in stores rep­ Boardman at from $800 to §1,000. the remaining 1.506 miles of high­ ing north on Moccasin avenue. A hall crowded to full capacity mind the house and do the resenting every line of merchan­ Flames believed to have origi­ Bates states that he was mak­ way pavement construction on When it appeared that the two greeted the speakers from the baking dising activity in the city. cars were about to crash, Mrs. nated in the explosion of a kero­ ing his usual rounds about 3:30 a. To wash the clothes and mend the the Niles-Buchanan road were in Michigan. Taxpayers Association, m., and was walking west on the A s an unusual feature of this the neighborhood of §20,000 per Gilman turned but was unable to sene stove destroyed the kitchen hose and sweep and do the sale, the merchants are presenting last Friday evening at the Wagner furnishings and badly damaged north side of Front street oppo­ mile for the same type installed by negotiate the comer, colliding grange hall to hear the only prac­ churning, free tickets to the Princess theat­ with and breaking the pole of the kitchen and living room inter­ site the state hank building when And dust the rugs and kill the the A J. Lang Construction Co. tical solution that has yet been he saw a man emerge from er to every purchaser at their for §36,000 per mile last year, ac­ the street sign and hitting a tree. iors at the home of Mrs. Grace bugs and keep the home fires stores. They have made arrange­ presented to the farmers of this Murphy Rogers at Fourth street Boardman’s w ith an armload of cording to advices from St. Jo­ The radiator of her car was badly locality for reduction of farm burning, ments with Manager Homer Mor- damaged but she was unhurt. and Moccasin avenue Tuesday goods. Bates started across the The men who have to stay behind seph last night. taxes. The men and women as­ street toward him when he sud­ ley fo r the free entertainment of The low bids for both the "black morning. because the home ties bind their guests at matinee and even­ sembled lent an attentive ear to denly dropped his armload and them, top” type installed on the west the program outlined and on its Mrs. Rogers had started a fire fired in his general direction with ing shows today and tomorrow. end and a twenty foot concrete in the kerosene stove to heat wat­ The Men, The matinees w ill begin at 2:30 conclusion, favorable comments a sawed-off shot gun, the volley The Men, with a three-foot stone shoulder were heard on all sides. er, setting it on the kitchen floor. lodging in the front of the A."& p. m. and the evening shows at were reported to be less than $150 She then went out to feed her The Worried Little Men, 7:30. The meeting was called to order P. stores front. Bates fired back The Men they leave be­ apart, each approximately $16,000 by John Gunyon, the master of the pony. A fter she had been out sending three shots, one of which An attractive feature in con_ per mile under the terms of the Active in organization of rural about five minutes, she stated that hind: them! nection with, this show will be the AWARDED N. W. grange, and tile speakers were in­ drilled a neat hole in the wooden contract let to the Lang Construc­ troduced by Mrs. Charles Hess, taxpayers. she saw the curtains of the room standard in the angle of the plate presentation of the motion pic­ tion company last year. ablaze, and rushed back to the N o Undertakers Represented tures taken by Chris Callahan of the grange lecturer. The princi­ glass window, striking the iron ”1 do not feel that it would be County Engineer John Bateman pal speaker of the evening was house to find the entire kitchen brace behind it and deflected representative scenes in the local stated that the bids would be tak­ good policy for me to offer spe­ Mr. George Foulkes of Hartford, Elizabeth Kiehn interior full of flames and smoke. straight across the window into schools and business and indus­ en, under advisement for a few She summoned aid from the neigh­ cial rates during the present dis- trial section. The feature film Michigan, known as "The Dirt the wall on the west side. tression," stated T. D. Childs, well days. Was Outstanding Student at Farmer,” who has been conduct­ Graduated From City bors. Earl Beck, Ralph DeNar- Another man rushed out of the will be “Local Boy Makes Good," The board of supervisors voted do and Ed Ashbrook arriving and known local mortician when ap­ with Joe E. Brown collaborating Local School Over Period ing these meetings throughout the store and fired at Bates with ;a proached by the accredited repre­ at the April session to complete counties of VanBuren, Allegan and College of Detroit turning a stream of water on the revolver and the two disappeared with Dorothy Lee in the presenta­ the construction this summer, as of Many Years. fire through a kitchen window. sentative o f the Record for ad­ tion of this popular comedy, based Berrien since the first of the year. around the corner, where appar­ the bonds had already been is­ It would appear that Mr. Foul­ Mrs. Rogers, unable to enter vertising in the great Sales Drive on the play by Elliott Nugent. Miss Jane Habicht, member of Miss Elizabeth Kiehn will he ently they had a car waiting with sued. kes is one of a number of large through the kitchen, broke the. edition, “ too many local business The local merchants have sever­ the Buchanan high school gradua­ graduated from the Detroit City the motor running. Bates ran men might want to take advant­ al thousand tickets to give away land owners who find their prop­ College, Teachers Department, to­ glass in the front door, unfasten­ to the comer and fired three more ting class this year, has been no­ erties emperiled by the ever in­ ed the lock and rushed into the. age o f them.” free to_ their customers, and Man­ tified that she has been, awarded day, receiving the degree of shots at the rear of the car, a creasing tax burden. smoke-filled interior to find her blue sedan, apparently shattering ager Homer Morley requests that Mrs. J. Kelley a scholarship o f $150 value to be Batchelor of A rts, with a life First in War, First in Peace as many as possible take advant­ The following are some of the certificate as an art instructor. pet Boston terrier, Pal, whom she the rear glass. applied on tuition charges at the had left in the house. The men A rt Johnston, local; battle-scared age of Lie afternoon matinee in Presents Pupils Northwestern University, with the high lights of his speech. She plans to accompany Miss The car turned east on Chicago “This is hot a political gather­ who were carrying out the fur­ .—pardon us, we mean bottle- order that the seating capacity of assurance of an additional $50 in Welling, head of the art depart­ street and thence soutli on Days scarred-—veteran, was reported to 300 may not be overtaxed, at the In Annual Recital ing it is a meeting together of ment, to an art convention in New nishings attempted to stop her hut avenue and out of town on the case she elects to attend that she ran into the flame filled kit­ be »the first man to park his car evening shows. school and maintains a rank in men and women who have been York City immediately after grad­ Soutli Bend road. in a select position on Front St., icrushed under a-great burden of chen after the dog, incurring” Fred French arrived shortly The auditorium of -the Presby­ the upper”ten" per cent'

\ THURSDAY, JUNE 15,1932. Ei-sgggVvj USHfi SBBMN COtiNi* ft&Sokb ■V:1t’iiittW«iAViii ■~.,,*,... -w ;f;jjMzj&£B$Ei- ,r Mrs. John Fruhling was able to Mr., and Mrs. Warren Juhl and Miss Velma Ebbert, kindergart­ Miss Jean Ednie o f South Bend, KMr. and-Mrs. Charles Tichenor weirt on < to. attend- - the--*Bennett Mr.- and Mrs. H arry: Post had return to her home Sunday from, son,. Ray, will leave Monday ! to en teacher in tne' local schools, the sister of William Ednie and a drove to East-Lansing'Sunday and fam ily reunion- at Lansing, return-; as guests at their home Wednes­ m g here Monday. the. Wallace hospital. spend a, week at White Lake, left Sunday to spend the summer frequent visitor here, is sailing in remained to attend the Michigan day evening, the former’s parents, Mich. vacation at her home at Kalama­ July for Europe for a tour of State College Commencement ex­ ^ M r , and Mrs. HV B.-Thompson Mrsi Laura Rose underwent an Mr, and Mrs. August Post' and his operation at Epworth hospital in Miss. M arian’Banke and William zoo. England, Scotland, and several ercises on :Monday, their son, and Miss* Janet Thompson- arrived South Bend Monday. Donaghue of Chicago were the For Thursday,. Friday and Sat­ countries on the continent. Gerald, being a member- of the Home Tuesday evening'from Mil­ brother, Ferdinand Post and w ife Simday guests of Miss Clarice urday, only, we will give our Mrs. Charles Detwiler of Three graduating class. waukee, Wis., where the. latter of Dowagiac, "also Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weaver of Seventy-five members of St. jvas graduated from Milwaukee- Floyd Walworth and son, Bernard South Bend were calling on Buch­ Banke. regular $3 permanent waves for Rivers, who has been spending a George Lano:, is improved from: $1. Vogue Beauty Shop, phone few days at the home of her Anthony’s church met there Mon­ Downer college that; day with tl of Sou^h Bend, who -came to at­ anan friends Tuesday. Miss Marcel Johnson o f Niles is degree of Batchelor of Science in tend the graduation of Miss Marie illness at his home. a guest this week at the home of 248. 24 tic brother, Henry Smith and family, day and. completed the work on Cleon Craig o f Seattle, Wash., the basement of the church build­ Home Economics. Post. , Mrs. Otto Reinke was a guest of was calling on; friends in Buchan­ her grandmother, Mrs. Emma Miss Betty Crawford, instructor- returned to her home Sunday. , Mrs. Tenny Bunker was brought ing, which is to be used for so­ friends in. South Bend yesterday. an Thursday and Friday. Brown. in music in the local schools, left cial and recreational occasions. A Supt. H , C:. Stark was a; busi­ back to her home from Epworlh James Barr; of Elkhart was a Mrs. Glenn: Easton is expected for Chicago today to spend the Hospital in South Bend Sunday. pot luck dinner was enjoyed at ness visitor ire Kalamazoo: Tuesday guest Sunday at the home of Mr. to arrive today to visit several summer vacation at her home noon by the 75 members present. , afternoon. and Mrs. Charles Rastaetter. She is recovering as well as days at. the home of Mrs. R. J. there. could be expected after the opera­ Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Van Deusen Mrs. Kelsey Sainton was a Miss Margaret Whitman arrived Burrows. “Masury’s Water White Linol­ tion which she underwent there. ; motored to Chicago last week CfanMcomJmd Bm m wk guest yesterday of Mrs. W. R. home Monday evening from Mrs. E.. C: Pascoe and children eum Lacquer” may be safely walk­ Mrs. L. E. Peck, Mrs. Ida Bish-; where they met an uncle, S. M. FRIDAYrn>r\ AND ittn cuninniivSATURDAY » Mils of Niles, Frankfort, where she taught. are visiting at the home of the ed on thirty minutes after apply­ op and Mrs. A. P. Sprague went to Bennett of Milwaukee, and return­ Mr. and Mrs. Bently J. Baker of George Meyers; is visiting at. the former’s parents in Constantine ing it. We sell it. Binn’s Mag­ Toledo, O., Thursday, accompany­ ed to Buchanan. Sunday the three Chicago visited relatives in Bu­ home o f his grandmother, Mrs, this week. net Store. 24-tlc: ing Mrs. George Schumacker, nee NATIONAL PASTEURIZED Pure Cream chanan Sunday. William Meyers o f three Oaks. Miss Hettie Burrows returned to Kenneth McCracken is expected Doris Peck, who had been visiting Nellie Boone, 30& Days ave., Mrs. Sarah Most is visiting this South Bend Saturday after spend­ to arrive Monday from Sewickley, here. They arrived home Mon­ sells: insurance of all kinds. See week at the home o f her daugh­ ing a week at the Charles Tiche- Pa., to spent his vacation as the day evening. her: 24tlc ter, Mrs. H. J. Stoner o f Galien. nor home. guest of his mother, Mrs. Nettie Frank and James Vandenbark Mrs. Joseph Murdock of Galien Orders; taken for any kind home Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dalton of McCracken. came from Martinsville, Ind., on is. a guest at the A. E. Matthews made jelly and canned fruit. Gary spent Tuesday as the guests Charles Blake left Monday for Sunday to spend the week-end as home this: week. Carrie L. Morley, 305 Main St. at the home o f the latter’s sister, Indianapolis, Ind., where lie plans guests of their sister, Miss Esther \m M. L. Jenks had as guests at his 24tlp Mrs. Ida Rice. BUTTERFinest Obtainable to spend a few days visiting with Vandenbark, local teacher, accom­ lb* home- Sunday his daughter, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs: Byron Treat had Mrs. George Chubb attended the his mother before going east for panying her home for the summer Beulah Thomson and her friend, fo r their dinner guest Thursday, funeral of, her cousin, Mrs. Mary the summer. vacation. Mrs. Virginia T. Bent, both of Chi­ Clarence Mikelson of Des Moines, Everts, in New Buffalo Wednes­ Mrs. Emma Robinson of Pen- Fifteen members of Buchanan la. FREE cago. day afternoon. nellwood Resort, Berrien Springs, Scout Troop No. 41 "will serve at Nut Margarine * 3^ 25° Have you looked over your in­ was a guest Sunday of her sister, the. dinner to be given by the Ber- surance policies? Do they cover Mrs. William Young, on Terre rien-Cass council at Lake Madron, Come Again— For Table or Cooking your needs? For insurance of all Coupe Road. June 24. A ll Buchanan people kinds see me. Jesse Viele, 110 W. Mrs. Elizabeth Huggard and son, who are interested in the event 50c box of rouge DON’T FORGET Front St. 24tlc Robert, recently from Chicago, are cordiallv invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. John Walsch were have moved into Mrs. Emma Bish­ when you buy a 50c Armour’s Bacon 2 k 15c Service is Our Middle Name week-end guests at the home of op’s residence property, 110 Moc­ M elrose— Lean and Tender the former’s father, G. Walsch, of casin avenue. CALL US FOR Milwaukee. Wis. Miss Alene Riley drove to Jack- box of powder. Sandwiches— Salads:— Pastry— Etc. Mrs. Jane Hotchkiss and Mrs. son Thursday to visit her sister, A . S. Webb returned Thursday Miss lone Riley, and “accompan­ NOTICE Amer. Home Catsup ^ 10° from a visit of two days at In­ $1 value for 50c W E D ELIV E R Phone No. 9198 ied her home for the summer va­ Made From Fresh, Ripe Tomatoes dianapolis, Ind. cation Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pears ar­ Clarence J. Mikelson left Fri­ Will person who took Special Introductory O ffers Don’t say Hamburg—ask for a KEWPEE rived home Thursday from a visit Brookfield Cheese day morning fo r Des Moines, Ta., tan polo coat from the Swift’*— Brick There’s a Difference at the home of their son, Richard after spending a few days visiting or American plcg. * V c school house, by mis­ X-lb. c Pears, in Chicago. at the home of his sister, Mrs. W. N. Brodriek WHITE loaf 4 - John M iller of Niles was a Wilbur Dempsey. take, last week, please Lipton's Tea BREAD Yellow Label guest two days the fore part of Mr. and Mrs. Kelsey Bainton notify Record office. “The Rexall Store” the week at the home o f his sister, and son, Charles, were guests Sun­ American Home— Whole or Sliced Mrs. R. R. Rouse. day at Linden Lea farm, the sum­ Lipton’s Tea Just Around1 the Corner on Portage Mrs. Thomas Clausen, nee Vir­ mer home of Mr. and Mrs. James Yellow Label ginia Fuller, of Clear lake, was Sturges of Chicago. Reserve Your Sunday Dinner entered Friday as a patient in Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Rough and kSEls 3 - 1 1 Raspberry Bev. National Brand Pawating hospital. granddaughter, Eleanor Rough, National’* Beat Mr. and Mrs. William Bohl mo­ spent Sunday at Crystal Springs tored to New Buffalo Sunday vis­ ’American Home Beverages- visiting in the summer home of Extra Dry Pale or Golden iting at the home of the latter’s Mrs. June Caldwell. brotner, Hiel Waldo. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Glover Household Hoods GINGER ALE Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wonder- and Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Johnson 2 f c . 3 7 c ROOT BEER lich of Chicago are here visiting and Mrs. Sarah Most attended a Depend Upon ARNEY’S R i n s o with the former’s parents, Mr. and conference o f the L. D. S. church The Granulated ! PEARLY NECTAR Mrs. E. C. Wonderlich. Soak* Clothe* Wn Lime* Lemon C A M A at Lansing Simday. for orOranso “ Robert Jewell, Smith-Hughes Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mutchler Plus 5c instructor in agriculture, plans to had as their guests this week, Mrs. Lifebuoy v 3 «k«17c 'deposit Place your insurance with the largest Farmers spend the coming week-end at his L ila Renbarger and mother, Mrs. SOAF*>Freiheoi Dull Skin S oii each home at Beulah, Mich. Dever, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank QUALITY GROCERIES bottle Insurance Company in the State: Check up on your insurance. Hyland, all of Chicago. _$is§7! Are you well protected? If not Miss Dorothea Chandler, in­ FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES Net Assets over $450,000.00 see Nellie Boone, 30S Days Ave, structor in the commercial depart­ A t our store you may always be assured of 24tlp ment in the local schools, left on highest quality groceries and the prices are Cabbage, lb . ______oc Over 22,000 Policy holders M r. and Mrs. A. E. Matthews Friday to spend the summer at always right. Try us. had as guests at dinner Sunday, her home in Danville, la. Dry Onions, fancy yellow, 3 lb s .______— ------10c Call; and get our rates their sons, Harlan and Henry Mat­ Mrs. Milton Fuller had as her thews, and their families. guests at her home yesterday, Mr, Bananas, 3 lbs. ______17c The Misses Vivian and Ann and Mrs. Frank Lankey of Rose- Mogford left Sunday to spend two lands, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. E. ARNEY C. E. noons, Mgr. Phone 91 109 Days weeks at Camp Eberhart on Lake Morrison of South Bend. L. Weaver Corey: near Three Rivers. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Post drove “The Square Deal Grocer” Orders taken for any kind home to Kalamazoo Sunday to accom­ made jelly and canned fru it pany there the latter’s aunt, Mrs. Phone 26 BISHOP BLOCK, BUCHANAN Carrie L. Morley, 305 Main St. Lillian Yeckley, who had visited 24tlp here over commencement. Mrs. D. DiGiacomo began tak­ Arthur Pearson left Wednesday ing; a course of daily mineral for Linda Loma, Galif., where he baths a t St. Joseph Monday for yjill attend -medical, school. He inflammatory rheumatism. went by way of Nashville, Tenn., Mr. and Mrs. Ben Klute and where he is visiting several days. fam ily of Three Oaks visited this Mr. and Mrs. Elmer G. Shan-ar week at the home of. Mrs. Klute's are leaving today for their homo mother, Mrs. Jane Wright. in Topeka, Kas., after a visit at JB@@si Buchanan” Days Leo Slate and George Reming­ tlie home of the latter's grandpar­ ton attended a dinner at Lake ents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Rein- Madron last night for all scout ke. masters of Berrien County. Mrs. Edward Collins and daugh­ Mr. and Mrs. M, L. Diamond ter, Beverly, and Mrs. Edward Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Raymond Mence of Racine, Wis., arrived On spent Sunday as guests at the D. Friday for a visit at the home of W. Bates home in St. Joseph. the former’s sister, Mrs. A. M.: Eight O 'clock Miss Mabel Rivers, instructor in Slate. the local schools, left Saturday to Mrs. Fred Mead returned home June 16 -17 -1 8 The W orkPs Fastest / spend the summer vacation with Thursday evening from Benton her mother in Burr Oak, Mich. Harbor where she had spent sev­ Setting Coffee . T / Miss Ida Ahola left Sunday eral days taking care of her moth­ morning fo r her home at Hancock, er, Mrs. M ary Lason, who had Dresses Asid More Dresses BLOUSES Mich., to spend the summer vaca­ been ill. tion at the home o f her parents. Mrs. Arlin Clark and Mrs. Les­ W e offer for these three days! Dotted Swiss and Organdie blouses, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Boardman ter Mitchell left Tuesday to visit ■had as their guest last week, the several days at the home of the Three dresses, either ladies’ or misses’ for fine designs ______79c former’s nephew, L. C. Boardman, former’s mother, Mrs. C. W. and wife of Little Valley, N. Y. Sheatsley at Koontz lake near the price of two which means that for Embroidered Organdie Blouses and com­ Mr. and Mrs. William Moyer Walkerton, Ind. bination blouses in assorted and son, Arthur, and Vere Geis- Charles Gillis of Cincinnati, O., $1.18 you can get three ladies’ or-misses’ ler of Royalton, were guests at is spending a few days as the dresses. The assortment is complete. sizes and patterns______79c , the Guy Eisenhart home Wednes­ /liest o f Miss Tina Skeels here, jlEled. Circle n-2 3 c B Q lcar &--2 SC day evening; attending the gradu­ and w ill accompany her to her; Handsome lace blouses f or dress wear 89c . ation of James Eisenhart from the home at Whitehall, Mich., the As To Hosiery 3 - f ; — — ------— high school here. latter part of the week. -— This three-day-sale is an ovation to hosiery buyers. Silk, Rajahs, Pongees and wash 4S m*e£sdt Allen-A hose, $1.35 service or chiffon weights,__ $1.00 Silks fiONA FLOUR b _ 12 Momie Pongee Silk, heavy grade, yard ------23c $ ' ''

James McFalion and Betsy Hart- Affected plants should be pulled line McFallon. With the excep­ and burned to lessen the spread of REPORT FEED tion of a few years spent at Gosh­ the disease. Til© Light House en, Ind., she spent her entire life A detailed discussion of tomato New Buffalo, Michigan in and about Buchanan, until diseases is given in Circular Bul­ TRIALS TO leaving for The Haven Hubbard letin No. 139, which will be sent Presents Memorial Home about eight years free to anyone requesting it from, D w ago. the bulletin clerk, Michigan State STATE STOCKMEN Death was clue to a stroke of College, East Lansing, Mich. The Blossom Queen Margory apoplexy, which she suffered at S ------o— -=— A Miss' Grand Kapids p. in. Friday evening. She had Athletics Take Princess lone „ Tests on A ll Classes of Live­ made all arrangements fo r her Miss Battle- Greek Princess^ Stella stock at.M. S. C. Show funeral when she entered the home The Measure of N Princess Doris 2vliss cwknniing Values of Rations. eight years ago, and her wishes were carried out. Burial was Miss Three Oaks Princess Alice N made hr Oak Ridge cemetery. Two Lyclick Merchants SECOND HAND PIPE—Of all NOTICE— I am now able t.(Ado: ail Princess Dorotnj Miss New Buffalo Barley put3 gains or. beef cattli brothers had preceded her in RATES sizes and fo r all purposes. Drop kinds of ’ furniture refinishing. C Miss Benton Harbor faster than either corn or oats, death, and only a few distant rela­ us a line and we will send you Prices reasonable. H. D. Smith; but both corn, and wheat are bet­ Reamer’s Athletics won their re­ Slassified. Advertisements are Saturday, June the Eighteenth tives are the only known sur­ turn game with the Lydick Mer­ nserted at the rate of 5 cents full details. Kander’s, Boxviing 307 Moccasin Ave. 24tip ter than barley in producing rap­ Green, O. 22t2p LYNN MC BAY and His COMMANDERS E vivors. A number of friends and chants' at Lydick Sunday after­ per ' line . each insertion; mink- E id gains of pork, according- to relatives from Elkhart, and Stur­ CARD OF THANKS By Popular Request figures front the past year’s feed­ noon by a score of 11-8, with Lor­ uiujn charge 25 cents •when FOR SALE — Bettz’s summer gis. attended the funeral. en Morse pitching seven innings paid in advance, or 3 times fo r I wish to thank the city fire de­ Admission. 50 Cents N IN E to O N E ing- tests at Michigan State Col­ Chicks: for sale now. Get June partment for their aid in, extin­ and D. Topash completing the, 50c. I f payment is not made: and July prices. Open every Including Dancing Watch for June 25 lege, which were presented to the guishing the fire at my home on group of livestock men who at­ •game. Loren Morse starred at when the advertisement is in­ night and day. Bettz Hatcheries, hat with three hits and three runs serted an additional charge of Tuesday morning, also ESxl Beck, No Cover Charge tended Feeder’s Day. 219 N. Front St., Niles, Mich. Ralph DeNardo and Ed Ashbroolt TOMATOES NEED in four times up. 5c per insertion w ill be charged. 24t3c The gains made by beef on The Athletics will meet the un­ for their help, t ground barley were also cheaper defeated N ew Troy nine at New Mrs. Grace Rogers, than the pounds of meat made by Troy next Sunday. FO B S A LE FOR R E N T feeding com or oats. Pigs made PRICADTION Hebrew Money their cheapest gains on whole FOR, SALE— 15 Duroc pigs, six The monetary system of the He* wheat in the college trials. All Ted Childs Gets weeks old. Lawrence Smith, FOR RENT—Pleasant furnished brews was based upon the Baby­ costs of gain were computed by PREVENT DISEASE phone 7112F3. 24tlp rooms for light housekeeping. lonian system of weigh Is. The ratio charging ail grains at 75 cents per Law Degree From 102 N. Detroit St. Phone 965. of the value of gold to silver was hundredweight plus a 10 cent FOR SALE—Alfalfa hay in field. 24tlc The Corner Drug Store 2 Types Blight can be Con­ E. F. Longworth, phone 368. 1:33 1-3 and prevailed over all charge for each hundred pounds Univ. of Michigan 24tlp Western Asia. of ground feed. trolled with Proper FOR RENT—Modern five room Spray Applications.. bungalow at 115 Lake St. Also Time used in serving out indi­ Ted Childs, son of Mr. and Mrs. FOR SALE — Strawberries, 25c partly modern, 308 Days Ave. Slanting Rainbow vidual feed portions to iambs was T- D. Childs, w ill be graduated case, pick them yourself. John Arthur A. Wray, 115 Lake St. 3 Tomatoes, which are often the Dimeat, phone 7132F12. 24tlc The rainbow is always seen along B A Y so much waste motion in the tests from the law department of the 22t3p made at East Lansing, as lambs chief pride of the home gardener, the circumference of a circle whose University of Michigan at the FOR SALE Early Richmond center is on a straight line with running on self-feeders finished are attacked by several diseases Commencement exercises held at FOR REN T^At 408 W. Front St., much better and sold for a high­ which can be prevented or control­ cherries by crate or tree. Tele­ 5 rooms and hath, modem. Fur­ the eye of tile observer, lienee no Aim cArbor next Monday. He phone 7115F5. 24t3e er price than did the lambs that led by simple treatments, accord­ has been visiting at bis home here nace heat. Phone 7124F2. 24t3p two persons see strictly the same were hand-fed. The most rapid ing to experts on plant diseases at but leaves Friday in company FOR SALE—2 acres of alfalfa bow. — - , THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY and cheapest gains with lambs Michigan State College. FOR RENT — Newly decorated 1 with his sister, Mrs. Edwin Peck, hay. Price very reasonable. 60 rooms furnished fo r light house­ were secured with a ration of Two types of blight, early and for Ann Arbor. River St., Ernest Zimmerman. $1.25 self-fed shelled corn and alfalfa keeping. Modern, at 607 S. Oak Healthful Humidity , late, at times cause serious losses. 24tlp 1. alue hay. Plants attacked by early blight St. Call 320. 24tfc Humidity in houses shot. he Thermos Bottles v In one of the feeding experi­ show brown spots with concentric s Fail to SCRATCH "PADS — News print FOR RENT—Furnished 4-room from 30 to 50 per cent, but in ’. ,bst i yr. guarantee ments noth pigs on rape pasture, rings or ridges about the spots on pads, lb. 5c; bond stock 10c lb.; an added reason for the use of bungalow fo r summer months. houses it is probably 20 per cent or the leaves. Black spots which Break Into Safe large size pads, 15c lb. Record Rent reasonable. Ideal place to lower—-too dry for health. Tke_ dry­ Electric Clock 51.75 value $1.19 tankage was discovered when it become covered with a black, vel­ was found that the pigs did less Co. Stfc spend summer vacation. Call er tlie air the more -difficult it is to vety growth appear on the fruits. at Hattenbach’s 176W. 24t2p 50c rooting if fed tankage. The trials This disease appears early in the heat a house, as moisture in the air with pigs on pasture also showed FOR SALE—-Kitchen cabinet base growing season. _ with porcelain top, almost new. carries and retains heat. I f frost alue more rapid gains on barley than Unknown burglars, evidently in­ Wisner Toothpaste t- 29c Late blight usually does not oc­ Use as kitchen table. Call 176W WANTED forms freely on the inside o f’ the on wheat, which is the reverse of cur until the latter part of July, experienced at the business, at­ glass, there is probably enough hu­ tempted to break into H. A. Hat­ 24t2p the findings with pigs confined in and the plants attacked by it midity. I f there is no sign of frost, a feed lot. show dark, water-soaked areas on tenbach’s office on South Oak St., WANTED-—2 or 4 wheel trailer, Tuesday night. Entrance was ef­ FO R SALE— Birdscll wagon in in good condition. Must be a tile air is too dry. Another change in tne feeding the leaves, an appearance similar good condition, used very little; habits of pigs when on pasture to that caused by freezing. A fected by breaking a window, after bargain. Phone 106J. 24tlp Fountain Pens which an unsuccessful attempt also clover and timothy hay. was the consumption of more white, downy growth appears on John Dodd, 3 miles southeast o f Buzzard’s Limitations tankage when fed wheat than was made to batter the combina­ W A N T TO TRAD E— Equity in §2.50 the undersides of the leaves. The Galien. 24tlp house and lot, fo r small garage, With its remarkable eyesight,pow­ when barley, but, iu the dry lot, fruits usually show rot near the tion from the safe. The would- aluo pigs ate more tankage with the be thieves rummaged through the electric refrigerator or vacant er of flight and size there probably Eastman Kodak * stem end and this spreads around FOR SALE — “Pioneer” Rural lot. 404 Main St., phone 514J. barley ration. the circumference of the fruits drawers of a desk, but got noth­ is only one reason why the vulture Fire Insurance Rates past 6 24 tip Buy now and avoid 10 per cent tax faster than it penetrates into the ing of value. or buzzard is not one of the’’ most interior. years, $2.94. N o specials. Full active pursuers of living prey in­ Mary Jane McFallon Spraying with a 4-4-50 solution amount o f insurance paid in MISCELLANEOUS Former Galien case o f loss. Investigate. Get stead of feeding upon dead 'or .help­ of Bordeaux mixture at intervals less prey—the absence o f talons Died Sat. at Haven of a week or 10 days will control the truth. Ray F. Weaver, Agt. L A W N MOWERS — Sharpened, Swav Shaving Cream, 50c value _____34c Resident Dies Phone 712SF13. Buchanan, Mich 50c. Wilbur Dempsey. 403 W. witli which to seize and hold- living1 both the blights of tomatoes. prey.— Capper’s Farmer. Hubbard Home Another enemy of the tomato 24t3c Third S t 24t3p Face Powders, 50c value ______37c plant called Grand Rapids disease at Mission, Miss Mary Jane McFallon, 77, because it first appeared near Face Powders, $1 value ______69c died at the Haven Memorial Home that city. The symptoms of this Cyrenoris Washburn, a resident after a short illness Saturday, disease are a progressive wilting of the Galien district for a num­ June 11, and the funeral was held of the leaves from the bottom of ber of years, died June 10 at his U W I7 to the Princess Theatre, giveit with from the Presbyterian church here the plant upward. Rough, brown home in Mission, Texas, according JXJLjE j each purchase. Good fo r Thurs. and Fri, at 2:30 p. m. Sunday, with Rev. spots surrounded by a white halo to word received by friends here H. W. Staver in charge. may occur on the fruits and make this week. Mr. Washburn was She was born near Buchanan them unusuable. Sprays and born at Belleville, O., in Decem­ on June 30, 1854, the daughter of dusts will not control this disease. ber, 1846, being 88 years old at the time o f his death. For years he lived on a farm 2 1-2 miles $ 4 northwest of Galien, until he left Y about three years ago to make his * > home in Texas: ’Ho is: survived by" & kis wife, by one daughter, M rs.1 * Clemmy Roundy, Berlin Heights, O., and by one sister, Mrs. Alice R e a d y F © f Hoag, Berlin Heights. A' Last Call For BE OUR GUESTS t Chicago-Buchanan T Y Annual Picnic Sat. tV f The attention of all Buchanan- * ites of any length of residence f Thurs. and Fri, lim e 16- here is again called to the picnic scheduled by the Chicago-Buch­ anan Society for the afternoon of ❖ f next Saturday, June IS, beginning Afternoon or Evening at 3 p. m. at the south end of f Lincoln Park. The lurid program ❖ outlined by Dr. E. R. Butts; pres­ ident, in the Record of last week, will be presented in toto. Buchan- Free Tickets To Princess Theatre anites will be especially welcome. t: W ith Every Purchase y Methodist S. S. Hie Berrien County Record +Z+A 1 Picnic June 23 f ❖ & rt The Methodist Sunday School We'AreShoutiaag prices For Theses Days Y will hold a picnic for the younger Whether or not, you oan share in ;, pupils at the Fuller resort at Clear ■f lake next Thursday afternoon, June 23’, with all parents cordially th is big p r e m i u m offer w e a r e s Thursday, Friday aaad Saturday invited to accompany. A ll who -i&s. plan to attend are asked to meet f Y at the church at 2:30 p. m. making. This offer is good for a J u ts© Sfe -17 * S 8 Y Catholics Conclude ' short time. - £ ^ J"'~ The stage is set, lower and lower prices, our # Observance Novena Y Electric lamp, 2 or 3 candle Observance of the Novena in Y honor of St. Anthony was con­ style, red or green, given with’ t • BIG SALE STILL ©M Y cluded at St. Anthony’s church ♦ Y Monday, June 13,. w itli the con­ a year’s subscription to the cluding mass of a series of nine i v* »• - „ It will pay every family to attend this sale, . . "’T3|r held daily at 7 a. m., with Rev, FREE Record, at $1.50 year. y w Father John R. Day in charge. Men’s Work ------o------f< Large White Men’s Dress n ■ t Shoes------$1.39 Handkerchiefs —3 Lace Shoes ■_ m Local News OR t . Men’s Work. c $1.95 Shirts „___ - 4 5 c m ■ T . Men’s heavy Men’s Dress % Mr. and Mrs. Enos Scliram and daughter were guests Sunday o f 19 piece rose colored, glass t Men’s Iiayon O veralls___ Oxfords ___ it Socks ------— 7 c -69c .95 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Misner of ■Y w Sturgis. They were accompanied v Y by- Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, water set and a 1 yr. sub­ Women’s fine footwear. New Summer styles. Cut outs, Women’s fine silk Hose, Service or Chiffon. who visited at the home of the 3 . f latter’s parents. straps, oxfords, pumps, alt leathers, all heels $ 1 . 3 5 .$1.00 quality, p a ir____ ,______- 6 9 c The old warning,. “look out for w the squirrels - assumed ’ significance scription-to The Record for * z ? Prices reduced on everything in the store, bargains, Y this past week, when a local child One; lot: Women’s Lace Shoes and « » for every one! Come aiid be treated to a xilcasant price was bitten by a squirrel which it t* " Slippers, p a i r ------l U C Y surprise. was feeding. A few days later T ■ t the squirrel was found dead and $ 1.75 ; " f . - f the head was sent to Ann Arbor, a verdict of rabies infection being T -Y returned. The annual school reunion held ■Y at New Troy yesterday was at-* t , »T . Phone 9 tended by over a hundred outside T- Y guests, drawn largely from Bu­ chanan, Three Oaks, Niles, Galien Y Y and South ; Bend, .j. Among - those; v GLENN E. SMITH from a-distance! was’’Fi'ank Bord-- Shoes for the Whole —Men’s Furnishings. % • fT; e n -fto t 'iKanSas.'l'ii-fThose ’ from f . Family- •Buchanan!were^Mrs. 'Hattie Miller, Y Y Belle 'Miller, j Mrs. i Etta Morley, The Berrien County Record Y Buchanan, Mich. Mrs, Mae Howard, Mrs. Myrtle t Y Kean, Mrs. A d a ‘ Boyce, Mr. and & Mrs. Ralph Kean, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Rebm. and Mrs. W, R. Rough. THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932. THE BERRIEN COUNTY RECORD FAG E FTtfB

wMi'CKY'! AND Ht3 GANG By Sam Iger something to lay hold of. Is there planks in party platforms. Thai who, speaking through the Na­ -v ■: -r-X$ - " ' any such thing? We invite you to government to be elected in No­ tional Education association, de­ this consideration. vember must carry out the con-, clare that "many of the three Tuesday, June 28. Annual pic­ structive enforcement work of the million additional students who nic of the Home Service depart- present administration. Politi­ have sought a high school educa­ PEE WEE VT SPNS IN THIS at the Mogford cottage at cians, scared by organized wet tion within the decade have: come Diamond lake. Hostesses: Mrs. E. propaganda and the concerted from poor homes where in form­ 'Book TtW DimoWB C. Mogford, Mrs. F. A. Habiclit, drive to disobey and ridicule the er times drinking was a heavy DICK WHPfT WAS ttCfREfctf Mrs. L. Sands, Mrs. L. M. Des- law, are seeking a road to success burden on the fam ily income,” and enberg, Mrs. E. B. Ross and Mrs. via “-resubmission.” This w ill that “ unquestionably the 18th DETECTOEF A NICE C. D. Arnold. lead to the ultimate dissolution of amendment has benefited the: CrOU. WHAT WAS V E W any party not squarely facing the schools beyond measure.” 'PRETT'/ AN HE U\<£U HEP issue. We have conferred with dry VE-RT fAUCH BUT HE leaders in every county of every Many Attend the DIDN'T kOUE HE-R.' State in the union and we can say Duty is what is due from us confidently .that the dry forces Bracken Funeral to others. i Of this country will withdraw their J support from the party and candi­ at Niles Tuesday True reforms are stairways to dates sidetracking prohibition, by the golden age. a resubmission plank. I Prohibition, with imperfect en­ A number from Buchanan at­ The housewives of America do forcement at first, and continually tended the funeral o f John. Brack­ not want to have to maintain the improving enforcement at present, en, who died at Wabash, Indiana, homes and beer saloons, too. , is responsible for certain major Sunday, and was laid at rest in ■ social and economic results which Silverbrook. cemetery at Niles on In a state, pecuniary gains is cannot be ignored. Poverty from Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Bracken not to be Considered prosperity, ' drink has almost entirely disap- formerly lived in Niles and mar­ hut national prosperity is found in [ peared from America. By reduc­ ried Mary Blodgett, who lived righteousness. — Confucius. ing the death rates from alcoholic when a girl in Buchanan. H e is ; causes, prohibition lias saved 180,- survived by his widow and by one When we had the licensed. liquor ' 000 lives; the bettered economic son, Harold Bracken, of Wabash, traffic, it is estimated that 60 condition under prohibition has Ind. Those attending from Bu­ ! per cent of the party caucuses in brought us blessings denied to chanan 'were Mr. and Mrs. Chas. our big cities were held in saloons. under the leadership o f Frank Meet at the church at 6 o’clock. other countries, during the world Blodgett, Mr. and Mrs. Henry the subject of the lesson-sermon 11:00 a. m. Communion, worship depression. Leech. Meet at the “church at 7 in all Christian Science churches and preaching. Sermon subject, Blodgett, Mrs. Ruth Wesner and p. m. “W ith the rising generation, N o better illustration of the ben- three sons, Charles, Robert and Seventh Day Adventist throughout the world on Sunday, "Spiritual Worship." whether or not they take alcohol, The Junior League will have a June 19. j efits of prohibition can be given Gene, Mrs. Myrtle Holmes and: Sabbath School Saturday at 10 6':30 p. m. Senior C. E. Topic, rests the future trade commercial­ than the conclusions of the lead­ daughter, Dorothy, and son, Don- party Friday. Meet at the church “How Honest Arc We as Individ­ ly, politically and economically.” at 1:30. a. m. Lesson study, “The King­ Among- the Bible citations is ers of public school education, old. dom Within.” The keynote: uals and Groups?” (Acts 4:32, — Brewers’ Journal of Great Brit­ Methodist Episcopal Church There will be a special attrac­ this passage ( I Chron. 16:31): “The Lord Jesus Is making ex­ “ Let the heavens be glad, and let 5:1-5.) ain, Feb. 15, 1922. Thomas Kice, Minister tion for the evening service, Mr. 7:30 p. m. Evening song sendee, Spring, a professional organist periments on human hearts thru the earth rejoice; and let men say Sunday School at 10 o'clock. You the exhibition of His mercy and among the nations, the Lord worship and preaching. Sermon The National W. O. T. XJ. j and tenor soloist, will play and topic, “All Things W ork Together Opposes Besubmissiou will find the church building cool ' sing for us. The service wall be­ abundant grace. He is effecting reigneth.” and pleasant these summer days. for Good to Them that Love God.” The National Women’s Christ­ gin at 7:30. Come and enjoy the transformations so amazing that Correlative passages read from You w ill also find, the lessons S:00 p. m. Thursday, mid-week ian Temperance Union opposes the treat. | Satan, with all his triumphant the Christian Science textbook, most helpful. boasting, with all his confederacy “ Science and Health with K ey to prayer sendee and Bible study. idea of dodging the prohibition The Open forum meeting- will bo issue by so-called resubmision ‘ Morning service at 11 o’clock. o f evil united against God and the the Scriptures,” by M ary Baker- Choir rehearsal. held this Monday at 7:30. A t­ laws of His government, stands Eddy, include the following (p. The questions for Bible school Father’s Day will be appropriately tendance and interest keeps up observed this Sunday. Men are es­ viewing them as a fortress im­ 509): “Mind made the plant of next Sunday are: 1—Who carried week by week at this interesting pregnable to His sophistries and the field before it was in the oil the gates of Philistine? 2— pecially invited and will be honor­ discussion meeting. ed guests. Arthur Johnston will delusions. They are to him an earth. The periods of spiritual In what chapter in the New Test­ give a vocal solo and the pastor The church desires to thank incomprehensible mystery. The ascension are the days and sea­ ament will you find how the mem­ will speak on, ‘‘The Mission of Mrs. Glenn Hasiett, tine superin. angels of Goo, serapnim and cher- sons of Mind’s creation, in which bers of the church in Jerusalem Modern Manhood.” tendent o f tine Junior department, uoim, the powers commissioned to beauty, sublimity, purity and hol­ gave their money freely for the You can fill your tank, for her leadership in the Child­ co-operate with human agencies, iness, yea, the divine nature, ap­ poor? 3—Who was the gleaner? Junior League at 5:30. ren’s Day exercises. Also Mrs. pear in man and the universe nev­ 4— Who had a coat of many col­ Senior League at 6:30. W e were look on with astonishment and joy and then forgot it, for W ill Irwin, Sunday School teach­ that fallen men, once children of er to disappear.” ors? glad to see such a big crowd of ers and all who helped: in any way wratn, are, through the training The Berean class meets this gasoline worries are oy­ young people at the League meet­ week Thursday at 2:30 p. m. at The 0-4-0 Sunday School class o f Christ, developing characters Evangelical Church ing Sunday night The League after the divine similitude, to be the home of Mrs. William Young er when you select our will have a party this Thursday will have a party this Friday. W. F. Boettcher, Minister at 104 Terre Coupe road. sons and daughters of God, to act gas, clean, powerful gas an important part in the occupa­ 10 a. m. Sunday School. The Golden Rule class will have to buy your insurance be­ tions and pleasures of heaven.” 11 a. m. Morning worship. Sub­ a picnic next week Friday, .Tune ject, “ Our Debt, are We Going to —-the favorite fuel. Preaching at 11 a. m. 24, at Pottawotamie Park, South fore you need it and from Thursday— Friday— Saturday Pay It?” Bend. » Prayer meeting on Wednesday No League service Sunday even­ evening at 7:30. an agent who can be found ing-. First Presbyterian Church Drive In S; P E € I A L § 7:30 p. m. Children’s Day pro­ when you need him. Christian Science Society gram. A ll the children and par­ Harry W. Stnver, Minister Shampoo and Marcel, or Shampoo Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. ents are urged to come so that we Church School: 10 a. m. Jack Let Us Serve You Sunday service at 11 a. m. can begin promptly on time. A Miner, Canadian naturalist, pays and Finger Wave, fo r ______Subject, “Is the Universe, in­ missionary offering will be receiv­ this tribute to the church school: With Gas and Oil cluding Man, Evolved by Atomic ed. “The more we invest in Sunday Marcel and Haircut, or Finger- Force?” Prayer •service Thursday even­ School the greater our daily in­ Wave and haircut, f o r ______Wednesday evening meeting at ing at 7:30. come of blessings will be. I have 7:4o. A welcome to all our services. just reasons to bow down and Reading room, located in the ------rO------thank God for the Sunday School Eugene Permanent Waves, $5.0 church at Dewey Avenue and Oak Church of Christ and its influence.” Thousands can bear that same testimony. Street, is open each Wednesday 113 W. Third St. The Insurance Man afternoon from 2 till 4 o’clock. Mark Wall, Minister Morning worship at 11 a. m. Babcock & Coleman ______107 N. Detroit S t. ------Sermon subject, "Is Anything 109 Main St. Rhone 398F1 Christian Science Churches 10:00 a. m. Bible school. Mrs. Certain?” In an era of transition Corner Main and Dewey Phone 275 230 E. Front St. “Is the Universe, including Man, N. E. Boone, Supt. Mr. C. Mills, and flux, of doubt and uncertain­ evolved by Atomic Force?” is Chorister. ty, the human heart cries out for

A ll goods guaranteed as represented and consisting, for the most pari, of merchandise purchased for spring business. 'All at your price, After 13 years of business and due to present conditions, I have decided to devote my entire time to the repair department, and to do this I have decided on drastic measures. Store open during usual business hours, during which time you are at liberty to examine any article. _ ■

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H f “•PASS SIX THE dOtfL^TX.,^K5QRt>... THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932. O. O. F. hall Thursday evening, Scout Council the grounds. The Council will Unveil Monument Social, Organization Activities with their husbands; and families furnish the coffee, etc. Wagner News as: guests. A strawberry short­ Local News The meeting of the council will ■For DeLora Batten cake supper was served. Honors To Hold Dinner Attend I). A ; It. then be held: on the hill side, or The Adult League, o f the Evan­ Honors^ Birthday Luncheon Tues. at, bunco were won by Mrs. Louis at Cemetery Sun. of Her Husband Gray, Mrs. Alice Koons, Miss Robert Roe arrived Monday At Lake Madron if weather will, not permit, it Will gelical church was entertained on Mrs. A. G. Haslett and Mrs. L. from Ann Arbor to spend the Monday evening at the home of ' ' Mrs; Oscar Swartz entertained: M. Desenberg attended the D, A. Mary Peck, Mrs. Mollie Proud, be held in Upton, hall,: I t is ex­ 'A t a garden party at her home on Honors at pinochle were won by summer vacation at the'home of pected, several hundred will take The members of Home Grove the Misses Minnie and Mae Rose. R . luncheon at The Hotel W hit­ his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert The Boy Scout Council will de­ Doris Whittaker returned home ^Tuesday- evening; honoring her comb at St., Joseph Tuesday noon, Mrs. Joe Melvin, Mrs, Jesse Leg­ advantage of inspecting the camp No. 10, Woodman ’Circle of Mish­ “ husband’s birthday; M r; and: Mrs; gett, Mrs. Emma Matzenbacn, Roe. H e was accompanied by a part from the usual custom of with its many o cl (led attractions Sunday from several weeks at as representatives o f the Fort St. college friend, Hanson Kellogg of awaka, Ind., will hold their un­ Lakeside. "Harold; Stark won bridge honors; Joseph Chapter o f Niles. The Mrs. Charles Koons, Mrs. Mollie having; a regular dinner this year, and features, and w ill also be able veiling services in the Oak Ridge Gilbert and by Messrs. Charles El­ Boston, Mass., who went on to to attend the annual meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Stanage * • * * j state regent, Mrs. McDonald of Lakeside the following day. and will convene at the Madron cemetery Sunday afternoon, June Ypsilanti, and the members of the. lis, Louis Gray, Jesse Leggett and spent Sunday at the home of the Auxiliary to Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Pangborn Lake Reservation for this affair. A ll registered Scouters and their 19 at 3 o'clock for the late sover­ state board were guests of honor. Joe Melvin. The next club meet­ latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Li. Meet Monday left yesterday for a visit at the: The meeting will be held on June families, all contributors; and the: eign DeLora Batten, who was a ; The Legion Auxiliary w ill hold ing will be held at the home of 24th and the grounds and build­ Sands. Mrs. Jerry Bowman, with Mrs. home of their son at Reed City, friends of Scouting are urged to member of Mishawaka Grove 26 its regular meeting Monday even­ Entertain Two Mich., to visit at the home of Rev. ing will be open during the entire attend this event, as much infor­ years, The Woodman Circle is ing of next week; At the meet- Emma Matzenback and Mrs. Clias. afternoon and evening for inspec­ Tables Cards Ellis assisting. and Mrs. W . H. Fowler, the latter mation concerning Scouting will the only women's order which Blu* Print* Aing held last week Mrs. Henry Mrs. Lester Miller entertained being their daughter. They went tion by everyone interested in be given. The annual election prects a monument at the graves Zupke gave a fine report on the # » a Scouting. The method of making blue .prints two tables; o f ladies at cards at in company with another daugh­ will take place and the program of their deceased members. O ffi­ was discovered by Sir John Her- proceedings at the Fourth District her home last night. R. X. Club Everyone is invited to bring a for the coming year will be: ap­ cers and members of Mishawaka ter, Mrs, C. P. Forman, and her chel. The details of the process , meeting held; at South Haven Meets Tonight husband of Elkhart. basket lunch and families and proved. The financial set up of will motor to Buchanan to hold, I t was voted to, send rompers to The Royal Neighbor Club will friends will have picnic lunches on the council will also be voted upon. service. have been varied in many ways. Episcopal; Guild meet this evening at the home of Miss Lilly Abell, Instructor in ; the Otter Lake Children’s, Billet., Bridge Party sixth grade in the local schools, ' Mrs. Edith Willard, won the sur­ Mrs. Arthur Myers on Liberty Av­ The local Episcopal, Guild is to leaves Sunday for Terre Haute, prise box. Refreshments were, -__ enue, with Mrs. William Bates as where she will be a guest for sev­ served; by the committee consist-, hold a benefit bridge party at the assistant hostess. ing of Mrs; Jayne Wright, Mrs.[home Of Mrs.^Harry Brown this * s * en weeks at the home of her Goldie Hollenbaugh and Mrs. M a. i afternoon, beginning at 2:15 p. m. brother, E. L. Abell, instructor in QMfljmtl ^ ^ efriqerator Entertain in Honor Indiana State Normal College, lie Pierce, * * * •». of Newlyweds Sunday while she attends the summer ses­ s * Accounting Department Mr. and Mrs. Chester Boswell sion of that institution. Q -i-O Class; Picnic Picnics Friday were host and hostess at a six th e Light. House at New Buf­ Eridav Evening I The accounting department at o’clock dinner Sunday evening falo on next Saturday night, is to The members of the 0-4-0 Sun-| th® Clark Equipment Company honoring Mr. and Mrs. Joe How­ honor Queen Margory, Miss Grand * day school class of the M e t h o d i s t ' will hold its annual picnic Friday ard. Rapids, who was crowned queen • church will go to Clear Lake Fri- evening at Baldwin lake near Ed- # 5? of tlie blossoms during the blos­ 1 day evening fo r a picnic supper. wardstaurg. Is Hostess to som week celebration. She will be Convenience Club escorted by the following prin­ Friendly Circle Encampment Fish Mrs. W. J, M iller was hostess cesses, lone, Miss Ba ttle Creek; Supper Tonight Monday evening to the members Dorothy, Miss Benton Harbor; SENSATIONAL FREE .Meeting’ Today , The members, o f the Friendly Buchanan encampment No. 169 of the Convenience club at a din­ Doris, Miss Three Oaks; Stella, .Circle are meeting this afternoon w ill be hosts, to the members and ner bridge. Mrs. J. C. Strayer Miss Chikaming; and Alice, Miss ■ at the home of Mrs. Jule Thaning, their wives at a fish dinner to be won the honors at bridge. New Buffalo. B y popular request held at the I. O. O. F. hall at S » * » Lynn M cRay and His Command- * * • p. m. tonight. Kebekahs to R. X. Lodge 'M eet Friday * * it M et Friday the syncopation for the event. An TRIAL OFFER DURING Entertain Dinner- The Royal Neighbor Lodge met admission of 50 cents will be The Bayleaf Rebekah lodge No. Bridge Club vSik will hold its; regular meeting Friday evening at the Woodman charged which will include danc­ Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Swartz en­ ing from 9 to 1. Big doings are ..Friday evening of this; week with tertained the Dinner-Bridge club hall, with Mrs. Bertha Huleher *M r; and Mrs. Otto; Reinke as and Mrs, Florence Wooden as the promised for June 25th. Watch at their home Tuesday evening. for them! A number of prominent chairmen o f the entertainment Mr, and Mrs. H. C. Stark won the committee in charge. Bunco was played, the prizes going to Miss personages are expected to be in ‘committee. honors. # # * Dorothy Vincent, Mrs. Chris Lentz, attendance on both evenings, res­ » » * ervations having been made. Entertain Contract Mrs. Fred Welch and Mrs. Ada Home Service Schwartz. ------o------Bridge Tonight Picnic June 28 * » ts ss Mr; and Mrs. Frank Habicht The Home, Service department will entertain the Contract Bridge of the Presbyterian church Will Legion Postpones Frank Mutchler club at their home this evening at hold: their annual picnic at the Meeting This Week a. 6:30 o'clock dinner; followed by Mogford cottage at Diamond lake Ralph RUmbaugh Post of the .bridge. June 2S, having postponed the American Legion has postponed event to that date from June 21. the meeting which was scheduled At Des Moines Portage Prairie i> !S * for this evening until next Thurs­ ’ Home' Ec. Club Evan Mission day evening, on account of the The; Portage Prairie Home Eco- Society Tuesday county Legion meeting to be held The Record is indebted to John -nomic club w ill meet at the home The Women’s Missionary society tonight at Eau Claire. The pur­ Holmes of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for REFRIGERATOR WEEK! of Mrs; W, B. Dale on; Portage o f the Evangelical church met on pose o f the county meeting is the the following excerpt from the Des Itoad, June 2z, starting at 2:30 p. Tuesday afternoon at the home Of formulation of a protest against, Moines Register relative to the m., fast time. Mrs. L." M. d w ell. too lenient sentences for public: illness of Rev. Frank Mutchler. * s * • # • officials convicted of graft. formerly of Buchanan, the son of Comrades; Class W. B. A. Met » * a Charles Mutchler of the Wagner Holds Picnic Tuesday Night Entertain at district and a one-time employe in The Comrades class of the The W. B. A. met Tuesday even­ Diamond Lake the Record office: Evangelical church held a picnic ing at their hail, the entertain­ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Habicht The Rev. F. W. Mutchler, pastor last night at Riverside camp­ ment committee being' Mrs. Emily will entertain the Contract Bridge of Union Park Church of Christ, grounds. Lindquist, Mrs. Esther Koch and club at their summer home at Dia­ was reported at his home, 2722 * 3 s Mrs. M. Gi’oss. Contests were mond Lake at a 6:30 dinner- Hast Ninth St., to be improving Thirty Club held, honors going to Miss Maude bridge this evening. Saturday after having returned Annual Picnic Slate; and Mrs. Myrtle Leggett. from Iowa Lutheran hospital. The Thirty club held its annual Members were invited to attend a Three Evan The Rev. Mr. Mutchler suffered summer picnic at the Strayer meeting o f the- South Bend Review Classes Picnic a stroke of apoplexy While worth­ cottage at Clear lake Monday, June 24. The Mountaineer, Beacon Light ing in his garden on the eve *.o£ with a co-operative picnic at noon and W illing Worker classes of the observance of the ninth anniver­ and a social afternoon. The com­ F. D. I. Host Evangelical church will meet next sary Of his church. A n operation mittee1 in charge was; Mrs. H. C. To Families Friday night for a wienie roast at was performed and his condition Stark and Mrs; A. G. Haslett. The F. D. I. club met in the I. the C. L. W ilcox farm. since has been improving. B. R. DESENBERG & Bro. 1 Sensational Sale Drive Immediate Buying

Red Kap Work S h irts______. FINE SUITS

220 Blue Denim Overalls — ____ S

Dress Socks, any co lo r______A MAJESTIC ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR IN YOUR When we bought these garments we expected them to be sold in pur regular $22.50 to $27.50 line. They’re mighty fine suits,- made to sell at HOME FOR 5 DAYS FREE - . NO OBLIGATION Men’s Balbriggan $25 to $30, but the public demands good clothes at popular prices instead, Union Suits____. so. here goes. A concentrated sale drive in prices you want! Forget what you ordinarily pay for clothes and see this remarkable collection. PHONE 139 Desenberg’s 35 years of reliability is back of each garment. Boys’ Golf Socks, 1 A To prove the advantages of electric refrigeration obligation.—Merely call us and we will deliver a pair ______A */ C and show conclusively the superiority ol Majes­ Majestic for Free Trial. This offer for Majes­ tic Electric Refrigerators, we invite you to use a tic Week only, so hurry. EXTRA SPECIAL Majestic in your home tor 5 days_ F E E S . __No 6 ply Rubber dvi B o o t s ______«p A • t 'd Mien’s Golf Knickers, made by Dutchess) .45 These Features Make Majestic Great Models for Every Purse and Purpose Values to $7.50, sp ecial------*3 Ample Ice Cubes— Fast Freezing. A suitable variety of models— A wide range of Balbriggan Shirts: O O Hermetically Sealed Unit—Lifetime Wear. or Shorts __ tit) C prices, B U T Only one degree of Q U A LIT Y — The All Steel Construction. finest that modern science can produce. Ma­ Boys’ 21c Men’s Golf Hose 1/2 Price Convenient— Sanitary—.Healthful. Union Suits___ Permanent Investment. jestic is by far the most accepted Refrigerator Snowy-White Permanent Finish. ’because of its supreme quality. Men’s fancy 25c Every Worthwhile Improvement. $99.50 and Up, F. O. B. Factory Shirts or Shorts R oy’ s Red Goose Oxfords

Black; tan or brown $035 Majesti© Sales Isiereaseif Men’s, fancy Ray- 25c Values to $3.75, your choice on Socks; 2 pairs 405% The First 5 Months of 1932 as Compared with the Same Period Last Year —A Record Approached by No One Else Special Low Price on Men’s Dress and Work Shoes Majestic Invites Comparison B® B® Desenberg. & B ro HOUSWERTH RADIO SALES ‘‘Everything to Wear for Men and Boys” Phone 139 104 W. Front St. Section Two e News - Editorial THE 5IERRIEN COUNTY RECORD ------— ^— Record Telephone Number Nine | BUCHANAN, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932. NUMBER 24 Record Telephone Number Nine']

Annual. Meeting union services at the Methodist E. E. English Is “I f nominated and elected, I general insurance and real estate church on Memorial Sunday, and 66 promise to give my full and com­ business. "" of Boy Scout about twenty-six scouts marched THAT LITTLE CAME” Inter-nat’l Cartoon Go., N.T.— B y B. Link plete time to the duties of the of­ For the past 20 years, Mr. Eng­ in the parade on Decoration day. Dem. Candidate fice, so that everyone, regardless lish has been one of the leaders bf A t the baccalaureate services, of race or creed, or political or the Democratic party in Berrien Council June 24 June 5, the ushers for the evening For Probate Judge social standing, will be satisfied. county. He feels confident that were all scouts from our troop and -fanm T h e P o t My platform, if elected, is to dis­ he will be the voters’ choice in I GAVE ITT hc The Boy Scout Council will de­ they were glad to be of service. T im e s i AlNT SHY J E. E. English, Benton Harbor charge the duties of this office in the primaries, and will conduct part from the usual custom of The remainder of the time from LAST "BOOST- real estate and insurance man, a just, efficient, and business-like an aggressive campaign. now until camp will bo spent in N o '. Mo l P ot i \'(A T E N manner,” he said. having a regular dinner this year T k a o p e n e d F oa who received his early education assembling their equipment and F ount r e d s , CEHTSTlfeHTr in the New Troy high school, and Mr. English is known in nearly and will convene at the Madron I’M S Q U A R E Famous Cattle Herd Lake reservation for this affair. passing tests, so that all may be \ SAV Tou CANT Too SEE later taught for two terms in the every section of Berrien county. ready. There are about twenty- umri THE l WANT ON£ For eight years he was engaged The Tankervllle estate in the The meeting will be held on June "DIDN'T *5 EE" THESE: TvMQ school two miles west of Three 21th. and the grounds and building four boys planning to attend camp Po-r. "BACht - Oaks, today announced his can­ in the teaching profession in var­ county of Northumberland, England, w ill be open during the entire af­ and they expect to capture all V P O T iM T h a t l a s t r e d s AWAY4 didacy for the office of Judge of ious parts of the county, during is celebrated for its herd of white honors, the week teat they are ternoon and: evening for inspec­ •Ra i s e ; f r o m T h e Probate of Berrien county. part of which time he served as wild cattle, which have been raised there. EMECT-C T IM E , a member of the Berrien County tion by everyone interested in T o o 'a e He will run on the Democratic there for TOO years. There are near­ scouting. UOM T F ool. ticket, and feels confident of the Board of School Examiners. In 1909 he came to Benton Harbor, ly 50 in the herd and the annual up­ Everyone is invited to bring a -(oufLSELF. 6 H Y - keep of each costs about §50, basket lunch and; families and L. R. Mangold is where he has since conducted a friends w ill have picnic lunches on the grounds. The Council Candidate for will furnish the coffee, etc. The meeting o f the council will County Treasurer then be held on the hill side, or if weather will not permit, it will be L. R. Mangold, well known ac­ Sensational V A L U E , held in Upton hall. It is expected countant and former government several hundred wall take advan­ official, today announced himself has made tage o f inspecting the camp with as a candidate for county treasur­ its many added attractions with er at tlie primaries Sept. 13. He its many added attractions and is the second to formally announce features, and will also he able to his candidacy for nomination to attend the annual meeting. this office on the Democratic tick­ AH registered scouters and their et. ( fied for the office, having had 25 fice is handling a greater volume nounce his candidacy. News of transmitted through the seed, Ota years of general business exper­ h. K. MANGOLD of work than ever before and the ience, nearly four of which I w'as his intention to run was received are perpetuated through the buds. office will continue to have an in­ with much interest among his le­ Justice of the Peace in Benton THE and municipal financing in Berrien creasing volume for several years Hence the necessity of using parts gion of friends, not only in Benton Harbor, which gave me a general GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC county, serving as deputy collector to come, this candidate makes it of the plant itself by budding, knowledge of legal forms and le­ of Internal revenue for several absolutely essential that the suc­ grafting and levering. gal procedure. Fine Service! years with offices at both St. Jo­ cessful candidate for this office he seph and Benton, Harbor. In competent and capable. The tax­ Our glasses are fitted with this official capacity he had per­ payers and voters of Berrien sonal contact with a large major­ ■genuine toric lenses, in any county are entitled too, and should ity of Berrien residents and also receive not less than one hundred F^J - shape: pur frames are the the opportunity of familiarizing per cent efficiency in all of our himself with tax conditions in | county offices.” newest, most handsome county. styles. We fit you only Mr. Mangold has never been a when you really need them, candidate for office before, but | Alfalfa Meal Used has always been interested in after a most careful ex­ taxation matters: both local, state j in Feeding Lambs amination. Satisfaction is and federal, he feels that if elect­ guaranteed. ed to the treasurer’s office he would be able to render the voters Ground alfalfa mixed with and taxpayers of Berrien county cracked corn is a very satisfactory a competent, capable and efficient ration for self-feeding lambs, ac­ THE STORE OF OUTSTANDING VALUES AND LOW PRICES BlackniondPs administration. cording to the animal husbandry , He has been a resident of Ber­ department at Michigan State Baking Oven 88c GOME IN FOR A DEMONSTRATION Hedge rien county for twelve years, com­ college where livestock men of Jewelry & Optical Store ing here as a government em­ the state will meet Friday, June One burner Shears oven. If you Niles, Mich. ployee after his discharge from 10, to get the yearly report of the* Arm y in which he served the livestock-feeding experiments. h a v e a $1.85 during the world war, having seen The alfalfa ration for lambs small was used in a trial to find a home amount grown product which could be o t baking 111 used by Michigan feeders to re­ to do, this Polished steel place by-product feeds which have is just blades. Notch Save in Wyman’s June Sales been bought in the past to add what you for heavy cut­ bulk to the lambs’ rations. need! ting. One of the college’s feeding trials wii— hogs was planned to Johnson’s Refrigerator Dishes 6000 sold in January— 6000 more in Feb- find the amount of protein supple­ Harbor and S t Joseph, but i ment which can be profitably add­ throughout the country’s farming Glo-Coat Wax ed to the pork producing ration, a districts, where the candidate has 10c each ruary— 6000 in March— test was also made t'o find if it is a, wide acquaintance built up dur­ desirable to grind grain for hog ing his quarter century as a Ben­ 75c Pt. A ttractlve Here are thousands more of those feed. ton Harbor hardware merchant green glass The report given during Feeders with his father, the late Philip D. Produces shin y, dishes. Keep Day will include trials with all Peters. transparent surface. food longer classes of livestock, and the ani­ “ I have no elaborate platform, [“£“] No rubbing or polish­ during h o 4 mals used in the tests will be ex­ and do not and will not make any ing. Here’s the wax weather. Isn’i hibited so visitors can judge the elaborate claims,” Mr. Peters said. you’ve been waiting this a low comparative merits of tne differ­ “I have had a great deal of cler­ for. Especially good price? Splendid Cannon ent rations used. Members of ical experience and business train­ for linoleum. V V-VT:* awfit i’ the animal husbandry department ing, and I believe I am fitted to w ill discuss the feeding methods. serve efficiently. I shall, if elected, Prominent livestock men will give my best to the office.” ■Gasoline Hang© talk to uie visitors during the af­ Mr. Peters has never before Turkish Towels ternoon program. A noon lunch­ sought a political office. Born $4 7 .9 5 f-o b- Sr’S eon will he held in the meats lab­ in Keeler, he came to Benton Har­ oratory at the college. bor when a boy. When he reach­ ed manhood he went into the hardware business with his father, $52.95 Delivered Boy Scout Camp who once served as supervisor from the fourth ward. , Welfare Ranges. Absolute safety assured. Economi­ A Great W ill Open June 26 Mr. Peters has always been ac­ cal. It has all the modern, handy features you’ve al- tive in fraternal, circles. He is a ...... wanted. Other models— low oven range, §39.85 past exalted ruler of the local rod. 3 Burner Itangette—§29.85 Delivered. Now that the spring roundup is Elks, and also a prominent mason. Tennis Rackets over, scouts are turning their at­ Each tention to the big summer camp $1.00 and up which will start June 26th, at First National Journal Fine Wilson rackets at $2,95j Madron lake. Carpenters are busy Our first national newspaper was §3,95 and §5.00. There’s a racket making several changes in the Ihe National Intelligencer, estab­ BIRD for every pocketbook at Kerr’s. A ll First Quality— No Seconds club house so that still better ser­ lished in Washington October 81, vice may he given campers. A 1800. It was founded by Samuel Tennis Balls new 100-foot pier is to be erect­ Harrison Smith, who went to Wash­ BATHS Double Thread and Durable ed and a large float which will be ington from Philadelphia for this One Burner, fitted up with a 16-foot diving 3 for $1.00 White with Colored Borders tower. Work is to commence purpose at the suggestion of Thomas Three balls paclted in scaled can. soon on the marksmanship range Jefferson. Wilson balls, best quality. Buy i good balls tliis year. which will be built on the north uaawmw »jiggi Rose, Green, Gold, Orchid side of the camp grounds to take Thi. Day’* Work Finished in lovely shades of Mrs. Melvin Boyle of Buchanan care of merit badge work along ivory and, green. Just the thing $ Today is your day and mine, the 2.98 lias the most beautiful new Size 18x36 inch that line. The new sailing can­ for light summer lunches. oes, six of them given to the camp only day we have, the day in which Round Oak Range. It is por­ Makes an attractive gift. Cream colored bird baths. Decorated top celain enamel in lovely shades— by L. C. Upton, president o f the we play our part. What ,oUr parr '■ •-•rtfOTIrUMiJIIl and base. Don't wait any longer! Here Limit of 24 to a Customer council, have arrived in Benton may signify In the great whole we cream and tan. H ay Rope is a bird bath of good quality at an amaz­ Tn ttie last few days we’ve also Harbor and will soon be taken to may not understand:; but we are ingly low price. It is graceful and artistic the lake. One of them is now here to play It, and now is our Government Specification placed these attractive new on display on the floor of the Manila Rope and will make your lawn much more at­ Round Oaks in the homes of Price on Wyman’s Convlhient time. This we know: it Is a part of tractive. Won’t you come in and just Sears Roebuck store, thru the % in., 100 ft...... $2.35 Mrs. Jenkins of Eau Claire and courtesy of Mr. Riley, the manag­ action, not of whining. It is a part look at these beautiful bird baths? Mrs. John Fowler of Bond oi -at-the-Door Service— 15c er. .Special attention is to be of love, uoc cynicism. It Is for us % in., 100 ft. ___ $3.35 the River. given all water sports this year to express love in terms of human as there will be three American helpfulness.—Rev, David Starr Jor­ Bed Cross men on the waterfront dan. Supplies are coming in daily for GEORGE WYMAN-£ CO. the handicraft department and w ill not he long- before the camp many new features will be added will be filled to capacity. Rates The Kerr ardware Co. this year at a much reduced cost are much less this year, thus en­ South Bend, Ind. to campers. abling; many hoys to attend who W ith the registrations: 'coming have not been able to do so be­ 123-125 Main St. Niles, fViidiigai^ in to the Area office daily, it fore.

i RE-TW O '"'"'*"1 TH E BERRU2N C0 UNTXRECORD';* THURSDAY, jtJNE 16,-1§32. A. & P. Sales Week's .Worst Pun ■DOROTHY; DARN 1Y j^ ^ Ghdrl^fMcWanusl Tlie principal figure in- a .new $72,432,836 in English novel Is a: fellow .who makes bis living writing' bad checks. We want to be the first to the Past Month say the character Is overdrawn;— New York Post.. Sales of The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea company for the four week period ending M ay 2S, were Dr. L. Donald Kelsey $72,432,8S6. This compares with $81,053,595 fo r tlie same period in OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN 1931, and is- a decrease of $8,620,- Redden Bldg. Buchanan, Mich. 709, or 10.63 pYr cent. ... Pliones;,’ May sales, expressed in tons, Office I2IF1 ’ Ttes: -121F2: were estimated as 437,687 this year, compared with 443,449 in May 1931. This is a decrease in quantity of merchandise sold of- 5,762 tons, or 1.30 per cent. Average weekly sales in May were $18,108,222, compared with $20,263,399 in; T931, a decrease of $2,155,177. Average weekly ton­ M iles; Mieia.o nage sales were 109,422, com­ pared with 110,862 in May 1931, a Asa^t; S ee B etSeai decrease of 1,140.

zoo spent Friday night at the gelistic service at 7:30. The Sun­ Wnu Eisele home. ; 5 Christian Assembly day programs have three services, Dime Branch Mr. and Mrs. John Kepler spent Bible school at 10:00 and worship Sunday at Plymouth, Ind., visiting To Be Held at Rock at 11:00 a. m., with afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Williams relatives. 1 communion service and evening and family o f Niles spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs, L. B. Rough call­ Lake July 31-Aug-. 14 service the same as for the week in the Harry Williams home. ed on Mr, and Mrs. John I. Rough days. Sunday services are often them home for a three week’s visit in Buchanan one afternoon last attended by more than 2000 peo­ Children’s Day Dr, Higbee was called to see week. Speakers for the fifteenth an­ The Galien stores were1 all clos­ John Dickey Saturday and Sun­ nual session, of the Rock Lake ple. A large tabernacle provides ed Thursday afternoon during the J. E. Vite is rebuilding and en­ for classes and meetings. Rock Held Sunday at day, but he is better now. larging his barn, Christian Assembly will include funeral of Marvin Lintner. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frame of South many of the outstanding leaders Lake is on M46 fifteen miles west The Early Fly Catches the Mr. and Mrs. Ray Norris were Mrs. James Knox is in Epworth of Alma. Maple Grove Bend were visitors in the Earl hospital for treatment. of the Church of Christ in Mich­ Early Trout j i Saturday afternoon callers on Mr, F.oundv home Sunday. igan, Indiana, Illinois and Ohio. ■------o------i and Mrs. Charles Vinton. Mr. "and Mrs. Ora Briney and ------o------The NitfiiM Hills The Maple Grove church was i Fifteen years ago a group of children came to the Joe Fulton and the man who buys his winter’s supply of coal filled to Its capacity Sunday even- ‘ W alter C, Hawes of Buchanan, Portage Prairie leaders in the Church of Christ Tlie Nilgiri hills form a plateau tng in observation of Children’s was a supper guest at the Slocum home from Buchanan and Miss of the fifth district of Michigan rather than a range, of hills, rising early in the season, catches the lowest price. • Jane and Marie stayed for this Day. I The program was given by hotel Friday evening. Defeats 3 Oaks gathered on the shores of tlie abruptly from tlie plains ot south b Mr. and Mrs. Ed Babcock spent week. Beautiful lake for a day or so fel­ India to a height of 6,500 feet above SI the” children of the Sunday school Mr. and Mrs. Paul Spink and lowship in preaching, teaching ir. charge1 of the superintendent, the week-end at Turkey Run Farit, Ail-Stars i 1-2 sea level. The highest point is called. Inch baby and Gladys Catherman of and planning for a larger program Mrs. Florence Gilbert, Many from South Bend spent several days in DocUbetta, which is S.7C0 feet high. Olive Branch and victauy attend­ for the district. Out of this meet­ Miss Helen Armantrout of South the Dell Smith home and returned The Portage Prairie nine played ing tlie assembly idea sprang, and They are sometimes referred to as ed. Mrs. Myrtle Kicffer and Bend spent the week-end with her ^ome Sunday. the Blue mountains. three sons played in the orchestra. good ball Sunday when they de­ now it has become one of the out­ parents, Alt'- and Mrs. C, A. Ar- j Miss Catherine Kenney of Ga- feated the strong Three Oaks All- standing assemblies in the broth­ This" Sunday school is well at­ xnantrout. j j;en spent Sunday in the Gene A dollar saved is a dollar anade, and in this-way; tended* every Sunday, having an Stars 11 to 2. The All-Stars got erhood of the Church of Christ, Self Stickrrs Mr. and Mrs, Louis Smith and t Sprague home, their two runs on over throws at and ranks among the leaders in ■J-J) ,____ • _ i average of 95 to 100 throughout two sons of Milwaukee, and Mrs, | Miss Lois Boyce of Buchanan is third. H. Lewis, Greyhound star, “Ego.” writes an amateur eiymol-’ the year. the field of summer conferences. John Rogers of New Carlisle, were j spending this week wiu. her sis- struck out 11 men and allowed but The assembly includes a school ogist from Erie, “has always seemed! Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and, ter, Mrs. Lester Olmstead. four hits. Liska and Kell did most of methods of five classes for the to me ns being that bnm&tyiusiiesisi Tigers Caught Mrs. Chris Andrews. Mr. and ’■ Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lutz of of the hitting for the Greyhounds, first five days ofi-each of the two which inflates p o m p oils{personstwitii? Mrs. A.’ F. Storm and son, Har- i Saginaw and Miss Muraie VanTil- the first getting a three-bagger weeks. The afternoons are given the importances of tlfeir s b lg 'i’s. Napping Sunday old, of. Niles, were evening guests, burg of South Bend spent the and a single, the latter, a double over to supervised- recreation. Two Would ■ci’pfiVptinj]??.!'he ■-•requests of; Mrs: L. W. Johnson of Buchan-1 week-end in the Ed Vantilburg and two singles. The two Letch­ services are held in the evening, a the Dis'nalt-hlBerald;' “giving me er brothers, known better as the vesper service at 6:30 in change «1H. A. •-HATTENBAGH^ an: and Mrs. Frank Lawson spent! home. your definition of the word?” . “Not * By Galien Nine Friday in. LaPorle. i Mrs. William Riley and Children “ Speed Kings,” each stole two. Of the young people and an evan- ;■ . COAL-COKE-iCE |V : A bv bases. at all.” couiplies the editor: ’’Ego' is J of / 1\ v v ^Buchanan, - Witch. .. R Babcock spent several days of Otsego and Mrs. Brant of •V • ii ' ' ~.<;y A loaded Galien team caught last week with his brother, D r . ‘ Spinks Corners, came Saturday to The line-up was as follows: the glue that enables a man to get Dayton playing listless ball Sun­ LlOvd Babcock of Detroit. Satur-1 the Gene Sprague home and at- Greyhounds A T R H stuck on himself." . .. . day and defeated the Tigers by c'ay he axtended the annual re- tended Sunday School at Olive Joe Letcher, 3 b ______2 0 1 the score of 5 to 1. The Tigers, Union of the 96th division o f the Branch Sunday. They called Sellers, s s ______3 1 1 M o H e r a lioweveY, are not down hearted Marines held in Chicago. . on as many old friends as they E. Miller, 3b, s s ___•______4 2 1 and promise their many fans that A colored quartette,from. Missis- • could Monday and Tuesday. Every Kell, r f ______5 2 3 Optical Service they will be back in their usual siopr, wilt - give an entertainment-1 one was so glad to see them. > Liska, lb ______5 2 2 Glasses Properly stride Sunday when they play the in the M. B. church on Thursday] fbe Gene Sprague fam ily and Bachman. I f ______4 0 0‘ fast Wj.ttner Dairy team o f South evenin'’’. j guests, Mrs. Brant and Mrs. Rilev.-1 H- Letcher, c f ______4 1 1 Fitted Bend at Dayton. W inner's have The SCarnation club was enter-1 and children, attended- Children’s I. Miller, c ______3 0 0 not lost a game this season but tallied last Wednesday afternoon i Bay at Maple Grove Sunday even-| Morgan, 2 b ______4 1 9 . the Tigers will show the cow-t ati the home of Mrs. Charles Part- ■ tag. A good crowd was present t H, .Lewis, p ______4 2 1 hoys a. brand of ball that wilt rv4ge^ ; Picnic dinner was served j and a fine entertainment was en-j All-Stars leave them bow-legged. at‘hooiV-anfi bunco was played.*Mrs joyed, fMangold, l b ______,___4 1 1 The score: Clara Partridge won the first Air, and Mrs. John Clark and t Snyder, s s ______4 0 0. Dayton AB R H E w ,.prize, Mrs. Hazel Warlike won the’ son* Ralph, and Mrs. Lovina Hoi- j Pretz, 3b ______4 0 1 Faso, ss ------3 0 0 2 i ;second ; prize, Mrs. Clara Dodd, .the .lister visited ta the Frank Hollis-, Renbarger, c ______4 - 0 1 Straub, 2b ______3- 0 I i l i Pfut, I f ______4 1 0 Sebasty, lb - — 4 0 0 0 0 berg won the house prize. . Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hollister Hampton, i f ______4 0 1 R. Rotiien, c _____ 4 0 1 1 0 Jesse Toland and son, Bruce.: are here from Texas fbr a month [ Long. 2b ______3 0 0 SaUsburv, p ______4 0 1 1 0 Mrs. Louise Scott and o-rarrd-' o.r two. They expect to go from ' H. Stanage, c f ______2 0 (j .i * B U R K E , Itic. H U MAN S says this Nurse L . Leltfer, i f ______3 1 1 0 it, if Benton Harbor, 'here out west to visit Mrs. Hollis- i L, Stanage, p ______2 0 0 Richter, 3 b ______4 0 0 0 0i :sts o f Mrs. Fanny 1 tor’s people. Mr. Hollister has Postriga ______0 0 ’0 Optometrist & Mfg., D; Rqtzien,. c f ____ 4 0 1 0 Q'yTruitt, .been in ill health and it is hoped ------o------Optician F. Loiter, r f ______3: 0 1 0 Q1 Mr. and Mrs. M. V, Fbster and ,the rest will greatly help him. Source of Cocaine 228 S. Michigan St. T o ta ls ______32 1 6 5 ■te Mr. and M rs.1 Air. and Mrs, Firmoil N ye and Galien ’ 3! Cocaine is obtained from the . South Bend,. Ind Mensinger, s s ____ 4 i 1 2 David Barber o f Niles were Sun- I guest. Mrs. Anna Moulton, visited leaves of the cocoa shrub, which Established 1900 Smith, cf1______3 i 0 0 1 *day afternoon guests of Mr. and >n the Alanson Brown home near grows on the eastern slopes of tlie D. Hess. I f ______3 0 1 0 1 Mrs. M. H. Nelson. ' Sodus; Sunday and called on the Andes ami in .lava. Ceylon and tlie W. G. Bogardus, G; D., at Decker^ lb ______4 2 2 0 0! Mrs, E ffie Couchman of Three - Henry Glade fam ily near Benton Malay stales. f’ncaine was first Paul Thayer’s Jewelry Store 3 o 0 0 o ; U n ru h .-rf____ :____ Oaks, spent Thursday with her | Harbor. isolated hy. Niemann in I860, its an- Niles, Micli. Klasner, 3 b ______1 0 0 1 a! daughter, Mrs. Tom Foster. | ------o------Keifer, '2 b ______3 0 1 0 i ! e-tlii tic (|unli!ios discovered hy Von Gn Wednesdays, from 9 to 5 Mr. and Mrs: Tom Foster, Mrs. 1, , Amvii in i!» o and first used as si H. Lee* p ______4 0 0; 0 ° f Anna Harner and Mrs. Alta H a r-! i Miller, - c ______3 0 0 0 o! ner were business callers in i | Portage Prairie surgical milliner by Kolier in llsS-i. Heckathoru,,______1 1 1 0 0 ,Niles Saturday afternoon. Unsenmler ______2 0 1 0 0i The Galien State Bank has1 re- i • T o ta ls ______wl r> 7 3 ■ti cently been designated by the) The Live Wire class picnic will • board1 judiciary committee of the I be held Saturday, June IS, at Kud- ; supervisors as a Berrien county i son, lake. A pot luck dinner at 1 i depository. (o’clock. G a lie n [email protected] ; Mr. and Mrs, 0: C: Glover at- - Mr. and Mrs. Wm. F. Eisele and i tended the graduation exercises at.Mr: and Mrs. M. H. Vite and their Mr;, and Airs, Tom Foster at- Niles Thursday evening of which . daughter, Dorothea, and Afrs. J. I. tended The funeral of the late Miss Loretta Grafford was a j Rough of Buchanan spent the Janies. Brachim held at Rolling member, - week-end with Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Prairie.-Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs, A. F. Storm and ■ Chase at Galesburg, Mich, Mr. and Airs. David 3arber. Mr. son, Harold, o f Niles were Sunday ! Children’s day will be observed and Mrs. Charles Ingles- o f Niles, evening guests of Mrs. Lydia Slo-! Sunday, June 19, at the church, and Mrs. Ira Sizer of Sawyer were cum. (A good program will be heard by Stuiday* afternoon guests of Mr. Eddie VanTilburgY who; has been.’ those who attend. Come one, conns and Mrs; Charles Vtaton. * a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry all: A free-will offering will be Miss Lillian Malone returned to* Lutz at Pontiac fo r the past two | taken, her home iu Los lUigeles. after weeks; returned home. Saturday- ! Miss Dorothea Eisele spent the spending a few weeks wish. Mrs. Mrs: Doane Straub and daugh-! week-end with Miss Dorothy Clarence Hess, who; accompanied ter, Leona, were Saturday business 1 Roelof at Galesburg, her home for an indefinite Stay. callers; in Buchanan and. Niles. Rev. W. H. Watson of Kaiama- Ernest Jamas, who; has; nine Mise Lane learns from Mrs. Chester Orchard’9 nurse o f acres of strawberries picked 253 • s cases last Sunday. Berries were a, 51 — :------i Peoria, IlL, that cars, as well as humans, need good care* good quality and sold very cheap. The Orchards have driven a Ford Model A 30,280 miles. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Glover left Tuesday for a visit with their son, To Preferred Stockholders of Rexford Glover and family, at An Interview by Flint. “They will attend the grad­ c?but there is one sure way to take my' baby to the doctor,! uation. exercises ’of the Flint high school o f which their two. grand­ INDIANA & MICHIGAN M a r g a r e t L a n e • make it run smooth and give but th ere’s n ev er been an children; Miss Qrpha Glover, and Reporter, London Daily Express no trouble. My husband put ounce of-engine trouble.’’ Frank Glover, axe members. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lutz of ELECTRIC COMPANY . and. International Ncios Service me up to it. He insisted I use * • • Pontiac spent Saturday and Sun­ Iso-Vis and he was right.” day with the latter’s, parents, Mr. LOWEST COST .REFRIGERATION NY NURSE will telL you the Mrsi Orchard’s30,280trouble« and Mrs; Ed VanTiiburg. Miss free miles prove again what Nola VanTilburg accompanied L same. A clean system We drove fast and smooth This is to .notify you that tho Depends on the mechanism, not on the price tag J spells a clean hill o f health. from her suburban home the Iso-Vis has demonstrated in laboratory tests and in A. A. A. regular quarterly dividend due n p H E Monitor Top mechanism o f the 'General And that goes .for cars, as well. odd mile to the hospital. tests on thelndianapolis Speeds * J- Electric Refrigerator is the most reliable, efli- " What’s wrong with that?” she cient and the cleanest refrigerating unitev.er build Ask Mrs. Chester Orchard tvay—Positive Lubrication smUed.,,flicking off the ignition, wiiet@ There is; not a single moving part exposed to o f 7:16-Mfest Maywood, Peoria, Protection.Iso-Vis(aSUmdard "sounds pretty good, doesn’t it? the dangers o f dust, moisture or tampering .fin- Illinois. She’s Both a nurse and Oil product) will not thin-out W o r l d JULY gers.The entire mechanism is hermetically sealed- a motorist; and she sees to the "YifeU, I suppose I take good front dilution. See the Ball iri-steel inside the M onitor Top.- It requires:no p r h f& attention : : : not even oiling. clean running of her car the . care o f i>er» X have her over­ arid Bottle Test at Standard same way she keeps a trained IisuietiLasec-EScientiosisly as I Oil-stations and dealers* will be paid on that date to DOWN PAYMENTS Balance in eye on tlie heaJ.fi> o f -her feahy as low as. 23 months daughter. Indiana & Michigan Electric Go, " I don’t know much, about a pfaaiw i 7% Preferred Stockholders ear’s ; insides,” she admitted,

;C0& ldsgne. Iso r is * re fined by o u f; WS- 2 . ■ ’ ’new: pro cess—givinj^it an o.ffzcioncy of record on the books of the company GENERAL^ ELECTRIC w hich is exceeded only hy Isc-Vis. The price As 25c-a quarc, on June 4,1932. , ALL-STEEL RSFRIGERATUR T A -N D A R COMPAQ r THURSDAY, JUKE IS. gjfe GQ'tiifiY R&£s>feb PAGE AGREED. j .

Mapping Canadian Forests tain; central division,, Fred D. N el­ ■, ..Progress Too Much Specialism? Arthur E. Huntley son, right-of-way agent, Traverse ,: Intellectually,- as*well: as pplltt- Excessive specialism in every In areas. covered, with forests: City; secretary,- Frank L. Curtis, -THAT LITTLE GAME”- ■THEY’LL PAY TWICE . bally 'the direction of' all true prog­ branch of human activity Is be- growth ami filled with intricate'wa­ Heads Telephone Detroit,- assistant secretary of tercourses, surveying by ordinary Michigan Bell Telephone company; \'wE<30T fie>o\rr F IF T Y ress is toward greater freedom and coming the fatal characteristic of o o d Su r e ground,.methods is laborious and ex­ Pioneers of America treasurer; Arthur C. Kuhn, Pleas­ Pf^lRS OP SHOBS V4HVSH 5 v fl* I I G ! F l N B / along an endless secession of Ideas. modern civilisation.—Dr. Fells Ad­ pensive.. H ie topographical survey; ant Ridge, auditor of disburse­ WOo SvRDS BooirtT (AB l W lA g I 'ThBI'u . T h in ®.' —Bovee. .“ " ler., department of the interior. Canada. vnb A lw a y s ments o f the company., U4 WHB W»5T -XWBuva MOKVHSv (VtHES- F ir w h e r b hits developed a method of mapping Arthur E. Huntley of Sag.'naw, Mr. Huntley; who succeeds Eli -TrtrmB V\KB NBSM, Sou . ARB Central division, commercial sup­ ME, these areas from aerial phonographs L: Dietsch o f Detroit; division, con­ HHovt i NRVER VJBM* A p/S« t h b y , erintendent of the Michigan Bell taken by the Royal Canadians air struction superintendent; as presi­ frtOR&H k \ X B E K ,~ CToNSS t force. . Telephone company, has been elected president of Wolverine dent, became a telephone inspector •YttSfUB SVXB I41HB MO Chapter, iSTo., 10; Telephone Pio­ at Grand Rapids in 1S95. advanced IP Koo BHIDS CKrt ^ Low Week-End Fares neers of America, by the chapter’s to manager at Holland in 1896; 'gM t'kC — manager at Muskegon in 1900,, dis­ 600 members scattered throughout trict manager at Ludington in M Reduction for the Round Trip the state, Mr. Huntley has Deen 1905, district manager at Benton ■ V Each Week to Sepfc. 3, incl. in telephone service since3.S95 and Harbor in - a ll; went to Petoskey i is widely known throughout Mich­ in the; same position in 1915 and to igan, He w ill assiune office July Saginaw in that capacity in 1919. ONE-WAY FARE plus one-tenth 1., The voting was by mail and He was named district commer­ announcement of the result was TO ALL POINTS IN THE FOLLOWING STATES: W a s h e r s cial superintendent in Saginaw- made, by Frank L, Curtis, secre­ district in 1919; and central di­ Indiana Pennsylvania New Jersey tary; in Detroit yesterday,. vision commercial superintendent Michigan N , Y ork Delaware W Other officers elected are as fol­ in 1920; He is president of the lows; Vice presidents—Detroit di (Lower Peninsula) Washington, vision, M . B, Huntoon, assistant Saginaw Rotary club. Ohio Maryland n. o. HOUSWERTH equipment engineer, Detroit; Mr. Huntley was formerly in southern division, Harry Paulsen, charge of this territory. Also to many destinations in Canada, .Illinois, Kentucky, Vir­ district plant superintendent, Kal­ ginia and West Virginia. U a d i © S a l e s Tickets good in coaches also in Pullman cars (on payment of amazoo; northern division, T. O. Hard to Be Friendly Pullman fare) on all trains leaving at or after noon of Friday 104. \V. Front. St. Phone 330 Manes, plant chief, Iron Moun- Many people’s efforts to make and all day Saturday, returning to- leave destination until friends are timid, awkward and midnight' following Monday...... abortive.-—Woman’s Home Com­ f&ODA&S KODAK SUPPLIES panion. Special Coach Fares over Fourth of July ■Jr/hi. of On&Way Fare for Round Trip FILM DEVELOPING Motion Pictures and Boolci 3 / to Destinations in Viewing motion pictures cause* Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana F&u&'tam Sesrvice Magazines less eye strain than reading a book 3t. Louis, Mo.; Louisville, K y .; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Wheel­ for a slmtlnr length of time, says ing, W. Va.; Parkersburgh, W. Va.; Niagara Falls, N . an officer of the National Society Y.; Buffalo, N. - Y,; and intermediate points. Good going WHITMAN’S CANDIES for the Prevention of Blindness. after 3:00 a. m., July 1st, all day, July 2nd and 3rd, and until 1:00 p. m., July 4th— Return limit, July 5th.

Corn’# Many Products For Information Apply Ticket Agent The Corner Drug Store Not much moire than half of the Phone 212 great corn crop of the country finds its way to ttie dining table. The re­ MICHIGAN CENTRAL mainder goes to the refineries to be made up into a large variety of ma­ terials. These include the "spar­ klers” which do Fourth of July duty, SEARCH FOR GOLD Community Information Bureau explosives, face cream, soap, arti­ Michigan Central Railroad m. and 4:15 p. in. for the west See This Improved ficial rubber and silk, varnish, tan­ OF FAMED BANDIT Eastbound stop at Galien. o ning extracts,, radio batteries, tex­ No. 46. 4:48 a. m. Regular stop. Mail addressed from Buchanan tiles, paper carpet, mucilage, salad No. 10. 2:16 p. m. Flag stop for to St, Joseph- and Benton Harbor ROUND OAK dressing, sirup, cooking oil, vinegar Ancient Papers Tell of Ali passengers for Detroit and is not delivered there until the fol­ points north, of Kalamazoo. lowing morning, with the excep­ ;ONyOURMfi< 3AZIHE* and milk acids. Some considerable Pasha’s Hoard. Gas Range at its New Low Price success has attended the manufac­ No, 58. 5:14 p. m. Regular stop. tion of special deliveries. No. 42, 7:22 p. m. Stops only to Mail .addressed to South Bend is A very spedaliarrangement enables ns to offer oar subscribers ture of paper from the stalks, and Athens,—Treasure amassed by let off Chicago passengers. delivered on the morning, of the the most sensational magazine values, of all time. Ft>r'.Jneti'i, it is probable that at no distant day the notorious All Paslia of Tepe- No. 56. 1:57 a. m. Flag stop. following day, with the exception fraction more than the price ol this newspaper yotj^can^ebijl^ a profitable use will be found for leui, who terrorized the Balkans Westbound of special deliveries* one of these, fine- Chib' Offers.r - - — the lilies of corn stalks which nc- 150 yeftrs ago, is being sought No. 45. 4:07 a. m. Regular stop. A ll air mail, whether east or cumnlate each year on. the farms of near Janina, in northern Greece, No. 5. Daily except Sunday. 11:33 westbound, is taken to Chicago.. Pathfinder (WWy), 26Jssoe* this country. where the pasha held his court. a. m. Regular stop. Mail sent from Buchanan as 'late; Working from recently discov­ No. 43. 6:55 p. >m. Regular stop, as 4:15 p. m. will, connect with the ered documents, archeologists have One local freight west daily in east and westbound mail planes «fv* Famous Dinosaur Skeleton found a tunnel which supposedly the morning. N o regular local the same night. X I Illustrated: Mechanical l yr- ri-ii The dinosaur on exhibition at leads to the buried treasures. In freight east. Parcel post addressed to South the tunnel they discovered the skel­ Bend and mailed here later than , American Poultry JmL, I yr./ Peabody museum of Yale university ‘ * The Farm Journal; etons of nine workmen hired by MAIL SCHEDULE 4:15 p. m. w ill hot arrive there I y < is nearly 74 feet long, 16 feet high, All and killed by him so that lie Outgoing East until the morning of the second I THIS NEWSPAPER. ONE YEAR and the skeleton weighs six and a alone would know the hiding place. 10:15 a. m. First class only. day, since it'is taken to a terminal. half tons. Its estimated weight The splendor of All’s court at 4:15 -p. m. First class and parcel N. Ind. R, R. Bus when alive was between 87 and 40 Janina has become almost a legend post. Busses leave for Niles and tons. The specimen was discovered throughout the Balkans. Ambassa­ 6:00 p. m. First class and parcel South Bend at 8:30 a. m., 10:30 by William Reed in Wyoming in dors of the great powers came to post. a. m., 12:30 p. m., 3:30 p. m., him and the poet Byron was his: Outgoing West 5:30 p. m., 7:30 p. m. 1SS1, and the hones were brought 11:00 a .m. First class, parcel A ll buses wait at the local to Yale under the direction of Prof. guest. He was successively 'he ally of Napoleon and Lord Nelson. At post. Standard Oil Filling Station on Woman’s World, I yr. Ochnie! O. March, whose research the peak of his career his glory 4:15 p. m. First class. Days avenue four minutes, with Pathfinder (WWy), I yr. Afl_ resulted in this type’s being known outshone that o f the sulcan in Con­ 6:00 p. m. First class and parcel the exception of the first in the Needlecraft, 2 yrs.V f Fpf , as; Brontosaurus excelus. At Tale’s stantinople. post., morning, which waits twenty min­ bicentennial in 190.1 a-portlon of-Hie Jr- Humble Start. ■ . -The-mails made up at 11:00 a. utes. Good Stories, I yr.V Only- skeleton was mounted and exhibit­ Yet All arose from a humble be­ Mythological Monster Successful Farming,' I yr.y ed. Lack of space prevented the ginning. He was born in 3.741 at Real Purpose Served ! The “griffin” was a mysterious THIS NEWSPAPER. ONE YEAR erection of the rest, which remained Tepeleni, a. hill village in Albania. by Cultivating Hobby ! In storage. A few years ago the Ilis father, who held the hered­ monster, hall’ Hon and half eagle, I f more people had real hobbies mounting was begun nnew, the hail itary office of bey of Tepeleni, was believed by the Greeks to keep there would be fewer cases of nerv- , NttOL of Peabody being especially con­ killed :by neighboring chiefs who watch over the gold of Scythia. ous breakdown, according to Dr. H. structed to house this one animal. seized his territory when All was fourteen years old. li\ Kilander, writing in Hygeia, the Nature .Preserves Balance Ali was left iu the care of ills Health' Magazine. Hobbies keep “A woman who is unbeautiful," mother, 1-Chamko, a woman of ex­ children one of mischief and they said HI Ho, .the sage of Chinatown, Slow Starting traordinary character. She herself Modern machinery often requires relieve the monotony of routine life "should not despair. Heaven has Gentlemen: formed a brigand hand and in­ for adults. It is well to be able to been generous in distributing in a Considerable time to get under spired the boy with her own fierce efficient working speed. A new 1201 lose oneself for an hour, an eve­ the world many men who' are' temper. both well-to-do aud near-sighted.” ton gyrostabilizer, described by Col­ Within a few years lie regained ning, or even for a day in some­ The Countess Model iCbtek otter $ 1.00 ence of a burled hoard was consid­ Y ered a legend until the; recent dis­ f- IV*.* covery of the document Now the s* • T Grass Rugs, ❖ discovery of the tunnel has stimu­ S ® > -9 5 T lated efforts to find the treasure. • f for the porch, $2.50 . t 5 Y Old Amarican Fort !❖ ' Imported Japanese Y Fort Livingston reservation is sit­ * S-- T uated on the west end of Grand Grass Rugsy 6x9 foot, $6.75 Terre island, in the parish of Jeffer­ N o; messy rubbing in N o long * VHf It' Y son, La. It was bought by the state drawn out/treatments. From the first 0 ■ Values $10 and $15 Y from. Etienne de Gruy, in 1834,. and Instant you: use it> a n ew beauty is: Decorative Lawn Y Immediately after ceded to the yours. A s o ft::: Alluring ::: Ivory Y United States for the purpose of toned complexion that reflects Furniture Y fortification. Beauty and Dignity; Begin, to-day.’ Y Vi/> . | The greatest values you . Paean On ards Y Pecan frees may bear a few nuts ORIENTAL when three to five years of age, hut; .f-i. T t.4?e generally speaking, pecan orchards SREAM $ have ever purchased Y QO&JRAUD *£ do not come Into commercial.bear­ WhHv.FiMbW +V Y ing until ;they are about ten years Rachel Shades - “ Niles Oldest Furniture Dealers if: T old. With proper carcrand adequate S i K t m fb rT R U L S f M ' w /spacing the: trend in yields-is then Y upward as the orchard grows older. JUNi jj' uMl ^ itT^ppslHoa. when'iT grown on'the- fripud^ of-the: cacti is’-the cactus" fruits o f‘ this ispecies -have a'erink gl^e’V3i ot’tay itianit. T l _iiT ’■* ' . mi_ -The' . ^delicate J —l'f — A'i.i .wren, . , T*- It builds «{1 na 1large, o w v n . ^1 flask- o c"lr_ son, "flesh, and black seeps, -fO; fragranpje-JgjETBtie‘ usually ’sglitarf shaped ries.t' of grasses arid .twigs, minding one p f the Georgia 4Y0-t§r p.^K'"-Hosspms,f nnd'fttie rsolid:;cen- which it lines with feathers. The melon in;- these respects. The Pgr ter ' gfltirfflKFyallow ' stamens, ■ rich nest is entered by. a covered way -pago Indians eat both the meat'534! with' ppilen, attract a ^variety of or neck several inches long. The aiid seeds)' insects; ’^The "^13^0,se never: put- • column cactiis, like most of its steygiStf-^Maiy-l^ag^alin”- ris "a relations)- is a prolific 'producer of One Useful Mouse

the front door of the Court House thence west sixty-seven (67) feet; Register of 'Deeds' for Berrien ■j. Published by .'-vi ^ Briefly Told. adjustment, of all claims and de­ the City of St. Joseph, Michigani Laws- to Curb'.Indians mands against said deceased.. ^ in the City of St. Joseph, Michi- thence north twenty-six and one- County, Michigan, on the 23rd day in said County of Berrien, tiiat THE RECORD PRINTING iCO. Ijn til tomorrow, becomes..yesterr Laws against nudity' on* 1 the- pub­ V ' It ' IS Fur!tESE Ordereci;*: That pub- ’ •giih', i'xi Said Comity of Berrien, half (26%) fe'et;' the'rice east of December, A:. D: 1922 in Liber b.eing, the place of holding the day; men: will be blind to the good, sixty-seven (67) -feet; thence south 144 of Mortgages, on page 242, Circuit Court within tlie said A. B. jicClujeii ‘c lic streets during, daylight hours lie notice thereof.be given.- by pub­ that being the .place .of holding fortune: of tlid present. ,. lication o f a* copy :of ’this- order-,: the Circuit Cbuft within the said twenty-six and one-half (26%) and . ' ' )*•' County, on the Sth day of August, Managing Editor one? adorned* ordinance books of feet to the place of beginning.’ WHEREAS, the amqunt claimed fo r ; three, successive weeks' pre­ County, on the Sth day of August’, 1932, at ten o’clock in the Entered a3 second class matter; rhoiaite, -■'friz., It was disclosed, in 1st insertion Jiine 16; last Sept. S vious to said day of hearing, in the A. D. '1932, at ten o’clock in, the : Dated: May 11, A. D. 1932. to be due' upon said mortgage.sat forenoon. The. description of the a survey intended- to? eliminate’ reg­ NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE forenoon. The description of the HARRY BOYCE, the date o f this notic'd" is the sum premises contained in said m ort­ November 20, 1919, at Buchanan, Berrien County Record, a." news­ Michigan; under the act of March ulations of horSe-nnd-bhggy days. < Default haying been made in-the paper printed'8 and' circulated in premises' -contained in said mort­ ; Receiver of tlie Buchanan of Five Hundred ‘Pwerityjsix .and gage is as follows: The laws- applied1 * to* Indians who conditions of. a certain m ortgage said-county. "* '* gage is) as follows: j State Bdnk, a Michigan 75-100 ($5.26.75) Dollrirs for priri- ' The following described real es­ 3, 1879. • came to town virtually naked- in made by Herman Hafer- , and WILLIAM H. ANDREWS, ' The, folio wing described real es- Banicing Corporation, ciple arid, interest, together with tate .situated. in the Township * of Subscription Price * Mortgagee. the attorney fee allowed by law. the goffcl old days. It also was nec­ 'Nettie Hafer,, his . w ife ’ to, Judge,of Probate.: itafe; isituafed iri, tSe' village, Wow. Ororioko, Berrien: County, Michi­ Berrien and: St. Joseph Counties, William J. Hanover, dated Sep­ SEAL. A true copy. ' Lillia O. City, "pf Buchanan, Michigan, desr Philip C. Landsman', dnd no suit.or proceeding having gan,. described as that part of the essary, old records show, to curb Burns' & Hadsell, ' ; been instituted at law .1° recover per year. $1,50 tember 22, 1919, and- recorded in Sprague, Register of Probate. cribe'd as commencing 'at a 'point southwest quarter of the south­ Elsewhere $2.00 the Indians iris other ways. Grass the offiiee o f the register ofi deeds" Attorneys for Mortgagee. the debt now reniaiiiingf secured west- quarter of .Section Twenty- on the west line of Clark Street Single Copies 5c was grass to the- Indian, so he for Berrien County':, Michigan, on in said Village, now city, of Bu­ \Business Address: by''said mortgage, or any pari six (26), Town Six (6) south, thought nothing o f feeding his the 22nd day of September 1919: in 1st, insertion M ay 26; -last. June. 9: chanan, that is one hundred nine­ Buchanan, Michigan. thereof, and , Range Nineteen (19) west, des­ 4 *- it . j i ponies on the carefully tended lawn liber 133: of mortgages: on; page STATE OF M IC H IG A N ,. the Pro’- ty (190) feet south of the north., WHEREAS, default has been cribed as commencing on the sec­ be necessary to pay tee amount so o f a prominent citizen. So a law 559. Which said' mortgage; was: bate Court for the.,-'County, of east corner of Block A of A. B. 1st insertion May 12; last Aug. 4 made in "the payment of the motl­ tion line seven hundred sixty (760) NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE as aforesaid due on said, Mortgage was: passed; against feeding' Indian assigned by said William- J. Han- Berrien; . . Clark’s Addition to the Village, ey secured b'y said mortgage,, fe e t. north of tee southwest iCQ'rf with seven per cent interest from W HEREAS, Ethel B. Richards, whereby the power of sale contain­ ponies; on. private lawns and anoth­ over to James G. Hanover N o­ A t a session of said Court, held: now City, of Buchanan, Michigan, ner of said Section; thence south the date of this ribfiee, and all made and executed a certain mort­ ed therein has become operative: seventy-nine (79) degrees fifteen er one: was enacted; saying- that vember 17, 1930, the assignment at the- Probate Office in- the, City according to the recorded plat other legal costs, together with thereof being recorded in. said reg­ of St. Joseph in said County; bit thereof, running' thence south on ga ge on the 3rd day of Novem­ NOW -THEREFORE, Notice • is (15) min. east to a point which is horses and- vehicles; should not be ber, A. D. 1930, to the Buchanan said attorney’s fee provided for in ister o f deeds office M ay 23, 1932 the 24tli day of May A. D. 1932. said lino eighty-five (So) feet and hereby given that said mortgage forty-two rods east of tlie west said Mortgage, at public auction, Sparked on sidewalks; in fiber 10 of assignments of mort­ Present:. lion1, William: IT. An­ nine (9) inches to the land of Ed­ State Bank, a Michigan Banking will be foreclosed by sale of tlie iino 'Of said southwest quarter of Corporation, which was recorded to the highest bidder, at the front gages on page 94. There is nbw drews, Judge of. Probate. In thp: ison B, Weaver;' mentioned in a mortgaged premises at public ven­ the southwest quarter of said Sec­ door of the Court House in the claimed, to be due on said mort­ Matter of the Estate of Dale H. deed recorded May 23rd,, A. _ D. in the office of' the Register of due, to the highest bidder, at the tion : tuer.ee north to the north Deeds for Berrien County, Michi­ City of St. Joseph, .Berrien County, Ancient. Roman- ‘ 'Racket" gage, botn. principal and. interest, Chubb, deceased. James M. Chubb, >1910 in Vol. 173 of Deeds on page front door of the" Court House in line of said southwest quarter of Michigan, that being the place Crnssus. reputed, to have; been the sum of Two tnousand six hun­ having filed in said court his fin­ i291 in the office of the Register gan, on the 8th day of November, the City of St. Joseph, Michigan, :itee- southwest quarter; thence A. D. 1930, in Liber 175 of Mort­ where the Circuit Court for the the richest man of Ills-tinie;.amassedi dred twenty nine and 30-100 al- administration account as spe­ •of Deeds for said County; thence in said County of Berrien, that west forty-two (42) rods to the County of Berrien is held, on Mon­ gages, on page 496, and. being the place of holding t trie section l!,ne; .thence' : south five a great- fortune by his ingenious ($2629.30) dollars, plus One hun­ cial and general administrator west on the north- line of said day, the 11th day of July, 1932 dred seventy seven and 59-100 and his petition, praying for the land eight (8) rods and two (2) WHERE a S, the ’amoririt claimed Circuit Court within the ‘ ‘ said hundred sixty (560) feet to the operation, o f a private- fire depart­ to bo due upon said mortgage at at ten (10) o’clock in the forenoon ($177vo9) dollars unpaid taxes, to­ allowance thereof, and fo r the as­ feet; thence north parallel with County, on the Sth day of August, place of beginning. .;of(:teat.:::day:'.',.,.'':,. ment in old Rome. When a fire; the date of this notice is the sum A. D. 1032, at ten • o'clock in the gether w ita all; other fees allowed, signment and distribution of the tlie east line of said Block A, Dated: May- 12, A. D1 1932. Trie: .land iteid premises -to; he would, break out, he or one. of Jiis by law, and no proceedings having residue of said estate; and: his pe­ eighty-five (So) feet and nine (9) of One Thousand Thirty-six and forenoon. The description of the H A R R Y B'OYCE, - 75-100 ($1036.75) Dollars for prin­ sold .are'situated iri the Township agents would rush to the- owner and been instituted to recover said tition praying that said court ad­ inches to Fuller’s land; thence premises contained in said .mort­ Receiver of tlie Buchanan of Weesaw, Berrien County, Mich­ cipal and interest, together with g'age is.as follows: Offer to buy the burning, structure sums; or any portion thereof, judicate and determine who were east eight (S) rods and two (2) Stdte Bank, a Michigan igan; and. are described in said NOW THEREFORE notice is at the time of his death the legal feet to the place of beginning, and the attorney fees allowed by law, The following. described real es­ Banking Corporation, ' at a very low figure. The; owner and no suit or proceeding having, Mortgage as follo\ys, to-wit: hereby given, that by virtue of the. heirs of said deceased and entitled conveying all the land conveyed to tate situated in Weesaw,;To\vnship, Mortgagees A piece of hind commencing six­ usually would sell for almost noth­ been instituted at law to recover' Berrien County, Michigan, describ­ ing to get some salvage., There­ power o f sale contained in said to inherit the- estate of which said said Ethel E. Richards by George Philip C. Landsman,. teen. huridred- seventy two and for­ H. Richards and Lucy A. Benadict the debt now remaining, secured ed as the north half of tee south­ Burris & Hadseii, upon, Crassus would call up his fire mortgage, which has now become deceased died seized. ty four one hundredths (1672.44) operative, and the statute in such I t is Ordered, That the 20tli day and Charles H. Fuller. by said mortgage, or any part east quarter of the northwest Attorneys.for Mortgagee; brigade and, In. many cases, put thereof, and quarter of- Section Twenty... (20), feet East of Sections two (2), case made and provided, the mort­ of June A. D . 1932, at ten Dated: May 12, 1932. Business Address: three (3) ten (10) and eleven' (11), WHEREAS, default has been Township Seven (7) . south, Range out the blaze. In, this way he- be­ gage will be. foreclosed by a sale, o'clock in the forenoon, at said HARRY BOYCE, Buchanan; Michigan. .teence South nine (9) rods, thence came owner of a great many build­ o f the mortgaged premises at pub­ probate office, be and is hereby Receiver of the Buchanan made in the payment of the mon­ Nineteen (19) West. . ey secured by said mortgage, Dated: May 12, A/D. 1932/ East four (4) rods, thence North ings. It is; hinted: by early writers lic auction to the highest bidder, appointed for examining and al­ State Bank, a Michigan nine (9) rods', thence W est four Banking Corporation, whereby the power of sale con­ HARRY BOYCE, 1st Insertion- Apr. 14; last .July- 7 that when business: was dull his at the front door o f the court lowing said account and hearing Notice, of Foreclosure and Sale of (.4) rods to place of beginning. house in the city of St. Joseph, said petitions. Mi tained therein has become opera­ Receiver of the Buchanan agents may have had a hand In tive, State Bank, a Michigan Mortgaged ..Premises, Dated April’ 13th, 1932. starting an occasional conflagra­ Berrien County, Michigan, that! I t is Further Ordered, That pub­ Philip C. Landsman, MORTGAGE SALE Clarence L. Weaver, lic notice thereof be given by pub­ Burns & Hadsell, NOV/ THEREFORE, Notice is Banking Corporation, tion. being, the place of holding the cir­ Whereas, default has beeri-made . Mortgagee. cuit court within said county, on lication of a copy o f this order for Attorneys for Mortgagee hereby given that said mortgage Mortagee.; will be foreclosed by sale of the in the payment ,of_ money .secured Frank R. “Sanders, the .12th day' o f September 1932. three successive weeks previous to Business Address: Philip C. Landsman, Attorney for Mortgagee, Buchanan, Michigan. mortgaged premises at public ven­ Burns & Hadsell; by a.Mortgage; dated-the YJHi, day at ten o’clock in the forenoon. said day of hearing, in the Ber­ of June, 1929, ‘ executed by Onan Business Address: Buchan aq Jett- Tunkins The mortgaged premises being des­ rien County Record, a newspaper due, to the highest bidder, at tire Attorneys for Mortgagee; *•' • •Michigan. front door of .ne Court House in Business Address: . . . S. Shipley ancLlya Ls- .Sffipley, :his Jud Tunkins says oratory seems cribed as follows, to wit: printed and circulated in said wife; to piarence hi. _Weaver, which The south half of the south: county. the City of St. Joseph, Michigan, Buchanan, Michigan. to have a backset hecause a man 1st insertion May 12, last Aug. 4 in said County of Berrien, that said Mortgage was recorded in the who has eloquence and magnetism half of the southeast quarter of WILLIAM II. ANDREWS, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Istrpublication May 12;-.iast Aug 4 office of. the- Register o f /Deeds of {{0 , G ee/ — section Ten (10) in township sev-’ Judge of Probate. being the pla ce of/''holding the can make more money out o f some WHEREAS, Jackson Cagle mid Circuit Court within the said •'NOTIGE OF MORTGAGE SALE the County _of Bjrrien^ Michigan, Grqndmofs en (7) south, range Nineteen (19). SEAL. A true copy. Lillia O. Coraie Cagle, husband and wife, kind of salesmanship..—Washington County, on the Sth day of August, WHEREAS, Melvin Lolmaugh; on the 5th day o'f August, 1929, in west," IVeesaw township, Berrien Sprague, Register of Probate. made and executed a certain mort­ and Grace B. Lolmaugli, husband Liber 157 of Mortgages, on page Walking Star. County, Michigan. A. D. 1932, at ten o’clock in the gage on the 21st day of October; forenoon. The description tJf the and" wife, made and execute’ll a 542, and iDownstairs— James G. Hanover, ; A. D, 1925, to the Buchanan State certain mortgage on the', 8ttr day Whereas; the amount claimed to 1st Insertion June- 16:. tasu July-2S Assignee. t 1st insertion, M ay 12; last Aug. 4 premises contained in said mort­ CHANCERY SALE i. Bank, a Michigan Banking Cor­ gage is as follows: of September, A. D. 1924* to ‘W il­ be due bn said mortgage at tee- A. A. Worthington, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE poration, which was recorded in liam J. Miller, of the City of Bu­ date o f this, notice is> the sum of In pursuance and by virtue of a j Attorney for Assignee. WHEREAS, James M. Clark and The following described real es­ decree of the Circuit Court for! the office of the Register of Deeds tate situated in the A’illage, now chanan, Michigan, which was. re-) five hundred’ thirteen and fifteen Business address: Buchanan, Mich­ Cleta Clark, husband and wife, for Berrien county, Michigan, on corded in' the office of the Regis-;* one hundredths- ($513.15) dollars the1 County of Berrien, State of igan. made and executed a certain mort­ city, of Buchanan, Michigan, des­ ■Michigan, ini Chancery- made and the 24th day of October, A. D. cribed as commencing at a point ter of Deeds for Berrien'‘County; o f’ priricipal and inte'rest and an gage on the 25th day of March A. 1925, in Liber 15S of Mortgages, entered on. the sixth, day of June 1st insertion June 9; last June 23 on the west line of Clark Street in Michigan, on the 30th day of De­ attorney’s fee of twenty-five ($25.- D. 1919, to William H. Findel, on page 69, and cember A. D. 1924, in Liber 144: 00) dollars, as provided for in said A . D. 1932, in. a certain, cause STATE OF M ICHIGAN, the Pro­ which was recorded, in the office of said Village, now city, o f Buchan­ therein pending, wherein Indus- ■WHEREAS, the amount claimed an, that is one hundred ninety of Mortgages, on page 550, and Mortgage, _and no suit or proceed­ bate Court for the County of the Register of Deeds for Berrien to be due upon said mortgage at .trial Building and Loan Associa­ Berrien. (190) feet south of the northeast WHEREAS the-said mortgage ings'at: law Having been* instituted County, Michigan, on the 28th day the date of this-notice is the sum was thereafter assigned by the* to recover tee irioneys secured by tion, a Michigan Corporation, is A t-a session of said court, held of March, A. D. 1919, in Liber 130 corner of Block A of A. B. C-lark’s Plaintiff, and. Judson. J. Markham of eight hundred twenty-five and Addition to the Village now City, said William J. M iller to the Bu­ said -Mortgage; (or any part there- at the Probate Office in the city of Mortgages, on page 429, and 97-100 ($825.97) Dollars fo r prin­ Sold and Arvadia P. Markham, hus­ o f St. Joseph in said county, on o f Buchanan, Michigan, according chanan‘ State Bank, a " Michigan* ° f , . . ; WHERE a S, the said mortgage cipal and interest, together with Banking Corporation, by assign­ Now:,, j therefore;. .NOTICE IS by band and wife, and Theodore the 6th day o f June A. D. 1932. was thereafter assigned by the to the recorded plat thereof, run­ Druggists Walker and Hazel Walker, bus- < the attorney fee allowed by law, ning thence south ion said line ment bearing date of the 12th da.y HEREBY GIVEN, that by virtue Present: Hon. William H. An­ said William H. Findel to the Bu­ and no suit or proceeding having of January, A. D. 1925; and re­ ?Use‘ s . band and wife, are defendants, Ho- j drews, Judge of Prouate. In the eighty-five (So) feet and nine (9) of the power of sale contained in 1VELBONA* chanan State Bank, a Michigan been instituted at law to recover corded in said register’s office on said: Mortgage; and .the Statute in Tablets tice is hereby given, that I shall' Matter of the Estate of Ida Mae Banking Corporation, by assign-? inches to the land of Edson B. sell: at public auction, to the high-; the debt now remaining, secured Weaver, mentioned in a deed re­ ^ 13th day of January, A . D. such, case* made_and provided, the Write for FREE, Jully illustrated 24-rpago Best, deceased. John H. Best ment bearing- date of the 21st by said mortgage, or any part iS25, at four o’clock in the after­ * book; JSistory, o f' RHEUMATISM.” Yrittx est bidder, at, the south, front door having- filed in said court his pe­ corded May 2-3rd, A. D. 1910 in said Mortgage will be. foreclosed chapter discussing germs o f rheumatism* to day of December, A. D. 1922, and thereof, and noon, in Liber 7 of Assignments y corporation of tbs court house in the city of tition praying that the administra­ Vol. 173 of Deeds on page 291 in by a sale o f the-premises: described t YELDONA recorded in said register’s office w h e r e a s , default has. been of Mortgages on page 2, whereby therein or so. much thereof, as: may]. Desls' 7, Atlantic- City,, n . Si St. Joseph, Michigan (that being tion of said estate be granted to on the 23rd day o f December, A. the- office of the Register of the place of holding the Circuit ( made in the payment of the mon­ Deeds for said County; thence the said mortgage is now owned John H. Best or to some other D. 1922 at eleven o’clock in the ey secured by said mortgage," by tlie said Buchanan State Bank, Court fo r said County,), on Mon­ suitable person, and his petition forenoon, in Liber 4 of Assign­ west on the north line of said day the first day or _ugust A, D. whereby the power of sale con-, land eight (S) rods and tvyo (2 ) a Michigan Banking Corporation; praying that said court adjudicate ments of Mortgages on page 1S3, tained therein has become opera- and 1932 at eleven o’clock in the fore­ and determine who were at the whe,reljyjne: ^aid;. mortgagees no\y. ,feeS;Lthence north parallel" with noon, thgafoliojyi.ng. described-prop­ rive: - < !-* ...... ' the east line of said Block A, W HEREAS, tlie amount claim­ timex.ofeher death the legal heirs ownid by the said-Buchanan' State NOW THEREFORE, Notice is: ed to be due upon said .riiortgage erty, viz:' 'all: those certain pieces of said deceased and entitled to Bank, a Michigan Banking Cor­ eighty-five (85) feet and'nine (9) or parcels of land situated in the hereby given that said mortgage inches to Fuller’s land; thence at the date of this notice is the inherit the real estate of which poration, and will be foreclosed by sale of tlie stun of Eight Hundred Sixty-five City of Buchanan, county of Ber~ said deceased died seized. WHEREAS, the amount claim­ east eight (8) rods and two (2) Visit Americas most interesting city/ feel the throb of and State, of Michigan, des­ mortgaged premises at public ven­ feet to tlie place of beginning, and and 95-100 ($865.95) Dollars for It is Ordered, That the 5th day ed to be due upon said mortgage due, to tee highest bidder, at the principal and interest, together giant business! Thrill to the major attractions of stage eed as follows: of July A. D. 1932, at ten conveying ail the land conveyed to at the date of this notice is the front door of me court house in with attorney fee allowed, by law, fin d scree n / Se e Chicago's Night Life— hear the brilliant Lots One (1), Two (2), Three o’clock in the forenoon, at said sum of one thousand eighty-three said Ethel E. Richards by George 1, Four (4), Five (5), Six (6), the City of S t Joseph, Michigan, H. Richards and'Lucy A. Benadict and no suit or proceeding having probate office, be and is hereby' and 50-100 ($1083.bu) dollars for in said County of Berrien, that be­ been instituted at- law to- recover music and meet the leading theatrical stars in the College Inn. en (7) and. Eight (S), Treat & appointed for hearing said peti­ principal and interest, together and Charles H. Fuller. :’s. Addition: to the Village ing the place of holding tee Cir­ Dated: May 12, 1932. the debt now remaining, secured tion; with the attorney fee allowed by cuit Court within the said County, by said mortgage, or any part UNEQUALLED ow City) o f Buchanan and It is Further Ordered, That pub­ HARRY BOYCE, law, and no suit or proceeding- on the 8th, day of August, A. D. thereof, and CONVENIENT 1700 ROOMS weship of Buchanan, lic notice thereof be given by pub­ Receiver of the, Buchanan LOCATION having been instituted at law to 1932, at ten o’clock in the fore­ WHEREAS, default lias been ' 1700 BATHS ated June 15, 1932. lication of a copy o f this order, recover the debt: now remaining, a cate Bank, a Michigan and ,T. T.. Hammond. noon, The description of the prem­ Banking Corporation, made in the payment of the mon­ FROM 43. once each week for three succes­ secured by said mortgage, or any ises contained in said mortgage is ey secured by said mortgage, YOU CAN DRIVE Circuit Court Commissioner,, sive weeks previous to said day part thereof, and Mortgagee Berrien County. Michigan, as follows: Philip C. Landsman, whereby the power of sale con­ YOUR CAR of hearing, in the Berrien County- WHEREAS, default has been The following described real. es­ tained therein lias become opera­ RIGHT INTO •ank R. Sanders, Record, a newspaper printed and made in the payment of the mon­ Burns & Hadsell, HOTEL SHERMAN .torney for Plaintiff. tate situated in Buchanan Town­ Attorneys for Mortgagee tive. circulated in, said county. ey secured by said mortgage, ship, Berrien county, Michigan, NO W THEREFORE, Notice is GARAGE : W ILLIAM I-I. ANDREWS, whereby the power of sale contain­ Business Address: t insertion June 16; last July 2S described as commencing at the Buchanan, Michigan. hereby given that said mortgage CHANCERY SALE Judge of Probate. ed tncrein has become operative,. southeast corner of the northeast will be foreclosed, by sale of the In pursuance anc! by virtue of a SEAL. A true copy. Libia O. . NOW THEREFORE, Notice is quarter of Section Thirteen (13); mortgaged premises at public ven­ decree of the Circuit Court for Sprague, Register of Probate. hereby given, that said mortgage thence north thirty-nine (39) rods; due, to the highest bidder, at the the County o f Berrien. State of will, be foreclosed by sale of the thence west seventy-seven and 1st insertion May* 26; last Aug 18 front door of the Court House in Michigan, in Chancery, made and 1st insertion June 9: last June 23 mortgaged premises at public ven­ two, tenths (77.2) rods; thence NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE entered on the sixth day of June STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Pro­ due, to the highest, bidder, at the south thirty-nine (39) rods:;, thence Default having' been made in A. D. 1932 in a certain cause bate Court fo r the County of front, door of the Court House in east seventy-seven and two tenths the conditions of a certain -mort­ therein pending, wherein Indus­ Berrien, the; City of St. Joseph, Michigan, (77.2) rods to the place o f begin­ gage made by Homer J. Postle- trial Building and Loan Associa- A t a session, o f said Court, held in said County o f Berrien, that be­ ning. waite and Beulah Postlewaite, his ition, s> Michigan Corporation,, is at the Probate Office in. the City ing .the place of holding the Cir­ Dated: May 11, A. D. 1932. wife, to Andrew G. Ilaslett, dated Rl.iintiff and Joseph J, Terry and of St. Joseph in said County, on cuit Court within the, said County, HARRY BOYCE, April 1, 1929, and recorded in the Mildred K. Terry, his wife, and the' 6th day of June A. D, 1932, on the Sth day of August, A. D. Receiver of the Buchanan office of tee register of deeds for William J. Miller are defendants, Presents Hon.. William H. An­ 1932, at ten o’clock in the fore­ State.Bank, a Michigan the county of Berrien and state of Notice is hereby given, that I shall drews,. Judge Of- Probate. In the noon. The description of the- prem­ Banicing Corporation, Michigan on the xoth day of April sell at public auction to the high­ Matter of the Estate of Emily ises contained iii, said mortgage is Mortgagee,. 1929 iri liber 163 of mortgages on est bidder, at the south front door Mariah Hunter, also known as as follows: Philip C. Landsman, page 160, on which mortgage of the Court House in the City of Emily' Hunter, deceased. John A. The following described real es­ Burns & Hadsell, there is -now claimed to be due, St. Joseph, Michigan, (that being Hunter having filed: his petition tate' Situated' in Weesaw Township, Attorneys for .Mortgagee. both principal and interest, the the place o f holding the Circuit praying that an instrument, duly Berrien County, Michigan, describ­ Business Address: Sum of ten thousand six hundred Court fo r said County,) on Mon­ admitted: to Probate in the State ed as the north half of the south­ Buchanan, Michigan. ninety One and 67-100 ($10,691.67) days the first day of August A.. D. of California, he admitted to pro­ east: quarter of the northwest dollars, plus twenty-three and 08- •HOME OF THE COLLEGE INN 1932 at eleven o’cleck in the fore bate and recorded in Michigan!, quarter of Section Twenty (20), 1st insertion May 12, last Aug. i 100 ($23.08) dollars, insurance % CHICAGO'S BRIGHTEST S P O T - noon,, the following described; and that, administration of said es­ .Township Seven. (7) south, Range NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE paid by the mortgagee, together property, viz: all that certain tate be granted to some other suit­ Nineteen (19) west. WHEREAS, Ethel .Siraganian, with all fees allowed by law, and -niece or parcel of land, situate in able person. And1 having filed all Dated: May 12; A. D. 1932, made and executed a certain mort­ no proceedings having been insti­ the "City of Buchanan, county of exemplified copies required by HARRY BOYCE, gage on the 21st day of June A. D. tuted to recover said sums, or any Berrien and State of; Michigan, statute, Receiver of the Buchanan •1927, to the Buchanan State Bank, portion thereof. described; as: follows: I t is Ordered,; That the 5tli day . State Bank, a Michigan a Michigan Banking Corporation, NOW THEREFORE, notice is Beginning at the southeast cor­ of July A, D. 1932, at ten a. m., Banking Corporation, which was recorded, in the office hereby given that by virtue of the ner of iot Twenty (20), in Rcss at said: probate; office is hereby Mortgagee., of the Register of Deeds for Ber­ power of sale contained in said and Alexander’s Third Addition to appointed for hearing: said peti_ •Philip C. Landsman, rien County, Michigan, on the 22nd I mortg'age, and: the statutes in such the Village (now City') of Buch­ tion; Bums & Hadsell, day of June, A. D. 1927, in Liber ’ case made and provided, said anan;. thence North, three (3) I t is Further Ordered, That pub­ Attorneys for Mortgagee. 163 of Mortgages, on page 20, and mortgage will he foreclosed by a Business Address: WHEREAS, the amount claim­ sale of the mortgaged premises at reds; thence West four (4) rods; lic notice thereof he given by pub­ It this bile is not ii o m a c freely, yoar.lood lication of a copy hereof for three Buchanan, Michigan. ed to be due upon said mortgage public vendue; to die highest bid­ A nd You’ll Jump' Out of B ed thence South three (3) rods; doesn’t; digest.. It . just decays in the bowels. thence East four (4) rods to place successive weeks previous to said at the date of . this notice is the der, at tee; front door of tlie court ISt insertion M ay 12; last Aug. 4 sum of Two Thousand Twenty- house in the city o f St. Joseph,; RHiCHESTERS PILLS in the Morning Sarin’ to Go Gas bloats up. your stomach. Yo u b^re a o f beginning.. hearing in the, Berrien, County V . . THE DIAMOND BRAND. ,A NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE seven and 61-100 ($2027.61) Dol­ Berrien county, Michigan, that be­ Iiodles! AHlryour-DroceUt /V. thick,.tad taste an d yp n r breath is fohlt;'slda Dated'. June 15, 1932: Record, a:- newspaper printed and. for' Oh!-ohoSiteri* ..‘U lR n io n d / i^ V „ J, T ” Hammond, circulated in said county- W HEREAS, Ethel E. Richards, lars for principal and interest, to­ ing the - place of holding the cir­ Brand Pills iaBed and?ColdvC#/ If you feel sour and sunk and the often breaks out in ihlemishes. Your'.hesd • - Circuit, Court Commissioner, W IL L IA M H. ANDREWS, made and executed a certain mort­ gether with, an attorney fee al_ cuit, court within said county, on .metallic boxes, sealed with -Blue V Y / world looks punk, don’t swallow a lo t: laches' an d yo u .feel 'down.and.oat Your-whole the 22nd day of August 1.932; at ;Ribbon. T a k e n o o th o r.,B n y ^\/ Berrien County, Michigan, Judge of; Probate; gage on the 2nd day of May, A. D. lowed by law, and no suit or pro­ 'o f y o u r ’’R ro g slftf. Aslc Cor?:. • of- salts, mineral water,, oil, laxative iieystem is poisoned.: - ceeding having been instituted at ten o'clock in the forenoon, The OT1I- CSES - TEUS - DZAitOivD Frank R- Sanders, SEAL, A true copy. Lillia- O. 1924, to the Buchanan State Bank, JiTtAlfD dIJILX*S« for <10 years known candy or chewing gum and expect lit takesthosc good old CA S T E R ’S LI T T L E Sprague,, Register o f Probate., i Michigan Banking Corporation, law to recover the debt now re­ mortgaged premises' being des­ as Best,rSafest, Reliable; B iiy2idw “l- ‘ them to make you suddenly sweet Attorney for Plaintiff, cribed as follows: SOLD BY*.DRUGGISTS EVERYWSSRB i L I V E R RI L L S to ge.trtBfiseitwo pbundsof’biie which was recorded in the office maining, secured, by said; mort­ and buoyant and full of sunshine. - ; 1st insertion June: 2;;, last June 16 of the-Register of Deeds for Bcr- gage, or any part thereof, and The south fifty-(50) acres of fio.^ng fredy andm^syoxifeei “up an^up.” St a t e ; OF MICHIGAN, -The Pro­ rien County, Michigan, on the 2nd WHEREAS, default lias been the northwest fractional quarter ; For they can’t do it. They only •They* contain ■woadcTfulj barzoless/ &entl< Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat bate: Court for, the County of day of June A. D; 1924, in Liber made in tlie payment of the money of section eighteen '-(18), and the I ’ll Tell.You Free move the bowels and a'mere move­ vegetable estracts,amaangiwh e n it copibs ta Berrien. 153 o f Mortgages, on page, 116, secured by said mortgage, where­ west fractional half of the south­ ment doesrit^et .at the.cause. The. 'niaidiig the bile flow.freely. ’ ^ A t a; session of said Court, held and . by the power of sale contained west fractional quarter o f section How,’to Heal reason for your down-and-out feeling B u t do n ’t ssk for.liver;pill 3- As k for Carter's In Just 4 Weeks at the Probate Office in the city : WHEREAS, the amount claimed therein: has become operative, eighteen (18) sixty-nine (69) acres - is-your-liver: I t should'pour out two little liver Fills. Lo o k for the na m e Carter's more or less, all in township seven o f St, Joseph, in said County; on to bo due upon, said; mortgage at /■ NOW THEREFORE, Notice is . pounds of liquid bile into your bowels • little liver Fills o n the*red. labeL. Resent Q the 25th day of May A. D, 1932. hereby given that said mortgage |7) south; range seventeen ||7): the date of this notice is the sum daily. - 1 .V.:.,'..- t ii snbstitute. ’2 5 c at all stocesv i<^1531,:C, S L . C e Mrs; Mae- West oE St, Louis, Present: Hon. William II. An­ of twenty-five hundred thirty-sev­ will be foreclosed by sale of the west, Niles township; Berrien Mo., writes: ‘‘I ’m only 2S yrs. old drews, Judge- of Probate, In the en and 50-100 ($2537.50) Dollars mortgaged premises at public ven­ County, Micliigan. * •and weighed 170, lbs: until taking Matter of the-Estate of Elizabeth lor principal and interest, together due, to the highest bidder, at the Dated May 26, 1932. one box of your Kruscheu Salts just Riffer; deceased;. with tlie attorney fee allowed by­ front door of the Court House iri Andrew G: Haslett, ' 4s weeks: ago. I now weigh 150 lbs, It appearing to the Court that law, and; no suit or proceeding, the City of St. Joseph, Michigan,- Mortgagee. You’ll never know how good I also have more.' energy and fur­ the time; for-presentation, of: the, having* been instituted at law to in said County o f Berrien, that A. A. Worthington, a'r cigar can be -uhtil:ycg& thermore I ’ve never had a hungry being the place of holding tlie Cir­ Attorney for Mortgagee. ;. Simply anoint the swollen veins claims;; against said estate, should recover the debt now remaining, and sores, with -Emerald Oil; and- moment.?’ be limited; and- that a- time ana secured by said mortgage; or any cuit Gourt within the said Coun­ Business Address: *- ' . have smoked a ^ Fat folks should take one half place be- appointed to receive,, ex­ part thereof, and ty, oh the Sth day of August, A. - Buchanan, Mich. ' * bandage, your log: Use . a bandage teaspoonful o f Ifrusehen Salts in a: amine and adjust all jplaims and' WHEREAS, default has been D. 1932, au ten o’clock in. the fore­ three- inches wide;,arid: loiig enough .glass o f hot 'water-.in -the morning; demands against; said’jdoceased, by made in the payment of Jhe, mon­ noon. The description of-the prem-.- * 1st insertion May 12.;; last Aug. 4 before . breakfast—it’s;5 * ithe^ SAFE,/ and before said Court’;' ey secured by, said 4. mortgage,' ises' containecl-'in.'said 'aridr.tgage. is- NOTICE Op MORTGAGE' SALE harmless/way- to reduce as-tensLof l it is Ordered, Th^t creditors .of whereby the povyrer’ o f' sale"f;N

r ' ' I , v . ■ s*' . •?A<3S SIX IN W OLVERINE WOODS landscape! Cosmos; moss-rose; * (An'appreciation)? hollyhocks; until in one oval enclo­ By: Charles O; Carpenter sure are displayed fiv e thousand (A ll rights reserved) (actually 5,000) fragrant,, dainty old-time petunias,, near a neat cot­ tage home and srarden. It-is Saturday afternoon; in: sum­ mer;''- A s the week: ends, full re­ Now, at both rig-in, ana lerc, the lease' awaits from, the stress and alluring orchard; -that strangely duties o f many months in. a crowd­ pleasant scent o f fully ripe apples, ed city. An. earned outing is: to very reminiscent of happy youth­ he? enjoyed today by indulging in ful days and the, cellar of that old a long (although regrettably sol­ farm, home; its; winter stores heap­ itary) stroll through a, Michigan ed; high; tempting indeed is the orchard and:- adjacent, woodland; true- fruit aroma wafted from oth­ I t iS“the time.of year- and the. kind er full-bearing trees, the redden­ o f day for true lovers of the pas- in g peach, many purpling plums,, toral; o f the- more; remote- rural re­ mellowing, delicious pears; and gions; to there roam and. revel: in large, clusters o f ripe grapes ap­ deep-felt admiration o f wondrous pear in lush profusion. nature's matchless, artistry; Then a group of gnarled quince As- the few- miles are- traveled, trees and their rather odd prod­ broad; beautiful: meadows are uct; .... down the long slope viewed;: ...... fertile fruit of a beautiful grassy valley, -over farms and: cultivated fields, alter- a hill, another valley, the ground nate-with verdant, rolling- pastures almost covered with native pep­ In this spacious country area, how per-mint; a taste proves its usual clear, clean and invigorating the pungency. Probab 1 y f o r t y very-air! How splendid, all the shades, of green vegetation are

now visible! Sweet clover, red leafy contours, their'almost ryth- cants have agreed to carry out in- A sliprt bulletin, Extension Bul­ a special exhibit of Lincoln relies tion, Fort Wayne, Indiana, giving and white clover; the unmistak­ mic motion from the cooling- structions furnished by the game letin No. Tl, “W iring the Farm­ full details concerning the-articles able and wholesome odor of new- collected from individual owners breezes, all here tends to quiet division and the. resulting birds? stead” has been published by the. and not heretofore shown in pub­ in their possession. Dr; 'Warren mown hay; (likely the most nec­ and repose. may not be released on commer­ college and will be sent free to lic. Each of the displays will give Will then decide whether am article, essary plant grown in all . the Direct sunbeams at times burst cial pheasant farms, shooting pre­ anyone who requests it from tlie is worthy of special exhibition and world is the unadorned, little no­ fu ll credit to the owner, and per­ partly through this canopied ar­ serves or on lands where a charge bulletin clerk, East Lansing. The haps tiie more important ones will .make arrangements for sending :it ticed grass; for without that, bor; casting weird patterns upon is made for hunting privileges. publication will aid those who are. later be purchased by tlie Foun­ to Fort Wayne. .. . . ;■/. within a few brief years our entire the grassy ground; one recalls the It is expected that about 18,000 unfamiliar witn choosing the cor­ dation. Dr. Warren promises that planet would become quite unin­ fabled “magic carpet.” pheasant eggs: will be distributed rect type of electrical equipment. | all items submitted for the spec­ habitable). for hatching to private parties. And Lazy Folks .. Ever varying figures and de­ ial exhibit will be returned. ? The path leads across a small A scientist says, that: -within 300 signs, shifting shapes and shad­ Local people who feel that they years • there will be nothing but rivulet, more heard, than seen be­ ows, . . . changeful . . . uncertain, Ask Help In have something of unusual interest cause of tlie heavy foliage; over a how like life itself .... or Make Careful Plans should communicate immediately standing'room left on- the earth. i “ foot-log" with guiding hand-rail Destiny! Finding Lincoln with Dr. Louis A. Warren, Lin­ That’ll certainly make I t Sard T>ri . . . . .sweet-scented, familiar For Electric Power coln Historical Research Founda­ folks with fallen; .arches.- - -. wild flowers ornament these W ith the: wealth of poetic imag­ Relics Here banks and attract scores of hon­ ery of a Milton, a Burns, c. Words DIXIE ey-bees, with their perpetual ex­ worth, how might one describe this Proper planning to secure the ample of ordered industry and a- scene! right sizes and types of equipment What have you in the way of * w ill save trouble and expense? in Abraham Lincoln relics in your mazing perseverance. The pervading calm and charm IS PART OF wiring farm buildings for electric home? * Higher, on the hillside, the of this secluded: silent Valley: lights and power, according to the Dr. Louis A. Warren, director of T - rankly growing water-cress main­ should relieve distressed worried agricultural engineering depart­ the Lincoln Historical Research THE LOCAL ly conceals another murmuring souls and heal weary ailing bod­ ment at Michigan, State College. Foundation, Fort Wayne, Indiana, brook. Wild grapes in abun­ ies, could they but dwell here for The increased use of electrical asks the Berrien County Record to dance; .... prolific hazel-nut terms? of perhaps one month twice SPECIAL' power and the extension of power help in locating any really genuine PICTURE bushes, swiftly recalling boyhood's each year: for in this haven fot- lines into new territory sometimes Lincoln curios in this section. In joyful gleaning, and many gleeful the hearsick. the afflicted, great tempts fanners to install equip­ the Foundation’s museum arid li­ visits to cheery, most hospitable Nature (gently but most power­ ment without first investigating brary arid in many other historical r “ Aunt Lucy's” , near whose home fully curative) yet? holds high do­ the desirability of the job fo r institutions all over the country, .v When you’re considering the institutions which give these grew thickly. A small wild- minion. and if permitted would re­ Which they pay. The use of im­ he states, there are innumerable cherry tree has ample fruit of fin­ store priceless healthful vigor, and Discount on proper sizes may create a fire haz­ priceless mememtos of the Great stability and strength to our community— the banks the est flavor! It is early August; hopeful joyous courage to all who ard? arid the installation of unap­ Emancipator, yet he feels that the time for golden-rod to be a- came proved equipment m ay lead to dis­ treasured away in many' a home manufacturing establishments, the stores — don’t forget bloom; near that great locust a Ah, what supreme mental poise;, appointment with electricity as a or office there must be manu­ dozen showy spires stand proudly and peace, what spiritual, uplift power. scripts, newspaper and magazine l Dixie!: on exhibit, full-flowered in gleam­ and power one might acquire from . F iv e rules ape laid down by the articles, books and pamphlets, pic­ ing yellow. BEHOLD! On eve­ a: continued stay in so tranquil All Furniture, t college engineers for farmers who tures, medals and other Lincoln ry hand blooming, gorgeous M ID ­ and restful a spot! intend to wire their buildings, m e items that arc every bit as valu­ Because; Dixie is ottffied and operated by feUow^rtp SUMMER in luxuriant, superb ar­ For the gfeatly gifted writer of wiring plans arid specifications able. He seeks the aid of this •t ray! This very shapely, glossy­ stirring prose or epic poem, . his should be listed nd then bids se-! newspaper and its readers in zens and. taxpayers ____it gives employment to local citp leaved shade tree is none other soul under the imnellinrr urge of cured, from two or more reliable...... bringing these to: light. ¥ than. a. “ Tulip Poplar", rare here innate genius, what a Site wherein contractors. Only materials ap­ Sometime next summer at Fort 25% to 40%' ¥ sens...it sharesin-icommonity responsibilities... and Dixie but recognized at once by an ad­ to find keen transcendent; in­ proved by the Underwriters’ labor­ Wayne, according to Dr. Warren,; i mirer of the species. A final spiration to express in brilliant atories should be used. The w ir­ the Foundation Will dedicate a . A Dollars stay at home! quarter-mile, and into “The W el­ style, the essence of? his idealSj-or ing should conform? to Lie nation-1 massive ' bronze statue of the: coming Woods” , Conies the poet philosophy! al; code and should: meet the re­ “Youthful Lincoln,” done by the Bryant’s line,- “The groves were Under this auspicious influence, quirements set by the: state, the famous sculptor Paul Manship. In Each-Dixie station is a home­ God’s first Temples.” And was the highly talented artist might power company, and the commun­ connection with this dedication not this the sentiment of Lord vivid!v portray insniring scenes’ o f ity where the work is done. The there will be held a two-day “ op­ Hamilton & Hamilton town: enterprise-wit's part of the Byron? “ There is a pleasure in ineffable, unforgettable beauty, of job should be approved by compe­ en house" in the Foundation’s the pathless woods, There is a compelling dignitv and grandeur; tent disinterested parties before it museum and library. For this “ op­ local picture! rapture on the lonely shore." or others of moving pathos, of in­ is accepted. en house” Dr. Warren is planning J1. How gravely impressive the soli­ tensely dramatic events. ■ L . tude of a stately forest! The master musician, could here Among those timber-dwellers create most rapturous .harmonies, seen and heard and seeming to such concerted, entrancing melo­ have first claim here, are the dies. such thrilling tonal sym­ wrens; (two in a nearby willow phonies that they and his -name thicket are in animated diologue) should be deathless throughout the Service the elert, lilting robins; a musical ages, to delight the hearts .and brown thrush; .crested cardinals; cheer the lives of millions yet".un­ born. : Til© Itlffilt# golden orioles in their wide-swing­ ing but wholly secure nest; croon­ In this place altruism -might ing mourning doves; several wood rule, vast projects for the prompt, pigeons; the blithe meadow lark; relief of needy humanity be ar-:i blue birds; perhaps half a hundred ranged in detail by those empow­ FRANK E. ANDERSON, Prop. fiashy butterflies; a flock of ered with such control; noblest, bronzed starlings; the quail; (and most practical plans and methods ; S. Oak st. Buchanan, Mich. of all living things seen tnis mem­ to become far-famed reality, for' orable day, no other is quite so the great advancement and genera), Satisfied Custom er winning in mute appeal as this happiness of all mankind could fit-, mother-quail leading her month- ly have origin in such a site. . old chicks.) And for TWO who were . gen­ uinely congenial, inherently attun­ A pair of gray squirrels ap­ ed. what a. 'rendezvous for reach­ proach the intruder, seeking what ing both the lieight and. depth of If you trade at our station you are certain of he may have to offer. sweetest mental communion, of Prom those strong houghs how truest human sympathy and com­ courteous, efficient service. You too:, can smile easily' might' be attached several panionship, undisturbed, unannoy­ safe swings, to provide long hours ed, where ■ each could be himself of innocent play and pleasure for and herself’fo r at least awhile; . . . be a satisfied customer. many laughing children! where both could be, in large de­ A serene,, soothing silence rests gree; mutually understood! like a veil over this densely shad­ Amidst these: exalting environs, ed retreat; no harsh nor dreaded purest, rarest, most unselfish love sounds, no distracting discords itself might bud and bloom in ideal and faultless perfection. Drive In For penetrate; no person or human, habitation is: within sight or sound; As twilight softly now surrounds what ideal isolation! While seat­ And evening shades descend, ed on this thick cool moss among What high romances, dreams,, in­ these towering oaks and elms, spirations. ©S Texas9’ these ma’ssive, wide-spreading- ma­ What sentiments. meditations, “ P rid e ples, green-robed monarchs a cen­ emotions, deeply stir the soul, tury old, what precious, sadly- the inmost centre of one’s: sweet memories are revived of heart and mind! ©as 7 gal» $£ blissful, care-free childhood: of What fancies, what sublimities? delightful rambles like this, long one’s concepts m ight’ attain! ago (but not alone) in what sure­ What fond unspoken ambitions, se­ High Grade Special Oil, q t ;------15c ly was then “The Bnchanted cret yearnings, long cherished? Wood” ; O how subtly appealing its. hopes, here and now press and:? charm of beauty and mystery! strive for better, truer” ,.ex­ And . . . with heartfelt- emotion pression, for fa y freer wider . . .. of that best beloved para­ fulfillment!, gon of parents, that darling, saint­ Buchanan, August 4,. 1931. Stan-Heet Oil, qt. ______■?------20c Veedol Oil, q t . ------’_ ,30c ed Mother, fondly; utterly devoted, who led there her eager young Available Supplies ( sons and in smiling love-language, Pennsylvania Oil, q t. ______25c Kerosene, g a l.______12c instructed them in all her rich lore of forest and: flower, of fern- and Of Pheasant Eggs field; and o f the untamed crea­ Tickets to the movies at The Princess Theatre— tures often: glimpsed there; of that Reported Exhausted handsome lad; that little blond good for Thursday and Friday, June 16 and 17, brother, who shared those always Applications for ringneck -pheas­ happy journeys; many times taken ant eggs: already received by the Only. Ask for them. on radiant Sunday afternoons in game division o f the department of FREE SHE’S blossom-time of balmy spring. conservation,"will take all of this Further Wandering spring’s available supply, it was Another enticing glade is enter­ announced today. ed, . . . profoundly enjoyed, . . . Requests for eggs are consider-, reluctantly left. ed in the order in which the formal See Buchanan On The Screed HAPPY Then: here is a specially invit­ applications are received at the ing spot, thickly sodded,with, blue: Lansing office o f the department, And you, too, can save- yourself; a lot of grass de’ep enough for ’ one’s re­ so that it is unlikely that any new Thursday add Friday Only clining, fo r complete, relaxation: applications can be-filled. grief if you will have your car overhauled and rest; . . . ’ .'fa r above, queer The: first pheasant’ egg was ob­ fantastic forms of the cirrhus, the tained at the game farm April 9, cumulus: and other cloud strata but. the bulk o f the birds will not suggest much to the imagination. begin laying until the latter1 part Prices Right Sight and touch of this tall black of April.- Most of the early sup­ walnut, of this “ shell-bark” hick­ ply o f eggs—between 11,000 " and ory, rouse remembrances of dis­ 12,000 will be kept for hatching at Work Guaranteed covering lofty hidden homes, of the Mason game farm and branch wild animals and birds, of locat­ rearing farms; A second hatch ing “bee trees” and securing much o f 10,000 more eggs will he set delectable- wild, honey; of gather­ soon’ after ’the,: first - hatch conies The High Grade Russell Chevrolet ing forest nuts after October Off.. . . . ‘L frosts, and of, early hunting adven­ After sufficient eggs have -been tures; o f the harvest of com to; be retained for. tlie first, game farm Phone A01. .Portage St., atRL-.C; R' R*: Sales later garnered during hazy “Indian hatch, ”eggs ""wiil be’ sent out to Summer^' days! . . . ; . those whose applications for them ■ Phone 98 Main St. Overhead, the delicate tracery of, have been? approved. those small,, uncounted branches, Pheasant eggs may he obtained their lace-like maze ’ o f curving,; ’from the' state ' onlyi^whenvappliti * * * - ’* 4"