CASS C ITY C HRONICLE

VOLUME 28, NUMB.ER 3. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. ' EIGHT PAGES. • - ,,~ - ~ ...... u

or .ten years ago~and even then j The election will take place next the taxpayers protested. Tuesday. Ther~ is one thing that the tax- IFAGH[I S' IALAIIIEII- Messrs. Jaeger, Nash and Thack- payers can make up their minds to cry, representing the Jaeger Motor YES, TIlE ADS CI]IITAIII "/ 1111 , VlLLAIIE ilAISEII right now, taxes in Michigan will I Car Co., of Ferndale, spoke to not be decreased in proportio,n i~ members o.f the l{otary C',iub Tues- pROFO, o o their incomes. If the taxes are not day in an endeavor to interest the iii A88 iT'f collected from real estate, they are community ,to subscribe for $10,000 a LE aF..AD Tili8 going to come from somewhere Average Is $58 in Tuscola in stock for an automobile assemb- ling plant in Cass City. Coil else. Rural Schools; Highest Is Oil cloth at 14c a yard, work ris and Betty Agar. A recitation springs, no shackle bolts, and few The Alex Henry Grocery is offer- It is estimated that the beer bill shoes at $1.00, ladies' rubbers at Budget of 1933 Will Be $25(}1 by Frances Koepfgen introduced $120 a Month. greasing" places were mentioned ing corn~at 7 cents a can and a ought to bring in two and a half 39c and 1.adios' hose at 39c are just further variety the program. among the features of the new fancy No. 2 can of grapefruit at Less than Last Year's in million dollars, but this is only an four of the 26 items priced in Folk- Light refreshments were served by automobile. The car is constructed 10 cents. There are several other estimate and no one has the Of the 138 rural school districts ert's "Real Bargains" announce- Expenditures. the reception committee at the of standard parts, has a wheelbase items at special prices in tl~is slightest thing upon which to base in Tuscola county, officers of 103 ment this week. week's display. close of 'the meeting. these figures. But anyway officials of 113 inches and is in the Ford schools have informed B. H. Mc- Special tractor gasoline at a For a limited time, Bigelow's The last regular meeting of the think it ought to be that, therefore and Chevrolet price class. One of Comb, county school commissioner, Hardware is offering $2.75 house The duties of Village Treasurer club year will be held Monday af- they make an estimate that it will the cars was on exhibition here price extremely low is announced that they have° engaged teachers paint at $2.00 per gallon. This ~- A. N. BigeIow wilI be light °and ternbon, May 8, at the home of Tuesday. by the Cass City Oil and Gas Co., be that amount. for the coming year. In 37 of these superior quality paint is guaran- ¥illage Assessor H. L. Hunt will Mrs. Stanley Heron. Annual re- Senator Francis Kulp, one of the Dr. I. D. McCoy, S. Champion who invite farmers to bring in districts, new instructors have been teed to give satisfactory service be without salary and Without work ports will be given at this time, as outstanding newer members of the and W. L. Mann were named~as a drums and have them filled. The engaged while in 66 schools the for at least five years. in that office again this year as will also the reports of delegates legislature who came into office in committee to present the proposi- company will deliver when request- teachers will be the same as at "Actual health depends upon the result of the action taken by attending the district convention the Democratic landslide last fall, tion to the community. ed .to do so. present. good eyesight," says A. H. Hig- members of the village council on at Port Huron. Following the re- is bitterly opposed to the high Arrangements have been made Three cans of good quality toma- Of the 103 schools that have en- gins, optometrist. Monday. night when they voted that ports a potluck supper will be en- tax placed upon beer. Senator for a meeting- in the assembly toes for 25 cents and extra quality gaged teachers for 1933-34, 85 dis- Two merchants are offering jig- there be no village taxes and no joyed. Kulp, a prominent Battle Creek room at the high school this (Fri- peas at: the same price are but tricts have announced the salaries saw puzzles free this %veek. assessment roll for the year 1933. Members of the club and their lawyer who probably knows as day) evening at eight o'clock to dis- two of 13 items at attractive prices they will pay. These will aggre- Keep sweet and clean with 5 The council took .similar action a friends have been invited to attend taxation and cuss this project. All interested are in the Mo D. Hartt store advertise- much about other gate $4,937.50 a month. The popu- pounds of honey at 33 cents and year ago. a demonstration to be given by legislative problems as man invited to come. Enter by north door ment. any lar 8 bars of P. & G. soap at 19 cents. The 1933 budget will be $2501.63 Mrs. Sara Coolidge, director of the in the legislature, feels that the salary is $50.00 a month, 21 fixed that amount as The Standard Oil Co. announces These prices are taken from many less than the money spent during Detroit Free Press Institute of high tax imposed upon beer is a schools having reduced motor oil prices effective special quotations in the Kroger *the past year which totalled Home Economics, in high direct tax upon the poor man. the rate to be paid. The average, the. immediately, q~here are five-cent Stores ad. $9484.13. The budget items fol- school auditorium at Caro, May 5, "With the one or two exceptions however, is at a higher figure, be: S. S. Forces to a quart reductions on two well- Apparel for the girl graduate low: at two-thirty o'clock. Those de- the liquor control commission was ing a little over $58.00. Mrs. Laura Medcalf, instructor Meet at Fairgrove known brands. and the boy graduate are headlined Telephone ...... $ 30.00 siring transportation are asked to made up of people who could well "Fuel that's dependable" in- appropriate Fire department ...... 240.00 notify the secretary. afford to pay any price for beer, in the Columbia Corners school, as topics with attrac- The annual convention of the cludes Daniel Boone, Miller Creek Truck upkeep ...... :.... '...... 175.00 but beer is the beverage of the district 2, Columbia township, will tive price~ by the Berman Apparel receive the highest salary of rural Tuscola County Council of Religi- and Phoenix coal, says the Farm Store. Council building ...... 200.00 working man, the man who is Produce Co. Water extension supplies.. 200.00 forced to count his pennies. He can teachers as shown by the records ous Education will be held at the Alvin Deneen will have an auc- "Great Oaks from little acorns Water extension labor ...... 150.00 pay five cents a glass for beer, now available. She will receive Presbyterian church in Fairgrov e tion sale of personal property at grow" describes the growth o~ the Street supplies ...... 300.00 but when he pays more than that, $120.00 a month° She is at present on Thursday, May 4, with morning his farm ~ of a mile west of Street labor ...... 400.00 then he is paying more that he can the teacher in that school. The and afternoon sessions. Michigan Power Co. from small Gagetown, on Wednesday after- units to a large concern. Light and power ...... 1900.00 afford,-and 4 don't like the new lowest salary for next year is $30 The following is the program: noon, May 3. Fairgrounds ...... !0.00 bill for that very reason," stated a month. Two schools are on this 9:30. Registration. Incidentals ...... 130.00 Senator I{ulp. But higher taxes on very low mark. i0:00 to I0:15 devotions. Rev. H. NOVESTA HOME FURNISHING Other salaries are listed as fol- I. Voelker of Evangelical Nightwatch ...... 500.00 Beer Bill Out of Way, Now everything seems to be in the air, GROUP TO REORGANIZE Election board ...... 15.00 and higher taxes Michigan people lows: One at $35 a month; ten at church, of Cass City. (Door s NEWI;[IF THE C. U. Brow, n ...... 910.00 Discuss Ways to Get are going to pay. $40; six at $45; twenty-one at $50; closed.) Insurance ...... 200.00 six at $55; twelve at $60; twelve 10:15 "Facing the Task in The last regular meeting of the More Cash. at $65; two at $70; one at $72.50; Increase." Miss Ione Carton, Noveata Home Furnishing Group Printing ...... 50.00 Many prominent Democrats as three at $75; two at $80; one at Lansing', State Supt. of Chin II[/IIIBYS[IITII}NI; was held at the home of Mrs. J. H. Bond and interest ...... 1522.50 well as Republicans are not at all $85;: one at $90;two at $95; one at dren's Division. Goodall Wednesday, April 19. Clerk ...... 50,00 By Elton R. Eaton. satisfied with the trend of affairs $100; one at $110. Ii:00. "What Pictures Can Do The review lesson on "Curtains" Lansing, Mich.~Now that the in Lansing. Democrats do not like Happenings Here and There For Us." Rev. Donald T. Gray was given by Miss Lura DeWitt in $6982.50 all-important beer question has some of the appointments that have of Michigan Ave. Baptist Garnered from the Chron- the forenoon. The estimated receipts for the been settled and the legislature has been made. They do not like it church of Saginaw. coming year include $300.00 in authorized legal beer to flow because they have not been provid- icle's Exchanges. At noon, a delicious lunch was II :45. Appointments of Com- highway money for the township, through spigots instead of bootleg ed with home sort of a definite Bill FIRE AT RUTH served by the refreshment commit- mittees. tee. $3,100.00 for water collections and beer that has flooded the state in Turn to page 5, please. % 12:00. Recess. Noon luncheon at Jack Paul, Pigeon senior at Cen- "Pictures," subject of the new $82.50 for miscellaneous items from recent years, taxpayers are begin- the church. Price, 25 cents. the clerk. These total $3,482.50. ning to wonder just •what can be W[D![SI1AY NIIIHT tral State Teacher's college, is, lesson, was presented by Mrs. N. A. 1:20. Devotions. Rev. J. C. Jones beginning his fourth year as a Gillies in the afternoon and proved The remainder, $3,500.00, will come done in the few remaining weeks Trio Deny Guilt in of Kingston M. E. church. from money now in the village of the legislative session to bring member of a Bearcat track squad/ to be very interest~g to both mem- Large Catholic Church, Rec- 1:30. Election of officers. Jack is an exceptionally capable bers and visitors. treas~y< them a bit of relief. While incomes Unionville Robbery 1:50 "The Summer's Opportunity," The lowering of the 1933 budget have .tumbled fifty per cent, sixty 100 and 220 man and holds the A delegate was chosen to repre- tory, School and Convent 'Miss Ione Catton. present college record in the 220 sent this group at Farm Woman's is accomplished by lessening the per cent, seventy per cent--yes, in Three Saginaw negroes, Ned 2:05. Conference and Exhibit on which he set last year. In addition Week which will be held at Lansing cost of street lights by $600.00 or some cases incomes have en'tirely Haywood, 26, Chas. Robinson, 39, Were Destroyed. . Pictures in Christian Educa- to track he has been a letter and in July. Mrs. Stephen Dodge is more a year, omitting caicium stopped the state is now figuring and Lucious Gasque, 31, pleaded tion. numeral winner on each football the delegate chosen and Miss Lura chloride on 'the streets~ $700.00; on legislation to bring in £dditional not guilty to the charge of robbing 3:00. 'Group Studies in Parallel reducing amounts paid for salaries revenues from the taxpayers of Fire starting at the front end of and basketball team on which he DeWitt is the alternate. the J. H. Ken4p general store at the Catholic church at Ruth spread Courses: has participated since entering The reorganization meeting will and labor, $840.00; lessening fair- Michigan. Unionville, when arraigned before to the priest's house, the convent Guiding Children in Christian Central. be held at the home of Miss De- ground expenses, $147.00; and less There will be little talk dhring Justice Atwood at Caro on Tues- • Living, Miss Catton, money paid out for incidentals. It he next few weeks 'that the legis- and the Catholic school Wednesday The Huron County Federation of Witt, May 17. day. Their hearing was set for night, destroying all four buildings. leader. Woman's clubs w~ll hold its 14th "In reducing the cost of street i lature is in session about anything Thursday. Guiding Youth ~n Christian lighting, the council will darken else except new revenues. The fire was discovered at 10:15 annual meeting at the Owendale I The store was robbed on the o'clock and had gained such head- Living'. Roy. Leo ~Burch of Evangelical church Saturday, April Church Calendar. about half of the~boulevard lights The farmers and home owners night of April 21 and some of the Gagetown. on Main St. The cost of electric- who can no longer bear the taxa- way that it was impossible to con- 29. Registration will be from 9:30 goods, officers say, were found trol it. Defective wiring may have Guiding Adults in Christian until 10 a. m. when the meeting First M. E. Church--Sunday, ity for a boulevard ligkt is $42.00 tion burden of the state, county, Saturday night at the home where Living. Roy. W. R. Curtis city, village and township have in been the cause of the conflagration will be called to order by the pres- April 30: per annum. the three negroes were living. of Cass City. The village financial statement many eases thrown up their hands though that had not been definitely ident, Mrs. C. C. Calkins, of Sebe- 10:00, Class meeting'. Amon~ the articles which were re- determined on Thursday morning. 4:00.' General Forum. waing. An address of welcome will 10:30, Morning worship. Theme: of March 1, 1933, showed a balance and are no longer even trying .to ported missing when the robbery The church was erected at least Report of Conference Find- be giyen by Mrs. A. L. Snider, of "The Modern Church." on hand of $14,590.82. On March pay taxes. Many who can pay tax- was discovered Saturday morning 40 years ago. The other buildings ings. Elktoh. Music will be furnished 11:30, Sunday School. Bible 1, 1932, .the balance was $19,503,36. es are taking advantage of present were suits, leather jackets, caps, were of a more modern type and A year's program of Chris- by 'the Bay Port Woman's club, ~embers of the village council disturbed conditions not to pay overalls, shirts, top coats and girls' Study. were built eight years ago. The tian Education in Tuscola Mrs. Walter Kramp, the Sebe- 6:30, Epworth League devotions. are Geo. W. West, president; W. L. taxes. While there is not really a dresses. loss is partially covered by insur- county. waing string trio, and the Harbor Mann, Lester Bailey, A. C. Atwell, taxpayers' strike ° in Michigan, Harold Drohn and Laverne Stev- 7:30, United service in the Pres- ance. Beach Woman's club. Mrs. David byterian church. ~o Bo Auten, J, A. Sandham and thousands are not paying who ens of Millington and Alfred Em~ Carl, president of East Central Monday and Tuesday, May 1 and R. M. Taylor, trustees; arid C. M. could pay. They ask why should pey and Eddie Tanski of Vassar district, will talk about "High Wallace, clerk. they pay .taxes when there is legis- were crested April 13 charged with Pioneer Settler 2, district meeting at Deckerville Easter Cantata Spots of State Federation" and lation being proposed to cancel the the theft of harnesses. The four for pastors and laymen. Miss Frances Stewart, dean of back taxes of those who have not men furnished bonds for their ap- Greatly Enjoye" d Passed Away, Apr. 26 Friday, May 5, a Father and Son women of Alma college, will speak paid their taxes in recent years. As pearance at the May term of court. banquet will be held in the parlors Pupils of 9 Schools to On "The Balkans." Mrs. A. H. a result of this feeling" almost the Twelve double team harnesses were of our church. The program will Sunday evening, the M. E. William H. Withey, pioneer set- Sauer, of Bad Axe, will give a Attend Review Here entire income Qf the state, except stolen from faiths in the western be announced next week. church of Cass City was filled to tler in Elkland township, passed reading and Mrs. N. J. Hill, of from its automobile revenue, has ~art of Tuscol~ county w£'thin the away at the home of his nephew, Bethel M. E. Church--Sunday its capacivy--'~-- to ~n~J:..... *~'^~,.uv u.,~"~'^"~ ^~ev.,. Detroit, will tell about her life in School, 11:00. Preaching service, come to a stop. it was following" last month. Officers have recov- Wallace Withey, on East Main St., Teachers of nine rural schools of the First M. E. church of Bay City I Russia. Business sessions will be .the introduction of what is known ered eight of them which were sold Wednesday, April 26, at 10:30 p. 12:00. the central part of 'the Thumb dis- render an Easter cantata entitled, held both morning and afternoon. as the Moore delinquent tax bill at a community sale in Bay City. m., after an illness of .several T. S. Bottreil, Pastor. trict have arranged to bring their that the taxpayers began to quit "The King Triumphant." T!4ere The contract for the erection of 7th and 8th grade pupils to .the months. paying. One state official who h~s were about thirty members in the the new school building in District Presbyterian Church- Paul J. Cass City .school to participate in choir and as they entered 'the Born in Rich township, Lapeer No. 5, Fairhaven township, was made a study of the tax situation, county, in 1840, he came .to Elkland Allured, Minister. Sunday, April "the review of subjects on which the declared that this proposed delin- P. T. A. Meets church in their robes, singing for awarded Monday evening to Arthur "pupils will write at the county township about 1864 arid a few 30: quent tax legislation had thrown Monday Evening their processional, "Christ the Lord J. Gulch, Detroit. Mr. Gulch was Morning worship, 10:30 to 12:30. examinations. It is expected that is Risen Today," every heart in years later was united in marriage the second lowest bidder on the 'the state into its present deplorable with Miss Dorleska Karr. He Sermon: "If 'thou hadst known in other schools will join, the class plight. As a result the institutions, 'that large audience was stirred. job, his figure being $7,474. John The last meeting of the P. T. A. cleared, a farm ½ mile north of this day the things which belong here. 'the taxpayers and everybody else in this school year will be held at The cantata was beautifully ren- Paison, Bad Axe, had withdrawn The review will be held here on Elkland cemetery which he sold to unto peace." Might not Jesus well suffers. the high school auditorium on dered and the special parts, such as his bid of $7,454. Friday, May 12, comlnencing at Joseph Striffler and later pur- repeat this cry unto 'the world of Now the legislature is faced with Monday evening, May 1. solos, qua~ets, etc., were el?or- According to John Doyle, Huron 1;30 p. m., and will close in time chased a farm just south Cass 19337 Adult lesson: "Jesus Sets not only 'the problem of figuring Moving pictures will be extfibited formed in very fine style. The county clerk, he has issued about that the class may attend the base- City. Here he lost his buildings New Standards of Living"--Mark out new ways to raise money but to by C. C. Paquin, educational diz'ec- choir seemed to be at ease and at 6~000 car license plates which is ball game at the fair grounds be- .during the fire of 1881 and in 1887 10:13-27, overcome the untold damage that for of the Michigan Conservation all times during the rendition of almost ~1,000 short of last year. Christian Endeavor, 6:00. An- tween Mayville and Cass City. Mrs. Withey passed away. some of the fool provisions of the Department, and there will be spe- the cantata, there was perfect har- The village council of Sebewaing other discussion on 'the parables of Rural pupils will be guests of the mony and co-operation. The cor- His second marriage was with has signed a contract for the pur- Moore bill created. cial musical numbers. Officers for Miss Jennie Hutton. After her Jesus. local school at this game. There is bound to be a sales tax net solo, Calvary, played by John chase of a new engine and gener- the coming year will be elected. death, he made his home with his( Joint evening seiwice, 7:30, in Pupils of the following .teachers of some kind from all 'the talk you Hittel, deserves special mention, ator to be added to their electric grandchildren in Windsor, Ont. this church. Under the subject,. will attend 'the 7th and 8th grade can hear around legislative halls, His tone was rich, sweet and beau- light plant. The cost is to be $35,- He came to Cass City to visit his "Christ and the Newspaper," the reviews here: Clare Collins, Miss and just now members of both the tiful. 926.00. The engine will be of the CASS CITY MARKETS. nephew, Wallace Withey, on Sept: Christian interpretation of current Le'ta O'Dell, Miss Ardis Laidlaw, senate and house are trying to fig- The choir sang for ~heir reces- Diesel ,type five cylinder, 525 horse Mrs. Marie O'Dell Hanes, Miss 2rid last and was taken ill while events will be presented in open ure out just what should be taxed April 27, 1933] sional, "Now the Day is Over," power. The total cost, including forum. :Berneice McConnell, Miss Abina and What should not be 'taxed. closing with the three fold amen. here. installation cost and addition to the Mr. Withey was a member of the Thursday, May 4, Annual Coun- Garety, Miss Hazel Hower, Miss *'Regrettable as it may seem, I Buyiflg price~ Mrs. Ida Sermon is the organist light plant building will be approxi- Methodist church while a resident ty Sunday School Convention at Marion Leishman and Miss Helen am afraid that 'the merchants, are Wheat, No. 2, mixed ...... 65 and director and Roy. W. Clyde mately $45,000.00. of Cass City and was very active Fairgrove Presbyterian church. Loughern. the ones who will have to assume Oats, bushel ...... 25 Donald is pastoi~ of the Bay City Turn to page 5, please. in the religious life of ,the commu- the greatest portion of the new Rye, bushel ...... 42 church. nity. taxes, stated a member of the Peas, bushel ...... 1.50 Evangelical Church- Sunday, ~Funeral services will be held at senate. He was toId that if such a Beans, cwt ...... 2.40 INMATE POPULATION AT April 30: The superinendent, Law- the Evangelical church on Saturday W. S. C. Observes thing should come to pass it meant Light Red Kidney Beans, cwt. 3.00 Want to Place rence Buehrly, extends a cordial afternoon at 'two o'clock and in- FARM COLONY NEARLY 1000 'the financial ruin of hundreds of Dark Red Kidney Beans, cw't. 3.00 welcome .to all to attend the Bible "Health Day" % Barley, cwt ...... 75 Auto Assembly terment will be made in Elkland Study at 10 o'clock. A class for merchants who have already seen Inmates at the Michigan Farm Buckwheat, cw.t ...... Y0 cemetery. every age. The morning worship their business drop to a mere Plant in Cass City Colony at Wahjamega now number In anticipation of National Butterfat, pound ...... 22 Mr. Withey is survived by one at 11 o'clock. Theme, "The Vision nothing. 960, according to Dr. W. A. Crooks, Child Health Week, which is to be Butter, pound ...... 18 daughter, Mrs. Elias Annis. Four That Thrills." While there was 'talk in the superintendent. The number has observed in May, the program of Eggs, dozen ...... 10 The Rotary Club was presented children, Mrs. Alvira Kelley, Moi'- The Junior and ~enior Leagues early part of the session of cutting increased nearly 200 since two the Woman's Study Club moo'tint, Hogs, live weight ...... 3½ with a Rotary sign Tuesday noon timer, Emma and Win. Withey pre- are meeting at 6:45 and invite you the expenses of the state to meet years ago when Dr. Crooks took April 25, with Mrs. J. E. Seed as Cattle ...... 2 4 by Dr. P. A. Schenck, the society's ceded the father in death. its reduced income, there is no such charge of the institution. Many Turn to page 8, please. hostess, carried out the theme Calves president, in recognition of two suc- talk now. Too many people have new patients have been admitted "Health Day." Thirty~-eight mem- Hens .... ::::::::::]]:::::i::J::]::::]::::::]::"8-41~ i cessive 100% attendance meetings. got to be given ' jobs and the in- .Junior Class to Give Dance the completion of the new bers and guests were present to Springers ...... 7 - 11 !The sign will be placed at the end since fl~aence, of Some of the educa'tional receiving hospital last summer. Father and Son Banquet hear the interesting and instruc- Wool, pound ...... 12 - 15 j of the pavement west of Cass City. A dance for the benefit of the institutions and departments are The cottages are filled to capacLty The ladies oft he M. E. church tive health talk given by Miss Vera White ducks, 5 lbs. and up, lb. 7 t Dr. Schenck was nominated to junior class will be given at the altogether too powerful to permit and 557 are now on the waiting list will serve a father and son banquet Schell, who presented some of the such a thing to happen. So tax- Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Burke at-lsucceed himself as president; Sam- Gagetown opera house Friday who cannot be admitted until va- Friday evening, May 5. Tickets health needs of this community. , uel Champion, vice president; G.A. night, May 5. Music by Coffman's payers have got to pay, and pa~r cancies occur. are on sale priced at 75 cents for Musical numbers included two tended a choir musical given at a' Tindale, secretary; E. L. Schwad- Commodores. Henry LaFave, Mgr. plenty. Indications are that the two and 25c for each additional selections by the high school boys' Presbyterian church in Bay City on erer, .treasurer; and E. B. Schwad- Everybody welcome. "Admission, state expenses will be somewhere one.wAdvertisement. quartet, and a duet by Nancy Mor- near where they were some eight Tuesday evening, t erer and Earl Douglas, directors.* 25c.--Advertisement 2t. Adve~ise it in the Chronicle.

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PAGE TWO. CASS CITY CHRONICLE~FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. . CASS CITY, MICttIGAN.

eontfnue the pursuit as far as th~ evening, April 24. Roll call was Maxine, of Flint spent Sunday at~ Chinese continue to set up de- answered by naming a wild flower. the Robt: Craig home. News Review of Current fenses. The Japanese authoritie~ A paper, "Rock Gardens," was Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kitchen, deny, however, that they intend to given by Edna Barden, "Porch Kitchen and children occupy Peiping and Tientsin. Their BRU(t B OH Boxes" by Grace Marshall and Jason Clarence, Emma and David, and i:i; Events the apparent plan is to create a buffer "Planning a~ Vegetable Garden" World Over oT ASTER EXIFCUT|VEa Earnest Kitchen spent Easter with "~/~ :" : ~_..-. area out of the triangle to facili- by Ida Steel. A flower contest \ Supplying a week-to-weekin spirafibn for the heaw]-burdenedwh9 will Mr. and Mrs. Louis Surbrook at tate the consolidation of the newly every human trial parallelec[in the experiencesof *'The Man Nobody'Kao,~.*' was held at the close. Mrs. Freel conquered province of Jehol. They read the program for next year. It Bliss, Michigan. tecl States Goes Off the Gold Standara ana Move have gained control of all the im- HOLDING PAGE ONE. was voted to change the night for Miss Helen Craig of Pontiac portant passes through the great Matthew's luncheon for Jesus ter's bedside, clasping her frail meeting to Tuesday evening for spent the week-end at her home wall on the southern border of here. Toward Inflation--~Seeretary Perkins Asks furnished ,the third "news" sen- white hand in his, watching the nextyear. Jehol and the gates have been sation. It was not at all the kind flutter of the pulse, tryin~g by the Guy Ormes of Care was a caller Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chambers Federal Control of Industry. sealed and heavy guards placed at of affair Which a religious teacher force of his longing to hold that in town Monday. and daughter, Marguerite, ~ and them. would be ey~pectcd Lo approve. ]it~ie Ji~e back from the precipice. ,5Do and ~rso ArLh~ i~aiiis vf / C 4' Decidedly it was good-natured and And at last the doctors had told Saginaw spent Sunday with Mrs. UBA'S political disorders, mur- By EDWARD W. PICKARD noisy. him that it was useless any more EVERGREEN. John Towle. C ders and bombings, of which No theological tegt was applied to hope. So he had come, this Neff MacCallum, daughter, Effie, $*X~)~E ARE off the gold stand- I make Secretaries Perkins and Wal- much has been written in recent in limiting ,the invitation. No one ruler, to the strange young man Mrs. John Tomle received word[and son, Angus, spent Friday eve- " ard," was the terse but mo* lace virtual dictators over the eco- months, have finally engaged the stood at the entrance to demand: whose deeds of healing were the last week announcing the marriage Ining with their son and brother, mentous announcement by Secre- nomic life of the nation. attention of the ad- "What is your belief regarding the of her granddaughter, Miss Opal tMalcolm , at the Mrs. John Towle tary of the Treasury Woodin as he The legal basis of the labor bill sensation of the day. .... ':+:"'":':':': ministration i n birth of Jesus?" Or, "have you or returned to his of- is to be found in the interstate com- Was it too late? The ruler had i Chambers, daughter of Mr. and lhome. ~ Washington. Rep- have you not been baptised?" The Mrs. Frank Chambers of Saginaw, 1 fice from a confer- merce clause of the Constitution and resentative Hamil- thought so when he entered the door were flung wide, and, along to Mr. Arthur Hallis on April 18. 1 }~@!~!~!~!~-#~:##~ii. President in the "unfair competition" sections door; but as he stood in that splen- ence with ton Fish of New with the disciples and the respect- Mrs. Maud Karr and daughter, I Advertise it in the Chronicle. Roosevelt; and a~ of the federal trade act. ~ork has been urg- did presence a new thrilling con- able folks, a swarm of publicans the same time the It is upon these legal powers that viction gripped him: i~i~::~i~i~i~ii~i ing our government arid sinners trooped in. White House gave the secretary of labor is to depend "Master, my daughter is even iii!~iii!!ii~i~ to employ diplomat- "Outrageous,"~ grumbled the ...... out the news that to exercise the following authority: now dead," he exclaimed. "but come I ~ii!i~ ~ ic intervention to worthy folk. "Surely if this teacher the Chief Executive 1. To prohibit from interstate com- end the "reign of and lay your hand on her and she merce articles produced by any in- had any moral standards he never had placed an em- terror," and said he will live." dustry working its labor more than would eat with such rabble." bargo on the fur- ~:.:.=:~;~:~~ would formally de- Jesus rose and went with him. 30 hours a week or more than six They were shocked; but he was ~1 therexport ofg old, hours in any one day. Milk and mand that Secre- permitting the dol- cream are exempted; executives and Rep. Fish retary Hull t a k not. That he had condemned him- managers are exempted; and cer- self according to their formula Here is lar to depreciate in such a step unless the administra- KINGSTON. President tain exemptions are made in the worried him not a whir. His liking Roosevelt foreign exchange, cases of seasonal or other emergen- tion got busy very speedily. For a for folks overran all social bound- and was ready to cies. Boards are set up to regulate time Mr. Hull seemed averse to any Mr. and Mrs. George Westerby such exemptions. FUEL ask congress for authority to put interference, but Mr. Roosevelt aries; he just could not seem to and son of Birmingham spent the 2. To limit and if necessary pro- remember that some people, are ~nto action his policy of "controlled hibit from interstate commerce the started things by calling the Cuban week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Leo inflation." Mr. Roosevelt himself production of any plant or indus- ambassador, Don Oscar B. Cintas, nice people, proper people, and Burns. trial group which is overproducing. some are not. That's calls this policy a program for con- to the White House for a discus- Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Calkins 3. To investigate wages through a "Come, come," he exclaimed to trol of commodity price levels, and wage board, to fix and impose mini- sion of the situation. ~he ambassa- and family of Orion spent the ,the Pharisees, "won't you ever get ~ays it is designed to raise prices .mum fair wages; to publish the dor also conferred with Sumner week-end with Mr.. and l~rs. Lewis but to keep them from going too names of employers failing to raise Welles, assistant secretary of state, over nagging at me because I eat Rossman. wages in accordance with a direct with these outsiders ? Who needs Dependable far up. He gave assurance that order to do so; and to prohibit from and then Mr. Welles went to the the doctor most--they that are well Allison, Twila and Bess Green there would be no resort to "printing interstate commerce goods produced White House for instructions. and Mrs. Kitely spent from Friday 10ress money." by any employer refusing to com- Mr. Roosevelt has no desire to or they that are sick ? There is no heat so satisfactory as coal heat ply with a wage order. "And here's ano.ther thing to until Sunday with relatives in Senators Thomas, Byrnes and order military intervention in the Pontiac. and there is no coal more dependable than those we Pittman drafted the measure to affairs of Cuba. which he could do think about," he added. "You lay carry out the President's plan, and IGHT now the eyes of the world under the Platt amendment, holding so much stress on forms and creeds Mr. and Mrs. Will Weldon of carry in stock. it was promptly introduced in the R are turned on Washington, for that this would cost us a lot o£ and occasionS--do you suppose God Detroit spent last week with Mr. senate as an amendment to the the series of talks between Presi- money and besides would enrage cares about all that ? What do you and Mrs. McCamic. I A COAL FOR EVERY NEED. ~ending farm relief bill. It provides: dent Roosevelt and representatives President Machado and create an think he meant when he said: 'I Mr. and Mrs. Olson moved from 1. For expansion of credit up to of many other nations have begun, unpleasant diplomatic situation. will have mercy and not sacrifice ?' the King farm to Mrs." Morton's $3,000,000,000 through purchase of and if the hopes of the Chief Ex- • herefore his present plan is to Take that home and puzzle over farm, north and west of town. government obligations by the fed- ecutive are realized they will result it." eral reserve banks. (This means the take steps to redeem the island's Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Freel and in the finding of a way out of the financial situation, which ia "Defends publicans and sinners Dani0n Bc purchase in the open market of gov- Dr. and Mrs. Goiter returned world depression. ernment bonds and was tried in the wretched, and to relieve the unem- . . . Jesus of Nazareth Welcomes home Saturday from a week's visit :Hoover administration.) Prime Minister J. Ramsay Mac- ployment and discontent that are at Them at Lunch . . Rebukes Prom- with his parents in Pennsylvania. 2. As an alternative, for the in- Donald was the first of the visitors ' | ] urnac the bottom of Cuba's difficulties. inent Pharisees... "Creeds Un- They also were in Washington, D. flation of the currency by issuance to arrive and the first to confer of greenbacks up to $3,000,000,000 :He and the State department wish important," He says. "God Wants C., where the cherry treds are in Size. under the act of 1862, such currency with Mr. Roosevelt and Secretary ] MmllerCr,ek to increase the sugar imports from Mercy Not Sacrifice." blossom. to be legal tender for all debts, pub- of State Hull. Edouard Herriot, Cuba by granting substantial reduc- A fourth .story for page one. You lic and private. Mrs. John Barden is entertaining former premier of France,: was ti9ns to the island on the sugar may be sure it was carried into 3. For use of such greenbacks to her sister from Philadelphia, Pa. mneet maturing government obliga- close on MacDonald's heels; and tariff. This, naturally, will not hundreds of homes during the next :tions and to purchase government the others ~are scheduled to follow Flease the domestic cane and beet few weeks, and formed the basis Mrs. Mary Hartt, Lillian Hartt ] PhoeniX,urn,,size. ebligations. rapidly. No one of the "conversa- sugar Industries. for many a long evening's discus- an.d E. R. Hartt of Pontiac spent 4. For retirement of such green° tionalists" is empowered to really Monday here. backs at the rate of 4 per cent & There is a genuine fear among sion. PROMPT DELIVERY. ORDER TODAY. year. decide anything( but all of them some officials in Washington that As the meal drew to its close Mr. Coan received word that his 5. For reduction of the gold con- are free to express the views of opponents of President Machado there came a dramatic interrup- daughter, Jennie, who" is..teaching tent of the dollar not more than 50 their respective governments on per cent for the purpose of protect- will, in their efforts to overthrow tion--a ruler of the city made his school in the Upper Peninsula sub- ing American foreign trade from th¢ economic matters. It was under- his regime, perpetrate some outrage way slowly to the head of the table mitted to an appendicitis operation stood that MacDonald would not [ FARM PRODUCE CO. effects of depreciated foreign cur- against American interests in Cuba, and stood silent, bowed by the last week. rencies and to enable the Presiden¢ talk much about the war debts, but thus raising a situation in which terrible weight of his ~ grief. That Mrs. Lottie Peter was hostess to [ Telephone 54 to negotiate an international agree- Herriot was authorized to state Znent stabilizing monetary stand- the United States might be com- morning he had sat at his daugh- the Woman's Study club Monday ards. France's position on that subject. pelled to intervene. 6. For acceptance of war debt The whole series of conversations payments up to an aggregate of in Washington is a preliminary to OSCOW'S famous trial of six $I00,000,000 in silver at a value of the coming world economic confer- ~aot more than 50 cents an ounce. British engineers and eleven ence, and the hope of President M 7. For coinage of such silver and Rusgians on charges of espionage, deposlt in the treasury for redemp- Roosevelt and Secretary Hull is sabotage and bribery ended in the tion of silvar certificates issued that the way can be paved for re- against it, such certificates to be conviction of five of the Britons habilitation of the world by the ~ased for paying obligations of the and ten of the Russians. L. (3. United States. lowering of trade barriers and Thornton was sentenced to three Secretary Woodin drew up the or- monetary stabilization. / der concerning gold exportation. Un- years in prison; W. H. MacDonald, who pleaded guilty, to two years; der it no gold is allowed to leave EPUBLICAN postmasters who the country except that earmarked Allan Monkhouse, John Cushny and R have demonstrated their effi. Charles Nordwall were ordered de- for foreign account before April 15 ciency are to be permitted to co~i. To the Public: ported; A. W. Gregory was acquit- and such amounts as are required to m ..... ~,, rL, plete their terms. So announces ted. The ten Russians were given ' ...... i save American business men from Postmaster General loss on consignments in foreign prison terms up to ten years. There :[ames A. Farley, to was nothing surprising in the out- trade incurred prior to the proclama- the joy of several tion of the new policy. come unless it were the mildness thousand G. O. P. of the penalties inflicted. The United States thus has placed office holders and The British government, which We have recently equipped our plant tohandle a itself on the same footing as Great t h e corresponding had been watching the case with Britain and many other foreign na- dismay of a great tions. Its money is unstable in value intense interest, struck back at the army of Democrats. Soviet union promptly. King George in international trade. It was point- who would like the and the privy council declared an ed out that Mr. Roosevelt could now jobs. Mr. Farley 80 per cent embargo on Russian with greater propriety propose that says his party has imports and the Metropolitan Vick- all nations go back to the gold stand- long stood, for the I~ers Electrical Equipment company, ard together. civil service system employer of the convicted men, or- Effects of our plunge into the in- of competitive ex- J. A. Farley r dered an immediate appeal in be- flation pool were immediate. Prices pecial Tracto aminations and "will not abandon half of the two defendants who ""-',..~ ÷~... ~,~*~- exchanges espeo and that high ground," so he gives out were sent to prison. cially in the commodity" markets this message : went up with a rush and trading "No incumbent whose term hag YRON "C. TAYLOR, chairman was heavier than for many months. not yet expired and who has been Millions of dollars were added to M of the United States Steel rendering loyal and effective serv- corporation, has added his voice to the farm value of all grains, and ice to the government need have cotton and sugar also moved up- the chorus of industrial executives the slightest fear of removal. It who believe the CO' a oiille ward, as did provisions. will be the policy of the Post Office course of the de- The Price is extremely low. On the London and Paris ex- department to allow every efficient p,ression has turned. changes the dollar sank decidedly. post master to fill out his term." At the annual meet- ~either the British nor the French District attorneys, marshals and ing of stockholders were pleased with the President's collectors are not under civil serv- in Hoboken, Mr. Bring inyour drums and get them filled or action. The London Daily Tele- ice and in time these places prob- Taylor, who is not- graph said: "Following America's ably will be filled with deserving ed in the financial latest action a demand will arise in Democrats. Also there are hun- district for the cau- we will deliver. Ask the station men-for more in- every country for fresh depreciation dreds of vacancies in the postmas- tiousness of his ut- so that exporters may not lose their terships to be filled immediately, terances, declared : power of competition in world mar- and these will be filled as,soon as "Better times are kets. The new task of the states-, Mr. Farley's department has com- ahead." formation.. Also distillate and a complete line ot men is to prevent a chaotic process pleted a study of examinatio~ And in support of M. C. Taylor of competitive depreciation of cur- methods. this belief he cited the fact that rencies. The postmaster general makes the corporation was operating at 21 the finest oil that money can buy. Greases of all .. the welcome assertion that th~ per cent of capacity, the first time p OLICIES of the Roosevelt ad- United States post office is going that operations have reached this lministration are being expanded to pay its way hereafter. He aims level since March, 1932. descriptions. and extended so fast and so far to save $72,000,000 in the coming Following his address Mr. Taylor .\ that congress and the country are fiscal year, and this, he believes, presented to the meeting a motion O scarcely able to will suffice to balance his budget. by a stockholder for a vote of con- keep up with the fidence in the Roosevelt adminis- Don't forget a ge me Firestone tire and pace set. One of j APAN'S armies in China contin- tration, It was carried without dis- the ~ broadest and ued their advance south of the sent by a standing vote. most revolutionary great wall, driving before them dis- Willard battery to make your car perform like organized or traitorous Chinese of its proposals was UTH BRYAN 0WEN, the new troops. The Japanese at latest re. submitted to the minister to Denmark and the ports had occupied the entire tri- R house committee on first American woman to be given a new one. At your service. labor by Secretary angle between the wall and the such a diplomatic post, has told the of Labor Frances Lwan river, with its base on the newspaper men that she intends to Perkins in the form gulf of Pohai, and were mpving serve beer in the legation in Copen- of a draft bill of- onward toward Tientsin. They hagen, which is something for the feted as a substt' crossed the river near Lwanchow daughter of William Jennings Bry- tute for Senator Secretary and bombarded that city and the Perkins an, lifelong advocate of prohibition. Black's 30-hour ! surrounding region. There was "Yes," she said, "I will serve 3.2 Cass City Oil and Gas Co. week measure which was passed by l great alarm in Tientsin, where per cent beer. It is in keeping with the senate and for the almost iden- some 400 Americans, mostly busi- the law of my own country and the tical Connery house bill. It is de- ness men and their' families reside. custom of the land to which I am Stanley Asher, Manager Telephone 25 signed to give the federal govern- When the Japanese started their going. But I don't consider that ment full control not only over the push into the undisputed Chinese important. I- am really interested hours of labor but also Over indus- territory so~th of the great wall in the progressive development in trial production and prices. The the Lwan river was set as the lira. Denmark which i hope to study for passage of this legislation and of the it. But the Japanese command my country." pending farm marketing bill would now has announced that they will ©. 1933, Western New~paper Un~o~ CASS CITY, MICHIGAN. CASS CITY CHRONICLE--FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. PAGETHREE. i i i ii i ir ,111 ...... i i ii iii iii i i i Detroit Sunday, after spending the Easter vacation with her parents, BUD 'n' BUB ,,,No,,o,,o; - DING DONG ! By ED KRESSY [ Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Ehlers. Mr. and" Mrs. Clifford Furness • entertained Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Furness, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd • : , ,+,, ,% Farver and Roy and Stanford Fur- ness, all of Elkton. Mrs. Sam McGowan of Detroit is spending some time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Phette- place. Mr. McGowan returned to +I '+++ Detroit Sunday. Mrs. Claud Kirkpatrick left Sun- day to spend a few days with her brother. Emerson 2~reei, of Decker+ ville. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Neville vis- ited at the homes of F. C. and Frank Neville in Minden City Sun- day. Jack Phetteplace is entertaining BELL514AVll bMDAPROMINgN-I" PART IN OU[

J L !!iiii

Cool and comfortable in this at- tractive frock for morning wear. 'l].lg_.LAI~61;ST PERFECT BELL II,l'l'llr= WOP..L~15T~15 AlqPHERb I~ AMEP-J(_.~,15 ou~ ov4kl WOP..LO- It is easily made, easily worn, and OI4E, gEl~r= 114 BUI2.MA. i~.V¢,oO5 IjBE~Ty BF_LL,II,I Pt~ILADELPHIA J)A. easily laundered, due to the sim- ple lines of its design. It may be developed in the smart Sophia Striffler to Delbert family, and returned home last digaonal striped cotton, in red and Strickland, S ½ of N ½ of SW i/$ Tuesday. white, blue and white, or green Turning Bach and pt. S ½ of SW ~, Sec. 35, Mrs. Sarah Valance has been and white, with bright colored but- Twp. Elkland, $I.00 etc. visiting the past two weeks with the Pages People's State Bank, Caro~ to her daughter, Mrs. R. D. Keating, Ivan Srdanov and wife, N ½ of and family in Cass City. Items from the files of Cass City SE ~4, Sec. 22, Twpo Ellington, Newspapers of 1898 and 1908. Mrs. John Combs and Mr. and $1.00 etc. Mrs. William Ashmore, Jr., were Eugene Wellington and wife to entertained for dinner Sunday at William Stebbins, SW ~ of NW z/~, Twenty-five Years Ago. the William Ashmore, Sr., home in Sec. 34, Twp. Watertown, $1.00 honor of their son, Theodore's sixth May 1, 1908. etc. birthday. The contract for building the Harold Dewey to Frank Hegler, Sunday School board meeting state road commencing at a point et at, NW ~ of NE ~, Sec. 22, will be held at the Harmon Enders- one-half mile west of the western Twp. Novesta, $1.00 etc. be home on Friday evening, April corporation line of Cass City and Mary Finehout to Ira C. Elli- 28. running two miles north was let thorp and wife, Lot 5, and pt. Lot 4, Frank MacCauley has been on Friday afternoon to A. T. Over- Blk. 4, Village of Millington, $200.- the sick list the past few days. man of St. Joseph, Mich., his bid 00. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond LaVigne being $2,589.50. Two other bids St. Lorenz Evangelical Lutheran were submitted, one for $2,600.00 and children of Detroit visited rela- Congregation to John E. Squires tives in Grant Sunday. and one for $3,800.00. and wife, pt. SW ~, sec. 6, Twp: A large crowd attended the The marriage of Miss Maude E. Tuscota, $1.00 etc. Premo Sunday School class meet- McCrea, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cora M. Berry to Olive N. Ray- ing at the Arthur Ellicott home James McCrea, and Samuel W. worth, lots 7 and 8, Blk. 6, Village Friday evening. Blades was solemnized on Wednes- of Wilmot, $1.00 etc. day at twelve o~clock at the home Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hartwick of ~the bride's parents on Garfield A. Lawrence Mills et al to Hat- and children of Clifford were Sun- Ave. tie M. Talbo£t, pt. S frl. ~/~ of SW day visitors at the Stanley Mellen- frl. ~/~ and pt. NE , ~ of SW ....iTI. A. A. McKenzie, the local agent dorf home. for the Michigan Sugar Co., has ~, sec. 30, Twp. Akron, $i.00 etc. Mr. and Mrs. Ulysses G. Parker A. Lawrence Mills eL al to Rach- and daughter, Miss Frieda, were placed a carload of beet seed among el T. Beaty, pt. SE ~ of SE 1£, the farmers in this vicinity. Fifty Saturday callers in Cass City and sec. 30, Twp. Akron, $1.00 etc. also called at the Levi" Helwig families who will work in the sugar John Hecht and wife to Walter beet fields for the Caro plant are home in Elkland. J. Hecht, E 100 A of SW {, sec. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Martin expected from Wyandotte and 27, Twp. Denmark, $1.00 etc. Cleveland, 0. and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Maharg Della Martin Cool %o Nerritt D. were Saturday evening •callers in Dr. A. N. Treadgold now occupies Hartt and wife, lot 1 and pt. lot 2, Kingston. his new suite of offices in the Blk. 5, Seed's sec. add., Village of building known as, the Etherinton Cass City, $2,200.00. property on Segar St., which he Merritt D. Hartt and wife to SHABBONA. purchased. John Doerr and wife, lots 1 and pt. Mr. and Mrs. John Wagester 2, Blk. 5, Seed's sec. add., Village Little Patsy Burns is spending a have moved to their farm near of Cass City, $1.00 etc. Linkville. few days with her grandparents, Charles H. Seely and wife to Mr. and Mrs. L. Waterman. .For A PATTERN, size 34, 36, S. A. Bradshaw, V. S., of Ubly Lloyd C. Whetstone and wife, pt. 38, 40, 42, 44; or 46, send 15c is assisting Win. Morris in his SW ~/~ of SW 1/~, sec. 29, Twp. A1- Levi Holcomb visited relatives in N ENE COtVlE:$ N EW$ OF Detroit the first of the week. in coin, your NAME, AD- veterinary business. He expects mer, $1.00 etc. DRESS, STYLE NUMBER and to remain in Cass City several Lloyd C. Whetstone and wife .to L. Waterman made a business size to Kay Boyd, 103 Park weeks. trip to Sandusky Friday. Mariam Juhasz, lot. SW i/; of SW Ave., New York. Complete NEDUCED M R|N S mW / ¼, sec. 29, Twp. Almer, $I.00 etc. Henry Phillips of Marlette is re- and simple sewing chart with Thirty-five Years Ago. Mariam Juhasz to Lloyd C. pairing the fence on his farm each pattern. April 28, 1898. Whetstone and wife, pt. SW ~ of south of here. SW ~, sec. 3, Village of Caro, Mr. and Mrs. Clare Burns spent J. A. Caldwell is moving build- $1.00 etc. tons and slide giving accent to the m ings for Charles Maynard at Gage- Sunday with Mr. Burns' parents, white trimming and belt. Or cot- Alfred J. Kirridge and wife to Mr. and Mrs. L. Waterman. Now town. ton flower prints, linen, or ±ub silk John Chapman and Ernest Hyatt may be used. + Chas. Levagood of this place and ¼ of SW 1A, see. 35, Twp. Almer, visited the former's brother, Rich- Miss Maggie Bailey of Novesta $1.00 etc. The shaped trimming on the ard Chapman, who is quite sick at were united in marriage yesterday waist and the belt are made of Edward ft. Weiderhold to Roy his home near Capac Sunday. by Pastor Rushbrook. W. Livez~nore, NW 1/~ of SW ~/~, contrasting material, and the 'cape- TheStandard Oil Company Mrs. M. Sharp is on .the sick list. let sleeves are ideal for spring and General Blanco, the Spanish sec. 18, Twp. Dayton, $1.00 etc. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jobe, of summer wear. general at Havana, was hung in Clawson came Saturday 'to spend Designed in sizes 34 to 46, size effigy at ~he corner of West and a couple of weeks with her. 88 requires 3 2-3 yards of 39 inch Main streets in our town last eve- RESCUE. announces Reduced Motor Mrs. S. Harms of Pontiac is visit- material with z/~ yard of contrast- ning. ing material, 35 inches wide, for Everybody is busy these days ing her daughter, Mrs. Ver~ Mc- Dr. D. P, Deming has offered his Gregory. the belt and waist trimming. The services to Uncle Sam as surgeon and nights going fishing. width of the dress at the lower Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Harp and and received notice on Monday Mrs. Elizabeth Tebeau has been edge, with plait fullness extended, Oil Prices- children, Maude and Gerald, of near Immediately! that his application had been on the sick list the past week. is two yards. placed on file. Imlay City spent Saturday with John Combs spent a few days relatives. Isaac Hall is preparing to build at Romeo on business. a residence on the south side of The M. B. C. prayer meeting was MICKIE SAYS-- $ Garfield ave. It will be veneered Mr. and Mrs. A~thur Taylor held at the Harvey McGregory with brick. visited at the Peter Anderson home home Tuesday evening. in Pigeon Sunday. A SUN~.H OF SU~SC21PTIO~L~ J. E. Thatcher, representing the Fred Nichol returned to Port ISO °vIS.. 3 ,ow 25' ' Mr. and Mrs. Ostrum Summers TO "PALS MBVSPAPER ~3:~IRE~ New York Life Insurance Co., who Huron Saturday where he is at- ~X~.~Y D~ GO A BUN(gH OF" has been working in Tennessee of were visitors Friday at the William tending school. Severn home near Metamora. REMEWAL~ AidE; DUE ~"VEt~Y late, spent several days of the week Frederick Ehlers returned to De- [:::I~',/~ PERI-~P,~ u/'oUl~ at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mellendorf troit Sunday after spending the PAIPF_.~:~, ],4E~[~..CZS"i:ZENEWIM~ = ~" Tuesday will be remembered for and sons, Edward and Milton, vis- Easter vacation with relatives ~V~D SUR.EAPPRE~TF-. tl" ited at the Joseph Mellendor~ home here. IF YOUD Loo~ A~'~ w/ POLARINE 2 0 some time to come by members of Sunday. the Baptist church here, the occa- H. T. Mills of Sandusky will talk sion being the ordination service A nice crowd attended the Ladies' to the young people at the M. E. of their pastor, Emanuel Rush- Aid meeting at the Twilbn Heron ch.urch here next Sunday afternoon brook. home last Thursday. at three o'clock. Monday, May 9, has been set as Mrs. Gilbert Tebeau and daugh- Mrs. Emily Leslie of Detroit was STANOLIND W W H +15 +PER QT. the date for a special village elec- ter, Marie, were callers in Cass a guest of Mrs. ft. P. Neville Fri- tion to vote upon raising $18,000 City and Owendale Saturday. day. §(Plus Ta~ for securing waterworks and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Heron and Mrs. DougaI McNevin is quite ill electric lights. daughters were Saturday evening and is confined to her bed. callers at the John MacCallum home. Mrs. Joe Brown is numbered Soon REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Coming with the sick. Mrs. William Valance and -Mr. and Mrs. George Hartsell were Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dunlap, Jr., , ) Mary LaLonde ,to Anton Stricker have moved back to his father's The Standard Oil Company will disclose an important achieve- and wife, Lots 7 and 8, Blk. 12, business callers in Cass City Satur- day. farm. ment in automotive lubrication. ® Watch this newspaper for Village of Reese, $1.00 etc. Mrs. Vern Nichol, Rex Nichol Almon F. Perry, Exr., to Am- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mellendorf and daughters and B. F. Phette- facts about a new product that win iengthen the life of your car. brose W. Hall, pt. Lots 8, 9, 10, 6, and sons, Stanley, Norris and Per- place visited relatives in Port Hu- 7, 4, 5, Blk. 16, Village of Vassar, ry, were business callers in Bad ron over the week-end. $1.00 etc. Axe Saturday forenoon. : Mrs. Chas. Travis and son of Frank Miller and wife to M. J. Mrs. William Little of Toronto, Dryden visited Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Standard Oil Company Toohey and wife, S ~ of SW Ontario visited a few days with Travis Friday. ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES Sec. 24, Twp. Juniata, $1.00 etc. her sister, Mrs. Thomas ffarvis, and Miss Eunice Ehlers retrained to Copr. 1933, Standard Oil Co.

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j!! J / CASS CITY CHRONICLE-- FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN. " PAGE FOUR. Croswell and destroyed 20 tons of Mrs. Sarah McDonald of Detroit Mrs. I. K; Reid is employed as Mr. and Mrs. N. Karr of Kings- Bird Mimic Brings cherries in a few days. CASS CITY CHRONICLE spent the week-end with friends nurse at the Win/Foe home. Mr. ton were callers in town Monday. No protection is given the start- Published Weekly. here. and Mrs. Foe and daughter, Miss Trouble to State W. Motz of Greenleaf called at Ourovernment ling by Michigan laws. They Adah, are all ill. the Mrs. W, G. Moore home Mon- Mrs. E. A. Corpron and daugh- The Tri-County Chronicle and can be destroyed by any means ter, Elnora, spent Tuesday of last Paul Zinnecker, who has been --How It Operates The European startling vrhich Cass City Enterprise consolidated day. which does not kill other birds at week in Saginaw. working in the Folkert store in can mimic the song of the meadow- the same time. This pest will en- April 20, 1906. Miss Christie McRae of Detroit is spending this week at her• paren- Elsie for the past few weeks, is By WHilom Bruckart lark or the blue jay and which can ter buildings in search ,of feed and Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Dailey and give a fair imitation of a cannery al home here. now back in the Cuss City .store. this trait can be utilized to trap Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Striffter visited i in disposing of cherries is the sub- Subscription Price in Advance. Mrs. N. MelIick of Bad Axe and and destroy them. The nests of ,the Miss Leone Lee, who is a teacher in Coiling Sunday. FACTS FOR FARMERS I ject of a warning sent to Michigan In Tuscola, Huron or Sanilac in Kingston, spent last week at her Florence Crane of this place mo- species should be destroyed if the Mr. and ,Mrs. L. Heideman and ]residents by the zoology depart- counties, $1.00 a year in advance. parental home here. tored to Royal Oak Monday to identification is certain. Commu- In other parts of Michigan, $1.50 children visited relatives in Peck NE of the senators created quite l~nent at Michigan State College. nity shoots to thin out flocks con- Mrs. W. G. Moore spent last spend the day with friends there. a year. In United States (outside over the week-end. O a furore in the recent session ] The startling is another foreign gregating in the fail have been suc- spent last week in Fowlerville, and Mr. and Mrs. Jas. McMahon and of congress by his criticism of the /species brought to this country by of Michia'an), $2.00 a year. ~!~er Junior is the ~ame of the cessfully staged in some communi- daughter, ja~lice~ si:,ent. ~e~:!-:~a~ Department of Agriculture for what , well inte~tio~ed ~,,,t ~m'.nf,,>~:~ed ~civertisi~g rates made known so~ born to }~h'. and },its. El,met ties. Mr. and Mrs. ~Wm. McCool and days last week at the home of Mr. he called a woeful waste of money persons who do untold damage on application. Martin, on April 12. The college zoology department Entered as second class matter daughter of Kingston speht Sun, and Mrs. Isaac Walker in Argyle. in printed pamphlets and documents while trying to improve on Mike Keenoy and son, Marcus, of asks that instances of damage done April 27, 1906, at the post office day at the D. C. Elliott home. ' for the information of agriculture. nature. The bird was introduced in Lansing visited at the Thos. Kee- Mrs. Bay .Crane and daughters, by the startling be reported to it at Cass City, Michigan, under the The Evangelical Ladies' Aid wili Katherine and Florence, and Mr. The senator, suddenly seized by a New York City in 1890 and now noy home Saturday. desire for economy, selected a pam- this summer. Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. meet May 3, in the basement of and Mrs. Loren Brown ~pent has increased and spread until phlet which he described as "The H. Fo Lenzner, Publisher ,the church for an all day meeting. ! Mrs. John L. Bearss entertained Wednesday of last week in Bay flocks are common occurrences in Mrs. Rand of New Jersey at her Love Life of a Bullfrog," on which Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. John Bohnsack en- City. Words in Dictionary home over the week-end. to make his own play for publicity. The startling is black in the tertained the B-D. Club at their The vocabulary of a standard dic- Mrs. G. VanWinkle and daugh- It was true that the Department spring, has a short drooping tail, home on S, Segar St., last Thurs- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gillam of tionary aggregates about 455,000 ters, Georgene and Sharlie, spent of Agriculture had issued a pamphlet and is about the same size as a day. Clifford were guests at the J. W. words. If the dead words of our Tewkesbury home last week. the week-end at the home of Mrs. concerning bullfrogs, although I male redwinged blackbird. ~ When speecl~ be added, the total, as Mrs. Joseph McCool and daugh- YanWinkle's sister, Mrs. Jewett, in failed to find in it any reference to the bird moults its spring plumage, shown by the New English Dhetion- ter, Mrs. Goldie Oaks, .of Flint Stanley Striffler and Keith Mc- Flint. his love life. On the other hand, the new feathers are tipped with ary on Histo{ical Principles, wvult~ visited at the D. C. Elliott home Conkey attended an A. & P. meet- Miss Eunice Ehlers, who is at- that document contained the results wMte or buff and the bird has a reach 700,000 words, for the Eng- Sunday. ing in Saginaw Tuesday night. of a study of that little friend of tending school in Detroit, spent mottled appearance. lish tongu< dying and dead. C. J. Striffler and Grant Patter- man in order to show how greatly Miss Dorothy Boyes spent Friday Wednesday and Thursday of last The startling destroys some nox- son made a trip to Buffalo, N. Y. he helped by his insatiable appetite and Saturday in Shabbona, as a week with Miss Dorothy Boyes at ious insects and may not be an guest of Miss Eunice Ehlers at her Sunday, returning home Monday. for certain kinds of insects, protect- Numbers Cannot Be Changed her home. unmitigated nuisance in all places home there. Clark Bixby, who has spent the ing the health of the nation and but it has a bad record in the cher- London streets are nambd ant[ Mrs. Eleanor Bader was 84 years past few months in California, re- the crops of the farmer. ry districts. The manager of one the houses numbered by the Lon- Misses Catherine Joos and Laura Miss Elizabeth Moore of Fowler- of age Thursday, April 2@, and was turned to his home here Monday. Obviously, it seems like a waste canning company in Michigan re- don county council, and it is illegal Jaus spent Thursday in Saginaw. ville spent from Wednesday until made happy by a birthday surprise of money until you know how far- ports that startling's appeared in to alter a number once assigned, Mr. and Mrs. ?/. D. Striffler Sunday at the home of her aunt, Dro and Mrs. W. Dickerson of party given in her honor by eight reaching the investigations of the flocks of thousands in orchards at or to deface it, visited friends in Argyle Thursday. Mrs. Ralph Ward. Akron were callers at the home of lady friends. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Randall, Sun- department prove to be. It is, how- Miss Anna Fletcher of Caro Mrs. Beulah Calley and children Mrs. Robert Brown is spending ever, proper to point out that with- spent Monday at her parental home and Kenneth Scott of Detroit spent day. two weeks in Detroit. While there out any of these scientific studies, here. from Wednesday until Friday at Warren Wood and Raymond Mc- her children, Bobble and Betty, are farming would not be what it has Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Striffler the John Bohnsack home. Cullough attended a four-county stayi~g with their grandmother, proved to be, a gigantic resource of drug meeting, in Bad Axe, Monday , hror, l le Liners :;: spent Sunday afternoo~ in Case- Mrs. W. R. Wylie and two chil- Mrs. Bertha Brown. a great nation. That statement is dren of Detroit were week-end night. rifle Mrs. L. Bailey, Mrs. W. D. Strif- made, notwithstanding the rec~og - guests at the home of Mrs. Wylie's Mrs. Sarah McDonald of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Campbell fler, Misses Catherine and Lucille ognized fact that farmers, as every- RATES--Liner of 25 words or FOR SALE--Home grown £imothy parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Tyo. and Angus McDonald were Sunday one else, have suffered in the worst spent Friday and Saturday in De- Bailey, and Joyce Fry visited at less, 25 cents each insertion° seed. Price, $2.00 per buo Ira Mr. and Mrs. W. ~ Hyatt and chil- dinner guests at the Thos. Keenoy depression of modern history. It Bullock, 5 east, 2 south, 1 east, troit. the home of Mrs. C. W. Clarke, in Over 25 words, one cent a word home. is my deliberate conclusion that ½ south of Cass City. 4-28-i Miss Ruby Ward spent last week dren, Maxine and Jack, spent Caro, Friday afternoon. for each i~sertion. Wednesday and Thursday of last Mrs. Carpenter of Flint spent farmers would have been worse off with friends and relatives in De- Lorene McGrath of Cass City, week with relatives in Flint. the week-end at the home of her except for the help of their gov- WE ARE SAWING lumber 3 miles GARDENS plowed, ashes hauled troit. freshman at Central State Teach- ernment in this connection. east and % mite south of Cass or any team work. Satisfaction Mrs] R. B. McConkey, Mrs. S. )arents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Benkel- ers' College at Mt. Pleasant, has Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bigelow were There are not thousands, but mil- City. Shagena Bros. .4-28-2 guaranteed. See Stanley Shar- Peterson, Mrs. W. Campbell, Mrs. man, Sr. been invited to join the Warriner callers in Saginaw Friday after- lions of these pamphlets, docu- rard. 4-21-2 A. Gallagher, and Mrs. A. N. Bige- Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Johnson: and literary society, one of the oldest noon. ments, books, leaflets and printed FOR SALE--Grimm alfalfa seed, low spent Thursday in Detroit. children of Detroit were guests at organizations on the campus. FOR SALE--Rural Russet Seed David McComb and family have material for newspaper publication 99% pure. Harvey Linderman, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fisher of the Albert Gallagher farm home Mrs. G. H. Burke, Mrs. J. D. potatoes. Loyal Boulton. 4-28-1 moved to the rooms over the B. J. sent out each year by the depart- 5 miles east, 1 south, ½ east of Royal Oak spent a few days this Saturday. Brooker, and Mrs. Mary Holcomb Cuss City. 4-21-2 Daily store. ment. If its work is to be of aid BLACK CAP PLANTS are now week at the home of Mrs. Fisher's Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Niergarth and daughter, Dorothy, were in Miss Lorraine Battle of Saginaw to those for whom it is intended, ready at Long's Fruit Farm, Bad parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Doerr. spent last week at the home of Bay City last Thursday to attend QUANTITY of cedar posts for was a guest at the Chgs. Dormelly they must be made acquainted with sale. Frank White, 1 mile south, AXe, M-53. 4-28-1 Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Landon and Mrs. Niergarth's parents in At- a musical given in the Episcopal it. So it does seem that govern- home Sunday. 1½ east of Cass City. 4-28-2 daughter,. Joel!a, of Holland spent tica, Indiana. church. Mrs. Jas. K, Brooker ap- ment expenditures of this kind are CASH PAID for cream at Kenr~ey's, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Kelley of the week-end at the home of Mr. Miss Christie McRae of Detroit peared on the program as pianist. justifiable up to a certain point; BEFORE YOU SELL your hogs Cass City. 3-24-tf Marlette spent Sunday at the John Landon's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. and the Misses Joanna McRae and Sunday dinner guests at the G. just as valuable, indeed, as are other and poultry, call the Marshall McTavish home. W. Landon. Lura DeWitt spent Tuesday after- W. Landon home honoring the funds spent by the department in Packing Co., Bay City, Phone FOR SALE--Strawberry plants at Miss Mary Agnes Fletcher spent Miss Carrie Hurley and Miss Tay- noon in Caro. birthdays of their son, Delbert, and the thousands of studies, researches, 2532. 4-7-5p 25 cents per i00. Sam Blades, Tuesday with her sister, Miss Anna lor of Detroit spent from Sunday Miss Esther Knowland, who has granddaughter, Joell~ Landon, experiments and administrative di- 2I/~ miles north of Cass City. Fletcher, of Caro. until Tuesday at the home of Miss spent the past few months with were Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Bailey of rection of its work. FOR SALE--Guernsey purebred 4-28-1. R. M. Taylor, G, A. Tindale, and Hurley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Howard Lauderbach, returned Harbor Beach, Mr. and Mrs. An- It is readily understandable how bull, 16 months olG from high producing strain. F. E. Hutch- WE BUY cream, eggs and poultry A. N. Bigelow spent Wednesday of qacob Hurley. .to her home in Caro Sunday.• drew Schwegler and daughter, agriculture gains from scientific work that results in prevention of inson, Cass City. 4-28-1p at our store on East Main St. last week in Detroit. Mrs. Chas. Donnely has received Miss Helen Latting of Lansing Joan, and Marshall Burr of Cass cholera among hogs, hoof and mouth M. C. McLellan. Phone 6. 2-27-tf 0. P. Kline of Mayville is a word that her grandson, Charles, and Miss Ilo Smith of Owosso were City. disease among cattle, rust in wheat, POULTRY WANTED--Hens, 8c ' guest at the Robt. McConkey, St., who has been ill since Christmas is FOR SALE--About seventy twen- week-end guests of Mrs. Ben Benk- and others of that character. Like- and 12c; springers, 7c and 10c. home for a few days. able be out now. His home ty-five pound .sAcks of spring to elman, Jr., at her home. wise, the experiment station in your Gillies' Creamery, telephone 184. wheat bread flour at a tow price Mro and Mrs. Kenneth Striffler is in Saginaw. The regular monthly business state, if you have happened to visit 3-3-tf. of Detroit were week-end guests The Lambda Sigma girls held meeting the Woman's Mission- [GRAPHIC GOL per sack. Call at depot. 4-28-1 of it, gives you a clear idea of results CHICKS--Accredited ,and blood at the C. D. Striffler home. their regular meeting at the school ary Society of the Baptist church to be gained from doing things a tested. Hatch every Tuesday I WANT TO BUY Kings.ton mani- house Tuesday evening. The eve- Mr. and Mrs. Alex Henry visited was held at the home o'f Mrs. Har- certain way, but it is not so easy and Friday. Price lowest ever fold and carburetor for Fordson ning was spent socially and a sup- at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John ry Young last Thursday. for the person who has not traced delivered free. Any number any- tractor. Ralph Loney. Phone • per was enjoyed. Jackson in Wickware Sunday. The Woman's Home Missionary each operation through to its ulti- where. Bay City Hatchery, ~er- 154-F-31. 4-28-i Miss Ethel Stewart spent the Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Turner, Miss Society of the M. E. church will mate conclusion to see where some rill, Mich. 4-28-3 week-end in Royal Oak, visiting Elaine Turner, and Miss Cressy meet Thursday, May 4, at the home expenditures are justified. FOR SALE--Two Duroc brood f OUl M~'r Mrs. John White at her home. Steele spent from Tuesday un.til of Mrs. A. H. Kinniard. This is All the while and in countless TO RENT--120-acre farm. Money sows with 6 and 8 pigs. Claude • ~ CON~JE Moore, 2 miles west of New James McIntyre of Detroit is a Saturday at the home of Mrs. Tur- the mite box opening meeting. 8 ways, the scientists of the depart- rent; very reasonable. G. Mc- u/~ 0~ CUT ~O7 Kee, Decker. Phone 154-F-14. Greenleaf. 4-21-2p guest this week a~ the home of his ner's ;brother, P. Metcalf, in De: Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross and ment are seeking to find facts, facts -FO ~ASMI~- Of value to the farmer, and when 4-28-1. grandmother, Mrs. Catherine Ross. troit. children enjoyed a dinner in honor WINDMILL for sale. Matt Parker. N~BL\CK. they have helped the farmer they Wm. A. Foe is confined to his Mrs. C. Burt and Mrs. John West of the eighth birthday of their son, / Phone 139-F-11. 4-28-1 have likewise performed a service FOR SALE--One young pair of home on E. Main St., being af- er~tertained the bridge club Tuesday Donald, Monday night, at the home night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. for the man in the city, since ag- mares, Fordson tractor and plow THE LADIES' AID of the Church flicted with b~lood poisonin~ in his of Mr. and ~rs. J. W. Tewkes- CUTS ACI:aOSS and a cow. John McGra`th, 3 C. Burr. A potluck supper was en- riculture is fundamental in our eco- of Christ will serve their regu- left leg. bury. miles west, 11£ north of Cass joyed and the evening spent in [ BALL nomic life. lar dinner at the churck-'Wednes- Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Taylor and Sun~tay guests at the home of City. 4-28-1p cards. i i::l~O~A ouTglD~ Thus we find ,in the Department day noon, May 3. Price, 15c. son, Howard, called at the E. A. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hitchcock were of Agriculture, bm'eaus of animal The Evangelical League of Chris- t All are welcome. Zemke home in Caro Sunday af- Mr. and Mrs. N. Merdon and daugh- industry, of agricultural economics FOR SALE--Strawberry plants, tian Er~teavor Will meet for the ternoon. ier, Carolyn, and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle and home economics, one relating 25c per 100. Mrs. Win. G. Mc- BABY CHICKS--We are now monthly business and social meet- USE ONE CLUB FOR CUT Kenzie. 4-28-1 Mr. and Mrs. H. Tare spent Sun- Hitchcock and two children of De- to plants and another relating to booking orders for chicks for de- ing at the home~ ,of Miss Elsie SHOT day home of Mrs. troit. control of foods and drugs in inter- livery when you want them and at the Tate's Buehrly next Tuesday evening, COME TO THE chili con carne mother, Mrs. Maude Leeson, in Sunday guests at the Thomas est of people's health, to mention a offering liberal discount for early HEN the ball is within a 50- supper served by the young peo- May 2. Colwell farm home were Mr. and few of them. Each has its place and orders. Every chick Michigan Brown City. yard radius of the green it is ple of the Church of Christ of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E: Steers, Mrs. Robert Brown of Caro, and W purpose. Each has been created Accredited. See us before trder- Miss Bertha McKenzie, who, for often impossible to impart backspin Novesta at the home' of Mr. and and Mrs. Win. Champion and c~ the past few weeks has suffered Mr. and Mrs. Ray Colwell and by a congress that saw a need for Mrs. Sprague, Friday, April 28, ing elsewhere. Elkland Roller daughter, Marjorie, of Detroit to the ball, for this requires a firm with a badly broken arm, is now children, Donna and Leonard, of the work that it was to do. 7:30 p.m.. Price, 25c. Mills. 2-10-tf spent the week-end with relatives blow which is likely to send the ball able to be out. Saginaw. flying past the green. In such situa- It may seem strange, at first and friends here. Mr. Champion TIMOTHY SP.~.D for, sale. Levi J. FOR SALE--Span of horses, 7 and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bohnsack of tions the cut shot is often employed. ~" .... ~ ~'"~ the weather h"-~a" joined them Sunday. Helwig, 4 miles north and 1~ 8 years old; nice bays; well Caro and Harry Bphnsack of Brown last week at the home of Mrs. Here the arms and hands are pulled and the bureaw, of public roads Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Schweitzer miles east of Cass City. 4-21-2 matched and well broke; weight City spent Sunday at the John Robt. Warner, who was hostess. in close to the body as the ball is should have been lodged in the De- and daughter, Helen, of St. Thom- partment of Agriculture. But the 2,900. These are extra good Bohnsack home. The afternoon was spent in sewing struck. The sidespin thus imparted CARPENTER WORK wanted-- ones. Allen Wanner. Phone as, Ont., and Miss Edith Schweib and conversation and refreshments ftinctions they performed at the Mr. and Mrs. R. H] Orr and chil- has a tendency to slow the ball up Work by the day at 25 cents an 148-F-13. 4-28-1 zer and Wilfred Brown of Rod- were served. once it strikes the turf. The ball time they were organized were more dren, John and Marjorie, of Pigeon ney, Ontario, weTe guests at the intimately related to agriculture hour or by contract. First class Mrs. Andrew McDermott and has a tendency to curve toward e POULTRY PRICES--For all No. 1 visited at the W. D. Striffler home Geo. West home from Saturday un- than to any other economic effort. work guaranteed. Ask for refer- Friday afternoon. son, Alton, of Alhambra, Calif., the right even after the bounce. Al- ences. Lue Keilitz, De ford. hens, 12c; Leghorn hens, 10c; til Wednesday. arrived by auto Tuesday evening at lowance must be made for this slic- The vast annual expenditures of roosters, 10c. At Elmwood store Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cleland of 4-14-4 Mr. and ~Mrs. R. N. McCullough the C. E. Patterson home. They ing trajectory, but with consider- the federal government, in co-oper- every day and at John Fournier's Minden City spent the week-end and Mr. and Mrs. John West vis- will spend .several weeks with rela- able practice one can accurately ation with the states, for construc- FARMERS! We pay cash for poul- store, Gagetown, every Wednes- with Mrs. Catherine Ross at her ited relatives in Rochester and Big tives and friends here. judge this shot. The main diffi- tion of public roads had their tno try, hogs, etc. Call us before you day and Saturday. Call Louis home on S. Segar St. ception from a desire to enable farm- Beaver Sunday. Mrs. McCullough Mrs. F. D. McIntyre and son, culty with this sort of swing is that sell. Caro Poultry Plant, Caro, Darowitz, 159-F-3. Cass City. Mrs. George Copeland and Mer- ers t0 reach markets. Right on top remained at the home of her sister, Donald, of Detroit spent from one who uses it often is likely to Mich. 4-28-1 4-21-tf. rill Bankard of Detroit spent from unconsciously empioy if for other of this came the desire taken - Mrs. Walter Buckner, in Big Bea- Wednesday until Saturday at ,the Tuesday until Saturday with Mr. shots. On longer swings an acute able farmers to receive mail through FOR SALE--Sparton seed barley, FARM FOR RENT--80 acres, fair ver, for ?~his week. home of her sister, Mrs. I. D. 1V~c- and Mrs. Nell Fletcher. slice is the result. It is for this the farfiung system of rural mail ,timothy ~ seed, eirly seed pota- buildings, abotlt 35 acres cleared. W. J. Allis and sons, John and Coy. Dr. McIntyre spent Saturday reason that Francis Ouimet recom- routes, and so that agency has gone toes, June alsyke clover seed, Charles S. Wheaton, 1 mile south Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Heath of Harry, and his mother, Mrs. Adah night and Sunday there also. Ypsilanti spent the week-end at the All:s, all of Flint, spent from Fri- mends the shot be confined to one •along, year after year, in develop- and young horses. J.D. Tuckey, and I mile east of New Green- Mr. and Mrs. H. Bigham and son, home of Mrs. Heath's. parents, Mr. day until Sunday at the Win. A. club alone, preferably the mashie ment of the greatest system of pub- Cass City. 4-28-2 leaf. 4-28-t Basil, spent Sunday at the home lic highways existing in any nation and Mrs. F. A. Bigelow. Foe home. Mr. Allis is Mr. and niblick, for it is with this club that of Mrs. Walker McCool in Shah- most of the short shots are played. on earth. RADIO ACCESSoRIES--All kinds BABY CHICKS--We can supply Mr. and Mrs. Joy Tyo of Detroit Mrs. Foe's son-in-law. On Satur- of radio accessories at the May bona. Mrs. McCool returned home This lessens the swing's contagious It was the same with the weather you With chicks from 1 day to spent Saturday night and Sunday day, Harry celebrated his fifth & Douglas furniture store, Cass with them to spend the week with effect. bureau. Farmers, with perishable 4 weeks old. We do custom at the home of Mr. Tyo's parents, birthday. City. her daughter, Mrs. Bigham. ~, 1933, Bell Sy~dic~te,--'WNU Service. crops, needed information as far in 1-17-tf hatching. Bring eggs on Wednes- Mr. and Mrs. DavidTyo. The "Broadcasters" of the Meth- day. Prices reasonable. Decker- odist Sunday School met at the W. C. Hyatt, owner of the Red advance as possible, and the gov- FOR SALE--A variety of Early Several members of the Cass City ville phone 43. Deckerville home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Seve- and White store, has moved his ernment tried to arrange it for them. White seed potatoes. Chgs. Ted- Ladies' Band attended a band con- Hatchery. : 3-17-12p fence, on Monday night. Bunco stock to Shabbona, in the bank Of course, in later years, the ford, 4½ miles south of Cass cer~ in the high school auditorium was played at which Catherine building there. He and his family "weather man" has come to be a City. • 4-28,1 EXPERIENCED housekeepers and in Unionville Friday night, given Bailey was prize winner. Light will make their home there and vital factor in the life of the air people who keep their" clothes by the Caro Citizens' band. refreshments were served. The resume their business at that place. pilot and in commercial and Indus- CATTLE BOUGHT or shipped looking spick and span all the Wesley Webber and family have meeting was well attended. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward were trial efforts as well, but it remains through the Elmwood •Shipping time send their wearing apparel in the Department of Agriculture moved from the rooms over the C. The Woman's Missionary Society hosts at a delightful party at their Association, buyer, or trucker< and draperies to us for dry clean- for the good and sufficient reason E. Patterson grocery, to the house of the Evangelical church enter- home Saturday night, given in Louis Darowitz. Call 159-F-3 or ing. Robinson's Laundry and that it can be administered better on N. Segar St., just recently va- tained ,the Butzbach Missionary honor of Mr. and Mrs. Ydlbourne Joe Leishman, Phone 132-F-32, .~ Dry Cleaning. there than in any other branch of cated by Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Hartt. Circle of the same church, Monday Parsons, newlyweds. About fifty Cass City. 2-3-tf the government and the purpose of The Women's Missionary Society night, at the home of Mrs. A. A. young friends a~fd relatives were CUSTOM HATCHING at reduced its inception remains as its funda- of the Presbyterian church will Richer. The young people were present, the evening being spent in IN LOVING memory of Maude rates. Blood tested and ac- mental basis of operation. meet Wednesday, May 3, with Mrs. welcomed by the W. M. S. presi- dancing, with music furnished by Fleenor Hutchinson, Who died credited Barred Rocks, Leghorns ©. 1932, Western Newspaper R. M. Taylor, with Mrs. J. Cole as dent, Mrs. Wm. Schwegler, and a friendd from Detroit. At midnight, Union. Apri ! 29, 1923: and Rhode Island Red chicks that assistant hostess. An invitation is short program was given in which refreshments were served by the Just a thought of sweet remem- live and grow. M. C. McLellan, extended for a large attendance to both societies took part and which hostess. Out of town guests were Largest Residence brance Cuss City, branch of Thumb the members and friends. proved very interesting and educa- Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ward, Mr. and The Vatican at Rome is the Just a memory fond and true; Hatchery. 3-31-tf world's largest residence. It con- The Prior family have moved tional along missionary lines. Mrs. Win. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. R. Just a token of affection, tains several thousand rooms, that CHASE A LINER on your errand. from the Mrs. McIntyre house on After the meeting, everyone ,took Ward, Alwin Ward, Mildred Chrys- And a heartache still for you. have been added from time to time It's surprising how quickly one Leach St. to" Mrs. Z. Stafford's part in a hymn memory contest, ler, Mr. and Mrs. Joy Tyo, Mr. Just a sigh for olden moments since it was begun in the reign of of these small advertisements in house on Garfield Ave. Mr. and Ruth Schenck storing the highest. Witcher, Mr. and Mrs. L. Ward 1 Just a smile of love anew; Emperor Constantine: Since 1377 the Chronicle does its work and Mrs. Harold Benkelman and family Delicious refreshments were served. Ross Harrison, and Win. St. Laur- "Pop, what is conservation?" Just a tear in s~lence falling, it has been the only regular home at low cost. Try it to your own are moving into the house just FiftY-four members ent, all of Detroit. Many of the "Keeping the mouth close~." And a yearning just for you. dud Triends ~, 1933, BellSyndieate.--WNU Service. of the Roman pontiffs; satisfaction. vacated by the Prior family were in attendance. guests remained Sunday also. Mother.

! KJ( • PAGE FIVEI • CASS CiTY CHRONICLE FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN. _ V - Drench Sheep by the commission. Not one objec- ~I~'.TIIRN~:..______, -- Must tion to the bill has been raised in Ready to Put His Taste to Work Again TAFFETA the house. Formal Modes in Glittering Array PLAID AND CHECKS to Kill Parasites There is: prospect of a constitu- tional, amendment being placed up- By CHERIE NICHOLAS Michigan shepherds who want t 9 Seen in Gay Blouses and make a profit from .their flock will on the ballot at >the next general - Vivid New Scarfs. have to drench ~their lambs early election which will provide for one~ board of control of all state edu- Taffeta, that good old standby and often according to the records cational institutions. The plan, whose rustle used to add to the secured by Michigan State College originally suggested in the senate magnificence of grandma's Sunday animal husbandry department from frock, is the last Word in fashion farmers who entered last year's by Senator Kulp of Battle Creek, has found much favor in both the news just now. lamb production contest. But don'[ get any misplaced • Lambs one month old can be house and senate. The new super- visions of a nation clad in rustling drenched safely with one ounce of intendent of public instruction, Mr. black taffeta frocks. the copper ,sulphate and 40 per cent Voelker, is known also to favor the it isrFt blaci~ this tim~, ~.L,,5. gLere ~iLgil. isn't enough of it to rustle. made by mixing one ounce of cop- It's being shown in gay new plaid per sulphate and one liquid ounce The Orr insurance bill which and checkered blouses, with short of 40 per cent nicotine sulphate in gives to Michigan life insurance puff sleeves and ascot-tie necklines. three quarts of.water. companies the same advantages You'll see it in vivid new scarfs, The whole flock of sheep should that big eastern • insurance compa- Roman striped or plaid, that you be drenched every 30 days. The niec have in making loans at pres- can tie in a bow or wear ascot fash- dose for 50 pound lambs is two ent, is soon to become a law. The ion. ounces of the solution, and adults bill was held up in the house one Even hats have gone taffeta on may be given four ounces of solu- day because of a slight misunder- us, some of the smartest spring tion. Sheep which have been standing as to its provisions. In- styles being crisp little sailors and weakened by parasite attacks surance companies have been hit turbans of navy blue taffeta, band- should receive smaller amounts just as hard as the banks relative ed with gay striped or checked or than the s.tandard dose for their to loans and while the big life in- solid color ribbon. age. surance companies under the laws Most sheep parasites are cap- of the state where %hey exist, have able of living long periods in the refused to permit certain loans, the water or soil of pastures and the Michigan companies have been BY CHEI~IE NICIIOLAS ] use of permanent pastures for forced to pay ,them, putting ther~ grazing sheep usually results in to a great disadvantage with thei~ the flock becoming badly parasit- powerful eastern competitors. The ized. The presence of parasites Orr bill puts all of them on equa! should be suspected in animals footing. which are unthrifty but which have little or no fever. The legislature hopes to compleb Affected animals lose weight, its work by May 20, that date hay are dult and move slowly. They ing been tentatively set as th( time for adjournment. There is usually stand with the back ~n palates can recognize at a single taste the very district in which a some ~ of another session in the humped and the body becomes very .tinctive zinfandel, riesling or claret was grown. He expects congress gaunt. Advanced stages of %he fall to take up some of the prob- legalize the fermented juice of the grape before the end of 1933, and trouble are often marked by pain- lems that are bound not to be d~s- Lce real wine tasters have grown scarcer than ever before from unem- less swellings under the jaw. posed of at the present session. )yment, the industry is calling him back into harness. He has gone int@ Parasites can be reduced by r0- ~aining" after 24 years of retirement. taring pastui~es through the use of / HOSPITAL NEWS. temporary crops like rape or Su- dan grass. The sheep can be taken John Lapham of Port Austin ways. The advent of the dressy off the regular pasture and run on t was taken home Saturday after- UDGING from appearances, Dame dinner hat and the favor for

been in flint room 0t his?" bold method of approach so that visit us Monday morning. We felt Mac Hewitt, Lorene Barnes and Directory. "Yeh. Second floor, front. Bay Pat T hayer would understand clear- very much encouraged after he had Emerson Brown. reviewed the sixth, seventh and Those neither absent nor tardy I. D. McCOY, M. D. window and everything. Fixed up ly that she was not bluffing. When like a boudoir of one of Louis Four- a girl visits a man in his room, eighth grade classes• for April are: Loreta Jackson, Bil- Surgery and Roentgenology. tenth's lady friends." explanations are often necessary, The primary grades learned the lie, Carl and Robert McKay and Office in Pleasant Home Hospital. "Ain't it so? And if--" Rube and Tony~thoroughly aroused-- poem "The Wind." Richard Rolston. Phone, Office 96; Residence 47. cocked his head on one side and wished the man to understand she The sixth grade will finish their Loreta Jackson and Richard Rol- listened attentively. The soft sum- arithmetic books next week. ston will receive seven month cer- L. D. McRAE, M. D. was prepared to let the campus mer air was rudely shattered by the know of their marriage. The second grade are learning tificates. Office hours, 12:00 M. to 2:00 P. M. roaring of a high-powered motor. "Well, I'll be everlastingly dog- the 4 multiplication tables. 5:00 to 7:00 P. M. Morris Hospital. bit!" Phil murmured, yCan you Our visitors last week were little Advertise it in the Chronicle. Phone 62. beat it. Phil: I ask yore" Helen Hewitt, Florence and Ella "No !" snapped Gleason. "I can't B. H. STARMANN, M. D. --and neither can anybody else." ! Physician a~d Se:~'~e..~r~ "Do you rect~on anyaoay saw nor Office hours, 10:00 to 12:00 a. m., go upstmrs.• 9- @ 2:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. "No" Telephone 189-F-2: "Suppose they did?" MYSTERY '~They couldn't, you poor simp. DENTISTRY. Say, what the h~l's happening ~' • I. A. Fritz, Resident Dentist. OcCav~ Roq Coke around here, anyway? First ~Iax Office over Burke's Drug Store. Vernon says he don't give a d~n We solicit your patronage when in where Pat Thayer is, and then Tony about waiting until summer .for a need of work. ,CHAPTER I!| Peyton goes up to Thayer's room. honeymoon. C a(jll rm worried." P. A. SCHENCK, D. D. S. "But the rest of it .... It's E VERYTt~IING seemed be They reflected heavily upon the to pretty rotten. That any man should Dentist. summed up in her simple state- situation, fear for the good name have married you because you have Graduate of the University of ment, She spread her arms help- of their own fraternity forming Having decided to quit farming, I will\sell at pub- a little money; that he should have Michigan. Office in Sheridan Bldg., lessly, and the young man stared their paramount worry. blackmailed you for two years;that lic auction my personal property, at my farm, ¾ of a at her. "What you reckon . . ." start- Cass City, Mich. he should have been--well nasty in "I had hoped not to tell you"- er Farnum, and Gleason answered n~ile west of Gagetown, or 5 miles south of Owendale, his attitude toward you. That hits A. MePHAIL she was speaking in a soft, tired the unfinished question. me pretty hard, Tony; perhaps be- voice--"until after we should have "Nothing, except that Tony is FUNERAL DIRECTOR cause I care for you so much. been divorced or had the marriage straight as they make 'em. If they Lady Asgistant. "Then there's Ivy. I was fair to annulled. I detested the idea of were pulling any rough stuff you Phone No. 182. Cass City. him about that. Ivy's a nice kid, a campus scandal--or gossip--or can bet your last dollar they Wednesday, May 3 and pretty--even If she is my sis- whatever it would have been. I "Ain't He Too Sweet?" wouldn't do it in the open that way. Eo Wo DOUGLAS ter. If he wanted to flirt with her Sale starts at one o'clock was waiting until graduation. Then It's O. K., Rube---but dog-gone In- Funeral Director. --that was their business. But If "I think," said Rube, ~'that our most I was going West or to France or discreet." he's a married man--and that kind shrinking violet is about to ap- LIVE STOCK Set riding spring tooth harrows Lady assistant. Ambulance ser- somewhere and quietly have the For twenty minutes Rube Far- of a man . . ." He rose abrupt- proach in his gasoline chariot." vice. Phone 42-F-4. whole miserable affair ended, But num and Phil Gleason sat on the Black mare 14 years old, wt. McCormic,k-Deering riding cul- ly. "I'm going to have a pretty They looked down the hill in time seeing Ivy with him--that rather veranda in miserable uncertainty. 1300 tivator straight talk with Mr. Paterson to see a long, low gray touring car E. W. KEATING changed things, Larry." At twenty minu~es past one Tony Thayer. A pretty d--n straight of heavy and expensive type swing Black Holstein caw, 3 years old, Set of cultivator discs Real Estate and Fire and Auto- "I understand. I wish you had appeared on the veranda again. talk." violently into Fraternity row from due July 8 mobile Insurance. told me before, though. And, going They glanced at her and saw that Walking cultivator "No!" She was on her feet and Marland road. It jerked to a halt Red Durham cow 5 years old, CASS CITY, MICHIGAN back to the beginning . . . what she seemed to be laboring under her hand was on his arm. This new under the two big oaks which dig- fresh Disc harrows caused you to--to become unin- stress of some powerful emotion. Larry frightened her. nified the lawn. Set of spike tooth harrows fatnated ?" They also noticed that she was mak- Jersey cow 6 yrs. old, fresh "Can't you see that you mustn't Vernon climbed from behind th4 Deering 5 ft. mowing machine She gave a little smile of dis- ing a brave effort to appear casual. T R.N. McCULLOUGN clash with Pat? He'd be liable to wheel of his car and started toward taste. "Several things, Larry. I'll Awkwardly the two boys rose and HARNESS Set of bob sleighs Auctioneer and Real Estate get nasty and spread the story. You the fraternity house. The two talk frankly--because it Is your bowed. Grindstone Dates may be arranged mustn't go near him now." boys on the veranda gazed at him Double work harness right to know. Before we were mar- Tony gave them a hard littie with Cass City Chronicle "I've got to. Leave yourself out closely and turned inquiringly to Set of light driving harness Big cookinrg kettle ried. Pat and I agreed that the mar- smile and said good-by. She walked office, Cass City, Phone of it if you wish. I've got to con- one another. 6 horse collars Flint wagon Beet box riage was to be a mere form until to the street and turned uphill to- • 134-F5. i sider Ivy. His affair with her can't "What's the matter with him?" summer. We were to be good ward the Old Main. Rube sank back Single harness Hay rack 3 pulleys [be permitted to run on." inquired Gleason. friends, just as we had been since into his hammock with a sigh of in- Set of whiffletrees | "That's true," she said thought- "Gee .... The sun is down- IMPLEMENTS he came to Marland~but that was finite relief. Neckyoke ,fully. Then an idea came to her right eclipsed, ain't it, Phil? Never all. It wasn't long after the cere- "And that," he remarked~"ls and she looked up brightly. "Let's did see Max looking like that. Reck- Osborn grain binder 40 Rock and Rhode Island hens emony that he made it clear' that most decidedly that." Miss Vera V. Schell, R. N. compromise, Larry. You go chat on they pulled him for speeding, or Ontario grain drill 1925 Model T Ford he didn't intend to keep the bar- "¥eh. But what is it?" with Ivy. See if you can do any- something ?" Land roller Hourly Nurse gain." "Darned if I know. Say, Phtl~ Oat straw thing with her. Of course she mustn't There was no mistaking the fact Her cheeks were flushed and did you get a good flash at her?" Syracuse riding plow Other articles too ~umerous to know that I'm Pat's wife. But that Max Vernon was in an ugly Telephone 185 Larry's were dead white. "I didn't get anything else." Riding beet lifter mention see if you can't get her to do what mood. He moved toward the house "No need to go into detail. It "She seemed kind of worked up. you want--to stay away from Pat. with short, positive strides, keeping wasn't very pleasant. I didn't re- Right mad, I might say." And meanwhile I'll go to Pat right his eyes focused on the ground and Terms -Cash. gard myself as his wife and told "She did. Sore as a goat. What now. I'll tell him that if he contin- would have passed into the house him so. He was rather nasty about you reckon?" ues running around with Ivy I'll tell without a word of greeting had not it. One thing led to another . . . "There's something funny .... the whole campus. That will spike Rube Farnum trailed him. and then we had our first quarrelY And I think the more we say noth- his guns. Don't you see that's the "Hi, Max !" She gave a short, bttter laugh. "One ing the less we'll get mixed up in I sensible thing?" Vernon responded without glanc- Alvin Den Prop o can find out a good many things a scandal." He looked at her keenly. ing at them. LEARN about a man when he is thor- There was a sound of feet on the "Do you think you can bluff him, "'Ix), Rube." R. J. WILLS, Auctioneer M. P. FREEMAN, Clerk oughly angry. I found out about stairway inside the fraternity house. Tony T' His manner was forbidding. Far- Pat Thayer then. Betore we had The boys looked toward the door "This time, Larry," she said, "I'll num. somewhat nonplused, made a finished I told him that he might in time to see Max Vernon come make him understand that I'm not gallant attempt at cordiality. AT have saved himself the trouble of out. bluffing." "Pat Tha yer just came in/' he going through with a marriage cer- His manner still puzzled them. called cheerfully. "He's up in his emony. I told him I intended to get The moonlike face was sternly set, The main building of Marland room." NNNNNNNNNNN@NNNNNNNNNNNN a divorce immediately, and then, giving it a somewhat grotesque ap- university looks down from the top Max Vernon stopped short. HOME Larry, was when the cloven hoof be- pearance of futile anger; he was of a modest hill upon the quiet, far- "I don't give a d--n where Pat came unmistakably visible. moving with short, quick strides N flung residential town of Marland. Thayer is !" he growled. "He refused to consider a divorce. across the veranda. Would You Like to The roadway which descends some- As he vanished inside the house N I had married him with my eyes He was wearing a different suit what precipitously from the main the two boys stared in amazement. N be an Author ? open. He didn't intend that I should from the one which had adorned building to Marland road is lined The thing was so startling that even ' C RE&T have any grounds for divorce. And his figure a half hour since and he N Correspondences Courses on both sides with fraternity Rube Farnum was moved to shed if I cared to bring action, he'd fight seemed even more engrossed with houses. Halfway down the hill his habitual lethargy. "N in Story Writing, Maga ~- it in such a way that the Marland thoughts of no highly pleasant na- stands the home of Psi Tau There, "Well, I'll be licked for a two- N zine Contributing, News- campus would become a thoroughly ture. by all odds the largest of them all. cent stamp! I ask you, Phil: did uncomfortable place. He descended to the walk without N writing, Editorial Writ- Shortly after noon of May first-- you hear little Maxie?" "I hated that idea, Larry. I love so much as a glance at Farnum OAKS N ing, Verse Writing, etc., at the very hour when Tony Peyton "Did I? Say . . . what you Marland. I wanted my degree from and Gleason. They noticed that and Larry Welch were having their reckon 7" N under Dr. J. Berg Esen- here. I stalled him off and was sur- under his arm he carried a sizable conversation in Larry's classroom~ Rube shook his head in bewilder- wein, Prof. R. W. Neal prised that he seemed content to bundle. They saw him reach his N N two young men descended the hill, ment. "I almost suspect something from little acorns grow." And wait. Then--one day--he came to car and pitch the bundle into the N and others. Preparatory turned in at the Psi Tau Theta must have happened. Who'd ever N me and asked the loan of a large tonneau. Then, with more speed the Michigan Electric Power courses in English and all house, and sought accommodation ; imagine Damon not giving a d--n N N sum of money !" than grace, Vernon jumped behind one in a saggy hammock and the where Pythias was?" @ @ school subjects if needed. "Good Lord I You don't mean .... " the wheel, kicked the starter, clashed Co. is no exception to the Old other in a somewhat decrepit wick- They discussed the phenomenon Address, • Precisely. Blackmail. I refused his gears savagely and jerked into N N er chair. eagerly. Max's friends had long and he threatened to spread around the road. adage. It has grown from THE HOME CORRESPONDENCE The lad who flopped in the ham- since determined that insofar as N N the campus the story I had been "Something's puzzling me," re~ SCHOOL. mock was "Rube" Farnum. a tall, Thayer was concerned, Vernon was small units to a large com- N trying to keep secret. No divorce, marked Rube slowly. N angular, gangly junior whose nick- hopelessly blind. His display of an- ]mind you; no annulment. He in- "What ?" N pany because it has always N Springfield, Mass. name fitted his appearance rather imosity, therefore, came like a jag- ]tended to insinuate . . . to let "Which is the most remarkable more snugly than his background. ged lightning from a clear sky. N followed sound policies of fair N I'~ohnesS tu de n:a ]~:d Yh ~Ojm its .?cwmn o p i:i phenomenon: Tony Peyton's visit % Actually Rube was an urban prod- "Something hit him hard." Rube N rates, the best possible service act. cocked one eye at the ceiling. "You and he cheerfully admitted that he non's, wild-eyed fury. I ask you, Phil Gleason, his companion, was reckon it's that little blond, Phil? and fair Jdealings with all was. He said I'd never miss the Phil--which ? N also a junior; but even in the first Max has been awful keen for her, N amount he wished to borrow--which Gleason gave a prompt and ex- whom it has done business. hot wave of approaching summer, and they do say she's been ram- N , N was true---and, anyway, I loaned it plicit 'answer. he was immaculate---jaunty, even. bling around a heap with Pat lately. to him. In the months that fob "Both !" he said tersely. N It has always consistently He was short and slender and in- You never can tell !" • . lowed I loaned him more money, °N I! clined 'to be dynamic. He spoke al- Larry~just to keep his filthy.mouth They gazed off toward the street, To be continued. followed the policy of lower- ways in explosives, whereas noth- N " shut. And it isn't the amount. But each busy with his own thoughts. ing ever excited Rube to more than ing its rates when costs ~per- it was terrible to feel that I was Their reverie was interrupted by N a slow, amused drawl. TANNER SCHOOL. being bled by a man whose name the arrival of a visitor. They did mitted ~ and is now giving N The verandas of the various fra- N • I legally bore. Time after time I de- not notice her until she turned in ternity houses were not empty nor lower rates with a 24 hour N termined to end it by suing for an on the walk and came straight to- Teacher, L~ta O'Dell. were they particularly filled. On annulment. Then I'd think about ward the veranda. Then their faces Reporter, Louise McKay. N continuous service than its N several of the porches, young men the embarrassment of staying on at broke into smiles and they jumped We are glad the ground is dry, slept calmly in hammocks. A few N ~ customers once paid for a Marland after the gossip became, to their feet. so that we can play, ball. were reading. N general--and I wasn't brave enough. "Hey, Tony!" they halted her. The sixth grade geography class few hour-interrupted service. Phil Gleason glanced at his It~'was my plan to wait until after I "How goes it?" made a poster of the West Indies. watch; frowned; shook the time- had my degree . . . then to end Antoinette Peyton gave each of We were glad to have Mr. Smith piece violently, and then turned to In fact, the rates are so low the affair legally." She paused for them a brief smile. his friend. a moment, then turned impulsively "Helloj' she said. Then her NN~ now that the average resident "D---n thing's busted again i" he N toward the young man. "I wonder question came with startling sharp- Bright Woman Lost exploded. "What time, Rube?" customer pays less than *½a if you understand?" ness. "Do you boys know whether Mr. Farnum reached into his "Of course I do, dear.*' Pat Thayer is in?" 20 Pounds an hour for his home electric @ / pocket and extracted a large but It was Phil Gleason who an- "And you think I was cowardly?" reliable watch. swered. Feels Much Better bill. Where else can you find "Not a bit. I think you've been "Twelve-thirty." "Yeh. He's up in his room. I'll rather fine about it." a servant that will perform as "Humph! I got a class at one- call him for you." "June 28th, 1932, I started tak- She noticed his manner of talk- N twenty." And then Tony Peyton did an ing Kruschen Salts, Have lost 20 many household tasks as ing; there was nothing soft or gen- Gleason's sharp eyes swung to- amazing thing: a thing so stagger- pounds from Janet 28th to Jan. 10. N tle in his voice. It was obvious that electricity performs for as low ward the street as a tall, graceful ingly unprecedented that neither Feel better than have felt for four N he was making a distinct effort to figure turned in on the concrete boy was able to move a muscle. years. Was under doctor's care for NN a cost ? keep himself under control. walk leading to the house. "Hello !" Quite calmly Tony Peyton walked several months. He said I had gall She was surprised. It was the he observed softly--"Here comes through the door and into the sa- stones and should have operation, months of first time in four years she had ELECTRICITY IS CHEAP What the Well-Dressed Man Should cred precincts of thelPsl Tau Theta Kruschen did all and mo~re than I known him that she had ever seen Wear." fraternity house. expected." Mrs. Lute Bright, Wal- him gripped by anger. There was NI USE MORE OF IT v. The Rube eyed the a~)proaching figure "Never mind," she called over her ker, Minn. (Jan. 10, 1933). something primitive in the ugly set of Pat Thayer with tolerant amuse- shoulder. "I'll go right up to hts To lose fat and at the same N Atlantic Monthly of his lips and the blue of his eyes * ½c per hour is the average cost of elestricity per resi- ment. "Golly !" said he~"I wish I room." time gain in physical attractivness MAKE the most of your reading had changed to an icy gray. was a raw freshie so I could get a Tony Peyton had done the impos- and feel spirited and youthful take ~] dent customer per 24 hour day. The average customer hours. Enjoy the wit, the wisdom, "I've kept pretty quiet, Tony," he kick out of just lomdng at that sible-and thereby scandalized the one half teaspoon of Kruschen in ~] used $2.73 worth of electricity per month during the last the companionship, the charm that said, choosing his words with bird. Ain't he sweet?" two members of Psi Tau There, who a glass of hot water before break- 12 months. /' have made the Atlantiv for sev- meticulous care. "At first I was all Thayer, happily ignorant of their stared in dumfounded amazement fast every morning. enty-five years, America's most with Pat. Goodness knows I'd be caustic comment, mounted the porch at the door through which she had A jar that last 4 ~eeks costs quoted and most cherished maga- the last one to blame him for want- steps and nodded to the occupants passed. With quiet dignity and but a trifle at any drugstore in zine. Ing to marry you. I even"--he N of chair and hammock. smiling determination she had calm- the world but be sure and get Mich ElectricPower Co hesitated for the briefest fraction Send $1. (mem~ioning this ad) "Hello. Phil. Howdy, Rube." ly announced that she was going to Kruschen Salts the SAFE way to 4 of an instant, and his" cheeks "YOUR SERVANT DAY AND NIGHT" Thayer passed through the door visit the room of a fraternity mem- reduce wide hips, prominent front -- to~ fiushed~"I even didn't blame him BAD AXE LAPEER HARBOR BEACH into the big. downstairs reception ber, and, what was even worse--she and double chin and again feel the THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY. when you told me that he wasn't hall. had carried out her threat. joy of iiving--money back if dis- CARO SANDUSKY VASSAR awfully keen about keeping his part 8 Arlington St., ~ Rube chuckled. "He's got it soft, The two boys did not know that satisfied after the first jar.- N Of .t.he bargain Boston. .... abp_ut-:7 that bimbo.. Star bp~:~e~ here. Ever To~y de!iberately had selected this Advertisement W-3. PAGE EIGHT. CASS CITY CHRONICLE~FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. CASS CITY, MICHIGAN.

nedy's brother, Ransom Spencer. CHURCH CALENDAR. DEFORD. They expect to return home Sun- I B day. Concluded from first page. Funeral Service-- to attend their helpful d4voti0nal funeral service of Mrs. Car- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Flynn of The services. rie L. McCain was held in the De- Detroit were Sunday guests at the R. E. Johnson home. The Senior League has charge of ford M. E. chur@ at two o'clock the evening service which begins on Tuesday, April 25, and the Mr. and Mrs. Merriman of Grand at 7:30 p. m. A varied program body laid to rest in ,the family lot Rapids, brother and sister-in-law or music and readings, which will MORE GO INTO MAY \ of Novesta cemetery. Service was of the late Dr. H. H. Merriman, contribute to ,the evening medita- POULTRY BUSINESS conducted by the pastor of the have moyed into the Merriman res- tion and worship. church, W. L. Jones. Carrie L. Wil- idence. H. I. Voelker, Pastor. cox was born March 12, 1847, at ,, cans Mrs. Alice Curtis, who has been ,oss 3 19c West Pallet, Vermont, and passed Was Considered Profitable . Baptist ~Church ~ Preaching at Kraut ~r~ Past Year. away at P~rt Htrro;:. ai; the horse !0:80~ Su~:~d~y S(fi'~o~fi at. ~_i:45. of her daughter, Mrs. Loella Pugh. in a very critical condition at the i Junior B. Y. P. U. at 3:00. Senior present time. 1 Poultry paid in 1932. It was One Her parents moved to Wisconsin B. Y. P. U. at 6:30. Gospel ser- of the few farm crops that did while she was Still a small child. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Locke en- mon at 7:30. - bring in cash to the extent that it At the age of twelve years she re- tertain%d on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. I Prayer meeting Thursday eve- could be considered profitable. turned to Vermont to make her Bernard Hunger and children of ~ning at 7:30. Choir rehearsal Bran Flakes 2 18c Therefore more farmers will go in- home with her grandparents. At Birmingham, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Ti- Thursday evening" at 8:30. / to the poultry business in 1933. Not the age of eighteen she joined her. tus and Louis York of Mayville. W. R. Curtis, Pastor. only : farmers but clerks, widows, parents who had moved ,to Michi- Mrs. A. Hershberger entertained " Country Club , lb. tenants, and out-of-job city dwell- gan. She taught school until the the Happy Hour Club Tuesday eve- Argyle M. E. Cureuit~S~tnday, ~odas pkg. ers will turn to poultry production year 1868, when she was married ning. April 30: Crackers 2 19c as a source of Iivelihood. to Wallace McCain. They were E. R. Bruce and Mr. and Mrs. Cumber Preaching, 9:45 a. m. "All this may ~6r may not be a fa- parents of seven children, her'l~s- R. E. Bruce were callers Wednes- Sunday School, 10:45 a. m. vorable sign of progress for the in- band and tw6 children preceding day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ubly~Preaching, 11:00 a. m. dustry," says Roy S. Dearstyne, her in death. Mrs. Chas. Silver- HEINZ head of the poultry department at Win. Wilson at Kingston. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. thorn died June 24, 1929, and Mrs. Holbrook Sunday School, 10:30 Rice Flakes ...... 2 19c North Carolina State college. "A Ben. Gage died March 27, 1932. Mrs. W. Keeper returned to her a.m. i vocsoap large percent of those people en- Five children survive: Mrs. Loella home at Capac on Tuesday after tering the poultry game make fail- spending the past week with Mrs. Wickware--Preaching, 2:00 p. m. Friday and Saturday Only Pugh, Port Huron; Wesley of Pon- Sunday School, 3:00 p. m. ures of the business due chiefly to tiac; Fred of Oxford; Mrs. Chand- A. L. Bruce. a lack of knowledge of fundamen- Argyle~Sunday School, 11:00 a. ler Goodrich of Malin, Oregon; and Win. Kilgore and B. O. Watkins Gelantine, I package ...... 20C tals. Then, too, new development m. Preaching, 8:00 p. m. I 8 bars 19~ Mrs. Gee. Spencer of Deford; also of Pontiac were callers at the Chas. is sometimes out of proportion for Epworth League at parsonage, Kilgore home Friday. the local markets to consume or twenty-three grandchildren and Saturday evening at 8 o'clock. the existing facilities to move at twenty-nine great grandchildren; Cecil Lester spent last Friday at No Epworth League at Holbrook fair prices. If a person has a dis- two brothers, Fred Wilcox, Port Bay City. on Friday night an account of con- Soap, medium bars... like for birds, he should by all Huron; and Frank Wilcox, Yale. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sherk vention at Elkton. H. N. Hichens, Pastor. means stay out of poultry produc- Mr. and Mrs. MeCain moved to De- spent Sunday evening at the Win. ford in March, 1889, where they tion." Wilson home at Kingston. Mr. Dearstyne points out- that resided until Mr. MeCain died in Mennonite Chureh~We wish to ~rs. Archie Hicks spent last announce that different arrange- Ti, ssue poultry growing requires long February~ 1916. During her ear- Sweet, quart jar ...... 19e week with he~ sisters, Mrs. Neff hours of work and study; careful lier life she was • a member of the ments have been made in our quar- Seminole Brand attention to detail and the ability Deford M. E. church and an active Black at Lansing and Mrs. Cleve ~terly meeting schedule, in response to accept and overcome disappoint- figure in church circles. She was Case at Battle Creek. to a request by Rev. J. S. Wood, presiding eider. The meetings as ment. also a char,ter member of Fern Hive Mr. and Mrs. Arehie Hicks en- Barbara Ann ...... of ,the Maccabees. Friends and tertained .on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. -now planned witl be as follows: 3 19c Combined GrMn and Mash relatives were present from Port Burton Morrison of Card, Mr. and Sunday morning at ten o'cIock, the observance of ,the church ordi- Huron, Yale, Avoca, Dayton, Ohio, Mrs. Jesse Kelley and son, Grant, Trough Is Recommended nances Pontiac, Birmingham, Bad Axe and and Mrs. B. Hicks. at the Riverside church. A new Cornell bulletin tells how Sunday evening, at seven-thir'ty Marlette. to build a combination grain and Miss Helen Sharrard of Shab- o'clock, evangelistic sermon at the Vz pound package ...... mash trough for feeding chickens. bona spent the week-end with Max- Mizpah church. The combination trough might be The Farmers' Club met with Mr. ine Homer. ~• Monday evening at eight ,o'clock, termed a double-decker with the and Mrs. Frank Hegler Friday, The Misses Helen Sharrard and preaching at the° Wheatland church. Catsup mash feeder on top and the grain Maxine Horner, Lewis Homer and Tuesday evening" at eight o'clock, April 21. A goodly number par- Brand Coffee ...... 45c Country Club Brand trough directly under it. The grain Clair O'Dell spent Sunday with preaching at the Riverside church. trough is held up against the mash took of a delicious dinner at noon. The program was as follows: Ques- Mr. and Mrs. Clair Haines at Card. On Wednesday evening at eight feeder by a knotted rope and can o'clock, the annual business meet- be lowered at grain-feeding time; tion Box; vocal solo, Mrs. C. KiN Sunday guests at the Jesse Sole JEWEL Brand lb. gore; instrumental quartet, Bruce home were Mr. and Mrs. Carl ing of .the circuit will be held at the 17 c or if no grain is fed, bath troughs Mizpah church Coffee, 3 lbs. 50e ...... 2 := 119C Malcolm, James Smetek, Leland Hough and daughter, Marion, .of ,, may be used as mash feeders; this All of these Services M'll be con- Kelley and Chas. Kilgore; reading, Pontiac, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Vanes reduces the floor space necessary dusted by J. S. Wood, P. E. Mrs. Colwell; address, Frank Heg- of Clifford, and Le,titia and Alvin for feeding. G. D. Clink, Pastor. The bulletin gives a list of ma- ler; recitation, Arleen Retherford; Tallman. terials necessary for building the men's quartet, Harley, Robert, Le- Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Funk~ Mrs. Decker M. E. Circuit--Shabbona combination trough and the illuso land and Walter Kelley; ladies' Naud Collins, and Mr. and Mrs. Church--Church School at 10:30 a. Velvet PastryCake Flourand trations are arranged in the proper 5 = 19c quartet, Ruby Kelley, Mrs. Walter Lloyd Osburn spent Thursday at m. Morning service at 11:30 a. m. order of building. If the lumber is Kelley, Mrs. Eber Stewart and Lapeer and~ Imlay City. Young people's service at 3:00 p. bought according to the list, little Mrs. H. D. Malcolm; cornet duet, m. Topic, "Christianity and High- rip-sawing is necessary, according Harry Wentworth, who is at- Bruce Malcolm and James S metek. er Education. Address by Howard to the authors. They also suggest tending a law school at Detroit, T. Mills of Sa~zdusky. that the lumber, which is of regu- Harley and Robex~ Kelley, Win. Honey - ...... - - 5 33C spent the past week at the home of Decker Ch~ch~Churcti school lar size, shouid be planed, because Kelley and son, Bern, spent ThUrs- his father, B. Wentworth. Mr. at 10:30 a. m. Evening service at planed edges are easier to keep day of last week at Detroit. and Mrs. Jules Wentworth, Ben 8:00 p. m. Prayer service o~ Tues- clean. Wentworth and Lucille accompa- I R Mrs. Arthur Schultz, Mrs. Homer day at 8:00 p.~m. ,o Dykes and Mrs. E. Hildinger of nied him as far as Dryden Sunday Elmer Church--Morning service Soft-Shelled Eggs Card spent Tuesday afternoon with on his return to Detroit. at 10:00 a. m~ Church School at There are several causes for soft- Mrs. Clarence May. Mrs. A. L. Bruce, her guest, Mrs. 1!:00 a. m. Prayer service on shelled eggs, says the Idaho Farm- Neeper, and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wednesday at 8:00 p. m. er. Sometimes when pullets are Mr. and Mrs. Neff Kennedy and Funk spent Monday at the Lloyd J. H. James, Pastor. laying heavily, the yolks and whites children left Thursday when Mr. f are formed more rapidly than the Kennedy, son, Roderick, went to 0sburn home at Lamotte. shell-forming material. Another Indianapolis, Indiana, on business. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bartlett of Ar, other¢ Accompl~shment cause is the lack of shell-forming Mrs. Kennedy, Jean and Jack, re- Cass City spent ,the week-end at Spiders are also accomplished material or the vitamin which mained in Ohio to visit Mrs. Ken- the William Hicks home. balloonists. makes the mineral available. This The Con forCs of vitamin is found in cod liver oil and sometimes the addition of 1 per cent of cod liver oil in the ra- tion or 2 per cent of the mash will the A n eri©an • help to. eliminate this difficulty. I would suggest adding 2 per cent of ground oyster shell flour to the mash temporarily ,until you over- Horns come the trouble. Occasionally hens that are overfat will lay soft- shelled eggs and persist in doing It is a well-known fact that, home for home, the so regardless of method of feeding. In some cases the shell-forming ma- American household has more comforts and conven- terial is not made available fast ..... 1. ~1 ~t.^ ~^~1.-~.*~ ~'~.~ • ia~,o~ ~hnn t_hn~ n~ nnv nthor nn~nn ¢ ~tllU self when production naturally Buy*2 HousePaint $:2OO slows up. In foreign lands the modernized dwelling is found For a limited time only--per gallon Causes of Slow Feathering only in the better sections of the larger cities. '4 One cause of poor feathering in chicks is crowding. If you have Waiting too long to paint your~horne is mighty In America, even in remote rural distri&s, you room to divide up your chickens this difficulty will, very likely, be risky business. ~Time, hot sun and bad weather are constandy find the radio, the vacuum cleaner, washing machines, overcome to a certain extent. An- taking their tollo other cause of poor feathering is up-to,date heating systems, telephones~ and numberless apt to be lack of moisture in the brooder room. Within the past If you are ailowing theae destructive agents to labor-saving appliances. year or two it has been found that depreciate ~¢our investment because of the high cost of first- where humidity is increased in the There is a well-kept look about residence, store brooder room, poor or slow feather- grade paint---here's your chance. ing is decreased to quite some ex- or outbuildings with an atmosphere of prosperity .... and . tent .and healthier chicks are there- By special arrangement with the manufacturer k by assured. of the line we regularly handle, we are permitted to make content. • POULTRY NOTES for a very brief time a slashing cut in recaU price of almost 40%. Did you ever stop to realize why this is so~ how

The high moisture content of this condition was brought about? vegetable greens is a big factor in Don't miss this opportunity to buy this high- % their value to. poultry. Gocn'ctnt~ ~ ~ grade House Paint at a cos~ far It is largely due to advertising. And a big share $ $ $ under the market. It is honestly the of the credit belongs to newspaper advertising. The 1933 Chicago Coliseum poul- best paint made and will valiantly protect your try show, the twenty-fifth event of @ original home investment according to our this show, will be held October 1(~ We guarantee this Stop and think how many of the foods you eat, 22, 1933. unconditional guarantee. superior quality the things You wear and other articlesentering into your Fifteen poultry flocks in Catawba paint to give saris- county, North Carolina, showed a factory service for The duration of ¢hi$ ...... every-day life, you first heard of through newspaper return of $1.56 a bird above all feed Sale ts both limited and in" costs during the past year. advertisements. Should it fail to do definite. It may dose any minute because A hen owned by Timothy Dons- so, we will replace only a restricted number of gallons were set You will then realize what a part they do play, br hue, Stockton, Calif., has gone to it free of charge. aside to be sold at this reduction. When they work on a double shift to catch up are gone the price goes back to normal at once. should pay, in your daily life. • on production. She laid a large. 8radl0y-Vr0omanCo., ~hicago egg, inside of which w~s another Read the advertisements in the newspapers regu- perfectly-shaped egg. $ $ $ larly and thoroughly, if you are not already doing so. Laying hens need more protein than chicks. They should have They mean more to you than you can tell. from 10 to 20 per cent protein in N. Bigelow & Sons their feed. Meat scraps and milk == _ i _ _ are the best sources of animal pro- CASS CITY. tein, better than the protein in vege- table feeds, says an expert.